VIDEO: MAITLAND MCDONAGH ON 'SISTERS'
ARROW'S DVD/BLU WILL HAVE NEW INTVS WITH JENNIFER SALT, PAUL HIRSCH, LOUISA ROSE, JEFFREY HAYESBloody Disgusting has an exclusive video of
Maitland McDonagh talking about
Brian De Palma's
Sisters, which will (maybe?) be part of the extras on
Arrow Video's upcoming Blu-Ray/DVD edition of the film. McDonagh wrote an essay about De Palma's
Dressed To Kill for Arrow's Blu-Ray edition of that film, released last year. There are a couple of curious discrepancies here, though: for one, while the video shows that
Sisters will be released April 14, the Arrow website shows the release date as April 28; the other odd thing is that the Bloody Disgusting headline calls the Maitland McDonagh video an "outtake," although the article by
MrDisgusting never uses that word once.
In any case, don't get excited-- there does not appear to be any promise that the upcoming release will include outtakes from the film itself. Whether or not the Maitland McDonagh interview is itself an outtake remains to be seen, as she is not listed in the list of extras included in the Bloody Disgusting article, but MrDisgusting does call the video "one of the extras." Here are the extras that are listed:
- Brand new High Definition digital transfer
- High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) and Standard Definition DVD presentation
- Original Mono audio (uncompressed PCM on the Blu-ray)
- What the Devil Hath Joined Together: Brian De Palma’s Sisters – A visual essay by author
Justin Humphreys (47 mins)
- All new interviews with co-writer
Louisa Rose, actress
Jennifer Salt, editor
Paul Hirsch and production manager
Jeffrey Hayes- The De Palma Digest – a film-by-film guide to the director’s career by critic
Mike Sutton- Archive audio interview with star
William Finley (excerpt)
- Gallery of
Sisters promotional material from around the world
- Theatrical trailer
- Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by
Graham Humphreys- Collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by author
Kier-La Janisse (
House of Psychotic Women), Brian De Palma’s original 1973
Village Voice essay on working with composer
Bernard Herrmann as well as a contemporary interview with De Palma on making
Sisters, and the 1966
Life magazine article that inspired the film, illustrated with original archive stills
Incidentally, in the video at Bloody Disgusting, McDonagh mentions William Castle's Homicidal, contrasting that film's lack of critical attention to the type of attention De Palma's Sisters received upon its release. De Palma listed Homicidal as one of his "Guilty Pleasures" in an article for Film Comment back in the 1980s.