• Blu-ray Review – River of Death

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    "River of Death" is a loose adaptation of Alistair McLean's 1981 novel. While it sips from a literary source, the true inspiration for the 1989 effort seems to be split between "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and "Apocalypse Now." Director Steve Carver ("Big Bad Mama," "An Eye for an Eye") makes a game attempt to give the adventure story a cinematic lift, channeling Spielberg and Coppola to the best of his ability, striving to give Cannon Films an easily marketable picture. "River of Death" isn't shy about stealing, but it remains weirdly inert. Despite its Amazon River setting, interest in shootouts and threatening, highly decorated natives, and star turn from action hero Michael Dudikoff, the feature doesn't provide the necessary speed for excitement, struggling to come up with ways to make a bland tale at least passably gripping. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Invitation to a Gunfighter

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    There's an appealing sense of disorientation that flows throughout 1964's "Invitation to a Gunfighter." It's not a dramatically dense effort, but it holds focus on shifting allegiances and desires, attempting to find different dramatic directions that move past traditional offerings of six-gun violence than typically motivate the genre. Returning Yul Brynner to the old west, "Invitation to a Gunfighter" scores with surprise and intimidation, finding the star's icy stare and the screenplay's behavioral curiosity combining to deliver a slightly askew take on revenge. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Burying the Ex

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    Director Joe Dante has forged a career on a love for genre pictures. The helmer of “The Howling,” “Gremlins,” and “Matinee,” Dante has demonstrated a devotion to Hollywood and all its ghoulish highlights. “Burying the Ex” is more of an easy lay-up for the moviemaker, but it plays to his strengths of dark comedy and horror, successfully molesting romantic comedy formula to fit the askew needs of undead cinema. “Burying the Ex” is hilarious, icky, and smartly made, reinforcing Dante’s gifts as a storyteller and his endearing appreciation for shock value and uncomfortable laughs. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Inside Out

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    After a steady run of regular releases, Pixar Animation Studios took a brief vacation after the release of 2013’s “Monsters University.” Possibly in need of a breather after an intense foray into sequelization, the company comes roaring back with “Inside Out,” a superbly sophisticated yet endearingly madcap romp around the complex realm of emotions. Directed by Pete Docter and Ronaldo Del Carmen, “Inside Out” returns to the adventurous side of Pixar filmmaking, taking great risks with content and execution while softening the blow with a tremendous sense of humor expected from the studio. It’s challenging work, but refreshingly so, taking the audience on an original ride through the human experience, stopping periodically to tend to elastic animated business. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Dope

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    “Dope” emerges as a film of many perspectives, but none of them are particularly captivating. It’s the latest from director Rick Famuyiwa, helmer of tepid comedies such as “Our Family Wedding” and “The Wood,” while showing a more appealing side with 2002’s “Brown Sugar.” “Dope” is meant to sharp, satirical, and silly, but it’s often confused when it comes to tone, with a callousness that doesn’t mine any significant laughs. It’s not messy, but unfocused and non-confrontational when it comes to truly testing its characters and their supposed intelligence. It has style and caustic, primitive screenwriting, but its soullessness seems at odds with its cheery ambition, delivering a whole mess of unappealing behavior in a movie about an underdog. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Madame Bovary

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    Gustave Flaubert’s 1857 novel “Madame Bovary” has been adapted for the stage and screen numerous times, with its tale of temptation and tragedy making a easy fit for dramatic interpretation, often gifting the lead actress a meaty role in an unusually itchy period piece. Director Sophie Barthes (“Cold Souls”) has plenty of insecurity to explore in her feature, but surprisingly little emotion sticks to the screen as intended. Instead, “Madame Bovary” is sumptuously crafted, highly detailed and lived-in, making it a visual event instead a poignant inspection of a lost soul. It’s incredible to look at, but once it steps away from pure cinematic storytelling, the latest round of tightly-corseted depressive desperation dissolves on impact. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Gabriel

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    “Gabriel” is a dark odyssey into mental instability and obsessive behavior that also acts as something of a celebration for actor Rory Culkin. Typically stone-faced and mumbly, Culkin is tasked with creating a full-blooded character with deep-seated, cleverly masked issues, requiring thespian subtlety, not indie film mummification. He pulls off the role in spectacular fashion, delivering substantial work that aids writer/director Lou Howe in his quest to generate an unsettling atmosphere of determination, only the end game for the lead character and the movie is left a compelling mystery that’s worth a closer look. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Wolfpack

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    In 2010, the documentary “Catfish” debuted under criticism that some of the feature, if not all of it, was faked. In a world where fiction is frequently passed off as “reality,” it’s easy to see why “Catfish” was targeted for suspicion, especially when so much of the movie was poorly performed and, dramatically, a little too neatly designed. “The Wolfpack” conjures the same itchy vibes of manipulation, as audiences are asked to believe in the story of seven siblings locked away in a New York City apartment for most of their lives, despite evidence contained in the picture that suggests the opposite. Inconsistencies, mysteries, and exaggeration weigh heavy on “The Wolfpack.” If the events depicted here are true, it’s a horrifying record of abuse that should trigger an investigation, not observation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Me and Earl and the Dying Girl

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    Cutesiness plays a major role in “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl.” Even the title of the movie is trying to be playful. Its joviality would be a blessing if the picture wasn’t actually about the slow drain of cancer, creating quite a problem for the production as it works to maintain light and dark without establishing a comfortable middle ground. It’s difficult to gauge the effort’s sincerity when it’s frequently working to show off its knowledge of film and home video history, but “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl” does connect in a few areas of empathy. Unfortunately, it takes some work to claw away the preciousness of the project to get to its heart. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – American Heist

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    To pull off a crime movie these days, a production needs imagination or a decidedly thrilling show of force. The limply titled “American Heist” doesn’t have any personality or presence, electing to work on a to-do list of clichés instead of trying to rework known elements for optimal surprise. It’s dreary work, cynical and unfinished, using familiar beats of reluctant criminality and brotherly bonding to work through material we’ve all seen before. Not even performances can wake this sleeping film, which is primarily interested in camera placement, not searing storytelling. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Anarchy Parlor

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    When considering the wide range of locations for a horror production, the basement of tattoo parlor doesn’t immediately present itself as a nightmarish playground of the damned. Attempting to redefine everyday artistry as a potential disaster area, “Anarchy Parlor” succeeds in being strange, but falters with just about everything else. A hackneyed, pitifully acted picture that’s roughly a decade behind genre trends, “Anarchy Parlor” is only truly interested in providing a grim arrangement of gore, nudity, and cursing. Expectations for anything more interesting or inventive are going to be left unfulfilled, as directors Devon Downs and Kenny Gage have zero patience for anything that doesn’t bleed, jiggle, or scream. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Phantom Halo

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    “Phantom Halo” endeavors to simulate the Great American Novel. Co-writer/director Antonia Bogdanovich aims to create a drama that touches on insecurity, financial ruin, fantasy, sex, and crime, using the saga of an emotionally stymied family as a foundation for the picture’s multiple narrative directions. Ambition is big with this feature, which tries to take the viewer on a ride of suspense and heartbreak, stuffing the dead spots with Shakespearean flourish. Sadly, what Bogdanovich puts into the feature is more interesting than what ultimately comes out. Confused and tedious, “Phantom Halo” is a mess of a movie that struggles to keep itself together for 90 minutes, gradually disintegrating until all that’s left are good intentions. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Charlie, Trevor and a Girl Savannah

    CHARLIE, TREVOR AND A GIRL SAVANNAH Emily Meade

    Independent productions, the backyard kind, need something to attract audience attention. Gone are the days when the basics in emotion and conflict provide enough oomph to entice ticketbuyers, urging filmmakers to create a commotion in place of consideration. The distractingly titled “Charlie, Trevor and a Girl Savannah” is a picture that’s out to slam bang its way into being noticed, with writer/director/star Ty Hodges investing in a collection of editorial tricks to keep the feature alert. “Charlie, Trevor and a Girl Savannah” is blasted with style, but the story doesn’t support the viewing experience as sturdily as it should, coming across almost as an afterthought as Hodges orders up all types of edits and transitions to give the effort a sufficient spin. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Coogan’s Bluff

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    In the years following his worldwide exposure in Sergio Leone's "Dollars" trilogy, star Clint Eastwood began a quest to define his American screen persona and career goals, spending 1968 on a collection of diverse releases, with "Hang 'Em High," "Where Eagles Dare," and "Coogan's Bluff" working to share what passes for range with the iconic star. However, "Coogan's Bluff" is perhaps the most important of the bunch, establishing Eastwood's creative relationship with director Don Siegel, with the helmer becoming a friend and mentor for the actor. While the pair would go on to make "Dirty Harry" in 1971, "Coogan's Bluff" is their first stab at creating an antihero, pushing the boundaries of good taste with this surprisingly gruff detective story. In many ways, the feature feels like a prequel to "Dirty Harry," but it retains its own personality, giving Eastwood a chance to play around with cop clichés as he perfects his famous squint. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Beguiled

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    1971 was a pivotal moment in time for Clint Eastwood and director Don Siegel. It was the year they gave the world "Dirty Harry," one of the most iconic police films ever made, launching a lucrative franchise that would carry on for the next two decades. However, earlier that year, the pair concocted "The Beguiled," looking to break away from the actioners and thrillers they were known for, setting out to adapt a 1966 novel that touched on uncomfortable situations of seduction. Playing slightly against type, Eastwood delivers strong work as the main character, pushed to rely on subtle bits of deception instead of pure intimidation. However, "The Beguiled" truly belongs to Siegel, who's taken a difficult story and transformed it into a fascinatingly bizarre suspense piece, bravely managing a tale where there isn't a likable character to be found. Exceedingly disturbing and evenly paced, the feature comes together splendidly, challenging viewers with scenes of predatory behavior and wartime anxiety, with Siegel extracting a few genuine ills out of a troubling saga. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Play Misty for Me

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    With 1971 already stocked with Don Siegel collaborations in "The Beguiled" and "Dirty Harry," star Clint Eastwood decided to strike out on his own during this especially fertile year of creativity. Interested in creating his own dramatic path, away from cowboy hats and guns, Eastwood elected to make "Play Misty for Me" his directorial debut, utilizing years of acting experience to help give what's essentially a simplistic stalker saga some much needed character and off-beat timing. "Play Misty for Me" isn't opposed to absurdity, but it's also an effective chiller that understands its audience, going big when necessary and silent when required. The effort also launches Eastwood's helming career on an unusual note, showcasing an interest in the strange and unexpected the icon would manage for the rest of his career. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Eiger Sanction

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    Hollywood wasn't shy about their lust for a James Bond-style success. Many spy parodies and knockoffs were issued after Ian Fleming's character became a pop culture sensation and a box office powerhouse, leaving it only a matter of time before Clint Eastwood would attempt to create his own version of Bond (after reportedly declining the role). 1975's "The Eiger Sanction," based on the best-seller by Trevanian, strives to recapture the Sean Connery 007 years, issuing a no-nonsense lead character who slaps around brutes, spanks women, and is generally one step ahead of every villain he encounters. Utilizing exotic locations and story that provides layers of conspiracy and uncertainty, "The Eiger Sanction" doesn't feature much of a mystery, with Eastwood's dry, unhurried directorial style at odds with the demands of the superspy genre. It's a tepid thriller, best appreciated as a travelogue with periodic bursts of violence. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Vendetta

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    The prison revenge thriller has a formula, and “Vendetta” sticks to it closely. It’s the latest picture from directors Jen and Sylvia Soska, who impressed with their debut, “American Mary,” following up an original vision with 2014’s “See No Evil 2.” Maintaining their relationship with WWE Films, the Soskas return to the fray with “Vendetta,” a connect-the-dots bruiser that actually packs quite a punch, boasting a surprisingly meaty lead performance from Dean Cain. It’s a rough effort that displays encouraging speed and imagination with fight sequences, making it easy to forgive the relative nothingness of the plot. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Jurassic World

    JURASSIC WORLD Chris Pratt

    2001’s “Jurassic Park III” was a wildly entertaining romp through dinosaur highlights first introduced by director Steven Spielberg in his 1993 classic, the last of the old-world blockbusters, “Jurassic Park.” Back then, it was clear the franchise didn’t have much room to grow, recycling horror beats to give a new group of visitors to the dino realm something to scurry away from, mostly consumed with adding fresh creatures to give the Universal Studios merchandise team something to sell. The series was retired, Spielberg grew up, and if you wanted to catch some dinosaurs on the big screen, you had to make do with inferior features. Resurrecting the brand name for one last thrill ride (or possibly reviving it for a new round of sequels), “Jurassic World” takes a slightly different approach to monster moviemaking. Instead of trying to top the first three efforts, it looks to celebrate the universe Spielberg created with author Michael Crichton. It’s a deafening, menacing, immersive tour of dino hunting/human survival, wearing its fandom like a badge of honor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com