An
Angel For Satan
(1966/Severin*)/The
Blacklist: The Complete Eighth Season
(2020 - 2021/Sony DVD Set)/Blind
Beast (1969/Arrow*)/Death
Screams (1982/aka House
Of Death/Arrow*)/Lawnmower
Man 2: Jobe's War
(1996/*all MVD Blu-rays)/Waxworks
(1924/Flicker Alley Blu-ray w/DVD)
Picture:
B/B-/B+/B+/B+/B & C+ Sound: B-/B-/B+/B+/B+/B & C+
Extras: B/C+/B/B/D/B Main Programs: C+/B/C/C/C-/B-
Now
for some thrillers loaded with horror and mystery that try to do more
than the usual releases in the genre, whether they succeed or not...
We
start with Barbara Steele's final Gothic Horror film from her
prolific Italian period, Camillo Mastrocinque's An
Angel For Satan
(1966) revolves around a mysterious statue that has been dug up from
the bottom of a local Italian lake, misfortune starts to befall
everyone starting with the two sailors who brought it back. It is
supernaturally cursed and if so, can this nightmare be reversed?
Well,
it certainly releases repression (from violence, to sex and more) in
people all over the small town and a madness slowly starts to build
up as well. Part mood piece, I like the look of the film, along with
its sets, costumes and locales, but it also sacrifices some
exposition and narrative to achieve this and that holds the film back
a bit. Otherwise, it does come at the end of many such gothic
monochrome (melo)dramas and it is amazing it took this long for the
film to arrive on video. Not originally issued in the U.S., it is
great the film survived and we can now all appreciate what the
makers did pull off.
Also
helping are the solid supporting cast including Claudio Gora, Anthony
Steffan and Marina Berti, faces fans of the genres this film covers
are familiar with and you may have seen before, even if you did not
know who they were. Definitely consider this one worth a good look.
The
1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer can show the
age of the materials used, but this is far superior a transfer to all
previous releases of the film, which was not widely released. It is
a good-looking film and has one other special thing going for it. It
is one of the all-too-rare monochromatic films to be shot on DuPont
35mm black and white negative film, a high quality film, stock the
company produced (in various ASA/ISO light sensitivities) known for
its high quality and made until about 1973, when the company got out
of the film business asa color took over (they contributed to the
remarkable but sadly underused three-strip TruColor format, but it
went by the wayside by the 1960s) and it is very distinct.
Director
of Photography Giuseppi Aquari makes the most of its strengths and
versus other monochrome stocks they could have shot in at the time
(Kodak, Agfa, Ferrania, Ansco, Ilford, ORWO, etc.) and it tends to
retain a little more silver than most, so the film black is inkier,
yet it still retains more detail than you might expect from later
black and white film (Kubrick had pushed such film to the limit in
Dr. Strangelove (1964) while Godard made overexposure part of
the look of Alphaville (1965, only using Ilford film) for the
dark, near future police state of its plot. This impressive
restoration now easily stands as an outstanding example of how
excellent DuPont movie film was and could be, along with the
large-frame VistaVision films that originated on it in the 1950s.
Serious film, fans have to see this!
The
PCM 2.0 Mono in mixed English and much better, original Italian
lossless sound including the music and sound effects, so watching the
Italian with subtitles offers the best impact and has also been
restored as well as possible. I doubt the film will ever sound
better than it does here.
Extras
include
an Original Theatrical Trailer and an extended version of it with the
missing part lacking any audio, an outstanding Feature-Length Audio
Commentary track with Actress Barbara Steele, Film Scholar &
Horror Historian David Del Valle and Severin Films' David Gregory in
a great must-hear track to watch after seeing the film, a second
Audio Commentary with Kat Ellinger (Author of Daughters
of Darkness)
with a different approach to covering the film that goes out of the
way to not be a typical or robotic track, The
Devil Statue
on-camera interview with actor Vassili Karis (Italian with English
subtitles) and Pierre Andre's Venus
In Furs
film: Barbara
& Her Furs
(9:27 in 1080p) in French with English subtitles starring Steele and
offering a brief audio commentary by her.
Next,
the explosive Eighth
Season
of The
Blacklist
(2020 - 2021) lands on home video. Starring the infamous James Spader
in his iconic role as Raymond ''Red'' Reddington, a former most
wanted fugitive that decides to work with the government in tracking
down a sacred black list of mobsters, terrorists, and various
fugitives. In this season, he goes against profiler Elizabeth Keen
(Megan Boone) who is his equal in many ways.
The
series is created by Jon Bokenkamp and has won several primetime Emmy
Awards. The series also stars Diego Klattenhoff, Harry Lennix, Amir
Arison, Laura Sohn, and Hisham Tawfiq.
22
Episodes span 5 DVDs and include include Roanoke, Katarina
Rostova: Conclusion, 16 Ounces, Elizabeth Keen, The Fribourg
Confidence, The Wellstone Agency, Chemical Mary, Ogden Greeley, the
Cyranoid, Dr. Laken Perillos, Captain Kidd, Rakitin, Anne, Misere,
The Russian Knot, Nicholas Obenrader, Ivan Stepanov, The Protean,
Balthazar ''Bino'' Baker, Godwin Page, Nachalo, and Konets.
The
Blacklist is presented in anamorphically enhanced,
standard definition on DVD commercial and watermark free here with a
1.78:1 widescreen aspect ratio and a lossy 5.1 Dolby Digital mix,
both of which prove to be a more immersive experience than watching
it on streaming or broadcast television. The show is shot pretty
well and feels more cinematic than your usual series.
Special
Features include:
Deleted
Scenes
Blooper
Reel
and
a few featurettes
Blind
Beast
(1969) is
another bizarre piece of Japanese erotic cinema from the time that
pits a blind artist against a model that he is obsessed with. The
more the woman model is punished and made as the centerpiece for his
work, the more attracted to him she becomes as she adopts his ideals
of touch being his pathway to pleasure.
From
director Yasuzo Masumura (who made a few Gamera films), Blind
Beast is considered a masterwork of cinema from the time and has
a surreal and bizarre sexual overtone to it despite its artsy premise
and execution. While it wasn't really my personal thing, I can see
those who enjoy films like Irezumi or Horrors of Malfromed
Men enjoying this.
Blind
Beast is presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray disc with
an MPEG-4 AVC codec, a 2.40:1 widescreen aspect ratio and a lossless
Japanese LPCM Mono (48kHz, 24-bit) mix. The film looks and sounds
fantastic on the Blu-ray format and certainly has never looked this
good on previous releases as the color grade was done by Arrow in
this new restoration.
Special
Features:
Brand
new audio commentary by Asian cinema scholar Earl Jackson
Newly
filmed introduction by Japanese cinema expert Tony Rayns
Blind
Beast: Masumura the Supersensualist, a brand new visual essay by
Japanese literature and visual studies scholar Seth Jacobowitz
Original
Trailer / Image Gallery
Reversible
sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Tony
Stella
and
FIRST PRESSING ONLY: Illustrated booklet featuring new writing by
Virginie Selavy.
He
wants your body... in pieces!
Death
Screams
(aka House
of Death,
1982) is another Z grade '80s slasher that hasn't seen the light of
day in decades and has now gotten a nice Arrow release. While the
film has some indie budgeted '80s charm, there isn't anything too
special about it as it seems to be more or less made in an effort to
cash in on the success of movies like Friday
the 13th
that were hot at the time. There's not really anyone you will
recognize in this, unless you're a fan of the Earl Owensby films of
the North Carolina scene from around this time. If so then you'll
also notice that Worth Keeter (director of several Owensby
productions) was the head of special effects on this.
A
murderer goes on a rampage on an unsuspecting town during a town
carnival. As several characters go about their daily business, two
corpses are floating downstream... The film is directed by David
Nelson and stars Martin Tucker, Jody Kay, Hanns Manship, and Susan
Kiger to name a few.
Death
Screams is presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray disc
with an MPEG-4 AVC codec, a widescreen aspect ratio of 1.85:1, and a
lossless English LPCM Mono mix. The film itself looks pretty good
and has been restored nicely as this is likely the first release of
this film since the VHS era.
Special
Features:
Brand
new audio commentary with producer Charles Ison and special effects
artist Worth Keeter moderated by filmmaker Phil Smoot
Brand
new audio commentary with The Hysteria Continues
All
the Fun of the Scare: The Making of Death Screams -
newly-produced making-of documentary featuring interviews with
producer Charles Ison, special effects artist Worth Keeter, writer
Paul Elliott, actors Hanns Manship and Curt Rector, actor/producer's
assistant/assistant supervising editor Sharon Alley and actor/talent
wrangler Robert "Billy Bob" Melton
TV
and Radio Spots
Image
Galleries
House
of Death Alternate VHS Opening Titles
Two
versions of the screenplay under the original title of Night
Screams [BD-ROM content]
Reversible
sleeve featuring original artwork and a newly-commissioned
reimagining of the original VHS artwork by Sadist Art Designs
presented with die-cut slipcover
and
a Fully-Illustrated collector's booklet featuring new writing by
Brian Albright
The
pre-Matrix cyber sci-fi thriller, Lawnmower Man 2: Jobe's
War (1996) has a feel that only a bad '90s genre movie could
have. We have seen this same icky look in films like Super Mario
Bros. and Double Dragon. While pretty cheesy, at the same
time the film isn't without some interesting imaginative moments and
some cool production design. The seed of a Hollywood blockbuster is
there, but it doesn't ever quite sprout. In short, the film is an
absolute cheesy mess that pretty much put the nail in the coffin on
the franchise and doesn't involve Pierce Brosnan or any of the
original film's masterminds. The first film in the series is still a
guilty pleasure for some and was a big money maker for New Line
Cinema back in the day. If you are a fan of this failed sequel,
however, it does look quite nice on this new Blu-ray release from
Ronin Flix.
The
film stars Austin O' Brien, Matt Frewer, Patrick Bergin, Ely Pouget,
Kevin Conway, and Camille Cooper.
Jobe
(Frewer) is an evil computer consciousness that seeks world
domination. It's up to a group of rag tag computer engineers to
thwart the villainous world domination plot up against a futuristic
'90s setting.
Lawnmower
Man 2 is presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray disc with
a widescreen aspect ratio of 2.40:1 and audio mixes in lossless,
English DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 and 2.0 Stereo (48kHz, 24-bit)
as choices, depending on your home theater setup. The transfer is
very nice and clean and presents the film as best it can look on the
Blu-ray format.
No
extras.
Finally,
we have Paul Leni's final silent German film before he headed to
Hollywood, the Expressionist Horror classic Waxworks
(1924) which is an anthology film (of sorts) that features three
separate tales (originally intended to be four of them, but money ran
out!) tied to a wax museum and its terrible, horrifying secret.
William Dieterle is the young man (yes, the future director started
as an actor) is hired by the museum's owners to write back stories
for three of the figures (Werner Kruss as Jack The Ripper, Emil
Jannings as Captain Haroun-al-Rashid and Conrad Veidt as Ivan The
Terrible) despite their infamous crimes being well known for the most
part.
The
results are creepy, visually arresting, effective, dense and still
impresses after nearly a century, which is why it has been often
imitated (including in the form of a few more classics) and is one of
the great German Expressionist films. This is the most complete
version of the film I have ever seen and its almost total restoration
(some parts are still missing) shows how creative and clever so many
of the people here were. Some parts have obviously aged and some
parts are more effective than others, but the film has had a
legendary reputation and now more than ever, you can see why. A true
classic, Horror fans and all film fans need to mark it down as a
must-see!
The
1080p 1.33 X 1 black & white (with tinting) digital High
Definition image transfer can show the age of the materials used, but
this is far superior a transfer to all previous releases of the film
thanks to the stunning restoration work that has been done here
started in 4K and finished in 2K from the best surviving sources. It
must have been painstaking work to get this saved and cleaned up
without ruining the original intent or amazing work done almost 100
years ago as we post, so expect to be surprised and impressed.
The
two DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Stereo lossless music-only mixes on
the Blu-ray are fine, but neither stood out too strongly for me
either, playing about evenly well.
The
1.33 X 1 DVD with lossy Dolby Digital Stereo is passable and fine for
the old format, but is no match for the impressive Blu-ray
presentation.
Extras
are impressive and include another high-quality Collector's Edition
Souvenir Booklet Limited Edition) featuring new essays by Phillip
Kemp and Richard Combs on the film's history and significance; notes
on the restoration process by Julia Wallmuller (Deutsche Kinemathek);
and rarely seen production photographs and promotional material,
while the discs add a Feature-Length Audio Commentary Track by
Australian film and arts critic Adrian Martin, Paul Leni's
Rebus-Films Nr. 1-8 (Courtesy of Kino/Lorber,) these
Leni-helmed cinematic crossword puzzles were originally screened in
1920s German cinemas as featurettes accompanying the main film. Each
of these animated shorts was split into two parts: a clue and an
answer, and presented before and after the feature presentation, In
Search Of the original version of Paul Leni's Das
Wachsfigurenkabinett offers an interview with Julia
Wallmuller (Deutsche Kinemathek) based on her presentation after the
premiere of the restored film at Il Cinema Ritrovato festival in
Bologna 2020, and A Conversation with Kim Newman delivers
another in-depth interview with journalist, film critic, and fiction
writer Kim Newman, discussing the legacy of Waxworks.
-
Nicholas
Sheffo (Satan,
Waxworks)
and James Lockhart
https://www.facebook.com/jamesharlandlockhartv/