Author: BO

  • Film Review – Stone Cold Fox

    Sophie Tabet makes her feature-length directorial debut with “Stone Cold Fox,” and she’s elected to make a crime movie with some action-y moments. Co-scripting with Julia Roth, Tabet goes where many filmmakers have gone before, looking to make a peppy, stylish overview of criminal activity in a small town, highlighting the efforts of a young woman trying to free herself from all kinds of danger. “Stone Cold Fox” isn’t a particularly original endeavor, but the helmer is committed to making a peppy picture filled with strange characters and periodic bursts of physical activity. The offering is entertaining for the most part, though Tabet is a little shaky when it comes to the overall tone of the feature, which mostly plays candied while actually dealing with dark events the production doesn’t really know what to do with. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Nuremberg

    The Nuremberg Trials have been explored in many forms of media, with film and television productions often working to extract the dramatic intensity of the legal event. Director Stanley Kramer explored the tension in 1961’s “Judgment At Nuremberg,” and a 2000 miniseries starring Alec Baldwin, Christopher Plummer, and Brian Cox aimed to add its own take on the courtroom showdown. And now writer/director James Vanderbilt (who previously helmed the ridiculous 2015 picture, “Truth”) hopes to add his interpretation to the list, adapting Jack El-Hai’s book, “The Nazi and the Psychiatrist,” for a big screen examination of unusual relationships and the confrontation of evil. “Nuremberg” doesn’t color outside the lines, remaining dedicated to traditional dramatic entanglements and stern performances, and Vanderbilt is driven to draw parallels to today’s world of simmering malevolence, creating an intermittently engrossing study of psychology involved in an ambitious legal challenge. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – Lord of Illusions

    It’s somewhat amazing that author Clive Barker, one of the most popular horror writers of his era, only directed three films. He gifted the world “Hellraiser,” able to turn a tiny budget into an iconic genre endeavor that developed a genuine Movie Maniac while launching a brand name that, amazingly, continues to this day. The 1987 offering was eventually followed by 1990’s “Nightbreed,” which has grown into a fascinating study of fantasy and horror, but also editing decisions, as various cuts of the effort help to strengthen the power of Barker’s vision. And there’s 1995’s “Lord of Illusions,” which attempted to deliver the helmer’s love of intensity to a mass audience. The feature was largely ignored when it was released, and it’s easy to understand why. Barker is ambitious with this tale of violent magic and noir-ish adventuring, but he’s not skilled in the art of storytelling this time, preferring to transform the bizarreness of the material (an adaptation of 1985 short story) into a leaden viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Scare Films Archives 2: Danger Stories

    There’s always entertainment value when watching educational films from a long time ago. These are clips from different eras of training and, quite often, promotion, and most of these offerings are created to capture viewer attention, using whatever means possible to do so. “The Scare Films Archives 2: Danger Stories” collects thirteen educational shorts for examination, highlighting a few of the weirdest and most shameless when it comes to instructing people on all the safety decisions they might encounter during an average day. There’s horror in the mistakes made around heavy machines in 1980’s “Shake Hands with Danger,” and performance oddity in “Mr. Flame.” The petroleum industry gives themselves a firm pat on the back in 1954’s “Farm Petroleum Safety,” and the surreal is encountered during a talking vehicle strike in “The Day the Bicycles Disappeared.” “The Scare Films Archives 2: Danger Stories” supplies a nice range of offerings, mixing up the absurd and the sincere, delivering an engaging tour of American (and British) health and professional training. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Friend

    Naomi Watts and a Great Dane figuring out their life together in the middle of New York City. It’s the stuff of comedy, but “The Friend” is primarily interested in the inner workings of people and animals trying to get through a difficult time together. It’s a companionship story from filmmaking partners Scott McGehee and David Siegel, who adapt a 2018 book by author Sigrid Nunez, challenged to preserve the novel’s intimate ways with animal care and mental health. “The Friend” isn’t too hard on the senses, maintaining a cozy mood of mild shenanigans involving a large pooch and the puzzle of its behavior. And there’s room for human concerns, as the main character experiences an unexpectedly therapeutic journey with a most unlikely partner. The helmers don’t push down too hard on viewers, and they respect the emotional odyssey of the source material, keeping the picture charming and sincere, also sustaining its appeal for dog lovers. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Wedding Banquet

    “The Wedding Banquet” was originally a film from 1993. While the picture was a minor art-house hit, it’s mostly known today as a breakout release for director Ang Lee, who used such success to help build an unusual and occasionally successful helming career. A remake arrives from co-writer/director Andrew Ahn, who achieved some notice for 2022’s streaming comedy, “Fire Island,” and continues his interest in comedic situations and deeply personal feelings. Ahn teams up with original co-writer James Schamus for the reworking, aiming for a more updating take on challenges to life and love. However, heart remains a top priority for the production, and while touches of melodrama aren’t entirely avoided, Ahn handles character concerns with grace, and he’s overseeing an excellent cast who skillfully work with the material’s blend of bigness and intimacy. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Bugonia

    The success of 2023’s “Poor Things” has certainly inspired director Yorgos Lanthimos to keep working. He quickly returned to theaters in 2024’s “Kinds of Kindness” (which died at the box office), and he’s right back on screens with “Bugonia,” also reinforcing his admiration for actress Emma Stone, who’s starred in all three pictures (also featured in 2018’s “The Favourite”). “Poor Things” was large in scope and imagination, but “Bugonia” remains closer to “Kinds of Kindness,” offering a puzzle-like viewing experience as it highlights mind games played by the main characters. It’s also a remake of sorts, using the 2003 South Korean film, “Save the Green Planet,” as inspiration, though the production tries to remain as Lanthimos-ian as possible, favoring a drier sense of oddity and intensity as a strange mission of heroism is tested by the boundaries of sanity. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – No Other Choice

    After completing a stint in television last year with “The Sympathizer,” director Park Chan-wook returns to the big screen with “No Other Choice,” returning the helmer to his interests in sinister business previously explored in efforts such as “Oldboy,” “Stoker,” and 2022’s “Decision to Leave.” He’s back with a tale of employment disasters and panic, adapting a 1997 novel by author Donald Westlake (which was previously handed a cinematic interpretation by director Costa-Gavras in 2005), which tracks the horrors of a family man who loses his job, left to stew in the humiliation before recognizing he can go to extreme lengths to secure his next position. It’s a timely understanding of hopelessness, handed a darkly comedic spin by the helmer, who tries to make a mess out of the main character’s panic, taking “No Other Choice” into various violent and absurd directions. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Violent Ends

    Writer/director John-Michael Powell aims to create a neo-western with “Violent Ends,” which details the fragmentation of an extended family who’ve dedicated their lives to the production and trafficking of drugs in Alabama. It’s a cold-blooded endeavor that’s committed to tough confrontations and familial issues, with Powell working in a revenge saga to go with a story that’s loaded with characters and motivations. Perhaps clarity when it comes to connections isn’t always there, but there’s a hardness to “Violent Ends” that’s captivating, helping to create a few surprises as the main character seeks to find the source of his pain, coming up against ruthless people who don’t want him around. It’s not a one-man-army offering of brutality, but something appealingly messier, as Powell maintains an iciness to the picture that carries it to the final scene. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Anniversary

    While production on “Anniversary” began in 2023, the feature has excellent timing, brought out for release during a tenuous time in America. The screenplay (by Lori Rosene-Gambino, making her debut) explores the unraveling of the U.S. after an authoritarian movement quickly takes command of the nation and its citizens, focusing on a family and how they deal with such a developing situation over the course of five years. There’s a lot going on in the picture, and director Jan Komasa (“Corpus Christi”) is ready to examine the meaty emotions in play as multiple characters gradually turn on one another. There are issues with the second half of the film, but “Anniversary” has provocative moments and invested performances, and Rosene-Gambino’s ideas on the downfall of America are eerily prescient, making for a periodically riveting sit. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Hallow Road

    Babak Anvari, the director of “Under the Shadow,” “Wounds,” and “I Came By,” goes minimalist for his latest, “Hallow Road,” which is scripted by William Gillies. The picture mostly takes place during a single panicked car ride, tracking growing concern from the parents of a young woman who’s involved in an accident on a long stretch of forest road. It’s a race to reach the scene, but Gillies has something more in mind for the endeavor, which develops into a study of marital ties, guardianship, and trauma as the miles tick by for the main characters. “Hallow Road” is not a major production, running just 74 minutes (before end credits), and it could very well work more interestingly on the stage. However, tension remains in the feature, as Anvari keeps his actors nicely agitated and Gillies provides an acceptable mystery to solve as the long drive develops new emotional challenges. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Wrecker

    Former stuntman Art Camacho returns after the general disaster of 2023’s “Ruthless,” trying his luck in the realm of action cinema once again with “The Wrecker.” There’s nothing original about the screenplay (credited to Sophia Louisa, James Dean Simington, and Niko Foster, who also stars in the picture), which once again tracks a mission of revenge from an ex-military man of action who’s called into duty to right a major wrong in Las Vegas. Camacho doesn’t have much of a budget to really go wild with the endeavor, and it’s hard to get excited about some of the technical choices made. However, while far from a compelling film, “The Wrecker” has its moments, which instantly makes it better than most of the B-movie competition, putting Foster in hero mode with some unusual weapons. But don’t expect too much from the feature. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Self-Help

    Erik and Carson Bloomquist love to make horror movies. The siblings have been very busy with genre work over the last three years, creating “She Came from the Woods” and “Founders Day,” and they jump right back into the fright business with “Self-Help,” which has certain moments of bloodiness and suspense. But perhaps not enough of the terrifying stuff. The new feature is an odd creation, as the Bloomquists look to examine the predatory ways of cult influence and family ties, attempting to blend the real-world struggles of trauma with some slasher cinema offerings. The endeavor has its appeal, collecting excitable performances and a handful of effective sequences. It’s just not all that intense, missing a more aggressive approach that might trigger a few genuine scares. “Self-Help” is oddly sedate for a Halloween-set chiller, but the Bloomquists have their moments. One just wishes there were more of them. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Satan Wants You

    Satanic Panic was all the rage in the 1980s, putting tabloid television and a multitude of grifters to the test as they worked to exploit the fears of suburbanites trying to make sense of their media-manipulated world. “Satan Wants You” is a documentary exploring ground zero of the phenomenon, highlighting the success of the 1980 book, “Michelle Remembers,” the literary weapon that inspired a whole decade of panic and exploitation. Directors Steve J. Adams and Sean Horlor want in on the rush of terror, out to craft an unsettling understanding of a calculated manipulation that snowballed into a national nightmare. “Satan Wants You” tries to be overly dramatic to support the mood of the subject matter, but it occasionally veers into ridiculousness, which doesn’t help the semi-interesting tale of deception that’s presented here. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Heavier Trip

    2018’s “Heavy Trip” was a big surprise. The Scandinavian comedy examined the panicked ways of a black metal band trying to fake it until they make it, hoping to share their “symphonic, post-apocalyptic, reindeer-grinding, Christ-abusing, extreme war pagan, Fennoscandian metal” sound with the world, only to find all kinds of goofy roadblocks to exposure. Co-writers/directors Juuso Laatio and Jukka Vidgren certainly know their stuff when it comes to the strange world of this music genre, and they understand the value of silliness, making one of the best pictures of its release year. Some time has passed, but the men of Impaled Rektum are back in “Heavier Trip,” and the helmers endeavor to sustain the same speed of humor and music in the sequel. It’s a mostly successful effort from Laatio and Vidgren, who set up another wild journey for the characters, landing sizable laughs and knowing references for the follow-up adventure. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Tapestry of Passion

    Reprising his most famous role, John Holmes returns to screens as Johnny Wadd, a private detective dedicated to helping his clients and he also enjoys sleeping with them. 1976’s “Tapestry of Passion” is a strange title for what becomes a movie about serial killing, occult practices, and sadomasochism, and there’s almost no passion in the picture. However, there are villains and women with money looking for help, putting the main character on the prowl for answers around San Francisco. Holmes isn’t exactly a charmer, but he remains the focal point for the endeavor, with co- writer/director Alan Colberg trying to assemble a somewhat dark take on adult cinema, adding elements of danger and threat that don’t exactly mix well with more heated encounters. Entertainment remains with the oddness of the story and a few confrontations, but “Tapestry of Passion” isn’t particularly successful with suspense and erotic intensity. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – All Night Long

    1976’s “All Night Long” is a tale about a competition. There are no feats of strength or speed, as endurance is the goal presented here, exploring an eventful evening for two men looking to achieve a special award for most pleasure shared in a matter of hours. It’s a simple concept from co- writer/director Alan Colberg, but it mostly connects in the feature, which intends to provide bits of silliness to go along with the usual in adult entertainment. Perhaps suspense isn’t really the point of “All Night Long,” but a certain level of energy is presented throughout the viewing experience, following the developments of a particularly hurried night of carnal delights and the rowdiness of the group assembled to watch them vie for a special title bestowed to only one man per year. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Stitch Head

    The children’s book “Stitch Head” was originally published in 2011, and became a hit for author Guy Bass. Naturally, the writer capitalized on a good thing, creating an entire series for the character and his world of monsters and mayhem, with six releases in all, generating an entire universe to explore for fans. Now there’s a movie, with writer/director Steve Hudson attempting to bring Bass’s collection of oddball characters and the needs of their hearts to the big screen. There’s a playbook to follow for this kind of animated offering, as Hudson turns to musical numbers and an extended finale to make sure family audiences are comforted by some sense of familiarity. More exciting is the picture’s sense of humor, sold through some wonderful performances and elastic animation. “Stitch Head” probably won’t carry on for five more sequels, but as an introduction to the character and his universal concerns about loneliness, the endeavor is very entertaining and periodically hilarious. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Regretting You

    There was a lot of trouble surrounding the 2024 release of “It Ends with Us,” and the legal journey still isn’t complete for the picture. However, the movie was a major hit, finding tremendous box office success as the first adaptation of a Colleen Hoover novel, and now the race is on to bring more of the author’s work to the big screen. “Regretting You” is the next out of the gate, reaching theaters about five months after it was shot, aiming to sustain interest from Hoover’s fanbase with another offering of troubled love and broken hearts. Director Josh Boone (“The Fault in Our Stars”) is challenged to make the usual in melodrama somewhat appealing, but it’s an uphill battle with this material, which serves up even more easily solvable communication problems in the guise of devastating personal woes, while Hoover’s fondness for broad conflicts is immediately grating, making for a long sit. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere

    Bio-pics about musicians are a common sight these days, with a few of these titles managing to break through and find success, backed by fan interest. Just last year there was “A Complete Unknown,” which strived to deliver an examination of Bob Dylan, who’s gone most of his life trying to avoid such attention. “Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere” also hopes to crack open a performer who’s not all that comfortable with confrontation, and writer/director Scott Cooper has a specific time and place to focus on in the picture, which examines the creation of Springsteen’s 1982 folk album, “Nebraska.” There’s a little personal history in play to help develop the subject’s psychological state, but the feature is no examination of a career. It’s primarily interested in depression, leaving Cooper (who’s adapting a book by Warren Zanes) to create an exploratory tone that makes such darkness worth investigating. “Deliver Me from Nowhere” isn’t all that successful when it comes to pace, turning deep feelings and bleak thoughts into sluggish cinema that’s ultimately not that illuminating. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com