Wednesday, April 29, 2026

THE EPITAPH VOL. 108 - BRIEF REMEMBRANCES OF THE RECENTLY RELEASED

 

VOL. 108

SCOOBY'S ALL-STAR LAFF-A-LYMPICS: THE COMPLETE COLLECTION (1977-78) - THE NEW FRED AND BARNEY SHOW: THE COMPLETE SERIES (1979) - PRIVATE BENJAMIN (1980) - GOOD LUCK, HAVE FUN, DON'T DIE (2026) - SLEEPERS (1996) - LAUREL & HARDY: THE DEFINITIVE RESTORATIONS (1933) - DUST BUNNY (2025)

We once again are flooded with a killer slate of home video releases, it's truly a wonderful time to be a physical media collector, and month after month I am reminded of how many classics and hidden gems are only just now getting the treatment they deserve on home video, it's crazy. The Epitaph this month features remembrances of two late '70s Hannah-Barbera animated series, an 80's army enlistment comedy gem featuring funny-lady Goldie Hawn, a collection of rarities from one of comedies great team-ups, a dark 90's thriller, and a pair of contemporary 2026 films that deal in apocalyptic A.I. science-fiction and whimsical monster under the fantasy. 

SCOOBY'S ALL-STAR LAFF-A-LYMPICS: THE COMPLETE COLLECTION (1977-1978) 
3-Disc Blu-ray Set
 
Label: Warner Archive 
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 550 Minutes 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD 
Cast: Daws Butler, Don Messick, Mel Blanc, Frank Welker, Casey Kasem

As a guy of a certain age this series of sport spoofs from Hannah-Barbera is a real nostalgic sweet spot, I had not seen any of these for decades, so this new 2-disc set from Warner Archive was a total time-machine cat-nip! At the time Hannah-Barbara were cashing on on the popularity of Olympics and ABC's all-star Battle of the Network Stars, and the show basically had Hanna-Barbera characters, both old favorites and new creations, in groupings competing for Olympic style medals, it was fun stuff and when I caught them on Saturday mornings I was always the throughly entertained. The three teams competing were the Scooby Doobies, the Yogi Yahooeys and the Really Rottens, and the competitions were always hosted by Snagglepuss and Mildew Wolf. We also get the voice talents of  Daws Butler, Don Messick, Frank Welker, Scatman Crothers, Casey Kasem, and Mel Blanc, which combined with classic H-B characters and globe-hopping sports competition shenanigans ensures you're going to have a good time. This 3-disc Blu-ray set looks and sounds terrific, the restoration efforts by Warner Archive to reconstruct and restore these have given us wonderful results. The only extras on the set is the 23-min Scooby Doo: Spooky Games, a 2012 made-for-TV adventure which follows Mystery Inc. to England as Shaggy competes in the World Invitational Games. 

Special Features:
- Scooby Doo: Spooky Games (23:18)

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THE NEW FRED AND BARNEY SHOW: THE COMPLETE SERIES (1979)
2-Disc Blu-ray Set 

Label: Warner Archive 
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 410 Minutes
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Fullscreen (1.33:1) 
Cast: Henry Corden, Mel Blanc, Jean VanderPyl, Gay Autterson

The New Fred and Barney Show was actually my introduction to The Flintstones, a revival series that aired in 1979, when I was about six years old. The show featured traditional Flintstones characters, headlined by Fred (voiced by Henry Corden following the passing of original voice actor Alan Reed) and Barney (voiced by Mel Blanc) and their children Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm, who were now toddlers, after having been depicted as teenagers in the The Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm Show n 1971. Their wives Betty and Wilma taking a bit of a backseat, hence the title of she show. Watching these now I was sort of overcome by a pleasant wave of youthful nostalgia, I had forgotten how much these one-off episodes delved into the mythical and magical elements, with a cadre of monsters and witches, haunted forests and their new neighbors The Frankenstone's, and of course the wonderful retro fun stuff like dinosaur powered appliances, including mammoth powered dishwashers, showers and hot tubs. Warner Archive's 2-disc Blu-ray set presents all 17-episodes  restored and wonderful looking, there are no extras to speak of, but the trip down memory lane was worth the price of admission all on it's own! Even at that young age when I first saw these I was a monster-kid, having grown-up on TV airings of the Universal monster movies on WPIX, and watching it now, still a monster-kid at heart, I had a blast, still. 

Special Features:
- None 

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PRIVATE BENJAMIN (1980) 
Blu-ray 

Label: Warner Archive 
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating: R
Duration: 110 Minutes 11 Seconds
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Stereo with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1)
Director: Howard Zieff
Cast: Goldie Hawn, Armand Assante, Eileen Brennan, Albert Brooks, Robert Webber

Private Benjamin (1980), directed by Howard Zieff, My Girl) is a 80s comedy classic starring Goldie Hawn, the comedic tale of a spoiled Jewish-American princess, Judy Benjamin (Goldie Hawn, Overboard), who after the death of her horny husband (Albert Brooks, Drive) on their wedding night. is coerced by a army duplicitous recruiter (Harry Dean Stanton, Repo Man) into enlisting for the Women's Army Corps. Soon after her arrival at Fort Biloxi she discovers that it's far from the paid vacation promised, but it's too late now, she's trapped in basic training, where she endures comical hardships and learns a lot about her self worth. The cast is unfirmly terrific, including the antagonistic Captain Doreen Lewis (Eileen Brennan, The Sting), Sergeant L.C. Ross (Hal Williams, TV's Sanford and Son) and the pervy Col. Clay Thornbush (Robert Webber, Madame Claude). Eventually she graduates basic and ends up stationed in a cushy position in Paris, where she finds what seems like love with Parisian doctor Henri Alan Tremont (Armand Assante, Prophecy). Her parents who are at a loss to understand why she enlisted are played by Sam Wanamaker (Death on the Nile) and Barbara Barrie (TV's Barney Miller), and other enlisted women include Toni Kalem (The Sopranos), P.J. Soles (Carrie), Damita Jo Freeman (Elvira: Mistress of the Dark), and also be on the lookout for Craig T. Nelson (Poltergeist) and Richard Herd (V, V the Final Battle) as military men. The Warner Archive Blu-ray look phenomenal, sourced from a 4K scan of the OCV in it's original 1.85:1 widescreen aspect ratio for the very first time ever on home video with uncompressed audio. Extras include a fullframe Theatrical Trailer and 2 episodes of the Private Benjamin TV Series starring Lorna Patterson steeping in as the titular Pvt. Benjamin, and interestingly Eileen Brennan, Hal Williams reprise their roles in the series, and Damita Jo Freeman returned as well, but as a different character. The series ran for three seasons with 36-episodes. The two episodes presented here are sourced from the best available masters, and accordingly show some SD video anomalies, but are still fun to watch. 

Special Features: 
- Two episodes of the Private Benjamin TV Series with Eileen Brennan and Lorna Patterson: Benjamin to the Rescue (22:41), The Captain's Helper (22:53)
- Original Theatrical Trailer (2:40)

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GOOD LUCK, HAVE FUN, DON'T DIE (2026) 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital 

Label: Universal Pictures 
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating: R
Duration: 134 Minutes 12 Seconds 
Audio: English Dolby Atmos (Dolby TrueHD 7.1), DTS-HD MA 5.1 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: Dolby Vision HDR10 2160p Ultra HD Widescreen (2.39:1), 1080p HD Widescreen (2.39:1)
Director: Gore Verbinski 
Cast: Sam Rockwell, Juno Temple, Haley Lu Richardson, Michael Pena, Zazie Beetz

The latest from director Gore Verbinski (Rango), and the first since 2016's A Cure For Wellness is a wild and messy time-travel A.I. apocalypse flick, a sort of 12 Monkeys by way of The Matrix, and Groundhog Day of course, wherein "a man from the future" (Sam Rockwell, Moon) arrives at a late-night diner in L.A. and proclaims he is on a mission to save humanity from an A.I. apocalypse, telling the patrons that the future of humanity depends on him assembling a specific combination of the diners to prevent certain doom. He also says this is his 117th attempt, so it seems he has not quite nailed down the specific combination, but he had a good feeling about this one! This 117th attempt includes diners Scott (Asim Chaudhry, The Sandman), Bob (Daniel Barnett), Marie (Georgia Goodman), couple Mark (Michael Peña, Ant-Man) and Janet (Zazie Beetz, Deadpool 2), Susan (Juno Temple, Venom: The Last Dance) and Ingrid (Haley Lu Richardson, The White Lotus) who has an allergy to technology. Enroute to their destination, the home of a 9 year-old genius programmer, we get some flashbacks to backstories for some of the characters and their involvement and observations of AI in the real world, the affect of cellphone addiction social media on the youth, and how Susan's son died in a school shooting was cloned with insidious results. It's a wild and wooly tale, but the action is kinetic, the paranoid predictions of our A.I. enslaved future are terrifically entertaining, Rockwell, who looks like a lunatic from the start, holds it all together and his opening monologue at the diner about the impending AI apocalypse totally hooked me into it, so I was here for the ride. The group make their way to their target, along the way they're attacked by masked men brain-rotted teens who have been enslaved by their phones sinister algorithm. It's smart, it's funny, and it's unpredictable wild, I had a blast. The 4K UHD presentation looks terrific with Doby Vision/HDR and Dolby Atmos audio, but sadly the only extras is an 8-min making of. This 2-disc UHD/Blu-ray release includes a Slipcover and a redemption code for a Digital Copy. 

Special Features: 
The Making of Goid Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die (5:07) 
- Digital Copy
- Slipcover 

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SLEEPERS
 (1996) 
4K Ultra HD + Digital 

Label: Warner Bros. 
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating: R
Duration: 147 Minutes 39 Seconds 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 5.1 Surround with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 2160p Ultra HD Widescreen (2.39:1),  1080p HD Widescreen (2.39:1)
Director: Barry Levinson
Cast: Robert De Niro, Dustin Hoffman, and Brad Pitt, along with Kevin Bacon, Jason Patric

For it's 30th Warner Bros. give the Barry Levinson (Diner) thriller Sleepers (1996), based on the book of the same name by Lorenzo Carcaterra, a new 4K makeover. Oddly this is a film I have zero memory off, which is surprising given that it features an all-star ensemble cast, among them Robert De Niro (The Godfather), Dustin Hoffman (Marathon Man), Brad Pitt (Se7en), Kevin Bacon (Flatliners) and Jason Patric (The Lost Boys). I threw this on expecting to remember having seen it, but no, I'd never watched it. The two-decade spanning story follows four boys, Lorenzo "Shakes" Carcaterra, Tommy Marcano, Michael Sullivan and John Reilly, from Hell's Kitchen who after a prank on a hotdog vendor gone wrong proves near fatal they end up sentenced to Wilkinson Home for Boys in Upstate New York, where they lose their innocence after repeatedly being tortured and sexually abused by torture by the schools guards, lead by Sean Nokes (Bacon). They never report the abuse or the death of a black inmate. In 1981, years after their release, Johnny (Ron Eldard, Super 8) and Tommy (Billy Crudup, Big Fish), are Irish mob career criminals, and while eating at a restaurant encounter Snokes eating alone, they confront him and unsatisfied with his response blow him away. They are arrested, and Michael, who is now an assistant district attorney, arranges himself to be assigned to the case in an effort free his friends and expose the crimes of Snokes and the others at the reform school. Michael is aided by "Shakes" who now works at the New York Times, mobster King Benny (Vittorio Gassman, Sharky's Machine), childhood friend/love interest Carol (Minnie Driver, Grosse Pointe Blank), and neighborhood priest Father Robert “Bobby” Carillo (De Niro), and alcoholic has-been lawyer Danny Snyder (Hoffman). I had a good time watching it, it sort of has a Goodfellas vibe, especially with the Jason Patric narration, crossed with a dark Stephen King coming-of-age tale, sort of a reform school version of Shawshank Redemption, and then becoming a  courtroom drama at the end. It's an odd hybrid, and it's overlong, but the all-star cast is phenomenal and the core story is pretty gripping stuff. The new 4K presentation is top-notch, it looks and sounds terrific with Dolby Vision and uncompressed audio. A nice surprise is that we get two brand new featurettes with Levinson looking back at the film. 

Special Features:
- NEW! The Making of Sleepers: A Conversation with Barry Levinson  (6:28) - Uncover the inner workings of creating the film, from the production design to adopting the novel into a screenplay, with director Barry Levinson. 
- NEW! Sleepers: The Art of Casting with Director Barry Levinson - Director Barry Levinson delves into the intricacies of crafting the roles of this star-studded cast. (6:52) 

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LAUREL & HARDY: THE DEFINITIVE RESTORATIONS 
(1933) 4-Disc Blu-ray Set 

Label: Kit Parker Films 
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 511 Minutes 
Audio: English with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Fullscreen (1.33:1) 
Cast: Jimmy Finlayson, Mae Busch.  Charlie Hall.  Billy Gilbert,  Charley Chase

Praise be to Kit parker Films for releasing the classic Laurel & Hardy comedies with new 2K and 4K digital restorations from original 35mm nitrate! Seeing these classic comedies from this conic comedy team fully restored and looking better than ever will always make me giddy, that there are good people out there doing the cinema-lord's work, and preserving these timeless bits of slapstick for future generations to enjoy. This 3-disc Blu-ray set features two full-lengths "Sons of the Desert" and "Way Out West", and 17 shorts, including the long thought lost silent-era film "The Battle of the Century," which is making it's home video debut in it's most complete form for the first time in over 90 years! A not-so-small caveat would be that these restorations are wildly uneven, they've been sourced from different sources, all of which have been probably not treated and stored well for the past 90 years, as such the restorations can only do so much, and there are faded, washed-out looking presentations, some have wonky contrast, and blacks can be milky, so just expect that. Also know that it looks like some of the restorations  have removed grain and film textures, which is not great either, but I am willing to say these are probably the best these have ever looked on home video - could they do better? Probably. Looking at the extras this is a treasure trove, hours of commentaries, alternate versions, archival interviews, trailers, galleries galore. I have not poured through the entire set yet, but wowsers, I am overwhelmed, what a comedy treasure chest, and a must-own for fans of vintage comedy team-ups. 

Special Features: 
- 'Battle of the Century' (1928) virtually complete and restored!
- Audio Commentaries by Randy Skretvedt and Richard W. Bann
- Never before seen video interviews as well as audio interviews with L&H co-workers
- Over 2500 stills, posters, scripts
- Alternate Soundtracks
- Music Tracks
- 'Ship's Reporter' Oliver Hardy Interview (restored)
- 'That's That' (restored/first time on video)
- 'Tree in a Test Tube' (restored from 16mm Kodachrome)
- L&H off-camera pix from Hardy's collection
- Restored Trailers

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DUST BUNNY (2026) 
4K Ultra HD + Digital 

Label: Lionsgate
Region Code: Region-Free
Rating: R
Duration: 106 Minutes
Audio: English Dolby Atmos (TrueHD 7.1) with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: Dolby Vision HDR10 2160p Ultra HD Widescreen (3.00:1)
Director: Bryan Fuller
Cast: Mads Mikkelsen, Sophie Sloan, Sheila Atim, David Dastmalchian, Sigourney Weaver

Dust Bunny (2026) is the directorial debut of Bryan Fuller (Hannibal, American Gods), a 10-year-old Aurora (Sophie Sloan) believes her adoptive parents have been killed by a monster that lives under her bed. When she follows her elusive neighbor in apartment 5B (Mads Mikkelsen, TV's Hannibal) is a killer, after witnessing what she believes to be a dragon, but in reality was a group of armed assassins inside of a dragon dance costume. It turns out that the resident in 5B is a contract killer. When she approached him to hire him to kill the monster under her bed he thinks that her parents were accidentally killed by assassins sent him, and that her imagination has just created the monster under the bed in place of what actually happened. He informs his handler Laverne (Sigourney Weaver, Ghostbusters) about the situation and advise him to kill the child as she witness the Chinatown contract, but he ignores her advice and befriends the child, which results in him having to porrect the child from an array of assassins who first come for him, and then for both. The film sort of feels like Leon: The Professional as seen through the imaginative lens and color palette of something like Amelie, I feel like the look-book or style-book they used by the production team must have had references to the work of Jean-Pierre Jeunet, as it has that whimsical, highly stylized fantasy feel to it, which looks gorgeous and just pulls you into the fantasy of it all, truly a candy-colored fairytale, I adored the visual style of it. The hired assassin-ness of it all offers some terrific hand-to-hand and firearm engagements as well, including a multi-assassin siege lead by The Conspicuously Inconspicuous Man (David Dastmalchian, Late Night with the Devil), where Aurora's case work Brenda (Sheila Atim, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness) shows up, further complicating the situation. Narratively I don't know if I loved this, there are some terrific comedic and heartfelt moments between the young girl and Resident 5B that work wonderfully, the young actress is terrific and I loved seeing the softer side of Mikkelsen, but the real pull here is the visual tour de force, and for me, that's all I needed, I love this flick. The 4K UHD from Lionsgate looks splendid, the artsy style and fantastical production design shine in 4K with Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos, plus we get a handful of EPK style extras, nothing too meaty, I def wanted more bonus material, but at least we get something. 

Special Features:
- Making Dust Bunny (11:56) 
- Monster Craft (0:36) 
- Q&A Sizzle (0:43) 
- Cute to Cutthroat (0:26) 
- Mads Choreography Video (1:01) 
- Cast Explainers (0:32)
- Theatrical Trailer

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Pre-Sputnik Era Sci-Fi Classics Destination Moon (1950) and Flight to Mars (1951) Arrive On A 2-Disc Collection from Film Masters July 14th!


DESTINATION MOON (1950) 

Two Out of this World Classics
Destination Moon (1950) and Flight to Mars (1951) come together in a 2 Disc Collection!

Both scanned in 4K from 35mm archival elements for a 
summer Special Edition from Film Masters

Film Masters, whose mission is to celebrate the preservation of classic film by releasing high quality restorations, announces a pressed two-disc set of a pair of pre-Sputnik era films from the early 1950s. Both films are scanned in  4K from 35mm archival prints and color-graded to present the prints as close to the originally intended viewing experience as possible. 

Groundbreaking at the time, Destination Moon (1950) was the science-fiction classic that launched Hollywood into the Space Age. Setting the standard for realistic space travel on screen, this film from Academy Award-winner George Pal was almost more of a futuristic documentary than an action packed science-fiction film. With gorgeous matte paintings by Chesley Bonestell, this presentation of Destination Moon showcases the extraordinary care and production that was taken for this first-of-its-kind space film.

Flight to Mars (1951) is the classic science fiction cult film from legendary producer Walter Mirisch. Arriving at the start of the 1950s space film boom and shot in Cinecolor, it follows the wild adventures of an Earth crew landing on Mars. Despite coming from one of Hollywood’s smallest Poverty Row studios, it was praised in its time as “convincingly told and absorbing.” — The Los Angeles Times.

Says Film Master’s President, Phil Hopkins, "In 1950, Destination Moon dared to treat space travel as a serious scientific endeavor long before it was a reality. Today, as NASA’s Artemis II crew completed a 10-day journey around the moon, breaking records and preparing the way for future space exploration, restoring this film in 4K allows us to honor the pioneers—like Robert Heinlein and George Pal—who first showed us that the moon wasn't just a fantasy, but a destination."

Special Features: 
- Destination Moon Restored Trailer, scanned in 4K from 35mm archival elements.
- Destination Moon Full length commentary by Justin Humphreys.
- Recreated Bob Burns interview, from Tom Weaver and Richard Heft.
- Man's Greatest Adventure: The Making of Destination Moon, a new documentary by Ballyhoo Motion Pictures.
- Destination Moon Digitized Original Pressbook courtesy of James Van Hise.
- Recut Original Trailer for Flight to Mars using restored elements.
- Flight to Mars Full Length Commentary by Justin Humphreys.
- Interstellar Travelogues: Extended Edition, a new documentary by Ballyhoo Motion Pictures.
- Walter Mirisch: From Bomba to Body Snatchers, archival documentary by Ballyhoo Motion Pictures.
- Full color inserted booklet with a new essay by Sloan de Forest






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THE UGLY (1997) Unearthed Film Blu-ray Review + Screenshots


THE UGLY (1997) 

Label: Unearthed Films 
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 93 Minutes 22 Seconds 
Audio: Original Theatrical English 2.0 Stereo and 4.0 DTS-HD MA Surround with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1).
Director: Scott Reynolds
Cast: Paolo Rotondo, Rebecca Hobbs, Roy Ward, Paul Glover, Chris Graham, Darien Takle

The Ugly (1997), directed by Scott Reynolds (Heaven), is a supernaturally charged psychological horror thriller from New Zealand, in it serial killer Simon Cartwright (Paolo Rotondo, The Rule of Jenny Pen), has been confined to an Auckland mental institution for the past five years, after murdering over a dozen people, the asylum is run by the menacing Marlowe (Roy Ward). There he is regularly tormented and abused by cruel orderlies Philip and (Paul Glover, TV's Spartacus) and Robert (Christopher Graham), who seem like violent criminals themselves. Simon has requested that he be re-evaluated by Dr. Karen Schumaker (Rebecca Hobbs), who has recently gained notoriety in another serial killer case that caught the public's attention, to deem whether Simon is fit to be released back into society, much to the chagrin of the disapproving Marlowe. 

As Karen begins a series of interviews with Simon we are shown how he ended-up becoming a serial killer through various flashbacks into his past, the abuse he faced from his manipulative mother Evelyn (Jennifer Ward-Lealand, Dead) and bullies at school. These non-linear flashback are quite stylish, with Karen becoming a part of the memory as they are being told, revealing the terrifying dark secrets of Simon's inner-mind as we explore the traumatic events that molded him into the serial killer that he has become. The sessions eventually reveal his alter-ego "The Ugly", and how he is spurred into violence by unseen ghostly tormentors, beautifully visualized by the Wētā Workshop team (The Lord of the Rings Trilogy). The film has an interesting use of color that pervades the films, the most striking being that most of the onscreen blood is not red, it's pitch-black, which is an interesting and stylish choice. The film is also full of moody lighting, skewed angles and fractured editing style that suits the psychological nature of the film quite nicely. 

The violence is potent and sometime unexpected, there's a frenzy to it, yet Rotondo is a strong enough performer that I did feel sympathy for the killer at times, the torture and torments he suffered as a young lad that formed him are palpable, though what he does is not forgivable, it is understandable to a degree. I also enjoyed the supernatural elements, the ghostly tormentors that spur the killer to act, and a subtle psychic elements that allow the killer to get under the skin and into the mind of the Karen is nicely realized with hallucinatory visions that she experiences. 

This is a film that has largely gone unnoticed since it received a DVD back in '99, so I hope that this new Collector's Edition Blu-ray from Unearthed Films puts more eyes on it, it's a terrifically stylish serial killer flick, and one worth checking out. 

Audio/Video: The Ugly (1997) makes it's North American Blu-ray debut from Unearthed Films as part of their Unearthed Classics line-up, presented in 1080p HD widescreen (1.77:1), sourced from a 4K restoration of the film from the original 35mm interpositive. The image looks terrific, plenty of detail and texture on display, the colors are bold, and black levels are solid throughout. The blue-tinted gel lighting uses throughout looks wonderful, that black blood is creepy looking, with other primaries like red look especially vibrant. Audio comes by way of Original Theatrical English DTS-HD MA 2.0 stereo or a 4.0 DTS-HD MA Surround track with optional English subtitles. The tracks are clean and well-balanced, i heard no evidence of age-related hiss or noise, dialogue sounds terrific, and the score and sound design elements are terrific. I say give that 4.0 surround track a listen, it's quite good. 

Unearthed do it up right with some terrific extras for this one, starting off with a brand new Audio Commentary with actors Paolo Rotondo and Rebecca Hobbs, moderated by Nathaniel Thompson of Mondo Digital, has a nice flow to it, Thompson keeps the commentary on track, probing the Hobbs and Rondo about their roles and experiences making the film. We also get an 18-min 8/19/97 Radio New Zealand Interview with Scott Reynolds with Host Jonathan Dennis. Reynolds talks about growing up as the kid of parents who worked at a mainstream theater, the influential films he saw there, including A Fistful Of Dollars and The Incredible Shrinking Man, he synopsizes the film, his thoughts on onscreen violence, and trying not to copy his influences, while inspiration from many realms, not just film, and his belief that it is better to take risks than doing the same old same, as well as the visual style and motifs. 

Also included are two Scott Reynolds Short Films, we have the 17-min femme-fatale thriller  'A Game with No Rules' (1994) and the 9-min 'The Minute'. Next, the 19-min Getting To Know You - Dialogues with the Devil in 'The Ugly' and Serial Killer Cinema, a visual essay written and narrated by Howard S. Berger that explores the serial killer sun-genre and where The Ugly fits into that. The last of the disc extras are an Isolated Score (DTS-HD MA 4.0) highlighting the tension-filled orchestral score by Victoria Kelley (Black Sheep), a 4-min Photo Gallery and the 2-min Original Theatrical Trailer with both 2.0 and 4.0 sound mixes. 

The single-disc release arrives in a clear keepcase with a Reversible Wrap featuring both the original Lionsgate DVD artwork and a new artwork by Scott Jackson/Monsterman Graphic. Inside there is a 6-Page Collectible Booklet with writing on the film by Jason Jenkins. The first=pressing also includes a Slipcover with the new  Scott Jackson/Monsterman Graphic artwork. 

Special Features: 
- NEW! 4K restoration of the film from the original 35mm interpositive
- NEW! Original Theatrical 2.0 Stereo and 4.0 DTS-HD MA Surround
- NEW! Commentary with actors Paolo Rotondo and Rebecca Hobbs, moderated by Nathaniel Thompson
- NEW! Scott Reynolds Short Films:  A Game with No Rules (16:54, 1994), The Minute (8:40, 1982)
- NEW! 8/19/97 Radio New Zealand Interview with Scott Reynolds with Host Jonathan Dennis  (18:03) 
- NEW! Isolated Score (DTS-HD MA 4.0) 
- NEW Photo Gallery (3:37) 
- NEW! Original Theatrical Trailer (2.0 Mix, 1:37) 
- NEW! Original Theatrical Trailer (4.0 Mix, 1:37) 
- NEW! The Ugly Visual Essay - Fetting To Know You - Dialogies with the Devil in 'The Ugly' and Serial Killer Cinema (19:22) - written and narrated by Howard S. Berger 
- 6-Page Collectible Booklet 
- Reversible Wrap
- Slipcover 


Screenshots from the Unearthed Films Blu-ray: 





























































Extras: 


















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