Ghost stories are common fodder for low-budget horror productions, offering filmmakers an opportunity to stage eerie events in the near dark, playing up intensity without the need to spend gobs of money to execute broad visuals. “We Are Still Here” is the latest picture to try its hand at shadowy evil, emerging from the mind of writer/director Ted Geoghegan, who makes his feature-length filmmaking debut. Teasing routine, the endeavor instead spins off into its own strange world of poltergeists and family drama, supported by a full-throated moviemaking effort that gives “We Are Still Here” cinematic authority, punctuated with a killer third act. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Heaven Knows What
“Heaven Knows What” is a difficult film to sit through. Directors Ben and Joshua Safdie aren’t interested in crafting an overview of heroin addiction and homelessness, they want viewers to live alongside the characters, feeling every drowsy step and rambling thought. It’s certainly a challenge to process the story and learn to accept discomfort, but the reward is an evocative look at lost souls in New York City, updating “Panic in Needle Park” for a new generation of ailing young people who don’t have a future. Again, there are mental and physical endurance issues to consider before buying a ticket, but underneath the thick layer of disease remains a potent look at the demands of self-medication. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The 11th Hour
“The 11th Hour” is produced by Zentropa Entertainment, a Danish filmmaking company co-founded in 1992 by Lars Von Trier. Throughout their history, Zentropa has dedicated itself to becoming a European misery factory, churning out such pick-me-ups as “Antichrist,” “Brothers,” and “Dancer in the Dark.” They’re responsible for a few legitimate classics and a handful of absolute cinematic atrocities, but rarely do they play on the sunny side of the street. “The 11th Hour” is one of their bleakest endeavors, surveying struggles with miscarriages, human trafficking, drug addiction, and rape. Somehow, Kim Basinger found her way to the production, and while she’s strong here, it’s difficult for anything to register as more than simple provocation from a studio that has a template for this style of storytelling. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Wild Horses
Legendary actor Robert Duvall received universal acclaim with his third directorial effort, 1997’s “The Apostle.” Stepping away for a few years, Duvall returned helming duty with 2002’s scattered “Assassination Tango,” co-starring with his wife, Luciana Duvall. “Wild Horses” marks Duvall’s fifth trip behind the camera (in a Hollywood career that dates back to 1960) and could very well be the most random picture he’s even been involved with. A cowboy soap opera with murder, bigotry, politics, and bible quotes, “Wild Horses” is likely the end result of a ten-hour-long rough cut that just couldn’t be tamed. It’s a mess, a complete and utter mess, but shockingly, the movie is rarely dull, embracing just enough of Duvall’s dedication to realism to make it bearable. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – The Organization
Completing a trilogy that began with 1967's "In the Heat of the Night," 1971's "The Organization" is the final film to feature actor Sidney Poitier as the character Virgil Tibbs. A forceful, smart cop trying to undermine growing criminal interests, Tibbs receives a little help from the neighborhood in "The Organization," which concerns the actions of a vigilante group who need the detective to help stop drug smugglers in San Francisco, putting everyone in the line of fire. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – The Premature Burial
Finding tremendous success with his Edgar Allan Poe adaptations, director Roger Corman created what's known as the "Poe Cycle," representing eight motion pictures detailing all manner of ghoulish events created by the author. The only one not to star Vincent Price is 1962's "The Premature Burial," which brought in Ray Milland to provide requisite screen torment, this time portraying with man with a fear of being buried alive. It's customary work from Corman, who labors to beef up a short story to feature-length standards, drenching the effort in spooky atmosphere and heightened performances. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Nightmare
In 2012, director Rodney Ascher created “Room 237,” a loving ode to the mysteries of Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 effort, “The Shining.” Filled with paranoia, atmosphere, and insight, the documentary challenged everything there was to know about the movie, opening it up to a fresh round of cineaste dissection. Now intent on making his own Kubrickian picture, Ascher returns with “The Nightmare,” another voyage into psychological darkness, this time looking at the lasting effect of sleep paralysis, a phenomenon that locks the afflicted in a gray area of consciousness, typically summoning haunted visions and frightening dreamscape encounters. Ascher doesn’t have enough content to fill an entire feature, but “The Nightmare” is a fascinating study of fear and analysis, with eight subjects brave enough to share their stories with the viewer. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Girlhood
The kids aren't alright in the French drama "Girlhood." Taking a look at the growing pains of a young woman in the midst of waywardness, director Celine Sciamma ("Tomboy") displays a command of mood and distress that creates understanding where cliché typically resides. "Girlhood" is a human story, filled with violence and concern, and while it ultimately bites off a little more than it can chew, the raw ingredients of the work remain fascinating. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – The McKenzie Break
With war films, the battle between good and evil is often rigidly defined. 1970's "The McKenzie Break" isn't celebrating the bad guys, but it pays a considerable amount of attention to their sneaky plans. It's "The Great Escape" in reverse, following the exploits of Nazi POWs in Scotland planning to tunnel their way to freedom. The only man who can stop them? Surprisingly, it's Brian Keith, here portraying Irish officer Connor, who'd rather be seducing women and draining a flask than dealing with smug Nazis, led by Captain Schlueter (Helmut Griem). Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – The Adventures of Ford Fairlane
1990 was a very big year for Andrew Dice Clay. As a comedian, he was the hottest ticket around, building an empire on dirty jokes that took him from a club act to Madison Square Garden, creating a frenzy wherever he played. The records were selling and his popularity (rooted in controversy) was unstoppable. However, his acting career needed a little work, with supporting parts in "Casual Sex?" and "Pretty in Pink" failing to make him a marquee name during the 1980s. 20th Century Fox, sensing a ripe opportunity, elected to bring Clay to the big time, creating a starring vehicle in "The Adventures of Ford Fairlane," an action comedy based on characters from author Rex Weiner. Handed the spotlight and the services of director Renny Harlin (fresh off his success with "A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master"), Clay made the most out of a rare opportunity, infusing the script with his own quirks and callbacks, creating a character not unlike his stage persona, set loose in a wildly entertaining detective yarn. "Ford Fairlane" isn't for every taste, but those tuned into Clay's goofy personality are rewarded with a hilarious performance that finds the comedian at his most confidant and playfully mischievous. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Insidious: Chapter 3
2010’s “Insidious” was a fresh take on haunted happenings, yanking director James Wan out of a directorial slump and putting him on a new path of terror interests that pulled away from his dismal “Saw” origins. It was a snappy, scary ghost story that felt self-contained, but box office was juicy, and the moneymen rang the sequel gong quickly. In 2013, “Insidious: Chapter 2” was released, and while the sequel made a fortune, creatively, the series immediately started to sink. Without a viable story and considered scares, Wan couldn’t mask the cash-in motivation for the follow-up, effectively ruining a good thing. And now there’s “Insidious: Chapter 3,” which loses Wan, allowing writing partner and series actor Leigh Whannell to step behind the camera, making his directorial debut. Unfortunately, Whannell makes a disappointing impression, with his “Insidious: Chapter 3” the least frightening and dramatic of the bunch. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Spy
“Spy” is a send-up of the James Bond series, and who better to pants 007 than Melissa McCarthy. The actress is perfectly suited for the broad antics of the movie, sent through an obstacle course of slapstick, action, and one-liners, emerging as a surprisingly effective big screen hero. “Spy” is McCarthy’s third collaboration with writer/director Paul Feig, with the pair easily topping the tepid antics of “Bridesmaids” and “The Heat” with this wonderfully amusing and unnervingly high-impact extravaganza. It’s one thing to simply pose the lead in funny positions as chaos erupts, milking a sight gag for everything it’s worth. But Feig is in love with McCarthy, giving her a real role to play as she works out the visual silliness she’s known for. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Hungry Hearts
“Hungry Hearts” is an unusual horror film. It doesn’t deal with poltergeists, zombies, or monsters, only the terrifying realm of marital manipulation. It’s a war zone where every word is a weapon and every action of protection a betrayal. As disturbing as any chainsaw massacre, “Hungry Hearts” deals in sinister business, inspecting depression and subtle acts of submission that register with realism, even as director Saverio Costanzo gradually pushes the illness into more cinematic areas of suspense. While it teases geniality, the movie gradually unleashes its poison, generating remarkable tension without indulging more grandiose acts of betrayal. Sometimes all it takes is a portrait of an unstable mother to conjure complete terror. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – When Marnie Was There
There’s a rumor circulating that Studio Ghibli, the famed Japanese house of animation, is going out of business. When legendary director Hayao Miyazaki, a studio founder, announced his retirement in 2013, it put the brakes on creative movement, with their last and possibly final effort, “When Marnie Was There,” finally making its U.S. debut. In keeping with Studio Ghibli standards, “When Marnie Was There” is mysterious and achingly human, using gorgeous animation to create an enigmatic, possibly magical world of secret friendships and otherworldly entities, using the unknown to guide the viewer through a screenplay that touches on sensitive issues of abandonment and doubt. It’s a puzzle at times, but an especially sensitive one that’s crafted with care. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Entourage
After the global success of the “Sex and the City” movies, it’s bizarre that Hollywood hasn’t made the effort to turn every reasonably successful show into a big screen event. “Entourage” certainly seems like a good fit, with the HBO series (which premiered in 2004) offering salacious content, industry satire, and a warm climate to film in. It comes with some surprise to find “Entourage” failing to do much of anything as a feature, with creator/director/screenwriter Doug Ellin satisfied with turning the picture into an extended episode of the show, complete with dismal performances and the most anticlimactic ending of the year. Granted, the series wasn’t known for its quality, but Ellin is on autopilot here, content to hit the basics and pray for a sequel. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – The Connection
When most moviegoers hear the title “The French Connection,” memories of Gene Hackman slinging riddles, barking at baddies, and steamrolling through New York City in a runaway car immediately spring to mind. It’s a tough act to top, with the 1971 William Freidkin picture considered a classic. “The Connection” isn’t out to top the Academy Award-winning film, instead taking a different approach to a story of cops and criminals making trouble for each other over the heroin trade. A French production that’s clearly influenced by American cinema, “The Connection” has the directorial muscle to connect the dots on routine material, finding a steady thriller beat and strong performances to support another foray into the drug smuggling underworld. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Results
A few years ago, writer/director Andrew Bujalski crafted “Computer Chess.” A quirky comedy with a distinct visual approach, the film was a free range creation, chasing every whim while showing comfort with stillness. It was an idiosyncratic journey into semi-tedium that felt like a novelty, but with “Results,” Bujalski’s follow-up feature, it’s clear that long displays of pure behavior might be his only interest. “Results” is amusing and uniquely performed, and the screenplay’s dedication to uncomfortable situations is laudable. Its shapelessness is a challenge, even with defined mischief, leaving the effort periodically struggling for oxygen, lost in permissiveness as the story begins skipping beats to simulate momentum. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – The Quiet Gun
It's somewhat surprising that 1957's "The Quiet Gun" doesn't have more of a reputation today. Externally, it's a nondescript, television-style western starring Forrest Tucker and Lee Van Cleef, showcasing the concerns of leathery men brandishing firearms and stern looks. Yet the screenplay (based on a novel) concerns the societal pressures of the moral majority, with racial tensions brought to a boil in the story, resulting in condemnation and murder. "The Quiet Gun" isn't a traditional genre offering, largely doing away with escapist events to register as more of a psychological drama, disrupting expectations in an intriguing way. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Hustler White
Co-writer/co-director Bruce La Bruce infuses 1996's "Hustler White" with a love of classic Hollywood movies and street culture. Even if he's not completely able to achieve his visual goals with a no-budget production, La Bruce retains a sense of mischief and kinky exploration with this graphic motion picture. Opening with a homage to "Sunset Boulevard," "Hustler White" is off to the races, following Montgomery Ward (Tony Ward) through the ups and downs of hustling, avoiding some and engaging others as he tries to make money in the big city. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com





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