Showing posts with label Keenan Wynn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Keenan Wynn. Show all posts

Friday, December 29, 2017

ORCA: THE KILLER WHALE (1977) (Umbrella Blu-ray Review)

ORCA: THE KILLER WHALE  (1977)

Label: Umbrella Entertainment
Region Code: Region Free
Rating: M
Duration: 92 Minutes 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA Surround 5.1, DTS-HD MA Mono 2.0 with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (2.35:1)
Director: Michael Anderson 
Cast: Bo Derek, Charlotte Rampling, Richard Harris, Will Simpson, Keenan Wynn, Robert Carradine 

Orca: The Killer Whale (1977) is a film I watched on late-night cable as a young boy, I was mesmerized by it in fact, I had already watched Jaws (1975) several times, but the concept of a Jaws knock-off was a bit foreign to me, this was just another killer "fish" movie, and it was a killer whale, not a great white shark, the two movies couldn't be more different *wink wink*. It would be years before I would discover what "jawsploitation" was, a wonderful little sub genre of Jaws knock-off films that came out, and continue coming, all these years later, spurred by the game-changing success of the Spielberg classic film, and just to confirm it, one of the best movies ever made.  Italian Producer extordinaire Dino De Laurentis being the smart man that he was saw an opportunity to cash-in on the original and enlisted the aid of producer Luciano Vincenzoni to find a sea-best even more fearsome than the great white shark, it was he who thought up the idea of using an orca. The film is directed by Michael Anderson (Logan's Run), written by Sergio Donati (Once Upon a Time in the West) with a score from none other than Ennio Morricone (The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly), which is just an impressive cinema-pedigree behind the camera by any standard.

The film opens with - what else - a great white shark stalking a diver beneath the waves, a scientist named Ken (Robert Carradine, Revenge of the Nerds), who funnily swims and hides beneath a rock outcropping on the ocean floor to hide from the approaching shark, attempting to pull a large rock over the entrance to keep the shark out. The way the film is edited it seems when he drops the rock it catches the ear of the shark who comes in closer to investigate, too funny. Nearby Captain Nolan (Richard Harris, A Man Called Horse) sees the fin of the great white circling the area, he makes a living capturing live specimens for the local aquarium and takes aim at the predator, but an Orca arrives on scene and destroys the shark, saving the scientist but angering Nolan to a large degree, he vents his anger on the scientist and his associate Dr. Rachel Bedford (Charlotte Rampling, The Night Porter). The encounter with the orca however spurs him to seek out a killer whale, which is sure to nab a hefty price from the aquarium. Tracking the orcas he takes aim at one but misses it, instead harpooning it's mate, which turns out the a pregnant female. What happens next is equal parts harrowing and hilarious, the preggers orca attempts to kill itself, hurling itself at the boat's spinning propellers, slicing it open and making a bloody mess - the water runs red. Eventually the crew hoist her up out of the water on a winch,  where she miscarries and the malformed orca falls onto the deck of the ship, to the horror of everyone, particularly the Nolan - who we later learn lost a child and loved one in an accident. The scene is heightened by the fact that the orca's mate is observing this from the water and screams - I shit you not - it straight up screams at the horror of it all! 

The grieving orca follows the ship, ramming in in an attempt to free it's mate, when the ship is threatened by the aggressive orca Nolan and his crew cut the orca free, but crewman Novak (Keenan Wynn, Herbie Rides Again)is snatched by the orca when it leaps out of the water, dragged to his death. The crew return to port but the maddened orca follows them, wreaking havoc on the small fishing community, first sinking several ships by ramming them while they're tied up, then setting the pier on fire (this orca is an arsonist!), and destroying Nolan's seaside home, even biting off the leg of Nolan's most attractive crew member, young Annie (Bo Derek, 10). I tell you what, the super-intelligent sharks of Deep Blue See (1999) have nothing on this damn orca!

It soon becomes evident that the orca has a personal vendetta against Nolan, it wants to face him on the open sea, man to sea-faring mammal, and so Nolan along with Dr. Rachel Bedford and her associate Ken,  the lone remaining crew member Paul (Peter Hooten, The Inglourious Batards),  and an indigenous local named Jacob Umilak (Will Sampson, Poltergeist II) set out to area where Nolan first harpooned the preggers orca for a final epic showdown. 

The movie must certainly sound silly, and it is, but I have to say that I have always loved it, I recognize the inherent silliness of certain scenes and the leaps of logic, but I am also struck by the how much depth it has, for both the orca and the people hunting it, much of this no doubt being bolstered by a wonderfully evocative, sometimes mournful score, from composer Ennio Morricone (Cinema Paradiso). The orca leads them out to see, towards a frozen area known as the Strait of Belle Isle, it picks off the crew one by one until just Nolan and Bedford are left, pushing an iceberg into the ship, which begins to sink, forcing the pair to leave the boat for an the relative safety of an iceberg, leading to the final climactic moments out on the ice. 

The special effects for this one are decent, there are a few ropey opticals, but they really nail the mixing of live-action orcas and rubber/mechanical ones I thought. The use of miniatures are well done, the sinking of Nolan's home and the setting of the pier on fire are particularly well-executed, and I loved the ice bound setting of the finale with frozen ice sheets and icebergs, plus the rubber orca fetus that drops onto the deck of the ship is shocking to say the least. 

The cast is great, Richard Harris  makes for a great Irish-Canadian Captain Ahab out to settle the score with his Moby Orca, he's wonderfully obsessed and in-tune with his own doomed destiny. He's not heartless, he feels remorse for the killing of the pregnant female, but he's obsessed to the nth degree, and dragging his crew to certain death. The steely-eyed Charlotte Rampling (Zardoz) has a nice presence, a sympathetic character who offers some pro-orca sympathies to the stubborn captain, she does good work here, and also serves as the narrator of the story.

The film is certainly a slice of jawsploitation but it never really rips off any specific scene from the movie, it does it's own thing, there are echoes of Spielberg's classic, such as Nolan standing on the  pulpit of his ship readying his harpoon gun, or that the beast this time around is an Orca - the name of Quint's boat from Jaws, or just the fact that they feature a great white shark at the beginning that is killed by the orca, which is a nice little swipe at Jaws. 

Audio/Video:
Orca (1977) arrives on Region-FREE Blu-ray from Umbrella Entertainment - though it is erroneously labeled as a Region B locked item - in 1080p HD framed in 2.35:1 scope aspect ratio. There's no information about the provenance of the HD master but it looks quite nice to my eyes, the ocean vistas are crisp and film like, good clarity and depth to the image. There's some very minor wear and tear, we have some white speckling and scratches are, but nothing too bothersome. Audio comes by way of lossless (yes, lossless!) DTS-HD MA Surround 5.1 and Mono 2.0 with Optional English subtitles. This sucker has a fairly great score from Ennio Morricone so I am very pleased that Umbrella went with the lossless audio this time around if only to deepen the fidelity of the score. Dialogue and effects are nicely balanced, everything sound nicely crisp and natural sounding. 

Extras on ths disc include an audio commentary from film historian Lee Gambin which I found jam-packed with information about the film, which was great, loads of production info about the making of the film, the cast and crew and the locations used in making the movie. 
Martha De Laurentiis  shows up for a brief 5-minute remembrance of the film and we get a trailer for the film in HD.   

This single-disc Blu-ray release comes housed in a 16mm spine Blu-ray keepcase with a sleeve of reversible artwork, the reverse side features a variant of the same key artwork minus the rating label. They use the original movie poster artwork, with the landscape framed image wrapping around to the back of the keepcase, very cool. The disc itself features an excerpt of the same image, when the disc is placed in the case it matches the reverse side of the artwork.  

Special Features

- Audio commentary by film historian Lee Gambin
- MOBY DICK ala DE LAURENTIIS: Martha De Laurentiis remembers ORCA (5 min) HD 
- Theatrical Trailer (3 MIN) HD

Orca (1977) is a film that gets lumped in with some of the cheesier jaws rip-offs, which is unfortunate, it's a fun flick with a semi-grand scale, epic scenery, and serious talent both in front and behind the camera, it all adds up to a fun watch with a few strange and gruesome detours, but still a heck of an eco-horror entry with a fun Moby Dick role-reversal.
 

    Thursday, December 28, 2017

    THE DEVIL'S RAIN (1975) (Severin Blu-ray Review)

    THE DEVIL'S RAIN (1975) 
    Label: Severin Films
    Region Code: Region-Free
    Rating: Unrated
    Duration: 86 Minutes
    Audio: English DTS-HD MA Mono 2.0 with Optional English Subtitles 
    Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (2.39:1) 
    Director: Robert Fuest
    Cast: William Shatner, Ernest Borgnine, Eddie Albert, Keenan Wynn, Tom Skerritt, Ida Lupino, John Travolta

    I first caught up with this Satanic panic drive-in classic when it was released by Dark Sky Films back in 2006 on DVD, it totally caught be surprise, a cool little slice of satanic cinema with an all-star 70's cast and directed by Robert Fuest, a wonderful director who brought us The Abominable Dr. Phibes (1971) and Dr. Phibes Rises Again (1972), not to mention the involvement of Anton Lavey, the founder of the Church of Satan!

    It all begins on a rainy night with Mark Preston (Star Trek's William Shatner) and his mother (Ida Lupino, The Food of the Gods) waiting for his father to return home, when he does he has no eyes and begins melting into a multi-colored glob of goo! Mark's mom is later kidnapped by a local Satanic cult led by Jonathon Corbis (Ernest Borgnine, Escape from New York)who wants a satanic tome that the Preston family has kept hidden away for years, it would grant the cult-leader favor with Beelzebub and make him all-powerful!

    When Mark himself becomes ensnared by the cult his younger brother Tom (Tom Skerrit, M*A*S*H) comes to his aid, along with his wife Julie (Joan Prather, Big Bad Mama) and occult expert Dr. Richards, played by Eddie Albert of TV's Green Acres. Working against the group are the local sheriff played by Keenan Wynn (Piranha) who is in tight with the Satanist, including a very young John Travolta in his first movie, though it is a small role.

    The satanic thrills come fast and furious in this briskly paced drive-in b-movie classic, aided by some very goopy and surprisingly grotesque special effects from Tom Burman  (Invasion of the Body Snatchers) and crew, including Borgnine being transformed into a horned, goat-headed manifestation of evil, who also gets his own goopy transformation. There's also a cool scene where Shatner is rendered eyeless, the make-up effects look quite a bit like the mask from Halloween (1978) which modeled after a Shatner/Captain Kirk Star Trek mask, I thought was pretty nifty. This one has always suffered a bit from a plot that seems to evaporate a bit, I always get list, not in the complicated plot, but in the lack of a clear one, but that's never deterred me from partaking in the satanic fun, plus we get some cool atmospheric and creepy cinematography from Álex Phillips Jr. (Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia). 

    Audio/Video: The Devil's Rain (1975) arrives on Blu-ray from Severin Films, the new HD restoration (from an non-specific source) looks very nice, there's a nice but inconsistent layer of film grain, details aren't overly abundant and the image can be soft, but overall this is a nice upgrade compared to by 2006 DVD, even with a few unsightly emulsion scratches. Audio comes by way of an English language DTS-HD MA Mono 2.0 track with optional English subtitles. The audio is clean and crisp, I wouldn't say the mix was overly dynamic by any means but it does the job.

    Onto the extras Severin have grabbed the devil by the horns with this one, offering up a plethora of extras, beginning with a director's commentary ported over from the 2006 Dark Sky release. Then onto the new stuff, brand new interviews with the cast and crew, including an 11-min chat with Skerritt who spins a tale of how he got started in the business, originally wanting to be a director, scoring a few writing gigs and his early career, making this movie and laughing quite a bit when asked about the involvement of Anton Lavey, which he seems to find mildly amusing. FX artist Tom Burman shows up for a brief 5-min interview discussing the goopy effects created for the film and how the melting people were achieved, it's cool.  

    Well established Script Supervisor Ana Maria Quintana (Blade Runner, Jurassic Park) speaks about landing her first job as a script supervisor on this very film by pretty much conning her way into it, and also being bilingual helped, as the film was shot in Mexico with a Mexican crew and with an English director and an American cast. 

    The Church of Satan gets some representation on two featurettes, one with the current High Priest and High Priestess of the Church of Satan speaking about Lavey's involvement on the film, plus LaVey Biographer Blanche Barton, speaking about her relationship with the Lavey, and his time on the film with the cast. There's also a vintage '75 interview with Shatner who speaks about the possibility of a Star Trek movie opportunity, and if that was something he'd be interested in, and what that might mean for his career... he made a wise move accepting the eventual offer! Another very cool extra is an interview with director/actor Daniel Roebuck (River's Edge) who showcases his vintage horror collection while detailing his own trip to the drive-in with his mom to see The Devil's Rain, and what his mom did for him to secure a prize at the screening, fun stuff. The disc is finished up with a theatrical trailer, TV spots and a poster and still gallery.    

    This single-disc Blu-ray release comes housed in a standard Blu-ray keepcase with  sleeve of reversible artwork, which looks awesome on both sides, I believe the a-side is the original movie poster, with a cool variant on the b-side. 

    Special Features:
    - Audio Commentary With Director Robert Fuest
    - Confessions Of Tom - Interview With Actor Tom Skerritt (11 min) HD
    - The Devil's Makeup - Interview With Special FX Artist Tom Burman (5 min) HD 
    - 1975 Archive Interview With Actor William Shatner (4 min) HD 
    - First Stop Durango - Interview With Script Supervisor Ana Maria Quintana (15 min) HD 
    - Consulting with the Devil - A Conversation with the High Priest and High Priestess of the Church of Satan (10 min) HD 
    - Hail Satan! - Interview With Anton LaVey Biographer Blanche Barton (8 min) HD 
    - Filmmaker / Horror Collector Daniel Roebuck On The Devil's Rain (11 min) HD 
    - On Set Polaroid Gallery Of Script Supervisor Ana Maria Quintana Accompanied By Radio Spots (8 min) HD 
    - Theatrical Trailer (3 min) HD
    - TV Spots (2 min) HD 
    - Poster/Still Gallery(8 min) HD 

    The Devil's Rain (1975) is a fun slice of evil 70's cinema, it's not the strongest story but the performances are good and the special effects are surprisingly gooey, which is what makes this so memorable, trust me, it ain't the story! This would make a fun hail-Satan triple-feature with The Brotherhood of Satan (1971) and Race with the Devil (1975) or a fun Borgnine scenery-chewing triple play with Willard (1971) and Deadly Blessing (1981).  I never really thought I needed to upgrade my old DVD of this one, but watching this Severin Blu-ray I can say that the A/V upgrade is very nice and the plentiful extras actually make the movie more enjoyable. 

    Tuesday, October 10, 2017

    LASERBLAST (1978) (Full Moon Blu-ray Review)

    LASERBLAST (1978)

    Label: Full Moon Features
    Region Code: A
    Duration: 82 Minutes 
    Rating: Unrated
    Audio: English Dolby Digital Mono 2.0, Surround 5.1
    Video: 1080p HD Widescreen 
    Director: Michael Rae
    Cast: Cheryl Smith, Roddy McDowall, Kim Milford, Gianni Russo, Keenan Wynn, Eddie Deezen 

    Laserblast opens with a green-skinned alien wandering the Southern Californian desert when two stop-motion aliens arrive in a space craft, they disintegrate the green-skinned alien after an exchange of laser-fire but are scared off by an approaching Cessna airplane before they can recover the weapon and and accompanying amulet. 


    From here we follow the exploits of teen-loner Billy Duncan (Kim Milford, Corvette Summer), hopping in his sweet 70's van to visit his girlfriend Kathy (Cheryl "Rainbeaux" Smith, Massacre at Central High), but instead he is hassled by the girls deranged grandfather Colonel Farley (Keenan Wynn, Piranha) and doesn't end up seeing her. As we continue to follow Billy we see he is not well liked, and is hassled by bullies Chuck and Froggy, the latter of whom is played by eternal-dweeb Eddie Deezen (1941), he makes for quite the nasally and nerd-afflicted bully, which is hilarious. Billy is also hassled by two local keystone stoner-cops who issue him a speeding ticket. 

    Later while wandering alone if the desert Billy discovers the laser gun and amulet left behind by the aliens, and figures out how to use them in combination with one another - blasting desert scrub brush for fun. With the discovery of the weapon and amulet Billy begins to change, from a somewhat typical brooding-teen with a chip on his shoulder he becomes more resentful and vengeful, the weapon/amulet combo seems to have an adverse effect on his personality, heightening his sense of alienation and propensity for violence.

    It also has some physical side effects, where the amulet touches his chest begins to show signs of a strange growth, his concerned girlfriend makes him see the local doc, played by a clearly slumming-it Roddy McDowall (Fright Night) who is there and gone before you know it, a victim of the alien-influence on the murderous teen. He continues to turn green and his teeth sharpen, he seems possessed by the weapon. 

    From space the aliens observe Billy and what he's up to, making him the target of a pair of aliens who return to earth to recover the laser gun, but the now deformed and menacing Billy is running around town like a feral Tusken Raider blasting mailboxes, newsstands, pinball games, telephone booths and cars, which is a lot of fun, with loads of fiery car and stuff exploding real nice, they even blow-up a billboard advertising the original Star Wars (1977). 

    The main draw for me to this schlock-cinema classic is the vintage stop-motion animation from David Allen, which was hist first job working for Charles Band. The aliens are rough looking but I love the vintage look of the stop-motion creatures, sort of looking like elongated turds with eyes and laser guns, but it has a certain 70's drive-in charm. I also loved the small turns from Keenan Wynn and Roddy McDowall, these guys always class up a picture. There's also a fun electronic score from Richard Band (Re-Animator) alongside Joel Goldsmith (The Man with Two Brains) — son of legendary score-composer Jerry Goldsmith (The Omen), which was the first movie score for both these guys. 

    The film is awful but it is a fun watch, there's a reason it was lampooned by the MST3K crew, if you love 70's drive-in schlock there's a lot to love with this slice of Charles Band produced science fiction, but the acting from Kim Milford, who lurches around like a green-skinned, laser-equipped orangutan for the final third of the movie before being done-in by the aliens with a deadly pink laser blast!  On a side not, based on the original poster art, which is used for this Blu-ray release, I always thought that Klaus Kinski starred in it, the rendering of Kim Milford looks a lot like the wild-eyed Kinski.   

    Audio/Video: Laserblast (1978) arrives on Blu-ray from Full Moon with a new HD scan from the 35mm answer print and it looks surprisingly good. Grain is a bit chunky at times and there's some white speckling, dirt and minor print damage but the image is decently bright and satisfying. Fine detail is less than stellar, but the colors are decently vibrant with some reds and blues popping nicely, but overall this is not a vibrant movie, lots of earth tones, but decently rendered for Blu-ray. Audio on the disc includes the usual Full Moon lossy-audio,  with both English DTS-HD MA 2.0 mono and 5.1 surround options - there are no subtitles provided. The sound is decently mixed, canned sound effects, dialogue and the Goldsmith/Band score sounds good, not super crisp, but well-balanced and clean sounding. 

    This release includes a brand new audio commentary by Director Charles Band and his brother Composer Richard Band. The track is fun and laid back, as are most Band commentaries. The recalling mostly what's happening on screen, working with the cast, poking fun at the movie and generally having a good time. It's not very scholarly or well-informed Band could barely recall Kim Milford's name, but it like the movie has a charm, at one pint Richard begins speaking about "bush gardens" in regard to 70's pubic hair, as Charlie feigns embarrassment, which is about par for the course on this track. 

    There's also a selection of vintage trailers, including Cinderella, Crash, The Day Time Ended, End of the World, Fairytales, Mansion of the Doomed, and Tourist Trap, however, notably Cinderella and Tourist Trap would not play when selected, which is probably a disc authoring issue. 

    Special Features:
    - Brand New Audio Commentary by Charles and Richard Band
    - Vintage Trailers: Cinderella, Crash (4 min), The Day Time Ended (1 min), End of the World (1 min), Fairytales (2 min) HD, Mansion of the Doomed (2 min), Tourist Trap 

    I am loving these vintage Charles Band produced movies coming to Blu-ray, they're not all great, but seeing these VHS era cult-classics getting the HD treatment brings on the nostalgia in a big bad way, we get aliens, lasers, stop-motion, mutations and Roddy McDowall and Keenan Wynn for the win! 

     
     

    Tuesday, October 3, 2017

    Charles Band's Crazy 1978 Sci-Fi Classic LASERBLAST (1978) Returns!

    LASERBLAST (1978)
    Collector's Edition  

    Crawling up from Full Moon's primordial ooze is Laserblast, a bona fide Charles Band classic and one of the weirdest science fiction tales ever told!

    Happy go-lucky Billy Duncan discovers an otherworldly laser gun in the southern California desert,making him the target of a pair of aliens (rendered in stop-motion by the late, great David Allen) who had recently executed its previous owner. As Billy revels in the power of the weapon, he begins to change, his skin taking on a green hue and his mind becoming more and more malevolent. As the tainted teen becomes more powerful and lethal, it's up to the local authorities and the aliens to stop him before he blasts his way to oblivion!

    Laserblast co-stars the legendary Roddy McDowall (Planet of the Apes, Fright Night) and Keenan Wynn (Kiss Me Kate, Clonus) and marks the first appearace of nerd icon Eddie Deezan. It also makes the first feature length score by Joel Goldsmith (son of Jerry) and Richard Band

    Laserblast appears here for the first time in Blu-ray in High-Def on October 10, 2017, remastered from the original 35mm answer print. Special features include a BRAND NEW feature-length commentary by Charles and Richard Band.


     

    Tuesday, September 19, 2017

    HAIL SATAN! Drive-in shocker THE DEVIL'S RAIN (1975) arrives on Blu-ray from SEVERIN FILMS!

    THE DEVIL'S RAIN (1975) 

    1500 Strictly Limited Numbered Slipcase Available
    First HD Release Oozing With New Extras!

    One Of The Most Notorious Drive-In Shockers Of The ‘70s

    Now Restored In HD For The First Time Ever!

    Severin Films invites you to spend your Halloween chanting “Hail Satan!” as they bring THE DEVIL’S RAIN pouring down onto home theater screens across North America, soaking horror fans in the wet, heavy bile excreted by the Devil himself! Each copy of the movie comes with reversible cover art and limited, numbered edition slipcase (only 1500 units) with alternate artwork are be available exclusively from the Severin webstore.

    Take an all-star cast – including William Shatner, Ernest Borgnine, Eddie Albert, Keenan Wynn, Tom Skerritt, Ida Lupino and even John Travolta in his movie debut – at their most hellishly over-the- top. Add one of the most visually inventive filmmakers of the era – director Robert Fuest, of THE ABOMINABLE DR. PHIBES fame – and thrust them into an insane tale of rural occult carnage, featuring Church of Satan founder Anton LaVey as Technical Advisor. Watch in infernal awe as it all hurtles towards the most eye-popping, flesh-melting finale in grindhouse history. Now experience this devilishly infamous classic as you’ve never seen or heard it before, restored in HD for the first time ever and oozing with all-new Extras approved by Lucifer himself!

    In addition to this devilish release of the film, Severin has also collaborated with the Church of Satan and it’s merchandising operation iSatanist to produce a stylish pendant necklace recreating the stained glass window from the church seen in the film, available at the Severin Films store or as part of the Prince Of The Abyss bundle.

    Pre-Order Available Now!

    Prince of the Abyss Bundle Blu With Limited Slip Case & Pendant - $33.00
    Devil's Rain Blu with Limited Slip Case - $23.99
    Devil's Rain Blu + Pendant - $31.00
    Devil's Rain Blu only - $19.99
    Devil's Rain DVD - $17.99
    Devil's Rain Corbus Pendant - $13.00

    *Limited Edition (1,500) slipcase available only through www.Severin-Films.com





    Special Features:
    - Audio Commentary With Director Robert Fuest
    - Confessions Of Tom - Interview With Actor Tom Skerritt
    - The Devil's Makeup - Interview With Special FX Artist Tom Burman
    - 1975 Archive Interview With Actor William Shatner
    - First Stop Durango - Interview With Script Supervisor Ana Maria Quintana
    - Consulting with the Devil - A Conversation with the High Priest & High Priestess of the Church of Satan
    - Hail Satan! - Interview With Anton LaVey Biographer Blanche Barton
    - Filmmaker / Horror Collector Daniel Roebuck On The Devil's Rain
    - On Set Polaroid Gallery Of Script Supervisor Ana Maria Quintana Accompanied By Radio Spots
    - Theatrical Trailer
    - TV Spots
    - Poster/Still Gallery

    Corbis Pendant (Front)

    Corbis Pendant (Back)