• Film Review – The Gallows

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    The summer moviegoing season of 2015 is a little light on horror films. Needing a mid-year chiller to plug a hole in the schedule, Warner Brothers picked up “The Gallows,” which was in production nearly three years ago. Hoping to make a little extra money from younger audiences on prowl for a communal scream, the studio isn’t coloring outside the lines with this endeavor, which is a straight-up, seen-it-all-before found footage terror feature starring a bunch of untested actors, directed by two men who have no interest in disrupting audience expectations. “The Gallows” is tedious and painfully conventional, with its unwillingness to try anything new more frightening than anything this achingly dull picture dreams up. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – What We Did on Our Holiday

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    The family road trip comedy takes on unusual gravity in “What We Did on Our Holiday,” which combines a sense of domestic chaos with the very real experience of death. While it traffics in combative behavior in strained relationships, there’s warmth to the film, watching directors Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin (who also script) labor to maintain an inviting tone that doesn’t sour as the tale works through uncomfortable discoveries. “What We Did on Our Holiday” is an amusing picture with a few laugh-out-loud moments, but it’s more interesting as storytelling tightrope walk, studying the feature as it navigates troubling turns of plot. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – A Little Chaos

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    If you must seen one film about 17th century gardening in Versailles this year, “A Little Chaos” is the right choice. Iconic actor Alan Rickman returns to directorial duties (also co-scripting) after an 18-year-long break with this period piece, which takes a look at royal interactions and the majesty of landscaping during a time of national pride. Dramatically, “A Little Chaos” isn’t out to overwhelm, sticking close to formula when dealing with romantic interests and bottomless pain, but Rickman knows how to spin predictability in a satisfying manner, guiding a compelling journey into companionship and construction that’s boosted considerably by a gifted cast who make the mundane meaningful. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Staten Island Summer

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    Colin Jost is best known as the co-anchor of “Weekend Update” on “Saturday Night Live,” where he also serves as head writer for the show. “Staten Island Summer” is his first produced screenplay, and there’s one thing is clear about his work: he loves “Caddyshack.” A valentine to his favorite New York City borough and a classic sports comedy, Jost fills his writing up with nostalgia and reverence, trying to maintain a decent hit ratio when it comes to laughs. He’s mostly successful, as “Staten Island Summer” is a genial viewing experience boosted by a lively cast, who manage to connect when the movie occasionally gets a little too casual for its own good. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Strangerland

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    “Strangerland” looks to establish a specific mood of frustration, set during the melt of an unbearable Australian summer. Director Kim Farrant successfully squeezes the setting for everything it’s worth, delivering a feeling of lethargy and illness to a particularly piercing story of personal loss. It’s a shame there isn’t much more to “Strangerland” beyond an evocative helming job, as its tale of closeted deception and confession isn’t robust enough to carry the feature, which is frequently caught spinning its wheels instead of fully examining its conflicts. Farrant attempts to turn something primal into an actor showcase, and her permissiveness slows the movie to a crawl. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Samurai Avenger: The Blind Wolf

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    "Samurai Avenger: The Blind Wolf" emerges from the mind of co-scripter/actor/director Kurando Mitsutake, and he probably wouldn't like any comparison to the 2007's two-feature time machine, "Grindhouse." However, it's hard to believe the 2009 release wasn't informed in some way by the Quentin Tarantino/Robert Rodriguez extravaganza, as it details classic exploitation elements, sold with faux film scratches and assorted visual limitations. Unlike "Grindhouse," "Samurai Avenger" isn't inspired by excess, oddly weighed down by the demands of an Eastern take on the spaghetti western, with Mitsutake too caught up in his design minutiae to really have fun with the premise. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Hero and the Terror

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    After blasting through the 1980s with actioners such as "Missing in Action," Invasion USA," and "The Delta Force," star Chuck Norris elected to try a few different career directions while he held B-movie attention. There was comedy in "Firewalker" and domesticity in 1988's "Hero and the Terror," which avoided high kicks and hard fists to give Norris a chance to play a haunted cop faced with an old foe and new challenge even more frightening than facing an unstoppable serial killer: parenthood. "Hero and the Terror" suffers from a lack of excitement, missing Norris's violent punctuation, but for those on a mission to grasp the actor's abilities during an era where he was largely hired to be a stoic killing machine, the picture is actually engaging. With Norris out of his comfort zone, the feature shows more interest in character then aggression, and while it doesn't have enough suspense to put it over the top, the effort finds different ways to hold attention, getting by on a surprising amount of personality. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – The Land That Time Forgot

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    1975's "The Land That Time Forgot" is notable for being the hit film that kickstarted interest in bringing author Edgar Rice Burroughs's lesser-known works to the screen. While followed by "At the Earth's Core," and a direct sequel in "The People That Time Forgot," the original picture faced the challenge of tone and execution, with director Kevin Connor struggling to balance character and spectacle in a manner that respects budgetary limitation and viewer patience. While largely faithful to the Burroughs book, the feature has difficulty conjuring excitement, often working through long, dry patches of exposition and surveillance before something of note actually occurs. In a story that includes a visit to a mysterious land populated with dinosaurs and tribes of primitive man, it's strange to feel restless while watching the effort, which shows tremendous difficulty summoning adventure. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Crypt of the Living Dead

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    1973's "Crypt of the Living Dead" (billed as "Hannah, Queen of the Vampires") isn't about coloring outside the lines when it comes to horror entertainment. It's a formulaic exercise in terror, focusing on bad ideas masterminded by curious characters, and the production isn't big on editing the picture into a sharply paced event. It's glacial, padded up the wazoo, but with lowered expectations, "Crypt of the Living Dead" isn't necessarily a waste of time. In fact, during select scenes, it works, managing to find enough atmosphere and weirdo interactions to keep the spirit of the effort awake, even when the rest of the film wants to lie down for a nap. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – House of the Living Dead

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    1974's "House of the Living Dead" (aka "Curse of the Dead") is a period piece about madness and murder, though it teases more visceral events early on, where the audience is treated to medical experimentation on a sedated baboon. What initially appears unsettling and possibly irresponsible soon transforms into a static genre picture that's more the silent treatment than blossoming into a roaring ghost story. "House of the Living Dead" has oddity, but there's not a suspenseful moment in the entire film, watching director Ray Austin feel around in the dark for a grim mystery that's never even remotely achieved. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Elimination Game

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    1982’s “Turkey Shoot” (aka “Escape 2000”) isn’t a widely known Australian production, but in cult circles, it’s received its share of accolades. The Brian Trenchard-Smith picture is a violent reworking of “The Most Dangerous Game,” with heavy exploitation influences to stretch its modest budget. “Elimination Game” (aka “Turkey Shoot”) is the inevitable remake, yet co-writer/director Jon Hewitt doesn’t offer complete replication, instead pulling most of his ideas from “The Running Man.” What should be a rollicking bullet train of big screen excess is instead an amateurish, borderline incoherent actioner starring Dominic Purcell, whose dead eyes and stiff physicality is perhaps the most telling aspect of this bumbling reheat. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Terminator Genisys

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    “Terminator Genisys” is the cinematic equivalent of untangling Christmas lights. Facing the need to restart the franchise after the last chapter, 2009’s “Terminator Salvation,” was deservedly met with low box office returns and audience derision, the new picture sets out to clear a different path for the moneymaking brand name. Returning Arnold Schwarzenegger to the series after a one film break, “Terminator Genisys” hopes to march forward by dealing with the past, returning to old big screen stomping grounds to give viewers a sense of familiarity before launching a fresh round of sequels with a slightly differently mission. It’s baffling work, but the “Terminator” sequels were never great about storytelling clarity. Instead, the production braids exhaustive amounts of exposition with slam-bang action sequences, trusting the sound and light show will soften brains looking to make sense of this cat’s cradle of timelines. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Magic Mike XXL

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    Released in the summer of 2012, “Magic Mike” became a phenomenon. A movie about male strippers caught up in emotional turmoil and stunted creative expression, the picture was instead largely accepted as a celebration of beefcake, with director Steven Soderbergh’s indie film mope and melodrama mostly ignored by the feature’s target demographic. “Magic Mike XXL” is the sequel, arriving with full awareness of what audiences didn’t care for the first time around. Hindsight is strong with this one, losing unwelcome actors and, well, a story, to fashion a playground for the fit stars of the show. Fans of stripping routines and shirtlessness will surely feel sated by “Magic Mike XXL.” Those in the mood for substance and measured dialogue should hunt for more interesting exploitation elsewhere. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Overnight

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    “The Overnight” is executive produced by the Duplass Brothers, which is a concise way to describe the comedic atmosphere of the movie. Playing with a casual, hand-held, semi-improvised approach, the picture attacks a central question of marital bliss from odd angles. What could be a gauzy drag featuring busy performances is instead absolutely hilarious, winningly acted, and surprisingly wise about the needs of marital partners when locked in a long term relationship. Playing discomfort with grace, “The Overnight” is a sneaky but uproarious odyssey into neuroses and sexual gamesmanship, retaining a human perspective as it samples wily comedic situations. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Infinitely Polar Bear

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    Although the picture is credited to Maya Forbes, co-screenwriter of lackluster fare like “The Rocker” and “Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days,” “Infinitely Polar Bear” proves to be a creative success for the debuting director. Drawing from her own experiences with a bipolar parent, Forbes finds a sense of authenticity to the work that does wonders to even out its sense of bruised whimsy. “Infinitely Polar Bear” is more of an understanding of mental health issues than a true dissection of unwieldy behavior, but Forbes keeps the feature together with a sense of humor, interest in darkness, and an understanding of adolescent emotion, packaging a light but sincere story of maturity. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Jimmy’s Hall

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    While director Ken Loach is a respected filmmaker with decades of cinematic achievements, his efforts typically favor stories of the downtrodden facing extinction, maintaining a career that’s primarily focused on those without means gradually consumed by their lowly position. “Jimmy’s Hall” joins the cluster of pain without protest, though it remains a more heartfelt examination of adversity than Loach typically offers. An Irish tale of religious oppression and romantic longing, “Jimmy’s Hall” is an unexpectedly illuminated feature from Loach, who isolates a range of emotions and impulses that deepen characterization, making the battle of freedom presented here all the more meaningful. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Jackie & Ryan

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    The healing power of music receives a revival in “Jackie & Ryan.” A low-key romance with deep-seated anxiety issues, the feature comes from writer/director Ami Canaan Mann, who made a splash a few years ago with the lauded but little seen “Texas Killing Fields.” Inching away from murder and paranoia to play softly with the troubles of average folk, Mann fashions a tender, understanding picture that attempts to evade formula through unexpected acts of kindness. “Jackie & Ryan” isn’t profound work, but it carries real heart and private moments of panic, emerging as a character study with a folk music core, matching the bond of stage performance with emotional unions found in everyday life. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – About Elly

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    Writer/director Asghar Farhadi received global recognition for his 2011 feature, “A Separation.” Following it up with 2013’s “The Past,” Farhadi solidified a reputation for searing character dramas infused with shocking turns of fate. While the world waits for his next effort, American distributor The Cinema Guild has elected to find work from his past to share with hungry audiences. “About Elly” was first released in 2009, but its themes of deception and desperation remain relevant today, submitting a story of secrets and lies that builds with harrowing tension, detailing Farhadi’s expert eye with casting and his ability to snowball harmless intentions into life-destroying events. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Li’l Quinquin

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    "Li'l Quinquin" is the latest release from writer/director Bruno Dumont, the helmer of "Humanite" and "Twentynine Palms." Digging deep into his reservoir of absurdity, the filmmaker offers an extended journey into weirdness and stasis with "Li'l Quinquin," which braids a serial killer saga with police procedural events and slapstick comedy, taking a whopping 206 minutes of screentime to figure out which end is up. It's a long adventure into the black heart of rural France, leaving the movie strictly for those who embrace the challenge of cinematic discovery and appreciate humor so subtle, it's practically indistinguishable. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com