Monday, October 21, 2024

HOLLYWOOD 90028 (1971) (Grindhouse Releasing Blu-ray Review)

HOLLYWOOD 90028 (1971)
3-Disc Blu-ray (x2) + CD Soundtrack 

Label: Grindhouse Releasing
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 87 Minute's 29 Seconds 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1)
Director: Christina Hornisher
Cast: Christopher Augustine, Jeannette Dilger, Dick Glass, Gayle Davis

Hollywood 90028 (1971), directed by Christina Hornisher, is a seedy, downbeat serial-killer flick that shows the dark side of the movie industry, wherein an aspiring steely blue-eyed movie cameraman Mark (Christopher Augustine, The Doll Squad) dreams of working on Hollywood films, but has been relegated to shooting peepshow porno-loops for sleazy smut-producer Jobal (Dick Glass). Mark carries with guilt over the accidental death of his baby brothers as a child, and is by memories of his overbearing mother, which has translated into sexual frustration as an adult, and in turn violence towards women. 

When he's not shooting porno-loops Mark prowls the peep shows and adult book shops of Los Angeles, picking up young hippie girl (Dianna Huntress) whom he strangles to death, the film opens with on such harrowing scene of him meeting a young woman, accompanying her back to her place, they make out and just when it looks like sexy good times he wraps his hands around her neck and chokes the life out of her startled eye. However, when Mark meets porno actress Michelle (Jeannette Dilger, Young, Hot 'n Nasty Teenage Cruisers) on the set of one of Jobal's sleazy movies the pair hit it off and end up spending time together walking around L.A. and visiting the Hollywood sign, discussing their issues and how they ended-up where they are in life. She's in a committed relationship and but he seems legit happy to have a platonic friend, but that does not keep him off the streets prowling for victims, later picking up a hitchhiker named Gretchen (Gayle Davis, Sharkey's Machine) , they hit the beach together and they rent a sailboat, while sailing her talkative nature annoys him, and he strangles her to death, explaining her absence on returning to the boat shop by saying he "dropped her off" down the coast. 

Not long after Michelle leaves him a voicemail breaking things off with him, saying she realizes they would never work out, that he; in a dark place, leading to mark going to her place, and of course things don't go a is planned, ending with a you-won't-believe-it-when-you-see-it finale atop the Hollywood sign. 

Written and directed by Christina Hornisher, her sole theatrical film, who was unknown to me prior to the re-release of this film by Grindhouse Releasing. the film is seedy but also quite well lensed by Jean-Pierre Geuens (Lemora: A Child's Tale of The Supernatural), capturing the grimy '70s L.A. streets, seedy adult bookshops and flea-pit cinemas of the era, making for quite time-capsule of this early 70's era in L.A., which is like catnip for me, I love seeing this era onscreen.  

While the film was alternatively marketed as The Hollywood Hillside Strangler and Twisted Throats to cash-in on the slasher craze and to true-crime headlines it's really more of a thoughtful character study, one that dissects the darker side of Hollywood aspirations, tracking both Christopher and Michelle's mid-west origins and their journeys to Los Angeles following their Hollywood dreams only to end up in the margins of the porno industry. There's a scene of them walking through L.A. as she discusses how she went from working at the telephone company to being lured into "modeling" and eventually the skin trade that I found quite compelling. Meanwhile Christopher applies for various legit cameraman jobs on commercial and film productions, only to be told they need to see a sample of his work before taking a chance on him, knowing all-to-well that the only reels he has are porno-loops and that he will be shunned. 

This is a film that lingers long after the closing credits, the flick has kinship with other flicks like Peeping Tom, Henry: Portrait of A Serial Killer, Taxi Driver, Don’t Answer the Phone and Maniac, but is not gruesome, the kills are suspenseful and shocking, but they don't revel in the brutality and gore of the kills,. The film is much more interested in exploring Mark's despair and derangement, and a feminist examination of the porno industry as a place where broken dreams go to die a misogynist death, that I found completely fascinating.

Audio/Video: Hollywood 90028 makes it U.S. home video debut on region-free Blu-ray from Grindhouse Releasing with a new 4K restoration created from the original 35mm camera negative. This looks pretty solid, there are some small blemished and softness along the way but it retains it's filmic grain without any aggressive digital-scrubbing, colors are generally strong, and fine detail and seedy 70's textures look terrific. Audio comes by way of English DTS-HD MA 2.0 dual-mono with optional English subtitles. The track is clean and well-balanced, there are no issues with age related hiss or distortion, and the soundtrack by Basil Poledouris (Conan the Barbarian) has some nice depth to it. 

As usual this Grindhouse Releasing set is dripping with extras, starting on disc one we get a Audio Commentary by Marc E. Heuck & Heidi Honeycutt that dives deep into the cast and crew, locations, distribution story and quite a bit more. We also get a Locations Audio Commentary by Shawn Langrick that gets into the locations seen in the film. 

We also get 9-min of VHS sourced Shocking Alternate Scenes from the Original X-rated Version: The Simple Story (2:53), Darkroom 2 (1:55), Love Montage (3:45), plus 3-min of The Cameraman Outtakes, which appear to be unused or alternate location footage. A nice add is the85-min Bonus Film: Twisted Throats, a shorter alternate version of the film in standard definition, with plenty of scratches and a nice authentic grindhouse patina.  

Also included are some Still Galleries of Publicity (21 Images), Drive-In Asylum Newspaper Ad Gallery (4:35), Christina Hornisher (21 Images), Cast Photos (25 Images), Covert Art by Jerry Martinez (67 Images), and Adult Bookshop (25 Image), with disc 1 extras buttoned up with Trailers including the alternate Hollywood Hillside Strangler trailer and Radio Spots, plus a huge reel of Grindhouse Releasing Prevues of Coming Attractions, which I almost always sit through no matter how many times I've seen it, it's pretty terrific. An Easter Egg hidden away on the menu includes a brief 1-min piece relating to the discovery of the Hollywood 90028 negatives.

Onto disc 2 we start of with the 96-min Hollywood Dreams: The Making of Hollywood 90028 featuring interviews with stars  Christopher Augustine, Jeannette Dilger, Gayle Davis, editor Leon Ortiz-Gil that tells the story of Hornisher and the making of the film through their recollections, touching on her personal life and upbringing, and her death in 2003. 
There's also a 38-min Christopher Augustine at the New Beverly, recorded September 23, 2022 after a screening fo the film with a Q&A; plus the 25-min Tom & Tina - The Early Years; Interview with Tom DeSimone (Reform School Girls), who was a friend who met Hornisher in film school and collaborated on a few projects with her. 

Also on Disc 2 are a 4-min Los Angeles: Here & Gone, a locations then and now comparison, plus four Experimental 16mm short films by director Christina Hornisher: 4x8=16 (2:52), The Sun is Long (6:00), And on the Sixth Day (5:11),  Sister of the Bride (21:17).  

Easter eggs tucked away on disc 2  include the 30-min The Erotic Director short porn with Dick Glass, an ddditional 6-min Interview with Gayle Davis who talks about her dancing career and meeting Elvis, plus an Every Mother's Son TV Appearance on Disc-O-Teen Dance Show hosted by horror-host Zacherly.  

The 3-disc Blu-ray/CD Soundtrack set release arrives in an clear, oversized Scanavo keepsake with a Reversible Sleeve of Artwork with the original illustrated poster artwork on one-side and a quite striking new piece by artist Jerry Martinez. The keepcase is housed inside a very cool side-loading Embossed Slipcover also featuring the Jerry Martinez artwork. The 3rd disc is the 17-Track CD Soundtrack of the Basil Poledouris score, newly remastered in stunning 24 bit/192khz sound from the original master tapes. The CD comes housed inside its own cardboard slip also decorated with the Jerry Martinez artwork. Inside the keepcase there's a 28-page Full-Color Illustrated Booklet with writing on the film by cinema historians Marc E. Heuck who takes a deep-dive into Hornisher career, while David Szulkin tackles actor/musician/scientology Dick glass, plus an appreciation by director Jim VanBebber (Deadbeat at Dawn), and a film chapter list. 



Special Features: 
Disc 1 (Blu-ray - Feature + Extras) 
- Audio Commentary by Marc E. Heuck & Heidi Honeycutt
- Locations Audio Commentary by Shawn Langrick
- Shocking Alternate Scenes from the Original X-rated Version: The Simple Story (2:53), Darkroom 2 (1:55), Love Montage (3:45) 
- The Cameraman Outtakes (3:22) 
- Still Galleries: Publicity (21 Images), Drive-In Asylum Newspaper Ad Gallery (4:35), Christina Hornisher (21 Images), Cast Photos (25 Images), Covert Art by Jerry Martinez (67 Images), Adult Bookshop (25 Image 
- Hollywood 90028 Trailer (1:40)
- Hollywood Hillside Strangler Trailer (0:35)
Hollywood Hillside Strangler Radio Spots. (0:58) 
- Grindhouse Releasing Prevues of Coming Attractions: Impulse (1:16), Death Game (2:40), Scum of the Earth (2:11), Bogard (2:42), Love Is Deep Inside (1:34), Ice House (2:39), Family Enforcer (1:47), Cannibal Holocaust (1:25), Cannibal Ferox (2:45), Massacre Mafia Style (2:18), Gone with the Pope (2:00), Pieces (0:32), The Beyond (3:26), Cat In the Brain (1:57), An American Hippie In Israel (3:01), Corruption (1:40), The Swimmer (2:42), The Big Gundown (2:13), I Drink Your Blood (2:49), The Tough Ones (3:29), The Passion Pit (2:32)
- Bonus Film: Twisted Throats  (84:46) 
- Easter Egg: The Discovery of the Hollywood 90028 Negative 1:07
Disc 2 (Blu-ray - Extras): 
- Hollywood Dreams: The Making of Hollywood 90028 featuring interviews with stars  Christopher Augustine, Jeannette Dilger,  Gayle Davis, editor Leon Ortiz-Gil and Tom DeSimone
- Christopher Augustine at the New Beverly (September 23, 2022)(38:29)
- Tom & Tina - The Early Years; Interview with Tom DeSimone (24:47) 
- Los Angeles: Here & Gone (4:14) 
- Experimental 16mm short films by director Christina Hornisher: 4x8=16 (2:52), The Sun is Long (6:00), And on the Sixth Day (5:11),  Sister of the Bride (21:17) 
- Liner notes by cinema historians Marc E. Heuck, David Szulkin,
 Richard Kraft and Jim VanBebber
- Easter Egg: The Erotic Director 
(30:17) 
Easter Egg: Additional Intervirew with Gayle Davis (6:00) 
- Easter Egg: Every Mother's Son TV Appearance on Disc-O-Teen Dance Show hosted by Zacherly  (7:21) 
Disc 3 (CD Soundtrack) 
- BONUS CD - Original Soundtrack album by Basil Poledouris - newly remastered in stunning 24 bit/192khz sound from the original master tapes

Packaging Extras: 
- Reversible Wrap 
- Embossed slipcover with new art by Jerry Martinez
- 28- Page Full-Color Illustrated Book 

Grindhouse Releasing 3-disc set for Hollywood 90028 (1971) is sure to be the definitive release of the film barring some future 4K Ultra HD release. The A/V merits are rock solid, and the extras are exhaustive, obsessively so.The Hollywood Dreams: The Making of Hollywood 90028 doc and the Tom & Tina - The Early Years; Interview with Tom DeSimone, the inclusion of her early short films, it's all a deep dive into the obscure director's life and art, and comes across as a true passion project from all involved. On top of that the CD soundtrack and 28-page Booklet add more depth and context to the release. While director Christina Hornisher might have only one feature film to her name it's quite an interesting and meditative exploitation flick, and Grindhouse Releasing are making sure the word gets out about it with this definitive home video version. 

Extras: 



















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Creep (2014) Limited Edition Blu-ray Box set arrives December 9th from Second Sight

CREEP (2014) 

Limited Edition Blu-ray Box Set
&
Standard Edition Blu-ray
arrive
December 9, 2024

‘A lo-fi horror of social awkwardness... constantly
prods at the boundaries of what might be
considered strange but ultimately harmless
behaviour and leaves the audience with a sticky
question: at what point would you run away, at the
risk of seeming rude?’
- Empire

‘Among the funniest and scariest horror-comedies
of this century, blending mumblegore
independence with a found footage aesthetic to
create a destabilising, unforgettable experience’
- Deep Focus Review

‘Will tickle your funny bone and screw with your
head – even as it rips your nerves to shreds’
- We Got This Covered

Lauded as one of Empire’s 50 best horrors of the 21st Century Creep has been described as ‘Among the funniest and scariest horror-comedies of this century’ (Deep Focus Review) and now the acclaimed horror is the next in line for the Second Sight Films Limited Edition treatment this winter.

This creepy feature is directed, co-written by and starring Patrick Brice as cash-strapped videographer Aaron, who answers an online ad for a one-day job in a remote mountain town and heads deep into the unknown, documenting the journey on his trusty camera. On arrival, he meets his new employer – Josef – played in a wickedly unhinged turn by Mark Duplass, who shares the brief... he’s a dying man who wants Aaron to film his video message for his unborn child...

But as the day progresses, his requests get stranger and then darker and his behavior become increasingly more bizarre... dare you watch the footage that unfolds?

Creep Limited Edition Blu-ray Box set is set for release on December 9 2024 and will also be available as a Standard Edition. The set is presented in a stunning rigid slipcase complete with new artwork by Luke Headland and comes packed with a slew of brilliant special features including a new commentary, interviews and a live Q & A with cast and crew, a deleted scene, an alternative ending and more. Please see full list below.

Don’t sleep on, get your Creep on with this must-have Limited Edition.

Special Features
• New audio commentary with director Patrick Brice, editor Christopher Donlon and actor MarkDuplass
• Arhive audio commentary with Patrick Brice and Mark Duplass
• Peachfuzz: A new interview with director Patrick Brice
• Into Darker Territory: A new interview with actor Mark Duplass
• Expand the Universe: A new interview with editor Christopher Donlon
• 10 Years of Creep: A live Q&A with Cast and Crew
• Deleted Scene: Cold Opening
• Alternative Scene: Message to Aaron
• Alternative Endings

Limited Edition Contents
• Rigid slipcase with new artwork by Luke Headland
• 70-page book with new essays by Sarah Appleton, Kat Ellinger, David Kittredge and Amber T
• Six collectors' art cards

Title: Creep Limited Edition Blu-ray 
Release Date: December 9, 2024
Running Time: 78 mins
Cert: 15 Pre-order here: https://bit.ly/CreepLE
Region: Free

Title: Creep Standard Blu-ray 
Release Date: December 9, 2024
Running Time: 78 mins
Cert: 15 
Pre-order here: https://bit.ly/CreepSE
Region: Free

Check out Second Sight Films' website for new release info and for consumers to buy direct at www.secondsightfilms.co.uk
More from Second Sight: Twitter: @SecondSightFilm
Instagram: secondsightfilmsofficial
Facebook: SecondSightFilms

Saturday, October 19, 2024

THE CREATURE (1977) (Severin Films Blu-ray Review + Screenshots)

THE CREATURE (1977)
aka LA CRIATURA

Label: Severin Films
Region Code: Region-Free
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 101 Minutes 6 Seconds 
Audio: Spanish DTS-HD MA 2.O Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1) 
Director: Eloy de la Iglesia 
Cast: Ana Belén, Juan Diego, Claudia Gravi, Ramón Repáraz, Manuel Pereiro

The Creature comes to us from Spanish transgressive filmmaker Eloy de la Iglesia (Cannibal Man), an unsettling film that's a melodrama with some heavily implied bestiality, wrapped up in de la Iglesia's patented liberal social commentary. In it Cristina (Ana Belén, Tormento) and Marcos (Juan Diego, Erotic Stories) are a married couple, she's a singer-entertainer and he is a presenter on a variety TV show with conservative political ambitions. They're relationship seems to be strained, a lot of it stemming from the fact that they have been unable to have a child. She's cold and disinterested in her husband, and at work he's just barely fending off the strong come-ons of his sexy co-worker Vicky (Claudia Gravy, 
Matalo!), and at home he's no picnic either. That marriage dynamic seems to change for the better when the couple find out that she is with child though, with her doctor telling he she'll have to cut down to 10 cigarettes a day - oh, the '70s, but that abruptly unravels when she is attacked by a black German Shepherd at gas station, and she loses the unborn child. 

After the miscarriage the couple go on a beach vacation, where befriends and adopts a stray male dog, also a black German Shepherd, which she names Bruno after her unborn child, much to the shock of her husband. She lavishes her new pet with all the affection a mother would give a child, and her new companion improves her disposition, but much to the surprise of her husband not necessarily towards him. She develops an unseemly and obsessive bond with her new canine companion, triggering jealousies and rivalries between man and beast, and on the advice of his co-worker Vicky Marcos attempts to sway the dog's attentions with a new female canine companion. The dogs hit it off quickly, and when Cristina catches them doing it doggy-style she appears both turned on and repulsed by their copulation, and wouldn't you know it, literally the next day the female dog is found dead. 

While de la Iglesia is careful to skirt the line, never depicting the human-canine copulation it is heavily implied that bestiality is taking place. At night Marcos returns home, after having slept with his co-worker Vicky, and Bruno guards the bed his wife is sleeping on, forcing him to spend the night on the couch. Later, while listening to records Cristina puts on her wedding dress and dances around the room with him, it's an insane wedding scene, and what it's suggesting with dog tracks all over the dress as it lays on the side of the bed, is not hard to figure out. 

It's shocking stuff, even when only implied, the whole film is steeped in social commentary, some of it obvious some of it more nuanced, but you need not even understand it to enjoy the film, which is something I think you can say about all of de la Iglesia's films, they are rich with allegory and commentary, but they can also just be enjoyed as sly slices of seedy exploitation. That said, I love the ending, it's a bizarre sort of happy ending, but not at all how one might imagine. The Creature (1977) is a  delightfully perverse and complex film with excellent turns from both Ana Belén and Juan Diego is truly challenging roles, especially from Belén - you won't soon forget this one! 

Audio/Video: The Creature (1977) gets a region-free Blu-ray from Severin Films, presented in 1080p HD widescreen (1.85:1), sourced from a 2K scan of the negative. It looks solid in HD, colors are vibrant, depth and clarity are modest but appreciable, and while it does look like it's been lightly filtered in spots the filmic grain is intact. Audio comes by way of Spanish DTS-HD MA 2.0 dual-mono with optional English subtitles. The track is clean and well-balanced, age related hiss and distortion are not an issues. Dialogue ins always intelligible, and the score by Victor Manuel (Al diablo, con amor) comes through string in the mix. 

Extras include a 23-min A Strange Movie – Interview With Assistant Director Alejo Loren; the 14-min Gaspar / Eloy – Interview With Filmmaker Gaspar Noé; and a 4-min Introduction By Gaspar Noé At Cinémathèque Française (July 20, 2023). The single-disc release arrives in a black keepcase with a single-sided wrap featuring the original illustrated movie poster artwork. 

Special Features:
- A Strange Movie: Interview With Assistant Director Alejo Loren (22:41) 
- Gaspar/Eloy: Interview With Filmmaker Gaspar Noé (14:04) 
Introduction By Gaspar Noé At Cinémathèque Française (7/20/2023) (4:29) 

Screenshots from the Severin Films: 




































Extras: 







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