Book
Of Harth
(2022/DVD*)/Cutting Class
4K (1989/4K Blu-ray
w/Blu-ray/*both MVD)/Sandman:
The Complete First Season
(2022/DC Comics/Warner Blu-ray Set)
4K
Ultra HD Picture: A- Picture: B-/B+/B+ Sound: B-/B/B+
Extras: C+/B/C+ Main Programs: B/C+/B+
Here's
an eclectic group of releases for you to know about....
Pierre
Guillet's The Book of Harth (2022) is a charming documentary
about conceptual artist David Greg Harth who has a 20 year old art
project named ''The Bible Project.''
Harth
has gone all over New York City and elsewhere to obtain as many
famous autographs as possible in his beaten up copy of the Holy
Bible. The final result is a mix of thoughts and deeper meaning,
focusing on blending the world of fame with the world of religion.
Some celebrities refuse to sign it. Others are intrigued by it and
go deeper. One calls it bad luck. And others simply sign it and go
about their day. The mix of reactions by each is interesting.
Needless to say his collection of autographs in the book is nothing
short of remarkable, with celebrities both living and dead. Harth
struggles with ending the 20-year-long project which has consumed a
lot of his personal life, and finally decides to keep going with a
Volume Two. The Bible Project is really what you make of it and the
concept itself is pretty interesting.
The
well executed documentary focuses mainly on The Bible Project, but
also allows the audience to get to know Harth as a person as well as
we see some of his other odd performance pieces, and a little about
his personal life and struggles with depression. The film paints a
portrait of what it's like in the life of a lonely artist and how one
is driven by passion and dedication to complete their arts in
different forms.
Several
celebrities from A to Z make walk-on appearances in the film and a
few you get to see some fun candid moments of. Kevin Smith and John
Waters both have funny sound bytes in it, but you get to see glimpses
of how wild the crowds can get just to get an autograph or picture of
the rich and famous in the natural world.
The
Book of Harth is presented in standard definition on DVD with a
1.78:1 widescreen aspect ratio and a lossy 5.1 Dolby Digital Audio
mix. Seeing that this is a digitally shot documentary, it looks and
sounds fine for what it is on the aging DVD format. However, a 1080p
transfer would be a nice bump up and more reflective of the native
quality of the piece.
Special
Features include Deleted Scenes and an Audio Commentary.
I
would suggest checking this short documentary out. It's fun to watch
and moves right along with nice visuals and editing.
Cutting
Class 4K
(1989) is
an interesting high school set thriller starring Brad Pitt in one of
his earliest roles. Directed by Rospo Pallenberg, the film centers
on a love triangle between Paula (Jill Schoelen, who was also in the
cult classic Popcorn),
Dwight (Pitt), and Brian Woods (Donovan Leitch).
Brian
just got out of a mental institution after the fallout and mysterious
death of his father and seems a bit unhinged as hotshot pretty boy
Dwight constantly ups him in every department (except educational
ones.) When murders start to occur in the high school, the whodunit
starts to narrow in on Brian, who tries to convince the innocent and
oblivious Paula of his innocence, which she buys into until it's too
late.
The
film has some clever writing and I could see this actually being a
good remake in the right hands. As it stands, it is a fun time
capsule piece of the late '80s and its hilarious to see Brad Pitt so
wet behind the ears as an actor. Also starring in the film as the
Principal is the late Roddy McDowall, who is the unsung comic relief
of the piece, with one scene where he checks out Jill Scholen behind
the closed door of his office that hasn't aged well.
Speaking
of, the underrated Jill Schoelen did a great job in this film as the
innocent and kind young girl who has no idea of the horrific things
that pop up in her life such as her dad being shot with a arrow and
her best friend murdered behind the bleachers. I'm a bit surprised
that she didn't become a bigger name in Hollywood as she certainly
had the talent and looks to do so.
Some
characters are inserted into the plot just to add suspicion of who
the killer might be, one of which is an odd and creepy janitor, whose
motivations throughout the piece are unclear as he is threatening in
one moment and downright silly in the next. I feel like maybe they
needed a few more drafts of the script before they went into
production on this as a bunch of little oddities prevent it from
being listed among some of the more accomplished 80s teen films of
the like.
Cutting
Class is presented in 2160p on 4K UHD disc with HDR10, an HEVC /
H.265 codec, a widescreen aspect ratio of 1.85:1 and an audio track
in English LPCM 2.0 Mono (48kHz, 24-bit) and lossy, English Dolby
Digital 2.0 (448 kbps) Mono. This is the same transfer as the 2018
Vinegar Syndrome release, both of which are better than the old
Lionsgate DVD we reviewed eons ago. The image is very sharp and
looks as good as a film of this time and nature can look. The also
included 1080p Blu-ray is of lesser quality and the same soundtrack.
Special
Features are not identical to the Vinegar Syndrome release and
include:
An
Original Theatrical Trailer
Collectible
LaserVision Mini-Poster
Reversible
artwork (reverse side features MVD Rewind Collection Artwork and
Rewind number sequence
Limited
Edition Slipcover (First Pressing Only; with
Rewind number sequence on right spine)
Interview
with star Jill Schoelen
Interview
with star Donovan Leitch
"Kill
Comparisons" featurette
"Find
The Killer and Win" VHS Video Store Retailer Promo
and
an R-Rated / Edited Version of "Cutting Class".
Cutting
Class is a pretty fun-but-imperfect '80s indie movie, and not
necessarily one that makes the cut on many cinephile's lists. This
release is fine, but feels more like a recycling of Vinegar
Syndrome's now out-of-print release, sans a few of the extras.
After
years in development, the live action adaptation of DC and Neil
Gaiman's The Sandman: The
Complete First Season
(2022) lands on disc from Warner Brothers / Netflix in its
first season. The creators no doubt had a monumental feat to pull
off with this epic project with the wild visuals and scope of
production, but the end result is surprisingly pretty strong.
The
Sandman is a mix of fantasy and historical fiction that centers
on Morpheus the Dream King who explores different paths of the
cosmic, living, and the dead. When he is captured in the world of
the living, his absence causes a huge riff in the dreaming and waking
worlds. The epic story is hard to summarize in just a few sentences
but is definitely an enjoyable and visually rich journey that's one
of Netflix's strongest productions to date.
The
series stars Tom Sturridge, Boyd Holbrook, Vivienne Acheampong,
Patton Oswalt, and David Thewlis.
The
Sandman: The Complete First Season (three Blu-ray BD-50 disc set)
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 a lossless English
Dolby Atmos (Dolby TrueHD 7.1
mixdown for older systems; 48kHz, 24-bit). There is also a 4K
UHD version available that we are not covering here, but is getting
rave reviews as well with slightly higher resolution than this 1080p
Blu-ray version. The show has a lot of digital elements and effects,
but it shot in a very cinematic and stylized way that cleverly calls
back to the original graphic novel art.
Special
Features featurettes: Behind the Scenes Sneak Peak and The
World of the Endless.
The
Sandman is an effective big budget Netflix genre series that stands
tall against some of their other more questionable projects in
similar genres. The cast is certainly intriguing and I look forward
to seeing further seasons.
-
James Lockhart
https://www.facebook.com/jamesharlandlockhartv/