Gang
Busters (1942*/**)/The
Man From Hong Kong
(1975*/***)/The Phantom Of
The Air (1933*/**)/Pirate
Treasure (1934/*/**all
Universal/VCI serials)/Seven
Deaths In The Cats Eyes
(1973/***both Twilight Time Limited Editions/*all MVD Blu-rays)
Picture:
B (Cats: B-) Sound: C+ (Man: B) Extras:
C/B/C-/C-/B- Films: B-/B-/B-/C+/C+
PLEASE
NOTE:
The
The
Man From Hong Kong
and Seven
Deaths In The Cats Eyes
limited edition Blu-rays
are now only available from Twilight Time and can be ordered from the
link below.
Now
for some action thrillers to know about, two feature films we are
revisiting here and three movie serials you will get a kick out of...
The
wildest, most inane, wacky, campy and unintentionally hilarious of
the three serials here is Gang
Busters
(1942,) which was based on the wildly successful radio drama program
and had a few tie-ins along the way. It's the police authorities
versus organized crime and here, the legendary character actor Kent
Taylor heads the authorities against a new threat from the mysterious
figure known as Mortis. Running 13 chapters (and 289 minutes!) with
the usual slight overlap, it is well done, but has some editing that
backfires and wants to be a noble project that teaches its young
audience to respect the police.
Irene
Hervey is the newspaper reporter (wait until you see her film
camera!) and female lead, while Universal managed to also sign Robert
Armstrong, Ralph Morgan (one-time Dick Tracy) and Richard Davies, so
all that makes this one of their most interesting-ever serials and
one worth your time.
Brian
Trechard-Smith's The
Man From Hong Kong
(1975) has finally made it to the U.S. and on Blu-ray, the great
Oz-Ploitation James Bond-wanna be that was the first Australian/Hong
Kong co-production and pits Golden Harvest studio star Jimmy Wang-Yu
against villainous drug kingpin and one-time James Bond George
Lazenby. You can read more about the film starting at this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/14591/The+Blob+(1988+remake/Sony/TriStar/Umbrella+i
Doomed
by an R-rating at the time (Fox picked it up for the U.S. market and
sometimes going under the title The
Dragon Flies)
and not even being able to take advantage of having a huge hit record
in ''Sky
High''
by the English band Jigsaw, it did even worse than the then-recent
Bond film The
Man With The Golden Gun
(1974) in a temporary lull in that series. I strongly recommend this
one if you love action, crazy humor and can handle its political
incorrectness. Lazenby has more fans as more viewers have discovered
how great On
Her Majesty's Secret Service
(1969) really is, so consider it a curio that pays off.
The
Phantom Of The Air
(1933) is the oldest of the serials here, but has plenty of fun and
amusing moments as Tom Tyler (later Shazam!/Captain Marvel in
Republic's all-time brilliant Adventures
Of Captain Marvel
serial, reviewed elsewhere on this site) as a highly-skilled aviator
who is in competition with another flyer (Leroy Mason) who is
secretly the head of a dangerous criminal gan who finds out a
scientist has invented an anti-gravity device that could be worth
billions of dollars.
Both
men happen to be associated with the scientists's daughter (Gloria
Shea) and are both interested in her. Of course, all this means
conflict is inevitable and if that was not enough, there is the title
airplane that mighty be one of the most powerful and dangerous
vehicles ever made.
Another
solid, early sound serial, it was somewhat influential on the action
genre and has some fun thrills, as it holds up better than expected,
even when some of the effects are dated or old, as expected.
Otherwise, the fight scenes and action scene are good and the
storyline is better than usual. This runs 12 chapters (and 240
minutes) and is narrowly the best of the three serials we have here.
William Desmond, Walter Brennan and Sidney Bracy are a plus in the
good supporting cast. Once you start watching and enjoying it, it
might be hard to stop until its over.
Pirate
Treasure
(1934) is another serial gems we are covering here and has an aviator
(Richard Talmadge carrying the lead here very well) searching for the
title fortune, apparently hidden by a long-gone relative. Can he
find it? Does anyone else know it exists? If so, will they kill him
for it?
He
has a gal friend here (Lucille Lund, more than able to hang with 'the
guys') and legendary character actor J. Pat O'Malley in an early
acting role. The low-point is stereotypical 'natives' in the middle
of nowhere who could thwart anyone getting the gold. Otherwise,
these early sound serials are like the silent chapter plays, in that
you can see the makers trying to find their way in making these
series as exciting and impactful as they can and with somewhat
limited resources. This one also runs 12 chapters (and 240 minutes)
and has more solid moments than you might expect. Glad to see it
saved and restored.
Lastly,
we have Antonio Margheriti's Seven
Deaths In The Cats Eyes
(1973,) which has more variations of its title in English alone than
any other film I can think of, as Margheriti again goes under his
pseudonym 'Anthony M. Dawson' with Jane Birkin visiting a Scottish
Castle (meeting her mother there) and the family in it, only to
discover something very murderous is going on. A giallo that tries
to be something different, we covered a very cheap DVD version of the
film around the time this site launched and I though this would be a
lost film. It was issued in a better version later, but I am now
only catching up to it in this restored Blu-ray edition.
Though
it did not make me love the film, I have to say it was much better,
more pleasant and enjoyable this time and I raised my opinion (and
rating) in the film a bit. Now that I can actually see and hear it
clearly as intended, I can see subtleties in the film and
performances that I could not see before and how the script takes
some risks, plus a different approach to the murders. Anton
Diffring, Hiram Keller, Dana Ghia, Venantino Venantini, Doris
Kunstmann, Francoise Christophe, Luciano Pigozzi, Georg Konrad, and
Serge Gainsbough help make up the effective supporting cast and this
is now the only way to see this film outside of a mint, scope 35mm or
even 16mm film print.
With
its often superior use of color and melodrama involving sex, betrayal
and class division, some will find this more involving and intriguing
than others, but it is at least a different kind of entry in the
giallo cycle and now, more than worth revisiting.
Now
for playback performance. The 1080p 1.33 X 1 black & white
digital High Definition image transfers on all three serials can show
the age of the materials used here and there, but this is far
superior a transfer to all previous releases of all on previous,
lesser home video formats with new scans that make these all look
shockingly good from new 4K scans. Detail and depth is some of the
best I have ever seen for serials on home video to date and will
surprise fans and those new to serial chapter plays. As for sound,
all feature PCM 2.0 Mono sound and
sound as good as they likely ever will, save Pirate
with lossy Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono sound that is slightly weaker and
has more background noise, yet it has more clarity than expected.
That makes them all on par with each other.
The
1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image on Man
From Hong Kong
is from the same fine, restored version Umbrella has on their older
Blu-ray edition, save that the image here is slightly darker and
sometimes more color-rich. It may also be missing a sliver of info
on a side or two, but its fine and as shot in real 35mm anamorphic
Panavision, is the best-looking release of the five covered here. As
for sound, we get two soundtracks here, a lossy
Dolby Digital 5.1 mix that is a surprising choice and on the weak
side, plus a PCM 2.0 Stereo mix that is much better and might be a
bit more naturalistic than the DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless
mix on their older Blu-ray, but not always as clear, even when some
elements in that upgrade fall short. It is a draw for the better
sound on both, but maybe if this ever gets a 4K edition, they can do
a 12-track upgrade with the best of both mixes.
That
leaves the 1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on
Cats,
which as I noted in my old DVD review was 'Shot
by cinematographer Carlo Carlini in Techniscope (an inexpensive
version of Panavision) and originally issued in three-strip
dye-transfer Technicolor.' Unlike the hideous low-budget DVD we
covered long, long ago, the color here is often fine and you can see
how it would benefit and look in such a 35mm print, but we do have
some off images (an early faded shot is a one-time thing) and a
little softness here and there (partly form the format, but maybe
also from the persons handling the scan trying to get rid of grain
here and there?) that stops this from looking as good as the few
great Techniscope transfers we have seen to date.
The
two soundtracks are here with Riz Ortolani's solid music score are in
PCM 2.0 Stereo, in either English (which is what they are actually
speaking for the most part) and Italian dub tracks, but both have all
their dialogue done in post-production as was the norm for all
post-WWII Italian (co-)productions. It is fine, the stereo simple,
but as good as the film will ever sound and a huge improvement over
that hideous DVD from years ago. From what we gather, this is also
better than the DVD Blue Underground later issued.
Extras
include Original Theatrical Trailers on all five discs, though the
VCI tend to be for other releases (serials in all cases, save Pirate
for two similarly-themed feature films they have all also issued,)
Gang Busters adds the early Technicolor classic cartoon A
Tale Of Two Kitties that pits a very early appearance of Tweety
Bird (he was not yellow yet) with cat take-offs of Abbott &
Costello to great effect (in lossy Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono that is not
bad.) Both Twilight Time releases add very nicely illustrated
booklet on the film including informative text and essays by Mike
Finnegan, Man From Hong Kong
is not as loaded as its Umbrella counterpart, but does drop the
low-def versions of Trenchard-Smith's other films that were squeezed
onto it. We still get the segment on the film from the Not
Quiet Hollywood
documentary (reviewed at full-length elsewhere on this site) and the
feature length audio commentary track with Trenchard-Smith,
actor/stunt legend Grant page and co-star Hugh Keays-Byrne. Too bad
the Making Of piece is not here, but the booklet helps to make up for
it.
Cat
adds a decent feature length audio commentary track by film historian
Troy Howarth, who has been prolific in this respect and is not bad
here.
To
order The
Man From Hong Kong
and/or Seven
Deaths In The Cats Eyes
limited edition Blu-rays, buy them while supplies last at these
links:
www.screenarchives.com
-
Nicholas Sheffo