El
Bruto (1953*)/Even
The Wind Is Afraid
(1968/aka Hasta El Viento
Tiene Miedo*)/Pennyworth:
The Complete First Season
(2019/Warner Archive Blu-ray)/Phantom
Rider
(1936/Universal/*all MVD/VCI Blu-rays)/Sniper:
Assassin's End (2020/Sony
Blu-ray)
Picture:
B-/B-/B-/B+/B+ Sound: C/C-/C/B+/B+ Extras: D/D/C-/D/D
Main Programs: C+/C+/C+/C/C
Here's
a good mix of all kinds of genre releases...
We
start with a lesser-seen Luis Bunuel film, the Noirish drama El
Bruto
(1953) with actor Pedro Armendariz as a worker from a slaughterhouse
who gets in trouble with a few women in town and when someone is
apparently killed, he gets blamed, though some might want to frame
him. The actor is best known as Karim Bey, who helps Sean Connery's
James Bond in the second Bond film: From
Russia With Love
(1963) to take on SPECTRE and SMERSH. He is really good here, more
than holding his won in the lead role.
Support
comes from a mostly unknown to U.S. audiences cast who are fine, but
it also includes legendary Katy Jurado, who more than holds her own
as a woman scorned, et al. Bunuel is known for his films having
surrealism, politics and bold moments, but we do not get any of that
here. What wee do get here is a raw, honest connection to the
workers in this world where so many have so little and he juggles it
all well, realistically enough and that makes this curio worth a
look. Glad to see it saved.
Trailers
for other Mexican cinema releases are the only extras.
Carlos
Enrique Taboada's Even
The Wind Is Afraid
(1968/aka Hasta
El Viento Tiene Miedo)
is a haunted spirit supernatural film in the older mode that uses
suggestion and suspense while treating the audience like it has
intelligence and a brain, taking place at a girl's boarding school
where a woman has a vision of a dead woman hanging dead and now, they
will all be haunted by a mysterious voice and the threat of more
death. Guillermo Del Toro remade this film in 2001 as The
Devil's Backbone.
Part
of this occurs when some of the gals go into a place they are
forbidden to go into, breaking the lock and entering, which turns out
to be a mistake. Like its remake, the film is not always successful
in using its approach the most effectively, but it has some
interesting moments and takes us places that are just a little
different than the usual supernatural horror film, so it was worth a
look at this. Now a curio thanks to that remake, even more people
will be inclined to try it out.
Trailers
for other Mexican cinema releases are the only extras.
In
DC Comics lore, Alfred Pennyworth has always been one of Bruce Wayne
/ Batman's top ally and in this live action mini-series, Pennyworth:
The Complete First Season
(2019), we finally dive into the exploits of the young Alfred
and how he came to be so seasoned. Initially premiering exclusively
on premium channel Epix, the series is now available on Blu-ray disc
courtesy of Warner Archive.
Similar
to what Marvel did with Agent Carter, DC is trying here to make a
sleek period action prequel series with a secondary character, but
this is more British spy thriller/Kingsman knock-off than
having much to do with Batman. It doesn't have any of the gothic
style/vibe of the property where previous entries (such as Gotham)
tried as hard as it could to fit in to the mythos or AT LEAST help
build off of it. Here, we just have a few familiar character names
being the main tie and the occasional easter egg reference. Kids
(Americans anyway) will likely be bored by its overall British and
adult tone, and comic book lovers and typical Bat-fans will likely be
neutral to 'meh' on it. Regardless, it's coming back for a second
season... and is now cemented forever on disc in this limited set for
fans to make up their own minds.
A
young Alfred Pennyworth (Jack Bannon) is a former British SAS
Soldier, who ends up working for Thomas Wayne (Ben Aldridge), who is
the future father to Bruce Wayne. Set in 1960s London, the show has
a British espionage feel and features many famous songs of the era.
Pennyworth
stars a mostly British cast with Emma Corrin, Paloma Faith, Jessica
Ellerby, Emma Paetz, Polly Walker, and Jason Flemyng to name a few.
Season
One spans three Blu-ray discs and ten episodes which includes
Pilot, The Landlord's Daughter, Martha Kane, Lady Penelope,
Shirley Bassey, Cilla Black, Julie Christie, Sandie Shaw, Alma Cogan,
and Marianne Faithful. Of course, most of those names are
iconic British women, fictional and in reality.
Surprisingly,
no extras.
Pennyworth
is big budget and big concept, but could have been a non-DC property
with the change of some character names. Likely why the series was
not pushed as hard on fans as other entries.
The
Phantom Rider
(1936) is the latest chapter play/Saturday Morning Movie Serial to
make it to Blu-ray, with the mysterious title character warning land
owners that a group of rogue thugs are out to steal their land and
everything they have ever worked for and to be ready to fight back.
No Heaven's
Gate
and not exactly The Lone Ranger, Buck Jones stars in this 15-part
romp that has some good moments and interesting turns, but it is more
a Western than anything else, but barely a superhero entry, though it
might sound like it otherwise.
Being
an earlier serial, it has more zip to it and has its moments where it
shows how good Universal's serials could be (versus rivals Columbia
and Republic) and fans of the genre (three years before John Ford's
Stagecoach
turned the Western into a full-fledged genre) shows the free-flowing
B-movie, even pulp mentality these films were made with. Having seen
this one decades ago, I was impressed at times in how well it held up
for what it is. From a new 2K scan of all 15 chapters, it is spread
across two discs and those interested will want to try it out.
The
only extra is a paper insert with a solid essay on the serial by film
scholar Toby Roan.
Finally,
the sleek
new action thriller Sniper:
Assassin's End
(2020) is a sequel to Sniper:
Ultimate Kill
(2017), and is on the lower budget spectrum of Sony. For what it's
worth, the film has nice cinematography that mimics Michael Bay and
color correction that gives it a bigger feel. With the most
recognizable actor being Tom Berenger, there's lots of brainless
action and some decently constructed sequences and makes for a fun
watch for action movie junkies even if it can't shake its 'straight
to video' feel.
The
film also stars Sayaka Akimoto, Chad Michael Collins, Lochlyn Munro,
and Ryan Robbins with direction by Kaare Andrews (Cabin Fever 3).
On
a fast paced run from the bloodthirsty CIA, special ops sniper
Brandon Beckett (Collins) and his legendary father (Berenger) take on
badass Russian mercenaries and a Yakuza-trained assassin as they
struggle to survive.
No
extras.
Sniper:
Assassin's End doesn't bring anything new to the table, but isn't
necessarily as bad as one might think. I'd put it in the 'painfully
average' category.
Now
for playback performance.
Pennyworth
is presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray disc with a
widescreen aspect ratio of 2.00:1 and an English DTS-HD Master Audio
5.1 mix. The show has a big production feel to it and is definitely
reliant on a lot of green screen and digitally enhanced shots to help
sell the time period better. Some of it works and some of it looks
pretty fake. Aside from some of the digitally added in moments, the
sets themselves are nicely constructed, fine acting, and there are
some moments that feel like a big budget film.
Sniper:
Assassin's End is presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray
disc with a widescreen aspect ratio of 2.40:1 and an English DTS-HD
Master Audio 5.1 mix (along with a Russian Dolby Digital 5.1 mix).
The score by Patrick Caird is chaotic and meant to keep you on the
edge of your seat, and the overall presentation is of the norm for
the Blu-ray format.
The
1080p 1.33
X 1 black & white digital High Definition image transfers on both
Bruto
(from a new 4K scan) and Rider
can show the age of the materials used, but both are far superior a
transfer to all previous releases of either. That is not to say that
they are without flaws. Bruto
has issues money must not have been around to fix, while Rider
is typical of all old serials we have seen on Blu-ray, with so much
film footage to show, it is impossible like an early TV series, to
expect not to see a few flaws. Otherwise, they look good and have a
few shots that look great.
The
1080p 1.66 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Afraid
can also show the age of the materials used, but this is far superior
a transfer to all previous releases of the film and I thought the
color (Eastman 35mm negative) looked really good and consistent here,
even if the detail was inconsistent. Otherwise, very watchable and
solid.
The
PCM 2.0 Mono sound on all three VCI Blu-rays can be clean, but for
some odd reason, have been transferred at a lower volume than
expected and Afraid
has some distortion in its dialogue, so be careful of high playback
levels and volume switching when watching.
-
Nicholas Sheffo (VCI) and James
Lockhart
https://www.facebook.com/jamesharlandlockhartv/