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Category:    Home > Reviews > Drama > Surrealism > Santa Sangre (1989/Severin Films Blu-ray)

Santa Sangre (1989/Severin Films Blu-ray)

 

Picture: B+     Sound: B-     Extras: A     Film: B

 

 

Finally, Santa Sangre has been released in the U.S., and on Blu-ray, no less!  Those who have been waiting years for the film to become available are now handsomely rewarded with this disc.  It looks and sounds brilliant, and has been loaded with special features, but we'll get to that in a minute.

 

A strangely beautiful story, the focus is on Fenix, a man who was once a circus performer as a child.  He has been left without a family as a result of an affair between his father and a tattooed woman.  After his wife catches him in an act of infidelity, she is vengeful, and burns his genitals with acid.  In turn, he cuts off her arms before he staggers naked out into the street and slits his throat.

 

Having no choice but to watch this unfold, Fenix is left mentally damaged by the experience, and eventually finds himself institutionalized.  After hearing his mother's voice calling out to him one night, he escapes from his confines and a string of murders begin to occur.

 

The films and filmmakers to have impacted the look of Santa Sangre are numerous, and it's hard to catch all of these influences in one go.  They run the gamut from Hitchcock and classic art films, to Universal Monster movies and Italian giallo pictures.  This collision of styles creates an experience unlike any other film, one that is just as rich for the mind as it is for the eyes, and compliments the story rather well.

 

The picture quality is excellent on this disc, and with visuals as striking as this, you should experience it on no less a format if you have access to a Blu-ray player.  It is presented in full 1080p high definition, with an aspect ratio of 1.78:1.  Sound quality is also good, with options for English DTS-HD 2.0 stereo, as well as Italian 2.0 stereo and a Spanish track in mono.

 

The sheer amount of bonus content on the disc is overwhelming, and it is a pleasant surprise that so much of it is well-produced.  There is a making-of documentary, a commentary track, deleted scenes, trailers, as well as additional interviews and a Q & A panel.  There's even a short film from one of Jodorowsky's sons and a music video.

 

Though the film represents Alejandro Jodorowsky’s most cohesive effort, it is still a whirlwind of an experience filled with beautiful imagery and lurid colors, and no less dreamlike than his earlier films, El Topo and The Holy Mountain.  This Blu-ray edition from Severin preserves the film spectacularly, and comes highly recommended for anyone seeking to expand their horizons, as well as their high-def library.

 

 

-   David Milchick


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