Babylon
5: The Road Home 4K
(2023/Warner 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray w/Blu-ray)/Borsalino
(1970/Blu-ray*/**)/Last
House On The Left 4K
(2009 remake/4K Ultra HD Blu-ray w/Blu-ray*/**both Arrow)/A
Moment Of Romance
(1990/Radiance Blu-ray*)/The
Postman Fights Back
(1982/88 Films Blu-ray/*all MVD)
4K
Ultra HD Picture: A-/B Picture: B+/B/B-/B/B- Sound:
B+/C+/B-/C+/C+ Extras: C+/B-/D/B-/C+ Films: C+/C+/D/C+/C
Now
for a wide
variety of new genre releases, mostly upgrades, from the ambitious to
one of the worst releases ever...
In
celebration of its 30th anniversary comes the animated feature film,
Babylon
5: The Road Home 4K
(2023), which is now on 4K UHD and Blu-ray. The film follows the
multi-verse concept and features characters from different iterations
of the franchise (and many of their original actor's
voices as well.) The animated film is sure to please longtime fans
of the sci-fi franchise who are thirsty for new material and follows
John Sheridan who ends up transported though alternate versions of
reality where he encounters the past, future, and present of the
galaxy and finds deep meaning in his intergalactic mission.
The
voice talent includes original series actors Bruce Boxleitner as John
Sheridan, Claudia Christian as Susan Ivanova, Peter Jurasik as Londo
Mollari, Bill Mumy as Lennier, Tracy Scoggins as Elizabeth Lochley,
and Patricia Tallman as Lyta Alexander and many others!
Special
Features: Filmmaker Commentaries and the Babylon
5 Forever
featurette.
Jacques
Deray's Borsalino
(1970) is
a high budget, stylized gangster genre film inspired in part by
Arthur Penn's
Bonnie
& Clyde
(1967) and arrived at the same time as its first imitators, namely
George Roy Hill's
Butch
Cassidy & The Sundance Kid
(1969) for which it is compared to. In this case, it has equal star
power in the pairing of Jean-Paul Belmondo and Alain Delon, was a few
years ahead of Hill's
The
Sting
(1973) and was based on real life gangster crimes and personalities.
They
were great friends when they made this, though its promotion caused a
long-time riff between them, it was a huge hit overseas and showed a
pre-Godfather gangster film could still do business after so
many had bombed in the 1960s. Playing slightly different gangsters,
they are good and have chemistry together, though the interplay
reminded me more of Roger Moore and Tony Curtis on the hit TV series
The Persuaders! than any feature film and in the best way.
On
the one hand, they capture the period extremely well in color, style,
costumes, production design, attitude and flow, plus the music works
very well. However, it still was stuck on some older tropes of the
genre that the two Godfather films would forever shatter.
Yet, despite some obviousness and some predictability, it has more
good moments than bad and some that are so French that you would
never see them in a U.S. gangster production.
I
would therefore recommend this to fans of the actors, the period and
the genre (ironic Paramount picked this up for U.S. distribution
before they knew what the had with The Godfather) and to see
the lead actors in great prime form. Cheers to the supporting cast
too. I hope this finds the new and larger audience it deserves.
Extras
(per the press release) include
a new feature length audio commentary by film scholar Josh Nelson
In
the later 2000s, a tiresome-upon-arrival cycle of 'torture
porn' movies arrived and though some initially made, money, they kept
making them, no matter how bad they were or badly they were done. In
the madness, some classics (or semi-classics if you were not a fan)
were remade since it seemed the time to cash in. Besides a hideous I
Spit On Your Grave
remake, Wes Craven and Sean Cunningham co-produced (how involved they
were is unknown, but it did not help one bit) a remake of his own
early hit. Dennis
Iliadis' Last
House On The Left 4K
(2009) is
the pathetic result and though Tony
Goldwyn and Aaron Paul make this a curio, but lead a cast of very
bored-looking actors doing an extremely unnecessary rehash.
The
very simple story is some gals get lost in the woods, but instead of
being found or quickly finding safety, they get kidnapped, tortured
and worse. This time, the viewer feels it in a whole new way. Then
it run on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on and
on for hours and hours... er, I mean 110 minutes. Movies this bad
used to be maybe one every year or two, but no more. Eventually, the
torture porn cycle stopped, but by watching this, the torture never
ends. Avoid this garbage at all costs.
Extras
(per the press release;
for those who care) include Illustrated Collector's
Booklet featuring new writing on the film by Zoe Rose Smith
Benny
Chan and Johnnie To's
A
Moment Of Romance
(1990) feature
a hoodlum (Andy Lau from Infernal
Affairs)
to be a getaway driver for a Triad boss (Tommy Wong from The
Killer)
for a big heist. However, it is a disaster and the driver kidnaps an
innocent woman (Jacklyn Chien-Lien Wu) to hide behind and protect
him. However, the heist has gone so bad, they decide to kill both of
them.
Though
I have watched plenty of Hong Kong cinema, including more dramas than
the action fans have, I knew something more was going on here than it
would seem with the careful casting and all, but it turns out the
makers are doing more with the history intertextually of such crime
and action films than it might seem for such a familiar scenario.
Cheers
to them for the ambition and with Hong Kong filmmaking coming to an
end, these films become more and more important. Unless you are a
big fan and have seen more films that I have (many such people exist
like that in North America alone) than you will not get as much out
of this as those who have will. As the film stands otherwise, it is
not bad for what it is, but is otherwise still much of what we have
seen before. Now in its rerelease, it is an unexpected long goodbye
to a cinema that has sadly come to a screeching halt.
Extras
include a reversible cover and booklet on the film, while the disc
adds feature length audio commentary track by film scholar Frank
Djeng, Archival Audio Interview with Co-Director Chan, video essay In
Love and Danger: Hit Cinema Through A
Moment Of Romance
and an Original Theatrical Trailer.
Ronny
Yu's
The
Postman Fights Back
(1982) is
an early Chow Yun-Fat film where he is not the lead, but part of the
tale of a man (Ka-Yan Leung) needing to make a secret delivery to a
rebel leader gets twisted when loyalty to country suddenly tops the
money and then, he still needs to protect himself. A film that vies
between its drama and some uneven martial arts sequences, it is
trying to do something different than we had seen at the time, but is
not always successful in doing so.
Still,
it is not from lack of trying and the cast is working hard to make it
all work. Maybe some of the screenplay could have been changed or
upped, but the director ultimately has to take responsibility and he
may have taken on more than he could handle and was trying top pull
off. Still, this is supposed to be a key film in the genre and with
Hong Kong cinema at an end, it takes on a whole new value. See it if
you are really interested or curious.
Extras
(per the press release) include Feature Length Audio Commentary with
Frank Djeng and Ronny Yu
Feature
Length Archive Audio Commentary with Stephan Hammond
Interview
with Chow Yun-Fat
Interview
with Leung Kar-Yan
Second
Interview with Leung Kar-Yan
Interview
with Ronny Yu
and
the Original Hong Kong Trailer.
Now
for playback performance. Babylon
5: The Road Home 4K
is presented in 2160p on 4K UHD disc with HDR10, an HEVC / H.265
codec, a widescreen aspect ratio of 1.78:1 and an audio track in
lossless, English DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit). A
1080p Blu-ray disc is also included with identical widescreen and
audio tracks, but a less detailed image as compared to the 4K. The
animation isn't
terrible overall and appropriate for a home video style release
similar to other Warner Bros. animated shows.
The
2160p HEVC/H.265,
1.85 X 1, Dolby Vision/HDR (10; Ultra HD Premium)-enhanced Ultra High
Definition image on the Left
4K
disc is one of the softest I have seen in the format to date, while
the 1080p Blu-ray version is even worse. The visuals are not very
memorable like its predecessor's
was, so expect little here in that respect. The
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mix is also on the weak side
and was not that good-sounding at the time, while the oddly-included
PCM 2.0 Stereo is even somehow worse. The combinations are as
pathetic as the film itself.
The
1080p 1.66 X 1 digital High Definition image on Borsalino
has some fine shots, good color and depth of field, but it is shot in
a style that can emphasize style and is a little soft in decently
recreating its period. Otherwise, it is a pleasure to watch. As for
sound, the original theatrical mono sound is here in French PCM 1.0
Mono and lesser English dub 1.0 Mono soundtracks. They are passable,
but limited, making one wish for 2.0 Mono of some kind. It would
have also helped the solid music score.
The
1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Moment
is the third-best looking transfer here after the Babylon
4K
and Borsalino,
with a 4K scan from the original 35mm color camera negative and that
material was definitely stored well because the results are really
good. The Cantonese PCM 2.0 Mono from the original theatrical mono
soundtrack is as good as this film will ever likely sound, resulting
in a combination that is more effective than you might expect.
And
finally, the 1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on
Postman
has some good color, but is a little softer throughout than I would
have liked and shows its age at a few moments with a 2K restoration
off of the original 35mm color camera negative. That is even
considering it is trying for a gritty look in many places. The
Cantonese and lesser English dub PCM 2.0 Stereo is not bad, but also
sounds boxy and was only so well recorded. That is a little
disappointing, but unfortunately, a trend for certain Hong Kong films
we've
seen a big cycle of getting upgrades lately. Guess the sound was
only so well recorded, mastered, mixed and stored. Oh well.
-
Nicholas Sheffo and James Lockhart (4K)
https://www.facebook.com/jamesharlandlockhartv/