Tuesday, June 2, 2026

THE SCREAMING (2000) Visual Vengeance Collector's Edition Blu-ray + CD Review + Screenshots

THE SCREAMING (2000)
Visual Vengeance Collector's Edition Blu-ray + CD

Label: Visual Vengeance
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating:  Unrated 
Duration: 83 Minutes 33 Seconds 
Audio: English Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080i HD Fullscreen (1.33:1) 
Director: Jeff Leroy 
Cast: Vinnie Bilancio, Wendi Winburn, John F. Goff, Curt Swobel.

SOV horror flick The Screaming (2000) is directed by Jeff Leroy (Rat Scratch Fever), a scrappy microbudget lampooning of Scientology, made for $3000 and a huge-pile of DIY chutzpa. In it chain-smoking and soul-patched graduate student Bob Martin (Vinnie Bilancio, Sorority House Massacre) moves into a new rental house, and immediately takes a liking to his attractive landlady, the sexy blonde health-nut Crystal (Wendi Winburn). She's a recruiter for the new-age cult Crystalnetics, and is always after him to give up smoking and drinking, and to improve his life. He's looking for change and she manages to convinces him to start working out with her daily, and trying to get him to join her new age cult, which is a pretty obvious send-up of Ron L. Hubbard's Dianetics, which was founded by R.R. Deepak. He doesn't mind getting in shape and starts to feel better in body and mind. At the start he is only interested in Crystalnetic in an academic sense, because he's writing his graduate paper on the cult, and he does not have a favorable opinion, but over the course of the film he starts to think that maybe there's something to it, after all, he's feeling much better about himself, but he's also suffering horrific nightmares of his blood being drained into mason jars, which is certainly weird. However, he is unaware that it's more than just a new-age cult, it's a blood-drinking sect dedicated to the teaching of it's founder R.R. Deepak, a winged alien-vampire, and his new health regime is really just a way to cleanse impurities before he is harvested and disposed of. Will he figure it out before it's too late?  

The low-budget flick is pretty interesting, the send-up of Dianetics is fun stuff, even if the story isn't very intricate, but it's an interesting premise - they even have a handsome big-time actor spokesperson, an obvious nod to Tom Cruise, by way of Dusty Chase (Tim Gaannon). The flick has plenty of cool effects, we get a winged creature, achieved through puppetry and cheap stop-motion animation, some ghoulish make-ups, nooses made of intestines, it's not gonna blow you away by any means, it's lo-fi and cheaply made, but it's a spirited and imaginative production, and the cast is pretty decent, particularly Bilancio and Windburn. Other character include Prof. Steiner (John F. Goff, Drive-In Massacre), who tries to warn Bob the dangers of Crytalnetics, and Detective Ketchum (Curt Swobel), a cop investigating missing people associated wit the cult. 

This won't be for all tastes, but if you love handmade horrors made with limited resources, but unlimited enthusiasm, there's more than enough here to enjoy for you bottom-of-the-barrel DIY cinema lovers. 


Audio/Video: The Screaming (2000) gets a region-free Blu-ray from low-rent cinema connoisseurs Visual Vengeance, the disc offers the film in 1.33:1 fullscreen in 1080i HD. This represents a director supervised master from existing SD tape masters, and it looks pretty solid considering this is basically a VHS upscale, which if you're plundering the VV vault will be no big surprise. The image is surprisingly stable, colors look solid. 

Audio comes by way of English Dolby Digital 2.0 with optional English subtitles, the track is clean, it's certainly has it's low-budget limitations, it's not the height of high-fidelity but it does the job, the dialogue is discernible and a never a chore to decipher, and the gory sound effects and Joe Woeful score sounds just fine, cheesy b-movie movie synths for the win! 

As usual VV do this release up right with some terrific extras, starting off with an Audio Commentary with Tony Strauss of Weng’s Chop Magazine, who is always so well-researched and enthusiastic about these lo-fi SOV flicks, it actually made me appreciate the scrappy flick more than I already did, def worth a listen. 

Next is a 9-min Screaming and Screaming Again: The Making of The Screaming with Joe Haggerty and  Vincent Bilancio, a fun cat that includes location visits, meeting director Jeff Leroy and producer David Sterling, auditioning for the film Crack, noting the film's original title was Scream, Ahain, which was obviously meant to cash-in on the popularity of Wes Craven's Scream Again. They also talk about the cast members Linda Serbo, John Goff, and Wendi Windburn, and get a bit into the the stop-motion and CGI special effects, as well as Jay Woeful's score, 


Woeful himself shows up in the 7-min Composing a Cult Classic: Music Composer Jay Woelfel. He talks about this being his first feature score, the tech he used, the themes found in his score, while also noting that he directed Asylum of Darkness, other some projects he's scored, as well as the different versions of the film. 

Speaking of which, we also get the 82-min bonus feature: The Screaming: Reborn, this is the director remastered alternate version of film, which also includes an optional audio commentary with director Jeff Leroy, producer Dave Sterling and star Vinnie Bilancio with different digital effects and some score alterations as well. 

Disc extras are finished up with a 2-min Image Gallery, the 2-min Original Trailer, a The Screaming: Reborn Trailer, and the 1-min Visual Vengeance Trailer for the film, in addition to a selection of upcoming Visual Vengeance Trailers, Rat Scratch Fever, Werewolf in a Women's Prison, The Witch's Sabbath, all of which were directed by Jeff LeRoy, so if you're a fan of this film you can look forward to more of his flicks getting Blu'd from Visual Vengeance! 

This limited edition set arrives in a clear keepcase with a Reversible Wrap, featuring the original VHS artwork as well as a new illustration Tom Hodge aka The Dude Designs, plus a First-Pressing Only Slipcover with it's own unique illustrated artwork. Inside there is a Folded Mini-Poster featuring the same artwork as the slipcover, plus a ‘Stick Your Own’ VHS Sticker Set, which is also limited to the first-pressing. That's not all though, Visual Vengeance have also included the CD Soundtrack featuring the Joel Woeful score, which is pretty awesome, and something that I think VV have only done once before, with their release of Moonchild.  It's a fun synth/electronic score, some nice b-movie drones, swirling atmosphere and eerie ethereal moments, 

Special Features: 
- Audio Commentary with Tony Strauss of Weng’s Chop Magazine
- Screaming and Screaming Again: The Making of The Screaming (8:44) - w Joe Haggerty, Vincent Bilancio, location cmvisits, dir. Jeff Leroy, producer David Sterling, auditioning for Crack, original title Scream, Again, tge cast Linda Serbo, John Goff, Wendi Windburn, the stop-motion, CGI, Jay Woeful's score, 
- Composing a Cult Classic: Music Composer Jay Woelfel (6:57) - 
First feature score, the tech he used, themes, directing Asylum of Darkness, other projects he's scored, 
The different versions, 
- Bonus feature: The Screaming: Reborm - director remastered alternate version of film (82:16) 
- The Screaming Reborn Audio Commentary with director Jeff Leroy, producer Dave Sterling and star Vinnie Bilancio
- Image Gallery (1:35) 
- Original Trailer (2:08) 
- The Screaming: Reborn Trailer
- Visual Vengeance Trailer (1:05) 
- Visual Vengeance Trailers: Rat Scratch Fever (1:17),  Werewolf in a Women's Prison (1:09),  The Witch's Sabbath (1:10) 
- Includes CD Soundtrack of the original score by Jay Woelfel (31 Tracks, 51 min) 
- Folded Mini-Poster
- ‘Stick Your Own’ VHS Sticker Set - FIRST PRESSING ONLY
- Reversible Wrap with Original VHS Art
- Limited Edition O-Card - FIRST PRESSING ONLY

Screenshots from the Visual Vengeance Blu-ray: 





























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Sunday, May 31, 2026

MYSTICS IN BALI (1981) Mondo Macabro Blu-ray Review + Screenshots

MYSTICS IN BALI (1981) 

Label: Mondo Macabro
Region Code: Region-Free 
Rating: Unrated 
Duration: 85 Minutes 59 Seconds 
Audio: English or Indonesian DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (2.35:1) 
Director: H. Tjut Djalil
Cast: Ilona Agathe Bastian, Yos Santo, W.D. Mochtar, Sofia W.D.

Mystics In Bali (1981) is directed by H. Tjut Djalil (White Crocodile Queen), and tells the mystical tale of an American anthropologist named Cathy (Ilona Agathe Bastian) who arrives in Bali to write a book about black magic. She meets a young man named Mahendra (Yos Santo, The Warrior and the Blind Swordsman) and he agrees to help Cathy study black magic, and agrees to introduce her to a powerful witch, who is the Queen of the Leyak (Sofia W.D., Queen of Black Magic), a cult of witches who are known to be shape-shifters. They meet her in a darkened forest, the hideous witch with long clawed-fingers, cackling like a maniacal hyena, it's actually this film that they sourced the cackling from the Mondo Macabro promo from. The witch agrees to train the American woman, but only if she brings with her blood for the witch to feed on, and if she agrees to meet her alone going forward without Mahendra's accompaniment, and to allow her two carve a spell glyph into her upper thigh with her long prehensile tongue. Cathy returns alone and continues her black magic training, becoming the witch's disciple, teaching her to shapeshift into a pig and a snake, unaware that the cackling witch is tricking her, for while she sleeps at night the witch takes possession of her head, which detaches from her neck, her lungs and entrails trailing behind it. It flies around and preys on pregnant women, the head wedged between it's victims legs while they sleep,  Re-Animator style, and yes, it does look like it's performing cunnilingus, consuming the unborn fetus and draining the mother of blood, then returning to her body none the wiser of what her fanged-floating head has been up to, with the witch becoming more vital and powerful after feeding on the blood that the floating head has procured. It's wild stuff! 

When she starts having nightmares and confides in Mahendra about them he gets wise to the fact that the witch's teaching are coming at a high price, for the woman he is falling in love with. He approaches his uncle, Machesse (W.D. Mochtar, Special Silencers), a Buddhist monk, who teaches him how to defend against the witch's black magic with meditation and mantras, however, while facing off against the witch and Cathy's flying head the uncle dies, but then his uncles twin brother Oka (the always great W.D. Mochtar, again) shows up, and we get a wild Indonesian horror finale chock full of batshit WTF-ery. 

This is probably one of the most known and notorious of the Indonesian horror films in North America, as it was the first to be widely available that I am aware of, I've had it on DVD for ages. It's chock full of mystical mayhem and some impressive visual effects, including the sequences of the head detaching from the body - which is done with some weird and off-putting SD video manipulation, however they did it, it's effectively unsettling. Of course we get more occult madness by way of the pig and snake shape-shifting, the vomiting of mice, and that reoccurring fanged-floating head, bolts of magical electricity and floating fiery orbs. Some of the effects are a bit ropey looking, which I think is pretty common with Indonesian horror flicks of this era, but it's often ghastly and effective even still, and I will not soon forget Cathy's disembodied head pulling toothpicks out of the stump of it's own neck! The film also benefits from an eerie score by Gatot Sudarto, alternating between traditional Balinese and synths. 

Audio/Video: Mystics In Bali (1981) makes it's Blu-ray debut on a region-free Blu-ray disc from Mondo Macabro, presented in 1080p HD framed in 2.35:1 widescreen, restored rom the original camera negative, but this is an older scan, not a new one, and apparently came from the same HD master as the previous DVD. That is of course less than ideal, but being the only source available, so it is what it is. Colors fare quite well well for the most part, fabrics and greenery shine, though fine detail, texture and shadow detail are lacking, but I do think there is enough improvement in depth and clarity for this to merit the Blu-ray upgrade, even if the color-grade is pretty much identical to the DVD. Audio comes by way of English or Indonesian DTS-HD MA 2.0 dual-mono with optional English subtitles. I've always watched this with the English dub, but I sampled the Indonesian track this time around, and it does sound more authentic, but I still prefer the dub, personally. 

Extras kick-off with a new 9-min Introduction by film-maker Joko Anwar, the director of the Satan's Slave remake, who speaks of this being a holy grail of horror, so outrageous, the shock value is through the roof. He describes it as traumatizing, when he first saw it, appreciating the rich culture and folklore. He also points to author Abdullah Harahopas being the father of Indonesian horror, while comparing the works of Indonesian horror directors Sisworo Guatama Putra  and Tjut Djalil, noting that Djalil was more abstract, and then offering his favorite/most memorable scenes. 

Next is an 11-min Video Essay: Monsters, Movies, and Myth, by Jake Gallo, who mentions a few Indonesian horror films of note, particularly those that are folklore horror, the many  different folkloric creatures, and the the abundance of Krasue films, which are the floating heads spirits. There is also a 15-min Interview with director H. Tjut Djalil who discusses his early career as a writer before becoming a director, and touching on the Indonesian film scene at the time, and a few of his films. 

We also get the Extended 2-hour Version of Mystic In Bali sourced from a fullscreen SD TV master, with over 30-minutes of additional scenes not seen in the theatrical cut. I did not notice much of any additional gore or supernatural shenanigans, but it's still a pretty cool extra. The last of the bonus stuff is the the 2-min Original Trailer. The single disc release arrives in a a standard keepcase with a single-sided wrap featuring a phenomenal new illustration by Jolyon B Yates that captures the bat-shit vibes of this one.

Special Features:
- Introduction by film-maker Joko Anwar (8:47) 
- Movies, and Myth, Video Essay Monsters, Video Essay by Jake Gallo (10:48) 
- Extended 2-Hour Version of Mystics in Bali (118:13) 
- Original Trailer (2:41) 
- Interview with director H. Tjut Djalil. (14.50)

Screenshots from the Mondo Macabro Blu-ray: 






































































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