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July 2022

Blu-ray Review - Mr. Jones

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"Mr. Jones" presents the story of journalist Gareth Jones, who not only managed to make his way into the Soviet Union during the early years of conflict before World War II, he witnessed the ravages of the Holodomor in Ukraine, exposed to the horrors of a man-made famine utilized by Joseph Stalin to destroy the country, using its riches as "gold" to demonstrate power to the rest of the world. Such a dire tale of political exposure isn't an easy sell, but in director Agnieszka Holland's hands, the feature becomes a riveting study of reporting and corruption that mirrors the world's struggles and horrors of today. "Mr. Jones" maintains a steady pace and sense of dramatic urgency throughout, giving Holland one of her most effective movies in years, and one smartly designed by screenwriter Andrea Chalupa (making a fine debut), who encourages suspense while delivering a powerful message on the value of the press. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Blu-ray Review - Buster Keaton Rides Again

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In 1964, legendary screen comedian Buster Keaton was hired to make "The Railrodder," a silent short used to showcase the natural beauty and personality of Canada. Director Gerald Potterton (who would go on to helm 1981's "Heavy Metal") was put in charge of assembling the picture, teaming with Keaton, who was 69 years old, embarking on the creation of his 87th movie. Hoping to capture this moment in film history, director John Spotton was brought on to make a documentary, "Buster Keaton Rides Again," about the production experience, observing Keaton at his most unguarded as the icon toured the country, trying to perfect gags for "The Railrodder." Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Blu-ray Review - The Little Hours

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Writer/director Jeff Baena has made a positive impression during his emerging career, pulling off a horror comedy with "Life After Beth," and achieving a cinematic miracle with "Joshy," a movie about male bonding that wasn't basted in ugliness. "The Little Hours" proves to be his greatest tonal challenge yet, mounting a comedy that's not always pursuing laughs, and its target is repression found in organized religion. It's a gamble from Baena, likely alienating a great number of potential viewers right out of the gate, but he mostly sticks the landing, finding ways to scrape out the blasphemy by playing it all so broadly, making a film that certainly has the potential to reach farcical highs, but pulls back a bit too often, perhaps afraid to really dive into the weirdness of the material. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Film Review - Thirteen Lives

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“Thirteen Lives” is a dramatization of the Tham Luang cave rescue, where 12 Thai boys and their soccer coach were trapped inside a cave for 18 days, inspiring an operation to retrieve them that required precise physicality and an untested medical leap of faith. The story was also explored in the 2021 documentary, “The Rescue,” but now director Ron Howard gets his shot with the tale, which plays to his career interests in the procedural workings of an unthinkable situation and his love of hope. “Thirteen Lives” doesn’t have a fresh perspective on the event, but Howard does provide a solid you-are-there approach, getting to understand the details of the rescue, the divers in charge of pulling off a perilous journey into the cave, and the team on the other side, who have no concept of the major effort in place to make sure they come out alive. Howard aims for a cinematic understanding of risk, and he achieves it with this mostly riveting feature. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Film Review - DC League of Super-Pets

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Live-action comic book features are everywhere these days, presenting vivid displays of fantasy action with enough CGI work to technically qualify as cartoons. “DC League of Super-Pets” goes fully animated, with the team behind “Scoob!” and “The Lego Batman Movie” bringing the exploits of superhero animals to life. Family audiences are the target demographic for the endeavor, but directors Sam Levine and Jared Stern don’t skimp on the epic action, giving the effort a few major set pieces to dazzle viewers while also tending to the comedic possibilities of the premise and its colorful characters. “DC League of Super-Pets” has its issues, but it remains a very entertaining picture with periodic explosiveness, keeping one eye on the kid film playbook and the other on the DC universe, trying to give fans a bit of goofy fun to go with all the high-flying activity expected from the brand name. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Film Review - Resurrection (2022)

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Writer/director Andrew Semans manufactures an intense tale of psychological warfare with “Resurrection,” exploring the gradual implosion of a woman losing her grip on reality when triggered by the return of an abusive boyfriend from long ago. Semans has thespian might in lead Rebecca Hall, who’s typically drawn to characters on the verge of complete physical and mental collapse, and he has select scenes of unnerving menace, playing up a sick game of control where the rules are extremely bizarre and invasive. Early scenes promise a more direct character examination, but “Resurrection” isn’t that tidy, with the material blurring reality, growing darker as it goes, and Semans prioritizes his writing, creating a battle of monologues that becomes a bit wearisome as the story unfolds, limiting overall suspense. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Film Review - Vengeance (2022)

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B.J. Novak is a celebrated comedian, author, and a cast member on “The Office,” which, according to the internet, is the greatest television show of all time. He’s hunting for a new challenge with “Vengeance,” making his directorial debut with his take on American characters and podcast culture, also working in a murder mystery at times. Novak also writes and stars in the feature, accepting an enormous amount of responsibility to deliver a tightly constructed whodunit with heavy presence of a Texas insanity. Novak gets most of the way there with “Vengeance,” which pieces together rather cleanly for its first two acts, delivering a rich sense of personality and dramatic purpose, even when the story is uncomfortably similar to the hit show, “Only Murders in the Building.” The helmer can’t stick the landing, but Novak offers amusingly exaggerated observations and behaviors with the film, which remains an engrossing sit. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Film Review - Not Okay

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Making fun of social media influencers is easy, with this world already flooded with such extreme personalities, it doesn’t take much to identify the cartoonish ways of the subculture. “Not Okay” could go for simple laughs, but writer/director Quinn Shephard hunts for a darker tone with the picture, exploring the depths of self-delusion and desperation required to make it big with followers, freebies, and access. She has a sharp idea for extremity, following a character’s evolution when a white lie develops into a major change of status, taking her on a journey of exposure and admiration she’s never earned. There’s a roller coaster ride of black comedy for the taking in “Not Okay,” but Shephard isn’t committed to making a barbed film, instead looking for a more emotionally driven study of a fragile mind coming into contact with authenticity that’s alien to her experience. Such an approach supports dramatic intentions, but Shephard is much better off poking fun at the excesses and vanity of the ego-driven universe. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Film Review - Sharp Stick

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Lena Dunham made an impression with her 2010 movie, “Tiny Furniture,” joining the indie film scene with her version of a Woody Allen picture, examining the neurotic and unwell with her own sense of humor and love of awkwardness. Dunham went on to create the television show “Girls,” keeping her busy for many years, but now she’s back on the screen with “Sharp Stick,” which carries a similar atmosphere as “Tiny Furniture,” but remains more focused on shock value and strange behaviors. The new endeavor, her first feature-length directorial outing in 12 years, certainly has the vibe of a creator unsure what to do with the material, presenting a series of unfinished thoughts with “Sharp Stick,” which delivers a few moments of fascinating mental health disasters, but not much else. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Blu-ray Review - The Ghost and the Darkness

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Stephen Hopkins isn't the most refined filmmaker, but there's always been something about his career that suggests he'd rather be making high art than genre entertainment. He broke through in Hollywood with his work on 1989's "A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child," and built a reputation for violent thrillers with 1990's "Predator 2," 1993's "Judgement Night," and 1994's "Blown Away." All of these features have significant creative problems, but Hopkins still found gigs, and 1995's "The Ghost and the Darkness" seemed like a project capable of taking the helmer to the next level of respectability, offered material (scripted by William Goldman) that carries a frightening atmosphere while supported by some of the finest cast and crew in the business at the time, giving what's essentially another "Jaws" knock-off some true cinematic regality. "The Ghost and the Darkness" plays like a production aching to achieve event movie status, but it never quite reaches such ambition. It's an entertaining picture with a cracking pace for the first hour, but Hopkins is a strange choice to guide the endeavor, stuck trying to find a balance between the grisliness of the true story behind the Tsavo Man-Eaters experience and the character study of Goldman's writing, which is often obscured through mangled editorial moves. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


4K UHD Review - Candyman

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In 2021, "Candyman" was released, which was a sequel to…"Candyman," a 1992 gothic horror feature adapted by writer/director Bernard Rose from a short story by Clive Barker. While stylishly made and thematically purposeful, it wasn't a scary movie, more interested in developing social and racial issues introduced in the original film. What makes Rose's picture at least somewhat commanding is its attention to the power of fear, with the production generating an impressively pressurized viewing experience that pulls scary business from a number of sources, contributing to a fantastically realized nightmare realm at times. The first "Candyman" remains the best in the series (this includes two other sequels), presenting a driving sense of doom that feels genuinely suffocating, with Rose using real-world agony to fuel something sinister, reaching effective points of terror. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Blu-ray Review - Inspector Ike

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As pop culture deep cuts go in 2022, "Inspector Ike" certainly has the weirdest inspiration in recent memory. Co-writers Ikechukwu Ufomadu and Graham Mason (who also directs) head back to the 1970s, looking to parody the state of television mystery movies, inventing a faux world for a gifted NYC detective and his periodic run-ins with murder. The pair concoct a comedy, and one created on a shoestring budget, limiting the technical replication of the picture, but Ufomadu and Mason manage to score some hearty laughs with this extremely specific valentine to the "Columbo" world of small-screen cops and their expert ways with sleuthing. "Inspector Ike" isn't built for bigness, remaining a modest offering of silliness, and it largely succeeds through engaged, playful performances and occasional ideas that deliver on the promise of such a strange spoof. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Blu-ray Review - Mother Schmuckers

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Some credit is due to co-writer/co-directors Harpo and Lenny Guit, who certainly understand how to identify the exact tonality and level of humor found in "Mother Schmuckers," doing so right in the opening scene. We meet siblings Issachar (Maxi Delmelle) and Zabulon (Harpo Guit) while they mess around in a kitchen, with their mother, Cachemire (Claire Bodson), instinctively knowing the two are up to no good. Turns out, she's right, with the siblings in the process of cooking a lump of feces, preparing to taste it because the pair are morons. Mom catches the sight of it, and eventually throws up right on the camera lens. And this, dear readers, is how "Mother Schmuckers" begins, making for a long 65 minutes before the Guits find their way to a conclusion. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Blu-ray Review - The Mob

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The Blu-ray packaging for 1975's "The Mob" ("La Gammick") lists the film as "Almost completely unseen outside of Quebec." Not a lot of movies can make that claim, giving the endeavor a unique identity as a crime picture that never found a wide audience, remaining a Canadian viewing experience for a select crowd. Now unleashed on disc, "The Mob" has the challenge of meeting expectations, offering a story of a criminal where his violent actions aren't explored in a cinematic manner for the most part. He's the talkative type, keeping the feature to a series of conversations, confessions, and modest confrontations, which is about as Canadian as it gets. Expectations for something more explosive should be lowered, as co-writer/director Jacques Godbout enjoys playing more of a psychological game with his characters. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Film Review - Anything's Possible

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Billy Porter is a force of nature. He’s found incredible success in front of the camera, recently stealing scenes in “Cinderella,” and now he’s taking his energy behind one, making his directorial debut with “Anything’s Possible.” Porter’s habitual flamboyance is injected into a teen movie written by Ximena Garcia Lecuona, and one that rides the line between an average study of adolescent love during the pressures of senior year performance and a look at the caution that arises when it comes to the complications of attraction. “Anything’s Possible” isn’t interested in a melodramatic examination of gender and hallway power plays, with Porter trying to capture the thrill of attraction and all the challenges it requires. The material attempts to represent a more inclusive vision of romance and relationships, and while formula is often present to get from one side of the story to the other, Porter and Lecuona stay positive and respectful with this examination of self-esteem. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Film Review - Nope

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Jordan Peele has a particular way of making a movie. He’s scored commercial and critical hits with his previous endeavors, “Get Out” and “Us,” beguiling viewers with his vision for strange experiences happening to real people. He’s working with genre entertainment to deliver his take on the world and its residents, showing the most interest in the black experience. With “Nope,” Peele inches away from social commentary, playing more with the bewitching magic of filmmaking itself, digging into history and technology as he returns to the comfort zone of the unknown and the threatened. Much like his other two efforts, “Nope” has moments of greatness, but the picture struggles to get past Peele’s directorial fetishes, keeping the endeavor unsteady as it shares an interesting and unusual study of the traditional flying saucer feature. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Film Review - This is Gwar

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As a band raging since the mid-1980s, Gwar is an acquired taste. They’ve been shredding faces and staining t-shirts for decades, making occasional appearances in pop culture before returning to the low-paying comfort of cult fame. The sound of the band isn’t easy to share with others, but their history is a remarkably knotted study of interpersonal relationships and business ethics, with Gwar almost in a constant state of change. And yet, they’re still around, perhaps just to irritate their critics, and such a tumultuous history is recalled in “This is Gwar,” with director Scott Barber (“The Orange Years: The Nickelodeon Story”) assembling an overview of artistic intent, ear-splitting sound, and onstage gore. It’s a deep dive into the foundation and endurance of Gwar, who’ve been through quite a lot while trying to give their fans the messiest, most horrifically violent entertainment imaginable, because that’s what the public needs. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


Film Review - Alone Together

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It hasn’t been easy for filmmakers to use the COVID-19 pandemic as a subject for riveting cinema, and most of these features have failed either financially or creatively. It’s a storyteller’s mission to deconstruct a complex situation of divide and fear, but this particular public health emergency needs more time to marinate, allowing for some much-needed perspective when it comes to replicating an often frightfully dire situation of community support. “Alone Together” is the second directorial effort from star Katie Holmes (2016’s “All We Had” being her debut), and she hopes to supply some needed understanding of psychology and human connection with her take on the early days of lockdown life. We’ve been here before, most recently in 2021’s “Together,” and Holmes (who also scripts) has her heart in the right place with this tender exploration of attraction, but she doesn’t have much else to support an overlong endeavor that’s not terribly gripping to begin with. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com


4K UHD Review - Escape from New York

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It's enough for John Carpenter to make 1978's "Halloween," using his innate sense of style and tension to generate a horror classic. However, the helmer only expanded his creativity as he began his run of Hollywood work, and this amazing career managed to produce another masterpiece in 1981's "Escape from New York." Using influences from westerns and survival thrillers, Carpenter (joined by producer Debra Hill and co-writer Nick Castle) creates a study of endurance and antagonism with the feature, managing a slow-burn adventure that drips with electronic mood and idiosyncratic events. It also creates one of cinema's great antiheroes in Snake Plissken, an eyepatch-wearing nihilist brought vividly to life by Kurt Russell, in one of his best performances. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com