The
Bat
(1959/Film Detective Blu-ray)/Don't
Worry Darling 4K
(2022/Warner 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray w/Blu-ray)/Dr.
Jekyll & Mr. Hyde
(1931*)/Mark
Of The Vampire
(1935*)/The
Nun & The Devil
(1973/Twilight Time Limited Edition Blu-ray**)/Silent
Running 4K
(1972/Arrow/Universal/**both MVD)/Sweet
Tooth: The Complete First Season
(2021.DC Comics/*all Warner Archive Blu-ray)
4K
Ultra HD Picture: B/B+ Picture: B+/B-/B+/B+/B+/X/B+ Sound:
B+/B/B+/B+/B+/B-/B+ Extras: B/C/B/B/B+/B+/D Main Programs:
B/C/B+/B+/C/A/C+
PLEASE
NOTE:
The Dr.
Jekyll & Mr. Hyde
(1931,) Mark
Of The Vampire
and Sweet
Tooth
are now only available from Warner Bros. through their Warner Archive
series and can be ordered from the link below.
Next
up are several classics and cult films restored and upgraded, plus a
new attempt at a classic and new TV show for you to know about...
The
Bat
(1959)
starring Vincent Price and Agnes Moorehead gets a new Blu-ray
re-release from Film Detective now that a new transfer has been
remastered from the original 35mm negative. The film has shown up in
various versions over the decades, many not the best, but now you can
see and hear the film better than most have been able to for a long
time.
The
film is a mystery/whodunnit type film (based on the book by Mary
Roberts Reinhart, a highly prolific mystery writer from decades ago,
at the same time Agatha Christie was, too easily forgotten) where a
black masked killer named The Bat terrorizes the residents of The
Oaks Mansion. The intricate mansion has many hidden chambers and
doorways and behind one of them is a fortune which this masked killer
wants to claim for himself. Vincent Price plays a chameleon of a
character in the film whose an honest doctor in one instance and a
man of strange choices on another... however, the mystery of who
exactly The Bat is, is left as a surprise at the end. The film also
stars Gavin Gordon, John Sutton, and Lenita Lane.
The
Bat
is presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray disc with an MPEG-4
AVC codec, a black and white restored image with a widescreen aspect
ratio of 1.85:1 and a English DTS 2.0 Mono mix, the older DTS (still
good, with only 3-to-1 compression.) This presentation of the film
is from a new restoration and scan from the original 35mm film
negative and is an improvement over the previously released 2015
Blu-ray, also from Film Detective.
Special
Features (some new featurettes for this exclusive release include):
Feature
Length Audio Commentary featuring Jason A. Ney
The
Case for Crane Wilbur
Classic
Radio Shows Featuring Vincent Price:
The
Strange Case of Charles Umberstein
Fugue
in C Minor
Hunting
Trip
Present
Tense
Three
Skeleton Key
(one of the two slightly different versions he eventually recorded)
Bloodbath
Angel
Street
The
Lodger
and
Speaking
of Cinderella.
The
Bat
is a fun mystery that keeps you guessing until the end. It's pretty
inventive and could be re-imagined as a modern film for a modern
audience. In some ways it reminded me of the modern day Scream
franchise in that the masked murder kills within a small circle of
people. The
Bat
is definitely worth checking out if you're a fan of mysteries!
Olivia
Wilde's Don't
Worry Darling 4K
(2022) is a new thriller that got more attention for its off-screen
making and cast than content, but now we can get into that with its
home video release. Florence Pugh is Alice, a happily-married woman
in a new suburban housing community with many amenities that is
state-of-the-art for living large sometime in the post-WWII 1950s.
The women stay home and work, while the men work for the company who
has set all of this up, so everything is sunny and safe.
However,
that does not last for long and of course, this is too calm and
perfect to be believed, though the husbands seem to love their wives.
Alice has a husband (British singing star Harry Styles) who seems to
be able to juggle it all and takes care of her very well. But one of
the other women start to have unexplained issues, then other
unexplained things follow. Alice is concerned and asks some
questions, but get few answers. She might want to leave it alone,
but she cannot and things get worse. The head of this
business/residence community (Chris Pine) also starts to seem a bit
'off' to her. What really is going on?
This
is Wilde's feature film debut as a director and she sports some
talent, while the screenplay sports some interesting ideas, but ones
we've seen before (Orwell's 1984,
the original Stepford
Wives,
Get
Out,
The
Matrix,
Pleasantville,
Blue
Velvet)
and manages to juggle them for a while. Sadly, it all starts to not
meld or mesh by the final act or two and the film tragically falls
apart with Wilde saying things only she understands. Too bad because
the money, ideas, look and cast are top rate. It is at last one of
the year's most ambitious films and she should try again.
The
rest of the solid cast includes Wilde herself, Gemma Chan, Kiki Lane,
Nick Kroll and other actors I expect we'll see soon enough if we are
lucky.
The
2160p HEVC/H.265, 2.35 X 1, HDR (10; Ultra HD Premium)-enhanced Ultra
High Definition image has some great color and mostly takes place in
the Victory community, but it has some softness and minor detail
issues from its Ultra HD shoot by the great Director of Photography
Matthew Libatique, A.S.C., L.P.S.. Otherwise, it looks good and has
a few moments above its rating. The regular 1080p Blu-ray is a
duller version of the 4K and not as watchable.
The
lossless Dolby Atmos 11.1 (Dolby TrueHD 7.1 mixdown for older
systems) on both versions has some fine moments of activity, but
Wilde and company do not make it bombastic throughout since most fo
it takes place in the early 1960s. That strategy works in a
narrative way, but holds back what a film would do with so many
tracks. Its also well recorded, mixed and edited for the most part.
Extras
include Digital Movie Code, a Making Of featurette and a Deleted
Scene: Alice's
Nightmare.
Released
the same year as Universal's Frankenstein
and Dracula
classics, Dr.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
(1931) is another black and white monster movie classic faithful to
its source material and remains timeless. Now you can see this
classic in a new Blu-ray release that looks and sounds fantastic in
this restoration from Warner Archive.
Based
on the classic tale by Robert Louis Stevenson, this version of the
story is very voyeuristic and told in several scenes from the
Doctor's first person perspective against a period backdrop. For
those unfamiliar, the story is about a scientist named Dr. Jekyll who
creates a serum that brings out his evil side (Mr. Hyde) in a
werewolf by night style transformation. While the make-up doesn't
compare to the great Jack Pierce over at Universal, it is pretty well
done for the time and brought to life by a great performance by
Fredric March (who won an Oscar for this role).
The
film also stars Miriam Hopkins, Rose Hobart, Edgar Norton, Holmes
Herbert, and Halliwell Hobbes with direction by Rouben Mamoulian.
The
film is presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray disc with an
MPEG-4 AVC (36.70 Mbps) codec, a full frame aspect ratio of 1.33:1
and a lossless, English DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono (48kHz,
24-bit) mix. This new 1080p HD master from 4K scan is comprised of
the best surviving nitrate elements. The result is a very nice
version of this film that hasn't exactly been easy to track down over
the years. This three-time Oscar winner has been hailed by many as
the 'best filmed' version of the Jekyll and Hyde tale on the silver
screen.
Special
Features:
New
Audio Commentary by screenwriter/film historian Dr. Steve Haberman
and filmmaker/film historian Constantine Nasr
Archival
Audio Commentary by author/film historian Greg Mank
Vintage
Looney Tunes Cartoon: ''Hyde
and Hare''
with Bugs Bunny
and
the Vintage 1950 Radio Adaptation with Fredric March.
The
master of the macabre Bela Lugosi and Lionel Barrymore star in Mark
of the Vampire
(1935), a black and white vampiric masterpiece that's long overdue
for a HD release as it was last seen in a 2006 DVD release that
wasn't exactly easy to find. Finally available from Warner Archive,
this new Blu-ray edition is satisfactory and presents the film in a
newly remastered 4K transfer from the original 35mm nitrate camera
negative.
The
film also stars Elizabeth Allan, Lionel Atwill, Carol Borland, and
Jean Hersholt and is directed by Todd Browning, who directed the
original 1931 Universal Dracula
with Lugosi and MGM's Freaks.
The
film centers on a town panicked by the death of a woman, who appears
to have been killed by a vampire. Close by the town lays a creepy
castle where Count Mora (Lugosi) and his daughter Luna (Carol
Borland,) who are believed to be the culprits, live. A Vampire
expert (Barrymore) and a few others team up in an assault against
Mora, with unexpected results.
Mark
of the Vampire
is presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray disc with an MPEG-4
AVC codec, a widescreen aspect ratio of 1.37:1 and a lossless English
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono mix, both of which were captured
from the new 4K transfer from the original nitrate camera negative.
A welcome upgrade indeed.
Special
Features:
A
Feature Length Audio Commentary with Kim Newman and Steve Jones (same
as previous 2006 version)
Vintage
Short: A
Thrill for Thelma
Vintage
Cartoon: The
Calico Dragon
and
an Original Theatrical Trailer
This
gothic vampire film is just as good as many of the Universal Monster
classics.
The
Nun & The Devil
(1973)
explores the sinfully secret sexual lives of Nuns in a 16th century
convent and is now available from Twilight Time in a thorough Blu-ray
edition. The film explores their suppressed needs for sex and love,
both of which are forbidden due to the vows they have spoken. The
'Devil' in the title refers to torture these poor ladies must endure
for not being faithful to the church.
The
film is a tedious and unsettling watch and not necessarily a film you
would watch on a date night. However, Twilight Time does a fine job
with the presentation on this release on Blu-ray disc. The film is
by the same director as
The Story of a Cloistered Nun,
Domenico Paolella, the former film which also saw a re-release this
year on Blu-ray disc in a box set (named Nasty
Habits: The Nunsploitation Collection)
from Severin Films along with other naughty nun classics. For those
unaware, yes, there is a sub-genre of cinema known as nunsploitation
as wild as that may seem! For those who are aware, then you get a
sense of what this movie is all about.
The
film stars Anne Heywood, Luc Merenda, Ornella Muti, Martine Brochard,
and Claudia Gravy.
The
Nun and the Devil
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 original Italian
and English LPCM 2.0 Mono mixes (with English subtitles). The
presentation is up to Blu-ray standards and nice looking for the
format.
Special
Features:
Audio
Commentary with Critic Kim Newman and Italian Cinema Expert Barry
Forshaw
Judging
Luc:
Interview with Actor Luc Merenda
The
Devil and Martine:
Interview with Actress Martine Brochard
Paolella
Connection:
Profile of Director and Co-Writer Domenico Paolella
Horny
Devils:
Nunsploitation Explained: Interview with Film Historian Marcus
Stiglegger
and
an Original Theatrical Trailer.
Douglas
Trumbull's Silent
Running 4K
(1972) has arrived from Arrow and is an upgrade from their great
Special Edition we covered a little bit ago at this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/15812/Death+Laid+An+Egg+(1968/Cult+Epics+Blu-ray)/
The
sound (still monophonic, so I guess the 6-track U.K. 70mm blow-up
stereo sound is missing or lost) and many extras are exactly the
same, so in this third time covering a release of the film, we will
cover the upgraded image.
The
2160p HEVC/H.265, 1.85 X 1, Dolby Vision/HDR (10; Ultra HD
Premium)-enhanced Ultra High Definition image definitely is better
than even the solid Arrow Blu-ray, with its new 4K scan of the
original 35mm camera negative, et al, demonstrating better color,
depth and detail, but the one thing that is an issue here is a little
more grain than I remember it having at its best. Save for that, it
is impressive.
Besides
the actors coming across more realistically than ever, the model work
also benefits. Most model work for a while after and most always
before Star
Wars
(1977) gets bashed for this, but Trumbull had helped mastermind the
model work on Kubrick's 2001:
A Space Odyssey
(1968) so this was very state of the art for a very long time (and
even now in the CGI era with most CGI just looking so bad and cheap)
so the results here are impressive a half-century later with few
flaws. These were done very well and the creators were very
thorough.
Finally,
even since we covered Arrow's Blu-ray edition, the prediction of
environmental disaster the film deals with is even more possible than
ever, making Silent
Running
a classic so timely, you should see it ASAP if you never saw it and
for others to see it again in such prime shape.
Lastly,
Sweet
Tooth: The Complete First Season
(2021)
jumps from the page to the screen in the Netflix produced adventure
series. Set in a post apocalyptic future, several children are born
as hybrids (humans fused the DNA of deer and other such animals). A
young half boy/half deer Hybrid named Gus is hidden away in the
country with this father and raised away from the crumbling society
known as America. Once his father dies and the boy has some to a
ripe age, he ends up navigating the dark world that fears and
threatens him with a watchful protector who helps him attempt to find
his lost mother.
The
Complete First Season
stars Christian Convery as Gus, Nonso Anozie as Tommy Jepperd, Adeel
Akhtar as Dr. Aditya Singh, Aliza Vellani as Rani Singh, Stefania
LaVie Owen as Bear, Dania Ramirez as Aimee and voice over narration
by James Brolin. Based on the DC Comics book series by Jeff Lemire,
Sweet
Tooth
is executive produced by Jim Mickle, Robert Downey, Jr., Susan
Downey, Amanda Burrell, and Linda Moran.
Eight
one-hour episodes make up Season
One
that include Out
of the Deep Woods, Sorry About All the Dead People, Weird Deer S**t,
Special Sauce, What's in the Freezer?, Stranger Danger on a Train,
When Pubba Met Birdie,
and Big
Man.
The
series is presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray disc with an
MPEG-4 AVC codec, a widescreen aspect ratio of 2.20:1 and a lossless,
English DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit). The film looks
and sounds fine for the Blu-ray format and is shot and produced on
the high end. A 4K UHD transfer would benefit this for sure and
flesh out some more details, but this pushes the limits of the
Blu-ray format.
No
extras.
Sweet
Tooth
is pretty creative and has some interesting characters despite a few
silly moments.
To
order either of the Warner Archive Dr.
Jekyll & Mr. Hyde,
(1931,) Mark
Of The Vampire
and Sweet
Tooth
Blu-rays, go to this link for them and many more great web-exclusive
releases at:
https://www.amazon.com/stores/page/ED270804-095F-449B-9B69-6CEE46A0B2BF?ingress=0&visitId=6171710b-08c8-4829-803d-d8b922581c55&tag=blurayforum-20
-
Nicholas Sheffo (4K) and James Lockhart
https://www.facebook.com/jamesharlandlockhartv/