Butcher
Baker Nightmare Maker 4K
(1981 aka Night
Warning)/Cathy's
Curse 4K
(1976)/Devil's
Honey 4K
(1986)/Great
Alligator 4K
(1979)/all Severin 4K Blu-rays w/Blu-rays)/Lost
In The Stars
(2023/Via Vision/Imprint Asia/Region Free Import Blu-ray)
4K
Picture: B+ Picture: B Sound: B- (Stars:
B) Extras: B/B-/B-/B-/C- Film: C+/C+/B-/C+/C
PLEASE
NOTE:
The Lost
In The Stars
Import Blu-ray is now only available from our friends at Imprint/Via
Vision in Australia, can play on all 4K and Blu-ray players and can
be ordered from the link below.
Now
for a mix of exploitation films you should know about....
William
Asher's Butcher
Baker Nightmare Maker 4K
(1981 aka Night
Warning)
is part of a few cycles at the time that were taking place on the big
screen and in exploitation pop culture. For one thing, it was a
slasher film, then it was one with some name people, it was also one
with a lower budget released by an independent company versus the
ones the major studios were finally issuing and it was also part of a
crazy trend of each such film trying to outdo the last one (often
with only weeks in between each release!) with shocks and wacky
ideas. To say these were politically incorrect is obvious and
besides the point.
This
time, Susan Tyrell is a woman who turns out to be jealous of her
married sister, who has just had a baby boy, so she kills them!
Years later, she is still raising the child (now 19 years old, played
by Jimmy McNichol, who goes all out to shatter his teen image and see
what happens) and is about to get murderous again. She is also a
little too interested in him, who is dating a young woman (Julia
Duffy, later Bob Newhart's wife in the second hit Newhart
show) and they seem like a nice couple, though 'auntie' is not a fan
of hers. Of course, things will nto stay peaceful for long and when
a strange murder happens, an angry, ignorant police investigator (the
underrated Bo Svenson in a very thankless role for which he is really
good in) starts to cross the line plenty and only madness can follow.
So
that's the wacky set-up and good taste is nto the goal of this film,
but it still plays it too loose and goes for shocks and titillation
too much at the expense of a screenplay that if handled differently,
would have made this film better and helped to hold up better. It is
a nice time capsule of some things outside of the genre, to its
advantage and is professionally done, thanks oddly to its longtime
journeyman director (more on him in a minute) but the promo
definitely is set on selling McNichol for the big screen and as he
was that popular at the time, it makes total sense. The
Toolbox Murders
(1978, see the 4K review elsewhere on this site) caused enough shock,
criticism and box office for one time voice of Lucy Van Pelt and very
successful child actress Pamelyn Ferdin (Space
Academy,
et al) from the same era as McNichol that you could see why this
could work and he was the brother of Kristy McNichol, an actress
definitely as good as Ferdin, all three of whom should have had
longer-lasting careers in front of the camera.
By
dealing with so much blood, so many R-rated issues and also show
almost his entire body when that was way less likely for any male
actor or star than a female at the time, that really took more guts,
but he had the loyal audience and the curiosity interest helped make
this film a moderate hit. So what if it was disjointed, the real
reason you'd go to see these films (pre-Internet; the era of far more
censored network TV, etc.) was to see what they would dare do. This
actually has some kind of charm, however limited, but is still light
years away from the cynicism of our torture porn era.
There
are times the film gets interesting before it resumes its
exploitation and some of the effects (Tom Savini's groundbreaking
work was only just starting to sink in throughout the industry) shows
its age and might even illicit some chuckles in certain viewers, but
they did do a good bit here for the limited budget and we don't see
that much in any feature film of any genre these days. So how was
this all tied together as well it it was?
Well,
it has to do with Director William Asher, whose name you might
recognize by accident from his long and extremely successful long
line of directing TV comedy, especially from some of the biggest hit
TV sitcoms still of all time to this day. Starting as a producer of
feature films in the late 1940s, he quickly started writing and
creating programs too and TV picked him up so fast, that's where his
legacy would be. He wrote & directed some of the biggest 'beach
movies' with Frankie & Annette, created and directed episodes of
the hit Patty
Duke Show,
produced The
Paul Lynde Show,
produced and directed almost the entire huge hit Bewitched
series, key early episodes of the great Linda Lavin classic Alice
and much more. His lone episode of the original Rod Serling Twilight
Zone
was even one of its more offbeat and odder shows.
So
with all that, how does he land up directing a film like this? Well
at this point of his career, he knew what he was doing and had
nothing to lose, too skilled in how to helm anything and one who
could bring anything in on a lower budget or on-budget, so that makes
sense. It is a stretch though and though he quickly returned to
comedy for the rest of the decade before retiring, he did prove he
could make one of these films as well ads most of the newbies that
were making a film for the first time. It also adds the the oddness
of the overall film.
Underrated
character actress Marcia Lewis, Britt Leach, Steve Eastin, Kay
Kimler, Gary Baxley and a then-unknown Bill Paxton also star.
With
all that, even with its flaws, all serious film fans, especially of
this genre, need to see this one at least once just to see what they
did.
Extras
include a
solid
slipcase and reversible cover, while both discs add three feature
length audio commentary tracks: one with Star Jimmy McNichol, a
second with Co-Writer/Producer Steve Breimer And Co-Writer Alan Jay
Glueckman, Moderated By Mondo Digital's Nathaniel Thompson and a
third with Co-Producer And Unit Production Manager Eugene Mazzola and
an Original Theatrical Trailer. The older Blu-ray disc also has
three featurettes in Extreme
Prejudice:
Interview With Actor Bo Svenson, Point
And Shoot:
Interview With Director Of Photography Robbie Greenberg and Family
Dynamics:
Interview With Editor Ted Nicolaou, Cast And Crew Interviews With
Actors Jimmy McNichol, Susan Tyrrell And Steve Eastin, Make-Up Artist
Allan A. Apone And Producer Steve Breimer and a TV Spot.
Eddy
Matalon's Cathy's
Curse 4K
(1976) is an older demonic possession film that was very popular,
especially after The
Exorcist
and arrived the same year as the biggest 'devil child' movie in
years, The
Omen.
You can read more in our original coverage at this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/14845/Cathy's+Curse+(1977/Severin+Blu-ray
Since
we last covered the film, a whole new set of demonic possession films
have arrived, including more attempts to revive The
Exorcist
as some kind of franchise, but at least this one is somewhat
ambitious and fresher versus the many others that are just really bad
and cynically made in their lack of originality and the sense that
they are even bored making them. Minus the bad digital we get all
the time now, they actually had to be creative and think, even for a
B-movie horror project like this. Both cuts are here and maybe the
longer one is narrowly better, but not by much. The curious and
especially horror fans should see both cuts, especially now in 4K!
Extras
include a Limited Edition webstore slipcase with glowing LED eyes,
plus all editions have a reversible cover, a nicely illustrated
booklet
on the film including informative text and essays by Simon Barrett
And Brian Collins, while the discs add a Feature Length Audio
Commentary track by Fangoria
Magazine
Contributor Brian Collins And Filmmaker Simon Barrett (U.S. Cut Only)
and Original Theatrical Trailers. The older Blu-ray adds three
featurettes: Tricks
And Treats:
Interview With Director Eddy Matalon, Cathy's
Daddy: Alan Scarfe Remembers CATHY'S CURSE and
Cathy
& Mum:
Interview With Actress Randi Allen And Costume Designer Joyce Allen,
and Introduction To Cinematic Void/American Cinematheque Screening By
Brian Collins.
Lucio
Fulci's The
Devil's Honey 4K
(1986) just manages to be the best of the four films here for my
tastes and I reviewed it as part of these horror genre releases at
this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/15164/All+The+Sins+Of+Sodom/Vibrations+(both+1968/
Of
course, I have to confess I like Corrine Clery (Moonraker,
The
Story Of O)
whom the camera lives and looks as great as ever, here for the first
time in 4K anywhere. The script and overall narrative are all over
the place, but she is as watchable here as she ever had been as as we
post, she is still making movies and appearing on television, albeit
mostly overseas productions sadly. No matter how off the rails this
gets, she is still good here and proves she is more than just a sexy
woman or sex symbol, but an actual actress with star power. If you
see this film, stick with this and her until the end to get all the
good parts out of it.
Extras
include a reversible
cover, Webstore Exclusive Slipcover/slipcase, while the discs add an
Original
Theatrical Trailer, plus the older Blu-ray
adds an Archival Audio Interview With Director Lucio Fulci By Michele
Romagnoli, an Alternate Opening, Sax,
Lies and Videotape:
Interview With Actress Blanca Marsillach, The
Devil's Halsey:
Interview With Actor Brett Halsey, Wild
Flower:
Interview With Actress Corinne Clery, Producing
Honey:
Interview With Producer Vincenzo Salviani, The
Devil's Sax:
Interview With Composer Claudio Natili, Stephen Thrower, Author Of
Beyond
Terror: The Films Of Lucio Fulci,
On THE
DEVIL'S HONEY and Fulci's Honey:
Audio Essay By Troy Howarth, Author
Of Splintered Visions: Lucio Fulci And His Films.
Sergio
Martino's The
Great Alligator 4K
(1979) is an infamously bad film that wants to be sleek and sleazy at
the same time, but coherence and consistency are beyond the grasp of
this bonkers monster movie with plenty of stereotypes and bad
moviemaking from a man who started with documentaries and
psychological thrillers. Starting with the slasher film Torso
in 1973, he started to move more into more explicit exploitation
territory while still juggling comedies, spaghetti westerns and
police thrillers too. Here, he was trying to stretch or the like,
but it did not exactly work out.
The
opening scene has a helicopter flying to what will be the scene and
location of the attacks, including Mel Ferrer, a Martino veteran at
this point who also appeared in Tobe Hooper's Eaten
Alive.
To give you a clue on what to expect if you watch this, they are in
the air flying in a Bell Jet Ranger helicopter (the make and model
used in all the James Bond films of the time) but when they land, it
is another copter, another make and model!
Speaking
of Bond, Barbara Bach, who had just been in the huge hit comeback
Bond The
Spy Who Loved Me
(1977) is soon the female lead, with a character who will deal with
much more peril in water than in that film. Like Cleary, women in
Bond films at the time were not taken as seriously and landed up in
lower-budgeted films at the time, which has fortunately changed
since. A few years later, Bach would still be making such films, but
by Caveman
had meet Ringo Starr and they have been married ever since and soon
quit filmmaking, sadly.
Soon,
give or take prolonged segments of 'natives on the island' and the
like, the cast of characters are being attacked by the killer giant
in some brutal and bloody ways, though the budget is as limited as
the visual effects, so some of this looked bad then. You can imagine
how bad it can look now. However, you do get some nice shots, some
weird moments and a good look at the good old days of bad
moviemaking; somehow not as bad as such films that are made today.
The digital usually looks more phony than what we see here, despite
its price tag literally being tens to hundreds of times more
expensive and that has nothing to do with inflation.
If
you are seeing it for laughs and political incorrectness, fine, but
if you are expecting much more, don't hold your breath. Bach is the
best thing about this one.
Extras
include a reversible
cover, Webstore Exclusive Slipcover/Slipcase, while the discs add an
Original
Theatrical Trailer, plus the older Blu-ray
adds Down
By The River:
Interview With Director Sergio Martino, Minou:
Interview With Actress Silvia Collatina, Beware
Of The Gator:
Interview With Camera Operator Claudio Morabito, Later
Alligator:
Interview With Production Designer Antonello Geleng, Underwater:
Interview With Underwater Camera Operator Gianlorenzo Battaglia, 3
Friends And An Alligator:
Discussion With Cinematographer Giancarlo Ferrando, Production
Designer Antonello Geleng And Special Effects Supervisor Paolo Ricci,
Paradise
House:
Christianity
And The Natural World In THE GREAT ALLIGATOR:
Video Essay By Lee Gambin, Author Of Massacred
By Mother Nature
and Alligator
Land:
Antonello Geleng Shares Original Production Drawings.
Finally,
we have the newest film on the list, Rui Chu and Xiang Liu's Lost
In The Stars
(2023) which is a wild mystery about a man (Yilong Zhu) who loses his
wife on vacation, then really flips out when a woman (Janice Man)
shows up, says she is his wife, knows everything about them, all the
facts point to her telling 'the truth' and he insists she is a fraud.
Has he lost his mind, or is something wackier and crazier going on
here?
A
female detective (Ni Ni, who really takes over when she shows up)
gets together with him and starts to investigate what is really going
on. So besides the sick person or sick world question (Polanski's
Rosemary's Baby is a great example of such a film) and the
film has its moments, but the problem is the the early part goes on a
little longer than it should, then it takes so many twists and turns
that it actually does nto add up as it should, whether the makers
realize it or not. An ambitious production, as elaborate as any of
its Hollywood, European or indie counterparts of late, that made me
all the more disappointed when this did not add up. It looks good,
has some real style and the cast is exceptional. I hope to see more
of them in other films along with other films from Asia overall.
Though I cannot recommend the film, if you like visuals and seeing
the ambition, it would be worth a look for those curious about that.
Better luck next time to the writers and directors if they try this
kind of thing again.
A
trailer is the only extra.
Now
for playback performance. Like Criterion, Arrow, Blue Underground,
Synapse and the better work by the major studio labels, Severin has
been building up a great library of 4K masters knowing the next
format was going to happen and to have an exceptionally strong,
accurate, rich and real pleasures to watch as if you are watching a
nice film print. All four films were shot on Kodak 35mm color
negative, but save The
Devil's Honey,
it was Kodak film before they (and all the rest of the color movie
film producers) had major fading issues, so the fact they still look
this good in amazing. The labwork might not be as good as what
Technicolor or Metrocolor was doing at the time, which could lead to
some of the flaws and aging issue, but they put much hard work into
restoring and saving these films, often orphan or indie-owned.
The
2160p HEVC/H.265, 1.85 X 1, Dolby Vision/HDR (10; Ultra HD
Premium)-enhanced Ultra High Definition image on all the 4K discs
(save 2160p HEVC/H.265, Dolby Vision/HDR (10; Ultra HD
Premium)-enhanced Ultra High Definition image on Alligator,
which is in 2.35 X 1 framing) are the best they have looked since
their original theatrical releases and surpass their still-impressive
1080p digital High Definition Blu-ray presentations, also included in
every release.
Since
these are horror thrillers, they are going to be shot with more
grain, less lighting, more styling and using other purposely unusual
lighting and camera set-ups, ultra-clear fidelity is not always the
intent. That these 35mm filmed productions look better than most of
the HD shoots I have seen lately says something about the ambition of
these productions and their desires to be hits.
Though
not credited anywhere on the film or its posters, the 2.35 X 1
framing from Alligator
is actually shot in the two-perforation Techniscope format, also
known as Chromoscope when Technicolor did not produce dye-transfer
35mm prints. That gives them less fidelity than using real scope
lenses (Panavision, Technovision, HawkScope, etc.) or just shooting
flat like the other three films, but this still looks good, so
Director of Photography Giancarlo Ferrando knew what he was doing.
True, the underwater sequences are not James Bond/Abyss
clean and clear, but they are nice and dirty for a horror/monster
film.
The
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono lossless mixes all come from the
original monophonic mixes and any surviving sound stems, usually
magnetic tape. You can hear the budget and sonic limits of the films
from their time, but Synapse and company (as usual) have done
everything they can to clean them up without compression, warping or
other harmonic distortion issues. As was the case with most movies
soundtracks until the last few decades, the music was usually
recorded in a studio with higher fidelity, so music and some sound
effects can have better fidelity than the location recording. All
offer English language tracks, but Curse
has a French dub track that is not as good but fairly good, while
Honey
and Alligator
also add Italian tracks. It is the original sound for Honey,
while in the case of Alligator,
both soundtracks are valid since they used both languages during
production.
And
finally, the 1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on
Lost
In The Stars
is one of the best HD shoots I have seen in a while from anywhere
with a superior use of color and some good lighting choices, even if
some shots have some unintended softness, it is impressive and is at
least a 4K shoot. The
sound is here in a Mandarin DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mix
and a lesser, flatter, boring English PCM 2.0 Stereo dub. Though the
sound has some off moments, it is still consistent enough and being
the newest film on the list, definitely the best sonically. The end
credits say this was produced, finalized and issued in Dolby Vision
and Dolby Atmos, so I can see a possible 4K edition and despite my
disappointment with the film, I would still watch that upgrade just
for what works here.
To
order the Lost In The Stars Region Free import Blu-ray, go to
this link for it and many more hard to find and exclusive titles from
Imprint:
https://viavision.com.au/shop/lost-in-the-stars-2023-imprint-asia-1/
-
Nicholas Sheffo