• Film Review – Deep Cover (2025)

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    Improvisational comedy. It’s regarded by some as a breakthrough in funny business, while others view it as the worst the world of humor has to offer. It’s certainly become a major force in screen comedies, and it serves as part of the plot of “Deep Cover,” which is actually credited to four writers, including co-producer Colin Trevorrow, and features very little improvisation. The picture uses this subculture as a way to refresh the crime movie, following the panic of three improv players pulled into a scheme to become undercover cops in London, using their wits to deal with criminals. It’s a fun concept that becomes a mildly amusing offering from director Tom Kingsley, who toys with the unscripted ways of panic and presence, going for a more madcap tone as a potentially simple situation snowballs out of control. “Deep Cover” is kept alive by alert performances, as the story tends to feel overstuffed, finding the writers laboring to extend a short film idea. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – How to Train Your Dragon (2025)

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    While a few movies didn’t quite meet financial potential, Disney has managed to sustain audience interest in their run of live-action remakes of animated classics. These things have made a ton of money for the studio, and DreamWorks isn’t about to pass on an excellent opportunity to exploit arguably their finest animated film. “How to Train Your Dragon” managed to capture critical acclaim and box office success in 2010, paving the way for two sequels, T.V. shows, and a ton of merchandising. There’s even an entire “universe” based on the franchise at a Universal theme park. And now it’s back, in the flesh (and CGI), with writer/director Dean DeBlois returning to transform a cartoon world into something a little more real, following the Disney template as most of the story, characters, and tone are revived for a redo. While so much of “How to Train Your Dragon” is the same, there’s still life in the brand name, providing a suitably epic return to Berk that’s not as delightful as the 2010 effort, but it does the trick, especially for younger audiences who can’t get enough “Dragon” in their lives. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Materialists

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    Two years ago, writer/director Celine Song made her debut with “Past Lives.” It was an offering about longing and life, sold with an indie film tilt that secured sterling reviews and impressive box office, helping to launch her career. She’s back in the thick of yearning in “Materialists,” examining a different processing of love and attraction, which the lead character turns into a type of math to serve her job as a matchmaker. The picture is being sold as something frothy and lively to help lure audiences into theaters, but “Materialists” isn’t a romantic comedy. It’s a more severe understanding of relationships and people, with Song once again refusing to butter up her material, preferring to go to some extremes to fully illuminate her ideas. Tonally, the movie is all over the place, but there are a few wonderful performances to keep the endeavor upright, and the writing contains moments of clarity when it comes to the ways of romantic expectations, providing more sting than sugar in this oddly conceived feature. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Diablo

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    With a few possible exceptions, Scott Adkins has managed to become the best thing about the movies he appears in. Perhaps that’s damning with faint praise, as these productions aren’t always created with the finest filmmaking minds around, and budgets are typically very small, but Adkins keeps moving forward in B-movies, usually prepared to put on a show for action fans. “Diablo” is his latest endeavor, and Adkins nabs a co-story credit for this rescue picture, which pits a desperate American ex-con against waves of Columbian enforcers out to prevent his reunion with a daughter he’s never met. Screenwriter Mat Sansom and director Ernesto Diaz Espinoza (“The ABCs of Death,” “The Fist of the Condor”) understand the mission, trying to deliver hard hits and near-misses in the offering, which carries an interesting viciousness. “Diablo” isn’t slick or swiftly paced, but it does retain intensity at times, and there’s always Adkins, who delivers a pleasing turn as a desperate man who’s always ready to fight. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Unholy Trinity

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    “The Unholy Trinity” has the structure of an epic, arranging a war of personalities all vying for a hidden stash of gold, willing to kill one another to achieve their claim on a fortune. However, the film doesn’t look all that big and mighty, presented as a low-budget display of western formula that put up enough money to acquire the attention of two name actors. Director Richard Gray (“Robert the Bruce,” “Murder at Yellowstone City”) attempts to sell a battle of men dealing with their past, greediness, and guilt, but a gritty sense of hostility doesn’t emerge in the feature, which has its troubles when trying to sell a more dramatic take on the central conflict. “The Unholy Trinity” has some thespian emphasis to power a few scenes, but there’s not enough to cover the whole picture, which gradually comes to a stop as banal speeches compete with disappointing action for screentime. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Echo Valley

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    The trials of parenthood are explored in “Echo Valley,” but not in full. Screenwriter Brad Ingelsby (“Out of the Furnace,” “The Way Back,” “Mare of Easttown”) examines the increasingly hostile relationship between a mother and her drug addict daughter, but the material isn’t a dramatic understanding of such particular suffering. Ingelsby is more interested in creating a thriller out of the situation, and not an inspired one with intriguing turns and corrupt characters. Director Michael Pearce (“Encounter,” “Beast”) has a committed lead performance from Julianne Moore, but not a firm grasp on suspense in the feature, which has a throttled sense of escalation and a screwy appreciation for its central crisis of motherly love. “Echo Valley” commences with some interesting illness, but once the writing starts to reveal its ultimate destination, it loses almost all of its appeal. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Killing Mary Sue

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    I’m not sure what kind of expectations should be in place for this new release when the filmmaker’s last effort was a 2021 cheapie titled “Coronavirus Conspiracy.” Writer/director James Sunshine somehow returns with “Killing Mary Sue,” which moves away from global misery to simply focus on viewer agony involving an action comedy that’s mostly unbearable. Sunshine doesn’t know what he wants from the endeavor, beginning as something approximating a farce before it slams into concern for characters nobody is going to care about. “Killing Mary Sue” is violent and obnoxious, and the helmer’s job is to transform extremity into a good time with terrible people. Instead, Sunshine keeps the picture shrill and unfocused, bringing a small cast of familiar faces to play around with an abrasive tone the director ultimately has no idea how to manage. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Endless Summer Syndrome

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    Family ties are thoroughly knotted in 2023's "Endless Summer Syndrome." It's a French production from co-writer/director Kaveh Daneshmand, and he makes his feature-length helming debut with a specific tonal challenge, following an accusation of incest as it invades what's meant to be a bittersweet vacation for a family of four. "Endless Summer Syndrome" is provocative and somewhat mysterious, but Daneshmand doesn't turn it into exploitation. He remains committed to character and mood, maintaining elements of paranoia and resentment to make an engrossing drama with pieces of a detective story, and one offering an unusual crime up for investigation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Dial D for Demons

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    Evil Spirits? A suicide epidemic? Haunted beepers? Surely 2000's "Dial D for Demons" is a horror film, but director Billy Tang has other ideas for the screenplay (credited to Kai Cheung Chung), intending to offer a roller coaster ride of emotions, reactions, and enemies as the story details a deadly night for five characters trying to enjoy time inside a Hong Kong vacation house. Mayhem is meant to break out in the endeavor, but such wonderful chaos doesn't arrive, as most of the feature attempts to transform a lukewarm mystery into something suspenseful, while the personalities involved are mostly generic, missing definition to help viewers get involved in the developing nightmare. Comedic touches are also difficult to digest, as the helmer isn't entirely sure what tone to go with in the picture, preferring to follow every whim. "Dial D for Demons" is more a drag than a thrilling fright film, unable to achieve much in the way of tension and characterization before unleashing a last act expositional dump that's too much for the effort to handle. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Dogs in Quicksand

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    The complications of relationships and unsatisfied people are explored in 1999's oddly titled "Dogs in Quicksand." Writer/director Mike Trippiedi goes the multi-character route for the endeavor, assembling an assortment of emotionally unstable people experiencing tremendous upheaval in their lives, trying to make sense of their own desires and attraction to others. The helmer creates a cat's cradle of personalities to inspect for the run time, as each participant is facing trouble they can't process in a healthy manner, leading to a series of strange connections and desires, dusted with a little violence to help add tension to the picture. "Dogs in Quicksand" is meant to be a dark comedy, as bad things happen to bad people, and Trippiedi attempts to play the whole production with a certain snappiness, investing in dialogue and broad performances to help the offering reach a semi- farcical speed. It's a laudable effort, but Trippiedi doesn't know when to quit, pushing the feature into tedium as it tries to add turns to turns already in the plot. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Fatal Delusion

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    1995's "Fatal Delusion" is a sensitive study of wartime PTSD and the corrosive nature of violence as it penetrates mind and body, sending a simple man to extremes as he processes his time in the military. Just kidding. This is a W.A.V.E., shot-on-video production from creators Gary Whitson and Ray Longo, who use the cruelties of battle to launch another fetish video for the company, quickly returning to their love of restraint, bathing, and unspeakable violence committed against women. A serial killer story is offered in "Fatal Delusion," as Longo scripts himself a starring role as a madman with a military past, taking out his "rage" on females who vaguely resemble part of his nightmare experience in Vietnam. Perhaps there's something to follow in such a tale of insanity, but W.A.V.E. doesn't roll that way, merely using the fiendish inspiration to maintain a steady view of kinks for their customers, paying minimal attention to the basics in dramatic intensity. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Tyler Perry’s Straw

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    “Straw” is Tyler Perry’s fifth feature in two years (a sixth, “Madea’s Destination Wedding,” is due out next month). He works extremely fast, and with this new release, perhaps too fast, as the movie was reportedly shot in just four days, and the finished product definitely reflects a production that didn’t stop to really consider its premise and performances. The material (credited to Perry) details the overwhelming frustration swarming a single mother who’s dealing with every responsibility imaginable, finally breaking from the stress as she takes a gun and tries to collect money owed to her in a bank. It’s a standoff story in many ways, but Perry is also trying to address the plight of women facing impossible odds of survival. “Straw” means well enough, at least during its first half, but Perry’s painfully manipulative ways with drama ultimately torpedo whatever meaningfulness the picture hopes to offer, becoming yet another eye-rolling soap opera for the repetitive filmmaker. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Predator: Killer of Killers

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    2022’s “Prey” brought the “Predator” franchise back to life after it was nearly destroyed by 2018’s “The Predator,” Shane Black’s inept take on master hunter action. Director Dan Tractenberg managed to get the series back to basics with the prequel, handling a limited budget and small-scale concept with some skill, winning over the target audience and restoring a little critical support for the brand name. The helmer is far from done with this cinematic world, but before the live-action “Predator: Badlands” hits screens later this year, there’s an animated presentation of alien entanglements in “Predator: Killer of Killers,” which is an anthology film that explores other tales of battle and honor throughout the years. Tractenberg and co-director Josh Wassung take this creative opportunity very seriously, launching brutal, bruising chapters of conflict and survival as more Earthlings tangle with barbarians from another world. “Killer of Killers” is perhaps the best “Predator” installment since the 1987 original, as animation makes a winning match to the sci-fi/action needs of the premise. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Ballerina

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    The “John Wick” saga found some form of closure in 2023, when the third sequel managed to deliver at the box office and please fans. It was an exhausting journey, but there was a sense of finality to it all. Lionsgate Films isn’t quite ready to say goodbye to the brand name, issuing a spin-off in “Ballerina,” which turns to actress Ana de Armas to continue down the path of pain Wick himself, Keanu Reeves, left behind. Actually, Reeves isn’t entirely done with the series, but this is de Armas’s film, and she makes the most of the action opportunity, providing a pleasant, forceful lead performance in a feature that’s determined to destroy her character. “Ballerina” has endured plenty of production trouble (it was originally shot nearly three years ago, and extensively reworked and reshot since then), making a true director’s vision difficult to discern (Len Wiseman is credited, while franchise overlord Chad Stahelski handled updates), but the picture itself contains plenty of explosive, bruising sequences, which helps to distract from its limited interest in storytelling. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Emmanuelle

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    “Emmanuelle” began life as a 1967 novel by author Emmanuelle Arsan, who collected her sexual fantasies and shared them with the world, turning her book into a best-seller for readers interested in a more refined presentation of lust. This literary success eventually spawned a film franchise that began in 1974, helping to launch the career of star Sylvia Kristel during the “porno chic” era. Sequels were made, and soon enough, producers went wild with the brand name in a very “Amityville”-like manner, including “Black Emanuelle,” “Carry On Emmanuelle,” and a television series, “Emmanuelle in Space.” Co-writer/director Audrey Diwan looks to restore a little seriousness to the franchise, delivering a frostier take on amorous activity in “Emmanuelle,” which attempts to remain as serious as possible while dealing with sexualized encounters and games of mystery. The helmer has the right idea when it comes to commitment to the material, but this feature fails to summon heat, or any emotion, really, as Diwan keeps the whole thing mummified while aiming to deliver excitement. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Dangerous Animals

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    Moviegoers are routinely confronted with offerings of Shark Attack Cinema, as producers are still finding profit in the dangers of the deep sea. “Dangerous Animals” also deals with an aquatic threat involving massive predators, but screenwriter Nick Lepard hopes to subvert expectations for the usual in oceanic panic by creating a different kind of serial killer tale, following the exploits of a madman using sharks to help feed his obsession with taking innocent lives. Director Sean Byrne doesn’t work often (previously helming 2009’s “The Loved Ones” and 2015’s “The Devil’s Candy”), but he’s prepared to deliver something quite strange and semi-disturbing in “Dangerous Animals,” which aims to unsettle viewers with prolonged scenes of suffering and grisly kills. Byrne gets a little carried away when trying to shock his audience, but he generates a compelling nightmare, adding an interesting intimidation factor to an odd study of perversion and death. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Life of Chuck

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    “The Life of Chuck” is based on a Stephen King novella from 2020, and we’ve been here before. Works from the iconic author, especially shorter ones, have inspired a few of the finest King adaptations around, including 1994’s “The Shawshank Redemption” and 1986’s “Stand by Me.” That same level of cinematic magic isn’t quite present in the new picture, but writer/director Mike Flanagan (a King Country vet with work on “Gerald’s Game” and “Doctor Sleep”) remains ambitious with the effort, out to scramble minds and soothe souls with the movie, which looks to fold time and space in an attempt to address the human condition. “The Life of Chuck” is all over the place, and Flanagan’s lyrical approach to the endeavor might feel like itching powder to some viewers. It’s a deeply flawed offering of mystery, but the helmer fully commits to the strangeness of it all, which is impressive, clearly out to deliver an inscrutable feature that’s meant to connect in a heartfelt manner. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Sunlight

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    Nina Conti is a gifted ventriloquist and comedian who achieved some notice for her collaboration with Monkey, a profane creation offering a voice for its performer as bits and pieces of psychological examination were worked out. Conti elects to expand on the ways of Monkey in “Sunlight,” turning the hand puppet into a full-sized creation, but one still capable of providing a broad understanding of dissociation in darkly comedic ways. Strangely credited as written by Conti and co-star Shenoah Allen, with a screenplay by Allen, “Sunlight” is a semi-improvised inspection of bruised people making an unexpected connection while embarking on a road trip, trying to understand their dire situations while one of the characters remains in a monkey suit for most of the run time. Conti doesn’t have a firm hold on pacing, but she’s open to explore the messiness of the personalities and their road to some form of healing, making a humorous endeavor that’s often surprising and marvelously acted. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – I Don’t Understand You

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    Filmmakers Brian Crano and David Joseph Craig team up to deliver a shot of dark comedy and mild horror with “I Don’t Understand You.” The pair also claim credit for the screenplay, creating a nightmare scenario of misunderstanding for two men on vacation in Italy (oddly, Amanda Knox is listed as a co-producer), about to experience a seismic change in their lives. Crano and Craig have fondness for the ridiculous in the feature, which takes on some fairly grim turns of bodily harm, but miraculously never succumbs to tonal instability. It’s a weirdly upbeat picture about complete catastrophe, putting the helmers to work reinforcing character and craziness, which gets the endeavor most of the way there. “I Don’t Understand You” is an offering of macabre entertainment, and it’s supported with enthusiasm by actors Nick Kroll and Andrew Rannells, who handle the thespian requirements of the effort, which asks them to provide a steady stream of nervous energy as the writing dreams up new ways to ruin a simple vacation for the characters. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Barron’s Cove

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    Evan Ari Kelman makes his feature-length directorial debut with “Barron’s Cove,” also claiming screenplay duties. He’s looking to make a deep impression with the picture, creating a tale of agonizing loss and grief, also shaping an unusual revenge story between an emotionally devastated man and the 10-year-old boy he believes murdered his son. There’s incredible bleakness to the material, which ends up becoming its most compelling element, daring to explore the depths of emotional instability and feral thinking during a nightmarish time. Kelman has something with the premise and characters, but he can’t sustain such intensity, eventually transforming the film into a thriller of sorts, which is the wrong way to go. “Barron’s Cove” is eventually sunk by weak creative decisions and editorial indifference, but it does contain a riveting first act, promising a severe study of madness that never arrives. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com