Sunday, January 11, 2026

FRIGHTMARE (1983) Tromatic Special Edition Blu-ray Review + Comparison (88 Films vs Troma)


FRIGHTMARE (1983) 
Tromatic Special Edition

Label: Troma
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 86 Minutes 36 Seconds 
Audio: English Dolby Digital 2.0 with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1) 
Director: Norman Thaddeus Vane
Cast: Ferdy Mayne, Luca Bercovici, Nita Talbot

Troma Synopsis: The gory ghosts of Hollywood's Golden Era return from the grave craving bloody revenge, in Norman Thaddeus Vane's Frightmare! Following the death of legendary horror actor Conrad Radzoff (Ferdy Mayne, The Howling II, Conan the Destroyer), a group of overzealous drama students steal his corpse from his crypt and take it to the decrepit haunted house where his finest fright films were made. As the night goes on, the students learn the true meaning of terror, as Conrad's vengeful spirit takes them out one by one. Featuring incredible special effects by Chuck E. Stewart (Critters, The X Files, Bruce Almighty) and early performances by Jeffrey Combs (Re-Animator), Nina Talbot (Night Shift, Puppet Master II), Scott Thomson (Police Academy I-IV) and Donna McDaniel (Hollywood Hot Tub). Frightmare is a bloody terror trip from the Tromatic 1980s.

Frightmare (1983) is a tasty slasher mash-up combing the body count of an 80s slasher with the vintage Gothic trappings of a Hammer film starring Christopher Lee, only this one stars Ferdy Mayne (The Fearless Vampire Killers) as aging horror star Conrad Radzoff, whose bloodstained star had faded with age, once iconic the aged star is relegated to appearing in lousy TV commercials. At the top of the film we see him filming a commercial, when a take is blown the star gets a dress down from the director in front of the cast and crew, the ornery star walks up to him a short time later and pushes him to his death from balcony. Later Radzoff attends an event to a more appreciative crowd, at the local college he is given a lifetime achievement award for his work from the school's Horror Society, but while accepting the award he suffers a heart attack on stage, and he is revived by student Meg (Jennifer Starrett). He later retires to his home knowing death is near and plans his death, including some very elaborate funeral arrangements, but shortly before dying he manages to summon the strength to strangles his disrespectful chauffeur, who also happened to have been his former director, played by Leon Askin, who was General Burkhalter from TV Hogan's Heroes, for those old enough to remember it. Funny story, that show got me into a bit of trouble when I started scrawling swastikas on my first-grade homework, I loved the show and thought the Nazis were inept bad guy, but had yet to learn what exactly it was the Nazis stood for. Anyway, Mrs. Goldstein took exception to my artwork and kept me after school one day and showed me VHS footage from the Holocaust and set me straight about what that symbol meant. 

After the star's proper death there's an elaborate funeral service with a 'from beyond the grave' video message from him addressing his fans, after the survive his body is then interred in a rather fabulous mausoleum decked out in neon and video screens with more videos from beyond the grave that are intended to play to visitors coming to pay their respects, but also a message for those who would dare disturb his eternal slumber. Mourning the loss of their icon the horror society break-in to the mausoleum and steal the horror star's corpse, bringing it back to a mansion where they party with his corpse in disrespectful ways, not dissimilar to Bob Clark's Children Shouldn't Play with Dead Things. They dance, drink and make-out with he star's dead body, eventually taking him up the attic and storing his body in a coffin. At around the same time his grieving widow discovers the body of her beloved has been stolen and approaches a spiritual medium who reaches out to the spirit of the horror star to try to find the body, during which Radzoff is somehow re-animated inside the coffin, rising from the dead he stalks the mansion and the body count begins. 

From here on in the film is pretty much a by the book body count film with the teens being picked off one by one by the angry horror star, who takes great pleasure in killing his fans in a myriad of gruesome ways. There's a tongue ripped out, a levitating coffin smashes a victim in the face, a beheading, a live cremation, someone bursts into flames and someone else is suffocated by noxious fumes released inside the booby-trapped mausoleum. That mausoleum is quite a technological marvel, set up with video screens, loads of neon-lighting, and a poisonous smoke machine, it's not very plausible for the time but it works for the movie. 

The film has loads of atmosphere, thanks in large part to cinematographer Joel King who did a lot on a little budget, there's lots of smoke and fog being pumped into the frames, good use of light and shadow, but the narrative has some big gaps in story and logic, but this is a film that I've always been able to watch and not get bogged down in the whole 'well, that doesn't make sense' arguments, I just dig it. Ferdy Mayne (Night Train to Terror) is near perfection as the Christopher Lee-ish horror star even if why he's out to kill everyone is properly explained, but maybe that hey disturbed his final sleep is reason enough, right? I like his air of self-importance, and be on the lookout for a very young Jeffrey Combs (Re-Animator) as one of the members of the horror society, and Chuck Mitchell (Porky from Porky's!) as a cop investigating the theft of the horror stars body. 

Audio/Video: Frightmare (1983), which is also known as The Horror Star, arrives on region-free Blu-ray from Troma using what looks to my eyes to be the same exact same 2K restoration that Vinegar Syndrome prepared which was later used by 88 Films for their UK release. The film is presented in 1080p HD framed in 1.78:1 widescreen. The film is shot with a certain dreamy aesthetic with shrouds of fog and smoke throughout, there's an inherent haziness to it, but the grain is nicely managed and colors looks nicely dense and accurate. Audio comes by way of an lossy English Dolby Digital dual-mono 2.0 audio track with optional English subtitles, the elements are in good shape and sound good, if not exactly crisp, but uncompressed audio on a Blu-ray in 2026? C'mon Troma, do better. 

The Troma Blu-ray carries over all the archival extras from Vinegar Syndrome and 88 Films that appeared on past releases with one exception, we do not get the Audio Commentary by Nathaniel Thompson and Tim Greer from Mondo Digital, which is a shame, but everything else in here. 
We get the Audio Commentary with David Del Valle and David DeCoteau, plus a second Audio Commentary with the The Hysteria Continues podcast crew. There is also a third option, while not actually a commentary we get an Archival Audio Interview with Director Norman Thaddeus Vane which plays over the film like a commentary track, These are all great tracks, De Valle and DeCoteau have a wealth of knowledge about the film and the key players, while the Hysteria Continues track is more fun but also laced with loads of researched information. The audio interview with the late director has some sketchy audio but gives a nice overview of he director's career. Also carried-over from the VS release is a 12-min Interview with cinematographer Joel King, who seems like such a character, having worked a few classic films including Brian de Palma's Carrie, opening the interview with "if you don't know light, you're not a photographer", going into his early career as a photographer and how he came into movies. He shows off some still photographs he took of Peter O'Toole and Sissy Spacek on various sets, speaking about working on Duel with Spielberg, borrowing stuff he learned on Carrie for this film, and how the film was lit with the possibility that it might end up black and white. Next up, the 12-min Bobo's Confession - Interview with actor Scott Thomson (Ghoulies) who recalls reading Stephen King's 'Danse Macabre' and chugging five espressos before going into his audition, the various shooting locations, and how his name helped inform his character, and him being a bit of horror-snob. There is also an image gallery with various poster designs and promotional images, plus a bunch of "Tromatic" extras which all are older and have nothing to with the actual film, which are all a little bit annoying to be honest, save that extras disc space to allow the transfer to breathe a little bit Lloyd, you don't have to cram it full of Troma crap. The single-disc release arrives in a standard keepcase with a single-sided sleeve of artwork. 

Special Features: 
- Original DVD Intro Featuring Lloyd Kaufman and Debbie Rechon (2:11) 
- Archival audio interview with Director Norman Thaddeus Vane (1:24:47) 
- Historical Commentary with David Del Valle and David DeCoteau
- Audio Commentary from 'The Hysteria Continues' Podcast
- Original Theatrical Trailer (1:28) 
- Artwork Gallery (2:04) 
- Man With A Camera: Video Interview With DP Joel King (21:21) 
- A Gory Lesson From The Set Of Meat For Satan’s Ice Box (5:45) 
- INNARDS! Music Video (1:50) 
- Radiation March (0:54)
- Troma in Times Square (1:01) 
- TA in 4K (1:10) 
- Coming Distractions: #Shakespear's Shitstorm, Eating Miss Campbell, Curse of the Weredeer, Sweet Meats, Kill Dolly Kill, The Toxic Avenger, Class of Nuke 'Em Hight, Tromeo and Juliette, Sgt. Kabukinan N.Y.P.D. 

Frightmare offers some fun old dark house creepiness and a slasher-y bodycount goodness, but it has some slow spots and the suspense is lacking. You'll stay for the fog-drenched atmosphere and Ferdy Mayne's fun performance but it's hard not to feel the shortcoming of the story and difficulty of tone, it feels like a send-up/parody of the genre almost but the humor just isn't there, which isn't to say I don't like it, I do, just go into this one with some tempered expectations, it's a bit on the loopy side of Gothic horror. 

Blu-ray Screenshots Comparison: 
Top: 88 Films Blu-ray (2018) 
Bottom: Troma Films Blu-ray (2026) 
















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Friday, January 9, 2026

SHAMELESS: THE COMPLETE SERIES (2011-2021) Now on Blu-ray!

SHAMELESS: THE COMPLETE SERIES (2021) 
27-Disc Blu-ray Set

Label: Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment 
Region Code: A
Rating: TV-MA 
Duration: 7500 Minutes 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 5.1 with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1) 
Cast: William H. Macy, Emmy Rossum, Emmy® Award Winner Jeremy Allen White, Cameron Monaghan, Emma Kenney, Ethan Cutkosky, Shanola Hampton, Steve Howey, Noel Fisher, Joan Cusack.

Synopsis: Meet Frank Gallagher (William H. Macy): proud, working-class patriarch to a motley brood of six smart, spirited and independent kids who, without him, would be…better off. In Frank’s booze-addled view, parenting just eats into his hard-earned bar-crawling time around Chicago – so he leaves it to eldest daughter Fionna (Emmy Rossum) to hold down the fort. Bearing the de facto parent badge/burden, she’s donned the proverbial apron and makes sure her younger siblings do their chores, keep a clean-ish home, and everyone (no matter how small) works to keep the house lights on, as well as food on the table. Brothers Lip (Jeremy Allen White), Ian (Cameron Monaghan), and Carl (Ethan Cutkosky) use their intellect to break every rule in the book to survive and make the bank, while younger sister Debbie (Emma Kenney) would sooner steal her share, Toddle Liam, the youngest, is just happy to be along for the ride. The Gallaghers are irreverent, endearing, resilient – and they’re absolutely, wildly and unapologetically Shameless.

Audio/Video: Includes all 134 episodes from all 11 award winning seasons arrive on a 27-dic DVD set from WBDHE, presented in 1080p widescreen (1.78:1). Depth and clarity are are significantly improved over the previous DVD editions, colors are well-saturated, black are solid. Audio comes by way of English DTS-HD MA 5.1 with optional English subtitles. it's a very front-centric soundstage, but dialogue exchanges sound fine, there's no issues with hiss, distortion or sibilance, and the music cues and occasional use of directionals and atmospherics sound fine, but again not as full as an uncompressed track would have provided. 

As far as extras go these are all recycled from past single season edition, nothing new. Seasons 1-3 are pretty stacked with featurettes, interviews and unaired scenes. Seasons 4-8 still have plenty of unaired scenes and just a couple of featurettes, seasons 9-10 only offer unaired scenes, and the final season 11 has unaired scenes and one featurette. 

The 27-dic Blu-ray set arrives in two high capacity clear keepcase, you know - the cheap ones. One hold seasons 1-7, the other seasons 8-11, each with a single-sided wrap featuring a collage of the single season artwork on the front and a photo collage of characters from the show on the back. These are housed in a keepcase with essentially the same artwork. Inside there's a 2-sided 3-panel insert that lists the special features for the seasons. The discs themselves have a different color for each season, listing which season and number of disc, but not listing any episodes or extras on them. 

Special Features: 
Season 1: 
- Unaired Scenes
- Bringing Shameless to America 
- Shameless: Bringing the Fun to Dysfunctional
- A Shameless Discussion About Sex  
- Audio Commentaries on Pilot and Frank Gallagher Loving Husband, Devoted Father
- Shameless Season 2 Sneak Pak 
Season 2:
- The Complicated Life of Fiona Gallagher
- The Art of Acting Drunk
- Writing the Shameless Version 
- Shameless Actor Discussions
- The Shameless Christmas Carol Music Video
- Unaired Scenes
- A Shameless Look at Season 3
Season 3 
- Where the Streets Have No Shame
- An Officer and a Gallagher
- The Many Sides of Sheila
- A Lip Off the Old Block
- Unaired Scenes
- Being Mandy & Mickey Milkovich
- A Messy Triangle: Lip, Karen and Manny 
Season 4: 
- Unaired Scenes
- Being Gallagher
- Shameless Neighbors 
Season 5: 
Unaired Scenes
- Shameless Sex Love
- Gentrify This!!!
Season 6:
- Unaired Scenes
- Shameless Shanola
- Running the Table: A Shameless Cobnversation
Season 7:
- Unaired Scenes
- Growing Up Shameless
- The Shameless Politics of Frank
Season 8
- Unaired Scenes
- My Shameless Sister 
- My Shameless Mentors 
Season 9-10:
- Unaired Scenes
Season 11: 
- Unaired Scenes
- Shameless Last Call 



Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Warner Bros. Discovery Home Entertainment Announces All the President's Men and Ben-Hur on 4K UHD



BEN-HUR
 AND
ALL THE PRESIDENT’S MEN

THE ACADEMY AWARD-WINNING FILMS WILL BE AVAILABLE FOR THE FIRST TIME IN 4K RESOLUTION WITH HIGH DYNAMIC RANGE (HDR)

AVAILABLE ON 4K ULTRA HD BLU-RAYTM AND DIGITAL ON FEBRUARY 17, 2026

Two Academy Award winning films, 1959’s religious epic Ben-Hur and 1976’s biographical political thriller All the President’s Men, will be available for the first time for purchase Digitally in 4K Ultra HD and on 4K UHD Blu-ray Disc on February 17.

The films will be available to purchase on 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Disc online and in-store at major retailers and available for purchase Digitally from Amazon Prime Video, AppleTV, Google Play, Fandango at Home and more. 

Ben-Hur
A remake of the 1925 silent film and adapted from Lew Wallace’s 1880 novel “Ben-Hur: A Tale of Christ,” the film is directed by William Wyler and produced by Sam Zimbalist and won a record 11 Academy Awards including Best Picture (Zimbalist), Best Director (Wyler), and Best Actor in a Leading Role (Heston).  The film’s cast includes Charlton Heston, Jack Hawkins, Haya Harareet, Stephen Boyd, Hugh Griffith, Martha Scott, Cathy O’Donnell, and Sam Jaffe.

In 2004, the film was deemed "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" by the United States Library of Congress, and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.

About the Film
The winner of 11 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Actor, Ben-Hur stands as one of the greatest Hollywood epics ever filmed. A member of the Jewish nobility living in Jerusalem, Judah Ben-Hur (Charlton Heston) lives a religious life and peacefully opposes the tyrannical occupation of Judea by Rome. When a boyhood friend, Messala (Stephen Boyd), returns to the region as a Roman official, he and Judah become estranged due to Messala's fanatical loyalty to Rome and ruthless indifference to the fate of Judea. Casting friendship aside, Messala fabricates a charge of treason against Ben-Hur, his sister and mother, all of whom are arrested by Roman soldiers.​

Ben Hur Digital release and 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Disc contains the following new and previously released special features:
- Ben-Hur: Anatomy of an Epic (NEW)
- The Cinematography of Scale (NEW)
- Charlton Heston & Ben-Hur: A Personal Journey
- Ben-Hur: The Making of an Epic
- Ben-Hur: A Journey Through Pictures
- Screen Tests: George Baker and William Russell
- Screen Tests: Leslie Nielsen and Cesare Danova
- Screen Tests: Leslie Nielsen and Yale Wexler
- Screen Tests: Haya Harareet and Make-Up Test
- Commentary by Film Historian T. Gene Hatcher with Charlton Heston (2 Parts)
- Music Only Track Showcasing Mikos Rózsa’s Award-Winning Score (2 Parts)

All the President’s Men
Directed by Alan J. Pakula and written by William Goldman, the film is based on the 1974 non-fiction book by Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward.  All the President’s Men stars Academy Award winners Robert Redford (Ordinary People) and Dustin Hoffman (Kramer vs Kramer, Rain Man), along with Academy Award nominee Jack Warden (Shampoo, Heaven Can Wait), Academy Award winner Martin Balsam (A Thousand Clowns), Academy Award nominee Hal Holbrook (Into the Wild), and Academy Award Winner Jason Robards (Julia). 

The film was nominated for 8 Academy Awards and won 4 for Best Supporting Actor (Robards), Best Screenplay – Based on Material from Another Medium (Goldman), Best Art Direction (George C. Jenkins & George Gaines), and Best Sound (Arthur Piantadosi, Les Fresholz, Dick Alexander, and James E. Webb).

In 2010, All the President’s Men was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.” 

About the Film
Academy Award winners Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman star in this true story as Washington Post reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, whose investigation of a seemingly minor hotel room break-in uncovers the greatest political scandal in United States history and leads to the downfall of President Richard Nixon.

All the President’s Men Digital release and 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Disc contains the following new and previously released special features:
- All the President’s Men: The Film and its Influence (NEW)
- Woodward and Bernstein: A Journalism Masterclass (NEW)
- Woodward and Bernstein: Lighting the Fire
- Telling the Truth About Lies
- Out of the Shadows: The Man who was Deep Throat
- Jason Robards on “Dinah!”
 
Ben Hur
Ultra HD Blu-ray Languages: English, Spanish, French
Ultra HD Blu-ray Subtitles: English SDH, Spanish, French
Run Time: 212 minutes
Rating: G
Digital Street Date: February 17, 2026
Physical Street Date: February 17, 2026

All the President’s Men
Ultra HD Blu-ray Languages: English, Spanish, French
Ultra HD Blu-ray Subtitles: English SDH, Spanish, French
Run Time: 138 minutes
Rating: PG
Digital Street Date: February 17, 2026
Physical Street Date: February 17, 2026


Sunday, January 4, 2026

SIRIUS (1942) Deaf Crocodile Blu-ray Review + Screenshots

SIRIUS (1942) 
aka SZIRIUSZ 

Label: Deaf Crocodile
Region Code: A
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 103 Minutes 15 Seconds 
Audio: Hungarian DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Fullscreen (1:.37:1)
Director: Ákos D. Hamza
Cast: Katalin Karády, László Szilassy, Elemér Baló, Géza Berczy

It is through the catalog of Deaf Crocodile almost exclusively that I have been enriched by Hungarian film rediscoveries that I am quite sure I might never have been privy to otherwise, the latest of these marvelous discoveries is the sci-fi adventure/romance Sirius (1942) aka Szíriusz, newly rediscovered and gorgeously restored courtesy of the National Film Institute (NFI) in Hungary and making it;s Blu-ray debut from deaf Crocodile The black and white time-travel romance is directed by Ákos D. Hamza, and based on an 1894 novel by Ferenc Herczeg, but amde contemporary by setting the opening and closing scene in the 1940s. 

It centers around world-travelling Hungarian playboy (László Szilassy) who after a night of rowdy partying at a costume ball with his pals decides to impulsively answer a newspaper ad from astrophysicist Professor Sergius (Elemér Baló)  promising a large dowry to the man who marries his daughter. He arrives at the home of the eccentric Sergius, still wearing his 18th century costume from the party. The scientist  proceeds to tells him about a time-travel machine that he has invented, the Sirius, convincing the bachelor to accompany him on a travel through time, agreeing to drop Tibor off in the year 1748 for twenty-four hours so he can experience time travelling 200 years earlier, warning him not to do anything to draw attention to himself. That 18th century costuming he wore is to the party turns out to be conveniently appropriate attire to a degree. 

There he explains his presence as having been involved in stagecoach accident, he ends up picked up by a stage coach carrying opera singer Rosina Beppo (Katalin Karády), whom he falls in love with, while also making enemies of all his aristocratic ancestor Count Tibor (Lajos Rajczy), his great grandfather, and of course, he does draw attention to himself, his mannerisms, politics and social etiquette don't fit the antiquated era, and when he strikes  match to light a cigarette, it's shockingly anachronistic, it might as well be black magic! He's also very outspoke about politics, and keeps hinting at events yet to happen, and he keeps calling the count great grandfather instead of his proper title, which results in some awkward situations and later some dueling swordplay with his great grandfather, with an ending that brings us back to the 20th century proper, with our love sick protagonist questioning whether what he experienced was real or just a bump on the head. It's a terrifically warm and wonderful watch, the blend of period costume melodrama, science fiction and fantasy makes for a sweet confection, full of whimsy and adventure, which i think will certainly appeal to fans of stuff like Back to the Future and Somewhere in Time. 

Audio/Video: Sirius makes its Blu-ray debut from Deaf Crocodile, beautifully restored from the original 35mm B&W nitrate negative by the NFI, presented in 1080p HD in 1.37:1 fullscreen, and it looks gorgeous, an impeccable restoration with nicely preserved film grain, excellent contrast and clarity, grayscale and shadow detail look terrific. The textures of the period clothing and close-ups of faces have some great fine detail as well. Audio comes by way of Hungarian DTS-HD MA 2.0 dual-mono, which has also been wonderfully restored, dialogue, score and effects are all delivered without issue, sounding terrific for a film of it's vintage.  The Blu-ray authoring by David Mackenzie of Fidelity In Motion is top-notch, the transfer has plenty of room to breathe, and I noticed no issues with compression during my viewing.

Extras include the 2-min Sirius Werkfilm (1942, silent) offering very rare  behind-the-scenes footage of the film's during production shot by a 19-year old studio trainee, plus a new 19-min Video interview with György Ráduly, director of the National Film Institute (NFI), moderated by Dennis Bartok that delves into the film's production and restoration, and the stunning life of actress Katalin Karády. Also included is a 20-min Video Essay Vissza a jövöbe – Hungary at a Tipping Point by journalist and physical media expert Ryan Verrill and film professor Dr. Will Dodson of Someone’s Favorite Productions that explores the making of the film, it's cultural significance, the impact of WWII, and more. We also have a new Audio commentary by comics artist (Swamp Thing), film historian, and author Stephen R. Bissette that really packs in the historical and contextual research, including more about the life and times of Katalin Karády. The last if the disc-extras is a 3-min TrailerThe single-disc release arrives in a clear full-height Scanavo keepcase with a 2-sided non-reversible wrap featuring the artwork of Deaf Crocodile's resident artist Beth Morris.

Special Features: 
- SIRIUS Werkfilm” (1942, 2:27, B&W, silent) – this ultra-rare behind-the-scenes footage of SIRIUS during production was shot by a 19-year old studio trainee and shows the director and lead actors setting up for filming.
- New video interview with György Ráduly, director of the National Film Institute (NFI) – Film Archive on the making and preservation of SIRIUS, moderated by Dennis Bartok. (18:54) 
- New video essay by journalist and physical media expert Ryan Verrill and film professor Dr. Will Dodson of Someone’s Favorite Productions. (20:18) 
- New commentary track by comics artist (Swamp Thing), film historian, and author Stephen R. Bissette.
- Trailer (2:48)
- New artwork by Beth Morris.
- Blu-ray authoring by David Mackenzie of Fidelity In Motion.

Screenshots from the Deaf Crocodile Blu-ray: 













































Extras: 






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