Thursday, January 9, 2025

THE LORDS OF FLATBUSH (1974) (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Blu-ray Review)

THE LORDS OF FLATBUSH (1974) 

Label: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment 
Region Code: Region-Free
Rating: PG 
Duration: 84 Minutes 13 Seconds 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1) 
Director: Martin Davidson
Cast: 
Perry King, Henry Winkler, Sylvester Stallone, Susan Blakely

The Lords of Flatbush (1974), directed by  Stephen F. 
Verona (Boardwalk) and Martin Davidson (Eddie and the Cruisers) a coming-of-age tale about four teens growing up in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn in the late-50s who dress in greaser attire, black leather jackets,  and call themselves The Lords of Flatbush. Out four main characters are ,Stanley (Sylvester Stallone, Rocky), Butchey (Henry Winkler, Happy Days), Chico (Perry King, The Possession of Joel Delaney) and Wimpy (Paul Mace, The Panic in Needle Park), who are all high school classmates and sort of wannabe tough guys, but who at the end of the day are just bored teenagers looking for a bit of fun, and along the way having to grow-up a bit. Stanley (Stallone) and Chico (King ) get the meatiest of the stories, with Stallone knocking up Frannie (Maria Smith, The Incredible Shrinking Woman) and having to get a job and get married, while being roped into buying her a $1600 dollar engagement ring, and Chico, whose sole mission in life seems to be to go all the way with as many teen girls as possible, including the all-to-easy Annie (Renee Paris, Bad) and the harder-to-get new girl Jane Susan Blakely (My Mom's A Werewolf). The film is a pretty loose collection of happenings with no real throughline, the shiftless teens boost a car, cause a ruckus in the classroom, hang out at a pool hall, and get into a gang rivalries. The film is most notable for starring a pre-Rocky Stallone and a pre-Happy Days Winkler, and being parts of the 1970's wave of greaser nostalgia that included Grease, Happy Days, The Wanderers and Sha Na Na. The standout here is Stallone, looking like a young Robert Mitchum (The Night of the Hunter) wrapped up in greaser attire, forced into maturity by the unplanned pregnancy. 

The flick is pretty rough looking, shot on what appears to be quite a low-budget, 1970's Brooklyn doesn't quite look late-50's period authentic but they do decent work attempting it. Lighting of often pretty poor, and the soundtrack is pretty terrible, the songs often playing too loud over scene, drowning out dialogue. If you're a fan of 50's greaser revivals like Grease, The Wanderers, American Graffiti or even Streets of Fire, you'll probably get a decent kick out of this one, but it's much lower tier than any of those, and is more interesting for it's young cast than anything story or production related. 
 
Audio/Video: The Lords of Flatbush arrives on region-free Blu-ray for it's 50th Anniversary from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment in 1080p HD framed in 1.85:1 widescreen. The image looks solid, grain is course but filmic, colors are well saturated, black levels are decent, there's some speckling and a green lean in the color-grade, but otherwise a solid presentation that looks authentic to the film's scrappy low-budget production. Audio comes by way of English DTS-HD MA 2.0 dual-mono with optional English subtitles. Like the video the audio is true to the scrappy low-budget production, some of the film's dialogue scenes was not captured all that well, seemingly mic'd in a way that it is often muffled or acoustically odd, but that goes back to the source elements and is no fault of the transfer. The same can be said of the songs used on the soundtrack, which often drown out moments of dialogue as the songs play, this seems authentic tot he original intent of the filmmakers. With those shortcomings I still found it it a serviceable track, but perfection it is not. 

The sole extra on the disc is a dingy looking fullframe 55-second Trailer. The lack of new extras is rather disappointing considering this is touted as 50th Anniversary Edition, but is basically a barebones release, this is certainly a missed opportunity. On the plus side I do believe this is the first official U.S. Blu-ray release of the flick, and I am pleased that Sony continue to  mine their back catalog with physical media releases. The single-disc release arrives in a standard keepcase with a single-sided sleeve of artwork featuring the original movie poster.  

Special Features:
- Trailer (0:55) 

Buy it: 
Physical Media Land - use code: MOVIEDEAL at checkout to get 5% off your entire order! 


Wednesday, January 8, 2025

Newly scanned in 4K, Roger Corman’s “Monster From the Ocean Floor” (1954) on Blu-ray & DVD, Feb. 4th




MONSTER FROM THE OCEAN FLOOR (1954) 

Horror Strikes From the Murky Depths of the Sea in Roger Corman’s First Feature Film as a Producer in 1954

The first feature-length film produced by the iconic king of pop cinema, Roger Corman, Monster From the Ocean Floor was inspired by a Los Angeles Times story Corman read about a one-man submarine manufactured by Aerojet General. He couldn’t pay for utilizing the sub in his move, but he promised plenty of publicity … and a deal was struck.

For his inaugural endeavor, Corman recruited first-timers William Danch (Shazam!, The Jim Backus Show, Mickey) to write the screenplay and director Wyott Ordung (A Whale of a Tale, The Mummy and the Curse of the Jackals, The Navy vs. the Night Monsters). Other first-timers included actor Stuart Wade (Teenage Monster) and, soon to be a regular Corman player, Jonathan Haze (The Little Shop of Horrors, Not of This Earth, It Conquered the World), who was given a bit part as the ill-fated abalone diver.

In the film, Julie Blair (Anne Kimbell, Port Sinister, Girls at Sea) is an American artist vacationing at a seaside village in Mexico where rumors swirl about a man-eating creature dwelling in the cove. Steve Dunning (Wade) is a marine biologist doing research in the area in a one-man submarine. While Julie thinks there may be some truth to the tales, Steve is skeptical … Nonetheless romance soon blooms. But when the mysterious death of an abalone diver (Haze) and Julie’s own terrifying encounter prove that the creature exists, Dunning takes to the depths in a daring underwater battle against the monstrous predator.

SPECIAL FEATURES:
- Tom Weaver and The Weaver Players provide full-length commentary, which includes archival contributions from Roger Corman
- Liner notes by Weaver
- Ballyhoo Motion Pictures presents two new documentaries, Bob Baker: From Monsters to Marionettes and Roger Corman: Becoming a B-Movie Maker
- Stills gallery, courtesy of Mike Barnum
- Original 35mm theatrical trailer
- Re-cut 2025 trailer.

TECH SPECS:
Monster From the Ocean Floor is presented with an aspect ratio of 1.37:1. Discs are region free and include English SDH. Audio is DTS-HD/Dolby AC3s.


Film Masters is a consortium of historians and enthusiasts who seek to celebrate the preservation and restoration of films. We are archivists, committed to storing film elements for future generations and reviving films that have been sitting dormant for decades. By scanning in 2K and 4K, we give these lesser-known films the red-carpet treatment they deserve. Leveraging modern means of distribution to release forgotten films back into the world, we also produce original bonus materials, including feature-length documentaries, which aid audiences in contextualizing and celebrating these works of art as they were meant to be. Visit us online at: www.FilmMasters.com





Film Masters
Genre: Cult/Horror
B+W
Not Rated
Format: Blu-ray & DVD
Running Time: Approx. 64 Minutes (Plus 90 Minutes Special Features + Stills Gallery)

Suggested Retail Price: $29.95 Blu-ray / $19.95 DVD
Street Date: Feb. 4, 2005-2008

Sunday, January 5, 2025

MCBASTARD'S BEST OF 2024 - THE BEST OF NEW FLICKS, STREAMERS, 4K UHD, BLU-RAY, BOX SETS & FILM DISCOVERIES!


MCBASTARD'S BEST OF 2024

 'Best of' to me is something so subjective, especially in regard physical media, but these Top2 5 lists are unapologetically my favorite feature films, streaming, physical media releases and film discoveries of this past year. There's plenty I didn't get around to see that I wanted to, so there's bound to be some obvious holes, but hey, I can only judge what I actually saw. The lists are in no particular order, other than alphabetical - if you made it to the Best of 2024 congrats, that's amazing, because 2024 in my estimation was the fucking best year yet for physical media releases, my wallet took a savage beating this year, and I wouldn't have it it any other way! I will also note that 2024 was such a strong year I upped my Best list from Top 15 as we did in 2023 to a Top 25!

BEST NEW FILMS IN 2024

Here they are, my favorite new flicks of 2024 that I saw both at the cinema and streaming at home - keep in mind, these are in no particular order other than alphabetical. 

1. ABIGAIL
2. ALIENS: ROMULUS 
3. APARTMENT 7A 
5. THE BIKERIDERS 
7. DEADPOOL & WOLVERINE 
10. THE FIRST OMEN 
12. GODZILLA MINUS ONE
14. HERETIC 
15. IN A VIOLENT NATURE 
17. LATE NIGHT WITH THE DEVIL
18. LONGLEGS 
20. NOSFERATU
22. SALEM'S LOT
23. SMILE 2 
24. STRANGE DARLING 
25. THE SUBSTANCE
    
BEST OF STREAMING SERIES

With as many movies as I watch it's hard to believe I actually find time to watch as many streaming series as I do, but I do - these are my favorites of series that hit the streaming platforms this year. I thought it was another stellar year of streaming programming - especially for genre fans.

1. 3 BODY PROBLEM (Netflix)
2. BATMAN: THE CAPED CRUSADER (Amazon Prime)
3. THE BOYS: S4 (Amazon Prime)
4. CREATURE COMMANDOS (Max)
5. CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM: SEASON 12 (Max)
6. DUNE PROPHECY (Max)
7. FALLOUT (Amazon Prime)
8. HOUSE OF THE DRAGON: S2 (Max)
9. HYSTERIA: S1 (Peacock) 
11. THE LORD OF THE RINGS: RINGS OF POWER S2 (Amazon Prime) 
12. ONLY MURDERERS IN THE BUILDING: S5 (Hulu)
13. OUTER RANGE: S2 (Amazon Prime) 
14. THE PENGUIN: S1 (Max)
15. SKELETON CREW: S1 (Disney+)
16. SWEET TOOTH: S5 (Netflix)
17. TERMINATOR ZERO: S1 (Netflix)  
18. THEM: S2 (Amazon Prime)
19. TIRES (Netflix)
20. TRUE DETECTIVE: NIGHT COUNTRY (Max)
21. X-MEN '97 (Disney+)
22. WEDNESDAY: S1 (Netflix)
23. THE WALKING DEAD: DARYL DIXON THE BOOK OF CAROL (AMC)
24. THE WALKING DEAD: THE ONES WHO LIVE (AMC)
25. WHAT WE DO IN THE SHADOWS: S6 (Hulu)

BEST OF 4K UHD

We've been hearing about the death of physical media for a few years now, yet here we are with another fantastic year that was absolutely packed to the freaking gills with amazing physical media releases, particaurly re-issues of catalog titles and cult films on 4K UHD - from the obscure to classic major studio releases, we were truly spoiled rotten in 2024. The were my favorite 25 4K UHD releases of the year!

1. A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET (1984)  Warner Bros.
2. CEMETERY MAN (1994) Severin Films
3. THE CASE OF THE BLOODY IRIS (1972) Celluloid Dreams
4. CHINATOWN (1974) Paramount) 
5. THE CONAN CHRONICLES (1982-1984) Arrow Video
6. DEATHDREAM (1974) Blue Underground 
7. GHOULIES II (1987) MVD Rewind Collection
8. GUMMO (1997) Criterion Collection
9. THE HITCHER (1986) Second Sight Films 
10. HAPPINESS (1998) Criterion Collection
11. HIGH CRIMES (1973) Blue Underground 
12. HIGH TENSION (2003) Second Sight Films 
13. THE KEEP (1984) Vinegar Syndrome
14. KILLER KLOWNS FROM OUTER SPACE (1988) Scream Factory 
15. LITTLE DARLINGS (1980) Cinematograph
16. LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR (1977) Vinegar Syndrome
17. NORTH BY NORTHWEST (1959) Warner Bros. Discovery
18. OPERA (1987) Severin Films 
19. POSSESOR (2020) Second Sight Films 
20. THE SEARCHERS (1956) Warner Archive 
21. SOUTHERN COMFORT (1981) Vinegar Syndrome 
22. SPIDER LABYRINTH (1988) Severin Films
23. THE TENANT (1976) Vinegar Syndrome
24. THE TERMINATOR (1984) Warner Bros. Discovery
25. TRICK OR TREAT (1986) (Red Shirt Pictures/Synapse Films) 

BEST OF BLU-RAY

It was another wonderful year of Blu-ray releases as well, so much terrific stuff getting HD disc releases, some for the first time, and some just getting amazing re-issues, some coming from major studios, but most of 'em coming from boutique labels who have carved out deep, cult-cinema niches, dusting off cult and rarities I never thought would see the light of day. Again, these are in no particular order, other than A-Z,  and these choices cater to my specific tastes, and do not necessarily represent the most technically robust presentations, nor the ones with the most prolific extras - though there are plenty that look wonderful and have awesome extras. The main deciding factor is the level of excitement it generated for me when I had it in my grubby physical-media loving hands. 

1. BAD COMPANY (1972) Fun City Editions 
2. THE BEAST WITH FIVE FINGERS (1947) Warner Archive
3. THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT (1999) Second Sight Films 
4. BLOOD TRACKS (1985) Vinegar Syndrome 
5. CROCODILE (1978) Synapse Films 
6. DEATH SQUAD (1985) Mondo Macabro 
7. DON'T CHANGE HANDS (1975) Severin Films
8. THE FACTS OF MURDER (1959) Radiance Films
9. FUNERAL HOME (1980) Scream Factory 
10. GHOST DANCE (1982) Vinegar Syndrome
11. HEAVENLY BODIES (1984) Fun City Editions 
12. HOLLYWOOD 90028 (1974) Grindhouse Releasing 
13. IMPULSE (1974) Grindhouse Releasing 
14. INSIDE (2007) Second Sight Films 
15. JOYSTICKS (1983) MVD Rewind Collection
16. KILL BUTTERFLY KILL (1983) Neon Eagle Video 
17. THE MAD BOMBER (1973) Severin Films 
18. THE MASK OF FU MANCHU (1932) Warner Archive 
19. NINJA TERMINATOR (1984) Neon Eagle Video
20. THE PRIMEVALS (1994) Full Moon Entertainment
21. RATMAN (1988) Cauldron Films 
22. REDNECK MILLER (1976) Film Masters 
23. SCALA!!!  OR, THE INCREDIBLY STRANGE RISE AND FALL OF THE WORLD'S  ILDEST CINEMA AND HOW IT INFLUENCED A MIXED-UP GENERATION OF WEIRDOS ANS MISFITS (2024) Severin Films
24. VILLAGE OF DOOM (1983) Unearthed Films 
25. ZERO WOMAN: RED HANDCUFFS (1974) Neon Eagle Video

BEST OF BOXSETS

There were so many wonderful box set this year, collections and multi-film sets that explored everything from low budget cinema auteurs, to classic animation and Italian horror compendiums. So many in fact that I couldn't even come close to affording everything I wanted to own, or even make time to pour through several sets that are already sitting on my shelf. So again, this sampling is just what I had access to, the money for, and the time to watch! 

1. ALL THE HAUNTS BE OUR: A COMPENDIUM OF FOLK HORROR - VOLUME TWO (Severin Films) 
2. THE CLASSIC GHOSTS: 1970S GOTHIC TELEVISION (1973) Kino Cult
4. CRUEL BITANNIA: THREE KILLER THRILLERS FROM THE U.K. (1971-1974) Vinegar Syndrome 
6. DARIO ARGENTO'S DEEP CUTS (1972-1987) Severin Films 
8. FORGOTTEN GIALLI VOL. 7 (1983-1987) Vinegar Syndrome 
9. GOLDEN HARVEST VOL. 1: SUPRNATURAL SHOCKERS (1990-1992) Scream Factory 
10. GREG ARAKI'S TEEN APOCALYPSE COLLECTION (1993-1997) Criterion Collection
12. HELLRAISER QUARTET OF TORMENT Arrow Video 
13. HOMEGROWN HORRORS VOL. 2 (1989-1990) Vinegar Syndrome 
14. THE HOUSES OF DOOM (1989) Cauldron Films
15.  INSIDE THE MIND OF COFFIN JOE Arrow Video 
16. LOONEY TUNES COLLECTOR'S CHOICE VOLS. 1-4 Warner Archive
17. THE NICO MASTORAKIS COLLECTION Arrow Video 
19. SEINFELD: THE COMPLETE SERIES (1989-1998) Sony
21. SPANISH BLOODBATH: NIGHT OF THE SKULL, VIOLENT BLOODBATH, THE FISH WITH THE EYES OF GOLD (1974) Vinegar Syndrome 
22. SUPER FRIENDS: THE COMPLETE SERIES (1973-1985) Warner Bros.
23. THE THIN MAN COLLECTION Warner Archive
24. PERIL & DISTRESS: AND SOON THE DARKNESS & SUDDEN TERROR Kino
25. I WALKED WITH A ZOMBIE (1943) + THE SEVENTH VICTIM (1943) Criterion Collection 

FILM DISCOVERIES OF 2024

These were my favorite first-time watches of the year that I would consider absolute gems worth seeking out. 


1. 3 GODFATHERS (1948) Warner Archive 
2. THE BAT WHISPERS (1930) VCI Entertainment 
3. BLACK EYE (1972) Warner Archive 
5. BURN WITCH BURN (1962) aka NIGHT OF THE EAGLE (Kino)
6. CABIN IN THE SKY (1943) Warner Archive 
7. CREEP (2014) Second Sight Films 
8. DOOR-TO-DOOR MANIAC (1966) Film Masters 
9. EIGHTEEN YEARS IN PRISON (1967) Radiance Films 
10. EVERYON WILL BURN (2021) Drafthouse Films 
11. THE GROUP (1966) Imprint Films
12. JAPAN ORGANIZED CRIME BOSS (1969) Radiance Film 
13. JOYRIDE (1977) Cinématographe 
14. LOLA (2022) Severin Films 
15 KID FROM KWANGTUN (1982) 88 Films 
16. MADEMOISELLE (1966) MGM
17. MIRROR MIRROR (1990) Dark Force Entertainment 
18. THE OFFENCE (1973) Imprint Films
19. PRIME CUT (1972) Kino 
20. SPECIAL SILENCERS (1982) Mondo Macabro 
21. STREET SCENE (1931) VCI Entertainment 
22. THIEVES LIKE US (1974)  Cinématographe
23. THE STONE TAPE (1972) 101 Films 
24. THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT (1940) Warner Archive 
25. TORMENTED (1960) Film Masters 

ODDITY (2024) (Acorn Media International Blu-ray Review)


ODDITY (2024) 

Label: Acorn Media International
Region Code: A,B
Rating: 15 Cert 
Duration: 97 Minutes 29 Seconds 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 5.1 Surround with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (2.39:1) 
Director: Damian McCarthy
Cast: Carolyn Bracken, Gwilym Le, Johnny French, Caroline Menton

The eerie Oddity (2024) opens with Dani (Carolyn Bracken, The Gone) alone at country home that she and her psychiatric doctor husband Ted (Gwilym Lee, Bohemian Rhapsody) are renovating, a place with very poor phone reception 'natch. As night sets in she phones and checks in with her husband and her sister Darcy from the seemingly only spit in the house capable of reception, a second floor corner, and then settles in for the night. That's when she receives a  knock at the door. Answering through a security peep hole a man with a glass eye appears, his name is 
Olin Boole (Tadhg Murphy, The Northman), and tells her that she is in danger, that he saw a man enter her home, and she needs to get out. The encounter is alarming, and the idea of a strange man watching let alone the threat of a potential home invader is unsettling. Dani decides to err on the side of caution and to stay inside behind the locked door, refusing entry to the man, while he says says he understands her hesitancy, and that he walk into town and alert the authorities. The timeline then jumps ahead about a year later, we learn that Dani was found murdered after the encounter, and that Boole, who turned out to be a recently released patient of her husband's, is the suspected culprit. He himself having been mysteriously murdered at a halfway house not long after. 

At that point we meet Dani’s blind twin sister Darcy (Bracken, again), still grieving for her sister. She runs a cursed-object curio shop she inherited from her mother, and is a self-proclaimed psychometrists, someone who can get a psychic impression of a person based on her contact with a physical object they owned. At her shop she is visited by Dani's widow Ted who gifts her something quite strange, the glass eye of Boole, which was discovered with the belongings of a recently deceased patient Declan (Jonathan French, Caveat), who was a witness tot he murder. While he is a non-believer when it comes to parapsychology and the supernatural he says he knew it was important for her to have, to perhaps give her a sense of closure. He also notes, much to Daarcy's dismay, that he has a new girlfriend named Yana (Caroline Menton, TVs All Creatures Great and Small), a pharmaceutical sales rep he met at the hospital. 

The next day, after having read the object Ted gifted her, Darcy pays an unexpected visit to Ted at the house where her sister was murdered, and where Ted now lives. Her arrival is preceded by the delivery of a mysterious wooden crate she has sent in advance. The unplanned visit seems unwelcome, with Ted un comfortably excusing himself saying he needs to get to work, leaving his girlfriend Yana alone with Darcy, who insists on spending the night, making Yana quite uncomfortable. Yana tries to go lave to stay the night at her apartment, already nervous about being alone in  the house where Ted's wife was murdered, but she seems to have misplaced her key, forcing her to spend time with Darcy. 

It turns out Darcy in not convinced that it was Boole who killed her sister, and she is determined to prove who the true killer, or killers, are using her ability to psychically read physical objects. She also reveals the contents of the wooden crate, an unsettling life-sized, hand-carved wooden mannequin made by her father as a fifth wedding anniversary gift to her mother, which she has unpacked and set at the dining room table, giving  Yana quite a startle. As the night wears on Darcy and Yana engage in some rather pointed and bitchy conversation, and through psychic impressions we see in flashback what transpired that night of the knock at the door, with Darcy dead-set on avenging her twin's murder and exposing and punishing the guilty parties, with the help of her creepy wooden mannequin. 

This is such a dread-fueled creepfest, from the opening scene with it's intense stranger-at-the-door scenario I was hooked. The atmosphere is masterful, there's a palpable sense of dread, and the psychic-detective elements of it was quite intriguing. There's a familiar Golem element to it as well with the wooden mannequin, which is present for the last half of the film, but it just sort of sits at the table with it's creepy wooden mouth open in what looks like an eternal scream. It just sits there for most of the film, but at certain points it appears to have moved ever so slightly. The psychological elements of it all are also keenly edged and well-executed, with a few well-placed and well-earned jump scares that certainly sent a surge of fright through me as the slow-build tension kept ratcheting up, building to a crescendo and spooky coda that left me slack-jawed with just how well executed this old fashioned fright flick was pulled off. The look of the wood carved mannequin adds an elements of folk horror to the processing, atop the psychological tension and the supernatural psychic detective story, it really kept things fresh, not knowing exactly how it was all going to pan out. Even though I thought I had it pegged early on it, and I was correct about a lot of where I thought this was going, it did it in such an interesting and well-executed way, with a superb cast, that it defied by expectations with nice little touches that I did not see coming, giving be goosebumps throughout, making this easily one of my favorite new flicks of 2024. 

Audio/Video:
Oddity (2024) arrives on Blu-ray from Acorn Media International in 1080p HD framed in 2.39:1 widescreen. The digital shot film looks terrific, plenty of mostly dreary, natural looking colors. We get warm wood and cool stone interiors, dismal exteriors, and inky shadows, and an occasional burst of colors like doomed Dani's indoor tent set-up with a warm yellow permeating the underlit interior. I found the shadow detail is slightly lacking at times during the darkest scenes, but overall a solid HD presentation with a well-authored disc without any compression issues. 
Audio come by way of English DTS-HD MA 51 with optional English subtitles. The track is clean and well-balanced, dialogue is nicely prioritized, and the creepy score by Richard G. Mitchell (Caveat) hits nicely, as do tasty needle drops by Irish folk band Harry Bird and the Rubber Wellies, and R&B staple Little Willie John. 

Extras include a 5-min Behind-the-Scenes with Cast and Crew, featuring interviews with director Damian McCarthy, actors Carolyn Bracken, Gwilym Le, and Caroline Menton, plus costume designer Suzanne Keogh, and production designer Lauren Kelly. 3-min Storyboard to Screen Featurette; and the 29-min The Making of Wooden Mannequin Gallery featuring a very detailed behind-the-scenes look at the wooden mannequins sculpting, design and painting. The single-disc release arrives in an oversized keepcase with a single-sided sleeve of artwork. 

Special Features:
- Behind-the-Scenes with Cast and Crew (4:40)
- Storyboard to Screen Featurette (3:16) 
- The Making of Wooden Manequin Gallery (38:35)


Screenshots from the Acorn Media International Blu-ray: