• Film Review – Red Sonja (2025)

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    After the success of 1982’s “Conan the Barbarian,” plans were quickly put into motion to deliver a sequel and help expand the cinematic potential of writer Robert F. Howard’s literary creations with a spin-off. 1985’s “Ren Sonja” was intended to keep the world of Conan going, but it didn’t find an audience, who were offered a visually striking but largely inert fantasy adventure, while Brigitte Nielsen’s performance as the main character left much to be desired. Talk of returning to Red Sonja has been going on for decades, but now there’s another big screen pass at the character and her violent spirit, with actress Matilda Lutz (“Reptile,” “Magpie”) hired to bring the flame-haired warrior to life for director M.J. Bassett (“Rogue,” “Endangered Species”) and screenwriter Tasha Huo. The new “Red Sonja” has a plan for Hyborian Age action and adventure, but not a lot of resources to pull off the adaptation, which often struggles with low-budget visuals and a few critical miscastings. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – The Keep

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    Michael Mann pulled himself out of a career in television, transitioning to features in the early 1980s. His first release was 1981's "Thief," helping to define his major cinematic style, but the effort did minor business. Undaunted by the career setback, Mann goes incredibly ambitious in his follow-up, 1983's "The Keep," which trades the intimacy of crime for a period horror offering loaded with characters and motivations, also slipping into a special effects show. There's an extensive production history behind the endeavor, as Paramount eventually took the film out of Mann's hands, whittling the effort down from its original 210-minute-long intent to just 96 minutes, effectively destroying whatever vision was initially in place. The storytelling damage is obvious, and manages to hurt the viewing experience. However, while a mess, "The Keep" remains intensely atmospheric, always prepared to supply striking imagery and synth support from a score by Tangerine Dream. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Crack House

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    The unrelenting brutality of Los Angeles is explored in 1989's "Crack House," finding director Michael Fischa ("Death Spa," "My Mom's a Werewolf') on a quest to sell the horrors of gang life and drug addiction in the gritty feature. However, exploitation interests are prioritized in the Cannon Films endeavor, keeping the helmer on a short leash when it comes to addressing the real sins of the big city. "Crack House" isn't out to change the world, which is something of a shame as any message-minded intent dissipates after the first act. The rest of the offering is devoted to sleaziness and arcs of personal corruption, inspiring Fischa to capture the end of innocence for a few of the characters, while others are faced with the bleakness of life itself, trying to endure its casual cruelty. And, if there's time, the production is ready to train camera focus on as many bare breasts as possible. It's all about priorities, people. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Carpenter

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    Slasher cinema heads to the home improvement aisle in 1988's "The Carpenter," as writer Doug Taylor ("In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale," "Splice") looks to turn a tale of household renovations into a bloodbath. The material has a little more than simple violence, inspecting a psychological meltdown and all the trouble it provides for the main character, who retreats to a weird place of comfort to deal with her issues. For a low-budget offering, "The Carpenter" is competently assembled by director David Wellington, who puts care into shots and at least a few of the performances. The picture is missing a killer instinct, refusing to go wilder with a premise that invites screen craziness, but it scores in small amounts, aiming to be a little stranger than the average genre endeavor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Female Perversions

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    Relationships and torment drive 1996's "Female Perversions," which is an adaptation of a book by Louise J. Kaplan. The female mind is dissected in the picture, putting screenwriters Julie Hebert and Susan Streitfeld to work investigating the depths of feelings and fears that swarm the characters as they deal with different stages of panic. The helmer looks to make an artful film, and one that taps into intimacy of thought while trying to sell a story about sisters coming to terms with their past. "Female Perversions" is insightful and undoubtedly relatable for many viewers, and while Streitfeld battles to maintain a tale worth investing in, she delivers an uncompromising feature filled with provocative ideas and visuals, aiming for an offering that inspects the Female Experience in a complex manner. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Weapons

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    After experiencing a creative wipeout with the 2009 comedy, “Miss March,” director Zach Cregger took some time to reinvent himself. He returned to theaters in 2022, delivering the modestly budgeted chiller, “Barbarian,” embarking on a new career path to disturb viewers instead of tickle them. The film performed well at the box office, but, more importantly, it suddenly turned Cregger into a talent to watch, keeping the movie business interested in his next offering. “Weapons” is the follow-up, and while “Barbarian” was a deeply flawed endeavor, Cregger shows noticeable improvement in his command of tone for the picture. It begins as a terrifying tale of loss involving missing children and the guardians dealing with such an event, but the helmer isn’t strictly focused on examining trauma. “Weapons” gets a tad weirder than that, keeping up Cregger’s impishness and love of surprises in a feature that manages to maintain some dramatic balance for most of the run time. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Freakier Friday

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    22 years is a long time to wait for a sequel, especially for a film like “Freaky Friday.” The original/remake/literary adaptation provided big screen appeal for the summer of 2003, delivering a spirited take on body switching mayhem while boosted by engaged performances from stars Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan. It was fun stuff, and probably could’ve handled an immediate follow-up, but an extended wait was encountered instead. “Freakier Friday” arrives to basically deal with the same situation of confusion and cover-up, returning Curtis and Lohan to their roles as overwhelmed characters handling a baffling hit of magic. Screenwriter Jordan Weiss isn’t coloring outside the lines with the feature, but she does a commendable job summoning chaos for “Freakier Friday,” generating a mostly light and zippy adventure that’s just as charming as the 2003 offering, even with some obvious pacing issues. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Boys Go to Jupiter

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    Julian Glander gets a little weird for his feature-length directorial debut, “Boys Go to Jupiter.” It’s an animated offering of absurdity and screen detail, delivering a Wes Anderson-y spin on the experiences of a 16-year-old kid trying to take on an adult world of financial responsibilities and relationships. Glander plays with dryness and video game-like visuals, but he’s fully committed to the oddity of his screenplay, which demands viewers go with its flow as it visits areas of adolescence, weird science, and late-stage capitalism while it also explores teen dilemmas of life and love. “Boys Go to Jupiter” is a creative effort from Glander, and it possesses enough humor and visual idiosyncrasy to hold attention as the tale dances with unreality and musical interests while visiting the secret lives of Floridians. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Strange Harvest

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    “Strange Harvest” is a movie that’s been made to resemble a television show. Writer/director Stuart Ortiz makes an unusual creative choice with the picture, which is meant to resemble an episode of true crime T.V., aiming to transform a study of a serial killer into something slick and formulaic, hoping to entice viewers used to such journeys into darkness that streaming companies tend to favor, bringing real-world horror to an audience that loves the stuff. Despite the appearance of realism, “Strange Harvest” is a fictional study of menace concerning the brutality of a murderer known as Mr. Shiny and his reign of terror across a California town. Ortiz creates a mostly credible study of such evil, using interviews and crime scene media to generate an authentic atmosphere of dread for the endeavor. As a technical exercise, the feature delivers on its invented reality, making for an interesting examination of storytelling. Dramatically, the offering is a bit lacking, as there’s a reason why this kind of programming typically runs under an hour in length. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

     

  • Film Review – My Mother’s Wedding

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    Kristin Scott Thomas has created an impressive career as an actress, working with some of the finest filmmakers around, taking in experiences with such talent as Anthony Minghella, Sydney Pollack, Joe Wright, and Robert Altman. “My Mother’s Wedding” is Thomas’s directorial debut, finally taking command of her own production, and she goes a semi-autobiographical route with co-writer (and husband) John Micklethwait, digging into her own past, which involved the presence of two fathers in her life. This experience fuels the screenplay, following three estranged siblings trying to make sense of terrible loss in their lives and their mother’s hope for love again, confronted by change and reflection during a celebratory weekend. “My Mother’s Wedding” is a smaller picture with milder dramatic goals, but Thomas holds it together with help from a talented cast and sincere emotion, exploring how these characters handle their feelings and their maturity when reconnecting with their past. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Ebony and Ivory

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    “The Greasy Strangler” was released in 2016, introducing film nerds to the curious anti-comedy vision of writer/director Jim Hosking. The picture was a wild ride of ideas and textures, and while it didn’t always hold together, the movie offered inspired goofiness at times, delivering an edgy understanding of a peculiar sense of humor. Hosking graduated to a slightly bigger moviemaking challenge in 2018’s “An Evening with Beverly Luff Linn,” offered some name actors and a decent budget to continue his exploration of oddity, coming up with another interesting study of lunacy. The effort was largely ignored by viewers, sending Hosking back to the world of small-scale storytelling for “Ebony and Ivory,” which actually doesn’t contain a plot. It’s more of an experience, following two characters as they deal with each other in a remote location. Hosking continues his hunt for slow-burn strangeness with the offering, but his creative drive is noticeably lacking this time around, showing more concentration on repetition in a feature that’s not easy to endure, even during its most inspired moments. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Pickup

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    “The Pickup” is an Eddie Murphy action comedy where co-star Pete Davidson is assigned all the funny lines. Something definitely went wrong during the development of the project, resulting in a decidedly underwhelming viewing experience where the actor capable of extracting laughs from the material is hired to play the straight man, and the director is Tim Story, who specializes in generic entertainment (“Ride Along,” 2019’s “Shaft,” 2004’s “Taxi”). The helmer adds another dud to his resume with “The Pickup,” which hopes to deliver big thrills with plenty of car stunts, while hilarity is meant to emerge from Davidson, who’s working extra hard to remain energetic in the endeavor, acting like a puppy who really wants a forever home. The screenplay is no help, taking few creative risks as Story is hired to provide as vanilla a viewing experience as possible, delivering an instantly forgettable feature. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – Tommy (1975)

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    In 1969, The Who unleashed "Tommy," their electrified stab at a rock opera after years of tinkering with the complex creative format. A musical achievement of impressive ambition and crunchy stacked-amp rock theatrics, "Tommy" understandably became a sensation with critics and fans, justifiably branded the defining album of the band's extensive career. The material soon embarked on a marathon tour of different interpretations, eventually making iconic leaps to Broadway in 1992 and a feature film event in 1975, handed over to cinema's most persistent rascal, daredevil director Ken Russell, who's never shied away from offering excess and volume, always delighting in some form of chaos. It was a match made in cinema heaven. The official tagline for the picture stated simply: "Your senses will never be the same." In this world of "Tommy," which touches on religion, violence, and insanity, it was a promise delivered in full. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Joy of Sex

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    "The Joy of Sex" was released in 1972, offering an illustrated manual for carnal activities to help illuminate taboo subjects. It was a popular sex education tool and literary event, billed as a "gourmet guide to love making." It wasn't built for a screen adaptation, but Hollywood had to try, especially during the post-"Porky's" rush of teen horndog cinema, attempting to bend the material into an R-rated comedy for adolescent audiences. 1984's "Joy of Sex" brings in director Martha Coolidge (fresh off 1983's "Valley Girl") to help add some dimension to inherently flat material, but there's not much she can do with the project, which is a lifeless offering of juvenile antics and concerns, at times barely even making sense. "Joy of Sex" is a DOA offering of shenanigans, and while a bit of effort is made to disrupt the usual in this type of entertainment, it's not enough to support a mess of a movie. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

     

  • Blu-ray Review – Blood Tracks

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    Rock and roll will never die! Unless, of course, the band chooses a remote area of Sweden to shoot a music video in, triggering the rage of feral locals desperate to defend their terrain. Then, obviously, rock and roll will die. And painfully too. 1985's "Blood Tracks" is a riff on Wes Craven's "The Hills Have Eyes," putting director Mats-Helge Olsson in the mood to generate some sex and violence in the middle of a snowbound location, using musical trends of the day to keep things hip while going through the same old stalk-n-kill business. It's not inspired work, as the production deals with tired material and thin characterizations, and while horror isn't known for its stunning displays of drama, "Blood Tracks" is too routine and bland to make an impression, even for exploitation entertainment. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Iced

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    1989's "Iced" brings slasher cinema to a ski resort, giving director Jeff Kwinty a playground of snow and cabin action to help deliver a lively feature. And yet, there's very little spirit found in the picture, which intends to be a mystery and a horror film, but spends most of its run time dealing with uninteresting characters and their personal problems. It's not a terribly satisfying adventure into genre moviemaking, finding Kwinty generally reluctant to participate in an alert endeavor that's heavy with violence. Exploitation interests are there, but the execution of the offering isn't, keeping "Iced" quite glacial as it waits for over an hour to really summon more active screen experiences. It's a long wait for extraordinarily little payoff. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Bad Guys 2

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    2022’s “The Bad Guys” began life as a book series by author Aaron Blabey, but the writer has gone far beyond his original premise of animal hoodlums and their battle with decency. Blabey’s imagination has taken the series into downright cosmic directions, following his creative impulses into challenging narrative territory, making for an unexpected ride of risk-taking storytelling, especially in the world of children’s literature. The brain-scramble approach hasn’t come for the cinematic incarnation of “The Bad Guys,” which remains content to be just a good time for young audiences, keeping up with animal high jinks and heavy action, really playing up the master criminal aspect of the series. “The Bad Guys 2” is more of the same, quietly denying Blabey’s insanity while it moves forward with cartoon bigness, generating a second helping of colorful characters and bright voice work, while animation remains stylish for this return to criminal temptation for the morally dubious bandits. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Naked Gun (2025)

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    The television show “Police Squad!” debuted in 1982 and only lasted six episodes. It offered broad humor and sharp visual gags, allowing creators David Zucker, Jim Abrahams, and Jerry Zucker to extend their brand of wild comedy after the success of “Airplane!” The trio revived their idea for the big screen in 1988’s “The Naked Gun,” which became a sizable hit for Paramount Pictures, who eventually ordered two sequels that also did significant business. It’s been a long time since Lt. Frank Drebin busted crime on the big screen, and while star Leslie Nielsen has passed away, co-writer/director Akiva Schaffer (“Hot Rod,” “Popstar,” “Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers”) hopes to revive the spirit of his biggest career triumph in, well, “The Naked Gun,” which plops Liam Neeson in the main role of Drebin’s son (don’t do the math). It’s inspired casting, as Neeson has a funny side to his gruff screen presence that doesn’t get much attention, but the bright, silly highs of the 1988 movie are missing in 2025, which certainly commits to the rat-tat-tat approach of the ZAZ creation, but doesn’t share its inspired sense of humor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Trouble Man

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    Michael Jai White has been steadily building a directorial career over the last 14 years, periodically taking control of his action movies. His last effort was 2023’s “Outlaw Johnny Black,” a mediocre attempt to continue what 2009’s delightful “Black Dynamite” started, with White going weirdly bloated with his light comedy, unable to recapture the same magic. “Trouble Man” finds White returning to the Blaxploitation subgenre, now with an acceptable run time (90 minutes) and a more direct script by Michael Stradford. The production doesn’t win on style or mystery, but it’s a surprising amount of fun, finding White encouraging a certain level of silliness while also overseeing conflicts, including several resolved through martial arts contests. “Trouble Man” maintains a sense of humor, and White does what he can with his limited budget, clearly having a good time bringing the main character and his specific way of doing business with others to life. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Sketch

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    We don’t get too many kid adventure movies these days. The family film marketplace is loaded with animated offerings and live-action versions of animated offerings, but “Sketch” is trying to provide a different sort of jolt for fans of PG-rated entertainment, returning to the 1980s and the Amblin years for inspiration. Writer/director Seth Worley (making his feature-length debut) concocts an unusual study of panic in the endeavor, which follows the actions of kids and adults finding their real-world troubles replaced by fantasy ones as a child’s drawings come to life, ready to terrorize the community. “Sketch” plays a fun game of humor, heart, and (mild) horror in the effort, and Worley proves himself to be an imaginative storyteller with limited resources. He stays attentive to character and offers some amusing thrills and chills in the picture, making it a pleasant cinematic alternative for those seeking a more adventurous moviegoing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com