• Film Review – Television Event

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    In 1983, ABC produced “The Day After,” a television production that aimed to expose the true savagery of nuclear war for a primetime audience used to dealing with escapism. The gamble paid off for the network, which attracted 100 million viewers the night the movie aired, becoming a hot topic for some time after its debut. “Television Event” is an Australian documentary that looks into the creation of “The Day After,” with director Jeff Daniels (not the actor) detailing the origins and legacy of the project, it’s production issues, and eventual airing, looking to understand how a small but weighty idea to bring global destruction to television screens was actually achieved during the height of a new cold war. Daniels is focused and honest about creative battles and growing network fears, creating a riveting study of a landmark film. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Jiu Jitsu

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    The world didn’t need more “Kickboxer” sequels, but producer Dimitri Logothetis felt differently, helping to bring 2016’s “Kickboxer: Vengeance” to the screen. Not content to watch from the sidelines, Logothetis assumed directorial command of 2018’s “Kickboxer: Retaliation,” taking control of martial arts action and thickly sliced brutality. Surprisingly, the helmer didn’t tank the assignment, coming up with an impressively violent endeavor that entertained in a way few “Kickboxer” follow-ups have. Now Logothetis turns his attention to “Jiu Jitsu,” which is also an offering of bone-crunching mayhem, this time involving the worlds of comic books and science fiction. It’s a bit a stretch to buy anything “Jiu Jitsu” has to offer, but if you’re a fan of “Predator” and its many sequels, writers Logothetis and Jim McGrath are basically remaking the 1987 offering, skipping on the grit, grunts, and compelling blend of fantasy and intensity. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Leap of Faith: William Friedkin on The Exorcist

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    Last year, director Alexandre O. Philippe (“The People vs. George Lucas”) issued “Memory: The Origins of Alien,” which strived to understand the creation of the 1979 horror classic without peeling back all the layers of the filmmaking process. It was an elusive documentary and unsatisfying overall, coming across as more of a college lecture than an unmissable breakdown of production achievements and cultural imprint. Philippe is back with “Leap of Faith: William Friedkin on The Exorcist,” and he’s still in a philosophical mood, attempting to approach an iconic picture from a few different angles, breaking the home video supplement routine. With “Memory,” Philippe had actors, widows, and historians, and he still didn’t manage to get beneath the skin of his subject. With “Leap of Faith,” he has Friedkin, a blunt director who’s always interested in a chance to talk about himself, bringing his distinct personality to the endeavor, with Philippe wisely sticking with his subject, refusing to go elsewhere to analyze the making of 1973’s “The Exorcist.” Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Run (2020)

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    In 2018, writer/director Aneesh Chaganty made an industry splash with “Searching,” one of a few computer desktop-based thrillers to pop in in recent years as more and more filmmakers turn to the secrets of technology to inspire chills. “Searching” won praise from audiences and made some money at the box office, proving there was interest in the helmer’s way with tightly confined terror and paranoia. He’s moved past the CPU and cell phones, but Chaganty remains in tight spaces with “Run,” which returns him to the fury of disoriented parents and their concern for children, only here he’s masterminding more of a Hitchcockian viewing experience. The feature only deals with a handful of characters and a situation of domestic clarity, but the production gets the material going with imaginative set pieces and interesting sinister business. It runs out of gas in the final act, but “Run” is quite the ride for its first hour. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Embattled

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    It’s been a long time since actor Stephen Dorff has delivered an alert performance. He’s been working the B-movie circuit for some time, flirting with a few softer diversions (including Sofia Coppola’s “Somewhere”), but he’s mostly stuck with playing hardened guys in criminal situations. For “Embattled,” Dorff is once again tasked with portraying a nasty human being, but the screenplay by David McKenna (“American History X,” “Blow”) doesn’t permit the character to act as flypaper for cliches, putting in the effort to create dimensions for a seasoned MMA fighter struggling with ego and anger issues, gradually recognizing the emptiness of his life. The role is a perfect fit for Dorff, who gives one of his finest performances, and it’s a strong film overall, exploring forms of violence and neglect, but also taking a look at the true formation of masculinity and family. There are plenty of hard hits and trash talking, but “Embattled” goes beyond the sport’s aggression to grasp the wounded hearts in play. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Sound of Metal

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    “Sound of Metal” began life long ago with director Derek Cianfrance, who was working on an idea concerning a heavy metal drummer experiencing the life-altering event of hearing loss. The concept was eventually gifted to “The Place Beyond the Pines” co-writer Darius Marder, who makes his helming debut with the picture. It’s quite a first shot fired for Marder, who’s searching for a way to communicate one man’s immersion into the deaf community after a life lived with complete loudness and, in some cases, recklessness. There’s frustration to spare in the feature, which is carried by a powerful performance from Riz Ahmed, who’s tasked with turning anger and confusion into a screen journey that offers no easy answers. “Sound of Metal” has restlessness and definite opinions on technology, and when Marder taps into the pure behavior of personal growth, he makes a hypnotic film. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Vanguard

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    Jackie Chan movies produced in China rarely make their way to American theaters anymore, but “Vanguard” is hoping to offer western audiences a little eastern amplification, delivering an impressively action-packed viewing experience starring a man known for his smashmouth entertainment. In reality, Chan takes more of a supporting part in the endeavor, which reunites him with director Stanley Tong, a frequent collaborator, playing a leadership role in a supercop tale that aims to be globetrotting and explosive. The plot is not exactly the priority here (the celebration of Chinese New Year seems to be the production’s goal), providing only some mild complication for what becomes a series of chases involving good guys and bad guys, with Chan popping into view on occasion to slap stuntmen around. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Girl (2020)

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    “Girl” is a Canadian production about the American deep south. The details of the setting are a little off, but so is everything in film. Writer/director Chad Faust wants to create something noir-ish, with a touch of southern gothic tossed in for taste, but he mostly ends up with a muddled take on fracture family relations with intermittent violence. “Girl” doesn’t have dramatic muscle to lift the endeavor, with Faust stuck going broad to give the picture the emphasis it needs. Instead of creating menace, the effort mostly underwhelms, dealing with hammy performances and static situations, which doesn’t inspire the depiction of mental illness and physical fatigue Faust seems to be reaching for. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Cycle Savages

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    1969's "The Cycle Savages" tries to tap into an industry trend, presenting the exploits of a biker gang on the loose, causing some amount of trouble wherever they go. Those accustomed to more forceful acts of intimidation and violence might want to take a pass on this film, which focuses on a mad dog gang leader's tireless quest to…break an artist's hands. Yeah, that's it for viciousness in "The Cycle Savages," which seems to be under the impression that slight bodily injury is the key to anarchic horror. The subgenre needs a little more awfulness to truly scratch that exploitation itch. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Best Friends

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    "Best Friends" has the appearance of exploitation cinema, but somebody forgot to inform co-writer/director Noel Nosseck that his movie should be a little sleazier, or least more suspenseful. The 1975 release tends to go for the heart instead of cheap thrills, following one man's desire to retain the experience of youth while he marches into adulthood. Post-Vietnam War PTSD issues and homoeroticism are a few possible dramatic avenues for Nosseck to explore, but he mostly sticks with a slightly agitated relationship story, which is never memorable enough to leave a lasting impression. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Resistance

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    Stories concerning the events of World War II are catnip to film producers, gifting them a chance to explore a seemingly simpler time of heroism and villainy, while most of the features pay careful attention to gritty tales of sacrifice during a period of unimaginable violence. For "Resistance," the saga of Marcel Marceau is examined, with the man who became world famous due to his mastery of mime once a French resistance soldier who had a hand in saving a large number of Jewish children during horrific years of Nazi occupation. Writer/director Jonathan Jakubowicz ("Hands of Stone") certainly has a take on WWII challenges and suffering, and while it's unclear just how accurate "Resistance" is, it does offer an unexpected source of conflict, depicting Marceau as a man of honor and creativity looking for safety in war and art. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Swallow

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    "Swallow" appears intended to be a major showcase for the acting skills of Haley Bennett, who takes a producing role on the picture, gifting herself a little more control over the final product. It's been a rocky road for the talent, who failed to breakout in efforts such as "The Girl on the Train" and "The Magnificent Seven," with "Swallow" delivering a juicy leading part that's completely focused on her abilities, offering a tonal challenge with strange material that deals uncomfortably with obsessive compulsive disorder and depression. The good news about the movie is that it truly makes the most of Bennett's screen appeal, and she delivers refreshingly alert work for director Carlo Mirabella-Davis, skillfully reaching some interesting psychological spaces as the feature conjures plenty of compelling darkness. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Freaky

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    In 2017, director Christopher Landon brought “Happy Death Day” to screens, reworking the plot of “Groundhog Day” to fit the needs of slasher cinema, making a hit movie that played well with young audiences. Delighted to have a financial success to his name, Landon returned to the well less than two years later for “Happy Death Day 2U,” which wasn’t a hit, grossing half of the original film’s take. Hunting for another familiar idea to transform into a ghoulish ride, Landon turns “Freaky Friday” into “Freaky,” fiddling with the body-swap concept to inspire a new round of broad comedy and bodily harm. Landon isn’t pushing himself with the endeavor, which plays at basically the same level as “Happy Death Day,” blending campiness and carnage for a more R-rated viewing experience that frequently teeters on the edge of obnoxiousness. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Dreamland

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    The power of fantasy drives the story of “Dreamland,” which inspects a young man’s very real connection to his deepest desires, suddenly realizing all that’s required for a life lived with adventure and excitement. Such a sobering take on wish-fulfillment is scripted by Nicolaas Zwart, who makes his feature-length debut with the film, blending the escapism of pulp fiction with the hangover of responsibility. The material is interesting, analyzing the creation and breakdown of legends, and director Miles Joris-Peyrafitte brings style to the endeavor, manufacturing a period mood of desperation to best motivate troubled characters. “Dreamland” has atmosphere and a slightly different approach to the deconstruction of heroism, offering viewers tight introspection and games of trust as the picture moves back and forth between drama and suspense. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Dating Amber

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    Director David Freyne made an impressive debut a few years ago with “The Cured.” It was a different take on zombie cinema, turning a pandemic setting into a refreshingly dramatic understanding of characters caught up in an extraordinary situation. Freyne returns with “Dating Amber,” and he loses his horror interests this time out, electing to study the frustrations and fears of two gay teenagers struggling to hide their true selves from friends and family. In a way, the two pictures have a few ideas in common, and Freyne once again showcases a gift for creating vivid personalities. There’s a seriocomic tone to the production that isn’t always smoothly communicated, but “Dating Amber” has a distinct understanding of the stakes involved in the story, with the helmer extremely protective of his lead characters as they experience all sorts of difficulties and tests of courage on their way to finding themselves in the big, scary world. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – 1 Night in San Diego

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    Writer/director Penelope Lawson is looking to play into modern comedy trends with “1 Night in San Diego.” She’s made a raunchy comedy that tries to be loose and funny with bawdy characters, sending them on an overnight run of mischief around the titular city. The playfulness of the feature is available in the early going, where Lawson has her freshest ideas and the cast gets used to the tone of the effort. “1 Night in San Diego” doesn’t sustain such energy, but it makes a positive impression overall, offering lively performances from leads Jenna Ushkowitz and Laura Ashley Samuels, and Lawson keeps the weirdness reasonably amusing, offering another night-on-the-town take on comedic chaos that scores just a bit more than it misses. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Chick Fight

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    The physical brutality of “Fight Club” is handed a makeover for “Chick Fight,” which surveys the blood, sweat, and tears of an underground brawling club. A serious study of bare-knuckle liberation and cult formation is jettisoned for the new movie, which tends to play as more of a comedy, hoping to bring laughs to a chilling premise. Director Paul Leyen tries to bring some low-budget style to the endeavor, and screenwriter Joseph Downey labors to sustain character development between scenes of women beating the stuffing out of one another, yet “Chick Fight” has some wily energy to offer with a few sizable laughs. Downey can’t resist the comfort of cliché to complete the picture, but he has some fun along the way, and the cast’s enthusiasm for the material certainly helps the cause, especially when staleness sets in. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Echo Boomers

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    Co-writer/director Seth Savoy makes his feature-length directorial debut with “Echo Boomers,” setting out to inspect the state of the millennial nation with this tale of bad deeds orchestrated by frustrated characters. The production tries to go topical with the plight of the wandering twentysomething, exploring how workplace denial and the weight of debt transform purity of intent into bad deeds done in the name of entitlement. There’s probably a documentary to be made about the subject, or even a dramatic undertaking with a real sensitivity to the ways things are for an entire generation. Unfortunately, Savoy chooses to make a valentine to Gen Y ingenuity with “Echo Boomers,” and he uses the hoariest of gangster cinema cliches to piece it together. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Dead Reckoning

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    How long ago was “Dead Reckoning” shot? Production was in full swing when Barack Obama was the U.S. President, that’s how old the picture is. And there’s a good reason for its substantial delay, as there’s little use for a half-speed thriller with a teen romance angle in the marketplace, forcing the producers to VOD-ize the title (the film was previously called “Altar Rock”) and emphasize the participation of B-movie action star Scott Adkins, who’s not in the feature for very long. Pandemic release scrambling has brought “Dead Reckoning” to audiences, and they don’t deserve such punishment, with the feeble, personality-free endeavor doing next to nothing with elements of terrorism and personal loss, finding director Andrzej Bartkowiak asleep at the wheel while the effort drags from one scene to the next. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Thirteen Ghosts

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    After scoring a slight box office success with 1999's "House on Haunted Hill," Dark Castle Entertainment returned to the William Castle well for 2001's "Thirteen Ghosts." The original 1960 picture is best known for its gimmick, with "Illusion-O" offering moviegoers a chance to "choose" whether or not they wanted to see poltergeists through a special 3D "ghost viewer." "Thirteen Ghosts" isn't nearly that innocent, trying to pummel its audience with sustained graphic violence and aggressive sound and visual design achievements. It's an R-rated update of enjoyable nonsense, with Dark Castle trying to keep matters deadly serious as they present their take on Castle's creation, making something gruesome and noisy to reach demanding audiences of the era. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com