Bonus- Interview with Jonathan Hertzberg of Fun City Editions!! - podcast episode cover

Bonus- Interview with Jonathan Hertzberg of Fun City Editions!!

May 16, 202253 minSeason 1Ep. 17
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Episode description

Vinegar Syndrome month continues with a conversation behind the scenes of Fun City Editions! Jonathan Hertzberg is the one man band behind some of the best releases to come from the OCN partnerships and I wanted to get his point of view out to the world. They have done some incredible work so far and they deserve immense amounts of attention. So watch to the end for a deep dive into individual releases, cancel culture, different forms of physical media, and so much more! - Check out Fun City Editions on the Vinegar Syndrome website: https://vinegarsyndrome.com/collections/fun-city-editions Check out the Fun City Editions website: https://www.funcityeditions.com FCE on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdsqt9gTpHRyW3c31zOUODw/videos - Become a patron here: https://www.patreon.com/DiscConnected - Like the page and follow on Facebook here: https://www.facebook.com/TheDiscConnected - Join me on Instagram at: https://www.instagram.com/thediscconnected/ - Or on Twitter: https://twitter.com/disc_connected - Email: DiscConnectedMedia@gmail.com -- Merch: https://disc-connected.creator-spring.com/ - Podcast available wherever you get your podcasts under the title "The Disc Connected" - If you happen to be shopping on Amazon for something and would like to share some of Lord Bezos' profits with my channel at no additional cost to you, please consider shopping through my link: https://amzn.to/39mcX1t - Tip Jar: https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=TDEVSPJZ9EFCW or paypal.me/RVinls (friends and family only) or  Amazon wish list: https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/20CR2ZN456P1B?ref_=wl_share - Music is by Michael J. LeRose- michaelxcreates@gmail.com. Outro is K(NO)W by Crusoe via a Creative Commons Attribution License and verbal/written permission from the artist. - Links above may be affiliate/promotional links that provide me a tiny commission to support the sight and do not charge the consumer anything extra.

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Transcript

Good morning everybody, and welcome back to the disc Connected. We are here with Jonathan from Fun City Editions. Good morning, Jonathan, how are we doing well. Good to meet you, Ryan, and thanks for having me on. Same to you. We have talked about Fun City Editions countless times. I am always singing the praises of this label, and it is one of It is one of the handful of labels that I seem to identify as having an actual, identifiable voice, and a lot of labels are a little

all over the place. So one of the things that really excites me about Fun City is when it was first announced. And actually if you go to all of the uh the the listings on vinegar cynem right now, it lists that these are for Maverick Repertory Cinema that can best be described as works outside of their time or sorry, works that exist outside of their time. Can you share what that means with everybody to you? Sure? Well, First of all, thanks you know, for you know, for for saying all

that. No nobody's I don't know that anyone's put it exactly like that before.

As far as our label having you know, such a definable voice to use, so that's yeah, that's really cool and still kind of blows my mind that that anyone would would see that or or would you know, would would get it, so to speak, because we're not because we're not you know, as easily identifiable as a genre type of label or you know, doing something that's well just more definable because our films, those films that exist

outside of their time. I mean, it is it is a it is a pretty uh there, you know, it's it that doesn't that doesn't quite that doesn't quite tell you what we do, like like if we if we said horror or something like that, so you know, but there's obviously plenty

of other labels that that are doing that and and do that well. So really it kind of, I guess goes back to the types of films I think that I that really have excited me or that I've always been excited to discover, which is films that that aren't that aren't easily that don't fit into an easy category, that that were trumple you know, that maybe had trouble uh hooking on with an audience when they first came out for one reason or another, maybe because they sort of rest in you know, more than one

place that people had a hard time maybe making sense of, Like I mean, like a good example is for one of our early which would be one of our early titles was I Start Counting, which is, you know, a good example of a of like a tweener kind of movie in that it's sort of it's part partially a thriller, partially and partially a coming of age story. And that when you have things like that where it's like, what

is this movie? You know, is it this or that? You know, when there's tonal shifts or there's or there are those or or it kind of belongs to multiple categories, that something that a lot of times people aren't that, you know, a general wider audience isn't into that. So yeah,

some movies that exist outside of their time. Is just the way of it's just a cute way of saying this movie was too was a little was a little too we or a little too ahead of its time or a little bit you know, just too far left field to be accepted by you know, by by the widest audience possible. But but then because of that, now years decades later, those a lot of those films are still sort of untapped or haven't really been haven't really been you know, released in the way

that we're doing them. And that's another thing that we, you know, strive to do a lot of times is release things that haven't been released yet, just because we've seen so many movies that you can double and triple dip on, and uh, you know, it's just more fun to it's more fun to work on something that hasn't been that hasn't been done yet, and that hasn't really had a lot of discussion around it. You know, you can kind of make the discussion, make the conversation, and you're not and

then you're also not. I you know, I don't I don't want to be trying to stack up against something that's you know, another label that's already done some something great for a particular film. You know. It's just it's

just more fulfilling to do it for something that hasn't had it yet. And that's that's one of the things that's excited me about this is all of these they seem to be able to generate the first round of hype for some of these films, and I think that the Internet age is really going to give

things like this that second breath they really need. And I inevitably, when you do something like I do, I get literally, probably every single day, somebody messaging me, hey, I like these few films, what's something I would like? And I think back in the day when you were relying on like TV guide excerpts and really quick snippets at the end of a you know, Ciskel and Ebert segment, maybe a lot of these you can't explain

in you know, twenty five words. And now when you can literally be speaking on the internet or gushing to somebody in private message or how one of these just really grabbed onto you, that's when something like this is gonna get legs and maybe get a real fan base. And there are certain things. I mean, I wasn't really going to go to individual titles, but like Walking the Edge, it seems to have grabbed on to so many people,

and it's got big names in it. So it's one of those things that's kind of surprising that it didn't have a huge presence then, but it's got power. Yeah. Yeah, well, well they're cult they're cult names those right, everything's relative there. Yeah, but yeah, well that's a movie that that yeah, it for us, that's probably the closest that we've come to a title that. Oh that that was a title that easily you could

have seen been a vinegar syndrome title or something like that. It's more it is a more straight up genre revenge movie, but at the same time it does have this really interesting character arc. You know, it's also it is also you know, ends up being a movie about about a guy who's you

know, who's thrown into this situation. But it's sort of what kind of you know, what what what precipitates his you know, his his growth, his his his arc, and it's like an arc and an actor and a quality of performance and equality of of I guess writing character development that you just don't usually see and I guess, you know, in a movie like that, And that's what people respond to because Bob, because Bob Forster was like, you know, such an incredible actor and a guy who you know,

of course, at that point he was not in the great you know, it wasn't a he wasn't at the peak of his career in terms of success, but you know, he did this part and and you know, infused it, injected it with a level of quality that you didn't normally in a you know, in a in a quote unquote grindhouse film like that. So

yeah, that that is so yeah, so it is. It still does sort of fall into what I was saying before about these movies being more than one thing at the same time, and it always and it is fulfilling when people do see that, because not everyone does, but I'll read the reviews, say like on a letterbox or something, which I think is a good gauge for seeing that, you know, sort of up to the minute audience

engagement with these films, especially because they're small. The films. I'm a lot of these films have such few views before we you know, before we release the Blu ray, so it's always interesting just to see the numbers and the review the ratings sort of go up when the Blu Ray comes out.

So anyway, I just use that as you know, walking the edge when I read a review on there, for instance, where someone does get that where they're sort of like, yeah, it's a revenge thriller, but really it's really about this guy, you know, getting off the ground and kind of getting a shit together, and it's a character it is. It does.

It is sort of in line with a lot of the the the really great character based stories of the American cinema from the seventies, you know, the previous decade where it was it was a lot of good you know, there were a lot of good character stories. It seems to be one of those titles you can review shortly but then but add the like but also not really because there's so many quirks in it, and a lot of these they

feel that way. I mean, even something like Jeremy. For the people that really got this early on when it was released from you guys, it it didn't seem to have a lot of hype, but then when people started watching it, just watching people's feedback steam roll was such a really cool thing to see. And I don't know if you felt that, but a lot of those those groups that I follow, it really happened like that. It

was word of mouth caught fire on Jeremy. Yeah, no, absolutely, that that was That's probably I've said it before, but like that was a movie that was maybe the closest to my heart of everything that we've released. It was a movie that I've loved for many, many, many years, and but I you know, I always knew that it was kind of like

one of those movies that a few people knew about. It was like it was the movie, it was that movie or one of those movies that the people who know about it loved that movie, but it was it was definitely under the radar, and it wasn't at this point. I mean, it was a popular movie when it came out, but it was an example of a movie that wasn't really quote unquote fashionable, you know, in the in

the subsequent years, like all these other things. Even though it's a New York movie, there's so many, you know, so many other movies around it. I felt like, yeah, people were, people liked, but this was one of those movies that kind of got left behind. So it was very special just to see that. You know, it's almost fifty years old, but there is a universal quality to it in terms of what the

characters going through and people. That was what was funny to see was there would be like people whose profile I'd see on letterbox and they're like all into like gore and slasher movies, and like really like straight up there's no there's you know, there's no if says or butts, like they're they're they're not people you'd think would be into something like Jeremy and they're like, oh my god, this movie, this is this is about me, you know, or you know, I cried, like I never cried in a movie at

a movie before. So yeah, no, that wasn't That was incredibly fulfilling. And also just because like the actors were because we had the actors on the on the disc and had an interview, you know, we had the interviews with the two main stars. So the fact that they were around to see it, to to sort of enjoy the movie and their performances getting a new look and almost getting treated like because there's so many people just had never heard of the movie before and it's a fifty you know, like I say,

it's almost fifty years old. So yeah, just this just the fact that we had them involved and they were able to kind of uh you know, get a little taste of that is was was really cool. I know, they really appreciated, you know, getting dimensions like you know, when like when Quentin talked about them on the Pure Cinema podcast, like stuff like

that. I mean, I mean that blew me away, right, But yeah, I like shared that with with Glennis O'Connor, you know, and she she just loved that, Like they're they're talking, they're talking about me on on you know, on a podcast now fifty years later and it's Quentin Tarantino. So you know, you can't do much better than that, especially

with the you know, audience we're trying to grow. So one of the things that I've gotten a lot of feedback on lately with a lot of OCN titles, people are appreciating that we are getting a not really a surplus, but more of these smaller labels are picking up that we love booklets and you've been doing a lot of them since the beginning, and Jeremy is one of

the better ones. I think that it really gives just an additional side to what you can absorb through a product like this, and it's it's so nice to be able to have, you know, after the movie and you absorb it for a little while, pick that up and then really dive into that and just get an overall like like putting a bow on it at the end. I always love doing that and I just want to say thank you. Oh well, well, well you're welcome, but thank you also for actually

reading the booklet. And you know that appreciating that it's there or knowing that

it's there. Cause yeah, I mean you you know, you see like a lot of labels don't don't do booklets, and right, definitely, I definitely had some advice advising against it early on, you know, or like you don't need to do that, But yeah, I definitely felt well that First of all, the Jeremy booklet is the essay was by Bill Ackerman, who's a friend of mine and he's collaborated with us I think a number of times where he will be in the future, and he is well he and

I he's one of the few people who I knew who knew this movie and enjoyed this movie before. So that was a movie that wasn't as easy to find people to do supplement or because it's not a movie where everyone's like, oh me, me, I'll do it. You know. You know you

talked about Jeremy being really close to you. I'm curious for a lot of people, and I think I know the answer to this, but most people when they are trying to get into partner labels through vinegar syndrome, they don't understand just how small some of these outfits are so the way this has a unified voice, it seems like this is all Jonathan. Is this entire thing curated by you specifically? You know? Yeah, well I am the one,

you know, I'm the one full time person here. Yeah, it's a one man band, but I mean it would be disingenuous for me to say that, like I don't have I don't do Obviously, every release has different collaborators, and then there's also of course all my partners at OCN and

Vinegar Syndrome who are with me on every release. And but yeah, as far as the curating goes, yes, it's primarily yeah, it's me, but you know, obviously sometimes I don't know about something and someone might suggest something to me and then it ends up being something that I'm like, oh yeah, wow, that's great, Yeah we should do it. So yeah, certainly for the most part though, yes, it's just a you know, one one man show. That's awesome. And like I said, you

can tell it seems every single choice has seemed very personal. And you brought up Vinegar Syndrome. So one of the things that I was going to ask about is you were you were literally one of the first like O g Partner

Labels. How how did that come about for you back then? Well, it's I've known uh, quite a few of the people over there for years as you know, acquaintances or you know, half a degree of separation and you know, just mutual uh mutual mutual friend and colleague of mine, who's a who has who's done distribution on his own before and he he has he's

sort of acts as a broker with studios, uh. And there's people there's you know, a lot of there are a number of people like that in the industry who are sort of like you don't have who have relationships with with people, you know, various studios, you know, reps, people who

represent libraries and stuff like that. So a friend of a you know, a friend of ours mine and vinegar syndrome who's also just personal friend, you know, who put together a deal with MGM, and I was, you know, it was something where I had I had started this label or I had formed the business, I had the business foundation for the label for several years, and I just you know, hadn't done anything with it yet, and it was just sort of like, hey, would you like to you

know, piggyback on this on this deal, you know, with Vinegar Syndrome, and we just you know, went from there. And it wasn't really at the at the beginning, it really wasn't a formulated plan to be a partner label that didn't even really exist. I mean, AGFA was around. I don't remember even when they I don't know if if if if my dealings predated AGFA becoming a partner label. But then by but by the time the these movies started, this deal came together, uh, it was you know,

and it was time to release them. It was, oh, yeah, you're going to be a partner label. So I just come along for that. I was just along for the ride. And yes, at the beginning it was AGFA, and it was then it was fun City Editions, and then from there it's just gotten. You know, it's crazy, like there's I don't I totally lost track of how many partner labels there are at

this point. It's pretty crazy. Yeah, it's pretty overwhelming. But the funny thing is like at the beginning, since there wasn't really this whole little cottage industry over there wasn't this there wasn't this whole separate machinery that was established yet people didn't really there wasn't really the partner label thing. There was AGFA, and there was you know, Vinegar Syndrome, and then you know,

and then they're assorted sub labels. So people assuming that the Fun City was like a new Vinegar Syndrome offshoot, and sometimes that's still how we are referred to. I don't think that happens with the other partner labels that came later. Now people don't think, oh, it's all just you know, they're all they're all part of the Vineger Syndrome. They're all curated by Obviously, people don't think that now because there's they're so varied and they're just doing so

many different things, all these different labels. So and I think a part of that is because a lot of us that do this, we've had to hammer home this is a completely different label and just spill it out for them. And now that there's I mean, I think the last time I counted, there's like twenty one partner labels or something. Oh, I think I thought it was even more, but it might be. No. But at

the beginning it was funny. It was kind of annoying, but it was funny at the same time, because people would say, oh, they're not any there. It's like they would treat it was almost like a conspiracy, the conspiracy theories. Oh it's a it's a new it's a new etiquette. It's just the same thing as etiquette. They just changed the name that Fun

City Editions. So, because we obviously have some things, there's some there, there's some connective tissue between a lot of the stuff that we've done and and what etiquette, what they were doing were trying to do with etiquette, and already, I mean, you have more than tripled the amount of things they put out over etiquette, and there's still more coming. You got a title that was just announced for this month. You want to give us some

not insider knowledge necessarily, but some feelings on The Coca Cola Kid. Yeah, sure. So The Coca Cola Kid is a is a good example of a movie that a lot of people of a certain age remember from when it came out, because it actually did have a pretty wide release at the time

in nineteen eighty five. You know, it was you know, it wasn't a huge success box office wise, but for someone like me that was had HBO and I watched a lot of stuff at the time that I don't even remember that I didn't remember until I saw it as an adult that was an R rated film, because I just remember watching it as a kid and I liked it. And I mean obviously like wow, so much of this went right over my head. I don't know, but I remember I liked it.

But anyway, my point is it was a movie that people saw on video and saw on you know, on cable, but then it kind of it kind of went away for a while. It did have a DVD about twenty years ago from MGM, and but it's like, you know, even though it's a even though the film has is by a by a you know, recognized au tour Doujon Macaveev, it kind of did. It is kind

of like an outlier movie for him. And then it's sort of like a more for it's a weird movie for most filmmakers, and for him it's a mainstream movie and it has you know, Eric Roberts and Gretiskaki and you know, but these are actors that they're they're their peak years are sort of in the past for the most part, although of course Eric Roberts is doing like eight hundred movies, you know, well, not eight hundred movies a year, but I think that's what he's up to on IMDb at this point.

Is I know, he's on Righteous Gemstone, so he's having a you know,

he's having a moment. But my point is like his time as like a leading man was you know, obviously a long time ago, back when when Coca Cola Kid was made, so yeah, and it hadn't come out on Blu Ray, it hadn't been restored, it hadn't been updated for the you know, for the HD era, so so you know, it just seemed like a title that was even though the MGM catalog has been so so deeply mined by so many boutique labels over the last ten years or whatever,

the Coca Cola Kid was one of those that somewhat surprisingly had not been And as I said before, as I just said before, it it is kind

of a weird movie. And I and I say that in a in a most positive sense in that it's again a movie that has it has a lot of things that sort of on the surface are kind of mainstream, kind of has a mainstream you know, kind of a classic screwball kind of set up but then of course it has so many odd ball things inject you know, injected throughout it that sort of would make people scratch their heads like, okay, I got all this stuff, but then what the fuck is this?

Like you know, like you know, like it just sort of like and that's kind of why it's again a fun movie to do, because it is gonna split. It is going to split people, and it split Peur back back then when it came out too, because because it's doing you know, it's doing more multiple things at once. And it's also it does this is a movie that even though it has an American star, it was made in Australia. It has a European filmmaker, so it's an international you know,

mix of people making this movie. And it's so it's not like and like I said, it has some Hollywood elements, but then it also has art house elements. And it has some stuff that's sort of you know, very sort of goofy obvious surface level humor, but then stuff that's that's sort of cutting deeper and is more you know, is on a is sort of on a more you know, on another level, and and and a little and

and it's gonna so it's gonna be a little bit. Yeah, it's gonna some people are gonna be like, yeah, pass, and then other people are gonna say this is brilliant. I think it's It's definitely one of those there's no middle ground, you know. I have a discord community through this channel, and one of the people that is involved in the discord, uh, he was elated just the fact that we are getting a I can never say that. The director's last name, right, Dujon Makayeev Is that correct?

Mak Okay, there we go. Uh, And he is just immensely excited that we're getting titles like that, and that has seemed to come up for a few of these I mean, you've got that name that a lot of people are attached to. Michael Ritchie Lynn Ramsey was probably the biggest one that everybody's like, oh my gosh, this partner was putting out this title right right. This seems just great for a label like this to be able to attract those people that are looking for some of these underseen titles from some

of these directors. Yeah sure, yeah, well yeah, you're you're yeah, they're all they're all directors that sort of have a little bit of an a tour kind of reputation or quality and and yeah, so it's surprising when things like Smile hadn't come out yet or you know again hadn't come out, hadn't come out on you know, hadn't been updated since the DVD era. And even that DVD from MGM from the early really early days of DVD was just like a really poor, outdated you know master. I mean it was

I don't even know if it was anamorphic. So you know, yeah, it's always surprising because people will people know those filmmakers and think of them as as important filmmakers. They're not, you know, they're they're they're certainly not anonymous like you know it was. Obviously, we have some films where no, you know, where the director is not as well known and it doesn't doesn't have a following. You know, nobody's been excited that we put out

a Norbert and Myzell film, you know, with Walking the Edge. But but no disrespect, but yeah, when you have when you can, when you can release a movie by Lynn Ramsey that nobody else has has has done on on you know, on Blu Ray, you know, and you know kind of give it, give it a little you know, polish it off. You know, it's certainly very it's very attractive, and it's very exciting

and and and it gets more people's eyes. You always get more eyes on the label when it's like someone like someone like that, because because we're still so new, and what we're doing is obviously niche and I mean not only what are our catalog is, but just the world we're in in general is very nat So whenever you can, so whenever you can, you know, put something out there that that has the potential like get a whole new audience

or you know, get get some new audience. That's always a good thing because then they then they look back at the then they go to you. They're like, oh, how did I not hear about these guys? And they look back and see what else you've done? And you know, so it hopefully maybe gives it gives a little bit of a little juice to some of the earlier titles too. We at this at this channel, everything we

always talk about is physical media. And I am always excited to see when somebody takes design sensibilities from previous sorts of physical media and uses them in exciting ways like you've done on something like Radio on and the way it looks, and on top of that, just the overall packaging for all this is over the top great. I am always singing the praises of the complete package from fun City because not only and you just mentioned the DVD quality of some of

these, your restorations are have been over the top amazing. I'm loving the

way that these look. Oh well, thank you. I mean that that that that, you know, both of these things, the packaging and the restorations, a lot of that has you know, obviously helps to be aligned with with Vineger Syndrome and OCN, you know, as as because that not only are they you know, just a distributor of their own stuff and then a distributor of other labels, but they're also a lab you know, so they're they're doing and they've been doing film to digital restorations now for i mean

the life of the company at this point. So you know, so you you know, by being a partner label, and we're pretty closely aligned partner label, and we are one of the only not the one of the I don't know how many there are at this point, but I feel like I feel like we're one of the only partner labels that is really strictly working on on films shot on film, because a lot of the other partner labels are more are releasing more contemporary films. So anyway, so you know, we

have a sort of a different we have a different workflow. So but it makes a lot of sense for us to be aligned with with with Venditor Syndrome on the UCN because there's already this machinery in place and really talented people in place that that do a lot, that are so expert and do all this great work from the quality of the scans to the color grading and so on, and so that's what you're seeing, is you're seeing the you know, because I if I was by myself, you know it would be it would

have been a much bumpier, much mumpier ride and a much much uh longer learning process learning curve. So and then on the design side, you know, obviously obviously those those folks really kind of set the bar pretty high with with the quality of the packaging that you've seen on the Vinegar Syndrome releases now

for years. And you know, obviously, you know, we're here to put movies out and and you know they're there to be watched, not to be you know, cradled and you know, looked at on your shelf. But they look when they look good. When when they when people think they this is going to look good on my shelf, or this is going to feel nice to cradle. That's a good thing. That's a good book,

you know. So it's all part of the package. I mean, because like you said, it's an it's a you know, it's it's physical media. It's these these then these products don't they're not they're not cheap. And there's a lot the competition out there, so I mean, there's there's a lot of great stuff coming out. So if you can set yourself apart, like especially when it's a movie like Jeremy and Nobody, so many I don't

say nobody, but so many people don't know this movie. Right, if I had just released it with a vintage some vintage artwork on the cover, I don't know if it would have had the same if it would have had this, if it would have caught as many eyes as it did by us having Jess Roder do that artwork, and you know, and then of course the whole the slipcover, which you know, again the quality of the slip cover and having the front and the back artwork and the embossing and the spot

gloss and all that stuff. Yeah, I mean that's like that was just so much fun to do that one. And she was just you know, she was just someone an artist that I you know, whose work I was familiar with. That I just thought very early on that she would be perfect for that movie. And it worked, and it worked out. And I

mean, I'm not a I'm not an artist. I'm not a designer myself, but I but I appreciate and I always have package design and you know, the marketing materials for movies, but also for other forms of physical media as well. So like you saw the radio on is the cassette tape, which is kind of kind of riffing. It is not kind of it is riffing another one that's very well stylized. Yeah, certain thing, right, Uh well, radio but I'm just saying that radio one was was riffing off

the Island Records cassette tape. So you know, we're mixing physical media here. But yeah, uh yeah, it's just it's it's certainly it's it's certainly something that that I've always had an appreciation for. So it's fun to be able to to utilize it or and and bring really cool, really talented artists in, you know, on a and mix it up. Obviously, I

have different different looks for every movie. And speaking of mixing physical media, Fun City also has put out not just Blu rays, but cassettes and vinyl and uh, they have their own website that I'm gonna be linking the description below, so make sure you check that out. They've done a couple of pieces of merch. The the enamel pin you guys put out is really nice in person. Have that on my wall. It is super super nice. Is there plans for more of that coming soon? More merch, more everything,

more more vinyl, more everything. Yeah, well yeah, there's definitely. I think there will be more vinyl, but it's always going to be something which is a which is which is sort of secondary to write the movies. Oh, it's a tough time for vinyl right now too. Yeah, well it's it's sort of. It's it's not it isn't. I'm a I'm a you can look you see behind me, the shelf full of vinyl. I'm obviously someone that's collected records for a long time. And and I actually

I listened to them too. They don't just sit on the shelf there. But uh, you know, but it's not necessarily what I've worked im my, most of my work experience is in film distribution, so much more. I have many more contacts in film than in music, and more experience in

terms of licensing films and working on films than on music. But I loved doing Cafe Flesh, and I hope there's more, you know, more, I hope to have more things like that once in a while, something like that that just fits the you know, fits what we're trying to do, and you know, we'll so we'll see. But yeah, it's it's it's very expensive to do well to do vinyl, good quality, and and there's just a lot of there's you know, that's not what we're here to talk

about. But I've there's been a resurgence and you know, and it just keeps growing in terms of people collecting vinyl and you know, the records. What's happened, of course, is the demand has has sort of surpassed the supply in terms of in terms of the facilities that can they can produce the

format that you know, do the work. And so that's the problem is that for a small label, uh, you kind of get pushed, you know, if there's a if there's a big like major label reissue or something like that, you sort of get kicked down the line at the pressing plants because there's just not enough of them. Unfortunately, so many places shut down

sort of not that long before. Suddenly people were like records, Yeah, it's great, this great new thing, you know, and then of course all these pressing plants that had been dormant or had not really been used for decades they were closed. So anyway, I don't know if you saw another conversation for another show, well not really. I mean we talked about vinyl on here all the time. There was a video. Yeah, Jack White

a couple months ago put out a video. I don't know if you saw this that basically said, with all of the resurgence in vinyl and all of the demand that's going on right now, one of these major labels, I'm calling you out to open your own pressing plant in the United States and hire US workers. And haven't heard anything about it. So I really wish something like that could get something kickstarted, and he seems like the voice that could.

So time will tell, but I wish. I mean, some of these, even like the boutique vinyl labels right now in the US, they're from what I hear, like twelve to fourteen months out on getting stuff pressed.

So it's yeah, I mean, I can tell you that our process on Cafe Flesh was I mean it predated the pandemic by a few months, and then that really shut things down for a while because there was that you know, basically like in twenty twenty for a good part of that year, the places were just the mastering place that we were, you know, those places were just like close closed for months, and then the pressing and then and then we just got kicked down the line at the pressing plant because of

obviously bigger releases. You know, uh that kicked us, you know, that kicked us down the line. So the whole process for us was well over two years from when it when it when it began to when we had the product out there. So yeah, that's amazing and shows just the the absolute passion behind the scenes on a label like this. So well, also, once we're there, you it wasn't like I could just like you know,

Abart Aboard, I was already in it. You know, it was already processes where it started, and you know, money's already been spent, and then it was just sort of like, ok everything was just sort of like frozen for a while. I get that. Uh, going back to the Blu Rays I as far as I remember, let me take a look. Yeah, I don't think any of the partner labels has put out a box set yet. You guys, I believe are the only ones. And

this Primetime Panic is it's pretty special. It's it's fairly unique, is there. You know, what was the thought process behind the box set? How did you come up with it? And is there anything because it seems to me like not a lot of people are talking about that, and that's one that I'd love to get a little more buzz going on. Really. Oh

okay, well I'd love to talk about it. Yeah. That was an example of like looking at a catalog of you know, of movies, and it was a company that has a very very wide range of types of movies. A lot of the stuff that was not for us at all. Right, a lot of a lot of you know, nineties direct video stuff that I'm even though I was there in the nineties, I didn't know what it was. But there's a lot of stuff that Vinegerson Drome for instance, or

some other labels have have a license from this catalog. But for us, I saw the these TV movies from you know, from the sort of golden age of TV movies from the seventies and eighties, and they were a lot of them had been newly, newly restored and from the best film elements from the from the camera negative And I said, oh, well, these are interesting. I couldn't do them by them. I don't think you couldn't,

you know. It was it was an example of there's certain things where for to be a standalone title would be a bit of a bridge too far right, But if you could, if you could say, creatively package a few titles, you know, it makes sense to do box set. So that's why we did that. And I said, you know, so these all

came from people. People will say why didn't you do this TV movie and that TV movie, and you know, on and on, and it's like, well, they're you know, the TV movie has to be owned by someone that we can that we have a relationship or we can have a relationship with and you can't just mix and match, like say, like a box

set of like movies from all different owners. Either. It's more complicated because you have royalty splits and things like that, so you know you can't and also sometimes you just have stipulations that you can't package a movie and a multi

pack set either. Anyway, we didn't have those stipulations with these movies, and they all came from the same catalog, and I just looked at a bunch of them and I realized that the three we chose for that box set, I could see at least a little a little connection between those films. Those titles. By the way, there are people, so people are actually going to see this. It's not it's not just absolutely okay, great, I would have cleaned up my background a little bit more. You're good do

that anyway. So, so those three movies are all produced by the same the same producers, and they were all restored recently, so it's just sort of they just sort of fit together. And then we just had to try to come up with an alliterative catching idle, and you know, of course something these are not horror movies. Uh not, panic is really kind of like over selling it and whatnot. And I well, no, they're all

they all are sort of scare films. They all have aspects to those films which are sort of ripped from the headlines and which have the idea they're they're also they were all sort of pitched at at parents. They were all sort of pitched at, you know, concerned parents, like these are these are and that's a lot of TV movies. You know, they're they're they're they're sort of heightened heightened reality. They're they're they're you know, they're the scenarios

are, like I said, ripped from the headlines a lot. They're sort of based on stuff that people were talking about, are scared about at the time, are concerned about, and that's why people get and so like when people criticize Dreams Don't Die, it's like as being like, you know, a corny like you know, having this like moral sort of moralizing element to it. It's like, well, that was just that's how it got made.

That's why it got made. That was the reality of TV movies, you know, that was that was what that was sort of what the market dictated so it's kind of cool that the other cool stuff in that movie, the graffiti and the grungy New York, was able to slip in there.

Okay, you know, but and you know, that was port of my hesitancy on the first time I was looking at some of these movies was well, because I had seen Dreams Don't Die when I was a kid, like on late night TV, because it did get rerun a lot throughout the eighties and nineties, and I was like drawn to it because I was like, oh, it's like a really hid the graffiti and it kind of reminded me a little of The Warriors, and it was New York of that same same

time period, you know, with the you know showing the subways with the graffiti and everything, and you know it pregentrified Outer brew in New York. But yeah, I looked at it again, you know, and I thought, I don't know, I don't know, it might be a little too you know, Like I said that the sort of graffiti is bad, you know, don't do it. I wasn't sure. I was, you know, totally with it. But then I said, but it but his,

it's that's just the his. That's just how this stuff happened at the time, so you kind of have to. That's that's why we have the extra features. That's why we try to have historic historic historic historian commentaries or essays and booklets and things like that, which is historicize the piece, to contextualize it, because context is everything you need. I really feel like, especially with all the films we have, there's things that are quote unquote problematic.

Now you know part parts of these movies that were made because because of when

they were made, they were just made in a different time. And you know, very often when you see things streaming, there's no context, so people, you know, might stumble upon something like dreams don't die, and if they have no idea that if they're younger and they just completely are they didn't if they weren't alive or sentient during the time when the when a movie like that was made, they're not going to know like, hey, yeah, I know there, I know it's outdated. You know it's outdated.

You know it's it's it has things that are easy to criticize from a twenty twenty two point of view. You know, whether it's the fact that, yeah, the main character is is the main character the main parton Agnes Graffiti Writer is you know this, you know it's Ike Eisenman, who he's like

Lily White Disney Kid. And yes, it's easy to critique that, you know, if it was made now and and and we have we have much more diversity and casting and and things are much more inclusionary, and we've we've we've evolved in that way so that it probably would not be you know, lily white, you know, apple cheeked Eisin. He's good, he's good in the movie. But yeah, I mean there's things about it that are authentic, and then there's things about it which are dictated by the market at

the time. And also just like what you know, what people at the you know at the time, what would be accepted and what what wouldn't be and you know you just so anyway, my my point is if you have context, then you can watch something and understand, like watch it, you know, you you to have you you you can then have at least a little more of an idea of what it was like to see it when it

was when it came out and when it was new. And that's the case, Like I said, we have a lot of films which have things in them which nowadays you can't do. You know, they show things, or they portray things, or have plot elements or whatever that are or you know, or they have or some of the filmmakers that are you know not uh would be canceled now or are canceled you know. And and so but I do I do, you know, I do subscribe to for the most part,

try to separate the art from the artists. And and and I felt again like so for something like Vilitus, you know, I felt it was important to have historian commentary and and and and really kind of uh not shy away from any of the the controversy about the film or the filmmaker. And you know, it kind of just I think, I think as long as I mean, I think, as long as you address those things, I

mean, that's sort of that's the idea. That's the opportunity that we have here is to is to not only not only present the film, but you know, the film itself, but that you know, just the everything that was happening or a lot of what was happening around it. That's what the form. That's that's the nice thing about physical media is having that space to have the packaging to have a booklet like you that that you know you mentioned

before that you enjoy. We'll keep doing those, and then having the commentary and having if we can, you know, have you know, relevant valuable video features as well interviews. And that's one thing we've dived into on this channel quite a lot, is the archival aspect. And I I've got a little old letterboard sign on my wall that says the Disconnected Museum and Library,

because that's why I try to do a lot of this. I want to curate it for myself, and then on top of that, I want to be able to look back at this in thirty years and step back into a period of time and learn something new. And I felt that way at most in a library. And when you are seeing some of these yes, some of them might be problematic or not PC or however you want to attack a

lot of the imagery in some of these things. But in all reality, if we don't archive it and you do something like sensor it or ban it, what opportunity is there to learn from? What opportunity is there to actually have a piece of history and grow as a person and as a society. So completely agreed with you there. Yeah, And also I just and I feel like it's just more. It gives you something more to talk about, you know. But yeah, I think it's important what you said, you

know, as far as learning from these things. And that's the thing is that we're there's many ways that were more. But then there's many ways in which I think the cost of that that in some ways has been nuanced. There's been there's sort of been like middle ground, and there's been gray area that sort of has been shaved off or lost, you know in you know, in sort of the the move or you know, the move towards a more evolved collective mind space. And I mean and we and in many ways

and in many ways that's been achieved. But yeah, I feel like sometimes certain things we really I see qualifying things on like when people are reviewing some of our titles, like from the seventies, like something like Smile, you know, and I'll see like a like a review on Letterbox and maybe who knows, I'm citing some of these reviews by memory, and then I'm like, oh, you know, some of the people might be it might actually

be be like disconnected viewers or subscribers. Who knows, but anyway, I read this review on on Smile and it's like a positive review and then it was like at the bottom trigger alert, seventeen year old Melanie Griffith, and it's I don't know, and I and I just feel like that's the kind of thing where I'm like, like, what what are you signifying there?

Like you know, you're, you're, you're sort of like it's it's like a I don't know, it's it feels to me sometimes in a way like you're you're above You're putting yourself above the film in a way like you know, you're that, you know, we're you're more evolved and that than the than than the people that made it in the film itself. And it's just it's very easy to do when when you're nearly fifty years in the future for

when that movie was made, it's a very different world. And I mean, yes, trigger alerts are probably not necessary for a lot of these movies, but h yeah, it does take a lot of nuance. But thanks social media for taking a lot of that gray out. Yeah. Well yeah, it's just it's just it's a yeah, it's a it's definitely there's a there's it does encourage people to, you know, obviously, to to to in one way or another, tell you that they're that they're right right,

or they know better. So yep, we we've lost a lot of our take a moment to think before we speak as a society. Unfortunately. On that note, I wanted to thank you for your time. I know that i'd give you about an hour and it's about to be nine o'clock here, so thank you for everything. I appreciate the time today. It has been

absolutely a joy. I sincerely hope people check out Fun City editions, and not only for what's coming up in the sale at the end of the month, but for the foreseeable future, because there's no no signs of slowing and every single release has been a winner. It might be. Thanks so much Ryan for saying that and and you know, and for and for talking about on the show as long as you have Champ Champion Us and uh, you know, and I'm happy to have been able to spend some time with you

here. Thank you, sir. Tell me no

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