Blast
Of Silence
(1961/Universal/Criterion Blu-ray)/Broken
Mirrors
(1984/MVD/Cult Epics Blu-ray)/Crocodile
Island
(2020/DVD*)/The
Exorcist: Believer 4K
(2023/Universal 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray w/Blu-ray)/Eye
For An Eye: The Blind Swordsman
(2022/Blu-ray/*both Well Go)/It
Lives Inside
(2023/Neon DVD)
4K
Ultra HD Picture: B+ Picture: B/B+/B-/B-/B+/B- Sound:
C+/B+/B-/B+/B+/B- Extras: B/B/C-/B-/C-/D Films: B-/B/C/C+/B/B
Now
for more thrillers...
Allen
Baron's Blast
Of Silence
(1961) is
the debut film of a man who turned into a major journeyman
director/writer, but instead of continuing on the big screen, became
one of the television's major go-to names to get some great episodes
of TV shows done and there, he definitely made a few classics as
well. Also playing the lead role of a hitman, it is a remarkable
debut effort for a new artist and holds up better than you might
think. His job happens to be during Christmas, so we see more than a
few bits of that and New York City becomes a character in the film
either way. No doubt he was thinking big screen throughout his
career.
As
he goes along, we meet all kinds of characters, good, bad and
indifferent, played by unknowns who deliver and while the film also
serves as a time capsule, it all meshes well and is an early
post-Noir film (any such crime film after 1958 for a good while) that
plays like the next raw, realistic, naturalistic step after that
all-time great movement and storytelling in filmmaking. Baron
carries the film all the way and even without the voice-overs, this
could have still worked as a artsy crime film ala Arthur Penn's
Mickey
One
with Warren Beatty.
As
for Baron, he would revisit this territory with Terror
In The City
a few years later, but his TV credits are as killer as John Llewellyn
Moxey's and include shows like The
Brady Bunch,
Love
American Style,
Surfside
6,
The
Immortal
(1970,) The
Sixth Sense,
Room
222,
Lucas
Tanner,
Switch,
Barney
Miller,
Fantasy
Island,
Barnaby
Jones,
The
Love Boat,
Cagney
& Lacey,
Charlie's
Angels
and four of the first seven episodes of Kolchak:
The Night Stalker.
As a matter of fact, early in The
Werewolf
episode of the show (episode five, by the way) when Kolchak (Darren
McGavin) checks into The Roosevelt Hotel in Hollywood, it is a
recreation of most of the scene where his assassin in this film
checks into a hotel arriving in town for his latest hit job.
With
only a few parts of the film showing its age or being a little
predictable, Blast
Of Silence
deserves more notice and respect than it gets and its great it has no
only been preserved and restored, but that Criterion has picked it
up. I highly recommend it!
The
film is presented in two black & white digital High Definition
1080p options from really good 4K scans: 1.85 X 1 and 1.33 X 1, both
of which look fine and hardly show the age of the materials used.
The wider aspect ratio version looks nice and has some nice detail,
while the 1.33 X 1 version shows more at the top and bottom of the
frame, making it also a real pleasure to watch and you get some great
shots that way you cannot get the other way. It may be slightly less
sharp, but depth of field is great. This was shot soft matte, so
both versions are actually authentic and it is a practice that still
is used today when people shoot on film without anamorphic lenses.
The
PCM 1.0 Mono sound is pretty good for its age off of the original
optical soundmaster, not hurting that all of Lionel Stander's
voice-overs (written by the brilliant Waldo Salt, both uncredited!)
were done post-production in studio. I just wished this were a 2.0
Mono track, but besides that, it sounds just fine. Location audio is
also not bad for its age.
Extras
include a high quality paper pullout with illustrations, tech
information and an essay by film critic Terrence Rafferty and
separate a graphic-novel adaptation of the film by acclaimed artist
Sean Phillips (Criminal,
Reckless,
Fatale),
while the disc adds:
•Requiem
for a Killer: The Making of ''Blast
of Silence''
•Rare
on-set Polaroids
•Photos
of locations from the film in 2008
•and
an Original Theatrical Trailer.
Marleen
Gorris' directs and co-stars in the foreign thriller/drama Broken
Mirrors
(1984), which centers on an Amsterdam Brothel where two prostitutes
become friends in a unhealthy environment and against all odds in
their personal lives. The film is out on disc courtesy of Cult Epics
in this nice edition with some interesting extras.
The
film explores how men dehumanize these women and the traumatic
effects it has on them. Crosscut with the inner working of this
brothel, a serial killer abducts one of the workers and chains her to
a bed in an undisclosed location and deprives her of food. He loses
his edge when she stops begging him for mercy, and whom we later
discover was one of the clients of the brothel. The film is
interestingly made and has great performances all around in its
character study and doesn't get as graphic in its sexual content as
it could have. Its themes are pretty apparent and it works as a
artistic piece where a friendship blooms in an unlikely scenario.
The
film stars Lineke Rijxman, Henrette Tol, Carla Hardy, Hedda Oledzky,
and Edda Barends to name a few.
Broken
Mirrors
is presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray disc with an MPEG-4
AVC codec, a widescreen aspect ratio of 1.66:1 and lossless audio
options: Dutch DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) Master Audio 2.0 Mono and
Dutch LPCM 2.0 Mono mixes, both with English subtitles. The film is
nicely shot and has been preserves in HD looking transfer as the film
was previously hard to track down and see in this quality.
Special
Features:
Audio
Commentary by Film Scholar Peter Verstraten
Interview
with US sex worker Margo St. James (Adriaan van Dis/Cinema 3, 1991)
Promotional
gallery
and
a reversible cover.
Crocodile
Island
(2020),
also called Ju
e dao,
is out on DVD from Well GO USA and is a foreign take on a giant
monster movie akin to Skull
Island
or Jurassic
Park.
In the film, a plane crashes onto a distant island where prehistoric
creatures roam. That happens to be the plot of at least three iconic
Hollywood movies I could name off the top of my head, and also
happens to be the plot of this one.
There
are giant spiders of course too, but one must wonder, why did they
rely so heavily on digital effects that look very rough and
unfinished? For the sheer amount of digital effects in the film,
they could have added some more detail and texture to the characters
and made them look more realistic. Or go the old school route and do
practical stop motion effects or animatronic characters? The result
are dinosaurs and a huge prehistoric crocodile that look more like a
dated video game than realistic cinematic characters. There seem to
be a few rogue practical effects shots here and there of the
crocodile that look okay, but the human drama doesn't outweigh the
clunky special effects work the story is so reliant on.
Crocodile
Island
is presented in standard definition on DVD with a 2.35:1 widescreen
aspect ratio and audio mixes in lossy Mandarin Dolby Digital 5.1 and
Mandarin 2.0 with English subtitles. There are also a few scenes
that are in English language. Being on the dated, low def DVD
format, the image looks as good as it can, but shows discrepancies
the bigger one blows up the image.
Special
Features: Trailer for this film and other Well Go releases.
David
Gordon Greene's The
Exorcist: Believer 4K
(2023) is the latest attempt to revisit the 1973 William Friedkin
classic, itself celebrating its fiftieth anniversary, with most
attempts just not that memorable. Greene has been drifting between
commercial films and more quiet, artistic ones, like the recent,
so-so Halloween
revival, but I have to say that the first 35 minutes or so of this
film is smart and some of his best work in years, then it has to
become a sequel. Then Ellen Burstyn makes a great return, but then
the film starts to get uneven and never totally recovers.
In
the beginning, two gals who are friends in school go out in the woods
for fun, but they disappear, worrying their respective parents. The
film starts in what turns out to be a flashback of one of the gals'
mothers dying overseas. Angela (Lydia Jewell) is now with her dad
Victor (Leslie Odom, Jr.) and he becomes very concerned about her,
already permanently damaged from losing his wife, her mother. This
brings us to meeting the rest of the persons involved and when she is
still not found and Victor and the police have no easy answers, he
starts to think maybe there is something more.
Soon,
convinced it is something evil and supernatural, he hears about a
half-century old exorcism and contacts the woman who wrote a
best-selling book about it, one time actress Chris MacNeil (Burstyn,
who nearly steals the film) whom Victor contacts for help. From
there, things start to get uglier and more harrowing.
As
for the script, it eventually goes all out to throw in everything by
the kitchen sink (though we see a few of those, none of them go
flying in the air and Satan skips speaking through one) but it is as
if they had some great ideas and a smart, mature, great approach and
just did not know totally how to follow it up to the end. The cast
is really good here though, including Ann Dowd (brilliant as the evil
slave driver on The
Handmaid's Tale
TV series) exploiting her connection to that role a little, but
playing a totally different character with genre conviction that is a
fine throwback to better horror films of the past.
There
is also an early twist in the film that was a big mistake in the long
term and I did not think worked to begin with. If they had even done
a toned-down version thereof, it would have actually worked far
better. Either way, this is a close call with Exorcist
III
and the first prequel film as the best films since the original
classic to take on the material and that world. No doubt all
involved love the original film and it shows in many parts. I know
some people were disappointed in this film and expected something
flashier, but audiences also have a problem sticking with anything
that requires more of an attention span these days, so cheers to the
makers for taking some big risks for a big commercial film like this,
one of the few ambitious such films of late in the big budget sequel
category. It's definitely worth a look but maybe watching the
original again first before viewing might help.
The
2160p HEVC/H.265, 1.85 X 1, HDR (10; Ultra HD Premium)-enhanced Ultra
High Definition image on Exorcist:
Believer 4K
has some good shots, but it somehow is not as impactful as the recent
4K release of the original film, though it does try to look like it
at times. It is still the best-looking release on the list and the
1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image on the regular Blu-ray
is not bad, but is a little softer and challenged than expected,
while color is not as good as the 4K, especially in the Video Black
where it counts. Both offer lossless Dolby
Atmos 11.1 (Dolby TrueHD 7.1 mixdown for older systems) soundmixes
that can be quiet and dialogue-based, then also gets interesting when
the sound kicks in. A few moments are demo quality and some of the
better such moments this year.
Extras
include a Feature Length Audio Commentary track by David Gordon
Green, Ryan Turek, Peter Sattler, and Christopher Nelson, plus we get
six featurettes:
Ellen and Linda: Reunited, Editing an Exorcism, Making a Believer,
Matters of Faith, The Opening
and Stages
of Possession.
And you can read more about the franchise with our coverage of the
original, now in a solid 4K version:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/16336/The+Exorcist+4K+(1973/Warner+4K+Ultra+HD+Bl
And
Exorcist
II: The Heretic,
the infamous sequel that just had too many people second-guessing the
original script until it was a mess...
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/15270/Absurd+(1981)/Anthropophagus+(1980/both+Seve
Eye
For An Eye: The Blind Swordsman
(2022) is
an intense and beautifully made martial arts film starring Xie Mao
(Ip
Man: The Awakening)
that has landed on Blu-ray courtesy of Well Go USA.
The
revenge thriller has a familiar plot to other films of its kind where
the main character is struck down and must avenge one's name. The
trope is classic because it works and this film at least puts its own
spin on a familiar storytelling formula.
A
clever lone blind swordsman / bounty hunter crosses paths with a
young woman who is assaulted at her wedding by a twisted group of
baddies. Tied to a similar revenge plot, the bounty hunter helps the
woman by slicing and dicing his way through all that oppose them.
The
film has incredible action sequences that are beautifully done and
some jaw dropping moments that martial arts fans will enjoy. The
period setting is expertly pulled off and in many ways this feels
like if a John Wick film was set in ancient China. While the plot
isn't anything revolutionary or original, the execution of the
material puts it a grade above other recent films of late.
Eye
for an Eye: The Blind Swordsman
is presented in 1080p high definition on Blu-ray disc with an MPEG-4
AVC codec, a widescreen aspect ratio of 2.39:1 and lossless Mandarin
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit) and lossy Mandarin Dolby
Digital 2.0 with English subtitles as well as English dubbed DTS-HD
MA 5.1 and Dolby Digital 2.0 tracks. As mentioned, the film is a
visual feast for the eyes and it would benefit greatly from a 4K UHD
release in the future.
The
only special features are trailers. Which is a shame as I would be
curious to know more about the film's production and creation.
Eye
For An Eye: The Blind Swordsman
is a visual feast with flaming swords and all!
It
Lives Inside
(2023) is
a suspenseful new horror film from Neon that explores the dark side
of Indian culture and superstition. It feels similar to me as other
recent genre films such as It
Follows
or Talk
to Me,
and has a high end indie quality to it that feels similar to an A24
production. The film does a good job of crafting suspense and
tension and is smartly made and has a lot of convincing performances
of shock and terror from its mostly unknown leads.
Samidha
(Megan Suri) is an Indian American teen who is a responsible young
woman from a good traditional Indian family, but yearns to fit in
with the other kids at school despite some of her religious
obligations. But when her old friend approaches her with a jar that
contains a demon that is hungry to feed, she explains that it has
become her obligation to tend for it. When the jar breaks near
Samidha, the demon attaches itself to her too and feeds on her
loneliness and angst. It starts to affect those around her too
resulting in some brutal deaths which starts to peel away at
Samidha's sanity. Overall, It
Lives Inside
has a cool cinematic and visual style with well developed characters
that result in an entertaining horror film.
Directed
by Bishal Dutta (Life
in Color),
the film also stars Neeru Bajwa, Betty Gabriel, Gage Marsh,
Siddhartha Minhas, and Mohana Krishnan.
It
Lives Inside
is presented in anamorphically
enhanced, standard
definition on DVD with a 2.39:1 widescreen aspect ratio and a lossy
5.1 Dolby Digital Audio mix. The film looks as good as it can on
standard definition and remains a visual treat despite some
compression evident in the aging format. A strong suit for the film
is its sound mix which features a creepy score and sound effects that
help aide the scares effectively. I would like to see this film in a
higher resolution in the future.
No
extras.
It
Lives Inside
is a great indie horror film and worth a watch!
-
Nicholas Sheffo (4K, Blast)
and James Lockhart
https://www.facebook.com/jamesharlandlockhartv/