Even with the popularity of zombie movies waning in culture,
a Zombieland sequel has potential to
reverse the recent failures in this particular undead subgenre of horror. What Zombieland: Double Tap promises is also
it’s greatest asset, and something no new season of “The Walking Dead” has ever
been able to guarantee; all of the original cast has returned. It has been ten
years since the first movie, so the reunion of Abigail Breslin, Emma Stone,
Woody Harrelson, and Jesse Eisenberg is an impressive feat. Their reunion is
met with a screenplay (Dave Callaham, Rhett Reese, and Paul Wernick) that is
clever one moment and a bit too obvious in the next, but it is an easy view at
just under 100-minutes. The inconsistency in the material prevents Zombieland: Double Tap from reaching the
level of the original, though this is without the added entertainment value of
the 4DX experience.
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The Lingering Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Athena Chu, Louis Cheung, Bob Cheung
- Directors: Mak Ho Pong, Derrick Tao
- Disc Format: Dolby, Subtitled, Surround Sound, Widescreen
- Language: Cantonese (DTS 5.1)
- Subtitles: English
- Region: Region A/1
- Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Not RatedNR
- Studio: Well Go Usa
- Release Date: October 15, 2019
- Run Time: 86 minutes
There are a lot of things that don’t make
sense in The Lingering, and that
includes the basic premise of the film. What sounds like a generic haunted
house narrative is complicated by the fact that ghosts and zombies are censored
from art by the Chinese government. This explains the careful language
describing the supernatural element as a “strange and dangerous presence”
rather than a ghost or haunting, but this film still might now have been made
if it weren’t for a bit of ambiguity and a shovelful of propaganda mixed in
with the melodrama that inevitably replaces the horror.
Kung Fu Monster Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Louis Koo, Dongyu Zhou, Bea Hayden Kuo
- Director: Andrew Lau
- Disc Format: Dolby, Subtitled, Surround Sound, Widescreen
- Language: Mandarin Chinese (DTS 5.1)
- Subtitles: English
- Region: Region A/1
- Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Not RatedNR
- Studio: Well Go Usa
- Blu-ray Release Date: October 8, 2019
- Run Time: 104 minutes
One location, bad CGI, and a storyline that
feels made for a pre-teen audience; these are the defining elements of Andy
Lau’s Kung Fu Monster. It is
disappointing in a way that a lot of Chinese cinema has become in recent years,
and a way that should be familiar to American audiences. Try as they have to
make this film entertaining to as broad of an audience as possible, the end
result is too childish for adults and may even be too monotonous for the
attention span of the modern child. It is hard to believe this filmmaker once
made Infernal Affairs.
Yesterday 4K Ultra HD Review
- Actors: Himesh Patel, Lily James, Ed Sheeran, Kate McKinnon
- Director: Danny Boyle
- Writer: Richard Curtis
- Producers: Danny Boyle, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Matthew James Wilkinson, Bernard Bellew
- Disc Format: 4K, NTSC, Subtitled
- Language: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo)
- Subtitles: French Canadian, Spanish, English
- Region: Region A/1
- Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1
- Number of discs: 2
- Rated: Parents Strongly CautionedPG-13
- Studio: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
- Release Date: September 24, 2019
- Run Time: 117 minutes
Yesterday has a great premise, joining
the ranks of a special division of romantic comedies that are blended with a
sci-fi premise. South Koreans have perfected this delicate balance with films
like The Beauty Inside and How Long Will I Love You, but there are
plenty of American ones as well. There are those that deal with time travel (Hot Tub Time Machine) and time loops (Groundhog’s Day), ones that take place
in the future (Her), alternate worlds
unlike ours (The Lobster) and
alternate worlds similar to our own (The
Invention of Lying, Eternal Sunshine
of the Spotless Mind), but all of these films made full use of their
premise. Yesterday has a great
concept that it seems to abandon for the romantic elements, rather than having
them work in tandem. Even worse, the message of the movie becomes contradictory
in its need to provide a satisfying and moral resolution.
Child’s Play Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Aubrey Plaza
- Format: NTSC
- Language: English
- Subtitles: English
- Region: Region A/1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: RestrictedR
- Studio: Mgm (Video & DVD)
- Release Date: September 24, 2019
Hollywood had
long been obsessed with remaking popular films from the past, and the horror genre
has often been the favorite testing ground for these updated adaptations. More
often than not, the duplicate is just that, a pale imitation of the original, rarely
capable of capturing the original magic, much less creating some of its own.
With news of a Child’s Play remake, I expected this trend to continue,
particularly with news of Don Mancini disassociated himself with the film. But
considering the downward spiral of Mancini’s franchise (which continues
simultaneously with home-entertainment releases), this turned out to be a good
thing.
X-Men: Dark Phoenix Blu-ray Review
- Actors: James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender, Jennifer Lawrence, Nicholas Hoult, Sophie Turner
- Director: Simon Kinberg
- Disc Format: NTSC, Subtitled
- Language: English
- Subtitles: English
- Region: Region A/1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Parents Strongly CautionedPG-13
- Studio: 20th Century Fox
- Release Date: September 17, 2019
The way that
superhero/comic book movies are received by audiences is beginning to feel a
bit like high school. If a film is thought to be popular, there are those who
make up their mind about it before they have even taken the time to get to
figure out if their expectations will be met. And then there are those films
that the masses decide are a waste even before they have been released. We have
seen this fan-backlash before, and it seemed that every comic-book fan I knew
would roll their eyes at the mention of Dark
Phoenix, long before it was in theaters. I find this mob mentality to be
ironically tantamount to the popularity cliques of high school that likely made
life miserable for most of the same comic book fans without ever taking the
time to get to know them.
Buster Keaton Collection: Volume 3 Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Buster Keaton, Sally O'Neil, T. Roy Barnes, Snitz Edwards, Francis McDonald
- Director: Buster Keaton
- Writers: Paul Girard Smith, Clyde Bruckman, Al Boasberg, Jean C. Havez, Charles Henry Smith
- Language: English (DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0), English (DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1)
- Region: Region A/1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Not RatedNR
- Studio: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
- Release Date: August 20, 2019
- Run Time: 136 minutes
The first two
volumes of the Buster Keaton collection, following the release of a fantastic
documentary to remind us all why he was such an icon of the silent comedy era,
included some of the slapstick star’s most recognizable titles. The first one
included The General, while the
second featured Sherlock Jr. as
headliner. While neither of the titles in Volume Three carry the same
historical significance, it does include one of Keaton’s personal favorites and
another with an unforgettable premise. Even if these aren’t the most famous of
Keaton’s films, they are every bit as memorable as the ones in Volumes 1 and 2.
The Brink Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Max Zhang, Shawn Yue, Janice Man
- Directors: Jonathan Li
- Format: Dolby, Subtitled, Surround Sound, Widescreen
- Language: Cantonese (DTS 5.1)
- Subtitles: English
- Region: Region A/1 (Read more about DVD/Blu-ray formats.)
- Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Not RatedNR
- Studio: Well Go Usa
- DVD Release Date: August 13, 2019
- Run Time: 100 minutes
A few great
action sequences alone do not make for a good movie. But when a film has good
action, it becomes easier to dismiss minor flaws within the narrative. The Brink isn’t a film full of flaws so
much as one that feels generic and forgettable save one or two carefully
constructed action set pieces that impress. The action is good, but never so
impressive that it is able to make the movie memorable. It doesn’t help that
the simple premise is presented in a convoluted manner and the leading man
seems to employ slight variations on a single emotion for the full run-time.
The Hustle Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Anne Hathaway, Rebel Wilson, Alex Sharp, Dean Norris
- Director: Chris Addison
- Writers: Stanley Shapiro, Paul Henning, Dale Launer, Jac Schaeffer
- Producers: Rebel Wilson, Roger Birnbaum
- Disc Format: NTSC, Subtitled
- Language: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), English (Dolby Digital 5.1), English (DTS 5.1), English (DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1), French Canadian (Dolby Digital 5.1), Spanish (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Subtitles: French Canadian, Spanish, English
- Region: Region A/1
- Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1
- Rated: Parents Strongly CautionedPG-13
- Studio: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
- Release Date: August 20, 2019
- Run Time: 94 minutes
There was online
outrage with the decision to turn Ghostbusters
into a female franchise. Whether it was coincidence or design, the gender
reversal of old films shifted to properties with far less of a devoted fanbase.
This meant less controversy over the repurposing of the material for female
protagonists, but it also meant far less interest. There may have been no
pushback for a gender reversal Overboard
or What Women Want, but that’s
probably because few people had little interest in the original narrative to
begin with. I’m afraid The Hustle
falls under this category, with most younger audiences unlikely to have even
heard of Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, and
fewer the one that came before. The biggest problem with the film isn’t a derivative
story, however, but the way that it loses all of its bite in an effort to make
sure a feminist message lasts, even when it contradicts the themes and
structure of the original film.
Avengers: Endgame Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Mark Ruffalo, Chris Hemsworth, Scarlett Johansson
- Directors: Joe Russo, Anthony Russo
- Disc Format: NTSC, Subtitled
- Language: English (Dolby Digital 2.0), English (DTS-HD High Res Audio), French (Dolby Digital 5.1), Spanish (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Subtitles: French, Spanish, English
- Region: Region A/1
- Number of discs: 2
- Rated: Parents Strongly CautionedPG-13
- Studio: MARVEL
- Release Date: August 13, 2019
- Run Time: 181 minutes
In the new world
of Hollywood blockbusters, which is
essentially all the industry seems interested in pursuing these days, two types
of audiences must be considered: the average moviegoers, and the fan. When
dealing with the average moviegoer, they are often reading film reviewers and
critics because they are ignorant or undecided. They turn to the expert opinion
(which is admittedly still subjective) in order to make a decision, whether it
is deciding to see a film or coming to a decision about how they feel about the
viewing experience/end product. Fans, on the other hand, mostly already have
their mind made up; they are reading the professionals to either reinforce
these preexisting beliefs, or to disagree with them. Often they only
recognizing expertise if it is confirming their own opinion, otherwise
insisting that all bad reviews must come from a bitter failed filmmaker rather
than admitting any validity to an opinion that besmirches something they love.
Poms Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Diane Keaton, Jacki Weaver, Pam Grier, Celia Weston, Phyllis Somerville
- Director: Zara Hayes
- Writer: Shane Atkinson
- Producers: Kelly McCormick, Alex Saks, Andy Evans, Ade Shannon, Celyn Jones
- Disc Format: NTSC, PAL, Subtitled
- Language: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), English (Dolby Digital 5.1), English (DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1)
- Subtitles: Spanish, English
- Region: Region A/1
- Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
- Number of discs: 2
- Rated: Parents Strongly CautionedPG-13
- Studio: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
- Release Date: August 6, 2019
- Run Time: 92 minutes
Poms reminded me of a student film. Not
every student film; as a film professor, I have seen many, and there seem to be
two different types. There are the ones that are taking the opportunity to
experiment and test boundaries, which usually results in the prototypical art
student film, seeming to point to aspirations in avant-garde and independent
filmmaking. Poms falls under the
other category, with the students aspiring to imitate the Hollywood
formulas, despite budgetary limitations. While it is less noticeable than it
might be in a more action-oriented genre, there is much that appears amateur
within Poms, despite the best efforts
and good intentions by the cast and crew.
Shadow Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Deng Chao, Sun Li, Zheng Kai
- Director: Zhang Yimou
- Disc Format: Dolby, NTSC, Subtitled, Surround Sound, Widescreen
- Language: Mandarin Chinese (Dolby Digital 5.1), English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Subtitles: English, Mandarin Chinese
- Region: Region A/1
- Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Not RatedNR
- Studio: Well Go Usa
- Release Date: August 13, 2019
- Run Time: 116 minutes
Shadow is a film
that fulfills generic expectations while simultaneously, inexplicably,
seemingly defies them to create something wholly unique, or at the very least
revolutionary in its ability to revise a genre. We saw this before with the
widespread success of Ang Lee’s Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon; a subtitled film which saw unprecedented success with
Western audiences. Fittingly, Crouching
Tiger was surpassed by Zhang Yimou’s Hero
as the most profitable foreign film to be released in America (much of this success owed
to Lee’s film paving the way, as well as Quentin Tarantino’s name attached as a
seal of quality). Yimou’s career has rarely since met the same cultural
response, though he has had varied success with the critics. Shadow seems to
mark a return for both.
How Long Will I Love U Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Jia Ying Lei, Li Ya Tong
- Directors: Lun Xu
- Format: Subtitled, Widescreen
- Region: Region A/1 (Read more about DVD/Blu-ray formats.)
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Not RatedNR
- Studio: Well Go Usa
- DVD Release Date: August 6, 2019
- Run Time: 101 minutes
Following a
tradition of blending the romantic genre narrative with icons and story devices
from the science-fiction and fantasy genres (a trend that seems particularly
prominent within Asian cinema in recent years), How Long Will I Love U is a refreshingly original idea, even if
there remains a great deal of predictability/familiarity in its execution. In
many ways, this has been the complaint about Danny Boyle’s Yesterday by critics, but the audience for romantic comedies is
rarely one clamoring for creativity over the base enjoyments of the genre, and How Long Will I Love U makes certain not
to sacrifice these expected elements, even if they counter the unpredictability
of the science-fiction elements in the narrative.
The Island Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Qi Shu, Huang Bo, Wang Baoqiang
- Directors: Huang Bo
- Format: Dolby, NTSC, Subtitled, Surround Sound, Widescreen
- Region: Region A/1 (Read more about DVD/Blu-ray formats.)
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Not RatedNR
- Studio: Well Go Usa
- DVD Release Date: July 30, 2019
- Run Time: 134 minutes
The Island has a premise that cleverly
blends the apocalypse-paranoia themes common recently with a narrative that
filters “Lord of the Flies” through an office hierarchy. It is an entertaining
modern parable about a group of flawed individuals who could easily stand in as
representatives for the variety of people existing in society together today.
Each have their roles in civilized society, but once the office workers think
that the world has been destroyed by an apocalyptic event, it alters their
inherent civility.
The Swindlers Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Hyun Bin, Yoo Ji-tae, Bae Seong-woo
- Director: Jang Chang-Won
- Disc Format: Dolby, NTSC, Subtitled, Surround Sound, Widescreen
- Language: Korean
- Region: Region A/1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Not RatedNR
- Studio: Well Go Usa
- Release Date: July 30, 2019
- Run Time: 117 minutes
I almost feel
bad for modern South Korean filmmakers. This generation is following one of the
most innovative and prolific in the nation’s entire cinematic history, and many
of the latest endeavors simply pale in comparison. The Swindlers is a perfect example of how South Korean cinema has
learned from the successes of Hollywood ,
while also retaining very distinct national themes (revenge narratives are
common across multiple genres). There is no difference between the way that
Chang-Won Jang adopts the Ocean’s 11/Now You See Me/The Italian Job formula for Korean audiences and how Chan-Wook Park
did the same with 90s thrillers (specifically Fincher films, The Game and Se7en) for his iconic ‘Vengeance Trilogy’ (Oldboy being the most influential in the West), other than the
familiarity with this structure and the quality of the films imitated. The
reason I feel bad for Jang is the same that I felt bad for every Tarantino-hack
in the late 90s, but it isn’t enough to make The Swindlers a more memorable film.
Buster Keaton Collection: Volume 2 Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Buster Keaton, Kathryn McGuire, Ward Crane, Frederick Vroom, Joseph Keaton
- Directors: Buster Keaton, Donald Crisp
- Writers: Jean C. Havez, Joseph A. Mitchell, Clyde Bruckman
- Producers: Buster Keaton, Joseph M. Schenck
- Disc Format: NTSC
- Language: English (DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0), English (DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1)
- Region: Region A/1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Not RatedNR
- DVD Release Date: July 9, 2019
- Run Time: 111 minutes
Buster Keaton’s
most remembered and technically accomplished feature films is, without a doubt,
The General (featured in Volume 1 of
the Buster Keaton Collection). If we are talking about innovation within the
medium, however, few films have contributed quite so much as the accomplished Sherlock Jr., which is featured in
Volume 2 alongside The Navigator,
which displays Keaton’s endless creativity with slapstick and comedic timing. Sherlock Jr. is not only a great early
slapstick film, it is one of the first films to really expand on the potential
discovered in Georges Méliès’ ‘magic show’ shorts.
Master Z: Ip Man Legacy Blu-ray Review
- Actors: Michelle Yeoh, Tony Jaa, Dave Bautista, Max Zhang
- Disc Format: Dolby, HiFi Sound, Subtitled, Surround Sound, Widescreen
- Dubbed: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Not RatedNR
- Studio: Well Go Usa
- Release Date: July 23, 2019
- Run Time: 107 minutes
There were so
many diverging plots in Ip Man 3, one
would be forgiven for forgetting the place Cheung Tin Chi (Max Zhang) has in
the series, despite his being given the first spin-off film in the franchise.
With that being said, Master Z: Ip Man
Legacy lives up to its name, and earns the honor of carrying ‘Ip Man’ in
the title, despite his complete absence in physical presence from the film. For
those eager for the upcoming Ip Man 4,
Master Z is a welcome deviation in
the meantime.
The Intruder DVD Review
- Actors: Dennis Quaid, Michael Ealy, Meagan Good, Joseph Sikora
- Director: Deon Taylor
- Format: NTSC, Subtitled
- Language: English
- Subtitles: Thai, Mandarin Chinese, Korean, English, French, Spanish, Vietnamese, English
- Dubbed: French, Spanish
- Audio Description: English
- Region: Region 1
- Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Rated: Parents Strongly CautionedPG-13
- Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
- DVD Release Date: July 30, 2019
- Digital Copy Expiration Date: December 31, 2020
- Run Time: 102 minutes
When a horror
film’s social or political subtext becomes more important than the logic of the
narrative and the characters within it, it is somewhat like being able to see
behind the curtain. The surface narrative of horror should be strong enough to
support the themes, not the other way around. While The Intruder is clearly playing upon some real American fears, with
an aggressive white landowner as the villain against a newly
arrived/assimilated black couple, it does so with zero subtlety and
consistently illogical behavior written into each character as a lazy way of
moving the story (and its racially-driven themes) forward. Taking the home
invasion narrative away from the post-9/11 terrorist anxieties and replacing it
with fears of white nationalists refusing to surrender ‘their’ America to the
minorities they consider to be ‘less American,’ all that The Intruder is missing is a good film to go with its themes (ones
already visited in the last installment of The Purge franchise).
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