Friday, January 31, 2025

RUNNING ON KARMA (2003) (Eureka Entertaining Blu-ray Review + Screenshots)

RUNNING ON KARMA (2003) 

Label: Eureka Entertainment
Region Code: A
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 93 Minutes 11 Seconds 
Audio: Cantonese PCM 2.0 Stereo with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1) 
Director: Johnnie To & Wai Ka-Fai
Cast: Andy Lau, Cecilia Cheung

Running On Karma, co-directed by Johnnie To (Running Out of Time) and Wai Ka-fai (Peace Hotel), is an offbeat Hong Kong action/crime thriller starring Andy Lau (Infernal Affairs) as "Big", a former Buddhist monk turned body builder/stripper, who turned away from his spiritual calling after in a fit of anger over the death of a friend, he accidentally killed a bird, in the process discovering that he has the unusual ability to see the past lives of people, meaning he can see who they were in a former life and how their actions in that past life will karmically play out in this life. At the start of the film he is stripping at a bar when he is busted undercover female cop Lee Fung-yee (Cecilia Cheung, The Legend of Zu) for performing without a proper permit. He flees the scene and she gives chase on foot, while he is running naked through the streets he sees another police action, cops are chasing a serial kille on the same street, and he sees a police dog chasing the suspect. He has a vision of the dog's previous life as a small child who tortured dogs, and moments later the dog is accidentally shot to death with a bullet meant for the killer - this was it's karmic-fate This establishes his past life/karma visions, which he also observes with his arresting officer Lee Fung-yee, seeing her past life as a wicked Japanese soldier prone to decapitating civilians during wartime. 

Recognizing Lee's inherent kindness, and hoping to help her change her karmic-fate through good deeds Big teams-up with the cop after showing her his inexplicable, gravity-defying supernatural Buddhist monk martial arts abilities and his karmic visions. He helps her investigate a murder, deducing through his karmic sixth-sense that  the victim of the serial killer he saw while fleeing the bar had wronged the killer in their past lives, also noting that the killer will be caught by finding someone who is missing their left arm. The way this pans out, the person the missing left arm is quite a scene indeed, a karmic quirk that I did not see coming. 

That's something I can say quite a bit about this one, it's weird and unusual, the tone shifts are tectonic, and the mashing-up of genres is absolutely breathless and unafraid. We get a crime thriller, a serial killer flick, rom-com flourishes, a supernatural martial arts flick, and a Buddhist meditation on karma and past lives. It's quite something, and on paper it sounds like a hot mess, but as directed by Johnnie To & Wai Ka-Fai it all comes together into this wonderful, weird and expectation defying slice of cinema that just won me over scene-after-scene. What felt like a revenge-minded crime-thriller about a supernatural serial killer sort of evolves into this beautiful film about the philosophical questions of spirituality, redemption and faith. 

That's not to say its not batshit insane, it is, for starters lets address the elephant in the rom, the fact that Andy Lau performs wearing a muscle-suit throughout the whole film. Why this is necassary for the character is not quite clear to me, but somehow it worked for me and did not come off as ridiculous. It's a solid piece of body-suit work, sculpted beautifully, it is mostly seamless-looking, as he is seen in it nearly  naked quite a bit I thought it held up well. There are fleeting moments when the folds and creases of the skin are a tad unnatural and uncanny, but I got say it works like gang-busters. The other thing is that Big tries to help the female cop, and seeing that her karmic fate has doomed her to an unfavorable end tries to keep his distance but is so drawn to her kindness that he tries to help her atone for her past karmic-sins. How this resolves was actually quite a shocking bit of business, involving a head bashed-in by a stone and decapitation by a sharp-edged rock - it once again defied by expectations, and even further more when this bit of violence triggers a justified quest for revenge, only to evolve into a spiritual journey of forgiveness.  

This comes highly recommended, and is surely gonna be on my year-end list of 2025 film discoveries. It's a film that defied expectation at every turn, and that on paper sounds like a proper train wreck, but the sharp genre-bending direction, and the terrific performance from Andy Lau, keep this action-crime-fantasy flick on track, managing to be violent, silly, soulful, and action-packed. 

Audio/Video: Running On Karma (2003) arrives on region A,B Blu-ray from Eureka Entertainment in 1080p HD widescreen (1.85:1), it looks terrific, the source is in great shape, colors are pleasing, black levels and shadow detail are solid throughout. The sole audio option is the original Cantonese PCM 2.0 stereo with optional, newly translated English subtitles. The track is clean and well-balanced, dialogue is nicely prioritized and the Cacine Wong core sounds great in the mix without overpowering the scenes. 

Extras include a new Audio Commentary by East Asian film experts Frank Djeng (NY Asian Film Festival) and F.J. DeSanto; a new 25-min Reap the Whirlwind – Interview with Gary Bettinson, editor-in-chief of Asian Cinema journal; a 19- in Archival “Making of…” Featurette, and a 1-min Theatrical Trailer. This Limited Edition (of 2000) release arrives in a clear keepcase, with a Limited Edition O-card Slipcase featuring new artwork by Time Tomorrow, plus a Collector’s Booklet featuring a new essay by David West of NEO Magazine

Special Features: 
- Limited Edition of 2000 copies
- Limited Edition O-card slipcase featuring new artwork by Time Tomorrow
- NEW! Audio Commentary by East Asian film experts Frank Djeng (NY Asian Film Festival) and F.J. DeSanto
- NEW! Reap the Whirlwind – Interview with Gary Bettinson, editor-in-chief of Asian Cinema journal (24:50) 
- Archival “Making of…” Featurette (18:39) 
- Theatrical Trailer (1:18) 
- Collector’s Booklet featuring a new essay by David West of NEO magazine

Screenshots from the Eureka Entertainment Blu-ray: 






























Extras: 











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Thursday, January 30, 2025

UNDERWORLD BEAUTY (1958) (Radiance Films Blu-ray Review + Screenshots)


UNDERWORLD BEAUTY (1958)

Label: Radiance Films
Region Code: A, B
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 87 Minutes 10 Seconds 
Audio: Japanese PCM 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (2.39:1)  
Director: Seijun Suzuki 
Cast: Michitaro Mizushima, Mari Shiraki, Shinsuke Ashida

Underworld Beauty (1958) is a Japanese noir directed by Seijun Suzuki (Branded To Kill) early on in his career. in it gangster-
thief Miyamoto (Michitaro Mizushima, Japan Organized Crime Boss) has just been released from prison after a three year stint after a diamond heist gone wrong. As soon as he is released he heads down into the sewer tunnels to retrieve a stash of diamonds he hid prior to his arrest, and takes them to his former crime boss Oyane (Shinsuke Ashida, Stray Dog) asking him to broker a deal to sell the jewels to a foreign buyer as payback for never mentioning his name during his arrest and imprisonment. He's trying to sell the jewels not to enrich himself but to give the profist to his old partner Mihara (Tôru Abe, Blind Woman's Curse) who was crippled during the heist after being shot, and who he feels honor-bound to help. 

However, crime boss Oyane secretly wants the stones for himself, and the deal goes awry when gunmen appear on the scene of the sale of the diamonds to the foreign buyer, and what ends up happening is that Mihara swallows the diamonds but dies during the chase, after falling off the roof. ow his corpse in in police custody and the cops are unaware that jewels are concealed inside the corpse. What ends up happening is that Miyamoto teams-up with Mihara's wayward sister Akiko (Mari Shiraki, The Naked Woman and the Gun) to somehow get the jewels and evade the double-crossing gangsters, but Akikio's greedy sculptor boyfriend Arita (Hiroshi Kondō, Sister Street Fighter) throws a wrench into the works.

This moody Japanese noir look fantastic, shadowy noir lensing, an odd but interesting jazz score, with the widescreen CinemaScope shot composition makes for quite a striking flicks with cool shots of a mannequin littered art studio and smoke-filled nightclubs, a trip down into the sewer certainly bringing to mind The Third Man. It's just a great looking flick, and the briskly paced story is fairly straight forward, but still quite engaging, if not quite a exciting or edgy as later crime films that Seijun Suzuki would go on to be known for, but is still an engaging noir crime thriller worth checking out. 

Audio/Video: Underworld Beauty (1958) arrives iba region A,B Blu-ray from Radiance Films in 1080p HD widescreen, framed in 2.39:1, sourced from a 4K scan provided by Nikkatsu Corporation. The monochromatic image looks quite nice, grain is unmolested and nicely resolved, the source is in terrific shape, grayscale and shadow detail are pleasing throughout and black levels are deep and nuanced, no complaints here other that a few stray speckles. 

Audio comes by way of Japanese PCM 2.0 with Optional English subtitles. While the track does have some hiss and distortion in the higher registers it's a solid track, the Japanese dialogue sound good, and the off-kilter score from Naozumi Yamamoto (Apartment Wife: Affair in the Afternoon) fares well also. 

Extras include the the bonus short film Seijun Suzuki’s Love Letter (1959), which is more of a romantic melodrama set in the snow covered mountains, which includes an Audio Commentary on Love Letter by Suzuki biographer William Carroll, plus the 3-min Underworld Beauty Trailer and the 3-min Love Letter Trailer.

The Limited Edition (of 3000) release arrives in a clear full-height Scanavo keepcase with a Reversible Sleeve of Artwork featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Time Tomorrow. The reversible artwork I found to be the most striking of the pair. We also get Radiance's signature Removable OBI Strip which leaves packaging free of certificates and markings. Inside is a 20-Page Illustrated Booklet featuring new writing by critic Claudia Siefen-Leitich and an archival review of the film, as well as cast and crew information, notes about the transfer and Blu-ray credits. 

Special Features: 
- New 4K restoration of the film by Nikkatsu Corporation
- Uncompressed mono PCM audio
- New interview with critic Mizuki Kodama (2024) (14:45)
- Bonus feature: Seijun Suzuki’s Love Letter (1959) (39:48) 
- Audio commentary on Love Letter by Suzuki biographer William Carroll (2024)
- Underworld Beauty Trailer (3:15) 
- Love Letter Trailer (2:54) 
- Newly improved English subtitle translation
- Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Time Tomorrow
- Limited edition booklet featuring new writing by critic Claudia Siefen-Leitich and an archival review of the film

Screenshots from the Radiance Films Blu-ray: 


























Extras: 











Buy it!
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