Saturday, November 23, 2019

STEPHEN KING'S SILVER BULLET (1985) (Scream Factory Collector's Edition Blu-ray review)

STEPHEN KING'S SILVER BULLET (1985)

Label: Scream Factory 
Region Code: A
Rating: R
Duration: 94 Minutes
Audio: English DTS-HD MA Stereo 2.0 with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (2.35:1) 
Director: David Attias
Cast: Corey Haim, Gary Busey, Megan Follows, Terry O'Quinn, Lawrence Tierney



Some movies you just watch and let the wonderment of youthful nostalgia freely wash over you, even when the film is not all that great, and for me Silver Bullet (1985) is one of films. It's a movie that was a staple of cable TV during my formative teen years, I have always loved it, despite the bad-looking werewolf that looks like a man in a skinny bear-suit.



The film is told in flashback by an woman named Jane who is telling the story of her paraplegic younger brother Marty (Corey Haim, License to Drive) and how a series of grisly murders occurred in their town in 1976. The film is based on Stephen King’s novella 'Cycle of the Werewolf', with the author also writing the screenplay for this film. It opens with the murder of a drunken train yard worker, his head ripped clean from his body by some unseen furry beast. The town's Sheriff (Terry O'Quinn, The Stepfather) attributes the headless corpse to a simple drunken train accident, but soon the bodies begin piling up, including a woman found torn to pieces in her bedroom after being attacked a more properly the werewolf, though after you get a glimpse of this thing you will understand why they keep it hidden and only fleetingly seen for the rest of the film. 



The local gathering at the bar begin murmuring about there a maniac being on the loose in their town, and with the sheriff beginning to lose the confidence of the people a lynch-mob is formed. The angry mob  storm into the fog shrouded swamps looking for the killer, but they are shredded by the beast in short order. The ill-fated vengeful trip into the foggy swamps is a good bit of atmospheric fun, but also a bit campy, with the largely unseen werewolf lurking beneath the thigh-high fog, at one point taking a baseball bat away from a cranky bar owner, Laurence Tierney (Midnight), and beating him to death with it, the creature's black hairy clawed-hand reaching above the fog with the bat in hand bringing it down on poor Tierney, who at this point must have been thinking to himself 'how did I end up in this turd!?!'.



Back to the kids, we have the young version of narrator Jane (Megan Follows, TV's Reign) and her wheelchair bound younger brother Marty (Corey Haim, The Lost Boys). The pair have the usual adversarial sibling relationship, but it's made clear in several scenes that despite annoying one another they care for each other quite a bit. Enter into the equation their drunken Uncle Red (played by the drunken actor Gary Busey, The Buddy Holly Story) who arrives to watch the kids while mom and dad go on a bit of a vacation, because of course you're going on vacation when a killer loose in your town, and of course you leave the kids with your drunken brother, right? 



Quicker than you can say 'bad influence' Uncle Red builds a speedy motorized three-wheeled wheelchair for Marty to zip around town in, calling it the Silver Bullet. He then gives the kid an armful of fireworks and lets him loose into the night - with a killer on the loose mind you - to shoot fireworks off a bridge. it's here that Marty has a close encounter with the werewolf, just barely managing to get away after firing a bottle rocket straight into the it's eyeball! Returning home Marty tells Uncle Red and Jane about the frightful encounter, but of course they do not believe the hairy-tale at first, but eventually they do come around to the idea, melting down the family's silver valuables to create a single werewolf-killing silver bullet. 



As they have no idea who the werewolf is Jane goes about town collecting cans while keeping an eye out for any newly single-eyed citizenry. It turns out that the local reverend, played Everett McGill (The People Under the Stairs), is the werewolf. At first the reverend seems anguished and torn by his moon-lit monster affliction, but as the killings continue he seems to become more and more consumed by the beast. At one point to illustrate this inner-conflict the reverend suffers a nightmare about his parishioners transforming into werewolves in church pulpits before him, it's fun pulpy stuff. As a man of God he attempts to keeps his murderous tendencies aimed at the sinful folk in town, in his own twisted mind believing he is actually saving their souls from eternal damnation by tearing them apart. When he realizes that the kids have identified him he then turns his one-eyed werewolf on the siblings, which leads to an anticlimactic ending, but like a lot of other bad films I tend to enjoy, I still manage to love it every damn time, thanks to the oodles of ingrained nostalgia.



I fully admit this werewolf film has more than it's share of lame bad-film shenanigans, but it;s also a hoot, Gary Busey is a firecracker in this movie, every scene he's in is laced with quotable gems. At the same time the look of the werewolf is a stinker, but Everet McGill is pretty great as the man of the cloth with a deadly secret.



Audio/Video: Stephen King's Silver Bullet (1985) arrives on Collector's Edition Blu-ray from Scream Factory in 1080p HD framed in the original 2.35:1 widescreen. This looks to be the same HD master used by Umbrella Entertainment for their release, the grain is nicely managed, the image is crisp and the colors look accurate and nicely saturated. The English DTS-HD MA Stereo 2.0 audio sounds good, dialogue is clear and special effects and the score from Jay Chattaway (Maniac Cop) sounds great, a creepy and dramatic, mixing of orchestral and electronic elements, optional English subtitles are provided. 



Scream Factory carry-over nearly all the extras from the Umbrella release, beginning with an audio commentary from Director Daniel Attias moderated by Michael Felsher of Red Shirt Pictures. Felsher does a great job mining the conversation for nuggets and tidbits. Attias never directed another feature film after this film, turning to TV where he has enjoyed a prolific career, directing all sorts of great TV stuff, from Six Feet Under to the Hulu series Castle Rock. We also get an isolated music score with an audio interview with Composer Jay Chattaway, also moderated by Michael Felsher of Red Shirt Pictures, the interview lasts for about 38-minutes, then the isolated score kicks in.



Actor Everett McGill shows up for a 16-min interview, speaking about his relationship with Dino De Laurentis, the motivations for the characters, his guilt and anguish, donning the hairy costume after initially not wanting to, and his appreciation for how sensitive to the material the director was, working with Corey Haim and the make-up process.




Special Effects Artists Michael McCracken, Jr. and Matthew Mungle appear for a fun 21-minute interview, the juiciest of the bunch, too. They discuss the day that Carlo Rambaldi's (E.T.) ill-fated were-bear suit arrived on set and how it didn't quite meet Dino De Laurentis's expectation, falling a bit below the mark and over-loaded with cable to operate it. These guys did not create the werewolf itself but worked on the various transformation scenes, speaking of how they were achieved using old school latex effects. They also spin a fun tale about one of the actors wanting to keep their werewolf make-up on after they wrapped for the day, saying that they were on their way to a sex-party! 



Archival extras are buttoned up with a theatrical trailer, TV spot, radio spot and an image gallery  that includes promotional and behind-the-scenes stills, cool make-up effects shots and sculptures, lobby cards and various home video releases. The one thing not carried over from the Australian release from Umbrella is a 26-min interview with 
Martha De Laurentis, which is too bad, it was a solid extra, but Scream Factory sort of make-up for it with a new audio commentary from Martha de Laurentis. It's just a little irritating that there's that one extras we don't get on this release, I am sure you other collector's will feel my pain.



Onto the new stuff, we get three brand-new  exclusive extras produced by Red Shirt Pictures for Scream Factory;s release.  We get an 12-min interview with actor Actor Kent Broadhurst who played the grieving father in the film, he discusses having to improvise his overwrought mourning scene, having to compensate for the shortcomings of the kid's corpse, which apparently looked so bad it wasn't usable in the film. Not gruesome awful mind you, just not well-done by the FX team. He also discusses the nightmare scene involving parishioners turning into werewolves in the pulpits and how much work that entailed, including a warning from the assistant director that the actors should remove their contact lenses lest they end up laminated to their eyeballs! 



We also get a new 17-min interview with editor Daniel Loewenthal who discusses his early career editing porno before getting into horror movies on Troma's Mother's Day. He also gets into creating suspense through editing and the failure of the film at the box office. 



The last of the new stuff is an audio commentary with Producer Martha De Laurentis Moderated By Michael Felsher. I have not gotten too deep into this one yet, but it does sort of make-up for this disc not carrying over the Martha De Laurentis interviews from the Umbrella release.  


The single-disc release comes housed in a standard Blu-ray keepcase with a reversible sleeve of artwork featuring the original poster art plus a new illustration from artist Devon Whitehead, the latter of which is also featured on the limited edition slipcover that accompanies the first print run, as well as the disc itself. I didn't love this artwork when I saw it online, but holding it in my hand and looking at it I think i does capture the pulpy charm of this werewolf flick.   



Special Features:

- NEW Audio Commentary With Producer Martha De Laurentis Moderated By Michael Felsher 

- NEW Cutting To The Bone – An Interview With Editor Daniel Loewenthal (17 min)
- NEW A Little Private Justice – An Interview With Actor Kent Broadhurst (12 min) 
- Audio Commentary with Director Daniel Attias moderated by Michael Felsher of Red Shirt Pictures
- The Wolf Within – An Interview with Actor Everett McGill (16 min) 
- Full Moon Fever – Interviews with Special Effects Artists Michael McCracken, Jr. and Matthew Mungle (21 min)
- Dino's Angel Takes on Lycanthropy: Martha De Laurentis Remembers SILVER BULLET (26 min) HD
- Isolated Score Selections and Audio Interview with Composer Jay Chattaway moderated by Michael Felsher of Red Shirt Pictures. (English Dolby Digital 2.0)
- Theatrical trailer (1 min)
- TV Spot (1 min)
- Radio Spot (1 min)
- Still Gallery (73 Images)  


Silver Bullet (1985) gets a fantastic Blu-ray from Scream Factory, it might not offer a new transfer but this is a solid-looking release and it is stacked with extras that get into the nitty-gritty of the film. While the film might not be shown on cable as much as it did back when I was a kid I can pretty much guarantee I will be watching this film quite a bit, it still has plenty of that youthful nostalgia and I will be smiling the whole way through,, shitty looking werewolf and all.