• Blu-ray Review – Rent-A-Pal

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    "Rent-A-Pal" is set in 1990, but it's a relevant picture for today's world of frustrated people dealing with isolation. This isn't what writer/director Jon Stevenson initially intended, but he's found a way to make a movie about today's increasingly isolated world, creating a slow-burn chiller about one man's decent into madness due to suffocating domestic experiences and his own distance from a functional relationship. While other filmmakers have touched on the toxic relationship between man and machine, Stevenson gets oddly specific with his writing, which turns a simple quest for VHS attention into a downward spiral of insanity. "Rent-A-Pal" has flashes of originality, and Stevenson has a good eye for casting, finding actors capable to doing something memorable with a shapeless threat. It's not the tightest feature around, in need of more editorial pruning, but when it focuses on blurred lines of reality, it's vividly executed with a wonderfully dark sense of humor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Terror Within II

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    Sometime during the production of 1989's "The Terror Within," star Andrew Stevens took a moment to consider his professional situation and thought, "Yeah, I could make one of these movies easily!" Stevens makes his directorial debut with 1991's "The Terror Within II," also claiming a screenplay credit while resuming his acting duties as David, a scientist crossing America to save the world from a growing mutant threat. Stevens doesn't have a new vision for the story, which remains an "Alien" rip-off, but he brings a stronger cast, different monster madness, and hires cinematographer Janusz Kaminski, who, in two years' time, would go from shooting this no-budget endeavor to Steven Spielberg's "Schindler's List." So yes, kids, don't give up on your dreams. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Terror Within

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    A full decade after the release of 1979's "Alien," and producer Roger Corman was still in the business of ripping it off. The concept of a malevolent beast from beyond attacking characters in a confined space gave director Ridley Scott a classic movie, but Corman views "Alien" as an unlimited resource, with 1989 "The Terror Within" another knock-off from his company. To be fair to the Hollywood legend, the feature does take place on Earth, and the creature causing all the trouble is a mutant, but the rest of the effort is the same old xenomorph-ian stuff, this time finding Andrew Stevens in the hero role, taking on a grotesque beast who enjoys killing survivors of a deadly plague. The villain also does other stuff to the locals, which manages to drain any possible fun factor out of this incredibly dull endeavor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – Sex World

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    Futurists promised a tomorrow with flying cars, food in pill form, and colonies on the moon. Instead, we now have adult entertainment in 4K. Continuing their efforts to bring more titles to UHD, Vinegar Syndrome returns to one of their biggest adult titles, "SexWorld," giving it an upgraded viewing experience after its initial, successful release in 2015. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Escape Room: Tournament of Champions

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    2019’s “Escape Room” wasn’t meant to be much, but the low-budget film grabbed a first weekend release date in January, which has become a prime spot for genre pictures. The post-holiday crowds responded to the multiplex palate cleanser, enjoying the ride director Adam Robitel prepared for the mass audience. A borderline sci-fi take on “Saw” with escape room elements, the feature managed to make money, and that’s a good thing for the production, which didn’t offer an ending, only a set-up for a sequel. Two years later, and there’s “Escape Room: Tournament of Champions,” which hopes to sustain the brand name for another round of near misses involving a cast of characters hunting for a way out of incredibly elaborate and expensive traps. With a continuation, there’s no need for introductions, and speed works well for “Tournament of Champions,” which gets surprisingly far when concentrating on panic. Unfortunately, Robitel and his writers (four credited for this screenplay) can’t leave bad franchise habits behind, ignoring any sense of closure to keep the money train going for a third installment. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – On-Gaku: Our Sound

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    Promotional materials for "On-Gaku: Our Sound" celebrate the feature's very existence, with director Kenji Iwaisawa putting in a heroic effort to simply complete the picture, which was seven years in the making. It's also completely animated by hand, with use of the rotoscoping process to bring to life a rather small story of adolescent awakening via the power of music. The material takes its inspiration from a manga written by Hiroyuki Ohashi, giving Iwaisawa a storytelling direction to follow while the production cooks up its own wonderland of attitudes, musicianship, friendship, and personal expression, sold with an exquisite dryness that pulls humor out of the strangest of places. "On-Gaku: Our Sound" loves its stillness (probably for financial reasons), but it's a marvelous exploration of an askew liberation. It's as small in scale as an animated film gets, but it delivers such a wonderful understanding of character, detailed through inventive and unusual artistry. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Devil Times Five

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    1974's "Devil Times Five" (a.k.a. "The Horrible House on the Hill" and "People Toys") rides the line of good taste as it offers a story about mentally ill children who enjoying killing adults, spending a weekend at Lake Arrowhead murdering a collection of couples who've settled in for a nice vacation. The "Evil Kids" genre is a tough one to deal with, as it takes a special filmmaking touch to extract the horror of the situation without making the whole endeavor mean-spirited. While "Devil Times Five" isn't a polished picture, with plenty of dim directorial and editorial choices, it's also not an endeavor that's looking to destroy viewers with scenes of cruel behavior. There's plenty of violence to satisfy genre fans, but the movie isn't a complete chore to get through, helping it to rise above the competition. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Slithis

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    Writer/director Stephen Traxler has a vision for 1978's "Slithis" (a.k.a. "Spawn of the Slithis"), but he doesn't have a movie to back it up. Inspired by genre classics such as "Creature from the Black Lagoon" and "Jaws," Traxler tries to create his own little corner of horror, taking the action to Venice, California, playing into growing environmental concerns of the era to inspire a mutant monster effort that barely features the titular menace for a good portion of its run time. Weird creative decisions are common in the picture, which devotes time to inane conversations, wild overacting, and the seductive powers of a potential sexual predator, keeping away from the basic enjoyment of a man in a rubber suit gobbling up local idiots. Traxler is hanging on for dear life with "Slithis," almost going out of his way to generate a painfully dull viewing experience, finding it more comfortable to do nothing with his production. After all, violence costs money, and there's not a lot of that to be found in the endeavor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Devil’s Express

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    "Devil's Express" is a 1976 release that attempts to be a martial arts extravaganza, a police procedural, and a horror movie. These are not three subgenres that coexist peacefully, and director Barry Rosen is not the guy to pull off such a tonal challenge. "Devil's Express" throws everything at the viewer with hope that something sticks, looking to dazzle with bursts of violence and a murder mystery involving a supernatural serial killer. The picture simply doesn't work, but Rosen is determined to at least put something together, struggling with basic storytelling competency and editorial finesse in his quest to contribute to filmmaking trends of the era. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Tomorrow War

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    Giving his star power a major marketplace test, Chris Pratt returns to save the world in “The Tomorrow War,” his first monster-budgeted feature that isn’t supported by Marvel Entertainment or the rampaging dinosaurs of the “Jurassic World” saga. It’s not a huge stretch for the actor, who’s once again placed into the middle of heavy CGI and noisy creatures, with his character tasked with entering the future to save the past, offering Pratt a chance to play action hero and a sensitive guy experiencing the fight of his life. Animation director Chris McKay (“The Lego Batman Movie”) graduates to live-action mayhem for the endeavor, and he does an admirable job creating bigness for “The Tomorrow War,” which offers visual punch and genuine suspense for its first two acts. At nearly 140 minutes in length, the production wears out its welcome, but introductory confusion is enjoyable, with the film presenting a fun ride of elaborate survival sequences. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Black Widow

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    Although it wasn’t intended, there’s been a two-year-long break from Marvel Cinematic Universe films, giving audiences a chance to breathe after the company pumped out three movies in 2019. For the latest in superhero entertainment, the MCU returns to one of its key characters, finally getting around to Natasha Romanoff after her debut as Black Widow in 2010’s “Iron Man 2.” It’s the least hero-y member of the Avengers, but there’s a lot that can be done with the character and her brooding ways. “Black Widow” doesn’t do enough with Romanoff, with screenwriter Eric Pearson trying to generate a family dynamic for the feature, coming close to ignoring the titular warrior while trying to arrange some form of backstory for her. “Black Widow” isn’t the rock ‘em, sock ‘em adventure the Avenger deserves, but thrills are intermittently present when the story isn’t in explanation mode, giving actress Scarlett Johansson something to work with as her co-stars get a little hammy to make their presence known. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Till Death

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    The trials of marriage are handed a unique survival challenge in “Till Death.” Screenwriter Jason Carvey endeavors to create a small-scale battle for survival with the picture, examining an unusual form of revenge facing a woman who’s been caught cheating by her husband, and he’s not in the mood for forgiveness. As thrillers go, it’s not a major effort from director S.K. Dale, who’s basically handed a single location to explore for 80 minutes, trying to find ways to keep viewers on the edge of their seats as bad things happen to bad people. Despite some shortcomings in the surprise department, “Till Death” is nasty enough to charm, with a few macabre developments that connect as intended, and Carvey’s central idea is refreshingly twisted, fueling some B-movie fun. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Forever Purge

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    “The Purge” has been incredibly good to creator James DeMonaco. It’s been his business since the debut of the 2013 feature, which made a lot of money on a tight budget, inspiring him to keep churning out sequels and prequels until filmgoers cry uncle. “The Forever Purge” is the fifth installment of the horror franchise (which took a detour into television in 2018), with DeMonaco continuing to write these chapters, handing directorial duties to Everado Gout. There’s a formula to this stuff, with DeMonaco pretending displays of horrific violence and human cruelty somehow reflect the state of America, trying to pass off crude B-movie mayhem as a giant mirror held up to a divided country. Not all of his ideas are far off from the truth, but his screenplays have always been cringe-inducing, and “The Forever Purge” is no different. DeMonaco loves to make cartoons, and his latest summation of national rage is just as brainless as the previous endeavors. The big change here is breathing room, with Gout trying to keep things moving along for a change, making for a somewhat lighter, more approachable “Purge.” Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Boss Baby: Family Business

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    An adaptation of a short storybook, 2017’s “The Boss Baby” tried to find ways to create a world out of a simple idea concerning the challenges of parenthood. Screenwriter Michael McCullers strained to expand the story, or simply create one, taking the original picture on an uneven ride of slapstick and sibling love. The mediocre feature connected with audiences, turning into a major hit for DreamWorks Animation, which promptly created a television show for the characters (“The Boss Baby: Back in Business”), and now a sequel. “The Boss Baby: Family Business” makes a huge time jump to advance the ongoing tale, but McCullers and returning director Tom McGrath (the “Madagascar” trilogy) have removed most of the formulaic softness that made “The Boss Baby” a chore to sit through at times. They move into a more cartoon realm with “Family Business,” and it suits the production, which has real fun dreaming up oddball encounters and frantic chases for the characters, and it presents a wonderfully sillier sense of humor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – No Sudden Move

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    Last December, Steven Soderbergh scored a creative hit with “Let Them All Talk,” a drama about relationships and personal reflection. It was small in scale and wonderfully acted, bringing out the best in Soderbergh’s filmmaking capabilities, finding interesting ways to detail human relationships. Seven months later, the helmer is back on more familiar ground with “No Sudden Move,” which is a crime story with a pretzeled screenplay by Ed Solomon (“Bill & Ted Face the Music”), examining underworld interests in 1950’s Detroit. It’s not a new caper from Soderbergh, playing to his interests in off-kilter characters, mounting trouble, and criminal visions put to the test, pouring his special indie movie glaze over the feature. It’s all familiar and on the static side, but a love of the game is on view in “No Sudden Move,” with the production clearly making Soderbergh happy, offered another chance to depict bad ideas going horribly wrong in the weirdest of ways. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Summer of Soul (Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)

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    “Summer of Soul (Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)” is billed as “A Questlove Jawn.” Beloved musician Ahmir Khalib Thompson makes his directorial debut with the documentary, slapping some Philadelphia slang on a story of a New York City event, bringing viewers back to 1969, when the Harlem Cultural Festival ruled Mt. Morris Park for six weekends during a special season. Thompson isn’t simply reviving interest in the concert series, he’s basically saving it from complete obscurity, with the production managing to locate footage of the Harlem Cultural Festival that’s been sitting in a corner somewhere for the last five decades. “Summer of Soul” is a lot of things, including an impressive restoration project, with the helmer creating a time machine for a moment when black culture was changing shape, giving 300,000 concertgoers a chance to see incredible musicians, leaders and preachers, and charismatic people put on a major show of love and respect for a population in need of hope and representation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Long Story Short

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    “Long Story Short” is the latest film from writer/director Josh Lawson, who was recently on view in “Mortal Kombat,” struggling to come up with funny business during his portrayal of video game insult comic, Kano. The performance wasn’t inspired, and neither is “Long Story Short,” which is Lawson’s attempt to rework a time loop premise, this time offering a brutal education to a callous man who’s magically sprinting through the years. It’s a weird idea, and one that’s almost entirely placed in the hands of actor Rafe Spall, who tap dances like a madman to make the feature work as a comedy and something more sincere. Lawson asks a lot of Spall to carry such a load, with the material going after a lighter touch when the reality of such a year-eraser experience would naturally fit a profoundly dark picture. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – A Dim Valley

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    Introductions are always important, helping the audience find the mood of the picture and begin to process characterizations as onscreen personalities start their journey. Writer/director Brandon Colvin isn’t a fan of such immediate impressions, opening the endeavor with ten minutes of a man getting hurt after falling off his bike, also showing a friend his ability to trigger a click in his jaw. This material represents a good portion of “A Dim Valley,” with Colvin in no hurry to introduce screen tension, motivations, or even a plot for this wandering effort, which is primarily about a marijuana-thwacked odyssey into the indie film unknown. “A Dim Valley” is strictly for audiences in an altered state of mind, working with vagueness to such a degree, I’m not even sure Colvin had anything written down before he started shooting the feature. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com