The
Bat
(1959)/A
Bucket Of Blood
(1959/Corman/Allied Artists/Film
Detective Blu-rays)/Disembodied
(1957/Allied Artists/Warner Archive DVD)/The
Mad Genius
(1931/Warner Archive DVD)/Sherlock
Holmes
(1916/Essanay/Flicker Alley Blu-ray/DVD set)
Picture:
B/C+/C/C/B & C+ Sound: C/C/C/C/B & C+ Extras:
D/D/D/C-/B Films: C+/C/C/C+/B
PLEASE
NOTE:
The Disembodied
and Mad
Genius
DVDs are now only available from Warner Bros. through their Warner
Archive series and can be ordered from the links below.
Mystery,
murder, suspense, voodoo, the supernatural, madness and brilliance
are here in a set of B-movies, followed by two early, ambitious genre
works...
Crane
Wilbur's The
Bat
(1959)
is a campy, amusing Agnes Moorehead/Vincent Price film we previously
reviewed n a restored DVD at this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/12469/The+Bat+(1959/Allied+Artists/Film+Chest+DVD)/I
A curio, now we have
the first Blu-ray, which has a nice improvement in picture, but the
sound is no improvement (even if it is lossless; see more below) and
we get zero extras. This is the best version of the film available
now, but someone's got to have a better copy of the soundtrack and
want to add some extras. Otherwise, the improved clarity makes this
a better watch with more fun.
Roger
Corman's A
Bucket Of Blood
(1959) was released by Allied Artists
the same year and has a sort of House
Of Wax
plot set at both a beatnik bar and the home of a young waiter there
(an amusing Dick Miller) who is sick of being belittled by almost
everyone and wants to be a sculptor. When he starts to kill, the
solution is plaster the dead with modeling clay and pass it off as
counterculture art!
Bert
Convy, who later became a TV staple as both a character actor and
guesting on TV game shows like Match
Game
in the 1970s (which led to him hosting the amusing Tattletales)
has an amusing turn here in what is supposed to be a horror comedy,
but the unintentional laughs get mixed with intended ones that don't
always work. At 65 minutes long, it actually takes a while to start,
but it still could have done more as Corman was more in a rush to
save money than think things through. Only worth seeing once if your
wide awake to get the few good moments out of it.
There are no extras.
Walter
Grauman's Disembodied
(1957) is also from Allied Artists, at the same length, from a few
years before and just as uneven and wacky as a young woman (Allison
Hayes from the original Attack
Of The 50-Foot Woman)
lives with her husband in 'the jungle' where he does his work, but it
turns out that not only is she a seductress, not only secretly
practices voodoo with voodoo dolls, but is a dancing voodoo queen
into human sacrifices that she can fit into rhythmic dance numbers!
Yes,
the film is pretty silly and also with unintentional laughs, but it
has little suspense, too much downtime and is yet another curio worth
a single look if that. Zombie fans will not find any zombies, but
those under voodoo spells do walk around zombified briefly for those
wondering.
There are no extras.
Michael
Curtiz's The
Mad Genius
(1931) has John Barrymore as a control freak who builds a winning
ballet troop, but this is not a backstage musical. His prized lead
male dancer gets involved with a romance he wants to destroy as not
to interfere with his ballet program, but this is not a mere
melodrama or 'woman's film' (read soap opera) because this is a star
vehicle for Barrymore (pre Hollywood Code era) to simply be demented
and dark for most of its 80 minutes, handing out illicit drugs in the
shadows to a dope addict director who works for him, abusing all
around him, comparing himself to horror monsters if the time
literally and showing us how good an actor he was.
Though
never landing an iconic character to make his own, Barrymore proved
back in the silent era he could bring major characters to life, as he
did in the remarkable 1922 Sherlock
Holmes
(see the Blu-ray restoration elsewhere on this site) and his title
character here might have been sold as potentially iconic, but was
never going to stick. Still, you have a great director, great actor,
solid cast and enough unexpectedly interesting moments that this one
is definitely worth a look.
A
Vintage Theatrical Trailer is the only extra.
Last
but not least is yet another lost film missing for decades that has
finally been found and restored, Arthur
Berthelet's Sherlock
Holmes
(1916) that has been the stuff of legend like Barrymore's 1922 film.
Made for the Essanay
Studios, it is in four parts, four different stories derived from the
original stage play with actor William Gillette as Holmes that he
co-created and made legendary his stage performances. With only
hardcore Holmes fans and scholars telling us how great and
influential the film was or how it captured the Holmes that would be
the guide for every actor from Barrymore and Basil Rathbone, to
Benedict Cumberbatch, Peter Cushing and the rest to the point the the
film shows Gillette built the total foundation for every portrayal of
the master detective in his wake. Yes, his work really is that
significant.
Saved
from a French print that miraculously survived, this Flicker Alley
Blu-ray/DVD set offers that version, an English version and a visual
restoration that is one of the most amazing I have ever seen for a
silent film. Arriving only a year after Griffith's controversial
Birth
Of A Nation
(see the Blu-ray elsewhere on this site), its narrative sense is very
strong, consistent and does a stunning job of capturing the spirit
and fun of the original Sir Arthur Conan Doyle books. Fans will be
thrilled and everyone who sees it will be pretty shocked at how well
made this is. With Gillette's legacy reconfirmed, Sherlock
Holmes
(1916) is a must-see all serious film, mystery and Holmes fans should
go way out of there way to see. Then this Flicker Alley set has even
more rare, must-see films, making it one of the most important
Blu-ray releases of the year!
Those
great extras include the DVD set version of the film, a high quality
booklet featuring images from the film and information about the
restoration project, then the discs add Sherlock
Holmes Baffled
(1900, courtesy of The Library of Congress and presented in HD) is
the earliest known film to feature the character of Sherlock Holmes,
A
Canine Sherlock
(1912) from the EYE Film Institute, the film stars Spot the Dog as
the titular character, Piu
forte che Sherlock Holmes
(1913) (also from the EYE Film Institute) a nice Italian trick-film
owes as much to Melies as it does Doyle, HD transfers from the Fox
Movietone Collection: the only known sound film interview with Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle and outtakes from a 1930 broadcast with William
Gillette showing off his amateur railroad (University of South
Carolina), plus a PDF manuscript of the 1899 Sherlock
Holmes
play by William Gillette and a PDF of the original contract between
William Gillette and the Essanay Film Manufacturing Company.
The
1080p 1.85 X 1 black and white digital High Definition image on The
Bat
looks really good for its age and is a nice upgrade from al the poor
copies and decent Film Vault DVD we previously reviewed, but the same
on Blood
not only has all kinds of ghosting and alignment issues, but motion
blur is increased due to the unusual use of DVNR (Digital Video Noise
Reduction) that has been obsolete since HD arrived. This was usually
used as a bad shortcut on transfers to get rid of scratches and print
flaws, but actually ruined details and causes all kinds of unnatural
shimmering. Too bad, since other shots are not as bad.
The
anamorphically enhanced 1.85 X 1 black & white image on
Disembodied
comes from a nice new print, but the transfer tends to somehow still
be too soft, which is also the case with the much older 1.33 X 1
black & white image on Genius,
but that is a shoot that tends to and seems to use more than one kind
of diffusion lens for style. It needs HD clarification.
That
leaves the remarkable 1080p 1.33 X 1 digital High Definition image
transfer on Holmes
1916
that obviously can show the age of the materials used, but the print
is in insanely good shape for being lost for so many decades and
being nearly 100 years old! It is a monochromatic film, but several
colors of tinting are used throughout that only minimally interferes
with its definition, detail and depth. The 1.33 X 1 DVD standard
definition version is OK, but no match for the amazing Blu-ray
transfer which happened out of hard work and a bit of luck, resulting
in as good looking an entry as any on the list.
The
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Stereo lossless mix on Holmes
1916
is well mixed, recorded and presented, sounding
great being a new recording. On the other hand, the DTS-HD MA
(Master Audio) 1.0 Mono lossless mixes on Bat
and Blood
have sources that are just too compressed, so they do not sound so
good, even outdone by the lossy Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo on the
Holmes
1916
DVD, which is not bad.
That
leaves the lossy Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono on Disembodied
and Genius
weak and as bad as Bat
and Blood,
meaning they all need some serious sound restoration, though Genius
has early audio issues from being an early sound film that might not
be totally fixable.
To
order either of the Warner Archive DVDs, go to this link for them and
many more great web-exclusive releases at:
http://www.warnerarchive.com/
-
Nicholas Sheffo