
I'll
Follow You Down
(2013/Well Go USA Blu-ray)/Legendary
(2013/Lionsgate DVD)/Strange
New World (1975/Warner
Archive DVD)
Picture:
B-/C/C Sound: B-/C/C+ Extras: C/D/D Films: C+/D/B-
PLEASE
NOTE:
Strange
New World
is now only available from Warner Bros. through their Warner Archive
series and can be ordered from the link below.
Here
are three very different science fiction releases....
Richie
Mehta's I'll Follow You Down
(2013) is a somewhat ambitious drama about a physicist (Rufus Sewell
of Dark City)
who is a father and husband that disappears mysteriously and is
assumed dead. His young son is not so sure and when he grows up to
be older (Haley Joel Osment of A.I.
and The Sixth Sense),
he starts investigating just what really happened. His mother
(Gillian Anderson of The X
Files) has never been the
same and may have her doubts too.
The
film wants to be clever, yet be a drama and it cannot have it both
ways. The conclusion is pat, the feel god aspect never works and
though we do get some interesting moments, the script never adds up.
The cast is good (including Victor Garber) and Mehta can direct with
some visuals a plus, but this lands up being more hokum than
substance and I was ultimately disappointed.
Extras
include Behind The Scenes, Deleted Scenes and an Original Theatrical
Trailer.
Eric
Styles' Legendary
(2013) will only live up to it title if it is ever remembered for the
mess that it is with Scott Adkins and Dolph Lundgren on his sillies
B-movie streak in this as hunters in some part of China in a race for
treasure when they are attacked by a creature no one thought existed.
They find it, but never a script!
This
is just hideous, badly shot, has some of the worst CGI we have seen
in a while and that says something. Lundgren is not even in the film
enough to justify co-lead status, resulting in something that makes
the Sharknado
telefilms look like c lever National Geographic specials. If you see
this playing on a TV set of any kind... run!!!
Unfortunately,
extras include two making of featurettes.
Robert
Butler's Strange New World
(1975) served as a pilot for a TV series that attempted to be another
Star Trek
as the then-failed show was becoming a huge hit in TV syndication.
With two stories contained in this one telefilm, designed to be split
into two shows if it were picked up as a series, this would have
joined a cycle of series about hero/scientists traveling a
post-apocalyptic earth that included the TV versions of Logan's
Run, Planet
Of the Apes (both
cancelled after one season), The
Starlost (though they are
stuck on an intricate space station, same principles) and the
Saturday Morning TV hit Ark
II (all reviewed
elsewhere on this site), as good as any of them.
This
one starts in outer space when the three leads (John Saxon, Kathleen
Miller and Keene Curtis) are send to the earth 180 years after it
had certain issues. Gene Roddenberry's work was the basis for this
pilot, but you do not see his names in the credits. Still, it is
smart, takes itself seriously and deals with issues of genocide,
cloning (a revelation then) and other issues hard science fiction
does so well.
Though
some of it now looks dated, you can see the makers and cast were
going all out to make this work and versus some of the shows that
have been greenlit since, it I a shame this one was not picked up.
Supporting cast includes future TV Captain America Reb Brown as a
henchman, Bond girl veteran Martine Beswick, Oscar nominee Richard
Farnsworth, James Olson, Ford Rainey, Bill McKinney, Gerritt Graham,
then-unknown Catherine Back (The Dukes Of Hazzard) and Playboy
Playmate Cynthia Wood, you have to see this one to believe it.
There
are sadly no extras.
The
1080p 2.35 X 1 HD-shot digital High Definition image transfer on Down
is the best visual presentation here as it should be being the only
Blu-ray, but it tends to have a slight softness throughout that works
against it a bit, while the
anamorphically enhanced 2.35 X 1 image on the Legendary
DVD and 1.33 X 1 color image on World
are even softer, though Legendary
is a particularly bad HD shoot. World
was shot on 35mm film and has some nice shots here and there, but the
print is rough and uneven. Color is decent at times too.
The
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mix on Down
is dialogue-based in between times when the sound kicks in, but that
is enough to make it the best-sounding release here. The lossy Dolby
Digital 5.1 on Legendary
is a mess, a little too digital, edgy, badly mixed and too much in
the front channels, so the older, lossy Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono on
World
manages to be better by being more professionally recorded and mixed.
To
order Strange
New World,
go to this link for it and many more great web-exclusive releases at:
http://www.warnerarchive.com/
-
Nicholas Sheffo