
The second of the BFI's Ken Russell releases is another two disc collection bringing together four films from 1965-7.
The collection opens with Always on Sunday (1965) a dramatized examination of the painter Henri Rousseau. The combination of Russell reuniting with Melvyn Bragg and Oliver Reed and Russell's infectious love of the film's subject results in a film which is illuminating in every frame. Isadora: The Biggest Dancer in the World (1966), a study of the outrageous American dancer, Isadora Duncan, starring Vivian Pickles as the dancer whose obsession with the importance of art and complete disdain for decorum chimes perfectly with Russell's own sensibility. Last of the TV dramas is Dante's Inferno (1967) which tells of the complex relationship between the 19-century artist and poet, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and his model Elizabeth Siddal.
The films in this collection have been remastered to High Definition, and are presented on Blu-ray for the very first time.
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Both this and the companion set of movies made for TV were labours of love for Ken Russell. On a less lavish scale than his movies like The Music Lover and Mahler where he had much bigger budgets and lavish locations, these films are of a much more intimate flavour. Wonderful blu ray transfers and as a bonus you gets dvd for each work.







