Deathdream
4K
(1972/MVD/Blue Underground 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray w/Blu-ray)/Never
Open That Door
(1952/Flicker Alley Blu-ray w/DVD Set)/Sherlock
Holmes
(1968 Peter Cushing TV Series/BBC*)/Sherlock
Holmes and The Deadly Necklace
(1962/*both Severin Blu-ray)
4K
Ultra HD Picture: B+* Picture: B/B & C+/C+/B Sound: B-/C+
& C/B-/C+ Extras: B/B/B-/C+ Main Programs: B+/C+/B-/C+
Here's
a notable group of horror thrillers and mysteries you should know
abbot and consider seeing...
Bob
Clark's Deathdream
4K
(1972) is
back, upgraded once again by Blue Underground, who knows how to take
care of genre classics as well as anyone. We reviewed the previous
Blu-ray edition here...
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/15099/Before+I+Die+(2016/Parade+Deck)/B
Looking
and sound great, like nothing since its original 35mm release, so
many world events have happened since even the regular Blu-ray was
issued of the film. As it may have lost some of its context to some,
I wanted to get into the horror of this film in a way that shows why
it is so great without ruining anything if you have not seen it or
seen it for a long time.
When
it was released, the few films dealing with the Vietnam fiasco were
either noting them incidentally or they were about the male soldiers
who came back home, all informed by the graphic footage (selectively
picked as it was) being broadcast daily on the evening news. Though
I have covered the ideas of patriarchy, family and the like that
Robin Wood addressed, I wanted to give this a new context to go with
it.
Like
his later classic A
Christmas Story,
Clark does have an honest idea of a healthy family,
even if there are some dysfunctions as accepted. That is true here
too, from Andy (Richard Backus) somehow surviving his fatal gunshots
because he hears (or thinks he hears) his mother calling for him. Is
it the love of his family and mom that helps him or something else?
So
the film is a twist on the slowly accumulating 'he came home'
narratives in the big screen and TV at the time, but none with such
horror, sadness and terror until Scorsese's Taxi
Driver
in its own way. Add the draft and the majority of people who did not
know the full extent to which Vietnam was a mess perpetuated by
money, genocide and lies in the guise of 'fighting communism' and you
can see how Andy and his family are a victim of like the majority who
were tricked. We'll see this played out more explicitly in films
like Ashby's Coming
Home
and Cimino's The
Deer Hunter
the same year of 1978.
So
the family is in darkness, we are in darkness, the truth of what Andy
becomes hides in darkness and we have to see how this all plays out.
Clark pulls out all the stops and really delivers here. Now you know
what you might be missing if you never saw the film before or have
not for a long time.
Extras
mostly repeat the previous extras on the regular Blu-ray upgrade
(save the booklet the older Blu-ray offered, not in our 4K copy here)
adding the new featurette: The Real Andy; a new interview with
Gary Swanson and the 4K only offers the three feature length audio
commentary tracks (including a brand new one by Troy Haworth &
Nathaniel Thompson) and the Original Theatrical Trailer, but they are
solid extras and the film deserves all of them.
Carlos
Hugo Christensen's Never
Open That Door
(1952)
has two feature films that originally were to form a trilogy
anthology project, but landed up being issued like this and surviving
as such. They also qualify as Noir from Argentina, though it is
arguable that the sometimes supernatural-leaning aspects of the
stories (to whatever extent they actually are and they are at least
somewhat) negates the Noir label a bit because Noir is about total
realism despite its roots being in the likes of German Expressionist
Cinema that was horror-film heavy and the accompanying detective
films that never shied away from supernatural implications or a
supernatural look, even when the films were not supernatural.
Never
Open That Door
and If
I Should Die Before I Wake
were produced around the same time, well within the original Noir era
from 1941 to 1958, but are all based on Cornell Woolrich (aka William
Irish) stories, one of the most important authors in all of Noir.
The first story of the first film involves a woman (Renee Dumas) is
in trouble and debt when her brother finds out from a constantly
ringing phone with few answers. He slowly finds out more and more
about why and decides to start to see what he can do about it.
The
second part of the film is The
Hummingbird Comes Home,
where a home invasion by some criminals happens to pick the home of a
blind woman who they underestimate, but that turns out to be a
mistake. This may be the most effective of the three and most
realistic, reminding one of the later versions of The
Desperate Hours
(1955 and 1990, bothy reviewed elsewhere on this site) in some ways,
yet is its own tale.
If
I Should Die Before I Wake
is the most problematic on the three since it has child-in-jeopardy
issues, pushes religion in a way that is totally atypical of any real
Noir and gets a bit heavy handed. When it leaves that nonsense
aside, it plays as well as the 1949 The
Window
(restored by Warner Archive and reviewed elsewhere on this site on
Blu-ray) based on the work of the same writer, later inspiring
Hitchcock's 1954 classic Rear
Window.
Here,
Lucho (a very effective, young Nestor Zavarce) is a troubled school
kid with a loving mom and strict police detective dad who is getting
in trouble at school as well. It may seem like a normal troubled kid
situation, but one of the gals he knows disappears and he actually
sees her go with an unknown older man before she is gone for good.
He wants to say something, but holds it in thinking no one will
believe him and that could have been the end of it. Then a second
gal he knows well in class also disappears and this time, he tries to
tell what he saw, but he gets shut down for other reasons.
Feeling
guilty and sick of the nightmare situation, he sneaks out of the
house to investigate himself, but will he get caught and in more
trouble before he finds a key clue to save the next gal if it is not
too late?
I
will not say more and the film has its moments, but it has issues
that deserve a separate essay that does not belong here. Had the
problematic parts been cut down or even out, it would have made the
film a little better, but censorship notwithstanding, there are still
other issues. The film was almost lost, so now you can see it for
yourself and see what I mean. Even with all that, it is worth a good
look.
Once
again, Flicker Alley has delivered and saved more classic films and
almost lost films, giving them top rate treatment and presentation,
films everyone should see at least once and film fans will want to go
out of their way to catch these.
Extras
(per the press release, all good) include:
Introduction
to Never
Open That Door
(aka No
abras nunca esa puerta)
and If
I Should Die Before I Wake
(aka Si
muero antes de despertar)
by author, film historian, and 'noirchaeologist' Eddie Muller
If
I Should Die Before I Wake
(Si muero antes de despertar,) an exceedingly rare archival
conservation scan of Carlos Hugo Christensen's third part of the
film trilogy
Audio
Commentary for Never
Open That Door
(No abras nunca esa puerta) by author and film historian Guido Segal
New
Documentary on Cornell Woolrich, produced by Steven C. Smith and
writer/film historian Alan K. Rode, and featuring interviews with
writer/film historians Gary Phillips, Maria Elena de las Carreras,
and Halley Sutton
Newly
Recorded Conversation with Argentina's leading film archivist and
cinema historian Fernando Martin Pena
High
Quality Souvenir Booklet with rare original photographs, posters,
and ephemera
and
Reversible Cover Artwork.
In
1959, Peter Cushing
and Hammer Films teamed up to make a Technicolor feature film version
of the Sherlock Holmes classic The
Hound Of The Baskervilles,
which we reviewed at this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/14289/The+Hound+Of+The+Baskervilles+(1959/Hammer/
It
was meant to launch a movie series that sadly never happened, but
should have. About a decade later, that was realized enough that the
BBC decided to get Cushing for the second season (aka series in
British TV terms), replacing the underrated, unhappy with the show
Douglas Wilmer in their new Holmes TV series and the result was
Sherlock
Holmes
in 1968 and was originally issued in the Severin Cushing
Curiosities
Blu-ray box set. Nigel Stock plays Doctor Watson, William Lucas as
Inspector Lastrade, Grace Arnold as Mrs. Hudson and despite the BBC's
infamous lack of preservation issues, six of sixteen episodes
survive, including Cushing in another Hound
Of The Baskervilles
adaption.
A
Study In Scarlet,
The
Blue Carbuncle,
The
Boscombe Valley Mystery
and The
Sign of Four
are the other surviving shows and after taking another look, it is a
shame they are not all around because this is a smart show and one of
the better Holmes TV shows, even after a few successes since (Jeremy
Brett and Benedict Cumberbatch are great actors, but I never bought
them in the role despite their huge critical and commercial success
in the role) so fans who have not seen these should go out of their
way for them.
Besides
the solid pacing, directing and writing to go with the acting, guest
stars include Nick Tate (from Space:
1999,
et al,) John Tate, Ed Bishop (Anderson's U.F.O.,)
Dorothy Edwards (The
Owl Service,)
Gabriella Licudi (The
Liquidator,)
Madge Ryan (Kubrick's A
Clockwork Orange,)
Gary Raymond, Ann Bell, Michael Godfrey, Paul Daneman, John Stratton,
Michael Robbins and Frank Middlemass.
For
the record, lost episode adaptions with key actors listed include The
Second Stain
(with Cecil Parker,) The
Dancing Men,
The
Greek Interpreter
(with Edward Hardwicke and Nigel Terry,) The
Naval Treaty
(with Peter Bowles and Dennis Price,) Thor
Bridge
(with Juliet Mills, Willoughby Gray, Isa Miranda (The
Night Porter,)
Henry Oscar and Grant Taylor,) The
Musgrave Ritual
(Georgia Brown and Norman Wolland,) Black
Peter
(Grace Arnold, Ilona Rogers and Jerold Wells,) Wisteria
Lodge
(Walter Gotell, Tutte Lemkow, Roy Stewart and Richard Pearson,)
Shoscombe
Old Place
(Nigel Green, Edward Woodward (!!!,) Kevin Lindsay and Peter Miles)
and The
Solitary Cyclist
(Peter Miles, Charles 'Bud' Tingwell) showing how many great shows
form this series have been lost. And that's just in this season!
Cushing
could play heroes as well as he could villains and has played the
greatest of all time of both. Compared to his work in the 1959 film,
he simply picks up where he left off effortlessly and without looking
like he even needs to try. There is some chemistry here between cast
members and though some people had issues with some of the teleplays,
this is still well done and recommended.
Extras
include
(per the press release; they are all good) Feature-Length Audio
Commentaries For All Episodes Featuring Kim Newman, Author Of Anno
Dracula,
Barry Forshaw, Author Of Brit
Noir
and David Stuart Davies, Author Of Starring
Sherlock Holmes: A Century Of The Master Detective On Screen
All
Episodes Available With BBC Countdown Clock
Illustrated
Peter Cushing Audio Interview With David Stuart Davies
Lost
Segments With Optional Commentary By Jonathan Rigby, Author Of
English
Gothic,
and Horror Historian Kevin Lyons.
And
last but not least, Terence Fisher's Sherlock
Holmes and The Deadly Necklace
(1962) is a German and
German-language Holmes movie that happens to have Christopher Lee in
the lead role and speaking English. Originally issued in the first
volume of the Severin Lee
Eurocrypt
Blu-ray box set, Lee said that he wished he could have rerecorded the
sound for the film (more on that later) but it makes for a very
interesting entry in his film career, German cinema and Sherlock
Holmes movies.
The
title object apparently belonged to no less than Cleopatra found by
an archeologist in Egypt, but something is definitely afoot when
Holmes and Doctor Watson (Hammer veteran Thorley Walters) find out
that Moriarty (German acting veteran Hans Sohnker) is involved, Lee's
Holmes is more wild and unhinged here, a nice alternate take he felt
was closer tot he original print versions.
Senta
Berger (The
Terror Of Dr. Mabuse,
The
Victors,
Major
Dundee,
The
Quiller Memorandum,
Puzzle,
The
Swiss Conspiracy,
Cross
of Iron,)
Ivan Desny (Danilella
By Night,
The
Invisible Terror,
Secret
Of The Sphinx,
The
Beckett Affair,
Code
Name: Kill,
Guns
For San Sebastian,
Mayerling,
Who?,
Paper
Tiger,
Marriage
Of Maria Braun,)
Leon Askin and other veteran German actors (more than a few in Dr.
Mabuse
films) are very good here and likely propelled Lee's Holmes into a
different, welcome direction.
Lee
is good here, but not in his usual element, which I actually like and
though everyone is speaking German but him, he plays it like he
understands every word and the conviction with which he is Holmes
works just fine here. It is not a great Holmes film overall, but a
unique, special and one-of-a-kind film that would make for a great
night of viewing with some of the older silent versions and a few
other odd ones at that. It can be uneven, but I landed up liking it
much more than not and older copies I tried to watch looked horrid,
so nice to see it saved like this.
If
you have never seen it before or seen it in the endlessly terrible
copies circulating on home video all these decades, you have to see
this restoration to really appreciate what Severin has done here.
As
a nod to this film, Lee shows up as Holmes' brother in Billy Wilder's
insanely underrated The
Private Life Of Sherlock Holmes.
Extras
include an Original Theatrical Trailer, feature-length audio
commentary track by film writers/scholars Kim Newman and Barry
Forshaw, Tony Dalton on Terence Fisher and Tony Dalton interviews
Terence Fisher, who later directed the Cushing The
Hound Of The Baskervilles.
We
should note that the Lee
Eurocrypt
Blu-ray box set noted has a great disc of his underrated, almost lost
anthology horror/mystery TV series Theater
Macabre
from 1971 to 1972, which we hope to cover as a single from Severin if
it ever gets issued. In the meantime, we recommend his two later
such anthology series that are also underrated and deserve a much
larger audience than they have. Edgar
Allen Poe's tales Of Mystery & Imagination
from 1995 in an older, out of print DVD pressing:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/4500/Christopher+Lee+%E2%80%93+Edgar+Allen+Poe%
That
has been reissued by VEI on DVD, but a special edition Blu-ray with
extras would be nice and the animated Extraordinary
Tales
from 2003:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/14098/Extraordinary+Tales+(2003/Edgar+Allen+Poe/Cine
Now
for playback performance. The 2160p HEVC/H.265, 1.85 X 1, Dolby
Vision/HDR (10; Ultra HD Premium)-enhanced Ultra High Definition
image on Deathdream
4K is
great, show some age from the low budget and slight imperfections of
the negative, but looks grainy and dark as intended with some great
color and shots that are just above my rating. Now it looks great
and I have never seen it look this good in all these years. The new
1080p Blu-ray looks slightly better than the older Blu-ray as well.
The
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 1.0 Mono lossless mix on both versions is as
good as this film will ever sound, though I wonder if 2.0 Mono would
have been a little better. Otherwise, another winner for Blue
Underground.
The
1080p 1.33 X 1 black & white digital High Definition image
transfer on Door
can show the age of the materials used, but some solid restoration
work has been done here and it shows, which extends to the also 1080p
1.33 X 1 black & white If
I Should Die Before I Wake,
but the surviving materials were nto in as good a shape. Still, it
has some nice shots that holdup and look good and even great here
thanks to Director of Photography Pablo Tabernero. Both offer PCM
2.0 Mono sound that shows the age, budget limits and condition of the
surviving materials that were used to make the restorations. Good
thing they held up as well as they did, because there are some rough
sections and even English subtitles can only do so much.
The
DVD included has both films in 1.33 X 1 black & white centered in
an anamorphically enhanced 1.78 X 1 frame and are passable and softer
than the Blu-ray, here for convenience. The
lossy Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono is also softer and weaker.
The
1080p 1.33 X 1 digital High Definition image transfers on the Cushing
Sherlock
Holmes
episodes were shot on early PAL analog color video with some 16mm
color filming outdoors (PAL analog progressive scan video cameras
would get damaging, permanent dots on their tubes if used outside, so
they shot outdoor scenes on film instead as standard practice for
British TV video productions) and of course, these surviving shows
can show the age of the materials used, but the upgrading and
upscaling is as good as the Tom Baker Doctor
Who
Blu-rays (see elsewhere on this site) but still can have analog
videotape flaws including video noise, video banding, telecine
flicker, tape scratching, PAL cross color, faded color and tape
damage. Otherwise, these are almost as good as we could expect,
though too bad the 16mm film sections did not survive as far as we
know, as they could have been 4K scanned and added to the tape
upscaling for better performance.
The
1080p 1.66 X 1 black & white digital High Definition image
transfer on the Holmes/Necklace
film can also show the age of the materials used, but this is far
superior a transfer to all previous releases of the film coming from
a 2K scan of the 35mm negative. I like the depth and detail, though
maybe we'd get something more out of a 4K scan, this is well shot
considering the budget and its age. Video Black is nice, as is Video
White. Soundtracks are here in a trying German and very trying
English dub versions, save Lee actually speaking the English, while
the person dubbing him in German does not quite work. Still, it is a
film with some good moments.
Both
Severin Holmes
releases have DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono lossless mixes for
all soundtracks and the original monophonic sound has been as cleaned
up and restored as possible, though they all have age issues, so
expect some issues. Otherwise, the TV episodes will never sound as
good and the feature films, if new soundtrack materials are somehow
unearthed in the future, might be able to be fixed a bit, but this is
as good as its soundtracks will also likely ever sound.
-
Nicholas Sheffo