Reindeer Games (2000/Miramax/Lionsgate Blu-ray)/War
Of The Arrows (2011/Well Go USA
Blu-ray w/DVD)/Wyatt Earp’s Revenge
(2011/Sony DVD)
Picture:
B-/B & B-/C Sound: B-/B- & C+/C+ Extras: C-/C/C- Main Programs: D/B/C
The
action film as a genre began before it became a genre via Westerns, Crime films
and Thrillers, not to mention a certain sequence in Eisenstein’s Battleship Potemkin in 1925. As Hollywood
has worn action films thin, it has tried to find other directions to take them,
but even the best filmmakers can hit sour notes.
The great
John Frankenheimer attempted to do a crime thriller with the able Ben Affleck
in 2000 with Reindeer Games, but
even in the Director’s cut now out on Blu-ray, it was surprisingly poor and
just never adds up. Affleck is an ex-con
who immediately starts to get into new trouble by impersonating a cellmate out
of desperation, only for what seems like a bad idea that could work backfiring
badly. He liked his buddy’s girlfriend
(Charlize Theron) and also finds himself dealing with her sociopathic criminal
brother (Gary Sinise), but it is very predictable, dull and also has a very bad
set of twists that render the film useless.
Even appearances by Danny Trejo, Clarence Williams III, Donal Logue and
Dennis Farina can’t save it.
Frankenheimer
had not exactly lost his touch, having just made the underrated spy thriller Ronin (1996, reviewed elsewhere on this
site) previously as a personal comeback of sorts, but Writer Ehren Kruger does
not know what he is doing and proved this later with his scripts for the first
two Transformers sequels, inept thriller Skeleton Key, U.S. Ring remakes,
problematic Brothers Grimm for Terry Gilliam and awful (and awfully goofy)
werewolf dud Blood & Chocolate. He
is the problem here and the blame for the failure of this to work. It was a big disappointment to start with,
has aged very badly and is actually painful to watch with mistake after
mistake. Try it out if you have immense
patience and see, but you are better off skipping it.
Extras
include Original Theatrical Cut Alternative Scenes, a Behind-The-Scenes
Featurette and a feature length audio commentary track by Frankenheimer about
how he made the film which is much more interesting than watching it. You can tell he was clearly trying to make
this work, but it is a dud.
Most of
the bad action films from Hollywood
since have usually been so because they were not even trying to be worth
seeing, something we could never accuse Frankenheimer of. This is one reason why more U.S. audiences
have turned to Asian Cinema for action and though many of those films have
their own clichés, formula, predictability and issues, they do occasionally
offer some pleasant surprises.
For me,
one of the biggest has been Kim Han-min’s War
Of The Arrows (2011) which at first could have been just another costumer
with “Wi-Fu” martial arts, overproduction and boredom, but that is not the
case. Instead, this drama set in 1623 as
Manchuria again invades Korea,
the invaders take slaves as they rape, kill, burn and terrorize everyone except
some men in the village who intend to fight back.
This
includes Nam-ji (Park Hae-ji) who is a loner of sorts and an ace in the use of
bow and arrows. He has longtime friends
from the village who are too and enough of them get together to slowly fight
back. I will not ruin the surprises on
the side, though the costumes, sets, locations and performances are better than
most of these films have offered since the cycle started and the action in the
film is constant, impressive and that is down to the use of arrows which is
some of the most interesting and spectacular in decades, possibly in cinema
history.
This runs
a rich, non-stop 122 minutes and delivers like nothing I have seen in any genre
this film covers in a while. A
thoroughly professional, grade-A, top rate production, it proves once again (as
past films, including the underrated thriller 301/302 have shown) that Korean cinema is as vital, rich and
energetic as any in the world right now.
Well Go USA managed to pick this gem up over the majors and if I were
them, I’d be thrilled.
Extras
include Highlights, Trailers and a Behind The Scenes featurette, but I wish
there had been more because it is amazing and best of all, impossible to remake
and not botch.
Finally
we have a newer Western entry, Michael Feifer’s Wyatt Earp’s Revenge (2011) which itself is part of a strange
retro-cycle of Westerns obviously made on HD video and while most of those that
I have suffered through have been cheesy, weak and brought the genre to a
regressive state that is the wrong side of its pre-genre/pre-Stagecoach full-fledged genre days,
this at least has a few good moments.
Val Kilmer is an older Earp, referencing the well-liked Tombstone
(though he was not the same character there) telling his story in
flashback. That unfortunately undermines
the impact of the drama and backfires on this somewhat ambitious production.
I was
hoping for more surprises here too, but this falls flat and despite some
interesting casting (including singer Tracy Adkins) that makes sense, it does
not add up or give us anything new, so only hardcore genre fans will enjoy
it. There is one extra in the featurette
Riding Along With Wyatt Earp, but I
never bought it and it really starts to have problems halfway through.
1080p 2.35
X 1 digital High Definition image transfers are offered on both Blu-ray
releases, but Games looks like an
older HD master and despite being shot in the Super 35mm film format by Director
of Photography Alan Caso, A.S.C. (later of Six
Feet Under), this was not a great-looking film to begin with and the early
use of digital visual effects has dated this more badly than expected. Arrows
has much better performance with decent color throughout, some good depth and has
a more cinematic grasp of the scope frame than many films I have seen
lately. The anamorphically enhanced DVD
version is not as good as the Blu-ray, which does a much better job of showing
Director of Photography’s Kim Tae-sung work.
He also did the music score!
The anamorphically
enhanced 1.78 X 1 image on Wyatt is
soft and has motion blur, but some bad editing, bad visual effects and bad
visual choices do not help either.
The
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mixes on the Blu-rays have their limits,
but for different reasons. Games has what sounds like an older
soundmaster or that the sound is a generation down, while Arrows has a laid-back soundmix until the action and music kick
in. The lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 on its
DVD is weaker still, but the DTS-MA on the Blu-ray has some good moments. That leaves the lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 on Wyatt that is also weak, but also has
some location and mixing issues that show its budget limits.
- Nicholas Sheffo