Friday, March 20, 2026

THE EPITAPH VOL. 106 - BRIEF REMEMBRANCES OF THE RECENTLY RELEASED

VOL. 106
BRIEF REMEMBRANCES OF THE RECENTLY RELEASED

LOONEY TUNES COLLECTOR'S VAULT VOLUME 2 (1935-1963) - ANNE RICE'S TALAMASCA: THE SECRET ORDER - SEASON 1 (2025) - COBRA KAI: THE COMPLETE SERIES (2018-2025) - SCOTT PILGRIM TAKES OFF: THE COMPLETE LIMITED SERIES (2023) - MEL BROOKS' SPACE BALLS: THE ANIMATED SERIES (2008) - THE CLOSER: THE COMPLETE SERIES (2005-2012) 

LOONEY TUNES COLLECTOR'S VAULT VOLUME 2 (1935-1963) 2-Disc Blu-ray Set 

Label: Warner Archive 
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 356 Minutes 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles 441
Video: 1080p HD Fullscreeen  (1.33:1) 
Directors: Robert McKimson, Friz Freleng, Arthur Davis, Chuck Jones, Norman McCabe, Phil Monroe, Richard Thompsor, Frank Tashlin, Bob Clampett
Cast: Mel Blanc, June Foray, Jim Backus, Sara Berner

Get yourself a second helping of classic Looney Tunes vault rarities with volume two of the series, offering 51 classic Merrie Melodies and Looney Tunes animated theatrical shorts cartoons featuring the beloved  Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Daffy Duck, Sylvester and Tweety, Coyote and Road Runner, Foghorn Leghorn, and some lesser known but no-less wonderful character like Conrad Cat, Spike and Chester, the Goofy Gophers, Henry Hawk, and Ralph and Sam. Every one of these is making their restored Blu-ray debuts, with disc one actually being loaded with new to disc restorations, starting off with the long awaited debut of "A-Lad-in His Lamp" featuring the voice talents of Jim Backus (the voice of Mr. Magoo), who does the near impossible. stealing the show from Mel Blanc and Bugs Bunny! These have all been restored and look terrific, some more so than others, but I was never disappointed, having these on disc is such an animated blessing for fans of vintage  toon comedy.  We even get a couple of non-PC gems like "The Daffy Duckaroo",  "Wagon Heels" and "Wise Quackers" on this set, uncut and uncensored, which is something that has not aired uncut on TV for many years. A couple of the have their Blue Ribbon title cards as the original title sequences have long been lost, but the 50's toons at least are not cropped on the top and bottom as they were on previous DVD sets. It' a truly terrific set, and this time around we actually get a smattering of archival audio commentaries that are ported over from past DVD releases, which I hope they continue to do. Some of my favorite shorts include Little "Blabbermouse" wherein a child mouse finds himself at odd with a fun caricature of W.C. Fields, and I have a real soft spot for the Goofy Gophers stiff, and anything with a horror/sci-fi bent to it like "Claws For Alarm" (1954) which is a tasty remake of  remake Scaredy Cat(1948), Friz Freleng's Bugs Bunny/Dr. Jekyll classic "Hyde and Hare" (1955), and "Jumpin’ Jupiter" (1955), an alien abduction short with Porky and Sylvester, and the Alfred Hitchcock Presents... parody "The Last Hungry Cat" (1961). Those are just my favorites, but this set is a nostalgic time machine of childhood wonder, and Warner Archive continue to stun with their animated short restorations, truly a treasure trove of vintage toons, a must-own.

Shorts: 
Disc 1
1. Looney Tunes "A-Lad-In His Lamp" (1948, 7:17) 
2. Looney Tunes "Ain't That Ducky"  (1945, 7:00) 
3. Merrie Melodies "The Bird Came C.O.D." (1942, 7:39)
4. Merrie Melodies "Bone Sweet Bone" (1948, 7:08) 
5. Looney Tunes "Boston Quackie" (1957, 6:59)  
6. Merrie Melodies "Boulevardier from the Bronx" (1936, 7:54) 
7. Merrie Melodies "Country Boy" (1935, 6:47)
8. Looney Tunes "The Daffy Duckaroo" (1942, 7:43) - B&W "lost" scene restored)
9. Looney Tunes  "Dr. Jerkyl's Hide" (1954, 6:43) 
10. Merrie Melodies "The EGGcited Rooster" (1952, 6:49)
11. Looney Tunes  "Fastest with the Mostest" (1960, 7:21)
12. Merrie Melodies "Fowl Weather" (1953, 6:50)
13. Merrie Melodies "I Taw a Putty Tat"  (1948, 6:32)
14. Merrie Melodies "I Gopher You" (1954,6:55)
15. Merrie Melodies "I Was a Teenage Thumb" (1963, 6:54)
17. Merrie Melodies "Little Blabbermouse" (1940, 8:13)
17. Merrie Melodies "Mother Was a Rooster" (1962, 5:56)
18. Merrie Melodies "Pests for Guests" (1954, 6:46)
19. Looney Tunes "The Rattled Rooster"  (1948, 7:26) - original titles restored
20. Merrie Melodies "A Sheep in the Deep" (1962, 6:14)
21. Looney Tunes "Sock a Doodle Do"  (1954, 7:18)
22. Looney Tunes "A Street Cat Named Sylvester" (1953, 6:36) )
23. Merrie Melodies "To Itch His Own" (1958, 6:06)
24. Looney Tunes "A Waggily Tale" (1958, 6:33)
25. Merrie Melodies "Woolen Under Where" (1963, 6:21)
26. Merrie Melodies "Zoom at the Top" (1962, 6:32) 

Disc 2
1. Merrie Melodies "Awful Orphan" (1949, 7:25) 
2. Looney Tunes "A Bird in a Guilty Cage" (1952, 7:00)
3. Merrie Melodies "Bowery Bugs" (1949, 7:31)  
4. Merrie Melodies "Claws for Alarm" (1954, 6:49) 
5. Looney Tunes "Crowing Pains" (1947, 6:48)
6. Merrie Melodies "Frigid Hare" (1949, 7:34) 
7. Merrie Melodies "Hare Remover" (1946, 7:28)
8. Merrie Melodies "The Heckling Hare" (1941, 7:24)
9. Looney Tunes "Hop and Go" (1943, 7:14) B&W
10. Looney Tunes "Hyde and Hare" (1955, 7:03) 
11. Merrie Melodies "Jumpin' Jupiter" (1955, 7:00p) 
12. Merrie Melodies "The Last Hungry Cat" (1961, 7:04) 
13. Looney Tunes "Mexican Boarders" (1962, 6:52) 
14. Looney Tunes "Mouse Menace" (1946, 7:01) 
15. Looney Tunes "Odor of the Day" (1948, 7:12)  
17. Merrie Melodies "Often an Orphan (1949, 7:31) 
18. Looney Tunes "The Pest That Came to Dinner" (1948, 7:16) 
19. Looney Tunes "Ready.. Set.. Zoom!" (1955, 6:57) 
20. Looney Tunes "Scent-imental Over You" (1947, 7:19) 
21. Merrie Melodies "Stop! Look! And Hasten!" (1954, 7:03)
22. Merrie Melodies "To Beep or Not to Beep" (1963, 6:39) 
23. Merrie Melodies "Wagon Heels" (1945, 7:10)  
24. Merrie Melodies "Whoa, Be-Gone!" (1958, 6:12) 
25. Looney Tunes "Wise Quackers"  (1949, 7:12) 
25.Merrie Melodies "You Were Never Duckier" (1948, 7:58) )

Special Features: 
- "Bowery Bugs" Audio Commentary with animation historian Michael Barrier
"The Heckling Hare" Audio Commentary with Greg Ford
- "Mexican Boarders" Audio Commentary with Greg Ford
- "Stop! Look! And Hasten" Audio Commentary with Greg Ford
- "You Were Never Duckier" Audio Commentary with animator and director (Pocahontas) Eric Golberg

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ANNE RICE'S TALAMASCA: THE SECRET ORDER (2025) 2-Disc Blu-ray Set 

Label: Acorn Media International 
Region Code: A,B 
Rating: Cert. 15
Duration: 180 Minutes 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 5.1 Surround with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (2.00:1)
Cast: Elizabeth McGovern, William Fichtner, Maisie Richardson-Sellers, Celine Buckens, Jason Schwartzman, Eric Bogosian, Justin Kirk

AMC continues to expand the Anne Rice' Immortsal Universe with Talamasca; The Secret Order, based on the novels “The Vampire Chronicles” and “The Lives of the Mayfair Witches”, and set in the same universe as the AMC series of the Interview with the Vampire and 2023’s Mayfair Witches. I have not watched Mayfair witches but the Interview with a Vampire series was quite a treat, so I may be coming into this at a slight disadvantage. The series has a real spy-thriller set-up, we have law school graduate follows Guy Anatole (Nicholas Denton, Dangerous Liaisons) who is recruited by the Talamasca, a secretive organization that monitors the supernatural world to maintain balance with the mortal world. He's recruited by the mysterious Helen (Elizabeth McGovern, Ordinary People) because of his psychic abilities to track down a woman named Doris (Celine Buckens, Shelter). He's set-up at the Talamasca's London Motherhouse, where he enters a world of the unknown, assigned a handler by way of Olive (Maisie Richardson-Sellers, DC's Legends of Tomorrow) to keep an eye on him, but he finds himself deep into a world he's unfamiliar with, he ends up investigating a vampire named Jasper (William Fichtner, The Dark Knight) who has infiltrated the London motherhouse, and has grown an army of vicious attack vampires that are rather frightening in their ferocity. This first season is only six episodes and I found it rather engaging, the hybrid supernatural spy-craft series has a charismatic lead by way of Nicholas Denton, and Fichtner is an equally charismatic and terrifying villain. As of this review the series has not yet been announced for renewal, but they've laid the groundwork for what could be a fascinating and gripping supernatural series, so fingered we get a second season announced soon, I would hate for the tantalizing cliffhanger to leave us hangin' without a proper conclusion.  

Special Features
- Show Me More 
- Episode Insider

COBRA KAI: THE COMPLETE SERIES (2018-2025) 16-Disc Blu-ray Set 

Label: Sony 
Region Code: A
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 589 Minutes 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 5.1 with optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1) 
Cast: Ralph Macchio, William Zabka, Courtney Henggeler, Xolo Mariduena, Tanner Buchanan

Cobra Kai is the rather genius continuation of the origil Karate Kid trilogy timeline, with characters Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio, My Cousin Vinny) and Johnny Lawrence (William Zabka, Just One of the Guys), decades after the trilogy. As the name might indicate our entry point here is Johnny who  has fallen on hard times, a functional alcoholic working menial labor jobs in Reseda, California, living in the shadow his sworn enemy Daniel who has gone on to become quite an entrepreneur with a wildly successful car dealership franchise with a beautiful wife Amanda (Courtney Henggeler, TV's The Big Bang Theory), teenage daughter Samantha (Mary Mouser, TV's Body of Proof), and younger son Anthony (Griffin Santopietro). Meanwhile Johnny is a divorced dad with an estranged son Robby (Tanner Buchanan), who much he was is a troubled teen. it's after an encounter with Daniel that Johnny comes upon the idea of re-opening the Cobra Kai dojo, his first student bullied neighbor kid Miguel Diaz (Xolo Maridueña, Blue Beetle), whom he takes on and school's in the "No Mercy" manner of his former master John Kreese (Martin Kove, TV's Cagney & Lacey), who actually pops up in the series, as does some other familiar faces from the original trilogy. The series explores the traumas that both Johnny and Daniel have endured and are dealing with, each with a gripping arc that makes for one heck of a fun show. The episodes are roughly a half hour long and fly by, some of the episodes, especially the first season feature flashbacks featuring footage and alternate takes from the original films of the pairs rivalry, and interactions with their former masters, including the the late Pat Morita as the beloved Mr. Miyagi. The six season series nostalgic, thoughtful and packed with both tasty character driven drama, and of course the martial arts action you would expect, all of which I have found highly satisfying. The 16-disc set arrives with each season housed in it's own keepcase with unique artwork on each of the wraps, each of the wraps also featuring an episode guide with a brief synopsis and list of the disc extras. The seasons relegated to 2-disc each with the exception f the sixth and final season which is a 3-disc-er, with all of the keepcase slipping comfortable into a sideloading slipcase, which is pretty thing cardboard stock, but it does the job. 

Special Features:
- Pilot Episode and Series Finale Audio Commentaries
- Deleted & Extended Scenes
- Cast Chemistry Reads
- Exploring the Musical Identities of Cobra Kai & Miyagi-Do with Composers
- Musical Performances at the Whiskey A Go Go with Guest William Zabka
- Blooper Reels
- Gag Reels
- Easter Eggs
- Fists & Fury: Fight Choreography
- Into the Dojo: The Characters
- Karate Dad Featurette 
- Making faces & Stingray Reels 
- Series Finale Commentary with Show Creators Josh Heald, Jon Hurwitz and Hayden Schlossberg 

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SCOTT PILGRIM TAKES OFF: THE COMPLETE LIMITED SERIES (2023) Blu-ray 

Label: Universal Pictures 
Region Code: A
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 217 Minutes 
Audio: English or Japanese DTS-HD MA 5.1 Surround, English 2.0 Dolby Digital with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1) 
Directors: Abel Góngora, Tomohisa Shimoyama, Moko-chan, Akitoshi Yokoyama, Rushio Moriyama, Takakazu Nagatomo, Kenji Maeba, Takuya Fujikura & Takakazu Nagatomo
Cast: Anna Kendrick, Chris Evans, Michael Cera, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Kieran Culkin, Brie Larson, Aubrey Plaza,  Brandon Routh, Jason Schwartzman, Kevin McDonald, Stephen Root,

Based on the cult classic live-action comic adaptation Scott Pilgrim vs. The Word, Scott Pilgrim is an 8-part animated series that aired on Netflix in 2023. Interestingly nearly all the the original film cast reprise their roles from the film, including Michael Cera (Super Bad) as indie-rock bassist Scott Pilgrim for the band Sex Bob-omb, and Mary Elizabeth Winstead (10 Cloverfield Lane)  as his love interest Ramona Flowers. The anime-style animated series follows the events of the graphic novel and film loosely, offering an alternate version of Scott meeting the girl of his literal dreams, Ramona Flowers, but then having to defeat her seven evil exes in order to date her. The exes are lead by Gideon Graves (Jason Schwartzman, Rushmore), who is the head of  group of Ramona's ex-partners called the League of Evil Exes, and things take an interesting turn when Scott is seemingly killed by the first ex he battles, and then it gets quite interesting with a film being made about Scott's life and some time-travel elements. I love that they have jiggered the story here, so you are not getting a repeat of the graphics novel nor the film, it's a standalone series that that brings somethings new and wonderful to the franchise, and at just eight episodes it's quite bingeable! The single-disc release arrives in a standard keepcase, the wrap features the episodes and extras listed on the inner-sleeve, and each of the episodes gets an audio commentary. 

Special Features: 
- Episode Commentaries with Creators and Executive Producers Bryan Lee and BenDavid Grabinski 

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MEL BROOKS' SPACE BALLS: THE ANIMATED SERIES (2008)  
2-DVD Set

Label: MVD Rewind Collection 
Region Code:
Rating:
Duration: 329 Minutes 
Audio: English Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: SD Fullscreen (1.33:1) 
Directors: Jay Surridge, Blake Liebel, David Dulac, Chad Hammes, Michael Montaine, Jason Raines, Rainer Soehnlein
Cast: Mel Brooks, Daphne Zuniga, Joan Rivers, Dom DeLuise, Tito Insana, Rino Romano

Okay, what the heck, how is it I've never even heard of this 2008 animated version of Mel Brooks' Spaceballs!?!? Well, after watching it, i might forget it all over again. The animated series is based on Mel Brooks' 1987 comedy Spaceballs and features the further adventures of Yogurt (Mel Brooks, Blazing Saddles), President Skroob (Brooks, again), Lone Starr (Rina Romero, Spider-Man Unlimited), Barf (Tino Insana, Neighbors), Princess Vespa (Daphne Zuniga, The Dorm That Dripped Blood), Dot Matrix (Joan Rivers, The Swimmer) and the dorky darksider Dark Helmet (Dee Bradley Baker, American Dad). It's cool to see Mel Brooks, Daphna Zuniga and Joan Rivers respiring their roles here, as well as the last role from the late Dom DeLuise as Pizza the Hutt, but I was turned off by the rudimentary flash animated style of it, it is very dated, as is the crude and lazy humor which is just a send-up of various pop-culture properties,  , including Jurassic Park, Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter, The Terminator, and even Spider-Man. None of the episodes are actually written by Brooks, and that's readily apparent, though he supervised the writing, so he bares some blame, but its just not as sharp as one would hope. That's not to say some of the humor here's still some fun to be had here if you can get past the lackluster flash animation and cheap comedy gags, I did laugh, just not as often as I would have hope. The biggest beefs I have about the series is that there are no many weird and inexplicable ret-cons that defy explanation, and there is no through-line to the episodes, each episode it it's own self-contained non-sequitur sketch that parodies other films set in the Spaceballs universe, it's a headscratcher that they went this way with this series. because the film has terrific characters and an interesting lore, they could have gone so many ways with this, and they went the wrong way. Regardless, with Spaceballs 2 finally coming in 2027 this one-season curio is at least  a befuddling snack in anticipation of something (hopefully) far superior. The 2-disc DVD release arrives in a clear, dual-hubbed Blu-ray keepcase, don't be fooled, it's SD DVD, the reverse side of the wrap features an episode guide with credits. We also get Collectible Mini-Poster and a Limited Edition Slipcover, with the first-pressing. 

Special Features: 
- Spaceballs (1987) Original Theatrical Trailer
- Spaceballs 2 (2027) Teaser Trailer
- Collectible Mini-Poster
- Limited Edition Slipcover (First Pressing Only)

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THE CLOSER: THE COMPLETE SERIES (2005-2012) 
28-Disc DVD Set 

Label: Warner Bros. 
Region Code: 1
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 80 Hours and 48 Minutes
Audio: English Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo (Season 1), 5.1 Surround (Seasons 2-7) with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: SD Widescreen (1.78:1) 
Cast: Kyra Sedgwick, J.K. Simmons, Jon Tenney, G.W. Bailey, and Mary McDonnell 

Fan of the television crime drama The Closer should be finally gets a complete collection DVD set bringing all 109 episodes of the seven seasons together on one set for the first time. Honestly I was never a fan, crime dramas are not my particular bag, having burned myself out Law & Order and Law & Order: SVU years ago. My wife loves it though, 
the series follows Deputy Police Chief Brenda Leigh Johnson (Kyra Sedgwick), a detective who puts Los Angeles’ most brutal killers behind bars, the show had an all-star ensemble including J.K. Simmons (Spider-Man), Corey Reynolds (Resident Alien), Jon Tenney (The Closer spin-off Major Crimes), G.W. Bailey (Police Academy), and Mary McDonnell (Donnie Darko). The 28-disc set arrives in a pair of high capacity keepcases - yep, loose discs galore when it arrived, that slip into a side-loading slipcase. The wraps feature episode guides and a list of extras, the discs are color-coded per season

Special Features:
- Police Files: Unaired Scenes
- Gag Reels
- Featurettes
- Music Videos
- And more!
 
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Saturday, March 14, 2026

SHE SHOOTS STRAIGHT (1990) 88 Films Blu-ray Review

SHE SHOOTS STRAIGHT (1990) 

Label: 88 Films
Region Code: Region-Free
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 92 Minutes 
Audio: Remastered Cantonese DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono, 2.0 Stereo, English-Dub 2.0 Stereo and 5.1 Surround  with Newly Translated Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1) 
Director: Corey Yuen
Cast: Sammo Hung, Tony Leung, Joyce Godenzi, Carina Lau, Sandra Ng, Wah Yuen, Pik-Wan Tang, Agnes Aurelio

Here we go, another ass-kicking slice of HK girls-with-gun action courtesy of 88 Films, this time it's She Shoots Straight (1990), directed by Corey Yuen (Fist of Fury). in it female cop Inspector Mina (Joyce Godenzi, The Ghost Snatchers) has just married her supervisor Inspector Huang Tsung-pao (Tony Leung Ka-fai, Prison on Fire), who comes from a family of dedicated police officers who are not easy to impress, in particular her sister-in-law Huang Chia-Ling (Carina Lau, Project A 2), When Vietnamese gang lead by Yuan Hua (Yuen Wah, Mr. Vampire) executes a risky robbery they are thwarted by the cops, but Hua swears vengeance. Later the risk-taking and rule breaking Chia-Ling goes after the gang leader and fund herself in a sticky situation, with Mina and Huang arriving to save her bacon, but Huang is killed in the line of duty, with Mina , Chia-Ling and the other sister-in-laws teaming up to get avenge his death.  

The film also features Sammo Hung as Superintendent Hung, in a small role but he still gets to kick some ass, and the flick is chock full of kinetic martial arts and fight sequences, the finale it a bast, which includes the lethal ladies storming a freighter, followed by a motorcycle chase with Mina pursuing Hua and his sister Ying (Agnes Aurelio, JFK), the final boss battle is terrific knock-down drag-out fight between Mina and Ying who give it their all! The film is well-paced, well-shot, and the fight sequences and action are absolutely electric, and at 92-minutes it flies by at a breakneck pace.  

Audio/Video: She Shoots Straights (1990) arrives on region-A locked Blu-ray from 88 Films, presented in 1080p HD widescreen (1.85:1). The image looks solid, sourced from a new 2K restoration for the OCN, print damage is quite minimal with only a few white specks, grain is unmolested by excessive DNR, texture and detail in the close-ups of fabrics and faces are appreciable, but not exactly a strength, it's tad soft, but colors are warm and the black levels are solid. Audio comes by way of post-dubbed Cantonese DTS-HD MA 2.0 dual-mono and 2.0 stereo, as well as an uncompressed English-dub in 2.0 stereo and 5.1 surround with newly translated optional English subtitles. The tracks are fine, both tracks are post-dubbed, the Cantonese options sounding more emotionally authentic, but if you're adverse to reading subtitles and do not speak Cantonese the English dubs are fine.   

Extras include an Audio Commentary with Asian Cinema Expert Frank Djeng, whom if you're familiar with you know he's gonna knock it out of the park, and he did, plus we get a 16-min Interview with Screenwriter Yuen Kai-Chi, a 2-min Alternate English Credits Sequence, 2-min Image Gallery, and a 3-min Original Hong Kong Trailer

The single-disc release arrives in a black keepcase with a Reversible Wrap featuring both a new Sean Longmore artwork that kicks all sorts of ass, plus the original HK artwork. The first-pressing includes a Limited Edition O-Ring Slipcase with a textured glossy finish also featuring the  Sean Longmore artwork with super-saturated colors, and it just pops so nice!  

Special Features: 
- Audio Commentary with Asian Cinema Expert Frank Djeng
- Interview with Screenwriter Yuen Kai-Chi (15:46)
- Alternate English Credits (2:23) 
- Image Gallery (2:20) 
- Original Hong Kong Trailer (2:37) 
- Reversible Wrap 
- O-Ring Slipcase with New artwork by Sean Longmore 

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FORCE: FIVE (1981) MVD Rewind Collector's Edition Blu-ray Review + Screenshots

FORCE: FIVE (1981) 
Collector's Edition

Label: MVD Rewind 
Region Code: A
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 96 Minutes 37 Seconds 
Audio: English LPCM 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1) 
Director: Robert Clouse 
Cast: Joe Lewis, Bong Soo Han, Sonny Barnes, Richard Norton, Amanda Wyss, Benny Urquidez, Robert Clouse

Force-Five (1981) is a low-rent Enter the Dragon riff that combines that kung-fi island action of that film with a death-cult strand, which makes for a very entertaining fisticuffs romp. They even got Enter the Dragon director Robert Clouse to direct, making this one right before his killer-rat flick Deadly Eyes (1982)! In it Reverend Rhee (Bong Soo Han, The Kentucky Fried Movie) operates a death-cult disguised as a peace, love and tranquility retreat, recruiting the naive children of wealthy elites and enrapturing them with the promise of eternal tranquility, then getting them to sign over their inheritances, before sending them down into his labyrinth where they are chased and gored to death by a bull! 

When wealthy senator William Stark's (Michael Prince, Death Wish IIdaughter Cynthia ( Amanda Wyss, A Nightmare on Elm Street) is recruited by the cult he sends a would-be assassin (Mel Novak, Game of Death) to retrieve her, but he gets caught and is given some painful nerve-shredding acupuncture before being sent to the subterranean labyrinth to meet his maker. Undeterred, Stark recruits martial arts expert Jim Martin (World Karate Champion Joe Lewis, Jaguar Lives!) to assemble a team of bad-asses to storm the island and infiltrate the cult. Our "Force: Five" include Billy Ortega (Benny Urquidez, Grosse Pointe Blank), Ezekiel (Richard Norton, Mad Max: Fury Road), the hulking Lockjaw (Sonny Barnes, Cleopatra Jones), helicopter pilot Willard (Ron Hayden, TV movie Six Against the Rock) and fatale-female Laurie (Pam Huntington, They Call Me Bruce?). To get to the island they arrive under the guise of an entourage accompanying Senator Forrester (Peter MacLean, Squirm), who is an agent himself, but they are quickly outed when Rhee's henchman Carl (Bob Schott, Vamp) recognizes Miller from past encounters. Things get a bit hairy and Cynthia does not want to leave, but when she finds a roomful of dead bodies she realizes the truth, but can they get off the island in one piece?

It's no action classic but this is a fun low-rent action flick with some recognizable named in front and behind the camera, the fight sequences are decent, and the bull-in-the-labyrinth stuff is wild, especially the explosive finale, chef's kiss for that one. Also keep an eye out for Tom Villard from Popcorn as a goofy cultists! Notable behind the camera include cinematographer Gil Hubbs (Flowers in the Attic), composer William Goldstein, Shocker), and produced by Fred Weintraub (The Pack, Enter the Dragon)

Audio/Video: Force: Five (1981) arrives on region-free Blu-ray from MVD Rewind Collection in 1080p HD framed in 1.85:1 widescreen. The source is in terrific shape, it has that early 80s gauzy look to it that always looks somewhat soft, but generally colors are strong, and grain levels look good. Perhaps die to the filtered lensing detail and textures are not overly sharp, but still a solid looking Blu-ray. Audio comes by way of English DTS-HD MA 2.0 dual-mono with optional English subtitles. The track is clean, dialogue sounds fine and the score and fight sound effects of blows landing and gunfire have some nice snap to it. 

There are no newly produced extras for this one but we do get a smattering of archival stuff, starting off with the 50-min Archival Interview with actor Joe Lewis, who speaks quite a bit about training under Bruce Lee, plus we get a 9-min Archival Interview with Benny Urquidez wherein he shows proper hands-wrapping techniques, and a 7-min 
Archival 'Benny Urquidez Fight' featurette, as well as the Original Theatrical Trailer

The single-disc release arrives in a clear keepcase with a Reversible Wrap featuring the original illustrated artwork, and inside there is a Collectible Mini-Poster, plus a 
Limited Edition Slipcover (First Pressing Only) that looks well-worn and sun-bleached, like it sat in the front window of a VHS store for too long, complete with creases, water and grease stains, and rental stickers, The artwork on the wrap is free of any faux damage with nicely saturated color, and no rental stickers. 


Special Features: 
- High Definition (1080p) presentation of the main feature in 1.85:1 aspect ratio
- LPCM 2.0 Mono Audio
- Optional English Subtitles
- Archival Interview with actor Joe Lewis (50:08)
- Archival Interview with Benny Urquidez (8:59)
- Archival 'Benny Urquidez Fight' featurette (6:41)
- Original Theatrical Trailer (2:19) 
- Reversible Wrap 
- Collectible Mini-Poster
- Limited Edition Slipcover (First Pressing Only)

Screenshots from the MVD Rewind Collection Blu-ray: 
































Extras: 




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SAKURAN (2007) 88 Films Blu-ray Review


SAKURAN (2007) 

Label: 88 Films 
Region Code: A,B
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 111 Minutes 
Audio: Japanese 2.0 Stereo, 5.1 Surround with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1) 
Director: Mika Ninagawa
Cast: Anna Tsuchiya, Kippei Shîna, Yoshino Kimura, Hiroki Narimiya, Miho Kanno, Masatoshi Nagase, Masanobu Andô, Minami, Kyôko Koizumi, Sabu

Sakuran (2007) is directed by Mika Ninagawa (Helter Skelter) and is based on a popular manga by Moyoco Anno. It is set during the Ancient Edo period in the Yoshiwara red-light district, and tells the tale of a young girl named Kiyoha (Anna Tsuchiya, Kamikaze Girls) who is sold to a brothel at a young age to be trained as a courtesan, however her rebellious spirit and stunning beauty provoke jealous rivalries with the other geisha and her mentor, but she preservers and rises to the rank of a top mistress, achieving success and the mastery of her craft, but at what price? She feels hollow and empty and craves freedom and love, and when the opportunity arises to have both, with Sōjirō (Hiroki Narimiya), can she muster the courage to defy societal norms to make her dreams come true? 

Honestly this is almost formulaic in regard to other geisha films of its type, but what sets it apart is the  opulent visuals which are rich and deeply saturated with vivid eye-searing candy-colors imagery that leap of the screen, the bold use of color nearly overwhelms the story, it's a period set film but is infused with a post-modern style that is truly breathtaking, but because of the contemporary soundtrack and modern cinematic style detracts from the period setting buy-in, but it's so stylish, well-acted and cool that I don't think you'll be disappointed by this sex-worker looking to escape the confines of her station melodrama. 

Audio/Video: The Sakuran Blu-ray from 88 Films looks stunning, the source is immaculate, colors are vibrant and glossy, the candy-colored image just pops beautifully, with warm skin tones and the terrific texture and detail evident throughout. Audio comes by way of Japanese 2.0 stereo and a newly created 5.1 surround, both tracks are clean and well-balanced, the sharper moments and quieter passage fare well, as does the score by J-Pop sensation Shiina Ringo.

Disc extras on the 88 Films release include a new Audio Commentary by Josh Slater-Williams, a 23-min Newly Filmed Introduction by Amber T, 3-min Stills Gallery, 3-min of Teaser Trailers, and the 2-min Theatrical Trailer

The single-disc release arrives in a clear keepcase with a Reversible Wrap with both the original and newly commissioned artwork by Luke Insect, a removable Obo Strip, plus a 24-page Illustrated Booklet with writing on the film by Jasper Sharp. 

Special Features: 
- Audio Commentary by Josh Slater-Williams
- Brand New Filmed Introduction by Amber T. (22:59)
- Stills Gallery (2:53) 
- Teaser Trailers (2:35) 
- Theatrical Trailer (2:27)
- 24 Page Illustrated Booklet with Essay by Jasper Sharp 
- Original and Newly Commissioned Artwork by Luke Insect 

Buy it!
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THE FINAL PROGRAMME (1973) Severin Films Blu-ray Review

 

THE FINAL PROGRAMME (1973) 

Label: Severin Films
Region Code: Region-Free (UHD), A (Blu-ray) 
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 89 Minutes 36 Seconds 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 2160p Ultra HD Widescreen (1.85:1), 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1)  
Director: Robert Fuest
Cast: Jon Finch, Jenny Runacre, Sterling Hayden, Harry Andrews

For more than 50 years, it’s been called “endlessly inventive” (The Guardian), “audaciously bonkers” (Frame Rated) and “unlike any movie you’ve ever seen” (B&S About Movies). Now experience the “weird gem that needs to be celebrated” (Mondo Bizarro) in UHD for the first time ever: In this premier adaptation of a Michael Moorcock novel, writer/director/production designer Robert Fuest (THE ABOMINABLE DR. PHIBES, THE DEVIL’S RAIN) unleashes Moorcock’s lethal dandy genius Jerry Cornelius (Jon Finch of Hitchcock’s FRENZY and Polanski’s MACBETH) into a mind-melting conspiracy of mad scientists, pinball nuns and immortal ambisexuals bent on world domination. Jenny Runacre (THE PASSENGER), Sterling Hayden (THE KILLING) and Harry Andrews (THE NIGHTCOMERS) co-star in this “stylish acid comedy” (Boston Phoenix) – also known as LAST DAYS OF MAN ON EARTH – now scanned in 4K from the original camera negative by StudioCanal, with 6+ hours of Special Features that include audio commentaries, video essays and a revealing new on-camera interview with Michael Moorcock.

Special Features:
UHD:
- Audio Commentary With Andrew Nette, Co-Editor Of Dangerous Visions And New Worlds: Radical Science Fiction, 1950 To 1985
- Archival Audio Commentary With Director Robert Fuest And Actress Jenny Runacre, Moderated By Author/Film Historian Jonathan Sothcott
- Trailer
Blu-ray:
- Audio Commentary With Andrew Nette, Co-Editor Of Dangerous Visions And New Worlds: Radical Science Fiction, 1950 To 1985
- Archival Audio Commentary With Director Robert Fuest And Actress Jenny Runacre, Moderated By Author/Film Historian Jonathan Sothcott
- A Brighter Apocalypse – Michael Moorcock On Jerry Cornelius And The Final Programme (33:20)
- Performance Independent – Interview With Producer Sanford Lieberson (30:43) 
- From Pythons To Programmes – A Conversation With Producer John Goldstone (25:02) 
- Programmer Of Immortality – Jenny Runacre In Conversation With Kier-La Janisse, Author Of House Of Psychotic Women (21:18)
- Dark Moons And New Worlds – Interview With James Riley, Author Of The Bad Trip: Dark Omens, New Worlds And The End Of The Sixties (36:42) -
- Androgynous Android – Video Essay By Costume Historian Elissa Rose (12:44) 
- Archival Interview With Jenny Runacre (11:10) 
- A Feast Of Fuest With Kim Newman, Author Of Nightmare Movies (14:10) 
- Italian Title Sequence a(2:23) 
- Trailer (2:43) 
- TV Spot (0:33) 

Screenshots from the Severin Films Blu-ray: 

































Extras: 






















Buy it!
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