Sunday, 28 December 2025

Redwood Creaky? The Fall of the House of Usher (1928), Redwood Creek Blu-ray


This is as much about the media as the message… Redwood Creek are a Kickstarting operation who specialise in “direct transfers” from original materials which don’t always match the look and the quality of “filmic” restorations. But they do what they say on the celluloid can and reproduce otherwise rare cuts and hard to find films. It does, however, come in a range of quality which may disappoint as much as it delights.

 

I’ve backed a few of their campaigns, The Magician – no tints and not as pleasing to watch as the Warner Archive DVD – then L’Inferno (1911) – one of the most important films in history and here in a slightly murky “red tint”, “never seen before” apparently but again not as good as the DVD from the Cineteca Bologna restoration which has a much sharper tone and texture with a variety of tints and which runs slightly longer*? Warning Shadows, which whilst being good in places, again just doesn’t even have the or clarity of the Kino DVD, and then there’s Eerie Tales (1919) which shows on my Blu-ray player as “Untitled Project” – it’s a writable Blu-ray again – but is pretty clear, albeit a 720p type of experience more than a 1080p experience.

 

In each case Redwood Creek massively over-perform on their targets and are clearly meeting a demand by picking some excellent films. So, I don’t mean to criticise their choices but there’s enough debate on Nitrateville and elsewhere on their quality and from people who know far more than me**. All I can say is that whilst I have been disappointed with past releases I did really enjoy watching this one!

 

Marguerite Gance

The reasons for this are a mix of the film itself, a decent transfer – from a clean 16mm copy and without the tints of the Kino DVD nor the French restoration of La chute de la maison Usher  – and the intriguing accompaniment from Belgian composer Laurent Pigeolet.  A composer known for his "extension" of Léos Janacek's works, most famously Sonata 1/X/1905, Pigeolet also composed the music for the restorations of The Magician, Warning Shadows and By the Law. It’s a very atmospheric and lyrically satisfying score that feels of the period as much as the visuals and as uncanny in the literal sense.

 

Poe wrote about the dangers of unfettered fascination and in Epstein’s film it closes in all around us; a fog to shroud our hidden passions from which, perhaps, for those who paint and for those who write, there may never be any escape in life or in death. Jean Epstein’s take on Edgar Allen Poe’s story reflects the writer’s style, his “totality” in which every aspect of the tale has a bearing on the narrative but it was, apparently, too much for co-scripter/assistant director Luis Buñuel who walked out over this divergence from the original story, especially, one assumes the ending but I’m keeping mush.

 

Jean Debucourt

Usher is an outstandingly creepy film - pathetic fallacy run wild with simply everything connected to mood and intention be it architecture, weather, landscape, clothing, candles or oils. It’s oppressive and there’s no respite from the get-go as the audience joins the un-named visitor - Charles Lamy – on his mission to help his friend Roderick Usher (Jean Debucourt). Summoned by a letter, which he studies using a magnifying glass almost as if the meaning was buried deep within the script, we are pulled directly into this close-up world of disorientation and distress.

 

The merest mention of his destination scares the customers at an isolated inn – probably a freehold - and only one man is willing to take him anywhere near this forbidding place. When he finally arrives, he sees Roderick, who leans out from the strange house almost as if he’s bound to it. His wife Madeleine (Marguerite Gance, married to Abel...) is almost a ghost, a feverish presence who is painted obsessively by her husband, his every brushstroke seeming to almost touch her as much as the canvas. Epstein frames Madeleine within shadow, cuts to Roderick’s hands as he moves them to his pallet and brushes and shows her fear as he paints her essence.

 

The house of the Ushers

As elsewhere in the director’s work – see the recent Eureka Blu-ray release of Finis Terrae (1929), slow motion is used to emphasise the strangeness of these moments and nothing at all looks or feels normal. The hall of the house is huge with monumental stone steps leading down to a grand fire lighting a vast stone floor: more of a cauldron than a living space. Unholy winds blow drapes suggesting uncanny movements filling the walls… there’s dread and only the visitor’s good humour to sustain us.

 

“… she seemed to give the painting, the strength that was ebbing from her body.”

 

Roderick must paint and his wife must pose, but it doesn’t appear to do either of them any good. In this version, “by some quirk of heredity, every male descendent of the Usher family devoted himself passionately to painting his wife’s portrait…” and Roderick is compelled to see this through to the end as, indeed, is his subject.  As his visitor studies, his host’s brush strokes seem to be transferring his wife’s life onto the canvas then, suddenly, there are shots of melting candles on the wane and Madelaine’s haunted desperate face falling into multiple exposures including one of which is negative… showing her literally void of natural light and life. Is this death by oil painting?

 


As in life so in death as the strangest of burials follows as they carry Madelaine to the family vault, through damp paths, across a lake and onto an island, her long white veil flowing out of the casket like her soul fading away into the night. Roderick refuses to accept that she’s dead and tries to get them to leave the coffin lid open… yet here’s a doctor strange with his glasses often whitened out by reflection, blind to his pleas. All the same, the story has someway to run as uncanny winds blow souls and silk alike through the headstone-chill of the house. Unquiet slumbers indeed...

 

The Redwood Creek Blu-ray is pretty hard to find now but copies occasionally turn up on eBay, it’s only real USP is the score and the fact it is physical media. The French restoration is a superior watch and it was restored in 1997 by the Royal Belgian Film Archive working with the Cinémathèque française, in collaboration with the Cineteca del Comune di Bologna, the Nederlands Filmmuseum, and the Archivo Nacional de la Imagen – Sodre (Montevideo).

 

A variety of sources were used including an original French 35mm nitrate positive held in the archives of the Cinémathèque française and a tinted black and white copy from the Nederlands Filmmuseum. A tinted black and white copy from the Fernando Pereda collection the Archivo Nacional de la Imagen – Sodre (Montevideo) was used as a guideline for the colours.

 

In 2013, the film was digitally restored by the French Film Archive and set to music by Gabriel Thibaudeau, whose score was performed by the Octuor de France.

 

The French restoration


In comparison the Redwood Creek Blu-ray uses a 16mm print source of unknown provenance they say it is “the first 4K restoration” but whilst it’s definitely the first 4k transfer of this particular source the amount of restoration is unknown. It matters not but, as I said, it looks fine and is perfectly watchable!

 

The French version comes in at some 64 minutes and 10 seconds whereas the Redwood Creek source is 65:43, possibly running a bit slower as I can’t find any difference in content.

 

At the end of the day, it is one of the finest French silents so, whatever way you can, it’s important to view!

The French restoration remains free-to-view on the Cinematheque website – which can be found here.

  

Jean Debucourt checks la qualité de l'impression...


*If I was that sort of person (I am, and I will…) I would compare the transfers of the “English” version of L’Inferno – running at 65 minutes and 44 seconds with the Cineteca version taken from the Italian source. Just to muddy the waters we have Terror Vision distributing a 2024 Blue-ray of their own, tinted, restoration of a 4k transfer of the English source which comes with the Redcreek 2022 “restoration” “modified by Terror Vision”, a black and white “alternative restoration”, Pigeolet’s score and others from Mike Kiker and HALEY as well as an excellent commentary from James L Neibaur.

 

That’s five versions I have now if you include the DVD version with the horrible Tangerine Dream score… I first saw the Tangs at the Liverpool Empire in 1977, they made some great music but this isn’t their finest!

 

**I’m sharing again this link from DVDFreak which, amongst other things, found that the “new tinted print” and “a new 4K scan…" “shared the exact same crop values, film damage and stability issues (on identical frames) as a previous version aired on German / French TV station Arte back in 2003...” suggesting much about quality and control and specifically how “new” anything actually was.


Redwood Creek on left, Cinémathèque française on the right.



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