• Film Review – Spencer

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    “Spencer” is not a bio-pic of Diana, Princess of Wales. It’s a chamber piece about the haunted woman, offering more of a psychological profile than a tour of exact details concerning her personal history. The feature is directed by Pablo Larrain, who attempted a similar study of unimaginable stress brewing inside a delicate mind with 2016’s “Jackie,” seemingly drawn to these types of cinematic inspections. “Jackie” was a hypnotic, funereal viewing experience, while “Spencer” aims to be more abstract and artful, with Larrain intentionally getting away from expectations during his examination of Diana’s fragile state of panic. Larrain aims to get inside Diana’s head and remain there for two hours, which is good for some striking images of struggle, but the picture isn’t exactly satisfying, with its addiction to elusiveness throttling dramatic potential. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Finch

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    Tom Hanks has made his fair share of movies about isolated characters, which plays to his considerable strengths as an actor. This tradition returns in “Finch,” with the star portraying a brilliant mind trapped inside a dying body, looking to the company of A.I. to help carry on through an apocalyptic situation on Earth. Hanks is the reason to remain with the story, as his ability to portray nuanced emotions and register degrees of panic are what make him such a special talent. Thankfully, screenwriters Craig Luck and Ivor Powell have something in mind with “Finch,” which explores the nature of trust, parenthood, and responsibility while highlighting various acts of survival. It’s a softer picture than it initially appears, finding ways to be meaningful about the human experience while still meeting suspense needs with its dystopian setting, and all the dangers it contains. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – One Shot

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    “One Shot” is the latest picture to use the gimmick of a “one take” filmmaking approach, helping to make material that might otherwise be mundane emerge as something cinematically exciting. Director James Nunn (“The Marine 5” and “The Marine 6”) embarks on a technical journey with the production, organizing controlled chaos to best amplify the action interests of the screenplay, using his camera to dodge danger and weave around the characters for 90 minutes of exposition and deadly confrontations. “One Shot” employs technology to sell the magic of an unbroken take, and while the idea doesn’t make for stunning drama, it does manage to generate a few adrenaline rushes during the run time. Complexity isn’t the goal of the feature, which does just fine with pure aggression and a somewhat chilling study of obedience, and Nunn works to crank up the endeavor’s kill count with help from star Scott Adkins. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Beta Test

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    This time last year, writer/director Jim Cummings delivered “The Wolf of Snow Hollow,” with the idiosyncratic filmmaker striving to put his stamp on a genre picture, remaining in touch with the violent extremes of a horror movie while still overseeing a screenplay populated with unusual characters and odd situations. Cummings returns with “The Beta Test,” sharing helming and writing duties with co-star P.J. McCabe, this time trading the possibility of fictional creatures with the harsh reality of Hollywood predators, who are just as vicious and relentless. The material is a hodgepodge of ideas and targets, blending sexual obsession with relationship anxiety, and there’s plenty of material about the brutality of the agent system, which is soon joined by an assessment of digital footprints and their power to ruin lives. “The Beta Test” tries to be everything, keeping Cummings out in front with a twitchy lead performance. It ultimately takes on too much, but the production nails some aspects of employment and cohabitation, offering unsettling realism when it comes to the way people treat one another. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Dangerous

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    Making low-budget films isn’t easy, with challenges common to the job, forcing moviemakers to dream up solutions to make sure something ends up on the screen. In the case of “Dangerous,” money matters allegedly crippled the production, which started shooting in 2015 before running into difficulties, triggering a five-year break from work, resuming in 2020. This incredible delay is perhaps the most interesting aspect of “Dangerous,” which suffers from a nondescript title and an even blander plot. Screenwriter Christopher Borrelli hopes to generate a “Die Hard”-style actioner with a northwestern island setting, but he doesn’t have many ideas for mayhem, electing to keep the material in neutral as dull characters interact, occasionally shooting guns at one another. Director David Hackl is equally uninspired, playing a long game of padding to make a feature-length run time, showing limited vision for the level of extreme physicality this type of entertainment needs to distinguish itself. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Ida Red

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    Earlier this year, there was “Body Brokers,” a misguided attempt to expose the minor and major scams of the insurance industry as it deals with the revolving door approach of drug treatment facilities. Writer/director John Swab had a great idea for a stinging expose on unrepentant greed, but he decided to bury the good stuff under layers of crime movie mush. Swab is back with “Ida Red,” which does away with commentary on the ways of the world to charge ahead as a tale of bad dudes making poor life choices, with a vague summary of tangled family ties to give it all some deeper meaning. Swab likes the hard stuff, but it’s impossible to ignore just how derivative “Ida Red” is. There’s criminal activity and desperate times, but Swab can’t bring the film to life, with the finished picture playing like a work-in-progress cut. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Little Big League

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    Baseball movies were all the rage in the early 1990s, especially ones involving children and their love of the game. Joining "The Sandlot," "Rookie of the Year," and "Angels in the Outfield" is 1994's "Little Big League," which had the advantage of a slightly less fantastical premise, exploring the life of a 12-year-old boy who inherits control of the Minnesota Twins. Co-writer/director Andrew Scheinman (co-founder of Castle Rock Entertainment and producer of "When Harry Met Sally," "A Few Good Men," and "Misery") makes a valiant attempt to reduce the sitcom-ish aspects of the premise, focusing on the world of baseball and the trials of being an overworked kid. Not everything connects as it should in "Little Big League," which doesn't contain many laughs, but Scheinman finds the spirit of the picture, playing up a remarkable situation with some down-to-earth writing and an enjoyable supporting cast. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Two Worlds of Jennie Logan

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    1979's "The Two Worlds of Jennie Logan" is a television film that's hoping to appeal to a singular demographic, offering romantic conflict, domestic despair, and secret desires. It's also a time travel movie, with writer/director Frank De Felitta adapting a novel by David Williams, trying to do something sincere with the concept of a magical dress that offers a broken woman a chance at a happy life. It's all very silly, but De Felitta manages to make the premise work to a certain degree, replicating the romance novel experience for the screen, providing a satisfactory understanding of character and motivation while trying to whip the material into a sufficient network television lather. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – So Long Billie

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    "So Long Billie" (aka "Pompei") appears to pursue a hypnotic viewing experience. Writer/directors Anna Falgueres and John Shank don't have much time for storytelling with their endeavor, making room for lengthy shots of nature, open spaces, sexual connections, and naked actors. There's little in the way of drama in the feature, but a direct assessment of motivation doesn't seem to be the point of the movie, which chooses to exist as a cinematic mist of sorts, hoping to attract viewers interested in art-house hypnotism. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Big Bad Mama II

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    There was a sense of finality to 1974's "Big Bad Mama." And then the feature made some sizable money for producer Roger Corman, inspiring him to attempt a sequel 13 years later, with "Big Bad Mama II" bringing back star Angie Dickinson for another round of Depression-era mayhem. The divide in time between the movies is substantial, which is why Corman orders up more of a remake for "Big Bad Mama II," which tweaks the original plot to handle different dramatic interests for the do-over, though co-writer/director Jim Wynorski is smart to keep his cameras trained on Dickinson for most of the endeavor, who provides another spirited performance as Wilma returns to power, and definitely not as a ghost. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Big Bad Mama

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    Roger Corman had a thing for movies with "Mama" in the title, and in 1974 he released one of his biggest hits with "Big Bad Mama," not to be confused with "Bloody Mama" or "Crazy Mama." Returning to his love of the gangster genre, Corman offers director Steve Carver a small budget and the star power of Angie Dickinson to make magic happen, with the feature a chaotic offering of violence and combustible character relationships. Carver keeps the picture in a state of unrest for as long as possible, looking to wow viewers with chases and shootouts, but "Big Bad Mama" is really Dickinson's big show, and she delivers a wonderfully enthusiastic performance as the titular criminal. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Very Excellent Mr. Dundee

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    In 2018, a Super Bowl advertisement was created hinting a reboot of the 1986 smash hit, "Crocodile Dundee," was coming in some form, with Danny McBride taking command of the role. It was eventually revealed to be an elaborate ad for Australian tourism, but the weird result of the mini-movie was excitement for a new "Crocodile Dundee" feature. Few could've predicted that response, especially original Mick Dundee, Paul Hogan (who cameoed in the commercial). Instead of capitalizing on the success of the ad with a fresh adventure for the once beloved Aussie icon, Hogan decides to do something smaller, blander, and possibly unfinished. With "The Very Excellent Mr. Dundee," the actor plays himself living in a world of fading fame and sequel frenzy, participating in a comedy (scripted by Robert Mond and Dean Murphy, who also directs) that tries to be silly and self- referential, but mostly ends up uncomfortably odd. "The Very Excellent Mr. Dundee" plays like a tax shelter production, with Hogan offering the least amount of effort in a film that has no clear idea what it wants to be. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The French Dispatch

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    Writer/director Wes Anderson has been away from live-action moviemaking for quite some time, taking a break from his routine to mastermind 2018’s “Isle of Dogs,” an animated adventure. 2014’s “The Grand Budapest Hotel” was Anderson’s last traditional endeavor, and it was one of his best, combining his tremendous love for the European experience and silly business with incredibly game actors, launching a lively farce that also increased the idiosyncrasy of his filmmaking vision, miraculously doing so without smothering the picture. The same can’t be said of “The French Dispatch,” which has been a long time coming, and isn’t entirely worth the wait, finding Anderson consumed by his own meticulousness, attempting to plunge deeper into his helming eccentricities and still emerge with a clever study of art, politics, and people. It’s gloriously acted and gorgeously crafted, per usual, but it’s a movie without an entry point, playing strictly for one member of the audience: Wes Anderson. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Paranormal Activity: Next of Kin

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    There hasn’t been a “Paranormal Activity” movie since 2015, but before that, there were so many “Paranormal Activity” movies. The original feature was a massive word-of-mouth hit that came out of nowhere and delighted horror fans, offering a haunted house experience with no-budget filmmaking achievements. Shocked by the profitability of the effort, Paramount Pictures ordered up a franchise, squeezing the brand name for every cent it could collect. Sequels and prequels (five of them) were basically all the same, save for some ill-prepared backstories and character connections, and eventually the faithful gave up the ticket-buying habit, sending the series to the shelf. Well, after a break, the found footage nightmare is back with “Paranormal Activity: Next of Kin,” which seeks to revive the scare zone for a new wave of frights, this time making a move from jump scares to sinister cult business, merging an old trend with a new one as the production tries to A24-up the atmosphere of the endeavor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Antlers

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    As a director, Scott Cooper is drawn to dark material, last seen on screen with “Hostiles,” a powerfully bleak picture. He’s also interested in character-based storytelling, trying to maintain some level of emotional engagement with the audience as he deals with heavy violence, avoiding pure exploitation. With “Antlers,” Cooper has a more difficult job of approachability, slipping into genre interests with this tale of a small town and the monster that’s bringing death to the community. It’s not a movie that takes it easy on the audience, with Cooper constructing some powerfully macabre imagery and grim turns of fate. However, “Antlers” isn’t here for cheap thrills, it attempts to be deeper than that, which doesn’t always work for the film, though Cooper’s dedication to a cheerless atmosphere of suffering is impressive, finding a few ways to freshen up the creature feature routine. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Last Night in Soho

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    “Last Night in Soho” is director Edgar Wright’s latest attempt to merge the worlds of cinema and music, enjoying a breakthrough with 2017’s “Baby Driver,” and recently on screens with the documentary “The Sparks Brothers.” Wright has always enjoyed a full-on sensorial show, attracted to the marriage of pop sounds and action, but he aims to dial down the ferocity with his newest endeavor, which is more about freak-outs than adrenalized activity. Paying tribute to London of yesterday and Italian genre offerings, Wright creates a visually potent cocktail with “Last Night in Soho,” offering extreme attention to design details with the movie, which is primarily a showcase for technical achievements. Storytelling isn’t nearly as robust, with Wright and co-screenwriter Krysty Wilson-Cairns (“1917”) getting lost in their quest to generate an unsettling mystery that’s capable of keeping up with the extreme visual presence of Wright’s work. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Army of Thieves

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    Last May, director Zack Snyder unleashed “Army of the Dead,” which was presented as a single chapter in a larger story of zombie horrors and character connections. It was a huge film that examined the dangers of a new world order, doing so with Snyder’s signature style and love of an expanded run time. “Army of Thieves” is the first step forward for the “Army of the Dead” universe, or perhaps a step backwards is a more apt description, with actor/director Matthias Schweighofer going the prequel route to explore the formation of master safecracker, Ludwig Dieter. Without horror elements to manage, “Army of Thieves” emerges as more of a playful caper featuring an energetic cast and glossy European locations, providing an entertaining ride of heist activity and near-misses with law enforcement. Zombies aren’t the focus this time around, which works very well for this lively endeavor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Eternals

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    For obvious reasons, the last four months have been packed with films from the Marvel Cinematic Universe. However, with “Black Widow” and “Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings,” the MCU was in action and introduction mode, endeavoring to sustain the excitement of superheroes in various forms of conflict, sold with huge CGI-laden set pieces. “Eternals” is a different beast, looking to set a more contemplative mood with its cast of alien personalities and their different powers. There’s also an unusual choice in director, with Chloe Zhao following up her Academy Award-winning work on “Nomadland” with a Marvel extravaganza, and she fights such expectations throughout the excessive 150-minute-long run time. “Eternals” has a lot to process, but there’s not much screen energy this time around, with Zhao gently refusing a zippy pace and defined performances to create her own version of an MCU experience, which involves a lot of windy locations, sparse imagination for action, and a cast of characters who are seldom interesting. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Spine of Night

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    About a decade ago, I stumbled across a video titled “Mongrel & The Wrath of the Ape King,” which was created by Morgan Galen King. The director was paying tribute to the work of Ralph Bakshi with the short, creating a “Fire and Ice”-style fantasy adventure with the use of rotoscope animation, which offers fluid bodily movement and fascinating strangeness, helping to set the mood of the adventure. It was bloody and gorgeous, dripping with synth and loaded with R-rated content, recalling an era when such creative risks were actually attempted. King has now graduated to feature-length filmmaking with “The Spine of Night,” joined by co-helmer Philip Gelatt, extending ideas found in his earliest works to construct an epic tale of magic and horror with the same visual approach as before. “The Spine of Night” is deep dive genre entertainment, possibly for a very small audience, but it retains King’s love of barbaric storytelling, creating an unsteady but visually arresting picture. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com