Showing posts with label Caroline Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caroline Williams. Show all posts

Thursday, March 31, 2016

THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2 (1986) (Scream Factory Blu-ray Review)

THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2 (1986) 

Label: Scream Factory

Release Date: April 19th 2016 
Region Code: A
Duration: 101 Minutes
Audio: English DTS-HD MA Surround 5.1, Stereo 2.0 with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1) 
Director: Tobe Hooper
Cast: Bill Johnson, Bill Moseley, Caroline Williams, Dennis Hopper, Jim Siedow, Ken Evert, Lou Perryman, Chris Douridas


A decade after the original terror-classic hit the cinema director Tobe Hooper resurrected the Sawyer cannibal-clan with an offbeat sequel infused with pitch black humor and outrageous gore gags, and it didn't land well with audiences at the time. Catching up with the Sawyer clan some thirteen years after the events of the first movie we find the Texans have traded in the nightmare farmhouse for a spacious labyrinthine underground maze located beneath an abandoned amusement park. They've also gone from hacking up hippies to eviscerating '80s yuppies. Madman patriarch Drayton Sawyer is now touring Texas in a lunch truck winning chili competitions along the way. Drayton's secret to winning is simple, "don't skimp on the meat. I've got a real good eye for prime meat.".


The movie begins with a pair of douche-nozzle yuppies driving to Dallas for a wild weekend of debauchery when a pickup truck pulls out in front of them on a stretch of bridge, they're stunned when Leatherface wielding a chainsaw appears in the bed of the truck and attacks the car with his trusty chainsaw while also puppeteering a desiccated corpse, presumably that of the Hitchhiker from the first movie. We're only a few minutes in and the movie is off to a phenomenal start, setting the tone and pace with black humor and terrific gore gags with the driver losing half his head to the blade of the chainsaw. 


As it turns out the yuppies were live on-air with a local radio DJ named Stretch (Caroline Williams) during the entire scream filled encounter with the Sawyers and the horrifying incident was caught on audio tape. A former Texas Ranger named Lefty (Dennis Hopper, Mad Dog Morgan) arrives on scene to investigate the bizarre accident/deaths. You see, Lefty is the uncle of Sally and Franklin from the original movie and he won't stop until he has avenged their deaths, he's been on the trail of the Sawyers for a decade. When the audio recording comes to his attention he doesn't so much team-up with Stretch as use her as live bait to attract the attention of the sadistic cannibals, which he does by having her replay the broadcast live on air on a loop. Fearing the tape will lead to their discovery Leatherface and his 'Nam obsessed brother Chop Top (Bill Moseley, The Devil's Rejects) arrive at the radio station and terrorize the DJ who's clearly in over her head with this mess. 

Leatherface's dead-skin mask this time around is my favorite incarnation of the chainsaw wielding maniac, it looks great with the actors mouth salivating wildly beneath it, flicking his tongue along his crooked toothed mouth. Mosely as Chop Top is one of my favorite characters of any horror movie, a bizarre and skittish nut job who picks away at his mangled scalp with bent wire coat hanger, eating the tasty bits of flesh he can scratch away. He's one of the most quotable characters in any horror film, even his iconic portrayal of Otis from The Devil's Rejects is only a close second, this is definitely his signature performance in my book. Also, you cannot watch this movie and not appreciate the demented performance of Jim Siedow as Drayton Sawyer, the cantankerous and eccentric patriarch of the Sawyer family, his dialogue and delivery are creepily side-splitting, he perfectly embodies the tone and spirit of the demented production, he's the dark heart of the movie.


At the radio station Leatherface and Chop Top terrorize Stretch, this is the stuff of nightmares, the way the scene is eerily lit with deep shadows takes it to the next level. When her producer L.G. (Lou Perryman) returns to the station from a coffee-run he gets a hammer to the skull after he finds Chop Top raiding the vinyl archives of the station. Somehow Stretch is able to use her charm to coerce the seemingly love-struck Leatherface into letting her live, Chop Top believes she's dead and the gruesome duo leave with L.G.'s corpse in their pickup. Lefty arrives a short time later and he and Stretch follow them to their underground lair beneath a condemned amusement park, where they find a nightmare carnival of macabre weirdness buried in the tunnels below. 


Dennis Hopper was fresh off David Lynch's Blue Velvet when he came onto this one and his character is nearly as as unhinged as Frank, though it is possible that during this period of drugs and excess in the '80s that the coked-up Hopper was just a nut. He would next go on to appear in River's Edge, and these three movie are probably my favorite of his. Obsessed with revenging the death of his nephew Lefty enters the underground lair with an armament of chainsaws , so you had best prepare yourself for the glory of dueling chainsaws! Hats off to the production designers for the surreal atmosphere and lighting of the underground sets, it definitely creates a surreal and nightmarish tone which is appropriate for this demented sequel, a movie that only Tobe Hopper and Cannon Films could have made together. 


The film has received criticism for straying a bit  far from the original in terms of tone and pitch, but I have always loved this damned movie to death. It's straight-up demented from start to finish, my favorite sequence being the assault on the radio station, with Chop Top and Leatherface tormenting poor Stretch. You wanna see strange, how about Leatherface mock-fucking her with his chainsaw spraying a slurry of shaved ice and Big Red soda over her face, a surreal nightmare of sexual innuendo. Caroline Williams (Contracted) screams her head off throughout, in my opinion this is one of the most memorable scream queen performances of them all, hear piercing screams always shred my nerves. Another nice touch is the reenactment the infamous dinner scene from the first movie, a nightmare scenario that comes off even creepier than the original, that grotesque makeup f/x work on Grandpa Sawyer is a thing of disgusting beauty. 

While the original is a notoriously bloodless shocker the sequel is throws the gore right in your face, dripping with grue thanks to the talents of gore f/x genius Tom Savini (The Burning) and his crew, which included Bart Mixon (Killer Klowns from Outer Space), John Carl Buechler (From Beyond), Gabe Bartalos (The Thing), Gino Crognale (The Hidden) and John Vulich (TerrorVision). When L.G. is brought back to the Sawyer kitchen they flay the skin from his legs and chest with an electric carving knife before peeling off his face and placing the dead-skin mask onto the face of an increasingly hysterical Stretch. It's an over-the-top sequel that just layers on the excess and over-acting and I love it for it.


Audio/Video: Scream Factory have gone above and beyond for this gore-drizzled sequel with not one, but two HD presentations of the movie. We have the original HD master found on the MGM Blu-ray which was supervised by cinematographer Richard Kooris, plus a brand new 2K scan of the interpositive film elements. The new transfer is nothing short of superb, the candy colored colors are vibrant with excellent contrast and deep blacks with very nice shadow detail, which is improved over the original HD master. There's also a fine layer of film grain with some very nice clarity and depth to the image, this is a wonderful new HD transfer. 


Audio chores are handled by a very capable English DTS-HD MA 5.1 option, there's also a more authentic stereo track for the audio purists. The surround mix sounds great with some nice atmospheric use of the surrounds to great affect. Both audio tracks sports excellent fidelity with a clean, crisp presentation that has some nice depth to it, plus the sweet '80s soundtrack featuring The Cramps, Timbuk 3 and The Lords of the New Church, among others, comes through clean and strong. Optional English subtitles are provided. 


Onto the extras on disc one we have a great blend of new and old stuff, this release is packed to the hilt with goodies. Those familiar with the 'Gruesome Edition' from MGM will recognize the selection of deleted scenes, image galleries, trailers and TV spots ported over for the new edition, plus both of the audio commentaries from the MGM Blu-ray with actors Bill Moseley, Caroline Williams and special effects makeup creator Tom Savini moderated by Michael Felsher, and a second with director Tobe Hooper moderated by David Gregory of Severin Films. 

Now onto the tasty new stuff on disc one, we have a new audio commentary to go along with the new trasnfer from director of photography Richard Kooris, production designer Cary White, script supervisor Laura Kooris and property master Michael Sullivan. The track is a good listen, a bit technical and not on par with the original commentaries in my opinion, but these commentaries do provide a wealth of information about the making of the movie. There's also thirty-minutes of Extended Outtakes from the 'It Runs in the Family' doc featuring never before seen interview footage with the late screenwriter L.M. Kit Carson and actor Lou Perryman. The actual 'It Runs in the Family' disc can be found on disc two. There is also a 44-minute Behind-the-Scenes Footage Compilation from Tom Savini’s personal video archives, we get to see some candid footage of the special effects being performed for film.  


Onto disc two of the set we have more new stuff and an old favorite, the old comes by way of the aforementioned 'It Runs in the Family' doc produced by Michael felsher and red shirt Pictures, the six part feature-length documentary featuring interviews with screenwriter L.M. Kit Carson, actors Bill Moseley, Caroline Williams, Bill Johnson, Lou Perryman, and special makeup effects artist Tom Savini, which is still a great watch, this is the definitive making-of doc for the movie. The new stuff begins with the House of Pain doc, a 43-minute collection of interviews with make-up effects artists Bart Mixon, John Carl Buechler, Gabe Bartalos, Gino Crognale and John Vulich, and for horror fans these behind-the-scenes peeks at the making of gore classics are always a blast, tales of creating the iconic gore gags, who worked on what, behind-the-scenes tom foolery and problems bringing these effects to film, with clips from the movie, behind-the-scenes images and video footage. 

Yuppie Meat is an 18-minute interview with actors Chris Douridas and Barry Kinyon who played the yuppies from the bridge massacre scene at the start of the film, they speak about how they came to appear in the movie and life post TCM2. I didn't realize that Douridas who played Gunner, the yuppie with the novelty glasses, was the host of KCRW's Morning Becomes Eclectic, a L.A. radio show I first heard back in '93 when Geffen records sent out a promotional cassette of Beck's performance on the show to promote the album 'Mellow Gold', which has nothing to do with the movie, but I thought that was neat. If you're a Beck fan you can stream that early performance which features a few choice rarities right here: http://www.kcrw.com/music/shows/morning-becomes-eclectic/beck-5


Up next is Cutting Moments, a 17-minute interview with editor Alain Jakubowicz who tells of how he sort of saved Tobe Hooper's Invaders from Mars in the editing room. The director worked on quite a few Canon Films during their '80s heyday, including work on Hooper's TCM2. 


Behind the Mask is an 14-minute interview with stunt man and Leatherface performer Bob Elmore who doubled for Leatherface actor Bill Johnson, appearing in many of the memorable scenes. He speaks about how Johnson couldn't lift the heavy chainsaw used in the movie and how he had to take on a larger role in the movie, admitting he is not an actor, and that Hooper yelled at him a lot to get the performances out of him.  

The last of the new extras is a new episode of Horror's Hallowed Ground with host Sean Clark, revisiting many of the locations used in the movie, most of which have been torn down and renovated beyond recognition. Honestly this was somewhat of a let down, but Clark is a witty guy and I love these location pilgrimages he does. Obviously Austin has gone through a lot of changes in the past thirty years, and it doesn't make for the best location visits but Clark and the crew do their do diligence, even heading out to Bastrop, Texas to the scene of the bridge scene and the long-gone site of the Texas Battle Land amusement park.


Separate from the disc extras we have a reversible sleeve of artwork featuring the very cool illustration fro Joel Robinson and the original one-sheet movie poster which was a send up of The Breakfast Club. Robinson's new artwork is also featured on cardboard slipcover for the standard blu keep case. 


Disc 1: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Part Two (Brand New HD Transfer)

- NEW 2016 2K HD scan of the inter-positive film element
- NEW Audio Commentary with director of photography Richard Kooris, production designer Cary White, script supervisor Laura Kooris and property master Michael Sullivan
- Audio Commentary with director Tobe Hooper moderated by David Gregory of Severin Films 
- Audio Commentary with actors Bill Moseley, Caroline Williams and special effects makeup creator Tom Savini moderated by Michael Felsher 
- NEW Extended Outtakes from It Runs in the Family featuring L.M. Kit Carson and Lou Perryman (30 Mins)
- NEW Behind-the-Scenes Footage Compilation from Tom Savini’s archives (44 Mins)
- Alternate Opening Credit Sequence (2 Mins) 
- Deleted Scenes (11 Mins) 
- Still Galleries – posters and lobby cards, behind-the-scenes photos, stills and collector’s gallery (60 Images) HD 
- Theatrical Trailers (2 Mins) HD 
- TV Spots (3 Mins) HD 

Disc 2: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Part Two (Original HD Transfer)

- MGM’s original HD Master with color correction supervision by director of photography Richard Kooris
- NEW House of Pain – a interview with make-up effects artists Bart Mixon, John Carl Buechler, Gabe Bartalos, Gino Crognale and John Vulich (43 Mins) HD 
- NEW Yuppie Meat – a interview with actors Chris Douridas and Barry Kinyon (19 Mins) HD
- NEW Cutting Moments – a interview with editor Alain Jakubowicz (17 Mins) HD 
- NEW Behind the Mask – a interview with stunt man and Leatherface performer Bob Elmore (14 Mins) HD
- NEW HORROR’S HALLOWED GROUNDS – revisiting the locations of the film – hosted by Sean Clark plus a special guest (25 Mins) HD 
- It Runs in the Family – a six part feature-length documentary featuring interviews with screenwriter L.M. Kit Carson, actors Bill Moseley, Caroline Williams, Bill Johnson, Lou Perryman, special makeup effects artist Tom Savini and more (84 Mins) HD 

I love TCM2, it is a gruesome and black veined terror-comedy, a full-on demented slice of weirdness and my favorite entry in the entire TCM series. It's hard to deny the horror-genius of this movie which was once panned across the board, I am pleased to see that the public opinion on this one has turned towards the positive these past few years, this is a straight-up classic. The new Blu-ray from Scream Factory is one of my favorite releases of the year so far, this is a must-own edition with a sweet new 2K HD scan and loads of awesome extras, well worth the upgrade. 


Sunday, April 13, 2014

Blu-ray Review: TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2 (Arrow Video Blu-ray Review)

THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2 (1986) 

Label: Arrow Video
Region Code: B/0
Rating: 18 Cert.
Duration: 101 mins
Video: 1080p Widescreen (1.85:1)
Audio: 2.0 Stereo PCM with Optional English SDH Subtitles

Cast: Dennis Hopper, Bill Moseley, Caroline Williams, Bill Johnson, Lou Perryman, Chris Douridas
Director: Tobe Hooper

A decade after the original film director Tobe Hooper resurrected the terror classic with an offbeat sequel infused with pitch black humor and outrageous gore gags. Now thirteen years after the events of that fateful night in 1973 the Sawyer clan have traded-in the rural farmhouse for a labyrinthine underground maze beneath a run down amusement park. They're traded in carving-up hippies for eviscerating yuppies and patriarch Drayton Sawyer tours Texas in a lunch truck winning chili competitions. The secret to his prize-winning chili is the prime meat, of course! 


As the adventure begins a pair of douche-nozzle yuppies are en route to Dallas for a weekend of debauchery when a pickup truck pulls up next to them, they're stunned when Leatherface wielding a chainsaw attacks the car while puppeteering a desiccated corpse. Were already off to a phenomenal start  with the opening scene setting the pace with black humor and terrific gore gags as the driver loses half his face to the saw. 


As it turns out the yuppies were live on-air with a local radio DJ named Stretch (Caroline Williams) during the encounter and the horrifying incident was caught on audio tape.  A former Texas Ranger named Lefty (Dennis Hopper, Mad Dog Morgan) arrives on scene to investigate the bizarre deaths. Lefty's the uncle of Sally and Franklin from the first movie and he's on a quest to avenge their deaths. The audio recording comes to his attention and the Ranger doesn't so much team-up with the DJ as use her as bait to attract the attention of the sadistic cannibals by having her replay the broadcast on air. Fearing the tape will lead to their discovery Leatherface and his 'Nam obsessed brother Chop Top (Bill Moseley) arrive at the radio station and terrorize the DJ who's clearly in over her head. 


Leatherface's dead-skin mask in this film may just be my favorite incarnation of the chainsaw wielding maniac. Chop Top is one of my favorite characters from any movie, a bizarre skittish nut who picks away at his scalp with bent coat hanger before eating the tasty bits of flesh. He's one of the most quotable characters in any horror film and after Otis from The Devil's Rejects is one of Moseley's most iconic creations onscreen, definitely a signature performance. You cannot watch this movie and not appreciate the demented performance Jim Siedow as the demented Drayton Sawyer, the cantankerous and eccentric patriarch of the flesh eating clan, his dialogue and delivery are creepily side-splitting and he perfectly embodies the tone and spirit of the production. 


At the station Leatherface and Chop Top terrorize Stretch and when her producer L.G. returns to the station he gets a hammer to the skull after discovering Chop Top raining the vinyl archives. Somehow Stretch is able to use her charm coerce the love-struck Leatherface into letting her live and soon the duo leave with L.G. corpse in their pickup.Lefty and Stretch follow them to their underground lair beneath a condemned amusement park and what they find is a nightmare carnival of macabre weirdness. 


Dennis Hopper was fresh off David Lynch's Blue Velvet and his character here is just as unhinged and strange as Frank, or maybe at this time Hopper was just a nut in every movie, this was the same year as Rivers Edge. Obsessed with revenging the death of his nephew Lefty enters the underground lair with no less than three chainsaw at his disposal - prepare yourself for the glory of dueling chainsaws! Hats off to the production designers for the surreal atmosphere and lighting of these underground sets, it definitely creates a tone. 


The film has received criticism for straying so far from the original in terms of tone and pitch but I love this damn thing to death. It's straight-up demented from start to finish with my favorite sequence being the assault on the radio station as they torment Stretch. You wanna see strange, how about Leatherface mock-fucking her with his chainsaw spraying a slurry of shaved ice and Big Red soda cover her, a surreal sexual nightmare. Caroline Williams (Contracted) screams her damn head off throughout this nutty film, one of the most memorable scream queen performances in my opinion. Hooper re enacts the infamous dinner scene from the first film here and it's a nightmare scenario that's more effective and creepy than the original in my opinion.


While the first original is a notoriously bloodless shocker the sequel  is dripping with grue thanks to the gore-master Tom Savini and his crew. When L.G. is brought back to the Sawyer kitchen they flay the skin from his legs and chest with an electric carving knife before peeling off his face and placing the dead-skin mask onto a hysterical Stretch. It's an over-the-top sequel that just layers on the excess and over-acting and I love it for it. My only objections with the movie are some pacing issues and a weak score but they make up for it with the inclusion of The Cramps classic "Goo Goo Muck". 


Blu-ray: Arrow's treatment of Tobe Hooper's satirical sequel to the original gets nothing less that the deluxe treatment using the same HD master supervised by cinematographer Richard Kooris with some additional restoration to remove additional dirt and debris giving this edition a very slight bump over the MGM Blu-ray. The colors are strong with some nice contrast levels and a nice layer of film grain which during some scenes is quite coarse to be honest but I love it. All the gory bits look fantastic with the hi-def bumbp. 


Audio chores are handled with an very capable English LPCM Stereo track with optional English SDH subtitles. There's some nice depth to the crisp stereo presentation - the uncompressed audio really punches it up a bit. 

Arrow's release carries over all the MGM extras with a host of  new supplements courtesy of Red Shirt Pictures, High Rising Productions and Nucleus Films. Carry overs begin with two audio commentaries, the first from director Tobe Hooper moderated by David Gregory and a second commentary with stars Bill Moseley, Caroline Williams and special-effects legend Tom Savini, moderated by Michael Felsher of Red Shirt Pictures. Also ported from the previous Blu-ray is the definitive retrospective doc It Runs in the Family and the alternate opening sequence and deleted scenes - one featuring Joe Bob Briggs from MonsterVision and some of Tom Savini's excised gore effects! 

Exclusive to Arrow's edition are the Still Feelin’ the Buzz video interview with horror expert Stephen Thrower produced by Nucleus Films. The noted author who speaks for about a half-hour on the challenges Hooper faced in making a sequel to what he considers a near perfect film and pointing out the changes in tone and hyper-reality of the sequel. 


Another new extras Cutting Moment with Bob Elmore is a video interview with The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 stuntman Bob Elmore who played Leatherface in the sequelas he recounts what appears to have been a grueling experience lugging around a seventy-five pound chainsaw in the Texas heat,  

A second disc features two early film the director, we have silent comedy The Heisters (1964) and his debut feature film Eggshells (1969), a weird hippie-centric slice of art house student film making. Eggshells benefits from an audio commentary from the director and Louis Black. I cannot say I loved either of these but they are available for the first-time on home video ever and I do appreciate the inclusion as they're both interesting glimpses into Hooper's pre-TCM career.  Additionally there's a 20 plus minute interview with Hooper conducted by High Rising Production's Calum Waddell with the director looking back on his career, plus a

24-minute trailer reel highlighting Hooper's body of work in horror. Arrow's disc is region-B so make sure you have a multi-region player before you snag this one, yet another reason you need to have a multi-region player. 

Special Features:

Disc 1
- High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation from a digital transfer supervised by Director of Photography Richard Kooris
- Original uncompressed Stereo 2.0 audio
- Optional English SDH subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
- Audio commentary with director and co-writer Tobe Hooper, moderated by David Gregory
- Audio commentary with stars Bill Moseley, Caroline Williams and special-effects legend Tom Savini, moderated by Michael Felsher
- It Runs in the Family – A documentary looking at the genesis, making-of and enduring appeal of Hooper’s film. With interviews including star Bill Johnson, co-writer L. M. Kit Carson, Richard Kooris, Bill Moseley, Caroline Williams, Tom Savini, Production Designer Cary White and more!
- Alternate Opening sequence with different musical score
- Deleted scenes
- Still Feelin’ the Buzz – Interview with horror expert Stephen Thrower, author of Nightmare USA
- Cutting Moment with Bob Elmore – Interview with The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2′s stuntman
- Gallery featuring never-before-published behind-the-scenes images
- Original Trailer


Disc 2 
- Standard Definition (DVD) presentation of two of Tobe Hooper’s early works restored by Watchmaker Films with Tobe hooper, available on home video for the first time in the world
The Heisters (1964) Tobe Hooper’s early short film restored in HD from original elements [10 mins] and Eggshells (1969) Tobe Hooper’s debut feature restored in HD from original elements (90 mins)
- Optional English SDH subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
- Audio Commentary on Eggshells by Tobe Hooper
- In Conversation with Tobe Hooper – The legendary horror director speaks about his career from Eggshells to The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2
- Trailer reel of all the major works by Tobe Hooper
- 100-PAGE BOOK – AMERICAN FREAK ILLUMINATIONS – LIMITED EDITION EXCLUSIVE:

Verdict: A demented sequel that dares to stray from the formula and one of my favorite horror comedies of all-time.  Arrow's audio/video presentation and extensive extras make this the definitive edition of the gore-comedy classic - a must own for serious collectors.