Director George Gallo hasn’t been delivering decent work, with recent years devoted to ineffective thrillers and chillers (“The Poison Rose,” “Vanquish”), and he returns to genre duty with “The Ritual Killer,” which is credited to six screenwriters and 18 producers, gathering a full house when it comes to making creative decisions. The feature reflects such a populated production team, as various ideas and tones compete for screentime, only to face a painfully vanilla approach from Gallo, who doesn’t do anything to get the endeavor going. “The Ritual Killer” is cookie cutter filmmaking all around, providing a dull ride with dangerous and broken characters who all move so slowly and offer little emotion, they may as well be mannequins presented for limited posing. For a movie about a murderer, black magic, and traumatic pasts, nobody here is working up the energy to care much about it. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
Author: BO
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4K UHD Review – Used Cars
1980's "Used Cars" represents a "strike three" of sorts for co-writers Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis (who also directs). The pair were hot stuff in Hollywood for a short time, managing to befriend Steven Spielberg, using such partnership to make movies. However, nobody was particularly responsive to those movies, with Gale and Zemeckis's careers hit with the failure of their first endeavor, "I Wanna Hold Your Hand" (a sublime comedy), and they accepted part of the blame for the underperformance of Spielberg's "1941" (an underappreciated film), handling scripting duties. "Used Cars" was meant to build the boys back up (with assistance from Spielberg, here as an executive producer), handling a slapstick comedy about used car salesmen and their love of unscrupulous business practices, and while they provide a wild ride of one-upmanship and crazed antics, the feature's dismal box office performance kept Gale and Zemeckis out of work for years, finally claiming industry success together in a major way with 1985's "Back to the Future." The fourth at-bat changed everything. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Mind, Body & Soul
1992's "Mind, Body & Soul" isn't deeply considered work from writer/director Rick Sloane, though he's not a filmmaker all that interested in creating refined entertainment. He's a B-movie slinger, responsible for two "Hobgoblins" features and six installments of the "Vice Academy" series. It's during the production of "Vice Academy: Part 3" where Sloane hatched a plan to make a second picture during the shooting of the first, quickly hammering out a script for "Mind, Body & Soul," which definitely plays like a production that was pieced together in a hurry. A fuzzy take on Satanic cults and witness intimidation, the endeavor is perhaps unsurprisingly sloppy, providing more of a random journey of screen events, while performances are stuck with Sloane's undercooked screenwriting and static staging. It's a low-budget journey into the black heart of crime and sacrifice, but the helmer pays no attention to pace or genre impact. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – The Sporting Club
Even by "New Hollywood" standards, 1971's "The Sporting Club" is an incredibly bizarre feature. An adaptation of a Thomas McGuane novel, the material has been realized for the screen by Lorenzo Semple Jr., best known for his campy interests, helping to shape 1966's "Batman" and 1976's "King Kong." The writer's impishness is in full display with the picture, which examines the panic of WASP-y types dealing with counterculture hellraisers and the true influence of their found fathers, inspiring a war of violence and psychological breakdowns. "The Sporting Club" isn't an easy movie to appreciate, with choppy editing and limited storytelling restraining the dramatic potential of the endeavor. However, the overall vibe of madness is something to behold at times, giving the effort some surges of wild behavior and dark encounters, making the film more of a curiosity than a stunning summation of insane white people and their invented problems. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Moonage Daydream
"Moonage Daydream" is not a documentary about David Bowie. It's a love letter to the musician, with director Brett Morgen ("Crossfire Hurricane," "Cobain: Montage of Heck") working to create a celebration of artistic impulses and philosophy, occasionally breaking up interview audio with songs from the iconic musician. Morgen builds a ride through the cosmos, spending time with the subject at various points during his career, but it's also attentive to his love of creation and analysis. "Moonage Daydream" isn't an education, it's an experience, and one specifically built for Bowie fans longing for another trip around the sun with a man of mystery and music, pursuing his elusive nature for 135 minutes of screen time, and often in the trippiest manner imaginable. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre
Director Guy Ritchie has enjoyed a recent creative winning streak, pulling himself out of the punishing excesses of the “Aladdin” live-action remake and “King Arthur: Legend of the Sword,” focusing on tight capers and revenge stories starring collections of meaty, loquacious characters, found in “The Gentlemen” and “Wrath of Man.” “Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre” keeps the good times going for Ritchie, who co-scripts (with Ivan Atkinson and Marn Davies) an amusing superspy adventure that does well with his usual interests in casting and threat. Ritchie’s cinematic muse, Jason Statham, returns to power in the feature, positioning him as a man of action, joined by a team tasked with taking control of an enigmatic doomsday device. There’s a James Bond-ian influence over “Operation Fortune,” crushed up with Ritchie’s impishness and love of tough guys posturing. The helmer doesn’t provide the tightest storytelling with the effort, but offers an entertaining sit with this globetrotting adventure into danger. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Children of the Corn (2023)
I’m sure Stephen King had no idea that when he created a short story in 1977 about murderous kids in rural Nebraska, he would still be seeing movies inspired by it made to this day. “Children of the Corn” is back, but, in reality, it’s never really left, with producers determined to keep making adaptations, sequels, spin-offs, and whatevers for nearly four decades, with the last offering, the little-seen “Children of the Corn: Runaway,” released in 2018. There’s certainly big money in forgettable horror, and the brand name returns with “Children of the Corn,” which lands firmly in the whatevers category, with writer/director Kurt Wimmer (“Ultraviolet,” “Equilibrium”) conjuring his own take on King’s idea, and he has something worth developing involving poisoned land and abused kids. Unfortunately, Wimmer is lost with the feature, delivering an amateurish nightmare that becomes an unintentional comedy, adding another dud installment to the pile. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Unseen
Writers Salvatore Cardoni and Brian Rawlins bring some technological complications to the survival movie with “Unseen,” which follows the panic of a gas station employee asked to help a nearly blind woman manage an escape attempt from her abusive ex-boyfriend over the phone. Director Yoko Okumura crafts a somewhat frenetic viewing experience, which offers a few hits of comic book-style escalation while trying to take the central crisis seriously. It’s a tonal challenge the helmer mostly lands, doing especially well with leads Midori Francis and Jolene Purdy, who supply excellent performances as frightened strangers, helping to secure a full sense of anxiety and humanity while the screenplay works to complicate a bizarre partnership. “Unseen” is a wild ride at times, finding its way with a unique take on video call assistance, reaching a few heights of fear and friendship during the mad dash to safety. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – A Little White Lie
“A Little White Lie” is an adaptation of the 2013 novel, “Shriver,” with author Chris Belden tracking the unique education of a mild man who finds himself in an incredible situation of mistaken identity. It’s a comedy from writer/director Michael Maren (“A Short History of Decay”), who portions out bits of humor carefully, playing with tone and timing as the story explores collegiate atmosphere and introspection. “A Little White Lie” struggles with some editorial limitations and unavoidable production challenges, but it emerges with plenty of laughs and an enjoyable handle on awkwardness. It also benefits from a solid cast, with most happy to follow where Maren leads, enjoying the idiosyncrasies they’re handed to play on this strange ride of personality and social and intellectual pressures. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Donor Party
“The Donor Party” is listed as a comedy, but it’s difficult to find any actual laughs in it. Writer/director Thom Harp has a COVID-19-friendly production premise, putting a small collection of characters into a single home for various adventures involving drugs, sex, and strained relationships. The screenplay isn’t too concern with delivering witty banter and punchlines, with Harp putting his faith in the cast to feel their way around the movie through improvisation, which, if put into the wrong hands, can be torturous to sit through. “The Donor Party” isn’t vicious, with the cast trying to do something with the weak premise, but their efforts aren’t enough to give this feature any noticeable entertainment value, with Harp basically filming rehearsals with this limp endeavor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Transfusion
“Transfusion” features one of the finest performances from Sam Worthington, who hasn’t exactly delivered riveting work over the course of his career. However, writer/director Matt Nable seems to understand how to work with Worthington’s practiced reserved, leaning into the insular ways of the actor, bringing out the best in him with this tale of an ex-military man fighting to deal with all the loss and destruction of his life. “Transfusion” has some difficulty deciding what kind of movie it wants to be, but there’s power here, especially in the first half, with Nable getting into the gut-rot pain of guilt and the frustration of communication, showcasing a particular escalation of danger for a character fighting to process all that’s happened to him. Nable handles the dark stuff very well, only slipping when trying to turn the tale into something more conventional, which isn’t as compelling as the human moments. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Blueback
The delicate ways of the ocean are explored in “Blueback,” which is an adaptation of a novel by Tim Winton. It’s a softer examination of parental influence and adolescent awakening, with director Robert Connolly (“The Dry”) trying to take it easy on the senses while also dealing with a story that examines the gradual destruction of Earth. While it observes sadness in many forms, the feature isn’t downbeat, with the production striving to keep matters as human as possible, detailing the power of conviction and the fragility of life and memories. Performances support the journey, with the ensemble delivering deeply felt turns as time and perspective change, and cinematographers Andrew Commis and Rick Rifici have a critical role in the production, selling the beauty of the open water and beachside life in Australia, doing an incredible job highlighting the majesty of the depths and the serenity of the skies. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Park
“The Park” is immediately striking due to its location, with the production gaining access to a real abandoned amusement park, permitted to create a post-apocalyptic atmosphere with help from authentic disrepair. The setting gives the endeavor something extra in the visual department, setting a forbidding mood for this tale, which is a slight riff on “Lord of the Flies,” only with more aggressive kids and a bleaker worldview. Writer/director Shal Ngo has the foundation for something quite interesting concerning the workings of a Kid Nation, highlighting humanity in the face of savagery, but there’s not much more to the effort, which passes on an epic understanding of survival to maintain a poetic examination of children communicating and expressing themselves during their darkest days. Ngo certainly has an idea with potential, but it gradually becomes clear that “The Park” would be better off as a short story. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Spoonful of Sugar
Director Mercedes Bryce Morgan is primarily known for her work in music videos and short films, with “Spoonful of Sugar” her feature-length helming debut, tasked with putting together a psychological scramble of domestic issues and drug experimentation. Her limited experience with the demands of drama is noticeable in the picture, challenged to make sense of a screenplay by Leah Saint Marie, which visits the outer rings of reality via the unreal rules of LSD. Marie digs up something of a remake of “The Hand that Rocks the Cradle” with “Spoonful of Sugar,” only here there’s very little participatory room for the audience, who are basically asked to watch Morgan assemble glossy images while Marie arranges a vague sense of concern for the characters. It doesn’t add up to much in the end, often registering as nothing more than bits of ugliness in search of a story. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Cutter’s Way
1981's "Cutter's Way" is an adaptation of a novel by Newton Thornburg, which uses the lure of mystery and murder to offer a highly detailed character study and commentary on the eroding American Way. It's a post-Vietnam War study of broken men lost to cynicism and disappointment, handed to director Ivan Passer ("Born to Win") and screenwriter Jeffrey Alan Fiskin ("Revenge"), who examine behaviors and relationships, with the story almost secondary to the endeavor. "Cutter's Way" has crunchy personalities and fine performances, but it's a little unsteady when it comes to finding its way around the tale, which begins with a defined place of unrest and gradually loses focus on much of anything. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Don’t Open Till Christmas
1984 was a big year for films featuring horrific acts of violence involving people dressed as Santa Claus. America had "Silent Night, Deadly Night" in November, and the United Kingdom unleashed "Don't Open Till Christmas" in December, contributing to an unusually hostile visit to the multiplex. Holiday horror is always strange, but "Don't Open Till Christmas" is downright bizarre, presenting a serial killer story that's been stitched together from two different production periods, endeavoring to transform an early version of the movie (directed by actor Edmund Purdom) into a coherent version of the movie (directed by Alan Birkinshaw). The quest to make something special out of "Don't Open Till Christmas" isn't fully achieved, but slasher fans might find plenty to enjoy with this semi-random merging of a detective story and murderous plans. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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4K UHD Review – The Werewolf vs. The Vampire Woman
Paul Naschy had a dream, questing to share his love of genre entertainment with the world, making it his duty to help create pictures highlighting the struggles of monsters and madmen. For 1971's "The Werewolf vs. The Vampire Woman," Naschy (who stars and co-scripts with Hans Munkel) returns to play Waldemar Daninsky, offering his fifth take on the character and his struggles with lycanthropy, newly positioned in an old monastery that also houses the remains of an ancient vampiric witch who's ready to conquer the world. Naschy loves to put on a creepy show, and "The Werewolf vs. The Vampire Woman" is suitably atmospheric and happy to showcase some graphic encounters. Like most Naschy productions, there's not a rip-roaring level of suspense, but his dedication to reviving the Universal Horror and Hammer Films experience is interesting to watch, showing impressive commitment to slow-burn terror and exploitation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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4K UHD Review – Rollerball
1975's "Rollerball" presents a future where corporations control the world, using their power to keep the public subservient through the use of propaganda and violent entertainment, often going to extremes to maintain authority. The feature is set in the year 2018, and it's really not far off from the real 2018, with screenwriter William Harrison (adapting his own short story) managing quite an impressive feat of prescient thinking, providing a vision of horror that's been somewhat realized in the decades since the picture's initial release. That's part of the appeal of "Rollerball," which digs into the terror of conformity and the liberation of awareness, tracking the lead character's awakening as a life of fame and fortune provided by corporate overlords is gradually revealed to be a prison, and one he's looking to escape. Harrison has a vivid imagination to offer, and director Norman Jewison provides passionate leadership with this Kubrick-ian take on a strange dystopia, generating an intriguing sense of intimidation and frustration as he carefully realizes a mental breakthrough. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Creed III
2015’s “Creed” was created as a way to extend the life of the “Rocky” franchise while finding a new direction for the series with a younger lead character, refreshing box office potential. To help secure interest from the faithful, the original Italian Stallion, Sylvester Stallone, was coaxed back into action as Rocky, giving one of his best performances, boosting the emotional core of a fantastic story concerning boxing and family. Stallone returned for 2018’s “Creed II,” which looked to revisit the events of “Rocky IV,” keeping things familiar while star Michael B. Jordan continued to find his place in the ongoing saga. For “Creed III,” Stallone is out, basically erased from the “Creed” universe for the second sequel, with Jordan determined to be the main attraction for the production, making his directorial debut with the endeavor. He’s created an enjoyable semi-revenge story with a defined Creed POV, aiming to redirect mentor energy into a new direction, going the “Rocky III” route with an effort that’s strictly out to entertain, hoping to do so without the special charisma Stallone brought to the features. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – We Have a Ghost
Writer/director Christopher Landon has built a career on making genre entertainment that’s not afraid to get silly and violent, playing to young audiences with basically the same blend of tones for a decade now, repeating moves in “Happy Death Day” (and its sequel), “Freaky,” and “Scouts Guide to the Apocalypse.” “We Have a Ghost” is essentially more of the same, this time highlighting the plight of a mute ghost and his viral fame, with Landon working to bring Geoff Manaugh’s short story to the screen. Some sizable inflating of the tale has occurred, with “We Have a Ghost” clocking in at two hours in length, and there’s no reason for it, with Landon offering an unsteady helming job that hopes to create a spirited romp in the same vein as “Beetlejuice” and “Ghostbusters,” but also wants to touch on YA elements of parental frustration and teen attraction. It’s not a mess, just bloated, unfunny, and prone to fits of frenzied action, with Landon attempting to make a feel-good endeavor about a kindly spirit that’s also a murder mystery and a domestic drama. What he really needs is an editor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com



















