• Film Review – All of You

    In 2020, William Bridges and Brett Goldstein created the television series “Soulmates,” which ran for a single season. It offered a look at a future world where true love could be determined by a test, giving patients an opportunity to achieve perfection in the messy game of human relationships. Apparently, the premise was just too good to simply throw away. Bridges and Goldstein return with “All of You,” which continues the “Soulmates” journey without being an official spin-off, adding a new chapter of trouble for two people who understand they’re meant to be together, only to have science disagree. “All of You” is a soap opera, and a slightly frustrating one at that, but the writers try to generate a tortured existence for the main characters, and this intensity has its moments while stars Goldstein and Imogen Poots do a satisfying job creating chemistry as two characters facing constant separation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – Murder Rock

    1983’s “Flashdance” came out of nowhere, hitting the scene with its style and soundtrack, which proved to be an irresistible package for ticket-buyers. The feature amplified growing interest in the MTV world of music-driven imagery, and such a mid-budget smash attracted a lot of imitators and rehashes. Director Lucio Fulci isn’t the first helmer that pops into mind when it comes to boppin’ cinema of the 1980s, but he attempts to compete with 1984’s “Murder Rock,” trying to stitch together a little flash-dancing of his own with the more familiar ways of an Italian giallo. Fulci actually gets fairly far with the big screen presence of the offering, cooking up as much dancing and dynamic lighting as possible. And there’s a good amount of chiller in the endeavor, exploring the destruction of bodies from a gloved killer. It’s not a particularly stimulating thriller, maintaining the usual in Fulci sluggishness, but it’s a colorful, soundtrack-driven effort that shows some thought with its dangerous ways. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Mansion of Madness

    1973’s “The Mansion of Madness” is an adaptation of the Edgar Allan Poe short story, “The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether.” Director Juan Lopez Moctezuma is tasked with taking a small amount of pages and turning it into a feature film, and the stretchmarks of this labor are visible throughout the viewing experience. Taking a surreal route to cinematic puzzling, Moctezuma goes the Jodorowsky way with the endeavor, which isn’t interested in the storytelling strengths of Poe’s work. The picture is more attracted to the theatricality of insanity, supplying an episodic journey into a special kind of Hell that’s not always interesting to watch, while some parts need to be endured. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Rats!

    “Rats” comes from the minds of co-writers/directors Carl Fry and Maxwell Nalevansky, who make their feature-length filmmaking debut with the endeavor. And the partners are trying to stuff as much as they can into the offering, out to make a wild, absurdist comedy that follows the everyday insanity of Fresno, TX. It’s a town home to petty crime, unhinged people, and the site of a possible sale of nuclear weapons to terrorists. Those weaned on Adult Swim programming are the target demographic for the effort, which almost exclusively rides along on shock humor and pronounced oddity, putting Fry and Nalevansky on a journey to make an extreme movie on a minimal budget. “Rats” is definitely crazy, and there are laughs to be had along the way, especially when the helmers try for inspired lunacy. But even the most die-hard fans of cinematic nuttiness might find themselves checking the time during the viewing experience, as Fry and Nalevansky can’t quite sustain their vision for this explosion of egos and bodily fluids. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – Blue Sunshine

    In 1976, writer/director Jeff Lieberman found himself with something of a hit with “Squirm,” his take on a “nature’s revenge” offering, involving the very slow violence of worms coming after people. In a smart career move, Lieberman tries something quite different in his follow-up, 1977’s “Blue Sunshine, which turns away from the horrors of the dirt to play into paranoia cinema of the decade. While still retaining some exploitation extremes and B-movie clunkiness, Lieberman does fairly well with his take on an LSD-fueled mystery, creating an engrossing detective tale that encounters a few enjoyably bizarre turns. There’s filmmaking growth, which is what really matters here, making this endeavor arguably the best picture of Lieberman’s career. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Afterburn

    “Afterburn” is the third film from director J.J. Perry, who tried to make his mark with adrenalized endeavors such as “Day Shift” and “The Killer’s Game,” offering mid-budget spectacle. The features weren’t finely crafted, and the case of “The Killer’s Game,” were almost completely ignored by audiences, but Perry remains employed, reteaming with star Dave Bautista for a post-apocalyptic adventure story that can’t exactly afford to really show off a devastated Earth. Instead, the effort offers small bites of action and conflict, putting Bautista to work with physical business as the screenplay (which is an adaptation of a comic book) tries to make an interesting plot and characters passably compelling. “Afterburn” has the foundation to launch a successful B-movie, but the picture rarely gets out of first gear, stuck with uninspired writing and performances. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Him (2025)

    To help sell “Him” to the masses, Universal Pictures has been plastering the name of Jordan Peele all over marketing materials. However, the “Get Out,” “Us,” and “Nope” filmmaker is only involved as a producer, not a writer or director, though one could be forgiven for thinking Peele played a major role in the making of the offering, as it closely resembles his vision for suspense and commentary. Co-writer/director Justin Tipping is the credited leader of the pack here, and he’s ambitious with the project, which means to explore the cult-like fame and fandom of professional football, following the torturous experience of a rookie trying to take advantage of interest one of the greatest athletes in the game is showing him. “Him” could be sharp critique of NFL excess and the meat grinder experience it offers most players, but Tipping would rather make a horror movie, and a particularly clumsy one at that, gradually losing control of the endeavor’s insanity to a point where it all just becomes white noise. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Megadoc

    Francis Ford Coppola isn’t afraid of having his moviemaking experiences documented. He welcomes the attention, becoming the focus of many fascinating studies of creative drive and its inevitable slide into madness. Perhaps most famously there was “Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse,” a 1991 release that explored the pained process of bringing 1979’s “Apocalypse Now” to life. Various video releases have included behind-the-scenes journeys as well (including an excellent one for “Bram Stoker’s Dracula”), helping to remove the mystery of Coppola’s process for those interested in filmmaking achievements. “Megadoc” is the latest offering of observance, but this time the subject is “Megalopolis,” which debuted in 2024 to great hype and low box office, representing the end of a long filmmaking odyssey for Coppola, who poured his life and fortune into the bewildering endeavor. Director Mike Figgis was invited to capture the craftsmanship and camaraderie, and “Megadoc” provides a fascinating look at the experience of “Megalopolis,” where excesses clashed with ego, putting Coppola in the middle of another production whirlwind where his vision didn’t always mesh with reality. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – A Big Bold Beautiful Journey

    Screenwriter Seth Reiss (“The Menu”) asks a lot of the audience with “A Big Bold Beautiful Journey.” It’s a study of fantasy, heartache, and love, using the ways of magical realism to provide an odyssey for viewers, with hopes to sweep them up in a strange adventure. Director Kogonada is also committed to the cause, striving to supply a sense of the bizarre and the painfully real, overseeing a mission of reawakening as two strangers experience a return to their heaviest days to help inspire a brighter tomorrow. “A Big Bold Beautiful Journey” intends to provide a warm viewing event highlighting two characters who learn to need each other over the course of the run time. Such sensitivity is difficult to buy in the picture, which is too twee to really sink into the system, and stars Colin Farrell and Margot Robbie aren’t a particularly well-matched pair, straining for chemistry in a feature that assumes it has a great deal more appeal than it actually provides. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Chain Reactions

    1974’s “The Texas Chain Saw Massacre” is a horror classic, and a feature that’s never been forgotten. The picture returns to pop culture power every year, most notably around the Halloween season, retaining generational fandom as the brand name is examined in sequels, remakes, video games, toys, and other media and products. It’s hard to recall any time when the movie wasn’t in film appreciation conversation, and now director Alexandre O. Philippe hopes to have his way with the movie in “Chain Reactions,” which is part documentary, part visual essay, putting the “Memory: The Origins of Alien” and “William Shatner: You Can Call Me Bill” helmer to work placing Tobe Hooper’s creation up for analysis with help from five interviewees who share the same reverence for the iconic offering. “Chain Reactions” isn’t out to understand behind-the-scenes accomplishments, more interested in the wonders of memory and the adventure of interpretation, looking at the world of Leatherface from personal places as each participant articulates their love for the endeavor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Waltzing with Brando

    “Waltzing with Brando” is “based on a true story,” which was documented in Bernard Judge’s 2011 book, “Waltzing with Brando: Planning a Paradise in Tahiti.” Judge (who passed away in 2021) led a colorful life, and experienced a relationship with the reclusive movie star, befriending Marlon Brando during a special time in his life, catching the actor as he worked to remove himself from Hollywood interests. Writer/director Bill Fishman (“Tapeheads,” 1994’s “Car 54, Where Are You?”) has a bizarre tale to share about an unlikely connection, and he has the natural wonders of Tahiti to use as a location, working to create a type of seduction meant to tempt the characters into submission, along with viewers. Such environmental splendor certainly has its appeal, and there’s Billy Zane, who does an impressive job inhabiting Brando, managing to elevate the feature with his graceful commitment. “Waltzing with Brando” has its issues with some casting choices and a general dramatic slackness, but pieces of this behavioral puzzle snap together easily enough, making for an acceptable viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Compulsion

    Writer/director Neil Marshall keeps making movies, but few of them have worked, especially in recent years. He’s committed to collaborations with his girlfriend, actress Charlotte Kirk, and the pair return to screens with “Compulsion,” which once again endeavors to celebrate Kirk’s thespian abilities and physical fitness. This time, Marshall trades the action-minded ways of “The Reckoning,” “The Lair,” and “Duchess” for an erotic thriller of some type, using his love of giallo entertainment to inspire another descent into masked killers, lusty characters, and poor police work. “Compulsion” hopes to generate heat and chills as the production piles on nudity and graphic violence, but there’s a limit to all the bad acting and screenwriting one can take, and that point is reached early in the effort. Marshall is trying to go all De Palma with the offering, but he’s mostly Wiseau in this clunky, exceedingly lifeless film. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Swiped

    “The Social Network” was released 15 years ago, but the picture’s influence remains. “Swiped” explores the rise and fall of another famous online experience, this time examining the days of Whitney Wolfe Herd and her experience as the co-founder of Tinder, which helped to revolutionize the dating experience by targeting a millennial audience with a gamified take on instant attraction through the power of swiping. Screenwriters Kim Caramele, Bill Parker, and Rachel Lee Goldenberg (who also directs) don’t have a particularly deep subject in Herd, but her tale (listed here as “inspired by actual events”) is loaded with ambition, treachery, and paranoia, which is a bit easier to bring to the screen than basic app development. “Swiped” is simplified and a bit cartoonish at times, but if one accepts the endeavor as an empowerment tale, there are elements of the production to appreciate, especially when it focuses on the toxicity of tech bro employment environments and Herd’s drive to make things better for female users, using her own experience with humiliation and hostility to inspire change. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Xeno

    The massive success of 1982’s “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial” certainly spawned plenty of copycats, putting producers to work dreaming up stories involving alien visitors and the young humans who love them. Traces of the Spielberg smash can still be found in cinema today, with “Xeno” clearly inspired by the classic film, providing a tale of discovery and bonding with a monstrous creature who’s drawn to the benevolent ways of a teen girl. However, there’s very little that’s cuddly in the feature, as writer/director Matthew Loren Oates aims to push his PG-13 rating with the material, which has its sweet moments, but also a violent side. A little extra intimidation factor helps “Xeno” achieve a different type of atmosphere, which is welcome, and there’s some wonderful technical surprises, as Oates dials down CGI achievements in the movie, turning to the Henson Company to create the eponymous visitor, giving the endeavor a sense of the real as it deals with fantasy conflicts. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Doin’ It

    Raunchy comedies aren’t in the best shape these days. Many of these offerings are either too muddied with loose improvisation games or locked in a quest to outdo the Farrelly Brothers when it comes to shock value. Being outrageous just isn’t very fun to watch in recent years, and “Doin’ It” is certainly trying to deliver crude laughs when exploring a story about a woman’s quest to teach sexuality to teenagers while also experimenting with her own virginal ways at the same time. It’s a decent premise from screenwriters Neel Patel, Lilly Singh, and Sara Zandieh (who also directs), creating moments of broad antics and more sensitive soul-searching. There’s a decent picture here when Zandieh dials down the grossouts, doing much better with human moments of absurdity than routine coarseness, giving star Singh some moments to shine with a lively performance. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Night of the Reaper

    Co-writer/director Brandon Christensen remains committed to horror entertainment. The helmer of “Superhost” and “The Puppetman” returns to fright features with “Night of the Reaper,” which hopes to be a little more complicated than the average slasher offering. There’s a lot to like about the picture, as Christensen is attentive to suspense and style, trying to play up threats on a limited budget as multiple characters get involved with dangerous developments in a small town. “Night of the Reaper” loses a lot of steam as it tries to form climatic relationships and events, hurting the overall viewing experience, but it opens with enthusiasm for genre events, giving it a nice push into danger, which the helmer manages to sustain for a good hour before explanations come to throttle any fear factor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Prisoner of War

    Screenwriter Marc Clebanoff and director Louis Mandylor are attempting to make a steely film in “Prisoner of War.” It’s a World War II tale, exploring the brutality of the Battle of Battan while also striving to appeal to action movie fans with fight choreography, which is less expensive than trying to replicate a global conflict. The picture stars Scott Adkins (who also claims a story credit), who’s become a dependable screen presence over the last decade, playing up his physical presence in features that often have him working with stunts, not always dramatics. One can sense Adkins is trying to do something a little more challenging with his part in “Prisoner of War,” and he’s certainly good here, portraying a caged man looking to make sense of his enemy. The endeavor initially captures attention with its B-movie ways and cast interplay, and there are highlights, but Mandylor moves slowly with the offering, believing he’s making something thoughtful, killing pace in a quest to elevate the effort. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Senior

    Writer Robert Eisele knows a thing or two about underdog cinema, previously credited on 2007’s “The Great Debaters” and 2009’s “Hurricane Season.” “The Senior” is his first screenplay in quite some time, and he’s not straying far from his wheelhouse, returning with the true story of Mike Flynt, who, at 59 years of age, elected to return to college and try out for his old football team, attempting to right many wrongs in the process. The fine details of the experience have been rubbed off, with Eisele and director Rod Lurie (last seen with 2019’s “The Outpost”) electing to keep the endeavor loaded with big feels and motivational content, offering a simplistic understanding of Flynt’s reunion with his favorite game. “The Senior” (which was shot three years ago) doesn’t overpower with dramatic might, but there’s star Michael Chiklis, who provides a committed, physical performance worth sticking with, especially when the writing veers into formula one too many times. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – London Calling

    In 2022, director Allan Ungar and actor Josh Duhamel collaborated on “Bandit,” making a decently paced crime story about a highly bizarre real life situation. Ungar and Duhamel reteam for “London Calling,” which is another underworld tale, this time examining the fictional exploits of an assassin tasked with bringing an 18-year-old kid with him during his latest assignment. High jinks ensue, but never inventive ones as Ungar (who co-scripts with Quinn Wolfe and Omer Levin Menekse) hopes to make a slapstick comedy out of the dark premise. Wackiness definitely has its expiration date in “London Calling,” which tries extremely hard to be silly and still remain violent, creating a tedious viewing experience as viewers are left with slack direction and editing, which transforms a simple idea into 110 minutes of criminal entanglements and strained humor. The highlights of “Bandit” are missing here, with Ungar clearly struggling to find a fun factor in the offering. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Just Breathe

    Stalker cinema is a difficult subgenre to pull off. There should be a balance of intensity and intimacy as both sides of the conflict comprehend a break from normalcy, generating a level of helplessness as matters deteriorate, especially for those being targeted by evil. “Just Breathe” is the directorial debut for Paul Pompa, and he doesn’t have a lot of money to sell an unfolding nightmare for the characters. He also handles the screenplay, which lacks an inventive attempt to create a sinister viewing experience capable of riling up viewers. “Just Breathe” feels more like a T.V. movie, and while it contains R-rated material, the endeavor doesn’t seem especially dangerous, following flat antagonisms and formulaic writing. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com