Alice
In Terrorland
(2023/High Flier DVD)/Ghost
Station: Dead On Arrival
(2022/Well Go Blu-ray)/Roundup:
No Way Out
(2023/MPI/Capelight DVD)/Tormented
(1960/Allied Artists/Film Masters Blu-ray)/Wednesday:
The Complete First Season
(2022/Warner Blu-ray Set)
Picture:
C/B+/C/B-/B+ Sound: B-/B+/C/B-/B+ Extras: D/D/C-/B-/D
Main Programs: C-/B/B-/C/B+
Now
for a new group of thriller releases, including a few surprises...
Alice
In Terrorland
(2023) is
a modernized take on the beloved Lewis Carroll story, but with a
slasher / murderous psycho kind of twist. While the cover-art eludes
to a more visual and stylistic take, the film has a frosted over look
that is dream-like and an over abundance of the use of B-roll and
lack of imagination behind the filmmaking. While the cover art is
interesting enough, the low budget film doesn't seem to be trying
hard enough to deliver on its promises.
Alice,
a bereaved teenage girl, must live with her twisted Grandmothers in a
isolated cabin in the woods. As the Grandmother poisons the girl and
reads to her, she has dark hallucinations that coincide with Alice
in Wonderland.
A
story as visually limitless as Alice
in Wonderland
can be, this low budget stab at the property tries to be a
nightmarish spin on the fairytale similar to Winnie
the Pooh: Blood and Honey,
but has even lower production value and a lead that never seems fully
engaged in her performance.
We
have seen Tim Burton's take on the classic tale and Disney's iconic
animated feature which were both more kid-friendly, and so an adult
take on the material could theoretically work with the right
filmmaking team behind it, but what this tries to be it doesn't quite
succeed at. In recent years a similar concept was pulled off in
video game form with Alice:
The Madness Returns,
which pulls off that more adult and darker take on the material
that's screaming to be made into a film, but the Hollywood studios
seem unaware of its existence. Nevertheless, Alice
in Terrorland
doesn't really grab its audience in the first act, but strings them
along waiting for the madness to start and when it finally does, it's
lackluster at best.
The
film stars Lizzy Willis, legendary European actress and personality
Rula Lenska, Lila Sarner, and Rikki Kimpton.
Alice
is presented in standard definition on DVD with a 2.35:1 widescreen
aspect ratio and a lossy 5.1 Dolby Digital Audio mix. The film has
an overall hazy kind of dream-like look that is hit with hard
compression from the aged standard definition DVD video. The film
looks as good as it can here.
Only
extras are trailers.
The
Ghost Station: Dead On Arrival
(2022) is
an intense Korean supernatural thriller that is attention grabbing
from scene one and doesn't let go. The film centers on a haunted
train station that has taken many victim. Those that hold their mark
can see them, but those that don't cannot. When an Oksu reporter
digs a little too deep into the case, she discovers that the haunted
train station was built over a creepy looking well and an orphanage.
In the same vein as The
Grudge
and The
Ring
films, The
Ghost Station
features vengeful ghosts that never get their fill of vengeance.
The
film stars Kim Bo-Ra (Ghost
Mansion),
Kim Jae-Hyun (Love
You as the World Ends),
and Shin So-Yul (A
Violent Prosecutor).
The film is directed by Jeong Yong-Ki (The
Doll Master,
Once
Upon a Time).
The
Ghost Station
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, Korean
DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit) with English subtitles.
There is also a lossy Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo track, which is
available as an option in Korean as well. Luckily, there's no awful
English dubbed track. The film itself looks fine on 2K Blu-ray disc
and the film is shot and produced very well.
The
only extras are Trailers.
I
would suggest The
Ghost Station
to fans of Korean horror films especially The
Grudge
and The
Ring
films as mentioned. The film is now out on Blu-ray disc from Well Go
USA!
Lee
Sang Young's Roundup:
No Way Out
(2023) is the kind of rare surprise I always hope for from
independent sources, but rarely see; a film or genre film that keeps
working and even surprising, even when it does not have the biggest
budget and features mostly new talent. Here, the star is Don Lee
(aka Ma Dong-seok) who you might already recognize for his work in
the Marvel Comics movie The
Eternals,
the import zombie hit Train
To Busan,
retro spaghetti western The
Good, The Bad, The Weird,
Doomsday
Book
and
Kundo:
Age Of The Rampant.
A big star overseas, it is unreal that he has not crossed over into
the U.S. market and watching this makers on wonder further.
Actually
the third of four (so far) feature films (starting with The
Outlaws
in 2017) where he plays Police Detective Ma Suk Do (or Ma Seok-do)
solving complex mysteries and corruption with his brain as much as
his superior martial arts skills. This time, a dangerous new drug
that has become instantly popular (reminded me of Robocop
2 in
a good way) at the same time a really good detective as suddenly
disappeared, he intends to find out what is going on this time and it
will be more violent and complex than expected.
Lee
can more than carry the lead, this even is sending up the glut of
police procedurals U.S., U.K. and otherwise, yet the directing and
screenplay show the makers know their way around several genres,
including action films, martial arts films and the cast really keeps
delivering all around. The action is as effective as just about
anything I've seen lately, the editing is exceptional and if the
other three films are this good, why is this not a trilogy as hot as
the Eastwood/Leone spaghetti westerns were, or the Knives
Out
and Branagh/Poirot Agatha Christie films have been? With the
superhero genre collapsing spectacularly in a peculiar way and
current action films not being at their best lately, I could see
there is a huge audience for this film and if you like this kind of
film, I cannot highly recommend it enough. Now I want to see all of
Lee's films, especially these!
As
for playback quality, the film is well shot and the like as noted,
but sadly, the anamorphically enhanced
2.35 X 1 image and the lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 soundmix are a little
weaker than they should be, even for this older format, but you can
see this is well-made and needs a Blu-ray or even 4K release, the
latter of which it apparently received in Germany. This will have to
do until then.
Trailers
are the only extras.
Bert
I. Gordon's Tormented
(1960) makes its Blu-ray debut, but not from Warner Archive, who
issued a DVD of the film with zero extras years ago, as covered at
this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/12325/The+Devil
About
it, I wrote...
''...Tormented
(1960) from the infamous B-movie director Bert I. Gordon with Richard
Carlson as a man who has been cheating on his wife (Susan Gordon)
with a hotter, more sexually wild woman (Juli Reding) who he wants to
leave and have her not speak of their affair. During an argument,
she accidentally falls through the railing of an old lighthouse and
is holding on for dear life. He could reach out to save her, but
lets her loose her grip and fall to her death in the ocean... but
is she dead?
Turns
out she is now a ghost who can move objects in the world of the
living and is out to get him for what he did to her. The film runs
only 70 minutes (quitting while it is ahead [this Blu-ray restoration
is actually 74 minutes]) and is hilarious for just about the whole
time from campy moments to howlers to wacky, dated visual effects and
a few genre cliches. It is still worth a look and Joe Turkel, later
known for Blade
Runner
and Kubrick's The
Shining,
also shows up.''
Sometimes
a film will play better when restored and you might get something new
out of it or its impact will be better, even leading to a
letter-grade upgrade. That did not happen here and the film gets
unusually slow for a Gordon film, not quite building any momentum.
However, I was glad to see it looking better than I had ever seen it
just to see it cleaned up and improved, while the MST3K
version included here is in worse shape than either video version, as
expected. If you want to see it, this is the best way now, with
Carlson, Turkel and Gordon, all making this a curio.
As
for playback, the 1080p 1.85 X 1 black & white digital High
Definition image transfer can show the age of the materials used, but
this is an nice improvement over the older DVD, though I wish the
film was also offered in a 1.33 X 1 version. Either way, this is
much better, though its budget was low and there are going to be
issues and limits.
The DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono lossless mix is about as good
as this film will ever sound. The combination is the best way to see
the film, unless you can find a mint 35mm or maybe 16mm mint film
print.
The
Warner Archive DVD had no extras, but extras here include
a nice, high quality, illustrated booklet on the film and Gordon,
while the disc (just about per the press release) adds an Unreleased
TV pilot of Famous
Ghost Stories,
made by Bert I. Gordon and hosted by Vincent Price in black and
white; Mystery
Science Theater 3000
(aka MST3K)
version of Tormented
taped in 1992 that shows a rough version of the full feature in
1:33.1, with captions; new documentary by Ballyhoo Motion Pictures,
Bert
I. Gordon in the 1950s & 1960s: Bigger Than Life,
featuring C. Courtney Joyner; archival interview with
writer-producer-director Bert I. Gordon, Bert
I. Gordon: The Amazing Colossal Filmmaker;
feature essay by Tom Weaver with a bonus essay by John Wooley, former
president of the Susan Gordon fan club and a personal friend of the
actress; Feature-Length Audio Commentary Track provided by film
historian-writer-filmmaker Gary Don Rhodes; new, visual essay by The
Flying Maciste Brothers, The
Spirit is Willing: CineMagic and Social Discord in Bert I. Gordon's
''Tormented'';
Original Theatrical Trailer, scanned in 4K from 35mm archival
elements, presented in its raw format and as well, a recut trailer
using restored film elements.
To
the amazement of the world, Netflix has decided after two years to
unleash another one of their most popular (and best) titles onto
physical media with the release of Tim Burton's Wednesday:
The Complete First Season
(2022) on
a 2-disc Blu-ray set with no extras (and no 4K UHD option sadly.)
The series was nominated for eleven Emmy awards and remains a huge
smash on Netflix's streaming platform. The show was an internet and
pop culture sensation from the get-go, with many being enamored by
Wednesday unique dance moves, a scene that was mimicked by millions
across America on social media platforms.
A
re-imagining of The Addams Family for modern times, Wednesday
features rising star Jenna Ortega (Scream,
X)
in the lead role and whom does a masterful job of putting her own
gothic spin on the character. Several big names are in the
supporting cast including Catherine Zeta Jones and Christina Ricci
(the former Wednesday from the films of the '90s), and nobody but Tim
Burton could have done such a unique job of adapting the property.
Similar in some ways to the Harry Potter (Hogwarts School of
Witchcraft and Wizardry) concept, Wednesday attends a school for
unusual children with supernatural abilities and solves a murder
spree in the process. Familiar characters from the Addams Family
universe pop up with a few surprises, but the scene stealer is
obviously Thing, which has only gotten cooler with the advent of
digital VFX technology.
The
8 episodes span 2 Blu-ray discs and include:
Wednesday's
Child Is Full Of Woe
Woe
Is The Loneliest Number
Friend
or Woe
Woe
What a Night
You
Reap What You Woe
Quid
Pro Woe
If
You Don't Woe Me By Now
and
A
Murder of Woes.
Wednesday
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 English DTS-HD
MA (Master Audio) 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit) lossless mix. The show has
dark color tones and desaturation much like Burton's more expensive
films (Sweeney
Todd
and Sleepy
Hollow
have similar desaturated color schemes in places), and the transfer
to Blu-ray is fine for 1080p resolution. Dare I say the show looks
better on streaming if you subscribe to the 4K HDR option, but having
it on a 4K UHD disc would be sublime. Still it looks fine for the
Blu-ray format here.
No
extras.
This
fantastic series certainly deserved a better home video release with
a 4K/HDR transfer and some extras and maybe a commentary or two
wouldn't have hurt, but I guess us fans will take what we can get
while we are still waiting for Netflix to get around to releasing
Seasons
3 and 4
of Stranger
Things
on disc, why they only released two seasons a few years ago and the
others didn't follow is the equivalent of the platform holding them
hostage unless you subscribe to the service.
This
Wednesday
Blu-ray set is also not available in stores (for now?) and so you'll
have to hunt it down online to get a copy. But if you do, it is nice
to have in the collection and looks as good as it can in 1080p
Blu-ray.
I
am happy to own this series on physical media as I am a huge fan of
Tim Burton. We will have to wait another few years (as of this
writing) for Season
Two
which sounds on track to be even better than this already excellent
first season. It's great to see Tim Burton return to form and debut
his first long-form series.
-
Nicholas Sheffo (Way,
Tormented)
and James Lockhart
https://www.facebook.com/jamesharlandlockhartv/