Showing posts with label Clayton Rohner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clayton Rohner. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

APRIL FOOL'S DAY (1986) (Scream Factory Collector's Edition Blu-ray review)

APRIL FOOL'S DAY (1986) 

Label: Scream Factory
Region Code: A
Rating: R
Duration: 88 Minutes 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA Stereo mONO 2.0 & 5.1 
with Optional English Subtitles 

Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (2.35:1) 
Director: Fred Walton
Cast: Deborah Foreman, Griffin O'Neal, Clayton Rohner, Jay Baker, Pat Barlow, Lloyd Berry, Deborah Goodrich, Tom Heaton, Leah Pinsent, Mike Nomad 



Not unlike a lot of slashers April Fool's Day (1986) features a group of young teen-ish looking people gathering at one location, we have Muffy St. John (Deborah Foreman, Waxwork) calling upon her college friends to come visit her family's island mansion for an April Fool's Day weekend getaway. We have nice girl Kit (Amy Steel, Friday the 13th Part 2)and her sulking boyfriend Rob (Ke Olandt, Summer School); pranksters Arch (Thom­as F. Wilson, Back to the Future) and Skip (Griffin O'Neal, The Wraith); the free-spirited 80's dude Chaz (Clayton Rohner, Destroyer), uptight prep Hal (Jay Baker), hottie Nikki (Deborah Goodrich, Remote Control) and Nan (Leah King Pisent) who is sort of the stick-in-the-mud. The group arrive on the tiny island via a ferryboat, but the pranksters shenanigans enroute cause a ferryman's to be horrifically injured, with him having to be transported by boat to the mainland to a hospital by the local sheriff. 



With that out of the way they make their way to the mansion and settle in for the night, the gatherings spirit seemingly unaffected by the disturbing accident, with Muffy pranking the group with gags that include collapsing chair, dribble glasses, trick lights, spraying faucets, and an exploding cigar. It's mostly harmless good natured stuff, but when boisterous group settles into their rooms for the evening things start to get a bit more strange, each discovering something weird, like ominous newspaper clippings, s&m gear, and a cassette tape (remember those?) of a crying baby, the latter of which is rather disturbing and in poor taste considering the young woman had just had an abortion. Later in the night prankster Skip heads to the boathouse to explore it and is attacked by an unseen assailant. In the morning his friends discover that he's missing and form a search party, with Kit spotting his corpse on a boat beneath the boathouse, but the body is nowhere to be found when they return with the rest of the group. After that the teens begin to disappear one by one, leading the others to believe that someone is stalking and killing them. 




The film is directed Fred Walton (When A Stranger Calls) and produced by Frank Mancuso Jr. (Friday the 13th Part III), it has a decent set-up and if it had followed through on the premise and pedigree this could have been a cool traditional 80's slasher, but that's not what happened. Turns out that Fred Walton was making a deconstructionist satire of slashers, playing with a set-up that feels very traditional but then turns it on it's head with a late-in-the-game revelation that has not always sat well with slasher fans. I know the first time saw it Ishouted "what? are you kidding me?" 
at the TV, feeling that the movie had betrayed me, and while it true that it betrayed my expectations, it's still a good bit of slasher-y fun. 



The twist which I won't spoil prevents the film from laying out the standard stalk and slash game-play, the kills are absolutely bloodless, and the set-ups are not that great, even lacking even the killer POV shots we've come to expect. That there's not much bloodshed might be my biggest beef with it, hamstrung by the mechanics of the plot. As a fan of slashers I tend to be forgiving to lapses in logic, but even I have to admit that the line of exposition that tries to button-up this film's inconsistencies is absurd, but I still love it.




For all it's slasher-wrongness I still think the film has plenty to offer slasher fans, I love the remote island setting, which is along the lines of something like The Slayer (1982), plus the ensemble cast is pretty great,. We get a good group of folks that are likable overall, even if I don't care for they way that Amy Steel (Friday the 13th Part 2) comes off as a not particularly strong, she deserved better, and when her character didn't punch another girl in the face following the shocker ending I was a bit mad, she needed to knock that girl on her ass!     




I know that this is a film that's gonna anger a few people, but if you take a step back and look at it it's still a fun slasher-y thriller with a hell of an audacious punchline. The fact that there's close to zero gore and only a touch of nudity is a negative, but it's got a great sense of humor, a fantastic cast, plenty of atmosphere and the sort of goofy hijinks that you only got in the eighties.  




Audio/Video: Scream Factory bring April Fool's Day to Blu-ray for the first time in the U.S. for their Collector's Edition. There;s no info about the transfer so I think we can probably assume this is an existing HD master provided by Paramount Pictures who they licensed the title from. The 1080p HD image is framed in 2.35:1 widescreen and looks fantastic to my eyes. Whatever the source it is in great shape without any blemishes, a few very minor white speckles but otherwise trouble-free. Grain is well-managed, clothing textures and facial close-ups offer pleasing amounts of fine grain and the colors are punchy and vivid, and the blacks are of the inky variety, it might not be a new HD master but this looks great. 




Audio comes by way of English DTS-HD MA 2.0 mono and 5.1 surround with optional English subtitles. The mono track is is solid but lacks power, the surround option just has more life and oomph to it, it's well-balanced and delivers the dialogue with more precision, and the score from Charles Berstein sounds great in the mix, which is spread into the surrounds.



Extras on the disc kick off with a 49-min 2-part interview with director Fred Walton who talks not just about this film but also about When A Stranger Calls (1979) which just got a bare-bones release in the U.S. so I appreciate the expanded purview of the interview. Of course he also speaks about the film at hand.  




Actors 
Deborah Goodrich Royce and Clayton Rohne each show up for 17-min interviews with the former touching on the lost alternate ending of the film which was actually filmed, and recounting having to repeatedly plunge herself into some nasty water. Rohn discusses his early career and how he ended up getting into acting, as well as touching on the fun atmosphere on-set while shooting the film. 




Composer Charles Berstein (Cujo)gets a lengthy 26-min interview, I've been seeing him pop-up on a lot of new releases discussing his scores, and I never get tired of it. He speaks about his early career, how he grew up watching his mom played organ music accompaniment to silent films, and his process of scoring films, how he prefers to score alone, but stating that music editors are worth their weight in gold.   




The last of the interviews comes from cinematographer Charles Minksky who gets into growing up watching films every Saturday at the cinema, how he became a cinematographer and learned his craft through trial and error, and how he loves the feel of film running through a camera.  




Extras are buttoned up with 2-min of TV spots and a 2-min full-frame trailer for the film. Unfortunately we do not get the alternate ending of the film, which to my knowledge has never been found, in fact I think there's only one still shot of scene from that version floating around the internets, it's certainly not here. As a fan I would have loved interviews with actors Deborah Foreman, Thomas 'Bif Tanner' Wilson and scream queen Amy Steel, but that didn't happen, though probably not for lack of trying I am certain, but what we do get is a fantastic A/V presentation and over 2-hours worth of interviews, so it's a bit hard to be too sore about what we didn't get, but I am quite certain there will definitely be fans bemoaning the fact nonetheless. 



The singe-disc release comes housed in a standard keepcase with a reversible sleeve of artwork featuring the original theatrical poster and a new on-point illustration from Yannick Bouchard, which is also featured on the disc itself, and on the limited edition slipcover with the new illustration.    



Special Features: 
- NEW Horror with A Twist – an interview with director Fred Walton (47 min) 
- NEW Well of Lies – an interview with actress Deborah Goodrich Royce (17 min) 
- NEW Looking Forward to Dessert – an interview with actor Clayton Rohner (17 min) 
- NEW Bloody Unforgettable – an interview with composer Charles Bernstein (26 min) 
 - NEW The Eye of Deception – an interview with cinematographer Charles Minsky (17 min) 
- Theatrical Trailer (2 min) 
- TV Spots (2 min) 




I have been waiting since the arrival of the Blu-ray format for  this slasher gem to finally get the HD treatment, and it was worth the wait. Scream Factory's Collector's Edition gives us a solid A/V presentation and a wealth of extras, it's a winner.



MORE SCREENSHOTS FROM THE BLU-RAY 

Saturday, April 16, 2016

DESTROYER (1988) / EDGE OF SANITY (1989) (Blu-ray Review)

DESTROYER (1988) / EDGE OF SANITY (1989) 
DESTROYER 

Label: Scream Factory:

Region: A
Rating: R 
Duration: 94 Minutes 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Stereo with Option English SDH
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1) 
Director: Robert Kirk 
Cast: Anthony Perkins, Clayton Rohner, Deborah Foreman, Lyle Alzado

The late-80's were a fertile time for prison-bound horror movies, in just '88 and '89 alone saw the release of Prison (1988), The Horror Show (1989) and Wes Craven's Shocker (1989). Scream Factory have seemingly cornered the market on late eighties prison-set horror movies having released all three on Blu-ray, and they've added Destroyer (1989) to the docket, yet another jail house supernatural thriller featuring a hulking killer sent to the electric chair for his crimes, who has now come back to continue his murder spree. 


Serial killer Ivan Moser (former NFL star Lyle Alzado) is a convicted serial killer, having raped and murdered twenty-four men, woman and children before being apprehended, the last of his victims was a popular game show hostess, along the lines of Vanna White. While sitting on the chair waiting to be fried for his crimes he obsesses over a nearby TV screen showing a rerun of the game show, which is a nice perverse touch. The roided-out Alzado is a frighting hulk of a man bursting at the seems, with his muscular and veiny physique the guy as if he is about to pop like a muscular zit, his eyes nearly bulging from their sockets, the guy looks like he is amped-up on steroids and a steady diet of that reportedly tasty '80s cocaine. While the big guy is being zapped by millions of volts on the chair there's a power outage, in the ensuing panic Moser rises up from the dead, an ensuing prison riot closes the prison down for good, and it is assumed that Moser died during the murderous riots, though no body has ever been recovered. 


Eighteen months later we have a b-movie director (Perkins) making a sleazy a women-in-prison movie at the now closed down penitentiary along with he screenwriter David Harris (Clayton Rohner) and his stunt-woman girlfriend Susan (Deborah Foreman, April Fool's Day), plus a cast of jailhouse background actors, including the leading lady who is a big-haired no-talent. Also among the crew is a nerdy special effects guy named Rewire (Jim Turner) who does the electrical and special effects work on-set, he seems to be the comic relief with a mix of nerdiness and stoner antics.


In the media the screenwriter mouths off about the riot at he prison, placing blame for the tragedy on the former prison warden named Kirsh (Pat Mooney), prompting an angry set-visit from the former warden, who becomes the first in a series of grisly murders perpetrated by the thought-dead Moser who burns the warden with an acetylene torch while he drops a turd in the toilet. 


The movie has some cheap prison atmosphere about it but lacks much if any charisma, certainly the venerable Anthony Perkins lends some credibility to his role as the director but this is a small change role for the guy, the eighties were not kind to the actor and most of his roles were not up to par with his talents. NFL-er Lyle Alzondo is a big guy with menacing physique but the character is devoid of any depth, his physicality is imposing and I wouldn't want the guy to get me in a headlock, but he's just a big muscular body with no character aside from an annoying and maniacal laugh, at least Horace Pinker from Shocker was fun.. 


Even by late-'80s standards the gore is pretty tame and won't do much for horror fans, a charred body is about as gory as you're gonna get, not even the presence of '80s scream queen Deborah Foreman (Waxwork, April Fool's Day) could give this one any juice, not an awful movie but just a lacklustre '80s slasher. 


Destroyer arrives on Blu-ray from Scream Factory with a new HD transfer derived from the only known surviving elements, which were not the original negative. The image is pretty solid with some decent fine detail, but the image doesn't have a lot of depth to it. The grain can be heavy at times, but all things considered the image looks good. The English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Stereo audio sounds good, clean and well-balanced, optional English subtitles are provided, the only extra for the movie is a standard-def trailer. 


Special Features: Trailer (1 Mins) 


EDGE OF SANITY (1989) 


Label: Scream Factory:

Region: A
Rating: R
Duration: 91 Minutes
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Stereo with Option English SDH 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1) 
Director: Gérard Kikoïne
Cast: Ben Cole, David Lodge. Sarah Maur-Thorp, Anthony Perkins, Glynis Barber

The second half of this Anthony Perkins double feature is the more intriguing Edge of Sanity starring Perkins in a kinky version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, with Perkins starring as Dr. Jekyll, a man of science with good intentions who's alter ego is unleashed after a lab accident.  At the top of the movie we are treated to a nightmare sequence which reveals how Jekyll was traumatized as a young boy after catching his father in the barn with a whore, the experience has had long lasting psychological affects on the boy which have haunted him on through to adulthood. 


Jekyll's most recent experiments are based around the medicinal use of cocaine as an anesthetic, one night a lab monkey knocks over the cocaine into another chemical and the ensuing vaporous cloud has a transformative affect on the doc, transforming him into his the crack-smoking lecherous murderer Mr. Hyde who roams opium dens and whorehouses of Victorian London in search of sexual kicks before embarking on an erotic murder-spree. 


Perkins was already infected with HIV at the time of the movie and his transformation into Hyde shows a bit of the emaciated facial features I associate with the disease, the transformation is rather upsetting in a way on that level. However, it was great to see Perkins in a meatier role after his appearance in the sub-par slasher movie Destroyer, showcasing his talents as he transforms from a well-mannered man of science to an immoral killer, some of the psycho sexual scenes are very uncomfortable to watch. It may not be a rape-revenge movie but the scenes of nudity are uncomfortable to watch, with Mr. Hyde seducing, torturing and then murdering each of his victims, usually slashing their throats. 


The story of Jekyll and Hyde is one of the most told stories on the silver screen, but this version was something unique. I found Perkins depraved and creepy as the sinister alter-ego unleashed, the way they weave in elements of Jack the Ripper is also a treat. The movie is set in Victorian era London but I have to say this is the most '80s looking Victorian movies I have ever seen, but it worked for me, the stylish cinematography is rich with lush visuals and good atmospherics, including the fog-drenched streets of London you would expect of a Ripper story.


The 91-minute R-rated uncut version of Edge of Sanity arrives on Blu-ray from Scream Factory looking awesome on Blu-ray, there's a nice layer of fine film grain, plenty of fine detail and the colors are strong, with the vivid reds and blues really popping off the screen. The English DTS-HD MA 2,0 stereo audio sounds great. As with Destroyer the only extra is a trailer for the movie. 


Special Features: Trailer (1 Mins) 


I love the Scream Factory double features, they may not all be venerated cult-classics but they're always fun for us lovers of b-movie cinema, who can even appreciate the modest charms of something like Destroyer, which scrapes the bottom of the '80s slasher barrel. Edge of Sanity is an awkwardly kinky take on Jekyll and Hyde with a standout performance from Anthony Perkins and is worth the price of purchase alone on my opinion, I only wish we had some new bonus features to go along with it. 3/5