Cold
In July (2014/MPI/IFC
Blu-ray)/The Dogs Of War
(1980/United Artists/MGM/Twilight Time Limited Edition
Blu-ray)/Nightcap
(2000/aka Night Cap
aka Merci Pour Le
Chocolat/Cohen Media
Blu-ray)
Picture:
B-/B/B Sound: B-/C+/B Extras: C/C/B- Films: C/C+/B-
PLEASE
NOTE:
The
Dogs Of War
Blu-ray is now only available from our friends at Twilight Time, is
limited to only 3,000 copies and can be ordered from the link below.
Here's
a mixed set of new thriller releases...
Jim
Mickle's Cold
In July
(2014) starts out with a potentially interesting set-up where Michael
C. Hall (Dexter)
plays a good father/husband who shoots and kills and intruder when
his fingers slip out of panic. He is told he was a bad criminal with
a bad past, plus a bad father, a father (Sam Shepard) who happens to
have just come out of prison. He seeks out the man who killed his
son and starts tormenting him, but then it turns out the person
actually killed might be someone else, so they both have to get
together to figure out what is really happening.
After
things get uglier, the criminal father calls an old private
investigator friend (Don Johnson in a nice, eccentric turn) as it
turns out the police might be lying and worse. Unfortunately, the
additional twists and turns get so sleazy that this becomes a violent
spoof of itself that wastes some good actors, interesting locales and
squanders any intelligent potential. Too bad, for it was good while
it lasted.
Extras
include feature length audio commentary track by the Cast & Crew
(two of them), isolated music score track by Jeff Grace in lossy
Dolby Digital 5.1 and with option commentary, Deleted Scenes
and Early Previsualization Tests.
John
Irvin's The Dogs Of War
(1980) has always been a film I found a mixed bag and now, Twilight
Time has issued a Limited Edition Blu-ray of the film with its short
U.S. version and the slightly better International cut. A United
Artists release anxious to cash in critically and commercially on
Christopher Walken's blockbuster Deer
Hunter success, he plays
a mercenary who accepts money for a mission in an Idi Amin-style
African dictatorship, only to get caught and tortured (guess this is
supposed to outdo Michael Cimino's Russian Roulette sequences in Deer
Hunter) barely escaping.
Guess what? He's going back for revenge!
This
fed too well into the reactionary 1980s and was no match for Deer
Hunter or other thrillers
or the few war pictures being made at the time (even Irvin's own
later Vietnam film Hamburger
Hill has its limits
despite being one of the few that hold up) including a superweapon
that does not seem too dated and battle scenes that are decent, if
not the best. There is just something too slap-dash about the film.
Walken's soldier of fortune accepts $15,000 for the initial mission
that gets him in trouble, which is roughly over $47,000 as of this
2014 posting, which made me think he was foolish for not asking for
much more. Then he is captured and that makes either amount seem a
joke considering the risks. However, it is a film that deserves a
Blu-ray release and this is as good as we expect it would get. Based
on the book by Frederick Forsyth, Colin Blakely, Tom Berenger, Paul
Freeman, JoBeth Williams and Ed O'Neill also star.
Extras
include the Original Theatrical Trailer, Isolated Music Score track
and another illustrated booklet on the film with another well-written
essay by Julie Kirgo. Too bad Walken or Irvin were not able to do an
audio commentary on the longer cut of the film.
Finally
we have Claude Chabrol's Nightcap
(2000/aka Night Cap
aka Merci Pour Le
Chocolat), one of the few
films of his I actually like and it holds up well enough since I
reviewed it over 11 years ago on DVD at this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/93/Merci+Pour+Le+Chocolat
Of
course, it still has its obviousness and small problems, but Isabelle
Huppert has become an even bigger star (this was her fourth film with
Chabrol alone, making one of the all-time comebacks after being
bashed for being in Cimino's Deer
Hunter follow-up Heaven's
Gate, now recognized as a
bold, important film despite being a bomb in its time) and her work
here is as smart as anything, possibly saving the film. She is the
top reason outside of Chabrol that this will be an art house and
thriller curio. Now you can see it for yourself in this impressive
upgrade.
Extras
include a new trailer for the film (versus the old one for its
original release on the old DVD), booklet with an essay on the film
by Peter Tonguette and feature-length audio commentary track by fans,
critics and film scholars Wade Major and Andy Klein on the film and
Chabrol.
The
1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image on July
is a digital HD shoot that has some good shots and some that look
weak or limited, but we've seen worse. Outdoing it are the 1080p
1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Dogs (with its
purposely rough look lensed by the great Jack Cardiff) and Nightcap
(which is purposely shot to be a little dark) rarely showing the age
of the materials used and both superior a transfer to all previous
releases of the film. In
both cuts, Dogs
is now just grainy and not additionally noisy like its previous
transfers have unfortunately been, while Nightcap
far outdoes and replaces the older U.S. DVD version with the best
color and (narrowly) best definition of the bunch.
The
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mix on July
is a little harsh in its need to sweeten up its sound for its action
and violence sequences to the point that it becomes almost a spoof of
itself, while the DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono lossless mix on
Dogs
is even harsher, showing its age despite the fact that the isolated
music score sounds better, making for the poorest sound here. Guess
the original sound materials were only so good? That leaves the PCM
2.0 Stereo on Nightcap
the surprise sonic winner here, issued originally in Dolby Digital
theatrically, there was no 5.1 mix on the old DVD (with weak Dolby
Digital 2.0 Stereo) either, suggesting that was a last-minute
decision. This is warm, rich enough and well-recorded, decoding
nicely when you use Pro Logic or one of its variants.
As
noted above, you can order
The
Dogs Of War
limited edition Blu-ray, buy it while supplies last at this link:
www.screenarchives.com
-
Nicholas Sheffo