“Two Lives” is a film one has to remain attentive to at all times. Answers aren’t immediately offered during the course of the picture, which uses flashbacks and unidentified character interactions to paint a portrait of a stained life that’s finally being revealed. It takes time to get moving, but the reward is a captivating drama that presents a few effective surprises and a standout lead performance from Juliane Kohler, who communicates a pitch-perfect blend of emotions that allows the effort to cut deep. Satisfactorily tragic and pained, “Two Lives” is sharp work that develops spellbinding turns of plot as it unfolds. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Boys of Abu Ghraib
With “Boys of Abu Ghraib,” Luke Moran attempts to become a triple threat in the industry. Serving as writer/director/star of the picture, Moran picks an incendiary topic for exposure, creating a drama based on situations found in the Abu Ghraib prison scandal from 2004, endeavoring to master a corruption of innocence arc found in multiple war features. While it’s certainly a provocative subject, and early moments suggest the helmer is on the right track when it comes to the depiction of military desperation, “Boys of Abu Ghraib” eventually loses itself to a syrupy flow of sensitivity while presenting one of the worst endings I’ve seen in quite some time. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – The Swimmer
1968's "The Swimmer" is a dream and a nightmare rolled into a deceptively simple mission of memory evasion. It's a strange picture, but engrossingly so, taking the viewer on a journey of self-delusion and nostalgia that gradually exposes a richly tortured main character as he attempts to immerse himself in a life that's no longer available to him. Strikingly made and outstandingly performed by Burt Lancaster, "The Swimmer" (directed by Frank Perry and scripted by Eleanor Perry) deftly combines disturbing realities with the romance of fantasy, constructing a riveting psychological portrait of a man set loose in his own playground of emotional fragmentation. Beautifully shot and executed, the effort is generous with disturbing, puzzling behavior, yet wise enough to provide clear clues to aid interpretation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – The Flesh and Blood Show
"The Flesh and Blood Show" opens with a shot of blood pouring down a pier pillar, setting a macabre mood for all the evildoing to come. It's a fantastic way to kick off the picture. Cruelly, it's the first and last bit of nasty business to cause a scene in the movie. A 1972 effort from director Pete Walker, "The Flesh and Blood Show" doesn't even seem particularly interested in scaring its audience, instead offering a mix of titillation and flaccid dramatics to fill the run time, while suspense is nonexistent, featuring extended sequences of horror that aren't the least bit frightening. Although the collision of egos, nudity, and infighting certainly has promise, it remains unfulfilled in Walker's feature, which is so glacial and mild, it's a wonder what the production was actually trying to achieve with its emphasized but underutilized genre elements. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Frightmare
"Frightmare" represents my official introduction to the filmography of Pete Walker. A British director who specialized in low-budget horror features, Walker made a name for himself with efficient chillers and scrappy visions of brutality, with efforts such as "Schizo," "House of Whipcord," and "The Comeback" earning the respect of cult audiences who live their lives to make such discoveries. 1974's "Frightmare" is perhaps his most admired production, if only because it caused quite a stir during its initial theatrical release, upsetting critics at the time with its X-rated vision of cannibalism and murder, while offering a provocative condemnation of criminal rehabilitation services. In 2014, it's difficult to understand why such a fuss was raised, with the genre now exposing every perversion and evil known to man, but what remains under the aged layers of condemnation is a crafty chiller, wonderfully performed and executed with a refreshing grimness. "Frightmare" has its share of ugliness, but it's also considered work from Walker, who isn't merely out to sicken, but haunt his audience with this effective picture. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Alan Partridge
It’s been a triumphant year for Steve Coogan. Last holiday season, “Philomena,” a film he co-write and co-starred in, picked up a few trophies and managed to find an audience despite an oppressive subject matter, while showing a pleasingly dramatic side to the performer few pictures have dared to explore. And now “Alan Partridge” makes its way to America, finally giving Coogan’s most famous character a shot at a global audience. Considering how hilarious the feature is, with a terrific wit, interest in silliness, and laudable speed, it’s a crime that it took this long for Partridge and his narcissistic antics to invade the states. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Nymphomaniac: Volume I
The marketing for “Nymphomaniac” has been a cheeky onslaught of provocative imagery, some tied to shots of orgasmic bliss interpreted by the stars of the film. It’s been amusing, yet the reality of the endeavor (an epic study broken down into two parts) is decidedly grim, possibly confusing those on the prowl for an offering of adult cinema as interpreted by director Lars Von Trier. “Nymphomaniac: Volume I” is the first half of the journey, and it’s filled with dire situations of compulsion and punishment. Even when the helmer makes minor attempts to pull the premise out of a coffin, the general tone of the work remains in a state of emergency. Demanding a less lustful mindset from the viewer, the effort emerges as an artfully designed exploration of grief and gullibility, pockmarked with Von Trier fetishes and wild metaphors. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Muppets Most Wanted
I was a great admirer of 2011’s “The Muppets,” which had the unenviable task of trying to make the Jim Henson legacy relevant to a younger generation while still tickling the old guard. Mixing slapstick with song and dance, the picture returned verve to the puppet community, even with a few missteps in pacing and character focus. Applying what they learned from the experience, director James Bobin and co-writer Nicholas Stoller return to the brand name with “Muppets Most Wanted,” a zippy, hilarious caper that ditches the endearing sensitivity of the reawakening to charge ahead as a traditional Muppet show of silliness, punctuated with a set list of fantastic songs by Bret McKenzie. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Divergent
Of course comparisons are going to be made about “Divergent.” With the monumental success of Y.A. adaptations such as “The Hunger Games” and “Twilight,” it’s a given that studios would be hungry to bring Veronica Roth’s trilogy to the big screen, as it contains all the necessary elements to tempt young audiences into theaters. It’s derivative work, but what’s surprising about “Divergent” is how bland it is. Handing material flavored with sci-fi, action, and romance to a team of filmmakers and actors with little experience in the genre mash-up, the movie ends up flat and repetitive, unable to acquire the epic stance it dearly wants to achieve. It’s more than just bad timing, the feature simply doesn’t have the cinematic intensity necessary to launch yet another arc of careworn heroism set in a merciless world of government control. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Le Week-End
“Le Week-End” is no dewy romance about the reawakening of feeling shared between a couple who’s been married for decades. Director Roger Michell and screenwriter Hanif Kureishi have little interest in soft-pedaling contentious interactions between the main characters, electing irony as the twosome embarks on a soul-cleansing journey of bitter communication in the most romantic city on Earth. Consistently surprising and bravely raw, “Le Week-End” cuts right to the bone, and does so in such an intimate manner, it feels splendidly authentic, permitting access to the deepest, darkest desires of the duo as they battle to express themselves and define their marriage. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – A Birder’s Guide to Everything
After 2011’s “The Big Year” turned out to be a colossal dud at the box office, I’m surprised any production would want to make another film about the birding hobby. Taking a slightly less madcap course when it comes to the act of spotting winged creatures, “A Birder’s Guide to Everything” locates a more fertile dramatic perch with its inspection of a teenager’s wounded heart and his attempt to lose himself in a chase, excusing him from real world concerns. Nicely acted and emotionally genuine, the picture doesn’t necessarily demand attention, but it earns appreciation through its delicate, nicely observed handling of sensitive issues. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Bad Words
First time directors usually select material that’s comfortable, providing a familiarity that eases the pressure of such a herculean professional task. For Jason Bateman’s feature-length helming debut, he’s selected “Bad Words,” a cynical, sarcastic, profane picture that’s cut from the same cloth as “Bad Santa” and “Bad Teacher,” celebrating the juvenile antics of an unstable human being, providing a wide berth for improvisation. It’s Bateman’s wheelhouse, though it’s surprising to find “Bad Words” rather pedestrian as it peruses its corroded imagination, relying on cheap jokes and predictable situations to carry the movie, while Bateman the actor coasts through the effort half-asleep, playing aloof with material that demands more pronounced representation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Just a Sigh
“Just a Sigh” seems to understand that it’s working with a flawed premise, which concerns the passionate interests of two strangers who meet on a train and engage in a heated affair, satisfying needs beyond primal sexual desires. To combat the familiar, writer/director Jerome Bonnell attempts to transform his picture into an immersive event, following the lead character as she feels everything, hoping to communicate decisions through physical movement and the odd shot of cheeky scripting. “Just a Sigh” doesn’t capture the senses in a compelling manner, but its elusiveness is actually effective, requiring an audience willing to give up on reason to take on the mysteries of attraction. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Particle Fever
“Particle Fever” brings physics to the big screen. Not the high school stuff, but hardcore science from brilliant minds excited to share experiments and findings with the world. The worst possible outcome with the picture is a feeling of homework, putting intense, specialized concepts into the minds of viewers, expecting them to piece together a sophisticated understanding of the work and the culture. “Particle Fever” has moments like this, but impenetrability isn’t a common occurrence, with the majority of the documentary user friendly as it details the highs and lows of the Large Hadron Collider and the team of physicists devoted to unlocking the mysteries of the universe. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Enemy
“Enemy” is fashioned in the tradition of brain-bleeder cinema, putting the weight of interpretation on the audience as it deliberately reaches into abstraction to keep the average moviegoer off its scent. Think the work of David Lynch or Lars Von Trier, with a distinct fingerprint of Stanley Kubrick thrown in for fun. A picture like this is overflowing with oddity and most vague of clues, only in need of a filmmaker capable of turning question marks into a riveting mission of big screen puzzling. Denis Villeneuve, hot off his success with last autumn’s “Prisoners,” doesn’t work “Enemy” into a lather, instead deliberately keeping his distance in a manner that doesn’t encourage deeper inspection. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Film Review – Stay
To embrace the fine qualities of “Stay” requires patience with its incompleteness. Writer/director Wiebke van Carolsfeld has her heart in the right place with this sensitive relationship drama set largely in Ireland, but the connective tissue is missing, often robbing scenes of their true power when backstory is blurred and motivations are lacking urgency. Thankfully, there’s thespian feeling providing by stars Aidan Quinn and Taylor Schilling, who provide a push of emotional understanding when the screenplay fails to connect the dots. Boasting lovely locations and an endearing community spirit, “Stay” seems like such an easy film to love, yet its deficiencies are difficult to manage. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Fried Green Tomatoes
When it finally saw a wide release in January 1992, "Fried Green Tomatoes" shocked Hollywood with its box office staying power, ending up with grosses nobody could've predicted. Finding its audience at the right time, it's easy to spot why the film connected in a big way. With characters worthy of emotional investment, sassy humor, and a female perspective rarely viewed in such a frank manner, "Fried Green Tomatoes" is a full course cinematic meal, retaining its literary origins with ideal confidence. Quibbles aside, it's a well-told tale with unexpectedly secure performances, also retaining a nice edge that helps to dial down the potential for syrup. After all, it's not every day that one encounters a sensitive tale of sisterhood that also contains an element of cannibalism. For that alone, the movie deserves respect. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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Blu-ray Review – Far and Away
Although other films have made the attempt to master the same moves as epic cinema of old, 1992's "Far and Away" was perhaps the last effort to come the closest to a David Lean-style spectacle without employing sizable help from CGI. Director Ron Howard's throwback feature doesn't achieve iconic status, but it's fine entertainment overall, exploring a classic tale of immigration and desire, set against the backdrop of the American Dream. Even with a few hiccups in storytelling, the production satisfies a sizable amount of its goals, hitting beats of romance and tragedy while stars Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman bring reassuring star power to the picture, allowing Howard to find his sense of sweep as the movie makes its way to a wonderfully widescreen conclusion. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com




















