• Blu-ray Review – Iron Angels III

    1988’s “Iron Angels II” tried to take the series into a more dramatic direction. The writing wanted tragic events and torturous betrayals, struggling to mix the inherent weirdness of the franchise with relationship darkness, aiming to become a more emotional viewing experience. With all of that out of writer/director Teresa Woo’s system, 1989’s “Iron Angels III” is out to retain a fun factor for the brand name, finding action the name of the game here, escalating conflicts and fight scenarios as Woo hopes to make her own James Bond movie with the offering. Storytelling has never been a priority for the producers, and the second sequel is perhaps the loosest installment in terms of plot and stakes, as the helmer submits a half-baked study of international terrorism to propel the mayhem, dealing with the broadness of screen villainy to successfully launch another adventure for the Angel Organization and their tireless fight to stop the spread of evil. “Iron Angels III” is very entertaining, with welcome emphasis on physical activity, but there’s not much more to the viewing experience than basic brawling and superspy feats of heroism. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Iron Angels II

    When we last left the Angel Organization, they elected to declare war against criminal operation Golden Triangle, facing certain doom as the team battled their way to victory against a most determined opponent. All was well, but work in the superspy business is never truly completed, and the agents (well, most of them) are back in 1988’s “Iron Angels II,” which returns to the furious action ways of the franchise, only now there’s defined interest in pursuing a dramatic tone from co-director/writer Teresa Woo. The battle for justice takes a trip to Malaysia this time around, and the change in scenery helps the endeavor, adding bits of culture and a lot more jungle to the sequel, which trades drug world activity for political revolution. Woo gets somewhat ambitious with “Iron Angels II,” but doesn’t manage to craft an improvement on the 1997 movie, dialing down the general fury of the picture to invest in character. It’s a laudable effort, but it doesn’t always connect as intended. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Iron Angels

    1987’s “Iron Angels” doesn’t share lofty dramatic goals, served up as a “Charlie’s Angels” riff where action dominates as war is declared between organized crime and law enforcement officials. Credited to three directors, the picture isn’t entirely interested in selling a major study of heroism and conflict, adding just enough trouble for the characters to sustain the pursuit of their goals, sold with Hong Kong-style physical ferocity. “Iron Angels” does well with its straightforward take on good vs. evil, mostly of use to viewers who enjoy blasts of stunt work and askew character business, which gets a little dizzying at times in this enjoyable feature. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Family McMullen

    In 1995, “The Brothers McMullen” made its debut at the Sundance Film Festival. It was a tiny, self-financed movie from writer/director Edward Burns, who pieced together a story about brothers, lovers, and all the messiness of relationships. The feature wasn’t edgy or dramatically charged, and it managed to charm audiences and attract a big studio release, giving Burns the biggest hit of his career. He’s been steadily working on modest endeavors ever since, but the lure of a sequel has finally captured his attention, offering “The Family McMullen” three decades later. However, nothing much has changed in this world, as characters still wrestle with personal connections, family history, and Catholicism, and Burns has no interest in radically rethinking the story. “The Family McMullen” hopes to remain easy on the senses and simple in design, returning fans to the difficulties of dealing with the McMullen men and, now, women. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Last Straw

    The “Diary of a Wimpy Kid” film franchise made a transition from live-action efforts to animated pictures in 2021, which has certainly helped to make the world of author Jeff Kinney more palatable. “Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Last Straw” is the fourth movie in this new creative path, and Kinney handles screenplay duties once again, adapting his 2009 book, which is actually the third release in the literary series, though narrative consistency isn’t really a goal for the production. What the filmmakers want is animated tomfoolery involving long suffering lead character Greg and his thwarted plans for relaxation, sending him through another series of misadventures. However, there are difficulties between the son and his father, helping to tighten focus on only a few personalities this time around, making for a slightly different “Diary of a Wimpy Kid” experience, and it’s one that has defined limitations when it comes to delivering cartoon fun. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Five Nights at Freddy’s 2

    In 2023, “Five Nights at Freddy’s” was a major box office success. The movie, an adaptation of the Scott Cawthon video game series, tempted fans with a feature-film understanding of a world involving killer pizza restaurant animatronics and ghostly happenings, coming along at just the right time. For those less enchanted by the premise, the offering was simply dull, unable to really do something menacing with its gaming history, becoming a picture about characters describing things instead of doing things. Cawthon (who takes a sole screenwriting credit) and director Emma Tammi return to duty for “Five Nights at Freddy’s 2,” which is definitely interested in bringing many violent robots into action, and even a poltergeist, but storytelling hustle remains elusive yet again. The sequel is more mindful of its central appeal, but the production still can’t land genuine excitement with another low-budget, sluggish endeavor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Fackham Hall

    It’s a big year for the spoof movie. Last summer, police tomfoolery returned in “The Naked Gun,” with the producers looking to revive a known brand with a cinematic sense of humor that’s fallen out of fashion these days. “Fackham Hall” is a British production that’s hoping to have a little fun with the world of “Downton Abbey” (which came to a close last September), putting writers Jimmy Carr, Patrick Carr, Andrew Dawson, Steve Dawson, and Tim Inman to work cooking up plenty of jokes and mischief centered around the prim and proper ways of an aristocratic family desperate to maintain their privileged future. “Fackham Hall” has the right spirit, mostly game to try anything for a laugh, and some inspired moments are found along the way. Unfortunately, the screenplay runs out of gas after an hour, losing a level of engagement as a bad idea for the third act nearly torpedoes the whole viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Reflection in a Dead Diamond

    Helene Cattet and Bruno Forzani are French filmmakers who specialize in highly visual moviegoing experiences that have extraordinarily little interest in traditional storytelling structure. They made a splash with 2013’s “The Strange Colour of Your Body’s Tears,” and developed their approach for 2017’s “Let the Corpses Tan.” The duo make specialized viewing events, focusing on the specifics of textures and the amorphous ways of memory, and they aren’t giving up their creative obsessions in “Reflection in a Dead Diamond,” returning to screen mystery and menace with renewed vigor. It’s a secret agent tale in some ways, but the picture isn’t concerned with solving dramatic puzzles. It’s another immersion into fetishized moviemaking for the duo, keeping Cattet and Forzani dedicated to manufacturing another surreal presentation of madness and murder, literally taking the feature one frame at a time for many sections of the offering. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Marty Supreme

    The Safdie Brothers are on a break. Or maybe they broke up, no longer interested in working together as a directorial duo. Benny Safdie struck out on his own in last October’s “The Smashing Machine,” attempting to tell a sensitive story about an MMA fighter and his major life problems. Josh delivers “Marty Supreme,” and judging by the general presence of the movie, it seems he was the one truly responsible for Safdie style and love of onscreen chaos. The picture is about a table tennis player trying to make something of himself in the 1950s, using his natural gifts and practiced ways of selfishness to make his dreams come true. In Josh’s hands, the offering becomes a carnival ride of violence, deceit, ping pong, and an anachronistic soundtrack. “Marty Supreme” contains fantastic screen energy, in the same vein as the Safdie’s “Uncut Gems,” but it’s also a feature that asks a lot of its audience without giving too much in return. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Oh. What. Fun.

    “Oh. What. Fun.” was originally published in 2021. It was a short story from author Chandler Baker about motherly neglect during the holiday season, and the writer is joined by Michael Showalter (who also directs) to help turn 59 pages of ideas and characters into a feature-length movie. The screenplay attempts to manufacture a madcap understanding of family concerns and Christmas excess, pursuing various subplots and slapstick encounters, also paying “tribute” to numerous holiday movies along the way. What “Oh. What. Fun.” is missing is a great deal of charm and humor, basically playing like an extended television pilot for a series about a mother managing life’s indignities. Showalter leans into the plasticized vibe of the picture, trying to crank up yuletide feels and wackiness, and when the endeavor isn’t underwhelming, it’s surprisingly unappealing. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Rosemead

    The theatrical release poster for “Rosemead” depicts the main characters in happy times, enjoying a day at the beach with smiles on their faces. The image doesn’t reflect the tone of the picture, but one can’t blame the releasing studio for trying anything to sell some tickets for what’s actually a very bleak story about a mother’s concerns for her deteriorating son. Writer Marilyn Fu develops a Frank Shyong newspaper article, attempting to create an intense study of shame and confusion with a strong Chinese cultural presence, while director Eric Lin is tasked with generating a developing sense of unrest as routine dissolves for two people struggling with different health realities. “Rosemead” is tough, but also involving, presenting Lucy Liu with a substantial role to really explore her range, and she offers career-best work in the feature, giving it a rich sense of concern as the story tracks a tragic decline in familial peace. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Hunting Season

    Action fans craving a hit of sustained suspense might be thoroughly underwhelmed by “Hunting Season.” There are a few hits of violence along the way, but screenwriter Adam Hampton isn’t fully interested in going the one-man-army route with this story of a father trying to protect his teen daughter from the evils of the world around them. Instead of consistent carnage, Hampton tries to manufacture a study of parental love and isolation, getting somewhere with the fatherly elements of the tale. “Hunting Season” is an odd one, as a portion of it works on a dramatic scale, and there’s a surprising amount of viciousness in the picture, giving it some snap. But there’s hideous overacting as well, and director Raja Collins (“Crescent City”) doesn’t have command of pacing, leaving the offering uneven, but with promising moments. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Speed Train

    2020’s “Money Plane” wasn’t a hit film, but it managed to attract plenty of attention as an offering of B-movie ridiculousness. The feature examined the world of a plane-based casino where betting on violent acts was offered, leading to a few close-quarter combat scenarios involving angry characters. Now there’s “Speed Train,” which has no connection to “Money Plane,” but it shares similar production interest in delivering absurd low-budget action entertainment involving just a few sets and an odd cast. Co-writer/director Ryan Francis (a longtime actor, dating back to appearances in “Hook” and “Ghostbusters II”) doesn’t have much here, but there is an idea following the intensity of a runaway train and the mayhem of AI-controlled human weapons that could produce a decent enough ride. Unfortunately, “Speed Train” doesn’t reach its potential, stuck with repetition and limited resources as it attempts to provide some junky escapism. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – 100 Nights of Hero

    “100 Nights of Hero” is an adaptation of a 2016 graphic novel by Isabel Greenberg, who blends the storytelling angle of “One Thousand and One Nights” to help invent a female-centric study of oppression and passion in a fantasy world of patriarchal control. It’s a tricky concept to the bring to the screen, putting writer/director Julia Jackman (“Bonus Track”) to work on world-building with a small budget and limited actors. The vision for the production is impressive, as Jackman hopes to delve into forbidden love and torturous experiences involving male oppressors. The execution of the feature is another story, and Jackman attempts to cast a spell over the viewer, luring them in with specialized production design details and acts of longing, but the slow-burn ways of the picture offer little dramatic reward. “100 Nights of Hero” ends up ambitious, but it’s also quite glacial. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • 4K UHD Review – The Dark Half

    Films based on books from iconic author Stephen King inspired box office business in the 1980s, and grew into something more respectable in the 1990s, once Kathy Bates took home an Oscar for her role in 1990’s “Misery.” 1993’s “The Dark Half” is part of this second wave of interest in King’s output, putting writer/director George A. Romeo to work on a story about writer duality and danger, tasked with balancing the horror elements of the tale and its periodically intimate psychology. The picture has its grisly moments, but it mostly connects as a study of King’s own struggles as an author, playing with his pen name past and elements of the publishing world. Romero’s not known for nuance, but he does a respectable job with “The Dark Half,” at least during its opening half, which is more invested in a compelling mystery concerning an author’s break from reality. The rest of the offering isn’t as involving as Romero attempts to satisfy genre fans and find a way out of a complicated premise. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Troll 2 (2025)

    Yes, of course there’s another “Troll 2.” However, this “Troll 2” has nothing to do with the notoriously bad 1990 release. The new film is a sequel to 2022’s “Troll,” where director Roar Uthaug received a chance to play with a Norwegian version of kaiju cinema, exploring the massive presence of fantasy creatures trying to understand their place in the world, often by destroying whatever happens to be within smashing distance. It was an entertaining picture, filling in the gap between major Hollywood-backed Kong and Godzilla productions, with Uthaug achieving a satisfying sense of scale and destruction. The trolls are back in business for the continuation, which has defined influences and formula to follow. The story feels a little more labored this time around, but there’s still a fun factor to embrace, and, when the movie gets around to it, troll interactions save the feature, delivering welcome action. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Devil at Your Heels

    Kenneth Gordon Polsjek was a boy with a dream. He grew up in the “slums” of Montreal, handling poverty and an aborted education, forced into maturity to make a living at a young age. Kenneth was drawn to spectacle, and was soon reborn as “Ken Carter,” setting out to create a career on the daredevil circuit during the 1970s. He was a man driven to success and to entertain, embracing his growing status as a fearless star in the stunt world, always hunting for his next event. 1981’s “The Devil at Your Heels” is a documentary about Carter’s quest for the impossible, with director Robert Fortier following the “Mad Canadian” for five years, capturing the development of a mile-long jet car jump as its challenged by all kinds of setbacks and delays. Carter is a character, and “The Devil at Your Heels” is an interesting, but slowly paced understanding of his drive to find publicity and fame, taking his act to the extreme to secure his place as the number one stunt driver in the world. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Destroy All Neighbors

    We don’t see many of these anymore. Screenwriters Mike Benner, Jared Logan, and Charles A. Pieper look to raise a little hell with “Destroy All Neighbors,” which is a strange blast of violence and dark comedy, with heavy emphasis on madness and makeup effects. Director Josh Forbes (“Contracted: Phase II”) is in charge of this cinematic circus, and his job is to find some level of tonal stability to help viewers get into the mood of the endeavor, which isn’t afraid to go just about anywhere with its macabre visuals. “Destroy All Neighbors” is meant to be a roaring good time with practical effects and screen craziness, and it definitely has inspired moments of insanity. The picture as a whole is a little too much to endure at times, but creativity is plentiful and humor remains intact in this exploration of overkill. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Hell of a Summer

    A summer camp setting and horror. It’s a combination that’s created a lot of memorable genre entertainment over the last 45 years, inspiring filmmakers to keep returning to the blend of innocence and aggression to support their low-budget endeavors. Co-writers/co-directors Finn Wolfhard and Billy Bryk try their luck with slasher cinema in “Hell of a Summer,” bringing a new generation into the woods for a survival challenge, only this round is a bit more comedic than I’m sure many viewers will expect. In fact, cheekiness tends to dominate the offering, as Wolfhard and Bryk maintain a weird distance from frights in their scary movie, which is loosely scripted, not terribly interested in being anything more than a mild goof. “Hell of a Summer” (shot three years ago) has the ingredients for at least a passable slaughterama, but there’s no dominating nightmare to follow in the picture, which is inspired by serious horror features. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Merchants of Joy

    The holiday season. For some, it’s a time of magic and human connection. It’s a chance to spend time with thoughts and feelings, reflecting on the year and its challenges. It’s also a period of great celebration for many, as revelers look to kick off the blues and devour all the treasures that arrive. For the “Five Families of Christmas,” November and December represents a period when they can make a small fortune selling Christmas trees to the people of New York City. “The Merchants of Joy” is based on two magazine articles written by Owen Long, with director Celia Aniskovich (“Call Me Miss Cleo,” “Fruitcake Fraud”) setting out to follow the yearly rituals and power plays of the people involved in this niche business. As a study of organization and commerce, “The Merchants of Joy” is an intermittently fascinating examination of unexpected anxieties and competition. As an offering of seasonal warmth and inspiration, Aniskovich fumbles the good vibes of the documentary, offering too much time with abrasive personalities. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com