Sunday, February 8, 2026

LAST FOXTROT IN BURBANK (1973) Full Moon Blu-ray Review + Screenshots

LAST FOXTROT IN BURBANK (1973) 

Label: Full Moon 
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating: R
Duration: 55 Minutes 58 Seconds 
Audio: English Dolby Digital 2.0 and 5.1 Surround (No Subtitles) 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1) 
Director: Charles Band 
Cast: Michael Pataki, 
Richard Band, Sheery Denton, Simmy Bow, Sally Marr, William Quinn, Merlouch Drabin

Last Foxtrot in Burbank (1973) was the first feature-film directed by Charles Band, long thought lost for decades after Band ordered the destruction of all film prints and press materials following it's disastrous 1973 theatrical release. For decades Band would not acknowledge the film's existence or his involvement, but since the original negative was discovered at UCLA he's softened a bit on his views of the film. As Band tells it he had his heart set on making his feature film debut with a horror film, but his comedian pal Frank Ray Perilli convinced him to make this film, a poorly conceived spoof of Bernardo Bertolucci's erotic drama The Last Tango is Paris, while the original film was still in the cinemas. The film is a straight-up condensed parody of Last Tango... starring Michael Pataki in the Brando role as Paul, offering a not inaccurate but still abrasive parody of Brando. One day Paul encounters Jeanne (Sherry Denton) in “Burbank, France” who lives next door to him in an apartment, they strike up a torrid sexual affair as she has to deal with his abrasive personality as he mourns the loss of his wife who committed suicide. There's not a lot more to it, the story is barely a story, the film is threadbare, and the stabs at humor and parody are lacking to say the least. Even at just 56-minutes long I found this to be a plodding watch. I can see why Band and other involved were ashamed of making it and tried to bury it, but I also applaud him for resurrecting it when the negative was re-discovered, because it's a hell of a curio from the vast Charles Band filmography.    

On the plus side we have Sherry Denton as the very cute Jeanne who is mostly nude for all of her scenes, whether that's reenacting the notorious butter scene from tango, showering with Pataki with his junk tucked away Silence of the Lambs style, or rebuffing her boyfriend (who is not Paul) who is constantly trying to secretly film a porno film without her permission, including Charles Band's brother Richard as the porno cameraman, she's the real reason to suffer through this. Charles Band himself shows up in a small role as a priest. Also be on the lookout for comedian Lenny Bruce's mother Sally Marr (Mansion of the Doomed, Fire Sale) as Mrs. Kitchenberg. 

Pretty much everyone involved in the film had disowned it, Charles Band is credited as director "Robert Bokino". Other notable names include John Carpenter who edited the film under the pseudonym "John T. Casino", while the Oscar-winning screenwriter of The deer Hunter Louis Garfinkle assumes the name "Sam Vaughn" - no one wanted their name associated with this one, even star Michael Pataki hides behind the name "Michael Loveman". The sole saving grace here is the lovely Sherry Denton who as I stated previously is nude for most of the film, and very easy on the eyes, it looks like this was her only film, too bad, I liked her. No, it's not a good movie, in fact it's quite terrible, but it's still an interesting Charles Band curio that's been newly resurrected after having been considered "lost" for decades, and that alone is worth celebrating. 

Audio/Video: The Last Foxtrot in Burbank (1973) gets a region-free Blu-ray from Full Moon in 1080p HD, frame din 1.78:1 widescreen. The film was thought lost for decades after director Charles band ordered the destruction of all the prints and PR materials following it's disastrous four-wall release, with Band doing his best to erase the film from existence, spending decades denying it existence or placing directorial blame on the film's star George Pataki. The film was eventually found in a UCLA film vault, and has now been made available for the first time ever on home video. The source looks terrific, grain is present and well-managed, textures look great, skin tones appear warm and natural, and the colors are vivid, it really looks terrific, like, really surprisingly terrific. As usual the only audio option Full Moon offer is lossy Doby Digital via 2.0 and 5.1 surround, I preferred the truer sounding 2.0, this low-budget cheapie certainly doesn't need an artificial surround boost. The audio track is clean and well-balanced, the atrocious dialogue consisting of suspect French and Pataki's abrasive Brando-isms sounds surprisingly good. 

Extras include a 11-min Burbank Memories with Charles Band wherein Band confesses to directing the film after being convinced by his stand-up comedian pal Frank Ray Perilli to make a spoof of The Last Tango is Paris. We also get the 4-min Original Remastered Trailer, which is less a trailer and just one of those theater exit interview with actors pretending to be theater goers shocked by what they've seen, plus a 8-min Trailers from Hell Episode with Introduction by Larry Karaszewski. The last of the disc extras are a selection of Vintage Full Moon Trailers that include Crash!, Mansion of the Doomed, Day Time Ended, Laserblast, Fairy Tales and Tourist Trap. 

The single-disc release arrive sin a standard keepcase with a single-sided wrap featuring the original movie poster artwork, itself a spoof of the Last Tangi in Paris.  


Special Features: 
- Burbank Memories with Charles Band (10:39) 
- Original Remastered Trailer (4:16) 
- Trailers from Hell Episode with Commentary by Larry Karaszewski (7:51) 
- Vintage Full Moon Trailers: Crash! (1:31), Mansion of the Doomed(1:50), Day Time Ended (1:34), Laserblast (1:26), Fairy Tales (1:31), Tourist  Trap (0:55)

Screenshots from the Full Moon Blu-ray: 







































Extras: 







Buy it!
#ad 

KNOCK OFF (1998) MVD Rewind Collection 2-Disc Collector's Edition 4K Ultra HD Review + Blu-ray Screenshots

KNOCK OFF (1998) 
2-Disc Collector's Edition 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

Label: MVD Rewind Collection 
Region Code: Region-Free
Rating: R
Duration: 91 Minutes 5 Seconds 
Audio: English  DTS-HD MA 5.1 Surround LPCM 2.0 Stereo with Optional English Subtitles
Video: HDR10 2160p Ultra HD Widescreen (2.35:1), 1080p HD Widescreen (2.35:1)
Director: Tsui Hark
Cast: Jean-Claude Van Damme, Rob Schneider,
Lela Rochon, Michael Fitzgerald Wong, Carmen Lee, Paul Sorvino

Knock Off (1988) is directed by Tsui Hark (A Chinese Ghost Story) and written by Steven E. de Souza (The Running Man), and of course stars the 'Muscles from Brussels'  himself, b-movie action star Jean-Claude Van Damme (Cyborg), a literally  explosive thriller set in Hong Kong's manufacturing scene during the 1997 handover to China! the nearly nonsensical plot involves a Russian arms dealer smuggling  tiny 'nano-bombs", which are tiny micro-bombs, in a shipment of counterfeit 'V-Six' jeans via the unwitting Marcus "King of The Knock-Offs" Ray (Van Damme) and his business partner Tommy Hendricks (Rob Schneider, Saturday Night Live), who find themselves not only entangled with a Russian Mafia plot, but the CIA, and Hong Kong mobster Skinny (Glen Chin, Natural Born Killers), not to mention a lunatic rickshaw race through the city, an exploding giant buddha, green flamed explosions everywhere, and some witty banter from Van Damme and  Schneider.

I've never been a fan of Van Damme's action films, or so I thought, until I watched this silly slice of late-80s HK action, in fact, going into it it had a double negative in that it starred Van Damme and Rob Schneider, but having watched it, i am surprised to hear myself say it, but this flick is fucking awesome. Not only are Van Damme and Schneider tolerable, they're actually pretty great together. The real reason here is the action-packed proclivities of director Tsui Hark, the inventive cinematography of Arthur Wong (Heart of Dragon), and of course the work of 2nd Unit Director Sammo Hung (The Prodigal Son) certainly doesn't hurt either. 

The Honk Kong set pieces are terrific, the action beats are kinetic, and the oddball humor and quirkier elements work more often than not. It's a strange one, the opening scene with a submerged crate full of explosive dolls srats things off on a note that certainly tells you that you're in for something a bit cornball, but it still manages to pack in some awesome action, and a few notable deaths, including someone killed by a missile that launches from inside a safe, and someone kicked off the top of a truck who is then impaled on a bamboo scaffolding! Paul Sorvino shows up here as the duplicitous head of the CIA, and there's double agents and double-crosses galore that manage to keep that cornball plot just of of reach of coherence, but the hyperactive flick's bizarre alchemy of cornball action, stylish lensing, and oddball quirkiness really did it for me. 

Audio/Video: Knock Off (1998) makes it's U.S. 4K UHD + Blu-ray debut from MVD Rewind Collection in both 1080p HD and 2160p Ultra HD, derived from a 16 bit scan of the original camera negative in it's original 2.35:1 aspect ratio with HDR-10 color-grade. The source looks very good, a few minor specks here and there, watching the UHD I found that the grain field can vary quite a bit from scene to scene, and sometimes within the same scene, perhaps due to the optical shots and inserts, as well as various lighting set-ups. Otherwise this looks excellent, the colors and skin tones look solid, though the vibrant color palette seems only slightly subdued to me, but the UHD is an improvement over the SD Blu-ray counterpart. Blacks are solid and not overly grainy, the green flames of the nano-bombs have a nice hue. Audio comes by way of English DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 and LPCM 2.0 with optional English subtitles. The tracks are clean and well-balanced, the stereo track has some nice panning effects, but the surround option does good work opening up the sound stage during the action set-pieces, dialogue in both English and Chinese are nicely prioritized, plus the score by Ron and Russell Mae of the pop group Sparks has a much better showing in the surround mix. 

The sole extra on the 4k UHD disc is an Archival Audio Commentary by Action Cinema Experts Mike Leeder and Arne Venema. On the Blu-ray we get the same commentary, plus a new 41-min Interview with screenwriter Steven E. de Souza, a new 18-min Interview with producer Moshe Diamant, an archival 10-min audio-only Archival 2020 interview with writer Steven E. de Souza, the 23-min vintage 'Making Of: Knock Off' featurette, plus the 2-min Original Theatrical Trailer

The 2-disc UHD/Blu-ray release arrives in a black dual-hubbed keepcase, we get a Reversible Wrap featuring the same key art but with MVD Rewind Collection or a 4k LaserVision Collection layouts. Inside there is a Collectible Knock Off “4K LaserVision” Mini-Poster, plus we get a 
Limited Edition Slipcover with the 4k LaserVision Collection layout, which is limited to the first pressing only. 

Special Features: 
Disc 1: 4K UHD
- HD Restoration (16-Bit Scan of the Original Camera Negative) of the film presented in its original 2.35:1 Aspect Ratio in HDR
- Archival Audio Commentary by Action Cinema Experts Mike Leeder and Arne Venema
Disc 2: Blu-ray 
 Archival Audio Commentary by Action Cinema Experts Mike Leeder and Arne Venema
- NEW! Interview with Steven E. de Souza (40:51)
- NEW! Interview with Moshe Diamant (18;24)
- Archival 2020 interview with writer Steven E. de Souza (9:49) 
- Archival 'Making Of: Knock Off' - featurette (23.15) 
- Original Theatrical Trailer (1:58) 
- Reversible Cover Art
- Collectible Knock Off “4K LaserVision” Mini-Poster
- Limited Edition Slipcover (FIRST PRESSING ONLY)

Screenshots from the MVD Rewind Blu-ray: 



































































Buy it!
#ad