Actor Dave Franco made his directorial debut with 2020’s “The Rental,” going against his comedic instincts to craft an effective chiller about the dangers of home rentals and relationships, emerging with a surprisingly unsettling feature. Franco returns with “Somebody I Used to Know,” which doesn’t add to his interests in creep-out entertainment, instead keeping things slightly silly with a comedy about a woman struggling to deal with a breakup and unfulfilled career dreams as she sabotages a wedding. Franco and co-writer Alison Brie try to bring as much edge as possible with this premise, working to keep the characters real as wackiness is soon paired with emotional gravity. “Somebody I Used to Know” has a way of neglecting the needs of tonal balance, but it’s a highly amusing endeavor with a cast that’s come to play. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
Author: BO
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Film Review – Sharper
12 years ago, screenwriters Brian Gatewood and Alessandro Tanaka created “The Sitter.” It was a crude, lame comedy, and their last feature work for quite some time, detouring to television with work on “Dice” and “Superstore.” Getting the funny business out of their systems, the pair return with much more serious work in “Sharper,” looking to expand their career with a solemn study of psychological gamesmanship, trying to rethink 1990’s “The Grifters” for a 2023 audience. Gatewood and Tanaka construct a tricky picture with troubled characters, and they have an ally in director Benjamin Caron, with the T.V. helmer working extremely hard to make sure the movie carries a defined cinematic sheen. “Sharper” is a puzzle, and one determined to remain a step ahead of viewers. If you’re sensitive to spoilers of any kind, it’s best to stop reading here, as this increasingly disappointing film is nothing but twists and turns. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Magic Mike’s Last Dance
Just over a decade ago, “Magic Mike” rolled into theaters offering a boisterous time to viewers interested in the moves of male strippers, with writer Reid Carolin hoping to support all the gyrating with personal problems facing the characters. The movie was modestly budgeted and a major hit, giving star Channing Tatum and director Steven Soderbergh a shot at creating a franchise. Audiences were a little less interested in 2015’s “Magic Mike XXL,” but Tatum has managed to make a business out of this world, creating a stage musical and a reality T.V. show, and now he’s ready to return to shirtless duty with “Magic Mike’s Last Dance.” Soderbergh and Tatum attempt to turn away from pranks and aimlessness with the second sequel, hunting for a “let’s put on a show!” vibe with this take on the formation of a theatrical production, hoping to merge some physical artistry with grind-happy sequences in what’s easily the best installment of the trilogy. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – She Came from the Woods
Co-writers Carson and Erik Bloomquist aren’t trying to reinvent the wheel with “She Came from the Woods,” presenting a horror film set at a summer camp, which is a location repeatedly used in the genre. What they want to do with the great outdoors is make a slightly cheeky chiller about an evil presence on the property, hoping to have some bloody fun with this mildly exaggerated take on terror entertainment. And it works, mostly, with the screenplay noticeably hustling when it comes to introducing characters and a spooky history to decode, and there’s enough physical activity to give the endeavor some more animated sequences. “She Came from the Woods” is capably handled by director Erik Bloomquist, who pays tribute to the history of nightmare cinema while also hoping to contribute to it, coming up with an engaging romp involving malevolent spirits and family strife. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Swallowed
15 years ago, Carter Smith directed “The Ruins.” It was a particularly nasty chiller, and in all the right ways, promising big things from the helmer and his love of genre entertainment. Smith’s career path didn’t take him to expected places, but he returns to horror events with “Swallowed,” a small-scale terror experience involving drug mules, mysterious bowel activity, and a strange imprisonment. Also handling screenplay duties, Smith keeps things manageable with the effort, which is basically contained to a few rooms and features only a handful of characters, looking to inspire suspense in more intimate ways. He gets halfway there in the picture, which starts out strong, promising ghoulish developments to come. Such extremity doesn’t arrive in “Swallowed,” but the build-up to agony is compelling enough to pass, with Smith skilled at launching a bizarre endeavor, but less confident when it comes to ending it. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Seriously Red
“Seriously Red” is a film with a useful message to share about the importance of self-esteem, but it’s sold via the world of celebrity impersonators, with all the strangeness of that lifestyle competing with the writing’s more heartfelt ideas. Director Gracie Otto has quite a creative challenge on her hands, trying to make sense of screenwriter/star Krew Boylan’s ideas on the sensitivity of the human heart and the pageantry of stage performance. “Seriously Red” has a lot going on, with Boylan attempting to generate an explosive sense of living and self-examination. She achieves a level of craziness connected to the tribute performer lifestyle, but the oddity of the endeavor often obscures its valuable understanding of a troubled mind, with the whole picture a bit too animated for its own good. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Disquiet
“Disquiet” plays like a video game. There are characters dealing with their handle on reality, set loose inside a contained setting, forced to process all sorts of violence coming their way. However, this is a film, the latest from writer/director Michael Winnick, who’s best known as the helmer of “Code of Honor,” a 2016 Steven Seagal picture. Winnick doesn’t have a large budget for “Disquiet,” attempting to generate a brain-bleeder with this tale of confused people trapped inside a hospital, tasked with sorting out their memories before they handle their escape. Throw in monstrous types and dangerous connections, and the production has the making for a mildly diverting B-movie. Winnick doesn’t get that far, doing much better with questions instead of answers, which gives the opening half of the feature some hustle, but even that starts to wane once the endeavor is forced to make sense of it all. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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4K UHD Review – The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2
In the 1980s, Director Tobe Hooper signed a three-picture deal with Cannon Films, who gave him money to make "Lifeforce," time to craft "Invaders from Mars," and a demand that he return to the source of his greatest creative success, delivering a sequel to his iconic 1973 shocker, "The Texas Chain Saw Massacre." It's not easy to make a follow-up to a movie known for its distinct take on berserk horror, but Hooper and screenwriter L.M. Kit Carson try to make deafening magic happen again with "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2," which returns to the wilds of Texas to explore more hellraising with Leatherface and his demented, cannibalistic family. Hooper and Carson aren't completely committed to replicating the previous feature, delivering a wild first half that that successfully reintroduces a terrible threat with a different approach, turning the whole thing into a John Waters production, only with more extreme violence (sold with triumphantly macabre artistry by Tom Savini and his team). "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2" is bonkers, with Hooper trying to combat repetition by going deeper into lunacy, attempting to blend black comedy with grisly encounters, and it works for little while, providing a freewheeling exaggeration of genre extremity, nicely performed by an impressively committed cast. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Satan’s Little Helper
Writer/director Jeff Lieberman made a name for himself with strange genre offerings, building a career with 1976's "Squirm" and 1978's "Blue Sunshine." He pushed through the 1980s working on projects such as "Just Before Dawn" and "Remote Control," eventually stepping away from helming opportunities to manage other professional obligations. "Satan's Little Helper" is Lieberman's return to duty, with the 2004 endeavor aiming to revisit his sense of humor with a darkly comedic tale of murder involving a serial killer and the little boy who worships him. "Satan's Little Helper" aims to be cheeky and merciless, which is a strange tonal combination for anyone to manage, requiring a special creative touch that Lieberman struggles to maintain, unable to generate an inviting flow of mischief to help viewers understand how he wants them to react. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Pandora’s Mirror
The demands of temptation are examined in 1981's "Pandora's Mirror," which pits star Veronica Hart against the lure of an enchanted mirror and all the desire it offers. It's adult cinema with some sense of class and storytelling ambition, presenting erotic vignettes from writer/director Shaun Costello (billed as "Warren Evans"), who attempts to create a sensorial experience with the endeavor while enjoying the time travel aspects of the tale. Of course, there's not a major budget to fully realize the premise, but Costello gets the effort up and moving quickly, replicating the romance novel experience with the feature, which is actually quite engaging between scenes of carnal activity. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Grand Jete
"Grand Jete" is a German production about the timeless love between a boy and his mother. Well, perhaps not timeless. And "love" here means "a sudden sexual relationship." Screenwriter Anna Melikova has the challenge of bringing Anke Stelling's book to the screen, making sense of incest and profound psychological problems, which aren't easy to watch. Director Isabelle Stever tries to find her own way to approach such a sensitive topic, electing to fully immerse the picture in a sensorial viewing experience, hoping to generate a special mood to best approach a troubling tale of obsession. "Grand Jete" doesn't go full Haneke, but it comes close, making the viewing experience both compellingly and irritatingly uncomfortable as Stever tries to put together a puzzle of mental illness, keeping away from dramatic structure for as long as possible. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Knock at the Cabin
With 2021’s “Old,” director M. Night Shyamalan went small, trying to keep making movies during lockdown days by containing the bulk of a story to a single location, and one away from the rest of humanity. The picture was profitable but was devoid of suspense, as Shyamalan stuck with his usual bag of tricks, turning a weird and twisty film into a predictably idiosyncratic one, bringing out the worst from the helmer. “Knock at the Cabin” continues Shyamalan’s small-scale screen adventuring, this time taking on an adaptation of Paul G. Tremblay’s novel, “The Cabin at the End of the World,” which offers a biblical showdown in the middle of the woods, forcing the production to come up with something more than Tremblay’s book to satisfy viewers expecting more bang for their buck, and confident control of screenwriting isn’t Shyamalan’s forte. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Arthur Malediction
In 2006, writer/director Luc Besson took a break from his usual interests in action and adult-minded fare to create one for the kids. “Arthur and the Invisibles” (titled “Arthur and the Minimoys” in Europe and beyond) didn’t make much of an impact during its initial theatrical release, but Besson was determined to do something with this brand name, which was originally a book and became a mild licensing sensation, with games, toys, and even a theme park ride tasked with expanding the fantasy feature, which was eventually joined by two sequels. If there was “Arthur”-mania, I’m sure most people missed it, but such devoted fandom makes up the plot of “Arthur Malediction,” which transforms the tale of tiny heroes and villains into a bloody slasher film that has very little to do with Besson’s original creation. This is a low-budget genre exercise from director Barthelemy Grossmann, while Besson assumes screenplay duties, looking to have some fun with the world of “Arthur and the Invisibles” without actually doing anything with the premise or characters. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Locksmith
Screenwriters John Glosser, Joe Russo, and Chris LaMont look to explore the ways of crime and family with “The Locksmith,” a noir-ish take on a quicksand-like dilemma facing a broken man dealing with a past filled with guilt. The writing isn’t razor sharp, but it does take care to examine various characters stuck in unwinnable situations, offering some level of attention to personality and developing distress. “The Locksmith” is a smaller film, without major dramatic firepower, but it delivers a proper sense of alarm with the lead character and his bad habits, and director Nicolas Harvard (making his helming debut) keeps things compelling, managing turns of plot and suspenseful confrontations. He also pulls a semi-interesting performance out of Ryan Phillippe, who does surprisingly well with his take on dented nobility. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Little Dixie
Frank Grillo typically plays tough guys, and he especially likes playing them for writer/director John Swab. “Little Dixie” is their latest collaboration, following the recent “Body Brokers” and “Ida Red,” with Grillo returning to duty as a man driven to collect his daughter from a Mexican cartel kidnapper, with the ransom an especially gruesome demand. “Little Dixie” is deeply violent material from Swab, who’s after a gritty revenge thriller with a more complicated sense of position for the characters, who aren’t simply black and white figures, but stuck in something more dangerous for all. Swab provides some blunt brutality in the endeavor, which takes the shape of a western at times, playing to Grillo’s strengths as a screen brutalizer, but the rest of the picture isn’t as convincing, with Swab handling iffy supporting performances and dramatic asides that tend to distract from the core conflict. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Amazing Maurice
“The Amazing Maurice” is an adaptation of a 2001 book by author Terry Pratchett, who took inspiration from the “Pied Piper of Hamelin” tale while creating an installment of his “Discworld” literary series. The material makes connections to stories and history, but the movie version of Pratchett’s apparently vast imagination is largely content to be a cartoon, with a somewhat “Shrek”-ian gravitational pull. “The Amazing Maurice” explores a world where a cat and his rat pals are con artists, soon coming up against a greater problem than a simple lack of funds, and screenwriter Terry Rossio (who co-scripted “Shrek,” along with “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” and Disney’s “Aladdin”) tends to emphasize the playfulness of it all, balancing British wit with Dreamworks-style cartoon antics. The production is out to entertain audiences young and old, and most of the endeavor is enjoyable, especially when it focuses on animal characters and their fight for survival. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Who Invited Charlie?
The ongoing study of the COVID-19 pandemic is given a slightly comedic spin in “Who Invited Charlie,” which returns viewers to the early days of panic and confusion, only the intent here is to provide viewers with some warm tingles. Dramatically, it’s an uphill climb for screenwriter Nicholas Schutt, who’s out to have some fun with memories of 2020, when the world went seriously wrong, but the story here isn’t one of sickness, at least not the physical kind. “Who Invited Charlie” aims for traditional emotional targets, examining the pressures of marriage and friendship, keeping things intimate while society is set ablaze. There are laughs to be had in the picture, which tries to keep everything approachable and understood, and there’s also a decent handle on the ways of relationships, with director Xavier Manrique attentive to performances and timing, helping Schutt reach most of his narrative goals. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Unmasking the Idol
If you were a filmgoer in the 1980s, perhaps you were thinking, "This James Bond movie needs more ninjas." Or maybe, "This ninja movie needs more James Bond." Well, 1986's "Unmasking the Idol" is going to be your best friend, as director Worth Skeeter attempts to merge the worlds of martial arts and superspy adventures, delivering all the excitement he can with a very limited budget, unknown actors, and sets left over from previous productions. Ambition runs pretty high here, as Skeeter strives to make a big impression with his action extravaganza, trying to deliver furious battles and elaborate escape plans while offering a tongue-in-cheek take on 007-style antics featuring a British secret agent. "Unmasking the Idol" isn't sturdily built, lacking a great deal of momentum in the second act, but it's a fun romp for the most part, as Skeeter really wants to entertain with this effort, doing what he can to delight viewers. And if you're thinking, "Does this James Bond movie about ninjas contain a supporting performance from a baboon wearing a gi?" The answer is yes. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Buried Alive
Juvenile delinquent cinema meets the horror rush of the 1980s in "Buried Alive," which takes its influence from the works of Edgar Allan Poe. There's a black cat, sounds emerging from mysterious places, and the spread of madness, but the feature isn't committed to the finer points of gothic terror. It's more of a slasher-like endeavor, exploring the developing nightmare of an all-girl school terrorized by a masked madman with a fetish for killing people slowly, getting off on the memory of their expiration. Director Gerard Kikoine hopes to add some gasoline to the viewing experience, investing in a hyperactive style for the picture, aiming to generate sensorial overload to best capture the feeling of a psychological break. Such hustle is appreciated, but the effort's storytelling skills leave much to be desired, with "Buried Alive" soon breaking down into seemingly random scenes of character interactions and horrible events. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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4K UHD Review – The Return of the Living Dead
1985 was a major year for the "Night of the Living Dead" brand name. In July, George Romero added another chapter to his undead saga with "Day of the Dead," which disappeared from U.S. theaters fairly quickly. Original co-writer John A. Russo also delivered a zombie experience for the summer season, taking a co-story credit on "The Return of the Living Dead," with writer/director Dan O'Bannon making his helming debut with the endeavor. Romero went somber with his vision for a zombie apocalypse, while O'Bannon goes wild, eventually, with "The Return of the Living Dead," electing for a more comedic version of a monster rampage, trying to separate himself from the competition with a punk rock soundtrack, unabashed exploitation, and a tone of hysteria that either delights or repulses, depending on the scene. O'Bannon isn't big on style, and his sense of pace leaves much to be desired, but he has a vision for physical horror and zombie threats, with the last half of the picture capturing a pure cinematic insanity that's rarely found in the genre. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com



















