• Film Review – Big Sky

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    “Big Sky” is a story of survival mixed with crime film clichés. The psychological aspects of the screenplay are enticing, taking a long look at agoraphobia, and how such anxiety is managed while trapped in frantic flare-up of self-preservation. Director Jorge Michel Grau (“The ABCs of Death”) struggles with a basics of suspense, and screenwriter Evan M. Wiener (“Monogamy”) looks to create a community aspect of panic, which inches the feature away from an intimate understanding of the lead character and her long road to safety. “Big Sky” is engaging, with select moments locating an intriguing tone of doubt, finding its more conventional ideas and stand-offs intrusive. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Best of Enemies

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    As televised intellectual pursuits go, few showdowns have managed to rival the series of debates that took place in 1968 featuring William F. Buckley Jr. and Gore Vidal. Two titans of the political and literary realm, the men were paired in an effort to boost ratings, only to walk away from the experience with a newfound hatred of each other. “Best of Enemies” is a documentary devoted to the debates and their aftermath, tracking an impressive display of ego handed a prime time slot to the delight of Americans everywhere, also helping to shape shrieking punditry as we know it today. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Air

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    “Air” offers an intriguing premise, but there’s little evidence provided here that supports the decision to take what’s clearly only enough plot for a short film and stretch it out to feature-length standards. It’s a two-hander acting opportunity for stars Djimon Hounsou and Norman Reedus, who obviously relish the chance to be the main attraction, guiding this concrete-bound post-apocalyptic tale of survival. Co-writer/director Christian Cantamessa guides a sharp, evocative effort, but there just isn’t anything here that demands attention, with much of “Air” handed over to exploratory sequences that feel like padding, trying desperately to make something major out of something minor. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Meru

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    Although there have been plenty of movies made about the struggle of mountain climbing, with its impossible tests of physical and psychological limitations (the big-budget “Everest” opens in the fall), “Meru” has a different approach to the assembly of breathless participants and frightening heights. Taking an emotional look at the spirit of climbing and the process of taking on one of the most difficult mountains in the world, “Meru” imparts lessons on the value of determination and shares imposing images of the center trek — a quest that threatens the safety of three men in the midst of life-altering challenges. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Final Girl

    FINAL GIRL Abigail Breslin

    “Final Girl” is a directorial debut for photographer Tyler Shields, who takes the opportunity to show off his visual prowess with a minor riff on slasher film formula. Storytelling isn’t his strong suit, as the movie lacks almost any level of suspense or characterization, existing only to show off dramatic lightning. A dismal, uneventful, and pointless picture, “Final Girl” never really knows what it wants to do with its screen time, fumbling psychological examination to play with silly violence, while personalities and motivations are missing from the final cut. It’s a resume effort from Shields, who seems better suited for beer commercials than big screen dramatics. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Do I Sound Gay?

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    As the title suggests, “Do I Sound Gay?” is a story about the quest for a voice, and for writer/director/star David Thorpe, one that’s masculine is preferable. Using his own mission to fix speech patterns and deepen his voice, Thorpe opens a can of worms with his documentary, touching on a subject that isn’t covered very often in pop culture beyond unfair punchlines. “Do I Sound Gay?” isn’t profound, but Thorpe’s investigation into self-esteem and public personas touches on a few universal truths about identity, while delivering interesting theories about the origin of specific speech challenges and the power of influence. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Big House, U.S.A.

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    Cover art for 1955's "Big House, U.S.A." displays five prison tough guys, with stars Broderick Crawford, Ralph Meeker, and Charles Bronson captured in menacing poses to sell the feature as a hardened prison drama. And yet, the titular location is only a minor part of the overall narrative, with John C. Higgins's screenplay establishing a wider scope of crime and intimidation. Surprisingly, "Big House U.S.A." is a kidnapping saga that winds through multiple locations as it details the saga of Jerry "Iceman" Barker (Meeker), an unrepentant ghoul responsible for the missing child of a wealthy businessman. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Madhouse

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    Although it isn't a comedy, 1974's "Madhouse" does show surprising life as a satire of film industry cruelty and genre expectation, employing stars Vincent Price and Peter Cushing to play around with their legacies in horror entertainment. Perhaps a more skilled take on insanity and insecurity was meant for "Madhouse," with the picture coming up short in terms of dramatic potential and chills. However, for those in the mood to watch icons interact with their professional past, the feature is satisfying and well performed. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Storm Fear

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    1955's "Storm Fear" is introduced as a tale of isolation, but soon surveys unusual intimacies. Scripted by Horton Foote (adapting a book by Clinton Seeley) and directed by Cornel Wilde, the feature holds attention through tremendous characterization, working through the paranoia and neuroses of a tattered family as they're forced to survive together in a remote location. It's a classic setting for domestic hostilities, but the production manages to unearth intriguing areas of discomfort, allowing "Storm Fear" to overcome its slightly hammy execution and land a few emotional punches. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Monte Walsh

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    1970's "Monte Walsh" is a special creation that surveys the end of the west, and how such a gradual event influenced a generation of men raised on the back of a horse. Starring Lee Marvin and Jack Palance, the picture represents the directorial debut for William A. Fraker, the gifted cinematographer who visually defined such efforts as "Rosemary's Baby" and "1941." In "Monte Walsh," Fraker looks to prove himself as a storyteller, and his handle on the roller coaster tone of the feature shows immediate skill, while his time with the actors delivers unusual emotional depth for the traditionally leathered genre. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life

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    It's hard to imagine the topic of Ayn Rand being explored without alienating most of the viewing public. A controversial figure, the best-selling author and philosopher carries an enormous amount of political baggage, making any production interested in covering her life immediately suspect. 1997's "Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life" lives up to its title, delivering a moderately in-depth discussion of the writer's life and times, with emphasis on her psychological make-up as she set out to change the world with her unique perspective on individualism. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Jenny’s Wedding

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    “Jenny’s Wedding” tackles the hot-button issue of same-sex marriage, but wisely avoids political leanings to deal with solely with characterization. It’s written and directed by Mary Agnes Donoghue, who scripted “Beaches” and “Veronica Guerin,” but hasn’t helmed a feature since 1991’s “Paradise.” Making a tentative step back into the industry war zone, Donoghue finds a tone of sensitivity with “Jenny’s Wedding,” inching it past the domestic intolerance routine to find genuine human moments of communication and concern. There are plasticized scenes to endure, but the movie commits to a larger arc of personal awakening, which helps to digest the clichés Donoghue clings to. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Fantastic Four

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    It’s a relatively new trend in Hollywood to restart franchises quickly after they’ve stalled. The character of Spider-Man is a prime example, with the web-slinger about to embark on his third big screen introduction in 15 years, watching producers churn out comic book adventures until one resonates enough to support a longstanding franchise. A decade ago, there was a “Fantastic Four,” which delivered an origin story and a visual effects bonanza, but very little entertainment, with the feature, and its lackluster 2007 sequel, failing to lure blockbuster-worthy audiences into theaters. For obvious financial and secretively legal reasons, the “Fantastic Four” have returned, this time shedding colorful antics for a darker, angrier film approach to global heroism, trying to find a fresh concept for understandably suspicious viewers hesitant to shell out lunch money to see the same old superhero stuff. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Ricki and the Flash

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    Identifying a fantastic performance from Meryl Streep has become old news, watching the legendary actress tear through varied roles with professional brilliance, routinely refreshing awareness of her screen dominance. Somehow, consistency hasn’t stifled her creativity, coming to every project with a specific identity. For “Ricki and the Flash,” Streep transforms into an aging rocker, perhaps her biggest stretch yet, and she pulls it off with alarming success, more credible as a stage queen than most actual musicians. And yet, Streep’s sublime turn is only a small part of the pleasures offered in “Ricki and the Flash,” which takes a giant step over absentee mama formula to achieve a full sense of humanity and humor. The music doesn’t hurt either. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Shaun the Sheep Movie

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    “Shaun the Sheep Movie” is the latest release from Aardman Animations, the beloved company behind “Wallace & Gromit,” “Chicken Run,” and “The Pirates! Band of Misfits.” Celebrated for their special cartoon wit and elastic stop-motion animation style, Aardman attempts to bring “Shaun the Sheep” to the big screen after the television series carried on for 130 episodes. Perhaps unfamiliar to American audiences, the farmland characters generate a special style of mayhem in “Shaun the Sheep Movie,” which doesn’t require intimate knowledge of the brand name to enjoy. The Muppet-style slapstick and visual invention works on its own, delivering big laughs and eye candy for a family audience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Call Me Lucky

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    Throughout his directorial career, Bobcat Goldthwait has developed an interest in darkly comic material, sifting through the ruins of humanity to find uncomfortable laughs and unexpected truths. Switching to non-fiction filmmaking for “Call Me Lucky,” Goldthwait constructs a valentine to his hero, political satirist Barry Crimmins. For the extent of his professional life, Crimmins has been inspired by political neglect and deception, all the while harboring a secret that’s fueled his commitment to activism. “Call Me Lucky” is sweet, bracing, sad, and infuriating, with Goldthwait managing a documentary that grasps the basics of biographical storytelling but ultimately transforms into a call to arms, taking the Crimmins path to understand the details of participation in America’s cultural and political direction. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Gift

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    Joel Edgerton has emerged as one of the premiere actors of his generation, building a reputation with work in features such as “Animal Kingdom,” “Warrior,” and “Zero Dark Thirty.” He’s also achieved a few screenwriting credits as well, masterminding “The Square” and “Felony.” “The Gift” is Edgerton’s directorial debut, setting out to make a slow-burn suspense effort that pounces on the audience as expected, but ultimately emerges as an offering of sinister business, capturing psychological torment with a dollop of subversion. Edgerton appears completely enamored with his creation, which helps the picture with confidence, but it’s an uneven nail-biter, unable to decide if it wants to freak out viewers with noise or slip under their skin. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Dark Places

    DARK PLACES Charlize Theron

    Last year there was “Gone Girl,” which was the first of author Gillian Flynn’s books to hit the big screen. “Dark Places” is the second wave of domestic disaster from the writer, returning to a place of mental illness and gamesmanship, only here the mystery is more of a “Clue” scenario than a gradual unleashing of psychosis. “Dark Places” isn’t quite as engaging as “Gone Girl,” weirdly sharing similar problems with pacing, but it does offer a few charged encounters that hit heights of suspense and pull decent performances out of the cast. It’s not nearly as buzz-worthy as Flynn’s previous adaption, but the movie manages to find its own toxic perspective. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Runner

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    Over the past year, Nicolas Cage has appeared in a handful of iffy movies, shifting into career survival mode to make it through efforts such as “Left Behind,” “Dying of the Light,” and “Outcast.” While committed to a certain degree, Cage’s dead-eyed screen presence couldn’t mask his interest in a paycheck, committing to pictures that have padded his career, not inspired it. “The Runner” doesn’t radically revive Cage’s appeal, but it does offer him an opportunity to act again, remaining the focus of this political drama, which demands a level of concentration and emotion he rarely encounters anymore. “The Runner” has difficulty assembling its puzzle of dysfunction, but it’s almost worth the price of admission to see Cage give a damn again. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com