August
Underground: Penance
(2007/Unearthed Films Blu-ray w/DVD*)/Facts
Of Murder (1959/Radiance
Blu-ray*)/Five Nights At
Freddie's 4K
(2023/Universal 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray w/Blu-ray)/Titans:
The Complete Fourth and Final Season
(2022-2023/DC Comics/Warner DVD Set)/Vampires
And Other Stereotypes
(1994/Visual Vengeance Blu-ray/*all MVD)
4K
Ultra HD Picture: A- Picture: C+ & C-/B/B+/B-/C+ Sound:
C+ & C-/B-/A-/B-/C+ Extras: B/C+/C+/C+/B Main Programs:
C+/C+/B-/C+/D
Now
for more genre releases of all kinds for you to know about...
Fred
Vogel's August
Underground: Penance
(2007),
produced by his independent horror label Toetag Pictures, lands on
Blu-ray / DVD from Unearthed Films and for the first time to a
broader market (previously it was only available second hand or on
the now defunct Toetag Pictures website) can see this intense and
vile film looking the best it can. Following Mordum and the original
August
Underground
(reviewed elsewhere on this site), the conclusion of the shot on
video trilogy puts the viewer in an uncomfortable seat watching as a
sinister serial killer Peter (Vogel) slashes his way through the
holiday season along with his partner, Krusty (Cristie Whiles.)
Penance
puts an end to the trilogy by showing the serial killers starting to
lose their edge a bit and one of them finally starts to shed a little
humanity. The film features some of the most intense gore special
effects I have ever seen on film and succeeds in being the ultimate
gross out snuff film for those who appreciate that genre. Some of
the most disturbing aspects of the film is its realism include a long
murder/rape scene in a couple's house on Christmas and another long
sequence where a pregnant woman is gutted. This is just the surface
of what you see in this intensely sickening film!
This
is definitely, I repeat, NOT for a casual viewer of horror films or
anyone with a weak stomach.
August
Underground's Penance 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 an original, lossless DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) English 5.1
stereo mix. The film is purposely shot to be a found footage shot on
VHS film and so the quality is intentionally bad which adds to the
realistic and unsettling nature of the piece and works to its
advantage. Also included is a more compressed DVD version of the
film with similar specs.
Special
Features include four feature-length audio commentary tracks,
including...
Commentary
by EFX Artist Jerami Cruise, Producer Shelby Vogel, Director Fred
Vogel, and Ultra Violent Magazine's Art Ettinger
Commentary
by Director Fred Vogel and Editor Logan Tallman
Commentary
by Toetag
Commentary
by Director Fred Vogel
Editing
"August Underground's Penance": An
Interview With Co-Editor Logan Tallman (BLU-RAY ONLY)
The
Most Disturbing Scene (BLU-RAY ONLY)
Superfan
Rob's Underground Experience (BLU-RAY ONLY)
Disemboweled:
Behind the Bile Documentary
Commentary
With Toetag on 'Disemboweled'
Zoe
Rose Smith Interviews Fred Vogel (BLU-RAY ONLY)
Voyage
to Perdition: An Interview With Fred Vogel (BLU-RAY ONLY)
Dave
Parker's Roundtable with Fred Vogel, Jerami Cruise, Shelby Vogel,
Logan Tallman, Ryan Logsdon (BLU-RAY ONLY)
Stephen
Biro Interviews Jerami Cruise (BLU-RAY ONLY)
Deleted
Scenes
Extended
Scenes
"Poppa
Pill - The Murderer Is Back" Music Video
"Rue
- The Locust" Music Video
NEW
Extended Photo Gallery
NEW
Teaser Outtakes
and
Trailers.
Pietro
Germi's The Facts Of
Murder (1959) is an
interesting directorial effort by the director and sometimes-actor,
also playing lead Inspector Ingravallo, trying to solve a robbery
that leads him to a murder! If the robbery had been simple and
simple to solve, he might have missed it, but instead he has more on
his hands than it first seemed. However, he is practical in all
matters and starts to investigate, including questioning a beautiful
young lady (Claudia Cardinale) about her boyfriend, et al.
The
film has its mystery, but is also a character study of sorts of the
Inspector and Italian society as it was and partly still is today, in
a long, ambitious 115 minutes with a great supporting cast, nice
locations and a somewhat Noir look and feel, though the Noir period
had just lapsed a year before the film's release. As photography
become more detailed as all the film stocks of the time kept
improving, you get a new look every few years and monochrome film was
still very much in use as color was still so new and still on the
expensive side. Add some elements of melodrama with touches of
Italian Neo-realism as we have here and this is a key film all
serious film fans should see at least once, especially in this
remarkable restoration.
Germi
already showed his acting chops in The
Railroad Man (1956) and
Man Of Straw
(1958) when he took this on and happen to have also wrote and starred
in them, so he was on a roll and followed this a few years alter with
the huge international Marcello Mastroianni hit Divorce
Italian Style, so this
comes form a really prolific period. Cardinale was already getting
notice for films like Big
Deal On Madonna Street
(the year before with Mastroianni) and in the same year, also had La
Prime Notte and Il
Magistrato putting her on
the map before films like Visconti's Rocco
And His Brothers (1960,)
Girl With A Suitcase,
The Lions Are Loose
(both 1961,) Cartouche
(1962,) Fellini's 8 1/2
and Visconti's The Leopard
(both 1963) and the very first Pink
Panther film (1964) put
her on the international superstar map permanently. As of the late
2023 posting of this review, she is still
in the acting business!
But
this is also an intelligent adult film made for intelligent adults
and we see that so rarely anywhere and limited-episode
cable/streaming platforms are no true replacement for such cinema.
Thus, despite some unevenness, it is highly recommended to all
serious film fans, especially in this incredible restoration and you
will not be disappointed with said expectations as explained here.
Franco Frabrizi also stars.
The
1080p 1.33 X 1 black & white digital High Definition image
transfer rarely shows its age and was shot totally on DuPont black
and white 35mm negative film, itself a too-rare thing, but this looks
amazing throughout and the 4K restoration ranges from impressive to
stunning. DuPont has a film stock like no other company and was as
solid and unique in its time as Kodak, Ansco, Gevaert, Ferrania, Agfa
and Ilford. That the film is very well-shot only adds onto how
compelling a watch it is and that includes demo shots. The
original theatrical monophonic sound has been restored and is
presented here in lossless, PCM 2.0 Mono sounding as good as it ever
will.
Extras
include:
New
interview with Pietro Germi expert Mario Sesti (2023)
The
Man With the Cigar in His Mouth - a documentary about Pietro
Germi featuring interviews with his colleagues and collaborators
including Mario Monicelli, Claudia Cardinale, Stefania Sandrelli,
Giuseppe Tornatore among others (Mario Sesti, 1997, 41 minutes)
and
What's Black and Yellow All Over? All Shades of Italian Film Noir
- visual essay by Paul A. J. Lewis on the presence of noir trends in
Italian cinema and the evolution of the genre (2023).
Five
Nights At Freddie's 4K
(2023) is
based on a wildly successful video game franchise of the same name
and has finally been brought to the big screen from Blumhouse (The
Conjuring
series, M3gan,
Purge,
the new Halloween
revival) which is the perfect production company to pull off such
young adult horror adaption. The film was a huge hit in theaters
despite getting a same day release on the NBC/Universal/Comcast
streaming network, Peacock, and is the first of many films in the
franchise. Its overall critical reception wasn't too stellar, but it
seemed like those familiar with the game weren't too upset. The film
is edgy and pushes the PG-13 rating by not showing too much onscreen
blood and guts even if it does touch upon some disturbing topics such
as child abduction and kidnapping.
The
film stars Josh Hutcherson, Piper Rubio, Elizabeth Lail, Matthew
Lillard, Mary and Stuart Masterson.
Mike
(Hutcherson) is low on options and has to take care of his lovable
young sister Abby (who may get adopted by his sinister Aunt if he's
not careful) so he reluctantly signs up for a job as a night time
security guard at an abandoned themed restaurant called Freddy
Fazbear's Pizzeria. Mike soon discovers that the animatronic
characters that live at Freddy's come to life after midnight and kill
anyone who comes onto their territory in a hellish game of cat and
mouse. But there’s an odd connection between Mike's past and the
characters of the pizzeria.
Five
Nights at Freddy's 4K is presented in 2160p on 4K UHD disc with
HDR10, an HEVC / H.265 codec, a widescreen aspect ratio of 2.00:1 and
an audio track in lossless, English Dolby
Atmos 11.1 (Dolby TrueHD 7.1 mixdown for older systems; both 48kHz,
24-bit). The 4K UHD disc is
far superior to the also included 1080p Blu-ray edition which shares
the same audio mixes and solid picture presentation. The film is
nicely shot and the production design inside Freddy's and the creepy
animatronic characters are really done well.
Special
Features include:
Five
Night's at Freddy's: From Game to the Big Screen featurette
Killer
Animatronics
Five
Nights in Three Dimensions
and
an Original trailer.
Five
Nights at Freddy's is a fun PG-13 popcorn munching horror flick
that’s pretty enjoyable and translates the creepy world of the
video game to the screen accurately.
The
DC Comics TV series Titans
is finally coming to an end after four long seasons on HBO MAX as its
primary streaming source with Titans:
The Complete Fourth and Final Season
(2022 - 2023.)
The teen superhero series is a gritty take on the Teen
Titans series
and tries to be the DC universe's answer to the X-Men,
proving once again that hormones and super powers don't easily mix.
There is also a Blu-ray edition on the market but we will be covering
the standard definition DVD edition here.
The
series stars Brenton Thwaites, Anna Diop, Teagan Croft, Ryan Potter,
Curran Walters and Conor Leslie.
Ten
Episodes make up the season and are entitled (Episode 1) Lex
Luthor, (2) Mother Mayhem, (3) Jinx, (4) Super
Super Mart, (5) Inside Man, (6) Brother Blood, (7)
Caul's Folly, (8) Dick and Carol and Ted and Kory, (9) Dude,
Where's My Gar?, and (10) Game Over.
Titans
is presented in standard definition, anamorphically enhanced DVDs
with a 2.00:1 widescreen aspect ratio and a lossy 5.1 Dolby Digital
audio mix. The show looks as good as it can on the aging format of
DVD with compressed image and a 5.1 sound mix that is fine. There is
obviously a decent budget to the show as the look and scope of it is
pretty cinematic it does have some nice production design and digital
effects which is on par with other DC series in the same vein such as
Gotham.
Special
Features include the featurettes Mystical Women, Welcome to
Metropolis and Baptism in Blood.
Visual
Vengeance rescues another shot on video film from obscurity: Vampires
And Other Stereotypes
(1994).
The film is ultra low budget and isn't quite as wild and
entertaining as some of the cover art may lead you to believe. It
seems to me that this movie was shot in a Halloween haunted house
that's sets were re-used for a movie. There are a few creative
moments featuring a giant mutant rat, but all in all, the film is a
tough one to sit through and will have you scratching your head even
if it does illustrate homemade horror from the VHS era.
This
a first feature from prolific 1990s Shot-On-Video writer, producer,
director Kevin J. Lindenmuth. It stars Fia Perera, Laura Vale, and
Rick Poll amongst others.
The
film follows a group of teens who step into a portal that leads to
hell and they are stuck within it where they meet two mysterious
characters that seem to know their way around the place...
Vampires
And Other Stereotypes is presented in 1080p high definition on
Blu-ray disc with an MPEG-4 AVC codec, a fullscreen aspect ratio of
1.33:1 and an English 2.0 stereo mix. Given that the film was shot
on video it can only look so good and given that this was a low
budget production Visual Vengeance has done what they can with the
resources in existence. This is a new 'director supervised SD Master
from 1-inch tape' and is definitely the best that this film has ever
looked or sounded before.
Special
Features include three feature length audio commentary tracks
including:
An
Audio Commentary with Director Kevin Lindenmuth
A
second Audio Commentary with Actor Mick McCleery and Director Kevin
Lindenmuth
and
a third Audio Commentary with Tony Strauss of Weng's Chop Magazine
Director
Kevin Lindenmuth Interview
Actress
Laura McLauchlin Interview
Actor
Mick McCleery Interview
Actress
Suzanne Turner Interview
Actress
Sally Narkis Interview
Makeup
Effects Artist Ralis Kahn Interview
Special
Effects Artist Scott Sliger Interview
Photographer
Sung Pak Interview
Publicist
Joe Mauceri Interview
Behind
the Scenes Image Gallery
Kevin
Lindenmuth Early Super 8 Films
Original
Trailer
Visual
Vengeance Trailers
Six-page
liner notes by Tony Strauss of Weng's Chop Magazine
'Stick
your own' VHS sticker set
Collectible
Folded mini-poster
Reversible
sleeve featuring original VHS art
and
a Limited Edition Slipcase: FIRST PRESSING ONLY.
-
Nicholas Sheffo (Murder) and James Lockhart
https://www.facebook.com/jamesharlandlockhartv/