• Film Review – A Minecraft Movie

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    Plans for a film adaptation of the video game “Minecraft” have been in place for quite some time. The 2011 release enjoyed an incredible surge of popularity over the years, but Hollywood was unable to cash-in on its success, leaving the material stuck in development. Now there’s “A Minecraft Movie,” which hits theaters a little behind the gaming trend, but retains enough energy to recapture fan love for the universe that’s been created over the last 14 years. Director Jared Hess is an odd choice to command the offering, but the “Napoleon Dynamite” and “Nacho Libre” helmer adds the right amount of quirk and goofiness to the endeavor, delivering a lively viewing experience that’s very much in the business of trying to make “Minecraft” exciting again. It’s a big feature with waves of characters and threats, providing a sugary distraction for family audiences. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Freaky Tales

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    Filmmakers Ryan Fleck and Anna Boden once specialized in interesting indie projects, often looking to explore the ways of mental health and battles of impulse control. That journey came to a halt when the pair helmed “Captain Marvel,” going into comic book hero territory with a routine Marvel offering of visual effects and half-baked writing. The career detour resulted in a massive hit, but Fleck and Boden aren’t resting in blockbuster country, returning to more idiosyncratic ways in “Freaky Tales,” which is an anthology film concerning a strange week in Oakland, California in 1987. There are four tales of violence and mystery to enjoy, with some cosmic oddity added to help the viewing experience, and Boden and Fleck remain confident and committed to strange events in the picture. “Freaky Tales” is low budget, but it delivers a few crazy conflicts and moments of surprise, remaining consistent throughout these stories of bizarre events and confrontations. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Friend

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    Naomi Watts and a Great Dane figuring out their life together in the middle of New York City. It’s the stuff of comedy, but “The Friend” is primarily interested in the inner workings of people and animals trying to get through a difficult time together. It’s a companionship story from filmmaking partners Scott McGehee and David Siegel, who adapt a 2018 book by author Sigrid Nunez, challenged to preserve the novel’s intimate ways with animal care and mental health. “The Friend” isn’t too hard on the senses, maintaining a cozy mood of mild shenanigans involving a large pooch and the puzzle of its behavior. And there’s room for human concerns, as the main character experiences an unexpectedly therapeutic journey with a most unlikely partner. The helmers don’t push down too hard on viewers, and they respect the emotional odyssey of the source material, keeping the picture charming and sincere, also sustaining its appeal for dog lovers. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Wake Up

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    RKSS is a Canadian filmmaking duo (comprised of Anouk Whissell and Yoann-Karl Whissell) who made a sharp impression in their debut feature, “Turbo Kid,” which offered sizable retro cinema fun as the helmers attempted to pay tribute to escapism entertainment of the 1980s. RKSS remained in the decade for their follow-up, “Summer of 1984,” exploring a more suspenseful tone in a less sugary movie. Another effort (“We Are Zombies”) came and went without much fanfare, but the team has returned to semi-stable creative ground with “Wake Up,” detailing a war between activists and security inside an IKEA-like store. It’s a B-movie idea played with aggression by RKSS, who look to get fairly violent and somewhat ruthless in the endeavor, and this hostility tends to work for the picture, especially during its most charged moments. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Luckiest Man in America

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    “The Luckiest Man in America” dramatizes the story of Michael Larson, who, in 1984, was a contestant on the television game show, “Press Your Luck.” Larson managed to win over $100,000 from the program after recognizing game board patterns, using this knowledge to avoid all the “whammies,” causing a commotion behind-the-scenes of the show as producers faced a tremendous financial loss. Writers Maggie Briggs and Samir Oliveros (who also directs) don’t go to extremes to turn a relatively simple tale into a cinematic event, largely remaining in the studio during the taping of the program to best examine psychological struggles happening in the room. “The Luckiest Man in America” is an interesting look at a fractured human putting himself in an extraordinary situation, and the screenplay manages to get fairly far with various complications and confrontations found during the event, helping to rework a bizarre bit of TV history. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – William Tell

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    For most people, the name William Tell conjures images of a crossbow accuracy contest involving a human target with an apple placed on their head. Perhaps there are even memories of “The Lone Ranger” and its use of Gioachino Rossini’s “William Tell Overture” as its main theme, successfully bending the tone of the original work to fit a wild west setting. Writer/director Nick Hamm is looking to restore the tale’s integrity with “William Tell,” endeavoring to give an 1804 play (by Friedrich Schiller) the “Braveheart” treatment, out to conjure a big screen epic featuring numerous characters and various motivations. It’s a big movie, but only in certain moments, and Hamm isn’t an inspired helmer (“The Hole,” “Godsend,” “Killing Bono”), out to transform European tensions into a Shakespearean viewing experience, creating a sluggish offering of heroism. “William Tell” might be of value to those most patient with historical actioners, but casual viewers probably won’t walk away with any fresh appreciation of the man and his mission. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – Howling II: Your Sister is a Werewolf

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    While 1981's "The Howling" wasn't a major achievement in genre entertainment, it certainly deserved a better sequel than 1985's "Howling II: Your Sister is a Werewolf." The sequel makes a vague attempt to connect to the original endeavor before becoming its own thing, and such creative freedom doesn't result in a bolder, darker exploration of the werewolf nation. Instead, director Philippe Mora oversees a low-budget creature feature held together by panicky editing that suggests there wasn't much material to begin with. "Howling II" is sloppy stuff, but it almost, just barely, possibly maybe works for its first hour, focusing on stately actor Christopher Lee trying to sell a story that's not really there, while co-star Sybil Danning puts on a visual show as a werewolf queen who's quite fond of cleavage. Filmmaking trends of the 1980s are certainly helpful, but not enough to support the entire offering, which eventually falls into confusion, buried by low-tech special effects. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Frankie Freako

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    Writer/director Steven Kostanski has developed quite a filmography, working to energize cult cinema with efforts such as "The Void," "Father's Day," and "Manborg." He hit a creative peak in 2021, with "PG: Psycho Goreman" delivering big laughs and inventive visuals, skillfully balancing the absurd with the wonderfully strange in one of the year's best movies. The helmer is back with "Frankie Freako," and he's not stepping away from his love of the bizarre, merging elements of "Gremlins" and "Home Alone" for this comedy, with star Conor Sweeney paired with a collection of puppets for an adventure into hardcore partying. There's a lot to process while watching "Frankie Freako," with Kostanski staying close to his low-budget roots, offering big imagination and entertainment value with the endeavor, delivering a textured romp with ghoulish beings and the "square" who's summoned them. Kostanski's vision for weirdness remains a delight in this enjoyably oddball adventure. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Power of Grayskull: The Definitive History of He-Man and the Masters of the Universe

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    In 2017, Netflix released an episode of their popular show, "The Toys That Made Us," that focused on the rise and fall of the "He-Man and the Masters of the Universe" toy line. It was done with the program's attitude and speed, acting as more of an overview than a detailed breakdown of just what happened to the brand name during the 1980s and beyond. Directors Randall Lobb and Robert McCallum attempt to go deeper into the He-Man universe with "Power of Grayskull: The Definitive History of He-Man and the Masters of the Universe," offering a more ambitious survey of the ins and outs of the Mattel moneymaker, looking to scan 40 years of development and execution in 90 minutes. "The Toys That Made Us" got there first, but Lobb and McCallum have more material to handle, offering some lively interviews and fascinating discoveries as they examine how He-Man exploded from a throwaway idea into a toy that was, for many years, the most popular item on store shelves. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Dude Bro Party Massacre III

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    According to the picture's opening crawl, "Dude Bro Party Massacre III" is a film from the 1980s that was banned and destroyed by President Reagan due to its monumentally violent content. The only copy of the feature that managed to survive was a VHS tape of an early morning public access showing in Minneapolis, allowing the legend of "Dude Bro Party Massacre III" to live on once again, complete with awkwardly edited commercial breaks. At last, the public is gifted a chance to witness one of the most grotesque B-movies in cinema history, with its unrelenting terror, gore, and fraternity neuroses, stuffed into a slasher extravaganza that finally brings to the screen what the horror genre has been missing: a Larry King cameo. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Road Trip

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    In 2014, Disney produced an adaptation of the 1972 Judith Viorst book, “Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day.” It wasn’t a slavish replication of the literary treasure, but the production found ways to maintain the idea of the writing while bringing it into a new age of family entertainment. The picture was a big time charmer, but a sequel was never launched. A decade later, Disney tries again with “Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible. No Good, Very Bad Road Trip,” which generates a new family who must endure all kinds of mishaps and torment while trying to get through a simple week of travel. While not as endearing as the previous effort, the new take has its appeal thanks to a spirited cast and plenty of disasters, also exploring Mexican heritage to give the offering its own personality. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Woman in the Yard

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    Director Jaume Collet-Serra is primarily known for creating pulse-pounding thrillers. He’s built an entire career making this stuff, recently coming off the monster streaming success of last year's “Carry-On,” which helped to boost his professional profile when it took a bit of a dive after the release of 2022’s “Black Adam.” Collet-Serra is now challenged to make something exciting out the small portions of story found in “The Woman in the Yard,” which is scripted by Sam Stefanak. It’s a modest tale of threat and mental health issues coming for a mother trying to protect her children from an undefined menace, and the whole experience remains in and around a single farmhouse for the 85-minute-long run time. “The Woman in the Yard” is being promoted as a fright film, and Collet-Serra certainly tries to work a few jolts into the flow of the offering, but the material is mostly about degrees of pain and regret, and while Stefanak attempts to get to the heart of his characters, he really doesn’t have much of a movie here. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Holland (2025)

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    Nicole Kidman certainly loves to play repressed women, preferably sexually so. “Holland” is her third role in less than a year (following “Babygirl” and “A Family Affair”) where she portrays a character being unlocked by a special, forbidden partner, responding to the thrill of danger and exposure to previously unrealized pleasures. It’s a bit of a career rut for the actress, but she remains lively and exploratory in the films, including “Holland,” which provides Kidman with a broader personality to play, as screenwriter Andrew Sodroski looks to the “Fargo” universe to inspire a tale of suspicion and lust, trying to blend exaggeration with suburban horrors. Director Mimi Cave (who impressed with 2022’s “Fresh”) offers style, but not much substance, struggling to keep a leaden story afloat, unable to make something exciting out of the usual in thriller cinema. The picture has moments of passably interesting oddity, but the overall offering is slack, and the ending is completely unsatisfying. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – A Working Man

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    Little was expected of 2024’s “The Beekeeper,” which paired director David Ayer (known for his messy, adrenalized action movies) and star Jason Statham (known for his steely screen presence). It was a January release that managed to find an audience, bringing in people in the mood for a revenge picture that was big on exaggeration and absurdity, hitting the right spot for certain viewers. Just over a year later, Ayer and Statham are back with “A Working Man,” which is an adaptation of a 2014 Chuck Dixon book, introducing readers to the one-man-army methodology of Levon Cade and his particular set of skills. The adaptation is handled by Ayer and co-writer Sylvester Stallone, who are fully committed to repeating “The Beekeeper” experience, once again keeping Statham growly and the helmer in overkill mode, mounting another tale of rage that’s every bit as moronic as their previous collaboration. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Popeye: The Slayer Man

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    We just did this. Last month saw the release of “Popeye’s Revenge,” which was the first production to take advantage of the public domain debut of the comic strip character. The endeavor was awful, made quickly and on the cheap, finding the filmmakers trying to follow the profitable ways of “Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey” by making a quickie offering of bottom shelf nonsense. Well, Popeye is back, and he’s on a mission to take lives once again in “Popeye: The Slayer Man,” which is also a low-budget slasher sticking to the formula all these movies contain, once again following curious youngsters into a remote area while a mysterious monster works to pick them off one-by-one. Director Robert Michael Ryan doesn’t have enough money or imagination to make this silliness frightening, or even entertaining, as too much of “Popeye: The Slayer Man” is dull, poorly scripted, and lacking energy when it comes to the destruction of victims. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Death of a Unicorn

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    Unicorns. Usually, they’re a force of goodness, or magic. Possibly rainbow power. “Death of a Unicorn” attempts to alter the reputation of the fantasy creatures, turning them into ornery beasts with a taste for blood. Such violence is warranted in the picture, as writer/director Alex Scharfman (making his helming debut) creates plenty of ruthless human behavior to explore, merging the mental illness of greed with a most unexpected discovery in the Canadian wilderness. The writing gets off to a wonderful start, managing distinct characterization and intensifying demands of unicorn energy, setting up something special in a clash between the rich and the horned. “Death of a Unicorn” doesn’t maintain such inspiration for the full viewing experience, but it covers enough of it with a demented sense of humor and lively performances, helping to give the material a little more dramatic weight than many might expect from an offering that initially seems somewhat ridiculous. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Penguin Lessons

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    “Inspired by real events,” “The Penguin Lessons” dramatizes the story of educator Tom Michell and his unusual experience in Argentina, where, in 1976, he found a penguin in distress. He managed to clean it up and nurse it back to health, only to find the creature wasn’t interested in leaving his side. The complications of this relationship are perfectly set up for comedy and heartwarming events, and those do occur in the movie. However, “The Penguin Lessons” tries to be a little more than simple comfort food cinema, as the tale also takes place during a military coup in the country, greatly complicating relationships in the story, scripted by Jeff Pope (“The Lost King,” “Philomena,” “Stan & Ollie). The film carries an uneven tonality at times, as director Peter Cattaneo (“The Full Monty,” “The Rocker”) battles to balance material that’s periodically all over the place, but the feature stays engaging, hitting beats of sweetness and sadness. And star Steve Coogan finds a few layers of character to play to prevent the picture from becoming a Disney-style examination of an unlikely friendship. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Thank You Very Much

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    In 1999, director Milos Forman attempted to replicate the Andy Kaufman Experience in “Man on the Moon,” and Jim Carrey set out to fully inhabit the comedian, trying to communicate a strange life to a mass audience. The movie didn’t attract too much attention at the box office, and it came up short when attempting to understand what made Kaufman tick, which, admittedly, is no small feat. “Thank You Very Much” is a documentary from Alex Braverman (“Waffles + Mochi,” “The Mind of a Chef”), and he’s much more direct in his pursuit of whatever truth there is to pull from Kaufman’s legacy. “Thank You Very Much” is a refreshingly insightful look at the performer’s creative origins and connections, giving fans and newcomers a greater understanding of his professional and personal drive to be a bizarre as humanly possible. Kaufman-y shenanigans aren’t present here, as Braverman dares to add a human side to the subjects clouded ways, making for a fascinating viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – That Guy Dick Miller

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    Dick Miller (who passed away in 2019) is an actor. To some, he's the guy who, for decades, showed up in seemingly everything, unafraid to take day- player parts in B-movies of all shapes and sizes. More educated film fans largely treat Miller as a hero, celebrating the longevity and tenacity of his career, which has carried on for over 60 years, amassing quite a resume of appearances in all sorts of endeavors. Director Elijah Drenner looks to celebrate such a life with "That Guy Dick Miller," a 2014 documentary examining the unassuming ways of the subject and his "Zelig"-like magic when it comes to Hollywood omnipresence. Drenner has access to Miller and his wife, Lainie, and they're joined by a wide range of admirers, with the interviewees sharing their adoration for the thespian and his industry history. "That Guy Dick Miller" isn't too big on the fine details of Miller's private life, but it delivers a quickly paced overview of an amazing career that's managed to endure and delight generations of viewers and filmmakers. Not too shabby for a scrappy boy from the Bronx. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Flesh Freaks

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    Zombie cinema is given a South American twist in 2000's "Flesh Freaks," a shot-on-video production from writer/director/star Conall Pendergast. The helmer certainly attempts to jazz up the proceedings, turning a monster breakout into a series of scenes with swirling camerawork and heavy editing, laboring to make the smallness of the endeavor at least look exciting. The effort is noted, but there's not much in the way of thrilling stuff in the feature, as Pendergast doesn't have enough material to fill his picture, resorting to plenty of padding, which is numbing to watch. When scary stuff actually does occur, "Flesh Freaks" shows off its love of gross-out moments, but it's not enough to sustain the entire movie, as tedium wins in the end. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com