Author: BO

  • Film Review – Don Peyote

    DON PEYOTE Dan Fogler

    As an actor, Dan Fogler has always been a troubling screen presence. Often stuffed into sidekick roles where his red-faced, mumbly sense of humor could be counted on to bring the laughs, Fogler often floundered in hapless pictures such as “Fanboys,” “Good Luck Chuck,” and “Take Me Home Tonight.” With “Don Peyote,” Fogler aims to enhance his shtick with a heavy dose of surrealism, co-creating (with Michael Canzoniero) this expedition into the folds of consciousness, with emphasis on splattered visions, a taste of madness, and musical numbers helping to bring this no-budget effort to life. To write that this is the most appealing Fogler has been on-screen to date doesn’t mean much, but as scattergun, super-freak-out cinema goes, “Don Peyote” is almost patiently weird enough to work. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Blood Glacier

    BLOOD GLACIER 2

    I appreciate how the Austrian horror film, “Blood Glacier” (now there’s an ominous title), has interest is using climate change revelations to jump-start a macabre monster movie. It’s not revelatory, but a nice change of pace, placing the blame for nightmarish developments on man’s misuse of Earth. However, not much is made of the premise, which loses intensity early and often, working to blend classic creature effects with low-budget CGI events, unable to drum up much excitement with either tradition. “Blood Glacier” doesn’t have a rich imagination, and while its locations are gorgeous, nearly saving the viewing experience, the mayhem contained within is lukewarm at best. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Belle

    BELLE 1

    “Belle” feels like sitting through the rehearsal process of a Broadway play that’s in serious need of work. A period drama from director Amma Asante, the feature is a handsome picture with a promising story in the plight of its lead character, who’s caught between her needs and her place during an unforgiving time. There’s plenty of ground to cover when it comes to English prejudices of the 19th century, but “Belle” would rather play to the back row with emphatic melodrama and neatly ordered subplots. When it comes to the business of slavery and bigotry, there’s little need for such formula, making the effort feel strangely safe and uneventful when detailing grandiose challenges to basic human rights. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Stranger by the Lake

    STRANGER BY THE LAKE Pierre Deladonchamps Christophe Paou

    "Stranger by the Lake" is mysterious, sensual, and disarmingly casual. The latest from writer/director Alain Guiraudie, the feature is a splendidly crafted effort that sneaks up on the viewer, lulling them into a state of comfort with the characters before gradually introducing elements of murder and suspicion. It works due to Guiraudie's moviemaking control and patience, while the cast submits exceptionally interior work, projecting emotional concerns while working through the subtleties of small talk. Although it's a repetitive film, it winds with purpose, slowly ratcheting up the tension in a confident manner that keeps the picture riveting, even when it seems to have no direction at all. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Jekyll and Hyde Portfolio / A Clockwork Blue

    The Jekyll and Hyde Portfolio A Clockwork Blue

    1971's "The Jekyll and Hyde Portfolio" is notable for being one of the rarest VHS releases during the format's reign during the 1980s and '90s. Why collectors would go crazy for such a weirdo piece of work is beyond me, but the game of exclusivity seldom makes sense. Something tells me the treasure hunters that went after the tape never actually sat down and watched it. A softcore oddity that merges chilly sexuality with extreme violence, "The Jekyll and Hyde Portfolio" appears to be inspired by the 1886 Robert Louis Stevenson novella, but most likely came into existence after a night of heavy drinking. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Jay and Silent Bob’s Super Groovy Cartoon Movie

    JAY AND SILENT BOB'S SUPER GROOVY CARTOON MOVIE

    Although he’s already celebrated the end of the View Askewniverse, and even threatened to retire from filmmaking altogether, Kevin Smith can’t seem to quit his most enduring creation. Last seen onscreen in 2006’s “Clerks II,” Jay and Silent Bob return to the realm of animation for “Jay and Silent Bob’s Super Groovy Cartoon Movie,” a low-budget affair that plays directly to the Smith fanbase with copious amounts of inside references, crude humor, and weed-scented shenanigans. It’s easy to dismiss the softball screenwriting, but there’s a definite speed to the picture that’s encouraging, sprinting through bits of awful humor in an irreverent manner befitting these stoner superheroes. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Moms’ Night Out

    MOM'S NIGHT OUT 2

    “Moms’ Night Out” is a tamer take on the “The Hangover” formula, electing to play out its mischief as peacefully as possible to preserve its PG rating and respect its Christian inspiration. There’s an acceptable message on the fallibility of motherhood in here somewhere that’s worth screentime to develop, but that purity of feeling is buried under multiple layers of lame jokes and dim supporting performances, while the anarchic spirit the premise hints at never snowballs into a charming, mischievous comedy. “Moms’ Night Out” plays like a failed television pilot, consistently heading in the wrong direction while searching for funny business. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Locke

    LOCKE 2

    “Locke” joins a special breed of movies that play out within a single location. Despite such an enticing filmmaking challenge, this is no thriller. Nobody’s been buried alive or pinned down in a phone booth, this is just the relatively simple tale of a man who’s devoted his entire being to a sense of order enduring the worst night of his life. Tension is conjured through tortured acts of recognition and passes at denial, while lead Tom Hardy delivers an exceptional performance that’s subtle and strong enough to hold viewer attention for 85 minutes, articulating an emotional breakdown with absolute precision. Although it might sound like unbearable directorial showmanship, “Locke” is a crisply defined drama that delivers on suspense and a swirling storm of heartache. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Neighbors

    NEIGHBORS Seth Rogen Zac Efron

    With his first two pictures, “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” and “The Five-Year Engagement,” director Nicholas Stoller proved himself skilled at navigating the “everything improv” mentality that’s absorbed all reaches of American comedy. He showed good judgment, balancing story and silliness with laudable timing, making sure the features held some type of emotional resonance even as they sprinted into stupidity. His latest, “Neighbors,” slips out of his control early and Stoller never quite recovers, forging ahead with a slapdash effort that continually blows its potential on a series of sketch comedy bits that have no connective tissue. “Neighbors” is a blunt instrument, which will be appealing to some, but when one steps back and considers the possibilities of the premise, the disappointment is crushing. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Legends of Oz: Dorothy’s Return

    LEGENDS OF OZ DOROTHY'S RETURN

    Between the release of “Oz The Great and Powerful” and the 75th anniversary reissue of the 1939 classic, “The Wizard of Oz” is officially back in business. “Legends of Oz: Dorothy’s Return” hopes to continue this financially lucrative run, only here the focus is on CG-animation, executed with a smaller budget than most big studio offerings, hoping to reawaken author Frank L. Baum’s world for box office dominance one more time. Filled with musical numbers and celebrity voices, “Dorothy’s Return” isn’t the expected embarrassment from untested independent film producers, but it’s not exactly magic in the making. More bizarre than charming, the feature has a pleasingly earnest quality about it, but no rousing creative ambition. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Double

    DOUBLE 1

    With 2010’s “Submarine,” writer/director Richard Ayoade proved himself to be a visually stimulating filmmaker with an addiction to idiosyncrasy, which nearly blocked out the dramatic power of the picture. “The Double” travels deeper into oddity, only here there’s a surreal story of identity to back up such cinematic detours. Inhaling the power of his favorite moviemakers, Ayoade submits a valentine to powerlessness with “The Double,” helming a mild comedy that’s eventually evolves into a technical exercise with the occasional blip of surprise. It’s a fantastic looking picture, but images are the only memorable element of this psychological puzzler, which works extremely hard to register as mischief. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Devil’s Knot

    DEVIL'S KNOT Colin Firth

    The saga of the West Memphis Three has been recounted in three documentaries by Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky, and another documentary by Amy J. Berg. That’s a lot of screentime devoted to a single crime, and while the tangle of evidence and suspects is considerable when detailing the arrest and prosecution of Damien Echols, Jessie Misskelley, and Jason Baldwin, most, if not all emotional and legal developments have been covered at this point. “Devil’s Knot” has the unfortunate task of dramatizing only a mere slice of the story, and its very existence is puzzling, arriving after so many other filmmakers have dissected the absurdities of the case. Although director Atom Egoyan has a commendable approach, “Devil’s Knot” is overwrought and, frankly, feels like old news. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – All Cheerleaders Die

    ALL CHEERLEADERS DIE

    Writer/directors Lucky McKee (“May”) and Chris Sivertson (“I Know Who Killed Me”) tried this once before. In 2001, the partners created “All Cheerleaders Die” during the infancy stage of their careers, using the little-seen horror picture as an example of filmmaking ability in the genre. 13 years later, the pair has elected to remake their debut effort, reawakening the feature with a fresh perspective and a larger budget, hoping to use early inspiration to fuel a new round of macabre highlights. “All Cheerleaders Die” is certainly ghoulish, with a pronounced nasty streak that keeps it on edge. It’s how this fury interacts with lighter material that poses a problem, with McKee and Sivertson perhaps too entranced with their own creation to fully appreciate how uneven it is. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Hallucination Strip

    HALLUCINATION STRIP Bud Cort

    "Hallucination Strip" (a.k.a. "Roma Drogata" and "The Hallucinating Trip") is an apt title for a movie that tends to wander around in a daze, never quite accomplishing anything as it serves up a feast of flesh and social commentary. The 1975 effort from director Lucio Marcaccini (unsurprisingly, his only feature) seeks to understand what the kids of Italy are up to as drugs and dissent flood the streets, but its appetite for concern is short-lived, with more concentration placed on sex and surreal adventures into psychedelics, limiting the world-changing impact the picture seems intent on achieving in its early going. "Hallucination Strip" is interesting in fits, but its ambition is more fascinating than its execution, with Marcaccini not exactly guiding the endeavor, he's just surviving it, hoping random jabs at profundity will cover the film's lack of absorption when it comes to the details of discontent and the weight of mistakes. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Super Skyscrapers

    SUPER SKYSCRAPERS

    As the cities of the world gradually run out of space, the only direction left is skyward. Massive buildings were once the darling of any self-respecting metropolitan area, and now they're being replaced with concrete goliaths, massive displays of architecture that seek to merge style with practicality, while one tower in particular appears to exist solely as a symbol of perseverance. "Super Skyscrapers" is a four-part documentary that highlights a handful of superstructures as they endure the trial of construction, with setbacks, weather concerns, and the challenge of assembly contributing to a long, arduous process. While the program isn't exactly a global look at the triumphs of the business, the essential elements of anxiety and professional passion are accounted for, making for a surprisingly tense viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Mr. Selfridge: Season 2

    MR SELFRIDGE Season 2 Katherine Kelly

    ITV's "Mr. Selfridge" was always a thinly disguised take on the hit show, "Downton Abbey," trying to replicate the formula of the rich and the working class existing uncomfortably in the same expansive environment. However, "Mr. Selfridge: Season 2" has shed its inspiration and simply gone after the same dramatic arcs as its competitor. Vaulting forward five years so the fine personnel and customers of London's top department store, Selfridge's, can deal with the commencement and ongoing misery of WWI, the series becomes mimicry of the worst kind. Already a program of iffy performances, plots, and emotional discoveries, "Season 2" somehow makes all new mistakes, growing ambitious with limited resources, while giving in to the some of the worst melodrama I've seen in quite some time. Not that "Downton Abbey" is the epitome of refined scripting, but the second go-around for Harry Selfridge and the commerce gang reeks of desperation, eschewing thoughtful, significant conflicts to become a turn-of-the-century "Days of Our Lives." Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Whitewash

    WHITEWASH Thomas Haden Church

    “Whitewash” is the strangest survival story you’ll see all year. A Canadian production, the film employs a criminal element of murder to lure viewers into an impossibly tight place with the lead character, watching desperation take hold in a forbidding, frozen landscape. And then, slowly but surely, the picture reveals bits and pieces about the crime and the men involved, moving away from mysterious intentions to play out as a game of endurance with a side of hypothermic madness. It’s a specialized viewing experience for more adventurous audiences, but “Whitewash” is accomplished, darkly humorous, and features a focused turn from actor Thomas Haden Church, showing rare commitment here. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Walk of Shame

    WALK OF SHAME Elizabeth Banks

    I’m not sure what Elizabeth Banks was hoping to gain by agreeing to star in “Walk of Shame,” but I’m certain she’s not going to feel much in the way of positivity once the public begins sampling the picture. Uselessly crude and insistently moronic, “Walk of Shame” features the type of story that could be completely washed away if the main character simply stopped to explain herself. However, that approach would negate the movie, leaving writer/director Steven Brill to groggily dream up nonsensical ways to keep this attempt at a screwball comedy on the go, subjecting Banks to lethal screenwriting and aggressive supporting performances. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com