
Black
Bag 4K
(2025/Focus/Universal 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray w/Blu-ray)/Four
Rode Out (1969/Film
Masters Blu-ray)/Mystery
Street (1950/MGM/Warner
Archive Blu-ray)/Naked
Witch (1969 aka
Witchmaker/MVD/VCI
Blu-ray w/DVD)/Working Man
4K (2025/Warner 4K Ultra
HD Blu-ray)
4K
Ultra HD Picture: B+ Picture: B-/B-/B/B- & C+/X Sound:
B/B-/C+/C+/B+ Extras: C/D/B/C+/D Films: B-/B-/B/C+/C
PLEASE
NOTE:
The Mystery
Street
Blu-ray is now only available from Warner Bros. through their Warner
Archive series and can be ordered from the link below.
Steven
Soderbergh's Black
Bag 4K
(2025) has writer David Koepp reteaming with the director to make a
spy picture, the brainy kind without huge budgets and endless gadgets
(though we all have gadgets now, of course) that especially wants to
be The
Ipcress Files
meets the many great detective and spy couples in the genres. Here,
Michael Fassbinder and Cate Blanchett are the couple, working for one
of the more secret subdivisions in the intelligence community when he
is framed as some kind of traitor.
Of
course, there is much more going on here than it first seems and
unlike most films that say they have that to offer the viewer, this
one delivers eventually, after a slow and mixed start. The mystery
is who is the traitor inside the organization, but also, why are they
doing what they are doing. At first, I was disappointed, but when
things finally picked up, this worked. Too bad it did not do so
earlier, or it would have been a much bigger hit. I hope seeing this
at home will allow viewers to give it a chance and get though the
early mixed nature of the script, because I did like what eventually
happens.
Maybe
they hoped for sequels and a series like the Knives
Out
or Branagh Poirot films and the potential is there, but they get
caught up in the numbers a little too much early on, so beware and
see it. You might like it too. Cheers also to the supporting cast,
including Naomi Harris, Marisa Abela, Tom Burke, Rege-Jean Page and
Pierce Brosnan.
Extras
include Digital Code, while the disc adds Deleted Scenes and two
Making Of featurettes: Company Of Talent and Designing
Black Bag.
John
Peyser's Four
Rode Out
(1969) is an underrated Revenge Western with adult themes, overtones,
grittiness and brutalness the vast majority of the 'westerns' made
for TV and theaters today would not have the guts to even try to
make. Pernell Roberts is a U.S. Marshall trying to track down a man
(Julian Mateos) who has robbed a big chunk of money, competing with a
Pinkerton Detective Agency (Leslie Nielsen, convincingly brutal here)
to get that money, but the twist is he also has the thief's ex-lover
(Sue Lyon, good here too) in tow to pressure him. Will it work?
Well,
the film works and stays more intense than you might imagine, the
actors in good form and a consistency in the narrative and pace that
helps this build and build and build. Underrated, even if you are
not a fans of the genre, you should definitely see it once just to
see how good it is. A nice gem rediscovered.
There
are sadly no extras.
John
Struges' Mystery
Street
(1950) is a Film Noir with a well thought out mystery in its
screenplay as Ricardo Montalban (Star
Trek II)
more than carries the film as the detective trying to find out who a
dead woman is, how she got there and why was she killed. Sally
Forrest is a party gal who decides to get together with a drunken man
at a bar, not knowing his whole story. He is distraught his wife had
a miscarriage and is not making the wisest decisions.
She
goes too far when she steals his car, only to meet a mysterious
figure who shoots and kills her, then sends he freshly dead body with
his car into deep water. Then a skeleton shows up and the mystery
begins. Lt. Peter Morales (Montalban) has a early lead that brings
him to an apartment run by an eccentric owner (Elsa Lanchester,
almost stealing the film at times) who is an opportunist, who gets in
the way of the investigation and was not a fan of the deceased.
But
Sturges does an amazing directing job, was co-written by Richard
Brooks & Sydney Boehm, this was shot by no less than the
legendary John Alton, A.S.C., and the cast is really, really good
here. At least a minor classic, WOW does this gem need to be
rediscovered!
Bruce
Bennett and Marshall Thomson lead the solid supporting cast.
Extras
include a feature length audio commentary track by Alain Silver &
Elizabeth Ward, Original Theatrical Trailer, short film Murder At
Harvard and two classic MGM Technicolor animated cartoons in HD:
Little Quacker and Tom & Jerry in the Hollywood Bowl.
William
O. Brown's The
Naked Witch
(1969 aka Witchmaker)
is one of those supernatural horror films so bad, you have to see it
to believe it, with the somewhat underrated Anthony Eisley leading a
team to investigate some bizarre ritualistic murders of young,
beautiful women (I will not describe it, but its not PG-rated) and
wants to stop it all.
Unfortunately,
the low budget, campiness and inaneness are so bad, they are amusing
(its one of those kinds of films) and is worth a look, flaws and all.
The supporting cast is not bad, I like how some of this is shot and
it is typical of the increasingly more graphic B-movies in the genre
of the time, including being an independent production. The
interested and curious should check it out just to see it to believe
it. Just don't expect too much.
Extras
include a horror poster gallery and feature length audio commentary
track by media and film scholar Robert Kelly.
Last
and least, David Ayer's Working
Man 4K
(2025) is yet
another
Jason Statham formula romp where he plays someone ordinary and
simple, but is up to so much, much more, or so they say.
These
are not to expensive to make and probably turn some kind of profit,
but now more than ever, he is making the same film over and over and
over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over
again. He was a decorated, advanced military soldier, now working
construction (If
I Were A Carpenter...)
only to put down his working and measuring tools to fight human
trafficking.
It
almost trivializes some serious subjects in bad ways, maybe sometimes
doing just that, but it has way more problems than that and is for
fans only, of which there are enough that he keeps making these
formula romps. See it at your own risk.
There
are no extras, unless you count Digital Movie Code.
Now
for playback performance. The 2160p HEVC/H.265, 2.35 X 1, HDR (10;
Ultra HD Premium)-enhanced Ultra High Definition image on Black
Bag 4K
is the best-looking film here, as expected, well shot, edited and
with some nice form to it, which works better than the
softer-than-expected 1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image on
the regular Blu-ray. You would never know how good this film looks
just from the 1080p, but the 4K impresses enough. Both also have
lossless Dolby TrueHD 5.1 mixes and they are just fine with the
occasional sonic highlight and always consistent.
The
2160p HEVC/H.265, 2.35 X 1, HDR (10; Ultra HD Premium)-enhanced Ultra
High Definition image on Working Man 4K is not bad for a
usually uneventful presentation visually, as the stunts and fights
are the usual albeit consistent and the second-best performer here.
The lossless Dolby Atmos (Dolby
TrueHD 7.1 mixdown for older systems) has some down-points, but works
well when it kicks in. Still, for fans only.
The
1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image on Four Rode Out
has some damage and off parts, but color is not bad and is still very
watchable just the same. The PCM 2.0 Mono sound is not bad
throughout, no matter how aged it sounds.
The
1080p 1.33 X 1 black & white digital High Definition image
transfer on Mystery Street can sometimes show the age of the
materials used, but this is far superior a transfer to all previous
releases of the film on home video, the third-best transfer here and
you even get some demo shots above my letter grade. Impressive, like
the film itself, while the DTS-HD MA
(Master Audio) 2.0 Mono lossless mix is limited, but has been
restored well and is about as good as this film will ever sound.
The
1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Naked
Witch
can show the age of the materials used, but this still looking good
despite its issues as this looks like a real dye-transfer,
three-strip Technicolor version of the film. Watch the color shine
through when least expected and the Techniscope has some good
composition. The lossy Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono sound on this and the
softer, anamorphically enhanced DVD are good for what it is, but why
no lossless sound for the Blu-ray? Otherwise, worth a look.
To
order the Mystery
Street
Warner Archive 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
-
Nicholas Sheffo