With "The Fred Halsted Collection," Altered Innocence strives to bring the deep cult appeal of the filmmaker to a wider audience. It's a noble endeavor, distributing three shorts from the helmer, including "L.A. Plays Itself" (55:17), "Sextool" (61:06), and "The Sex Garage" (35:09), with each of the offerings highlighting Halstead's interest in experimental imagery and hardcore scenarios, working to bring a level of artfulness to underground cinema while preserving his fascination with titillation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
Author: BO
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Blu-ray Review – Old Henry
Writer/director Potsy Ponciroli has a specific western tale to share with "Old Henry" that's wrapped in layers of enigmatic behaviors and obscured personal history. The story concerns a farmer in a precarious situation with a trio of outsiders, and it lines up perfectly with classic cowboy tales of outlaws and lawmen, and seems tailor-made for an aging Clint Eastwood, as it plays to the icon's sense of stillness and ways with glaring. However, Eastwood wasn't recruited for the part, finding Tim Blake Nelson claiming the role of an aging father fighting the ways of his past. Nelson's already played his fair share of southern characters. In fact, that's pretty much all the Oklahoma native plays, but he's skilled at bringing these personalities to life, and "Old Henry" fits the star like a glove. Nelson is exceptional here, bringing pure grit to the production, helping to escalate a slow-burn endeavor from Ponciroli. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Pursuit (2022)
He was once a staple of cable programming and bottom-shelf video store offerings, and now Andrew Stevens is trying to make his mark on the VOD action market, producing “Pursuit,” which, like so many of these low-budget endeavors, features a crummy script, poorly shot action, and the appearance of a once A-list actor (in this case, John Cusack) who’s now doing money gigs to pass the time. “Pursuit” is ridiculous, but not in fun way, with the production trying to get mean with graphic violence and sadistic characters, hoping to attract attention to a darker revenge story, and one that sometimes requires a whiteboard to follow. Director Brian Skiba (“Beverly Hills Christmas,” “Defending Santa,” and “Merry Ex Mas”) trades seasonal spirit for nasty business in rural Arkansas, and while he tries to squeeze in some style and severity, he can’t fight a dull script and bad acting, which this picture is loaded with. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Texas Chainsaw Massacre
“Texas Chainsaw Massacre” is the ninth installment of a franchise that began in 1974, and the original filmmakers weren’t exactly thinking about a long-running movie series at the time. The grotesque appetites of primary monster Leatherface have basically remained the same over the decades, but he’s taken many forms, deviating from the original endeavor, which was largely about grimy, grisly frights, shot like a snuff film. After the general blandness of 2017’s “Leatherface” and the absolute stupidity of 2013’s “Texas Chainsaw 3D,” “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” makes some effort to connect to the original Tobe Hooper classic, returning to the character of Sally Hardesty for a little long-time-coming revenge, aping the recent smash hit, “Halloween.” Sadly, for “Chainsaw” heads, this bit of visceral motivation doesn’t bring much to the feature, which aims to be simple, short (74 minutes before end credits), and slaughter-y, but offers nothing new to the brand name besides a modern setting. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Dog (2022)
After spending the last decade developing his position as a producer of films such as “Magic Mike” and “Logan Lucky,” Channing Tatum is ready to make the leap to direction, and he picks a layup project to best secure a future behind the camera. Joining partner Reid Carolin, Channing also co-scripts “Dog,” which examine the combative relationship between an ex-Army Ranger and the wounded military canine he’s tasked with bringing to her deceased handler’s funeral. It’s hard to dislike anything involving the healing powers of animal partnership, but Carolin and Tatum don’t think things through with the feature, preferring to make a scattered tale of mutual misery that hopes to be heartwarming, only to offer unlikable characters making confusing choices. “Dog” eventually gets to the sweet stuff, but the journey there is a rough ride most of the time, dependent on Channing’s charms to connect the dots. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Inspector Ike
As pop culture deep cuts go in 2022, “Inspector Ike” certainly has the weirdest inspiration in recent memory. Co-writers Ikechukwu Ufomadu and Graham Mason (who also directs) head back to the 1970s, looking to parody the state of television mystery movies, inventing a faux world for a gifted NYC detective and his periodic run-ins with murder. The pair concoct a comedy, and one created on a shoestring budget, limiting the technical replication of the picture, but Ufomadu and Mason manage to score some hearty laughs with this extremely specific valentine to the “Columbo” world of small-screen cops and their expert ways with sleuthing. “Inspector Ike” isn’t built for bigness, remaining a modest offering of silliness, and it largely succeeds through engaged, playful performances and occasional ideas that deliver on the promise of such a strange spoof. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Cursed (2022)
There’s not a lot of ways to approach a werewolf story, with freshness lacking when it comes to the ways of transforming bodies and vicious appetites. Writer/director Sean Ellis (“Cashback,” “Anthropoid”) searches for a new take on a monster movie, and he finds it with “The Cursed,” which brings such terror to the late 1800s, offering a story about land seizure, denial, and grief. There’s also the occasional sequence of stalking between predator and prey, but Ellis doesn’t go overboard with his moments of violence. Instead, he elects to take the slow-burn route, playing tribute to Hammer Films and their deliberate ways of exploring an unfolding nightmare. “The Cursed” isn’t always riveting, but it comes together as an intelligent study of werewolf fantasy and threat, doing something different with a well-worn concept. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – King Knight
Writer/director Richard Bates, Jr. enjoys the creation of idiosyncrasy. He’s been creatively successful with the stuff in recent years, previously helming “Tone-Deaf” and “Trash Fire,” getting something going with dryly executed weirdness that occasionally lands some huge laughs. He’s back to business with “King Knight,” which explores the bursting insecurity of a witch whose entire history of personal success as an adolescent is exposed to his coven, leaving him in a position of exposure he can’t immediately process. Bates, Jr. brings a healthy sense of humor to the endeavor, which is small in scale but steady with silliness, making for an enjoyable sit. It’s not the most ambitious feature, but the production achieves some good-natured hilarity with its limited budget, remaining strangely kind and cheery with this tale of wizardry and shame. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Uncharted
“Uncharted” is an adaptation of a video game series established in 2007. The franchise has been wildly popular with players, often described as an updated version of the Indiana Jones saga, sharing an appetite for high adventure and globetrotting treasure hunting. And now it’s a movie, because that’s apparently what gamers want to see, removing control of the action and putting it into the hands of producers itching to provide a big screen ride that could never replicate the experience of being the characters on a mission to find a fortune. “Uncharted” the film fails to summon a significant sense of excitement, struggling with miscastings and an overall sluggishness that doesn’t inspire a sense of awe or suspense that typically comes with this style of entertainment. It began life as a video game and probably should’ve stayed one. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Dracula: Dead and Loving It
The early 1990s brought the work of writer/director Mel Brooks to a new audience, and the audience wasn't exactly thrilled to see Mel Brooks. There was 1991's "Life Stinks," which was entirely sold as a Mel Brooks experience, dying a quick death at the box office. And his return to parody cinema, 1993's "Robin Hood: Men in Tights," managed to collect cult appreciation over time, but not initial multiplex interest. 1995's "Dracula: Dead and Loving It" was intended to be Brooks's grand return to the pantsing of horror movies, connected to 1974's "Young Frankenstein," one of his highest grossing endeavors and most beloved creative efforts. It was an uphill battle for the helmer, who attempts to have fun with vampire fever conjured by Francis Ford Coppola's "Bram Stoker's Dracula" and the endurance of the 1931 Bela Lugosi chiller, adding his increasingly tired Brooks-isms along the way. "Dracula: Dead and Loving It" might've been more energized if it was produced in the 1970s, but over two decades after "Young Frankenstein," the whole thing just lays there on the screen, fighting for funny business that never arrives. The Brooks touch is gone from this one, though he certainly tries to revive long dormant genre magic. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Number One
Charlton Heston portraying an aging NFL quarterback is pretty fantastic casting, with the intense actor a perfect fit for a hotheaded character getting too old for the game. Heston is terrific in 1969's "Number One," which offers him an interesting dramatic challenge, tasked with bringing to life a fairly unpleasant human being going through a universal psychological experience, portraying a football hero facing the end of his career, his marriage, and possibly his male appeal. The screenplay (by David Moessinger) tries to work into the folds of such self-esteem issues, and director Tom Gries doesn't avoid a few painful behavioral realities involved in this position of doubt. "Number One" could use a tighter edit, but it offers some interesting ideas on denial and fear, with Heston trying to give the part some real grittiness while fighting a few melodramatic elements in the material. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Creature
Writer/director William Malone was ordered to create a knock-off of "Alien" with 1985's "Creature," and that's exactly what he delivers with the horror picture. However, he's not permitted a sizable budget, going the Roger Corman route of tight spaces and limited locations with the endeavor. Malone doesn't have the resources to generate something extraordinary, but he manages to manufacture a reasonably compelling monster movie with "Creature," which provides impressive set design and performances for such a small-scale production. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Trauma
Dario Argento delivered fantastic horror and mystery movies in the 1970s and '80s, but the 1990s were tough on the director. 1993's "Trauma" is arguably where his creative decline began, trying to get something disturbing going with a chiller concerning a black gloved killer using a garroting machine to help collect heads for a mysterious reason, co-writing a screenplay that's searching for ways to be an odd whodunit. There's a large number of ideas and different tones swirling around "Trauma," but Argento's instincts aren't sharp this time around, coming off unsure with what he wants to do with the endeavor, which has the capacity to be unspeakably brutal or uncomfortably romantic, but remains mostly muddled. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Steel and Lace
1991's "Steel and Lace" hopes to offer a more dramatic side to exploitation entertainment, mixing some serious emotion with the pure thrill of revenge cinema. It's an uneven blend of the real and unreal, but director Ernest Farino doesn't blink when it comes to the wilder aspects of the journey, making sure scenes of comeuppance register with full bloodshed. "Steel and Lace" deals with some intense situations concerning sexual assault and the failure of the justice system, offering just enough texture to help the production get past cheap thrills, elevating the material beyond simplistic acts of bodily harm. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – TC 2000
Billy Blanks is perhaps best known as the creator of Tae Bo, a workout program that became a staple of infomercial programming throughout the 1990s. Blanks made a fortune in the business, but he also wanted to be a movie star, offering his martial arts skills to writer/director T.J. Scott. The result was 1993's "TC 2000," which positioned Blanks as the big new thing on the action cinema scene, using his physical presence to keep up with Scott's refreshingly berserk pacing, which has some form of fighting or chasing happening every few minutes in the film. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Marry Me
“Marry Me” is being positioned as the big 2022 Valentine’s Day offering from Hollywood, presenting a digestible opposites-attract tale that’s filled with music and warm feelings, and an enormous number of plugs for NBC television programming. Sweetness isn’t really a priority for the picture, which is a loose adaptation of a webcomic, though such an odd inspiration doesn’t really factor into the making of the endeavor, which often resembles dozens of other romantic comedies all seeking to create some tingles for date night. “Marry Me” is certainly inoffensive, but there’s no noticeable drive from director Kat Coiro (“A Case of You”) to make something different with the material, happily guiding the feature through predictable scenes and programmed feelings. There’s very little spark to the movie, which spends most of the run time denying what actually works in the film, on a simple quest to deliver the same old stuff for holiday viewers trying to catch a little buzz off big screen love. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Kimi
Returning to his love of low-wattage thrillers, director Steven Soderbergh offers “Kimi,” which updates the ways of paranoia cinema for the COVID-19 age. Written by David Koepp (another fan of twisty chillers, previously helming “Stir of Echoes,” “Secret Window,” and “You Should Have Left”), the feature pieces together elements of “Rear Window” and “Blow Out,” creating a situation of panic for the lead character that requires more than just physical endurance to survive. There’s a heavy psychological element in play, as “Kimi” is perhaps more of a character study than a nail-biter, with Soderbergh enjoying another celebration of 1970s cinema, sticking with minimalist ideas and conflicts. The endeavor isn’t thunderous, but it’s efficient and gripping at times, working with mental health issues of today to inspire a classic sense of pressure on the protagonist. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Death on the Nile (2022)
In 2017, Kenneth Branagh decided to try his luck with the works of Agatha Christie, directing an adaptation of her most famous novel, “Murder on the Orient Express.” He also gifted himself the central role of private detective Hercule Poirot, fitted for an ornate mustache and a chewy part, unleashed on a somewhat underwhelming endeavor that was definitely boosted by his thespian emphasis. The picture found an audience, becoming a major hit for Branagh, who tries his luck again with “Death on the Nile,” which takes its inspiration from a 1937 Christie book. Much like “Murder on the Orient Express,” there’s a lot to like about the new Poirot adventure, but there’s just as much that doesn’t connect in the film, which is hurt by an uneven cast and iffy technical credits. But there’s always Branagh, who makes a meal out of the part, once again giving his all to the feature in a way that helps to occasionally lift it off the ground, making detective fiction thrilling. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Blacklight
Liam Neeson has been doing the same thing for many years now, cashing in as an unusual action hero for an older audience. He’s made serviceable bruisers in recent years (“The Marksman,” “The Ice Road”), and he reteams with his “Honest Thief” director, Mark Williams, for “Blacklight,” which is, of course, about a character with a particular set of skills who switches to protection mode when he’s threatened by bad guys. What’s slightly different about “Blacklight” is its push to be taken seriously as a story concerning the hazards of journalism, which is blended with the usual business involving Neeson’s character and his way with violence. The writing (by Williams and Nick May) is trying to comment on the ways of today’s world, delving into conspiracies and government betrayals, but the two sides of the endeavor fail to gel into one complete Neeson-y joyride, leaving the final cut tonally inconsistent and a tad silly. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – I Want You Back
In 2020, director Jason Orley made a positive impression with “Big Time Adolescence,” which examined the confusion that comes with being a teenager, facing social challenges and personal issues involving a bad influence. He returns to the ways of arrested development with “I Want You Back,” which brings the age of concern up to thirtysomething territory, but flaming insecurities remain. The screenplay is credited to Isaac Aptaker and Elizabeth Berger, and they try to update the “When Harry Met Sally” formula for a new, more cynical time of romantic woe, reworking character panic concerning the end of relationships with a broader comedic vision. “I Want You Back” doesn’t sustain its initial spark, but it’s incredibly funny at times, with stars Jenny Slate and Charlie Day offering tremendous chemistry and timing to help Orley find his way through the endeavor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com



















