It
Takes From Within
(2014/First Run DVD)/Jurassic
Park 25th
Anniversary 4K Collection
(1993 - 2015/Universal 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray w/Blu-ray Box
Set)/Shocking Dark
(1989/Severin Blu-ray)/The
Strangers: Prey At Night
(2018/Universal Blu-ray w/DVD)/Zombie
3 (1988)/Zombie
4: After Death
(1989/Severin Blu-ray w/CD Sets)
4K
Ultra HD Picture: A Picture: B-/B+/B/B+ & C+/B/B
Sound: B-/A/B/B+ & C+/B/B
Extras: C/B/B/B/B/B
Main Programs: C/A B+ C+ B/C+/B/B/C+
This
new block of horror monster thrillers covers everything from low
budget bloodfests to big budget blockbusters...
An
experimental and dark film, It
Takes From Within
(2014) is shot in glorious black and white (which we don't get often
enough anymore) and feels very inspired by David Lynch (but not
nearly as interesting). Dark, depressing, and at times unsettling,
the film takes place in a town where a man and woman and preparing to
attend a burial... but as they do they are haunted with unusual
paranormal incidents that are nothing but bad news.
Directed
by Lee Eubanks, the film stars Jesse Ferraro, Sabra JohnSin, and
Gabriel Lopez. The film is presented in anamorphically
enhanced
2.35:1 widescreen black and white in standard definition on DVD with
a lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound mix. While the presentation
is up to DVD standards, it's still heavily compressed and lacking in
the detail that 1080p provides.
Special
Features...
Audio
Commentary with Director Lee Eubanks
While
much of it is up to interpretation, It
Takes From Within
is an art film that has some interesting visuals and ideas but isn't
quite engaging enough to reach cult status.
Now
for one of the early, big 4K Ultra HD disc sets. While there aren't
any new extras in this release of the Jurassic
Park
saga, which comes to new 4K life on disc so soon thanks to the
arrival of the sequel Jurassic
World: Fallen Kingdom.
All
four
previous films have been upgraded to 2160p HEVC/H.265, HDR (10; Ultra
HD Premium)-enhanced Ultra High Definition picture quality and
showcase the detail and craftsmanship that makes the saga so
monumental. The first two Spielberg-directed films are definitely
the strongest in the saga, while JP
3 is
by far the weakest... with Jurassic
World
getting back to the roots of the original but not without its own
list of flaws.
This
set has great packaging (though a bit reminiscent of the previous
Blu-ray release) and in the film's themselves some detail work on the
dinosaurs themselves (particularly those that were made practically
by Stan Winston studios) are what really make this saga worth
upgrading to on 4K UHD. I've owned these films on every format and
have seen them (especially the first two) an embarrassing number of
times and have never seen them look this good.
Jurassic
Park
(1993)
There
isn't much to say that hasn't already been said about Spielberg's
game changing 1993 genre film. Not only was it a blockbuster, but it
was the first film to really showcase the possibilities of computer
generated effects. Twenty five years later, the film still holds up
(and will continue to for another 25) with its bold storytelling, top
notch directing and acting, and incredible musical score by John
Williams. Based on the bestselling book by Michael Crichton
(Westworld),
Jurassic
Park
brings dinosaurs back to roaring life.
An
adventure 65 million years in the making...
When
an incident results in the death of an employee, Jurassic
Park
owner John Hammond (Richard Attenborough) brings in three specialists
to sign off on the park to calm investors. The specialists,
paleontologist Alan Grant (Sam Neill), paleobotanist Ellie Sattler
(Laura Dern), and chaos theorist Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum), are
surprised to see the island park's main attraction are living,
breathing dinosaurs, created with a mixture of fossilized DNA and
genetic cross-breeding/cloning. However, when lead programmer Dennis
Nedry (Wayne Knight) shuts down the park's power to sneak out with
samples of the dinosaur embryos to sell to a corporate rival, the
dinosaurs break free, and the survivors are forced to find a way to
turn the power back on and make it out alive. The film also stars
Bob Peck, Martin Ferrero, Ariana Richards, Joseph Mazzello, and
Samuel L. Jackson.
Extras
for Jurassic Park:
The
Making of Jurassic Park
Early
Pre-Production Meetings
Location
Scouting
Phil
Tippett Animatics: Raptors in the Kitchen
Storyboards
Foley
Artist
Production
Archives: Photographs, Design Sketches and Conceptual Painting
Theatrical
Trailers Including Jurassic Park III
Dinosaur
Encyclopedia
Production
Notes
Cast
and Filmmakers
and
BD-ROM Features Including Live Web Events
The
Lost World: Jurassic Park
(1997)
Despite
not following Crichton's original novel, I feel that The
Lost World: Jurassic Park
is one of the most underrated sequels in movie history and actually a
favorite of mine. Starring Jeff Goldblum (who returns as Dr. Ian
Malcolm), the film is full of intense action set pieces, awesome
looking dinosaurs, wonderful performances, high production value, and
an incredible score by John Williams.
When
a vacationing family stumbles upon the dinosaurs of Isla Sorna, a
secondary island where the animals were bred in mass and allowed to
grow before being transported to the park, Ian Malcolm (Goldblum) is
called in by John Hammond (Richard Attenborough) to lead a team to
document the island to turn it into a preserve, where the animals can
roam free without interference from the outside world.
Malcolm
agrees to go when he discovers his girlfriend, paleontologist Sarah
Harding (Julianne Moore) is already on the island, while at the same
time Hammond's nephew Peter Ludlow (Arliss Howard) has taken over his
uncle's company and leads a team of hunters to capture the creatures
and bring them back to a theme park in San Diego. The two groups
clash and are ultimately forced to work together to evade the
predatory creatures and survive the second island. The film also
stars Pete Postlethwaite, Richard Schiff, Vince Vaughn, Vanessa Lee
Chester, Peter Stormare, and a young Camilla Belle.
Blu-ray
extras for The Lost World: Jurassic Park...
The
Making of The Lost World
Deleted
Scenes
Illustrations
and Conceptual Drawings
Storyboards
Models
The
World of Jurassic Park
The
Magic of ILM
Theatrical
Trailers Including Jurassic Park III
Dinosaur
Encyclopedia
Production
Notes
Production
Photographs
Cast
and Filmmakers
Posters
and Toys
and
BD-ROM Features Including Live Web Events
Jurassic
Park 3
(2001)
Not
as serious in tone as the first two entries and going a campier
route, Jurassic
Park 3)
or III where the Roman numeral looks like dinosaur claw marks!) is a
misfire but has grown on me more and more over the years. Bringing
back original lead Sam Neill as Alan Grant (and a bit part by Laura
Dern), the film loses Spielberg and boy does it show. Though he
would later go on to direct the first Captain
America
film, Joe Johnston kind of made this film up as he went along and the
result is a brief Jurassic adventure that doesn't bring anything new
or exciting to the table... and some cringeworthy dialogue.
The
film also stars Tea Leoni, William H. Macy, Alessandro Nivola, and
Michael Jeter to name a few.
Dr.
Alan Grant (Neill) is bribed by an impressive amount of money to
return to Isla Sorna, Site B (which was seen in The
Lost World)...
a world where the dinosaurs roam free and are in no way part of a
theme park-like attraction. Promised by two parents (Macy and Leoni)
to be paid handsomely to help find their lost son (Morgan) on the
island, their airplane crashes and they end up stranded. They soon
come across genetically enhanced raptors, T-Rexes, and a vicious
Spinosaurus. In short, this was the Jurassic
film that first introduced the genetically mutated and enhanced
dinosaur.
Jurassic
Park 3 Special Features:
Return
to Jurassic Park: The Third Adventure
Archival
Featurettes:
The
Making of Jurassic Park III
The
Dinosaurs of Jurassic Park III
The
Special Effects of Jurassic Park III
The
Industrial Light & Magic Press Reel
The
Sounds of Jurassic Park III
The
Art of Jurassic Park III
Montana:
Finding New Dinosaurs
Behind
the Scenes
Tour
of Stan Winston Studio
Spinosaurus
Attack the Plane
Raptors
Attack Udesky
The
Lake
A
Visit to ILM
Dinosaur
Turntables
Storyboards
to Final Feature Comparison
Production
Photographs
Theatrical
Trailer
and
Audio Commentary
Jurassic
World
(2015)
The
franchise's much needed reboot, Jurassic
World,
takes us back to the original Park but this time upgraded and
enhanced like never before. Deemed safe to return by the public,
Jurassic World became the realized dream of all that John Hammond
originally intended when he made the first park. Of course it
doesn't take long for things to go awry, this time with a park full
of visitors and the park's deadliest genetically enhanced dinosaur to
get loose and go on a killing spree. Its up to smart talking Raptor
trainer Owen (Chris Pratt), Claire (Bryce Dallas Howard) and others
to get the dinosaur contained before it reaches the park visitors...
Directed
by Colin Trevorrow (Safety
Not Guaranteed)
the film was a huge success and spawned the new planned trilogy for
the series. While a little corny and too jokey in some scenes (the
Raptors become a bit too much like a pet at times when they were once
the scariest part of the movies), overall there's a lot to like about
Jurassic
World
that makes it an entertaining entry into the series... though it
still doesn't stack up to the Spielberg ones for me.
Special
Features for Jurassic World:
Deleted
Scenes
Chris
& Colin Take on the World
Welcome
to Jurassic World
Dinosaurs
Roam Once Again
Jurassic
World: All-Access Pass
Innovation
Center Tour with Chris Pratt
Jurassic's
Closest Shaves -- Presented by Barbasol
All
four films are (again) presented in 2160p HEVC/H.265, HDR (10; Ultra
HD Premium)-enhanced Ultra High Definition on 4K UHD disc and are
presented in 1.85:1 widescreen aspect ratios. With HDR capabilities,
there's a huge improvement in overall color and far more detail and
texture on everything. The rich soundtracks are in both lossless DTS
X 11.1 and DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1 and upgrade the sound mixes for
the previous three films (but not World,
which was already that way). The first two films look particularly
good in 4K, with the most attention spent on the first film, which
also happened to the the worldwide debut of DTS sound in theaters.
Jurassic
World
looks amazing too for it being a bit newer. The one that isn't the
most notable upgrade in the bunch is the third film, but it still
looks better than it did on regular Blu-ray here. The 4K discs have
only the films themselves while the also included Blu-ray editions
feature the same versions as released on disc previously with all the
extras.
In
short, this set is great for the hardcore Jurassic
Park
fan that has 4K capabilities... in fact with the epic scale of these
films, you'd be silly not to get them on this new and impressive
format.
One
of the most infamous and weirdest Italian genre B-flicks of all time
gets the HD upgrade that nobody ever imagined it would... Bruno
Mattei's Shocking
Dark
aka Terminator
2
(1989). That's right... it was actually released under the title
'Terminator 2' by its Italian pick up investors in an effort to sell
it better (and yes this way before Cameron's sequel to the original
classic.)
The
filmmaking trio of Bruno Mattei, Claudio Fragasso, and Rossella Drudi
(Zombi
3 and
4,
see more below) banded together to make this film, which they were
under pressure to rip off elements from both Cameron's Aliens
and the original Terminator
(even going as far as naming the female lead 'Sarah') from the
producers. The final product is pure B-movie cheese at its best and
a must-see for sci-fi and genre fans everywhere. Shocking
Dark
has plenty of aliens, gore, corny dialogue, and plenty of tropes that
sci-fi fans will quickly embrace.
An
alien infestation plagues a military base, where a group of soldiers
are sent out to investigate... only to become prey to evil alien
creatures in the process in Shocking
Dark.
(Yeah, I know the premise sounds familiar.) The film includes
nearly shot for shot scenes ripped off of Aliens,
one that is hilarious as it is so close to its source.
The
film stars Geretta Geretta (Demons)
and Tony Lombardo (RATS:
NIGHTS OF TERROR)
along with a host of others.
Remastered
in 2K HD from the original film elements, there's no question that
the film looks far better here than any fuzzy previous release to
date. Presented in a 1.85:1 widescreen aspect ratio a nice sounding
mono mix, the film looks and sounds miles better than it did in any
other release. The print has been considerably cleaned and dusted
off, and captures the creepy atmosphere perfectly. Even if you have
seen this film, you haven't seen it look this good so in a way it's
like seeing it again for the first time.
Special
Features...
Terminator
in Venice
- An Interview with Co-Director / Co-Screenwriters Claudio Fragasso
and Co-Screenwriter Rossella Drudi
Once
Upon A Time in Italy
- An Interview With Actress Geretta Geretta
Alternate
Italian Titles
Severin
Hall of Fame pin and Exclusive Slipcase available at
www.severin-films.com
It's
been ten years since the original Strangers
was released, so when The
Strangers Prey at Night
(2018) was announced many were skeptical. Good news is that this
sequel is actually pretty good and holds up to the same spirit of the
original even if it isn't completely original. This slasher
franchise brings us mortal humans that can be killed. but who also
have no clear motive and who are simply out for bloodlust 'just
because.' In this regard, The
Strangers
is a bit more scarier than The
Purge
because this could easily (and likely has) happen to anybody
anywhere.
The
film stars Christina Hendricks (Drive),
Bailee Madison (Just
Go With It),
Martin Henderson (The
Ring),
Lewis Pullman (Battle
of the Sexes),
and Damian Maffei and is directed by Johannes Roberts (47
Meters Down).
A
family is in a bit of disarray as Kinsey (Madison) is being sent off
to boarding school due to her bad behavior whilst her brother
(Pullman) is about to graduate from high school. So their parents
Cindy (Hendricks) and Mike (Henderson) decide to take them out to
their relative's campground for a weekend away. But when they get to
the camp site, they don't find their relatives and instead are
greeted by a trio of masked persons who want nothing more than to
chop them up. What starts as a vacation ends in an un-relentless
battle for survival.
Presented
in 1080p high definition with a widescreen aspect ratio of 2.35:1 and
a nice sounding English DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless mix. Also
included is a compressed standard definition version that has similar
specs, an
anamorphically enhanced image and
a lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 mix. Most of the film takes place at night
so it's nice to see here that everything is nicely lit and shot
interestingly. This is definitely a film worth checking out in HD.
A digital copy is also included.
Special
Features...
Alternate
Ending
"Prep
for Night"
Music Video - Director's Cut: The Man in the Mask, Dollface, and
Pin-up Girl get ready to terrorize an unsuspecting family in a music
video directed by horror auteur Mickey Keating (Darling,
Carnage
Park)
A
Look Inside The Strangers: Prey at Night:
Stars Christina Hendricks, Martin Henderson and director Johannes
Roberts talk about the making of the film
Family
Fights Back:
Stars Christina Hendricks, Martin Henderson, Bailee Madison, Lewis
Pullman and director Johannes Roberts review the film's characters
and their fight to survive
The
Music of The Strangers: Prey at Night:
Director Johannes Roberts and star Bailee Madison discuss the John
Carpenter-inspired score and the '80s soundtrack that keeps The
Strangers
killing
Prey
at Night
is better than I expected and surprisingly one of the better horror
films so far this year.
Lucio
Fulci's groundbreaking Zombi
(reviewed elsewhere on this site) is essential viewing for anyone who
loves zombie movies. With that film being an unofficial sequel to
Romero's Dawn
of the Dead,
next came Zombi
3
(1988) which is a wildly insane film shot in the Philippines. Fulci
was very ill at the time of the filming so collaborators Bruno
Mattei, Claudio Fragasso and Rossella Drudi came to the rescue in
helping Fulci complete production. The result is a wild ride from
frame one that involves plenty of arm chopping and flesh ripping
madness to satisfy.
A
Zombie virus is accidentally unleashed on a small tropical island and
soon spreads like wildfire as a band of survivors struggle to
survive...
Special
Features include:
The
Last Zombies
- Interview With Co-Director/Co-Writer Claudio Fragasso and Co-Writer
Rossella Drudi
Tough
Guys
- Interview with Actors/Stuntmen Massimo Vanni and Ottaviano
Dell'Acqua
The
Problem Solver
- Interview with Replacement Director Bruno Mattei
Swimming
with Zombies
- Interview with Actress Marina Loi
In
the Zombie Factory
- Interview with FX Artist Franco Di Girolamo
Audio
Commentary With Stars Deran Sarafian and Beatrice Ring
Trailer
and
Bonus Disc: CD Soundtrack with high quality PCM digital sound
Finally,
Claudio Fragasso set out to make a Zombie film of his own and
succeeded in Zombi
4: After Death
(1989), which was actually one of the first films to introduce the
'talking' zombie. The idea here was that the undead would evolve
from slow walking and absent minded to fast, intelligent, and scary
creatures brought to life by voodoo. Given its tropical setting and
carnage, Zombie
4 is
a fun popcorn muncher and holds a special place in Zombie movie
history.
Both
films are presented in 1080p high definition with a 1.85:1 widescreen
aspect ratio and a lossless DTS-HD
MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono mix,
the film looks and sounds far better than it did in any previous
release on video. This new 2K transfer bests the foreign release of
the films too as these are newly color corrected and look and sound
great. In short, if you just own the DVD versions of these then this
is definitely a worthwhile upgrade.
Special
Features include...
Run
Zombie Run!
- Interview With Director Claudio Fragasso and Screenwriter Rossella
Drudi
Jeff
Stryker in Manila
- Interview With Actor Chuck Peyton
Blonde
vs Zombies
- Interview With Actress Candice Daly
Behind-The-Scenes
Footage
Trailer
and
Bonus Disc: CD Soundtrack with high quality PCM digital sound
Like
I said, even if you have seen these films before you haven't seen
them look or sound nearly this good. These are all new releases that
come complete with new extras that fans won't want to miss out on.
Be sure to order off Severin's official site for added goodies!
-
James Lockhart
https://www.facebook.com/jamesharlandlockhartv/