Author: BO

  • Blu-ray Review – Falling in Love

    1984’s “Falling in Love” is an attempt to soften two actors known for their incredible intensity. There’s Meryl Streep, coming off an Academy Award win for her emotionally devastating performance in “Sophie’s Choice,” chasing such power with the chilling atmosphere of “Silkwood,” bringing life to an uneasy subject matter. There’s Robert De Niro, whose furrowed brow approach to acting turned him into an icon, also collecting an Oscar for his memorable turn in “Raging Bull,” maintaining that edge for follow-up projects such as “The King of Comedy” and “Once Upon a Time in America.” These are not two performers known for projecting warmth, but they each hold a different interpretation of intimacy, giving director Ulu Grosbard (“Straight Time,” “True Confessions,” “Georgia”) something to work with in “Falling in Love,” which represents a career change for both performers, asked to go soft and emotional for this study of infidelity and need. Screenwriter Michael Cristofer (“The Witches of Eastwick,” “The Bonfire of the Vanities”) sets up a tender dance of internalized feelings for the personalities, skipping a lot of plot to remain close to the characters, allowing Streep and De Niro a chance to find their way across alien terrain, and this exploratory aspect of the picture helps to strengthen the viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – 38 Especial

    Director Miguel Angel Martinez is out to capture the red-hot action of the supercop genre in 1992’s “38 Especial.” It’s a low budget Mexican production that’s mostly interested in balancing sinister business with the rise of a serial killer and the brawny action of police on the hunt, occasionally taking lives and sleeping with those connected to the case. “38 Especial” certainly tries to be of some level of excitement, as Martinez endeavors to keep things active as violence breaks out and confrontations grow heated. It’s not polished or all that commanding, but as a mild distraction with a bit of DIY energy, the feature is passable, perhaps even a bit exciting for viewers absolutely devoted to small-time thrillers. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review -Daddy Dearest & Juice

    The career of director Arthur Bressan Jr. offers an unusual ride of dramatic intensity, going from documentaries (“Gay U.S.A.”) to narrative-driven features detailing troubling subject matters (“Abuse,” “Buddies”). Somewhere in the mix, there was time for more sexual adventures, including 1984’s “Daddy Dearest” and “Juice,” which explore an adult entertainment side to the helmer as he takes on two tales of fantasy, and, in many ways, the demands of daily employment. Bressan Jr. provides some intensity as the main characters deal with their wandering minds, but the pictures are primarily out to showcase bedroom encounters and lustful ways, putting on a display for viewers while Bressan Jr. works around the thinnest of plots to hold “Juice” and “Daddy Dearest” together. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – Presence

    “Presence” is a ghost story. However, it’s a ghost story from director Steven Soderbergh, who’s usually not interested in giving viewers exactly what they expect, endeavoring to mix things up with his indie-minded ways. His latest is no different, but Soderbergh isn’t in an esoteric mood with the feature, heading in a more observational direction in a story about a spirit studying a dysfunctional family’s life inside an old house they’ve recently moved into. Scary business isn’t the focus of the offering, as screenwriter David Koepp is primarily interested in broken relationships and domestic issues, gradually working on a developing mystery involving a roving phantom. “Presence” isn’t going to please horror junkies used to more pressurized haunted house tales, but those with patience and some appreciation for Soderbergh’s filmmaking ways are offered an engrossing puzzle of death and household distance. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Woman in Cabin 10

    “The Woman in Cabin 10” is an adaptation of a 2016 novel by Ruth Ware, who’s enjoyed a successful career as an architect of literary mysteries, often compared to the writings of Agatha Christie. She’s new to the realm of cinematic interpretations, with the book handed over to director Simon Stone, who contributed solid work in features such as “The Dig” and “The Daughter,” also sharing a screenplay credit with Joe Schrapnel and Anna Waterhouse. The team is ready to scramble viewer minds with this study of growing confusion and paranoia onboard a yacht filled with billionaires, following the sleuthing skills of a journalist who believes she’s witnessed a murder. The set-up is solid, the stuff of a classic whodunit, but “The Woman in Cabin 10” gradually falls apart as it goes, indulging in growing ridiculousness before it reaches pure absurdity in its final act. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Kiss of the Spider Woman (2025)

    “Kiss of the Spider Woman” began life as a 1976 novel by author Manuel Puig, who was interested in exploring the pains of reality involving political torment and the liberation of the mind as fantasy takes hold. It was turned into a 1985 film, directed by Hector Babenco, with the little feature snowballing into an art-house hit, even scoring four Academy Award nominations and an Oscar win for co-star William Hurt. In 1992, the material was reworked into a musical from John Kander and Fred Ebb, which went on to collect multiple Tony Awards, including Best Musical of the Year. That stage endeavor serves as the inspiration for a new “Kiss of the Spider Woman,” with writer/director Bill Condon (“Dreamgirls,” 2017’s “Beauty and the Beast”) attempting to bring the sharp divide between grime and glamour to the big screen, putting his faith in Jennifer Lopez to carry most of the effort’s song and dance. Technical credits are impressive, and the story finds moments of intimacy, but the production also battles a level of theatricality that doesn’t translate to riveting cinema, making the offering feel sluggish and flattened. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Tron: Ares

    Disney elected to return to their past with the 2010 release of “Tron: Legacy,” giving the 1982 cult classic an event movie makeover, looking to compete in the blockbuster marketplace with a high-tech take on computer program wars and family ties. The endeavor did good business, but not “Avatar” business, shutting down corporate interest in maintaining franchise momentum on the big screen. “Tron” continued in video games, an animated series, and even a Disney Parks roller coaster, and now time comes for the company to try again. “Tron: Ares” is the second sequel, and while it offers ties to the previous picture, screenwriter Jesse Wigutow is tasked with finding a new rhythm for the series, which updates tech and characters, and even purpose as war is raged in the real world and on the grid. “Ares” comes loaded with chase sequences and incredible visual effects, and while it doesn’t quite reach the wonderful scale of “Legacy,” director Joachim Ronning (“Kon-Tiki,” “The Young Woman and the Sea,” but also “Maleficent: Mistress of Evil” and “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales”) makes a proper thrill ride with the offering, which remains immense fun as it figures out a new way forward for the saga while playing with its past. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – John Candy: I Like Me

    John Candy passed away 31 years ago, and in a remarkable display of professional longevity, he’s never faded away. Candy has remained in the hearts and minds of comedy fans since he departed, with new generations introduced to his special charisma and screen presence, keeping his legacy alive. “John Candy: I Like Me” is a documentary about the actor and his unique personality, with director Colin Hanks (2015’s “All Things Must Pass”) launching an effort to collect information and memories about the star, looking to create a portrait of a complicated, somewhat gentle man who managed to make his dream of performance a reality, even achieving a level of fame few have experienced. “I Like Me” is meant to be an emotional event, and interviewees are tasked with providing warm memories of Candy, with Hanks attempting to identify the subject’s emotional complexity and career frustrations with a noticeably softer approach. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Deathstalker (2025)

    There was once a time when sword and sorcery movies had their moment in the sun. It was an era long ago, known as “the eighties,” when producers, hungry for easy profits and small budgets, tried to match the success of 1982’s “Conan the Barbarian” and rising commitment to role-playing games, offering their own take on weapon-wielding brawn and adventuring. 1983’s “Deathstalker” is one of the more famous titles of the trend, eventually conquering the home video market and spawning numerous sequels. And now it’s been brought back to life courtesy of writer/director Steven Kostanski (“Psycho Goreman,” “Frankie Freako”), who loves a monster mash, bringing his vision for practical effects and tomfoolery to “Deathstalker,” which offers a fantasy saga update that focuses on the fun factor of the subgenre. It’s a new take on an old story, with Kostanski using his remarkable imagination for gore and creature effects to successfully revive the brand name with this mostly lively display of action and evildoing. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Love of an Icon: The Legend of Crocodile Dundee

    40 years ago, “Crocodile Dundee” began production. It was a smaller Australian endeavor meant to celebrate (and test) the on-screen charms of star Paul Hogan, who was primarily known as a T.V. personality and tourism pitchman. Of course, the picture went on to achieve tremendous success, winning over global audiences on a scale that shocked the filmmakers, also turning Hogan into a beloved media figure. “Love of an Icon: The Legend of Crocodile Dundee” explores the creation of the 1986 release, but directors Victoria Baldock and Delvene Delaney aren’t entirely committed to tracking all aspects of the production. Instead, the documentary is more of a valentine to producer John Cornell (who passed away in 2021), with Delaney, his widow, out to celebrate his contributions to “Crocodile Dundee” and spotlight his longstanding friendship with Hogan, with the pair taking their little vision for an Australian comedy to the top, achieving the impossible together. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Maintenance Required

    Just a few weeks ago, she was battling a wild boar in the woods, also dodging menace from masked killers in “The Strangers: Chapter 2.” Now actress Madelaine Petsch is taking on a more frightening enemy: the dating scene. “Maintenance Required” is a romantic comedy from writers Roo Berry, Erin Falconer, and Lacey Uhlemeyer (who also directs), trying to give the target demographic a few tingles of flirtation and near-misses while also adhering closely to the subgenre’s formula to make sure everything lands as intended. Surprises are non-existent in the movie, which is strictly out to become something easily digestible for its streaming audience. However, some charm remains in the mix, with Petsch and her co-stars delivering a passable sense of enthusiasm for the material, which also delivers a few empowerment touches and odd comedy beats to help make routine palatable. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – After the Hunt

    Director Luca Guadagnino had a very interesting 2024. He released two features, scoring a pop culture hit with his tennis soap opera “Challengers,” while his pricey adaptation of William S. Burroughs’s “Queer” went largely unseen by the moviegoing public. Instead of taking some time off, Guadagnino is back in action less than a year later with “After the Hunt,” bringing Nora Garrett’s troubling tale of misconduct and accusations to the screen. The writer examines the slow burn horror of characters caught up in a mess of allegations, forced to deal with an explosive situation without disrupting the rest of their lives. It’s a potent idea for a gripping odyssey into drama, but Guadagnino doesn’t summon much tension for the endeavor. “After the Hunt” isn’t completely committed to discovering points of pressure, finding the director taking his time with intensity, and he gets a little sloppy with performances as the offering struggles to find some level of cinematic power. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Vicious

    “Vicious” is the latest endeavor from writer/director Bryan Bertino, who made his helming debut with 2008’s “The Strangers,” but hasn’t managed to come near that success with any of his subsequent efforts. He often favors small-scale horror, keeping budgets down and claustrophobia increasing with modest tales of terror, and he remains committed to the cause with “Vicious,” which tracks the developing nightmare of a woman on her own, managing the presence of a curse that demands everything from her. The picture really isn’t all that different from “The Strangers,” keeping Bertino busy dealing with mysterious motivations and household violence. The feature doesn’t jump off the screen, missing a more invasive sense of fear, and the helmer’s ideas for suspense aren’t imaginative, once again offering the audience a night with a hyperventilating character and her battle with shadows and an aggressive sound design. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – The Nesting

    An adult film director, Armand Weston was hunting for a mainstream effort to help change the course of his career. Inspired by the success of horror entertainment in the late-1970s, the helmer (joined by co-writer Daria Price) attempts to add to the genre gold rush with 1981’s “The Nesting” (titled “Phobia” on the disc), revisiting certain haunted house elements and peaks of madness from such films as “The Amityville Horror” and “The Shining.” Weston isn’t seasoned in the ways of suspense, and his inexperience shows in the endeavor, which drags along without much purpose for an entirely unearned run time of 110 minutes. Hopes for frights and mystery are drained out of the viewing experience quickly, as “The Nesting” simply refuses to engage on a suspenseful level, resembling more of a television movie with its punishing pace and limited dramatic rewards. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Neither the Sea Nor the Sand

    Gordon Honeycombe adapts his own novel, 1969’s “Neither the Sea Nor the Sand,” for the screen, trying to bring something of a horror story to life with material that feels intensely literary in design. Director Fred Burnley has the challenge of realizing the strange relationships found in the tale, which tracks the development of obsession between a woman and her lover who face a distinct challenge to their coupling. It’s not an easy film to describe and periodically difficult to sit through, offering an idea for some type of haunting and deeper psychological break in a mostly half-baked fashion, making for an uneven viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Tasty

    The radio game isn’t easy, with 1985’s “Tasty” a study of on-air personalities joining together to battle potential unemployment in their own special way. It’s an adult production from co-writer/director Bud Lee, while star Hyapatia Lee takes some control of the effort, enjoying co-scripting and possessory credits, making her the focal point of the endeavor. “Tasty” is a comedic look at professional desperation and mischief, offering a lighthearted view of happenings at a radio station, putting the Lees to work as they dream up carnal events and silly business, looking to create a fun ride for viewers while still delivering the basics in adult entertainment. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The End

    It’s the end of the world, and characters are going out with a little song and dance in “The End.” Documentarian Joshua Oppenheimer (“The Act of Killing,” “The Look of Silence”) tries his luck with a narrative-driven feature, examining the strange ways of a wealthy family living out their days inside an enormous bunker during a climate apocalypse, determined to carry on as normally as possible before someone enters their lives to change everything. Oppenheimer has elected to serve up such grimness as a musical, allowing these cautious personalities to express themselves through songs, trying to give the endeavor a sense of the unusual and poetic while confronting deep emotional wounds. “The End” carries on for nearly 150 minutes, which is the first of many indulgences from the helmer, but he’s attempting to do something unusual in the work, addressing real-world ills and familial tensions in unexpected ways, helping to digest a somewhat unwieldy film. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Smashing Machine

    Who is Mark Kerr? That’s the primary question in “The Smashing Machine,” with the end of the picture describing the former fighter as a “pioneer” in the world of mixed martial arts during its early growth period with global audiences. This information is arguably best served at the front of the film, but writer/director Benny Safdie isn’t too attentive to information about Kerr’s history in the feature, which isn’t a bio-pic, but a snapshot of a particularly turbulent time in the fighter’s life. “The Smashing Machine” is light on details, but it carries fantastic mood on occasion, getting into the highs and lows of Kerr’s experience, giving Dwayne Johnson a real acting opportunity as he’s tasked to play a flawed, humbled person going through quite a bit with himself and others. “The Smashing Machine” isn’t always dramatically steady, as Safdie nudges the material into soap opera territory at times, but it stays compelling and periodically raw, really selling its mission to make Kerr a household name. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Bone Lake

    Screenwriter Joshua Friedlander has something devious in mind with “Bone Lake,” and perhaps cineastes have seen this type of twisted game before. The picture isn’t really a horror experience until the final act, more closely resembling a riff on Michael Haneke’s “Funny Games” for the majority of the feature, exploring tensions rising between two couples stuck in the same rental house for the weekend. Director Mercedes Bryce Morgan (“Spoonful of Sugar”) creates a good deal of screen tension, working to reinforce various violations of trust and woozy temptations while the writing hopes to pull viewers in closer as things go all kinds of wrong for the characters. “Bone Lake” doesn’t have originality on its side, but there’s some moviemaking hustle to appreciate, as Morgan generates an atmosphere of uneasy interactions and growing paranoia. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Good Boy

    We lost legendary director David Lynch this year, but his filmmaking spirit is sure to carry on for quite some time. His love of the unreal and heavy moods inhabits a most unusual picture in “Good Boy,” a micro-budgeted offering of eeriness from co-writer/director Ben Leonberg, who casts his dog, Indy, in the main role of a loyal pet finding his sanity tested when his owner holes up inside a cabin, dealing with life and medical issues the animal doesn’t understand. Leonberg doesn’t have much of a story, turning to atmosphere to carry the short feature (running just over 70 minutes), attempting to taffy pull a simple idea into a surreal examination of canine companionship and protection, told from Indy’s POV. There’s an interesting viewing experience to be had with “Good Boy,” but those hunting for direct chills and thrills might feel a bit disappointed with Leonberg’s approach here, which is more artful than intense. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com