“The Trust” is the directorial debut for Alex and Benjamin Brewer, with the siblings jumping into the industry via cliché, served up bruised and battered by dark comedy. It’s easy to spot a lack of seasoning with the helmers, who arrive with big ideas for visuals and twists, but fail to juggle the various tones they excitedly introduce. “The Trust” has initial promise and personality, but as the story unfolds, it becomes clear that nothing interesting is happening. Instead, the feature works through formula with dwindling enthusiasm, leaving stars Nicolas Cage and Elijah Wood to come up with their own level of dramatic interest, and even they stop faking it after the first act. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – High-Rise
Director Ben Wheatley has built a career making tough, impenetrable semi-horror pictures that explore grim psychological abysses and shocking violence. He’s dealt with domestic meltdowns (“Down Terrace”), period torment (“A Field in England), and cult nightmares (“Kill List”), but “High-Rise” pulls Wheatley into the big time, gifted known actors and a reasonable budget to create a suspense feature that details a vicious societal breakdown in a tight, suffocating space. It’s not quite the haves vs. the have nots, but “High-Rise” definitely has a few ideas on the state of the world and the ravages of unchecked capitalism. However, for every sharp stick jab of satire, Wheatley provides needless excess, clinging tight to repetitive helming habits that ultimately drown out the material’s war cry. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Cash Only
As a gritty, low-wattage crime story, “Cash Only” has a few interesting deviations from the norm. It’s not every day that one encounters a tale of survival that highlights the quick-thinking actions of an apartment landlord, and the feature explores the Albanian immigrant experience in America, identifying community interaction in Detroit. “Cash Only” is effective and periodically nail-biting, but that it works so hard to remain fresh for those burned out by the same gangster business found in dozens of movies every year is its real achievement. Screenwriter/star Nickola Shreli puts some thought into the picture, which manages to capture desperation superbly, at least until the final 20 minutes. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Divine Access
Billy Burke hasn’t enjoyed the most eventful of film careers, often stuck in bland roles of little consequence, like his long stretch as Bella’s powerless father in the “Twilight” series. In an effort to help brighten job opportunities, Burke produces “Divine Access,” which, at times, seems to be created strictly to showcase Burke’s previously unseen range. With those limited creative goals in mind, the feature is enormously successful, delivering Burke’s best role to date in a production that’s comfortable offering a good chunk of its run time to the performer to do whatever he wants with it. “Divine Access” is most enjoyable keeping close to Burke, with the alternative being a somewhat silly story about fanaticism and jealousy that’s difficult to take seriously. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Queen Mimi
Los Angeles is home to millions of wayward soul stories, but Marie “Mimi” Haist is just special enough to inspire a documentary about her life. An eccentric and feisty 88-year-old woman, she’s the subject of “Queen Mimi,” a feature tracking her daily experience as a connected homeless woman in California, with pal Yaniv Rokah picking up a camera to capture her special point of view and surprising longevity. In today’s documentary-everything marketplace, it’s difficult to understand what inspired Rokah to bring Mimi to screens, but luckily there’s just enough biographical curiosity and star power to carry the viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Sundown
“Sundown” is on a mission to revive the Spring Break comedy of the 1980s, hitting modern audiences with cheap thrills and thinly developed characters while the film soaks up the sun and sand. Going the R-rated route, the feature at least understands the elements that made movies like “Hardbodies” semi-tolerable, but as juvenile farces go, “Sundown” is lacking in insanity. Co-writer/director Fernando Lebrija tries to work the effort into a frenzy with broad comedy and bizarre encounters, but he’s missing a crucial sense of escalation, with the picture stopping to rest between incidents, which ruins the pace of the endeavor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Crazylegs Crane
Arriving in 1978, "Crazylegs Crane" represents the other end of the quality spectrum for DePatie-Freleng Enterprises, who offer 16 shorts of fumbled comedy and aggressive voicework with saga of a bird and a dragonfly mixing it up on a daily basis. Even with lowered expectations for television animation from the 1970s, "Crazylegs Crane" tests patience with its unadventurous storytelling and slack sense of humor, content to rework select gags repeatedly, with only the rare moment of oddity arriving to wake the series up. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – The Manhattan Project
Marshall Brickman is perhaps best known for his collaborations with Woody Allen, co-scripting efforts such as "Sleeper," "Manhattan," "Manhattan Murder Mystery," and the Academy Award-winning "Annie Hall." It's an impressive resume, but Brickman's directorial output isn't quite as stunning, encountering rough creative seas with 1980's "Simon" and 1983's "Lovesick." 1986's "The Manhattan Project" may not be a towering achievement of cinematic craftsmanship, but it's the best thing Brickman helmed during his career, guiding an exciting and idiosyncratic thriller that played into the nuclear fears of the era (unfortunately, little of that has faded away in our current volatile age) while remaining an effective teen-centric offering, investing in smart characters and complex situations. "The Manhattan Project" isn't above a dramatic manipulation or two, but it carries confidently, trying to explore a real-world scenario of human fallibility and intelligence, with Brickman working to achieve a nail-biting tone to preserve the escapist qualities within this sobering film. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Solarbabies
Brooksfilm is the company Mel Brooks created to help develop personal projects, helping them through the Hollywood system. The quality of these efforts varied wildly, but 1986 was a particularly volatile year for the company, which welcomed the release of "The Fly," arguably one of the best horror pictures of the 1980s, showcasing a thunderous directorial vision and creative freedom from David Cronenberg. In '86, Brooksfilm also shepherded "Solarbabies," an awkwardly titled take on "Mad Max" that featured a cast on roller skates, emoting to a glowing blue sphere. There's certainly no way to compare the movies in terms of artistic and dramatic reach, but it's difficult to fathom what Brooksfilm was thinking with "Solarbabies," their attempt to join the fantasy film sweepstakes of the decade, only without a defined approach to transform its vast collection of absurdities into high-flying, fast-rolling, orb-cradling fun. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – The Ant and the Aardvark
Working to create their own take on the destructive misadventures of Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner, DePatie-Freleng Enterprises delivers "The Ant and the Aardvark," a 17-episode saga featuring playful combat waged between an anteater who sounds like Jackie Mason (John Byner provides the voice) and Dean Martin-esque insect named Charlie (also Byner). Doing away with plot and a great assortment of supporting characters, the production focuses almost solely on the titular duo, who spend these brief blasts of screen time engaging in all kinds of violent shenanigans and zany chases, playing up cartoon slapstick with a merry-go-round of exaggerated misfortune. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Captain America: Civil War
After the rousing success of 2014’s “Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” which strived to redefine a problematic superhero in a post-“Avengers” landscape, Marvel Studios sustains the introspective atmosphere for “Captain America: Civil War,” expanding on ideas of heroism and responsibility as the Marvel Cinematic Universe expands and costumed crime-fighting becomes ubiquitous in fictional realms and at the local multiplex. Returning directors Anthony and Joe Russo know exactly how to play these characters, building on the “Winter Soldier” success through community inspection while still making time for bulldozing action sequences. Captain America remains the focal point of the movie, but his place as a symbol for freedom feeds into a larger appreciation of heightened abilities and tech, and all the confusion it creates in a paranoid world. “Civil War” teases the Big Ideas while still wholly triumphant as superhero cinema. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Meddler
Lorene Scafaria made her directorial debut with 2012’s “Seeking a Friend for the End of the World.” Taking on the apocalypse with a sense of heart and humor, the helmer made an impression with difficult material, showing encouraging timing and an interest in character details, not just lunging for the jokes at every turn. She returns to screens with “The Meddler,” bringing down her dramatic scope to survey the ways of a widow and her complicated relationship with the world around her. Honing her screenwriting skills with inspired material, Scafaria handles the delicate balance of light and dark with “The Meddler,” taking a potentially draining study of smothering and finding a rich sense of spirit and humor, approaching emotional confusion with exceptional care. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Louder Than Bombs
The American dysfunctional family film receives a European makeover from Norwegian director Joachim Trier, who last helmed the critically praised “Oslo, August 31st.” It’s never the expanse of plot that defines this type of viewing experience, but the depth of pain, and “Louder Than Bombs” does a commendable job juggling character misery, trying to blur connective tissue long enough for the effort to become a mystery of sorts. Thanks to Trier’s artful visual touches and determination to make the teen uprising on view here feel as skin-crawlingly authentic as possible, “Louder Than Bombs” achieves most of its dramatic goals, finding fertile ground with potentially clichéd material. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Term Life
Former child actor Peter Billingsley (“A Christmas Story,” “The Dirt Bike Kid”) made his directorial debut in 2009 with the comedy “Couples Retreat.” A weak effort that showcased a permissiveness with its cast and distraction with its tropical location, “Couples Retreat” didn’t launch Billingsley’s big screen helming career with promise. Seven years later, he returns to duty with “Term Life,” dropping interest in silly business to adapt a graphic novel about dangerous men. Darkly comic and action-oriented, “Term Life” has the means to take viewers on a wild ride of chases, gunplay, and threats, but the cut presented here doesn’t make much sense of the story, struggling to build momentum as editing fails to juggle numerous supporting characters and sinister motivations. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Mothers and Daughters
Tensions between parents and their children try the digital age on for size in “Mothers and Daughters.” Directed by Paul Duddridge, the picture takes its line-up of related combatants to video chats, with most scenes of confession and heartbreak happening on computer screens, giving the feature the uncomfortable distance it’s hunting for. It’s an interesting concept, exposing the spaces we are now capable of putting between one another, and “Mothers and Daughters” has effective scenes of frustration, watching a few fine actresses wrestle with emotions they’re rarely asked to explore onscreen anymore. It can be a pedestrian effort, but when the screenplay (written by Paige Cameron) digs in deep to locate hurt, the production sparks to life. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Memoria
There have been two features inspired by “Palo Alto,” actor James Franco’s collection of short stories. In “Palo Alto” and “Yosemite,” filmmakers have worked to tap into Franco’s special appreciation of teenage angst, creating meditative works that care for characterization and strive to identify with the turbulent growing pains of adolescent life in California. “Memoria” is the latest pour from the Franco jug of creative writing, reuniting audiences with a somber mood of juvenile delinquency, taking a close look at the youth of today as they struggle with age-old challenges of social interaction, crushes, and troubling parental influence. “Memoria” has brevity on its side, and the picture is a nice fit with previous cinematic chapters, but, at this point, if one isn’t already feeling the Franco vibe, there’s little reason to start experiencing his brand of ennui here. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Ulee’s Gold
While enduring a career of sporadic work, writer/director Victor Nunez has a special way with characterization, taking extreme care with the lives he's dramatically dissecting on film. With 1993's "Ruby in Paradise," Nunez delivered a rich understanding of personal freedom and fears, while exploring Floridian locations with unusual respect for the state's natural beauty and idiosyncratic residents. 1997's "Ulee's Gold" is Nunez's second major feature and arguably his best work, building on the education "Ruby" provided to help blend slightly more commercial interests with his dedication to soulful dissection, led by a terrific performance from Peter Fonda. Channeling the work of John Sayles, Nunez pulls sizable drama out of subtle details and modest personalities, sticking to the basics of human behavior to create engrossing frustrations, gently nudging the tale to mild violence to help provide shape to the character study. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Miracle Beach
"Miracle Beach" has terrible timing. A 1984-style beach shenanigans endeavor that was ultimately produced in 1992, the feature missed its chance to battle the competition, coming up with its own display of horndog antics featuring a bevy of topless women, while goofball supporting characters manage slapstick requirements poorly. Perhaps in the thick of the trend, the film might've found its place as harmless entertainment, trying to provide enough bikini-ogling antics as possible while nursing its fantasy premise. In the 1990s, the effort sticks out awkwardly, positioned as bottom shelf video store fodder for teenage boys. Weirdly bland and incredibly unfunny, "Miracle Beach" is too friendly to inspire viewer rage, but the boredom it generates as it goes about its business stumbling through terrible scenes is enormous, with director Skott Snider caught uncomfortably between the "Mannequin"-esque date movie he wants to make and the T&A fest the producers are counting on. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com






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