``Warner Bros. Pictures Tough Guys Collection'' All New to DVD July 18 From Warner Home Video: ``Bullets or Ballots,'' ``Each Dawn I Die,'' ``'G' Men,'' ``San Quentin,'' ``City for Conquest,'' ``A Slight Case of Murder''.BURBANK, Calif. -- Warner Home Video Warner Home Video is the home video unit of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group, a division of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc. It was founded in 1978 as WCI Home Video (for Warner Communications, Inc.). It was re-named Warner Home Video in 1980. : --Edward G. Robinson, Humphrey Bogart, James Cagney, George Raft and Others in Crime Classics Punched Up with Extras Including "Warner Night At The Movies" Vintage Featurettes, Expert Commentaries, Classic Cartoons and Trailer Galleries Warner Home Video follows up its recent "Gangster Collection" success with the "Warner Bros BROS Brothers BROS Benefits and Retirement Operations Section (King County, Washington) BROS Barnes and Richmond Operatic Society (London, UK) . Pictures Tough Guys Collection" -- six new crime genre classics that make their DVD DVD: see digital versatile disc. DVD in full digital video disc or digital versatile disc Type of optical disc. The DVD represents the second generation of compact-disc (CD) technology. debuts on July 18. All new to DVD, the six-disc set will include "Bullets or Ballots," "Each Dawn I Die," "'G' Men," "San Quentin," "A Slight Case of Murder" and "City for Conquest" with the original prologue intact for the first time since the film was released. The collection will be available for $59.92 SRP SRP - A data link layer protocol. . Each title is also available separately for $19.97 SRP. All six titles have been fully restored and digitally remastered with special features including historian commentaries and new making-of featurettes. Each disc also contains an exclusive "Warner Night at the Movies" segment which recreates moviegoer mov·ie·go·er n. One who goes to see movies. mov ie·go ing adj. attractions such as newsreels, comedy shorts, cartoons and trailers from the years each film was released. Major Hollywood studios in the '30s and '40s were each known for their distinctive styles (MGM MGM in full Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc. U.S. corporation and film studio. It was formed when the film distributor Marcus Loew, who bought Metro Pictures in 1920, merged it with the Goldwyn production company in 1924 and with Louis B. Mayer Pictures in 1925. for its musicals; Universal for its horror films, etc.). Warner Bros. was best known for firmly establishing the genre of gangster films, which were also noted for their socially conscious themes as well as their simple visual look (low key lighting and sparse sets). |
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