Showing posts with label Mary Lambert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Lambert. Show all posts

Monday, February 17, 2020

PET SEMATARY TWO (1992) (Scream Factory Blu-ray Review)

PET SEMATARY TWO (1992)
Collector's Edition  

Label: Scream Factory

Region Code: A
Rating: R
Duration: 100 Minutes 
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 & 5.1 with Optional English Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1)  
Director: Mary Lambert
Cast: Edward Furlong, Anthony Edwards, Clancy Brown, Jared Rushton


While visiting his b-movie scream-queen mom (Darlanne Fluegel, Slaughter of the Innocents) on the set of her latest movie  young Jeff (Edward Furlong, T2: Judgment Day) witnesses her horrific death by electrocution. In the aftermath Jeff and his veterinarian father Chase (Anthony Edwards, Revenge of the Nerds) move back to her hometown of Ludlow, Maine to deal with their grief, with Chase opening a veterinarian clinic. 



They soon meet the town's sheriff Gus (Clancy Brown, Highlander) and his stepson Drew (Jason McGuire) along with their dog Zowie, who they bring into the clinic when Gus's rabbits bite it on the nose. In a creepy move Gus makes sure to mention that he and Jeff's now-dead mom were quite an item back in highschool, "the whole nine yards". 



At school Jeff becomes the target of bullies lead by Clyde (Jared Rushton, Big), which he kind of asks for when he brings a kitten to school with him, leading to them running off with the cart. After that altercation he becomes friends with Drew, and we learn that Drew's stepdad Gus is a real piece of shit, bullying  the kid at home about his weight and being overly strict, going so far as to shoot his dog Zowie when she yet again gets into the rabbit kennel.



This is when the familiar nightmare of Pet Sematary begins, with Drew convincing Jeff to accompany him to the forbidden native american burial ground, and just like Church the cat in the first film, Zowie returns the next day with a mean disposition. They take the re-animated dog to see Chase at the clinic to stitch-up the open wound left by the gunshot, but he's a bit confused as the dog has no heartbeat but is somehow still alive, actually he doesn't seem all that surprised strangely. 



Gus's continued torment of Drew results in Zowie ripping out his throat at the cemetery, killing him, so Drew and Jeff, as teens not wanting to get into trouble, take him to the Indian burial ground, and he returns changed, but in a strange twist is seemingly less mean than before he died in some regards, and more volatile in others. This changed Gus ends up saving Jeff from a beating at the hands  of the bully but he then kill's Clyde by destroying the teen's face with the revved-up back wheel of a motorcycle, a kill which happily brought to mind 80's slasher Happy Birthday To Me (1981), but with more gore, complete with the victim's scarf being sucked into the running wheel! 



As where the first film had a lot of atmosphere and dread about it, this sequel does not, perhaps owing a bit to the fact that it was shot in Georgia and not in Maine, though they try hard to make you think it's the same place, there's even a mailbox on the side of the road with the name "Creed" on it, there's something about it that fails to conjure the same sense of eeriness. I will say that they do good work replicating the look of the pet sematary and the native american burial ground, though inexplicably missing is the ever-present danger of speeding semi-trucks that plagues the family in the first film. 



The film thinly recycles a lot of the elements of the previous film but adds a weird music video aesthetic, especially the heavily filtered nightmare sequences, that fail to capture the potential for dread and atmosphere, instead it seems content just to make things stranger, and strange it is. Clancy Brown is delightfully chewing up the scenery as the re-animated Gus, cracking awful puns with a thick, not-very-good, Maine accent, being mean for the sake of being mean, cracking jokes about digging up the corpse of Jeff's mom to fuck her, when he's not actually raping Drew's mom. 



Edward Furlong was coming off the huge blockbuster success of T2 and is top-billed, but it's Drew that initiates the nightmare by resurrecting his dog, and then soon after his stepfather. It's not till much later that Furlong's character gets the idea that he can bring back his dead mother, but he seems more of a secondary character here than the star. Other than hysterically screaming "mom!" at the top of his lungs at the start of the film when his mom get's electro-fried he fades a bit into the background with a low-key performance, he's the least interesting character.



It's a bit odd to me that director Mary Lambert returned for the sequel yet it feels so tonally different to the previous film, it's just a weaker film overall, but it has a weird energy that I still can sink my teeth into. A lot of that is coming straight from the over-the-top turn from Clancy Brown who keeps things demented as the resurrected Gus, it's just too bad the rest of the film is not as interesting what he's doing, but that's also why I sort of love this film, it's wackiness amuses me, but it's still a pretty bad sequel, but at least it's an entertaining watch.       



Audio/Video: Pet Sematary Two (1991) arrives on Blu-ray from Scream Factory, licensed from Paramount, with a new 4K scan of the original camera negative framed in 1.85:1 widescreen in 1080p HD. The source is in fantastic shape with no blemishes whatsoever, with the grain structure being resolved naturally. The limited color palette is strong throughout with inky black levels and solid shadow detail. We also get natural looking skin tones of both of the natural and the re-animated variety, with good depth and clarity, offering some nice gruesome gore in the close-up shots of carnage. 




Audio on the disc comes by way of both English DTS-HD MA 2.0 stereo and 5.1 surround with optional English subtitles. Dialogue is always direct and clean sounding with the Mark Governor (Mindwarp) score having good placement in the mix. The tasty grunge-era songs from L7The Jesus and Mary Chain, The Nymphs among others also has some nice power behind them. The 5.1 does a good job of spreading the atmospherics and some directional action into the surrounds, with the 2.0 having some effective panning stereo effects. 




Scream Factory, by way of Justin Beahm and Reverend Entertainment, pack-in the extras for this Collector's Edition, and this is the exactly the sort of bad film that makes me look forward to the extras, I always want to know more about WTF happened! The film get s a brand new commentary with Director Mary Lambert, which to be honest I have not gotten around to yet, but I am looking forward to checking it out soon. Interviews start-up with Edward Furlong who shows up for a 14-min chat clutching his cigarette lighter the whole time, discussing being cast in T2 at a Pasadena Boy's Club, and how his aunt and uncle worried it might be child porn! He also talks about learning to channel his real-life tensions through acting, his love of horror films and being excited to do Pet Sematary Two from the get-go. Says he was kind in awe of co-star Jared Rushton who had already co-starred in Big with Tom Hanks, and shooting in Georgia, which he says was a bit of a bore. There's also talk of working with the trained animal, and the gruesome special FX used on the film, as well as being asked to do some questionable fire stunt work and how much he hated the syrupy fake blood. 




My favorite element of the whole film is the demented performance from Clancy Brown, and thankfully he's interviewed for 21-min, speaking on how he got caught up in theater before landing an acting gig in Bad Boys, Extreme Prejudice and other early films. He a bit too kindly describes Pet Sematary Two as being way more self aware and subversive than it's predecessor, going as far to say it probably should have been titled something else, even though it has the same "gag" in it. Brown as usual is very candid about everything, laughing about the film and how fun his character was to play, saying he pushed the envelope and Mary Lambert never seemed to pull him back from that instinct so he went all out, even getting into his own backstory and rationalization he created for it. He then goes onto speak about working with the kids on the film, including Furlong, who he says he worried a bit about, but that he was a good kid on set and pulled through okay, and admiring what a classic beauty Lisa Waltz was. He finished up with a $1000 bet he made on this film doing better than Innocent Blood with make-up FX legend Steve Johnson, who worked on both films, and touching on a few of the FX shots - including the potato truck accident, before finishing up the interview by busting out his Mr. Krabs voice from Spongebob Squarepants for shits and giggles.

  


Jason McGuire shows up for 24-mins talking about his suburban middle class childhood, growing up in Georgia, his love of films, and his mom enrolling him in some acting classes, which lead to being cast in Pet Sematary Two. He gets into his experiences on set and working with Furlong and the rest of the cast including, including  Anthony 
Edwards, Lisa Waltz and Clancy Brown, the latter of whom introduced him to sushi, changing his life! McGuire touched on his favorite scene and working with the animals, and surreality of  his filming his death scene and his short-lived film career post PS2, with small roles in Forrest Gump and  Leap of Faith, before sputtering out after a growth spurt. It's an interesting interview from the perspective of a kid who didn't go onto do all that much, but who certainly looks back at the experience fondly and without any regret, noting that the film is a bit of a guilty pleasure looking back at it. 



Make-up FX guy Steve Johnson gets a 16-min interviews, opening up with the fact that Stephen King had dropped his name from the project early on. Ge recalls that the film was around the time that he was striking out on his own away from Richard Edlund and his crew, with this film along with Innocent Blood and Freaks coming at about the same time and how that was a bit of a strain, having to fly around the country to work on the project simultaneously. Of course he gets into the good stuff, the gore-gags in the film, speaking of how creating a full-on animatronic dog is actually difficult, because we are so familiar with the lovable furballs that it's hard to fake their movement convincingly. He gets into creating the exploding head and how they shot the motorcycle face-lift.   




Last up is composer Mark Governor who begins with his ear love of music, working for Roger Corman and learning many different trades with him, before eventually working with Lambert on Pet Sematary Two and how he created the grunge-tinged score, noting how fans continues interest in his score for the film lead to it being released. The last of the extras is a 2-min trailer for the film.




The single-disc release arrives in a standard keepcase with a dual-sided sleeve of artwork with the awful original artwork on the a-side and a much cooler new illustration from artist Laz Marquez on the flip featuring the re-animated dog in the film. This film has always had shit floating-heads artwork for both theatrical and home video, so it's nice to see it get an upgrade even if it makes it look like a were wold movie, and it's quite an improvement, the same new artwork is featured on the limited edition slipcover (O-card) and on the disc itself.  



Special Features:
- NEW 4K scan of the original camera negative approved by director Mary Lambert

- NEW Audio Commentary with director Mary Lambert
- NEW Young and Brooding - an interview with actor Edward Furlong (13 min) HD 
- NEW Playing Over the Top – an interview with actor Clancy Brown (21 min) HD
- NEW My First Film – an interview with actor Jason McGuire (21 min) HD
- NEW A Thousand Dollar Bet – an interview with special makeup effects creator Steve Johnson (16 min) HD 
- NEW Orchestrated Grunge – an interview with composer Mark Governor (29 min) HD 
- Theatrical Trailer (2 min)




Pet Sematary Two is a bit of a guilty pleasure, lacking the atmosphere of the original, but with plenty of cheesy music video strangeness that keeps it at least entertaining. It's Clancy Brown that brings it on home with his insane energy and over-the-top lunacy throughout, he keeps me coming back for more of this truly awful sequel year after year. Thankfully Scream Factory put together a great looking release with some quality extras that should appeal to both true fans or curious bad-movie rubberneckers, making this a desirable release for genre fans.  



Friday, March 16, 2018

UNEARTHED AND UNTOLD: THE PATH TO PET SEMATARY (2015) (Special Edition Blu-ray Review)

UNEARTHED AND UNTOLD: THE PATH TO PET SEMATARY (2015) 
Special Edition Blu-ray 

Label: Synapse Films
Rating: Unrated 

Duration: 97 minutes
Region Code: Region All
Video: 1080i HD Widescreen (1.78:1)
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 5.1 Surround
Director: John Campopiano, Justin White
Cast: 
Mary Lambert, Denise Crosby, Dale Midkiff, Miko Hughes, Brad Greenquist, Andrew Hubatsek, Susan Blommaert

If you ask me what my favorite Stephen King movie adaptation is I will say Stanley Kubrick's The Shining (1980) without hesitation, and yes I know it's not truly an adaptation, Kubrick strayed from the source material and did his own thing, and thank you Mr. Kubrick for doing so. Now if asked what's my second favorite, it's gonna be Pet Sematary (1989) every time, when I saw it at the cinema my freshman year of high school I thought I was too much of a horror fan to let a studio horror movie get to me, but I was fucking wrong - the movie is creepy and frightening as Hell, and even when I watch it these days it still gets right under my skin, the issues of the loss of a child are only more poignant now that I am a father, the movie is still a powerhouse of a fright film which is a testament to the script, the excellent cast and director Mary Lambert (Urban Legends: Bloody Mary). I own Pet Sematary on Blu-ray and the disc has some very minor extras plus a decent audio commentary with Lambert, but it doesn't get into the nooks and crannies of making the movie, and that's where this new making-of doc come into play, Directed by John Campopiano and Justin White, two average horror fans who had a calling to deep-dive into the making of this cult film, a project that started as a five hour road-trip to Maine to scout out some of the filming locations in  Ellsworth, Maine. Keep in mind that they had to do the hard work themselves because this is a movie that did not have a dedicated episode of Horror's Hallowed Grounds to do it for us, though that would be cool, though it would be a bit redundant at this point because these guys pretty much went everywhere and found out everything about this friggin' movie that you could ever want to know! 

The doc has interviews with director Mary Lambert, and the stars Denise Crosby, Dale Midkiff, Miko Hughes, Brad Greenquist, Andrew Hubatsek, Susan Blommaert, the Berdahl twins, Michael Lombard, all the main cast are here, and then it goes deep into the local peeps in Maine who worked on the production doing carpentry and landscaping to bring the otherworldly horror flick to the big screen. There's also are behind the scenes footage of the making of the film, location visits and a brief archival video of Stephen King speaking about writing the book, there's even a university professor espousing some psycho analysis of the Lewis character and his questionable yet somewhat logical actions throughout the film. The film opens with a quote from producer/studio exec Lindsay Doran (Ferris Bueller's Day Off) who speaks about her failed attempt to bring the movie to the silver screen in the early 80's at Embassy Pictures when the script landed on her desk, and then moving to Paramount where she again tried to pitch the script only to have it once again fall on deaf ears, finally getting the green light when the studio was scrounging for completed scripts during the writer's strike of 1988. It's that sort of cool insight into the process of making the movie that I love about this doc.  I loved the loads of interviews from non-Hollywood types who worked on the film locally, speaking about the impact of the film on their lives and their community. 

Reversible Artwork 
The doc runs along pretty briskly at 97 minutes but does have a few slow moments, I have to wonder if it would drag more for someone not too keen on movie docs, it would have to, but then again why would you buy it if you weren't, right? Anyway, I originally watched this a few months streaming on Amazon Prime ( I think it's still on there), and at the time my attention did waver a bit, but I tend to wander mentally when watching streaming movies for some reason, not sure what's that about, but I tend not to value the streaming experience as much as when I watch physical media, I guess that's why I am a collector of physical media. I will say that when I popped in the Blu-ray disc I was thoroughly entertained and properly enthralled by the re-watch, if you love Pet Sematary and have the yearning for an in-depth and thorough making of doc with some cool local-flavor about it this is an easy recommend. 

Onto the extras we get quite a few, this sucker is packed to the rafters with content, beginning with an audio commentary from directors John Campopiano and Justin White, there's also a second track that's a podcast commentary/interview with the duo. onto the video extras we get 8-min of edited/alternate scene, 18-min of deleted scenes that were cut because they strayed from the narrative of the film, but there's some cool stuff in there. Actress Dawn Crosby speaks about trying to buy a car from a local Maine guy who scared her something fierce, and a story of how the local carpenters were a bit taken aback when the painters showed-up to distress the house to make it look work by taking bats and chains to the exterior. Creators John Campopiano and Justin White show up for an 18-min video interview discussing their love of the film and the grassroots origins of the doc and how what started as a filming location scout tuned into a years long process, and I would just like to say thank you to them for doing it, it certainly doesn't seem like an easy undertaking. 

The disc is finished-up with some rare behind the scene VHS footage of the shoot running about 7-min, poster art concept gallery a location photo gallery, promotional trailer and a sizzle reel for the doc. The single-disc Blu-ray release comes housed in a standard blu-ray keepcase with a reversible sleeve of artwork featuring art by illustrator Alexandros Pyromallis which really captures the vibe of the film, and also brought to mind Guillermo Del Toror's The Devil's Backbone in a way. The disc itself features the say illustration from Pyromallis

Special Features:
- Audio Commentary with Creators John Campopiano and Justin White
- Podcast Commentary with Creators John Campopiano and Justin White
- Edited / Alternate Scenes (9 min)
- Video Interview with Creators John Campopiano and Justin White (8 min)
- "PET TALES - From the Cutting Room Floor" Featurette (18 min)
- PET SEMATARY Location Photo Compilation (2 min)
- Documentary Poster Art Concepts (2 min)
- Rare On-Set Video Footage from Rhonda Carter (7 min)
- Documentary Sizzle Reel (4 min)
- Promotional Trailer (3 min)
- Reversible Art Design by Alexandros Pyromallis

Unearthed and Untold: The Path to Pet Sematary (2015) goes in deep and leaves no stone at the Mic Mac burial ground un-turned, if you're a fan of the film and crave an insightful, well-rounded and incredibly thorough making of doc look no further - this is essential stuff for fans. Synapse have put out a few impressive making-of movie docs through the years, from Document of the Dead (1995) to Michael Felsher's Just Desserts: The Making of Creepshow (2007), and now we have this one, quite a trio of movie docs they've got there, hope to see more soon, I love these things.