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Category:    Home > Reviews > Thriller > Mystery > Horror > Science Fiction > Slasher > Supernatural > Mexico > Killer > Giallo > Monster > American Rickshaw (1989*)/Friday The 13th 4K (2009 remake/New Line/Arrow 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Set)/La Posesion De Altair 1974 (2016*)/Off Balance (1987 aka Phantom Of Death*)/Rat Man (1988 aka RatMan/*

American Rickshaw (1989*)/Friday The 13th 4K (2009 remake/New Line/Arrow 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Set)/La Posesion De Altair 1974 (2016*)/Off Balance (1987 aka Phantom Of Death*)/Rat Man (1988 aka RatMan/*all Cauldron Blu-rays/all MVD)



4K Ultra HD Picture: B Picture: B/X/B-/B/B Sound: B- (Friday: B) Extras: C+/C/B-/B-/C+ Films: C/C-/C+/C+/C


Now for some B-movie thrillers you may have never heard of and a remake that did not work...



Sergio Martino's American Rickshaw (1989) features actor and Olympian Mitch Gaylord as one of a group of guys who get hired to run tourists around in rickshaws, but a striper hits on him and jumps him. He obliges, not knowing she is having them videotaped in action. Why? She is going to help frame him for a murder connected to the son of a tele-evangelist/preacher (Donald Plesence of the original Halloween films, Death Line, THX-1138 and You Only Live Twice) and then things get odder... much odder.


The film wants to be a low-budget Big Trouble In Little China with bits of other films, but the script is underdeveloped, Gaylord does not have enough good scenes and the film eventually gets repetitive and pointless. Plesence is poorly used and underused, while Martino has even done better with flawed films like Torso and The Great Alligator. Gaylord was actually in movies before perfect 10 performances at the Olympics (he was a Cub and young stunt guy in Logan's Run (1976)) so he was not unfamiliar with a film set for a while.


Not quite a cult film, American Rickshaw (aka American Tiger to sell Gaylord's fighting abilities) is still a curio, even as Gaylord also also continued to be a stunt double in more big films as well. Though a larger career did not follow like it might have with better films and a few hits, he at least tried like many of his 1970s and 1980s contemporaries. These days, not enough actors are getting the same amount or kind or type of chances.


Extras include an Image Gallery

  • On camera interviews with director Sergio Martino and production designer Massimo Antonello Geleng

  • Then and now location footage

  • The Projection Booth Podcast discuss AMERICAN RICKSHAW

  • and a Feature Length Audio Commentary with Samm Deighan & Kat Ellinger.



Marcus Nispel's Friday The 13th 4K (the infamous 2009 remake) has the music video director remaking a surprise hit that turned into a franchise that was played out by the time of this revival, but instead of something interesting and effective like End Of Days or The Cell, this becomes a flat star vehicle for Jared Padalecki. He was the co-star of Warner's highly successful and highly overrated hit TV series Supernatural and the fans mostly stayed home with everyone else and we had no sequels.


Even Jason the killer seems as bored as he is boring, knocking off each unknown character as an undeveloped cardboard bore. This is also very talky, so much so that at the Pittsburgh premiere of the film, Tom Savini attended and heckled the film, especially during each kill. Savini had done the shocking make-up effects for the original and was rightly not impressed with the film or its cleaner, less-impressive, digitally-assisted visual make-up effects. He was not the only one, all speaking to how bad a package deal this was.


For more on this film and the franchise, you can read our old coverage of the Blu-ray versions at this link:


http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/8741/Friday+The+13th+-+Pt+2+(1981/Blu-ray)/Friday+T



Extras are still many and (per the press release) include two cuts of the film, the Theatrical Cut (97 mins) and the extended Killer Cut (105 mins)

  • Limited edition Greetings from Crystal Lake Postcard

  • Double-sided foldout poster featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Gary Pullin

  • Illustrated collector's booklet featuring new writing on the film by Matt Konopka and Alexandra West

  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Gary Pullin

Then the discs add...

    DISC ONE: THEATRICAL CUT

    • Brand new audio commentary by writers Mark Swift and Damian Shannon

    • Brand new audio commentary by director Marcus Nispel

    • Brand new interview with director Marcus Nispel

    • Brand new interview with writers Mark Swift and Damian Shannon

    • Brand new interview with cinematographer Daniel Pearl

    • A Killer New Beginning, an exclusive video essay about why horror fans shouldn't fear remakes, what 2009's Friday the 13th remake gets right, and why the film serves as a perfect template for future franchise remakes by film critic Matt Donato

    • Excerpts from the Terror Trivia Track

    • The Rebirth of Jason Voorhees archival featurette

    • Hacking Back / Slashing Forward archival featurette

    • The 7 Best Kills archival featurette

    • Deleted Scenes

    • Original teaser, trailer and TV spots

    • Electronic press kit

    • Image gallery


    DISC TWO: KILLER CUT

    • Brand new audio commentary by film critics Alexandra Heller-Nicholas and Josh Nelson.



Victor Dryere's La Posesion De Altair 1974 (2016) is the newest of the films here, a supernatural tale of terror, haunted houses and a better version of all the tired Paranormal Activities films and their endless rip-offs, this is more well paced and thought out than those formula-fests (Sunn Schick Classics anyone?) and also avoids imitating the ever horrid Blair Witch Project. The result is something more palpable and ambitious, a Mexican film that can go a few rounds with the larger productions and releases.


So is it a found footage film? Sort of, but you are part of it all the way without gimmicks or cliches, so anyone serious about such films or a study of this cycle needs to see this film and how Dryere and company out-classed so many bad films. Serious horror fans should consider it a must see, while I was glad I caught it, even if it was not shockingly good, its still decent.


Extras include an Original Theatrical Trailer

Sound design featurette
•CD Soundtrack (sounds really good)
•and a Reversible Blu-ray wrap with alternate artwork

PLUS, for the record, the out-of-print Limited Edition also featured:

2 double sided mini lobby cards
•and high quality side loaded slipcase



Ruggero Deodato's Off Balance (1987 aka Phantom Of Death) was made just before American Rickshaw and also has Donald Pleasence, this time as a police detective inspector trying to track down a serial killer who has surfaced as a high profile concert pianist (Michael York of the Austin Powers films, Cabaret, Logan's Run) bring additional class and respect to a classy Italian town. Too bad the bloody trail keeps growing. Can the Inspector find out who it is and stop it?


The two actors are good here, but the dubbing is a little off in the English version (which they are speaking in) and the Italian dub is a little more off, while the rest of the mostly unknown cast does their best. However, the lead is the underappreciated Edwige Fenech (The Strange Vice Of Mrs. Wardh, The Case Of The Bloody Iris, Strip Nude for Your Killer) who has worked in many kinds of film, but is an icon of Italian Giallo thrillers. This film can get as bloody and gruesome as they are, but not as starkly effective. Another curio, with more good moments than bad, fans and the curious will want to catch this one at least once.


Extras include an Original Theatrical Trailers in English and Italian

An Uncommon Director - An interview with Ruggero Deodato, one of the final interviews with the controversial director filmed July 2022 (33 min)

Feature Length Audio Commentary with film historians Eugenio Ercolani and Troy Howarth

and a reversible Blu-ray wrap with alternate "Phantom of Death" artwork.



Giuliano Carnimeo's RatMan (1988) is the kind of B-movie genre madness you used to get all the time, pre-internet, when movies were still allowed to be movies. Rat DNA is mixed with monkeys (et al, or something like that) and the result is something that looks like a rat with the killer baby from Larry Cohen's masterwork It's Alive (1974) with any killer midget you've seen before. No good taste here, but no great writing either.


A woman's sister, a fashion model, is murdered on an island in the tropics, so Terry (Jenny Agren from Avanti!, Pulp, Eaten Alive!, City Of The Living Dead) goes to investigate and slowly starts to find it was not a jealous lover or killer rapist, but something more unexpected. A new guy she meets named Fred (David Warbeck, from The Beyond, The Last Hunter, Twins Of Evil, Trog) who might help her, but can she trust him? Does he know more than he says?


Well, it is a little more bloody than average, but not too memorable and is a curio for hardcore horror fans at best. Not so bad, its good, but it at the least carries its ideas from start to finish in its own logic and world. Too bad we've seen most of this already and too much of this is derivative and a little played out. Still, we've seen much worse lately.


Extras include an Original Theatrical Trailer
Lighting the Rat Man: Interview with cinematographer Roberto Girometti

Framing the Rat Man: Interview with camera operator Federico Del Zoppo

Just a Fin: Audio interview with post-production consultant Alberto De Martino

and a Feature Length Audio Commentary by film historians Eugenio Ercolani, Troy Howarth, and Nathaniel Thompson.



Now for playback performance. The 2160p HEVC/H.265, 2.35 X 1, Dolby Vision/HDR (10; Ultra HD Premium)-enhanced Ultra High Definition image on the Friday remake is not as good as it could be and despite having a solid Director of Photography in Daniel Pearl, A.S.C., is too standard and on-the-safe-side shoot. It was shot on Kodak Vision 2 and Vision 3 35mm color negative films, though prints were by Fuji, but this looks a bit different from the 35mm print I saw back then. Anyone who likes this should be pleased for the most part, but its nothing special otherwise. The sound is a DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mix as it was in theaters, also nothing memorable and note it has not been upgraded to DTS: X or Dolby Atmos, so that tells you what you are getting.


The 1080p 1.78 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Altair was shot on Super 8mm color and sometimes black and white film with one of the Rolls Royce's of Super 8 cameras, a Beaulieu (the 4008 ZM4) which helps make this work better. The results have the expected grain, but definitely more atmosphere than the vast majority of digitally-shot horror films since digital overtook photochemical film. The look is very consistent and effective, nicer still now that you can scan Super 8 film for the big screen, where not to long ago you had to cheat. Spielberg and J.J. Abrams used 16mm film to imitate Super in in their Super 8 feature film because they could not get actual Super 8 to look this good yet.


The sound is here in Spanish DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 and 2.0 Stereo lossless mixes that sound as good as they can and not bad for the low budget, with some sonic limits and the 5.1 only being a little better than the Stereo. Its just fine, though it also has its share of silent moments. The 16bit/44.1 PCM 2.0 Stereo CD allows you to hear the music more clearly and is a nice bonus to have here.


The rest of the Blu-rays, all from Cauldron, are here in solid 1080p 1.66 X 1 digital High Definition image transfers that look very impressive. Rickshaw offers a PCM 2.0 Mono lossless mix, RatMan a DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono lossless mix and Off Balance both a DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Stereo lossless mix and Italian DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono lossless mix. The first two films sound as good as they ever will, while both Off Balance soundtracks offer dubbing that can be too forward and slightly off-kilter. The English track is the sound that matches how the actors are talking, issued theatrically in Dolby's old analog A-type Dolby System format with mono (aka Pro Logic) surrounds that also ages the film a bit. Both have the Pino Donaggio music score, a plus for this film. Still, it is as good as the film will also ever sound and even when the sound is dated on these films, the picture quality more than makes up for it.



- Nicholas Sheffo


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