Bikeriders
4K
(2023/Universal 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray w/Blu-ray)/Door-To-Door
Maniac
(aka Five
Minutes To Live)
+ Right
Hand Of The Devil
(both 1961/Film Masters Blu-ray Set)/Harum
Scarum
(1965/Elvis/MGM/Warner Archive Blu-ray)/Ride
(2023/Well Go Blu-ray)
4K
Ultra HD Picture: B Picture: B-/B-/B/B- Sound: B+/C+/B-/B
Extras: C/B-/C/C Films: C/B- & C+/C/C
PLEASE
NOTE:
The Harum
Scarum
Blu-ray is now only available from Warner Bros. through their Warner
Archive series and can be ordered from the link below.
Jeff
Nichols' The
Bikeriders 4K
(2023) is a film of the criminal biker culture in the 1960s, Danny
Lyon's book of the same name and with the kind of characters we used
to see all the time until the late 1970s on the big screen. Cool
bikes never went away, but stories of the tough times mostly did. I
believe much of what we see here probably happened and in many of the
ways shown, liberties on the truth notwithstanding. I also like the
cast that includes Austin Butler (just off of his Elvis
film,) Jodie Comer, Michael Shannon, Norman Reedus and, as expected,
a scene-stealing Tom Hardy.
Hardy
is not over the top either, but no matter how good it looks in the
period recreated, bikes included and costumes top rate, the makers
make the huge mistake of trying to imitate the style of Martin
Scorsese films and it immediately hurts the film in such profound
ways, it all never recovers. The voiceovers are like a bad
third-rate imitation of GoodFellas,
et al, and the nearly two hours is too often a torture test of how
not
to make such a film. Like imitating Hitchcock or Spielberg, you are
always doomed when you try this kind of thing and that is why what
could have been a good or even great film crashes and burns very
early on. Now you can see for yourself.
Extras
include Digital Code, while the discs
(per the press release) add:
·
Johnny,
Benny, & Kathy:
From the accents to the attitude, get to know the lead characters of
THE BIKERIDERS. Hear from the cast and producing team on how they
took the personalities and environments from a book of photographs
and brought a narrative to the big screen.
·
The
Era of THE BIKERIDERS:
Grab your leather jacket and gear up for a ride as we enter the era
of THE BIKERIDERS. This piece focuses on the authenticity that was
captured by the brilliant production team who nailed the look, feel,
and sound of the late 1960s Midwest.
·
The
Filmmaker's Eye:
Jeff Nichols: Go behind the lens with director Jeff Nichols as he
shared his overall vision for the film, stylistic choices, and how he
works with talent. Members of the ensemble cast along with producers
chime in on the significance of working on a Jeff Nichols film.
·
and a Feature-Length Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Jeff
Nichols.
Bill
Karn's
Door-To-Door
Maniac
(1961) + Aram Catcher's Right
Hand Of The Devil
(both 1961) are part of an interesting new double feature Blu-ray set
from the Film Masters label, the first of which has legendary singer
Johnny Cash as a sadistic singer/thief who gets involved with a
conniving, longtime criminal (the late, great Vic Tayback, still
playing heavies at the time, but best know as Mel from Scorsese's
Alice
Doesn't Live Here Anymore
and the TV series that spin off from it, Alice
with Linda Lavin) who convinces this 'man in black' to help him rob a
bank by kidnapping and terrorizing the wife of the head of it.
The
family includes Ronnie Howard (Ron Howard in his child actor years)
when he was still known for the huge hit Andy
Griffith Show
as their son, but he does not know his dad is having an affair with
another woman, though his mom starts to suspect. That complicates
some things and then, Cash's predator really goes way too far, but I
will stop there, though you would not see the film with big names
made like this today. However, it was a B-movie made by men and you
just have to see it to believe it. It has enough interesting moments
and Cash in a rare dramatic role, so glad to see it make it to
Blu-ray.
Aram
Catcher's Right
Hand Of The Devil
has the director as the lead, a criminal who gets a bunch of other
petty thieves together to rob a stadium of some serious cash, but he
also gets obsessed about a particular woman and the film becomes more
surreal than expected. I actually liked how it does it and in a
leisurely way, but it is not for everyone. Catcher was trying to be
Hitchcock among others and even worked with the Master of suspense
until they had an ugly falling out, but I was surprised how
ambitious this film was. He did almost all the work on it (including
costumes and editing) so it makes for a great second film here and
though it can be too laid back in parts, I still think it is worth a
good look too.
Extras
include a nicely illustrated booklet on the film including
informative text and two excellent essays, while the discs (per the
press release) add
author/podcaster Daniel Budnik and film historian Rob Kelly join
forces to provide a comprehensive commentary track for Door-to-Door
Maniac
with Don Stradley providing liner notes; Larry Strothe, James Gonis,
Shawn Sheridan and Matt Weinhold of the Monster
Party
podcast are back for a full-length commentary for Right
Hand Of The Devil,
with C. Courtney Joyner providing liner notes; Ryan Verrill and Will
Dodson from Someone's Favorite Productions present the all-new,
visual essay, Player
Piano: Passion of Aram Katcher;
recut 2024 trailer for Door-to-Door
Maniac;
and a restored, original trailer for Right
Hand Of The Devil.
In
the 1960s, Elvis lost his popularity in the music world despite still
having hits here and there, still has the most Top 40 hits of the
Rock Music era since 1955 (119!) especially from 1963 until about the
end of the decade, mostly forgettable songs. He used to blame The
Beatles for him no longer being on top (despite still being the top
male hit star of the 1960s) and I can understand the complaint to
somewhat of an extent, but his 'Elvis Musicals' were even worse and
the fab Four did not make him make them. Gene Nelson's
Harum
Scarum
(1965) is one of the poorest of them, dating particularly poorly with
dull music and a plot that has become more ridiculous for all kinds
of reasons.
His
actor/stuntman character 'Johnny Tyrone' is also a martial arts
fighting expert (!?!?!?!) and he is so good, he gets kidnapped by a
group from the Middle East (!?!?!?!?) to assassinate a King! Yes,
his fighting skills are somehow superior to all the warriors in the
Middle East of the time (?????) so they have to capture this 'King'
of fighting arts to succeed.
Of
course, current world events make this more implausible now than
ever, but it was even goofy for the middle of that decade. It would
NEVER get greenlit today by a longshot. Of course, it is mostly shot
on MGM sets and its not trying to be more than the fake & funny
romp it tries to be, but it cannot even do that well. The makers
brought back his Girl
Happy
co-star Mary Ann Mobley, who I always liked (she was The
Girl From U.N.C.L.E.
briefly before the Adam West Batman
happened and the spin-off series went for the youth culture/pop art
thing, with the also-great Stephanie Powers taking over) and does nto
get enough screen time here.
Even
if she did, it is beyond bad and silly, cliched, stereotyped and the
songs are everything we've seen before, yet, it made money like every
single Elvis film ever made. Again, he was the only movie start to
never have a film lose money. After suffering through this one again
after so many years, he HAD
to be REAL
popular at the time still for this to eek out any kind of profit.
Now the very most curious can see for themselves. At least it is
well restored, so see more in the tech section below.
Extras
include the Original Theatrical Trailer and two Chuck Jones
Technicolor MGM Tom
and Jerry
cartoon shorts: The
Cat's Me-Ouch
and Of
Feline Bondage.
And
then we have Jake Allyn's Ride
(2023) featuring C. Thomas Howell as an old, retired broncho rider
who needs some serious money when his daughter develops cancer. With
his estranged son, they decide to rob a fortune to take care of her,
but it all goes wrong and all kinds of bizarre things follow.
I
did not expect just another horse riding movie, but this can get
surprisingly brutal, but it has too many cliches, melodrama and too
often smacks of a 'disease-of-the-week' TV movie that became such a
cliche decades ago. The underrated Annabeth Gish also shows up, but
she is not in it enough and oddly, I did not totally buy Howell as
old. Thus, this is only for the very curious, but at least everybody
involved is giving it their best.
Extras
include a set of separate on-camera interview clips with Director
Allyn and cast members Annabeth Gish, C. Thomas Howell, Forrie J.
Smith, Josh Plasse, Laci Kaye Booth and Zia Carlock and an Original
Theatrical Trailer.
Now
for playback performance. The 2160p HEVC/H.265, 2.35 X 1, HDR (10;
Ultra HD Premium)-enhanced Ultra High Definition image on Bikeriders
4K is
good here, but has some surprising softness and slight lack of detail
more often than expected, so the Elvis film can actually compete with
it, while the 1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image on the
regular Blu-ray is softer still with less color range. Go for 4K if
you can to see it if you must. Both have lossless
Dolby Atmos (Dolby TrueHD 7.1 mixdown for older systems) mixes that
have their moments and if nothing else, this has the best sound of
any biker film in cinema history... for now.
The
1080p black & white digital High Definition image transfers on
both Film Masters Blu-rays can show the age of the materials used, in
both 1.33 (aka 'TV version' that shows the full frame actually shot
on each film with more image on the top and bottom) X 1.78 X 1
framing, still look good for their age, budget and the fact that they
are orphan films. The 1.78 X 1 on Devil
might be very slightly softer than the rest, but they are very
watchable and the
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono lossless mixes on all four versions
are as good as these films will likely ever sound.
The
1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Harum
Scarum
can sometimes show the age of the materials used, but this is far
superior a transfer to all previous releases of the film and its
Metrocolor looks pretty good and consistent throughout. The
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono lossless mix is about as good as
this film will ever sound, but the hit records seem to have also been
issued in stereo.
The
1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Ride
is a new HD shoot and has some good shots, but nothing too
outstanding either, if at least consistent. Still, softer than I
would have liked, while the
slightly better DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mix is steady
enough and professional, if not spectacular or with any memorable
sections.
To
order
the
Warner Archive Harum
Scarum
Blu-ray, go to this link for it and many more great web-exclusive
releases at:
https://www.amazon.com/stores/page/ED270804-095F-449B-9B69-6CEE46A0B2BF?ingress=0&visitId=6171710b-08c8-4829-803d-d8b922581c55&tag=blurayforum-20
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Nicholas Sheffo