
Adventurers,
The
(1995/Eureka!*)/Blue
Sunshine 4K
(1977/Synapse 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray w/Blu-ray + CD/*both MVD)/House
Of Psychotic Women, Rarities Collection Volume Two
(Butterfly
Kiss
(1994)/Morgiana
(1972)/Savage
Eye
(1959)/Glass
Ceiling
(1971/Severin Blu-ray Box)
4K
Ultra HD Picture: B+ Picture: B-/B/B Sound: B- (Glass:
C+) Extras: B-/B/B Films: C+/B-/B-
Now
for some dark thrills, some of which clash with dark history....
Ringo
Lam's The
Adventurers
(1995) starts with an impressive, brutal sequence set in the 1970s
when the Khmer Rouge invaded Cambodia as the Vietnam disaster was
winding down and started killing people all over the place. It is a
rarely seen, documented and discussed event, but they do justice to
it. An 8-year-old child sees his parents killed, but he somehow
survives. Fast forward to the present (i.e., the time this film is
released) and the son is now a grown jet fighting in Thailand and he
wants revenge. From San Francisco to back home, the killer is now a
wealthy arms dealer and he is still killing.
The
young man's father was actually secretly working for the CIA when he
was killed and the son is now working with them to get to the
kingpin, but he'll have to romance and seduce his daughter to finally
get closure.
Unfortunately,
this becomes too much of a formula revenge film that only remembers
the past is so-so flashbacks and is too slap dash to follow-up,
connect and match the opening sequence. The actors are good, but the
editing too slick for its own good and plotting as predictable ad it
is more formulaic than it should be. Still, it has its moments, but
not enough and the missed opportunities keep piling up as the 110
minutes keep moving on. Now you can see for yourself.
Extras
in this great
slipcase packaging include:
Limited
Edition of 2,000 copies
Limited
Edition O-Card slipcase featuring new artwork by Time Tomorrow
New
audio commentary by film critic David West
Two
Adventurers:
new interview with Gary Bettinson, editor of Asian Cinema journal
Previously
unseen archival interview with writer and producer Sandy Shaw
Original
Theatrical Trailer
PLUS:
A Limited edition collector's booklet featuring a new essay by Hong
Kong cinema scholar Aaron Han Joon Magnan-Park.
As
noted when I did the 'Elvira' version of the film on this site, Jeff
Lieberman's Blue
Sunshine 4K
(1977) is
the sometimes funny, always watchable and often intriguing Science
Fiction/Horror thriller about an exceptionally deadly batch of LSD
that is not only making its former users ill after ten years after
the fact, but turning them into psycho-killers. Zalman King is the
lead in this thriller and Lost
In Space's
Mark Goddard also stars.
I
can add the I like the look of the film, its pacing, music and the
rest of the cast fits in well. The title substance is supposed to be
something profitable and becomes entangled in politics, big money and
worse, with only some knowing its deadliest side effects. Of course,
those in the know might have a new use for it.
As
relevant as ever, the film remains a great example of how a low
budget horror film can work very well and be very effective when it
has a good script and a group of talented people who can bring it
together. Synapse has been handling this title for decades and once
again, they have expanded on it, saved it, restored it and preserved
it for generations to come. Consider it a must for all serious film
fans, especially those who love science fiction and horror.
Extras
in this great slipcase packaging include:
Two
audio commentaries featuring director Jeff Lieberman
New
introduction to the film by director Jeff Lieberman
Archival
2003 interview with director Jeff Lieberman
''Lieberman
on Lieberman''
video interview
Channel
Z ''Fantasy Film Festival'' interview with Mick Garris and Jeff
Lieberman
Fantasia
Film Festival 4K Premiere Q&A with moderator Michael Gingold and
director Jeff Lieberman
Anti-drug
''scare films'': LSD-25
(1967) and LSD:
Insight or Insanity?
(1968), courtesy of the American Genre Film Archive
Jeff
Lieberman's first film The
Ringer
(Remastered in 4K by Synapse Films from the original camera
negative, also worth a good look)
Theatrical
Trailers
Still
Gallery
Liner
notes booklet by Jeff Lieberman, featuring a chapter on the making
of Blue
Sunshine
from his book Day
of the Living Me: Adventures of a Subversive Cult Filmmaker from the
Golden Age
Limited
edition fold-out poster
and
a Limited Edition remastered CD soundtrack (13 tracks).
The
House Of Psychotic Women, Rarities Collection Volume Two
follows up a very strong first volume (unreviewed, but highly
recommended) that included Identikit
with Elizabeth Taylor and Andy Warhol (!!!,) I
Like Bats,
Footprints
and The
Other Side Of The Underneath.
This set is no slouch either, offering the following:
Michael
Winterbottom's Butterfly
Kiss
(1994) launched the TV/documentary director into feature films with
Amanda Plummer (Pulp
Fiction,
Needful
Things,
The
Fisher King)
as a wild woman named Eunice who gets involved with other women and
looking for an old love, but landing up- with a few new ones. Too
bad she also likes sex and violence. Saskia Reeves, Kathy Jamison,
Emily Aston, Freda Dowie and Ricky Tomlinson are solid in supporting
roles and Winterbottom went on to helm the likes of Welcome
To Sarajevo,
24
Hour Party People,
Code
46, 9
Songs
and A
Mighty Heart.
Definitely worth a look.
Juraj
Herz's Morgiana
(1972) is a surreal love triangle where two sisters (both played by
Iva Janzurova without the usual issues most films have when doing
this) land up wanting the same man, but only one has inherited the
wealth of their father, which means murder may be in the mix.
Considered the end of the Czech New Wave, this is highly stylized in
costumes, sets, editing and art also added as a unique exercise in
gothic horror. The density of time and location is a plus and the
results remains creepy and effective. Josef Somr and Josef Abrham
also star.
For
more on Herz's The
Cremator
(1968,) read our coverage at this link:
https://fulvuedrive-in.com/review/8586/The+Cremator+(1968/Dark+Sky+Films+DVD
The
Savage Eye
(1959) stars Barbara Baxley as a recently divorced woman living in
San Francisco, who tries to move on with a new life, but depression
and other issues start to tear at her, with things getting worse and
worse throughout. More interesting than it sounds, it took three
directors and several cinematographers (including the legendary
Haskell Wexler of Medium
Cool,
Faces,
One
Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest,
Bound
For Glory,
In The
Heat Of The Night,
the original Thomas
Crown Affair)
so it has a raw look to it all. Altman veteran Baxley (Nashville,
Images,
Countdown)
also appeared in Sea
Of Love,
Exorcist
III,
Norma
Rae,
All
Fall Down
and dozens of TV shows and telefilms, so many longtime viewers might
recognize her more than expected. It is another gem worth having in
this set. Gary Merrill and Herschel Bernardi also star.
Eloy
de la Iglesia's The
Glass Ceiling
(1971) was the director's fourth film and the beginning of his
breakaway from standard narratives into taking larger risks and
pushing narrative boundaries. Carmen Sevilla plays a housewife left
alone by her husband going on a business trip, who starts to lose her
grip all the sudden on reality and starts to think the couple
upstairs are murderers. Is she just imagining this, or did she catch
something shew would have missed had her husband not left?
Sevilla
(de la Iglesia's No
One Heard Her Scream,
Heston's Antony
& Cleopatra,
The
Devil's Cross)
is effective and convincing here, the camera liking her very much,
while de la Iglesia (Murder
In A Blue World,
The
Creature,
Cannibal
Man,
Navajero,
the El
Pico
films, all reviewed elsewhere on this site, all also from Severin)
keeps the pace up with proper tension to the end. That wraps up
another really good set of films in a series that I hope continues to
be this strong and goes on for a long time.
Extras
in this great
hardbox packaging are many and include:
Introduction
To BUTTERFLY KISS By Kier-La Janisse, Author Of House
Of Psychotic Women
Introduction
To BUTTERFLY KISS By Writer Frank Cottrell-Boyce
Audio
Commentary For BUTTERFLY KISS By Film Historian Kat Ellinger
Between
Everyday And The Extreme:
Michael Winterbottom On Directing BUTTERFLY KISS
No
Judgement:
Amanda Plummer Remembers Portraying Eunice
You're
Not Judith:
Saskia Reeves On Portraying Miriam
Pestilence
Through Petrol:
Julie Baines On Producing BUTTERFLY KISS
Front
Light And Black Sky:
Seamus McGarvey On Shooting BUTTERFLY KISS
BUTTERFLY
KISS Trailer
Short
Film: PLEASURES OF WAR (Ruth Lingford, 1998)
Introduction
To MORGIANA By Kier-La Janisse, Author Of House Of Psychotic Women
Audio
Commentary For MORGIANA By Stranger With My Face Festival Director
Briony Kidd And Cerise Howard, Co-Founder Of The Czech And Slovak
Film Festival Of Australia
Little
Drop Of Poison:
Actress Iva Janzurova Remembers MORGIANA
The
Stone Forest:
Newly Commissioned Short Film On Shooting Location Pobiti Kamani,
Animated By Leslie Supnet And Narrated By Kier-La Janisse
NIGHTMARES
- Juraj Herz' 1970 Vampire Rock Musical Made For Czech TV
Short
Film: REST IN PEACE (Rachel Amodeo, 1998) New 2K Scan Of This Cult
Favorite By Rachel Amodeo And Dame Darcy
Audio
Commentary For THE SAVAGE EYE By Film Curator/Historian Elizabeth
Purchell
Judith
X:
Locations Video Essay By Esotouric's Kim Cooper
Archival
Interview With Co-Director Joseph Strick
THE
SAVAGE EYE Trailer
Trailers
From Hell Commentary For THE SAVAGE EYE By Kier-La Janisse, Author
Of House
Of Psychotic Women
Short
Film: INTERVIEWS WITH MY LAI VETERANS (Joseph Strick, 1970)
Archival
Interview With Director Joseph Strick On INTERVIEWS WITH MY LAI
VETERANS
Short
Film: MISS CANDACE HILLIGOSS' FLICKERING HALO (Vincenzo Core And
Fabio Scacchioli, 2011)
Introduction
To THE GLASS CEILING By Kier-La Janisse, Author Of House
Of Psychotic Women
Audio
Commentary For THE GLASS CEILING By Shelagh Rowan-Legg, Author Of A
Forthcoming Monograph On Director Eloy De La Iglesia, And Faculty of
Horror's Alexandra West
Connected
At The Soul:
Patty Shepard As Remembered By Her Sister, Judith Chapman
Alternate
Scenes From The TV Version Of THE GLASS CEILING
THE
GLASS CEILING Trailer
and
the Short Film: ANTA MUJER (Agusti Villaronga, 1976).
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 Blue
Sunshine 4K
looks really good, sometimes even better than the rating above in its
demo shots with great color, depth and just a palpability that makes
the horror, wild shots (more than a few of which are actually in
daylight) and darkness really effective. The 1080p 1.85 X 1 digital
High Definition image on the regular Blue
Sunshine
Blu-ray still looks good and is from the same scan, but it cannot
compete in the best ways with the 4K, but nice it is included. In
the case of the 4K, its like finding a 35mm or even 16mm
mint-condition film print that never warped or faded.
The
original optical monophonic theatrical sound has been upgraded to a
DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 and DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono
lossless mixes that are both fine, with the 5.1 showing off the music
and the age of the materials, then the mono track is the authentic
original presentation also worth trying out once. The film will
never sound never than it does here. The
PCM 2.0 16/44.1 Stereo CD of the music soundtrack sounds fine, even a
little better than the CD in the older DVD set Synapse issued eons
ago. All in all, a great set!
The
1080p 1.85 X
1 digital High Definition image on The
Adventurers
has some pretty good color as shot on Kodak 35mm color negative, but
tends to have some softness and flaws here and there, a bit
unexpectedly considering it is the newest of all the films.
Otherwise, it looks good from its new 2K scan, but why not a 4K scan?
There
are three lossless soundtracks to choose from: a DTS-HD MA (Master
Audio) 5.1 upgrade and two Cantonese PCM 2.0 Stereo tracks, one
restored, the other raw and unrestored. The restored stereo has some
good qualities, the unrestored is for nostalgia and the 5.1 has some
qualities over the sometimes slightly too forward and brash-sounding
restored stereo, but never totally dethrones it as the best sonic
option. Now you can judge for yourself, but when listening to the
unrestored stereo, be
careful of volume switching and high volume playback.
The
1080p presentations on all four Psychotic
Women
movies look as good as expected and equal to the previous volume,
which still impresses me. The 1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition
image transfer on Butterfly
Kiss
is very nice and consistent, flesh tones are very accurate as well as
red (for blood) and its solid. Though the film was a Dolby Digital
release, we get no 5.1 mix, but a PCM 2.0 Stereo mix with Pro Logic
surrounds from the original Dolby Analog SR (Spectral Recording,
their most advanced analog noise reduction system) that still sounds
good, but why no 5.1 mix?
The
1080p 1.33 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Morgiana
has fine color and really benefits from its new 4K scan, as shot on
Kodak 35mm color negative film. It has a special style and from
being the last of the Czech New Wave films, but the transfer handles
the artworks and editing just fine. The Czech PCM 2.0 Mono is also
good and as good as this film will ever sound.
The
1080p 1.85 X 1 black & white digital High Definition image
transfer on Savage
Eye
can show the age of the materials used in small parts, but the
restoration impresses and looks really good. Detail and depth are
fine and all the hard work paid off. The PCM 2.0 Mono is as good as
it can sound, but it shows its low budget and is a little on the weak
side, so be careful of volume switching and high volume playback.
Leonard Rosenman's score is a plus, best known for his work on
Robocop
2,
East
Of Eden,
Hell
Is For Heroes,
Fantastic
Voyage,
Beneath
The Planet Of The Apes,
Battle
The Planet Of The Apes,
The
Todd Killings,
Race
With The Devil,
Star
Trek IV: The Voyage Home
and The
Car.
He definitely knew his way around genre filmmaking and psychological
narratives.
The
1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Glass
Ceiling
also looks really good, with consistent, warm color, detail and depth
in its new 4K scan, also as shot on Kodak 35mm color negative.
The Spanish PCM 2.0 Mono sound is the original track and has been
restored as much as possible, but even if the lesser English
PCM 2.0 Mono is sonically a little better, it is nowhere as
convincing.
-
Nicholas Sheffo