Sunday, February 1, 2026

POWER OF DARKNESS (1976) Mondo Macabro Blu-ray Review + Screenshots

POWER OF DARKNESS (1976) 

Label: Mondo Macabro
Region Code: Region-Free
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 95 Minutes 4 Seconds 
Rating: Unrated
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1)
Audio: Spanish DTS-HD MA 2.0 Stereo with Optional English Subtitles
Director: Mario Sabato
Cast: Sergio Renán, Osvaldo Terranova, Carlos Antón, Christina Banegas

Argentinian slow-burn tale of conspiracy and paranoia The Power of Darkness (1976), directed by Mario Sabato, and based on a chapter from the 1961 novel On Heroes and Tombs, which was written by his father Ernesto Sábato. In it Fernando Vidal (Sergio Renán) is a man who has been on hard times after having lead a privileged life, he now finds himself living in a tiny single room in Buenos Aires. One day while on the street a man approaches him and says that he was a childhood friend of his, telling him of a secret worldwide conspiracy involving a cabal of nefarious blind people intent on controlling the world. The unnerving experience brings about suppressed memories and nightmares from his childhood, after which he begins to notice more and more blind people in the city, he becomes paranoiac and increasingly detached from reality, believing he is being followed through the streets and subways of the city by blind agents, ending with a wild descent into the darkness of a subterranean labyrinth, leaving us to wonder if he's been driven to madness by delusional paranoia or a victim of an insidious  worldwide conspiracy perpetrated by the sightless. 

The film has an oppressive and paranoid atmosphere, the streets of Buenos Aires are dark and dilapidated, the film walks a fine line between depicting our protaganist as either being either mental ill or someone with a justified paranoia, and Sergio Renán is terrific in the lead role as a man on the edge of madness. The psychological thriller looks terrific as well, handsomely lensed and drenched in shadow, shot by cinematographer Leonardo Rodríguez Solís who would go onto shoot a couple of notable low-budget Roger Corman produced sword and sandal flicks like Deathstalker, Amazons, and Deathstalker II: Duel of the Titans, plus we get a wonderful score by Víctor Proncet that supports the thematic elements quite nicely. 

Audio/Video: The Power of Darkness (1976) gets it's first English friendly Blu-ay release from those lovers of niche world cinema over at Mondo Moacabro, advertised as being as being "newly restored from the negative", presented in the 1.85:1 widescreen aspect ratio. The image looks quite nice, the source is in terrific shape, I found the film to have a weird contrast to it during the darker scenes, I am not sure if these are somewhat faded original elements or a stylistic choice to have a diffuse look, but it almost has a wonky day for night quality to them. The color scheme is generally very toned down, there are not a lot of highlights, just browns, tans and slate greys. The sole audio option is a Spanish DTS-HD MA 2.0 track with newly created optional English subtitles, the track is clean and well-balanced, unremarkable but clean and well-balanced. 

The extras are slim for this one, we get a 5-min “About the Film” Video Short which is just text that talks about the book and the film, noting the John Malkovich may have acquired the rights to the film and speculates that perhaps we will see some sort of forthcoming adaptation, plus we have the 3-min Trailer. The single-disc release arrives in a standard keepcase with a single-sided wrap featuring artwork by Justin Coffee.

Special Features:
- Newly restored from negative.
- “About the Film” Video Short. (5:02) 
- Trailer (3:03) 
- New and exclusive artwork by Justin Coffee.

Screenshots from the Mondo Macabro Blu-ray: 



























Extras: 






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ROSA (1986) 88 Films Deluxe Collector's Edition Blu-ray Review + Screenshots

ROSA (1986) 
Deluxe Collector's Edition Blu-ray 

Label: 88 Films
Region Code: A,B
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 96 Minutes 59 Seconds 
Audio: Cantonese DTS-HD MA 2.0, English-dub PCM 2.0 with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1) 
Director: Tung Cho 'Joe' Cheung
Cast: Biao Yuen, Lowell Lo, Kara Ying Hung Wai, Hsiao-Fen Lu, Paul Chun, Dick Wei, Fat Chung, James Tien, Tai-Bo

Rosa (1986), directed by Joe Cheung (Flaming Brothers), with a screenwriting co-credit attributed to Wong Kar Wai (Chungking Express), is a Honk Kong cop action-comedy, Yuen Biao (Saga of the Phoenix) stars as Ha, aka Little Monster, a member of the elite Criminal Investigation Division (CID) of the Royal Hong Kong Police Force who runs afoul of his Chief Inspector Tin (Paul Chun, Royal Warriors), who demotes him to the Case Analysis Division, where he meets officer Lui Kung (Lowell Lo, She Shoots Straight), aka 'Mustache', another officer who is hot-tempered and has also fallen on the wrong side of Tin, accidentally causing the chief's wife to go into premature labor, oops. Kung complicates his relationship with his partner by developing a romantic relationship with his sister Lui Lui (Kara Hui, The Lady is the Boss), who Tin is overly protective of. 

When a police informant who has dirt on a former cop turned drug trafficker Lee Wai-fung (Charlie Cho, Police Story 2) goes missing Little Monster and Moustache team-up to find him, their only lead is Rosa (Luk Siu-fan, The Sexy Lady Driver), the informer's girlfriend, but danger mounts when she herself is targeted by a syndicate looking to collect on gambling debts owed, with Ha muddies the waters of the investigation by falling for Rosa, and now both Little Monster and Moustache's romantic entanglements threaten to derail their investigation. 

Honestly the mid-80s HK action-comedies have never been my bag, there are a ton of comedic set-pieces and I sort of found them annoying, far more ideal are the action sequences, and thankfully this one does have some killer stunts and fight choreography, particularly during the finale at a warehouse where our quartet must face-off against dozens, and this more or less saved the film for me, it was pretty fantastic stuff.

Audio/Video: Rosa (1986) arrives on Blu-ray from 88 Films, presented in 1080p HD framed in 1.85:1 widescreen. the source looks terrific, near flawless, colors are robust and vibrant, skin tones are warm and black levels are good. texture and detail is generally good, grain is at times a bit uneven, and it looks like there's some digital filtering applied, there's a smoothness to it in spots, but overall a solid transfer. Audio options include both remastered Cantonese DTS-HD MA 2.0, and the English-dub by way of PCM 2.0 with newly translated subtitles. The tracks sounds fine, it's not gonna knock your ear-socks off by any mean, but it captures the kinetic slapstick-action and comedic performances jut fine. 

Extras include a pair of commentaries, the first is an Audio Commentary by HK Cinema Expert David West, and a second Audio Commentary by by HK Cinema Experts Frank Djeng and F.I. DeSantis. There is also a 23-min Interview with Joe Cheung & Benz Kong, 3-min of English Opening and Closing Titles, a 2-min Image Gallery, and the 4-min Original Trailer

This Limited Edition Rigid Slip Box set with stunning new artwork by Sean Longmore, inside of which is a full-height clear keepcase with a Reversible Wrap featuring the Longmore artwork and the original HK artwork. Also tucked away inside is a 2-sided Limited Edition Premium Art Card featuring what looks to be lobby card artwork, plus a Limited Edition 40-Page Perfect Bound Book with new writing on the film. we have 'Rosa and the Rhythm of 80s Hong Kong Cinema' by Fraser Elliot, and 'Longing for the Shaw Brothers, Reaping the Golden Harvest by Paul Bramhall, plus cats and crew info, and loads of images from the film and it's PR campaign. Also included is a Slipcover with the same terrific artwork as the wrap that slides over the entre Rigid Slip Box with spot-gloss highlights, which features both the Longmore artwork and an original HK illustrated movie poster artwork. .  

Special Features: 
- Brand New 2K Restoration from the Original Negative 
- Remastered Original Cantonese Monoaural Soundtrack 
- Newly Translated English Subtitles 
- Audio Commentary by HK Cinema Expert David West 
- Audio Commentary by by HK Cinema Experts Frank Djeng and F.I. DeSantis
- Interview with Joe Cheung & Benz Kong (23:23) 
- English Opening Titles (1:10) 
- English Closing Titles  (1:41) 
- Image Gallery (2:14) 
- Original Trailer (4:27) 
- Limited Edition Rigid Slipcase with new artwork by Sean Longmore
- Limited Edition Perfect Bound Book 
- Limited Edition Premium Artcard

Screenshots from the 88 Films Blu-ray: 






































Extras: 



Buy it!
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