• Film Review – Friendship

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    Paul Rudd is certainly drawn to tales of male bonding. He scored a few hits in his career exploring relationships between friends learning to have fun and relate to each other. Silliness ensued in offerings such as “I Love You, Man” and “Role Models,” but “Friendship” is a much stranger, darker overview of camaraderie. Writer/director Andre DeYoung goes the anti-comedy route with the picture, detailing the mental health decline of a man who simply wants to be accepted by others, unable to control himself when his idyllic life is denied. “Friendship” pairs Rudd with Tim Robinson, a former “Saturday Night Live” player who’s built a small empire of strangeness on television. DeYoung is ready to utilize this bizarre intensity, setting Robinson loose in the feature, which has some laughs, plenty of awkwardness, and an uneven way of delivering a psychological study of human need. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story

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    With a title like "Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story," one expects to learn something about the subject. The 1993 endeavor isn't interested in providing a thorough investigation of the media star and martial artist, preferring to explore the cinematic ways of his life. Co-writer/director Rob Cohen creates a bit of a hagiography with the film, carefully sanding down Lee's rough edges, making his story palatable to a wide audience as the writing primarily focuses on bigotry and response to adversity. It's a commercial for Bruce Lee, which adapts his wife Linda Lee Cadwell's 1975 book, "Bruce Lee: The Man Only I Knew," and she's extremely protective of his reputation and legacy. "Dragon" is sanitized and filled with fantasy, but Cohen (in what's easily his finest movie) crafts an engaging picture, best digested as entertainment that features reminders of Lee's philosophy, passions, and physical abilities, sold through a sensational lead performance from Jason Scott Lee. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Toxic Crusaders: The Series

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    How desperate does a toy company have to be to reach out to Troma Entertainment for inspiration? 1984's "The Toxic Avenger" wasn't a movie for children, filled with all kinds of violence and crudeness that Troma loves to deliver. But, somehow, this feature and its many sequels found its way to the realm of kids T.V., transformed into 1991's "Toxic Crusaders," turning the "superhero from New Jersey" into an environmental warrior, joined by his "tromatons" evil sense, a sentient mop, and a gang of mutants looking to stop Dr. Killemoff and his Radiation Rangers from their repeated attempts to poison Tromaville. Created during the days of R-rated influences and pollution fears (emerging a year after "Captain Planet"), "Toxic Crusaders" is a big swing in terms of functionality, and the producers do what they can to retain Troma's strained silliness while still making something for the little ones and their merchandise-buying parents. Only 13 episodes were produced, with the show trying to become the next "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles," but, understandably, the program didn't last. It's not unappealing work, but it's not terribly exciting, and tired shtick (such as breaking the fourth wall) tends to smother the heroic elements that do manage to connect. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – Delirium: Photo of Gioia

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    Yes, 1987's "Delirium" is a giallo. There's a mysterious killer on the loose. Victims die in increasingly elaborate ways. The filmmakers invest in color and style to bring the feature to life. That's all well and good, but the production doesn't seem thoroughly invested in the process of bringing suspense to life. What "Delirium" primarily becomes is a showcase for star Serena Grandi's physical appearance, as director Lamberto Bava is mostly focused on getting the actress out of her clothes as much as possible. Sure, danger is out there, and business affairs to tend to. But there's time for sheer outfits and nudity as well, and the supporting cast also contributes bareness to this sexploitation endeavor. The film isn't the greatest example of thriller moviemaking, but it has the one goal in mind, impressively making sure this display of flesh is handled with care. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – Thieves Like Us

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    One of the strangest things to ever happen to Robert Altman was box office success. It happened once, as 1970's "M*A*S*H" managed to break out and find an appreciative audience exposed to the director's impish, subversive ways and his specialized manner of making movies. The release was enormous, suddenly putting Altman in the spotlight, which didn't suit his artistic interests, spending the rest of the decade burning off such financial potential on a series of challenging endeavors that perfectly fit his cinematic worldview. 1974's "Thieves Like Us" was sold to audiences as something of a gangster picture, following the survival of three prison escapees using bank robberies to fund their lifestyles. But this is Altman, and the cheap thrills of criminal activity have no place in the effort, as it's more of a character study focusing on people stuck in neutral for various reasons. "Thieves Like Us" remains in line with other Altman offerings, but it's hard to grasp the purpose of its glacial pace, which strains dramatic engagement as cinematic indulgence tends to dominate the viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Wick Is Pain

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    If you’re a movie fan, you’ve probably experienced golden theatrical moments where a bond between entertainment and audience is born. For me, the release of 2014’s “John Wick” contributed a beautiful moment involving slightly disinterested viewers suddenly snapped to attention by the picture’s level of ferocity, while its eventual displays of violence extracted a jubilant group reaction that’s extremely rare to find. Ticket-buyers were changed when they left the theater, understanding they just watched a film made with care and commitment to shaking things up in the world of action cinema. “Wick Is Pain” is a documentary out to celebrate the entire “John Wick” franchise, as director Jeffrey Doe examines how the chapters came to life, often through blood, sweat, and a few tears. It’s a celebratory offering, but an earned one, as the series has become a mighty monetary force for distributor Lionsgate Films, who’ve turn all things “Wick” into an event, keeping director Chad Stahelski and actor Keanu Reeves busy over the last eleven years, generating towering valentines to big screen stunts and style. If you dig the brand, “Wick Is Pain” is an enormously engaging viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Nonnas

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    Director Stephen Chbosky (who struggled to find an audience for his last release, “Dear Evan Hansen”) and screenwriter Liz Maccie take on the “based on a true story” ways of “Nonnas,” which is an Italian word for grandmother. It’s a tale of a middle-aged man taking a chance on a restaurant idea that’s meant to preserve the cooking traditions of his family, sharing the warmth of such gatherings and food with the public. It’s a reality for restaurateur Jody Scaravella, and Vince Vaughn receives a chance to restore some of his screen charms in the part, portraying a man taking on a tremendous financial and culinary challenge while trying to mend his broken heart. Chbosky and Maccie are in crowd-pleasing mode with “Nonnas,” and they prepare a familiar dramatic feast of problems and neat resolutions, but it’s hard to resist the spirit of the feature, which makes plenty of room for its actors and their unique screen appeal. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Shadow Force

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    “Shadow Force” is a generic title that immediately brings to mind all the bland B-movies being cranked out for streaming and VOD services these days. The types of films that feature terrible action sequences, paycheck-focused stars, and paint-by-numbers screenwriting, leaving the subscribed left with empty calorie viewing experiences that are immediately forgotten. The picture is the latest from co-writer/director Joe Carnahan, who’s been doing okay with bruiser entertainment in recent years (“Boss Level,” “Copshop”), but he stumbles with his attempt at a superspy saga. Perhaps the flatness of the title is actually a proper fit for this thoroughly uninspired endeavor, as Carnahan doesn’t have freshness or ferocity to share in the offering, which plays almost exactly like every other actioner in the marketplace, and a few of the helmer’s previous efforts. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Unit 234

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    Andy Tennant was once a very in-demand director. He collected a few hits during his career, most notably in the romantic comedy arena, helping to bring 2005’s “Hitch” and 2002’s “Sweet Home Alabama” to box office highs. Primarily known as the helmer of fluff, Tennant looks to get a little dark with “Unit 234,” which features very few warm emotions and candied scenes of comedy. It’s a thriller from screenwriter Derek Steiner, who imagines a long night of pursuit and violence involving desperate people sneaking around a storage facility, mixing victims and aggressors while attempting to stay one step ahead of viewers. Tennant isn’t known for style, and his feel for pacing is off in the film, but there’s a level of payoff worth sticking around for. “Unit 234” actually makes its way to refreshingly dark final act, and the actors assembled mostly understand what’s required of them, getting the offering to moments of misery that are more compelling than the usual in chases and near-misses. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Clown in a Cornfield

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    It’s been a little while since we’ve heard from co-writer/director Eli Craig. His last release was 2017’s “Little Evil,” an entertaining follow-up to his raucous debut, 2011’s “Tucker & Dale vs. Evil.” Craig is a talented helmer and someone who clearly loves genre moviemaking, heading right back into the darkness with “Clown in a Cornfield,” which is an adaptation of a novel by author Adam Cesare. It’s a YA title handed the R-rated treatment, as Craig transforms a potentially self-aware concept into a bloody but amusing ride of slasher cinema, paying tribute to the traditions of the subgenre while also exploring a little more characterization than what’s usually pursued. “Clown in the Cornfield” has substance, which is impressive, and strong performances, which is rare, and while the writing fights a feeble climax, the build to a payoff is exciting and intentionally funny. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Summer of 69

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    Jillian Bell has made a positive impression as an actress over the years, bringing her quirky sense of humor to a few movies that needed her help, hitting a career high with her starring turn in 2019’s “Brittany Runs a Marathon.” Seeking greater control over her work, Bell makes her directorial debut with “Summer of 69,” also co-scripting with Jules Byrne and Liz Nico. It’s meant to be a throwback to the wilder ways of sex comedies from the 1980s and ‘90s, offering silly antics concerning one teen’s quest for carnal excitement as she battles her virginal state. Bell gets the endeavor up and running with a bright sense of humor and a tremendous amount of playfulness from the cast, suggesting a farce in the making. “Summer of 69” applies the brakes at the midway point, and it’s a hard, unpleasant stop for the feature, but there’s enough charm to carry the viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Sharp Corner

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    Jason Buxton hasn’t made a movie since 2012’s “Blackbird,” and he returns with a claustrophobic study of one man’s obsession concerning car accidents and life demands in “Sharp Corner.” The writing doesn’t offer an expansive understanding of troubling behavior, remaining small in scope as it examines the unraveling of a person newly exposed to hidden thrills. While it seems positioned to become a thriller, “Sharp Corner” remains mostly modest when it comes to suspense, preferring to push viewers in different ways. It’s a picture of surprising events and disturbed characters, and though it doesn’t pursue bigger levels of excitement, Buxton lands a few of his ideas on a troubled mind finally freed to explore a little darkness when horror arrives on his front door. There’s just enough disturbing behavior and dark comedy to keep the feature together, and it gives actor Ben Foster a substantial role that doesn’t welcome his habitual quirkiness. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Watch the Skies

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    Co-writer/director Victor Danell is part of a filmmaking collective known as “Crazy Pictures.” “Watch the Skies” is their second feature (after 2018’s “The Unthinkable”), with Danell (and co-writer Jimmy Nivren Olsson) attempting to launch an alien conspiracy thriller for a family audience, going a bit softer with the material’s depiction of paranoia and pursuit. Released in Sweden three years ago, “Watch the Skies” attempts to crack the North American market with its presentation of emotional wounds and physical endangerment, using a special A.I. program to help match lips to the English dub, hoping to attract more than the usual specialty cinema crowd. It’s a lively endeavor, and one that benefits greatly from its engaged acting, which lifts an occasionally familiar screenplay that’s often trying to replicate the Spielberg Experience without a truly inspired story. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Absolute Dominion

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    Lexi Alexander hasn’t made a movie in quite some time, and when she did, the director created highly divisive pictures that went directly to cult appreciation (including “Green Street Hooligans” and 2008’s “Punisher: War Zone”). She returns to feature-length filmmaking in “Absolute Dominion,” restoring her button-pushing ways with a tale about a post-apocalyptic fight tournament meant to establish the one true religion to reign supreme over Earth. It’s a Big Idea crammed into low-budget moviemaking, but the tale remains provocative, following the brawn of atheism as it collides with spirituality, or perhaps complete madness. “Absolute Dominion” bites off more than it can chew when it comes to visuals and ideas, but there’s an interesting journey to enlightenment at the core of the endeavor, and its ambition, while faulty, is something to see. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – Rock ‘n’ Roll High School

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    Few films are as joyous as 1979's "Rock 'n' Roll High School." The Roger Corman-produced endeavor gleefully updates the teen rebellion subgenre from the 1950s for a new generation, attempting to reach a fresh audience with its display of evil educational authority, teenage lust, and the power of musical liberation, and the Ramones are brought in to portray the sonic force of deliverance. Director Allan Arkush goes big and broad with the feature, but he manages to avoid chaos, creating an exceedingly good-natured romp that's free enough to be silly without sliding into overkill. "Rock 'n' Roll High School" is out to provide a good time and great tunes, achieving most of its creative goals, especially when it comes to the sheer spirit of this irresistible comedy. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Ghost Dance

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    During the frenzy to make slasher films for a hungry audience, 1982's "The Ghost Dance" tries to bring something a little different to the usual in blood and guts. Co-writers Robert M. Sutton and Peter F. Buffa (who also directs) turn to the Native American community in Arizona for inspiration, attempting to summon some supernatural horror for the effort. "The Ghost Dance" is fairly conventional when it comes to violence, as Buffa arranges numerous stalk-and-kill sequences to keep genre fans happy. More interesting is the filmmaking itself, as the production is mildly attentive to visuals compared to similar endeavors, adding a touch of style and momentum to an offering that needs the occasional boost of cinematic energy to remain engaging. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – Last Embrace

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    Throughout the 1970s, director Jonathan Demme started to form a career, doing so via help from Roger Corman, who took a chance on a young man with a vision for exploitation entertainment. Demme delivered "Caged Heat," "Crazy Mama," "Fighting Mad," and "Citizens Band," crafting escapism for the drive-in crowds, maintaining a sense of humor through most of his cinematic adventures. 1979's "Last Embrace" offers a maturing Demme hoping to replicate some moves from Alfred Hitchcock, overseeing a mystery/thriller that tries to remain twisty and agitated. The screenplay by David Shaber is an adaptation of a 1977 novel ("The 13th Man") by Murray Teigh Bloom, and the material remains very literary in design, following a paranoid man's quest to understand who's trying to kill him, often doing so through research. "Last Embrace" isn't a nail-biter, but it has a few explosive moments of suspense and strong performances to support the viewing experience, finding star Roy Scheider hitting all the right beats of anxiety as Demme attempts to make something involving and familiar. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Infinite Santa 8000

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    Just in time for the holidays comes a tale about Christmas and family. However, 2013's "Infinite Santa 8000" also contains "mutants, scum, and robo- people," taking viewers to a dire future where the Earth is in ruins and all that remains in a way of goodness is a cyborg Santa and his robo-reindeers. Creators Greg Ansin and Michael Neel inhale all sorts of influences from video games and comic books to support "Infinite Santa 8000," which began life as a web series charting the main character's battle for survival before being turned into a feature-length endeavor. 100 minutes of all this violence and flat animation is a big ask from Ansin and Neel, but they try to deliver cheap thrills with the effort, getting grungy with this study of survival and guardianship. It gets repetitive quickly, but for certain audiences, there's fun to be had in this post-apocalyptic tale. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Rust (2025)

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    In 2021, cinematographer Halyna Hutchins was killed on the set of “Rust,” shot with a loaded weapon in a horrible accident that sent shockwaves throughout the film industry. There’s been headline news, lawsuits, and even a crude documentary released just month (“Last Take”), and now, surprisingly, there’s an actual feature. Cast and crew set out to complete the movie years after Hutchins’s death, a production push eerily reminiscent of 1994’s “The Crow,” which also carried on after a tragic loss. Now a completed picture, “Rust” arrives in theaters, hoping to offer cinematic artistry and a thought-provoking story, as writer/director Joel Souza endeavors to realize his vision for a decidedly “Unforgiven”-esque tale of violence and the corrosive effects of such living on those who choose darkness. There are obvious challenges when watching the effort, especially getting past its real-world horror, but Souza also doesn’t make a very compelling offering, taking an exceptionally long time (140 minutes) to stew in mental illness, which doesn’t hold much dramatic power. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Another Simple Favor

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    2018’s “A Simple Favor” was an adaptation of a Darcey Bell novel. The literary thriller was handed over to screenwriter Jessica Sharzer and director Paul Feig, who elected to turn the material into camp, getting comedic and broad with a study of suspicion and murder. The picture found an audience, becoming a minor hit during its theatrical release, and now seven years later, there’s “Another Simple Favor,” with Feig and Sharzer (joined by Laeta Kalogridis) returning to get even wilder with Bell’s original creation. They’ve prepared a second helping of problems for the main character and her addiction to true crime situations, cranking up the cartoon-iness of it all with an overstuffed sequel that’s aimed strictly at those who thought the original feature wasn’t silly enough. “Another Simple Favor” craves wild twists and turns in a luxurious Italian setting, and perhaps that’s enough to entertain. However, the endeavor doesn’t contain suspense, and wit isn’t Feig’s thing, making for another uneasy sit with overprocessed writing and obnoxious characters. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com