Showing posts with label Olivia Luccardi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olivia Luccardi. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

CHANNEL ZERO: BUTCHER'S BLOCK - SEASON 3 (2018) (Via Vision Blu-ray Review)


CHANNEL ZERO: BUTCHER'S BLOCK - SEASON 3 (2018) 

Label: Via Vision Entertainment
Region Code: Region-FREE 
Rating: MA 15+
Duration: 270 Minutes
Audio: English Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround
Director: Arkasha Stevenson
Cast: Rutger Hauer,  Holland Roden, Olivia Luccardi,  Krisha Fairchild,  Brandon Scott


The third season of Channel Zero: Butcher’s Block follows Alice Woods (Olivia Luccardi, It Follows) and her schizophrenic sister Zoe (Holland Roden) who have moved to a small town to start fresh, leaving behind the memories of their suicidal mother who's been committed to an asylum. On the edge of this small town lays Butcher’s Block, a shady, run down neighborhood with an overgrown park in the center, a place of urban legends, where the locals tell of an white ominous staircase that is said to appear from nowhere. At the top of the stairs appears a door, a door you should never enter. 


It's at the top of these stairs where a man named Joseph Peach and his strange family live, a surreal world that is not what it at first appears, flowing green fields shroud the worship of a dark god, who requires that the Peach's abduct people from the neighborhood, and to that end have a pint-sized minion who wanders the park, looking like jawas. This season takes a bit of inspiration from Candyman with an urban folk lore complete with creepy murals painted on the crumbling city buildings. The story of the sisters who fear falling into a chasm of mental illness like their mother connected with me, and the gory trappings surrounding it definitely appealed to my horror sensibilities. 


This season we have a phenomenal cast, beginningwith Mr. Rutger Hauer (Hobo with a Shotgun) as the patriarch of the Peach family, the guy always classes up a picture, and he's got a great role to chew on here, his best in years. Nipping at his heels we have Andreas Apergis (X-Men: Days of Future Past) as his lunatic son, stealing damn near every scene he's in, and I love the gap-toothed charm of Olivia Luccardi here, she pulled me right into the story from the get-go, there's just something about her I find so appealing. 


Three seasons in and Channel Zero still manages to come through with visually amazing tales of the strange, the level of unease and dread throughout this season is at an all-time high, this is by several measures my favorite six-episode arc of the series so far, so get yer TV creep on and check this series out if you haven't done so yet. 


All six episodes of Channel Zero: Butcher's  Block arrive on a single-disc, region-free Blu-ray from Via Vision Entertainment presented in 1080p HD widescreen, but with only a lossy Dolby Digital surround option, though the Dolby Digital handles the dialogue and score just fine, including some vintage Lee Hazelwood & Nancy Sinatra and Riz Ortolani's haunting theme from Cannibal Holocaust, which is used in the first scene of the first episode! Subtitles are advertised on the sleeve but are not on the disc. There are no extras on this release, it's bare bones with only the option to select an episode or play all. The Via Vision website indicates this is a 2-disc set, but like Channel Zero: No-End House it's a single disc-er. 


 

Thursday, September 27, 2018

FERAL (2016) (Scream Factory Blu-ray Review)


FERAL (2016)

Label: Scream Factory / IFC Midnight'
Region Code: A
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 91 Minutes 
Audio: English 5.1 DTS-HD MA with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1) 
Director: Mark H. Young
Cast: Scout Taylor-Compton, Olivia Luccardi, Lew Temple, Renee Olstead, Brock Kelly, Landry Allbright, George Finn

A group of six college kids head into the woods for a weekend of fun, but things go awry when they become lost and set-up camp overnight, during which they encounter a feral humanoid creature which guts one of therm and wounds another, leaving the the others to care for the wounded, taking refuge with a hermit who lives in  cabin in the area, and a guy who definitely seems to know more than he's letting on. Feral is a fairly standard viral/undead entry with some nice flourishes along the way but nothing that's gonna flip your wig in regard to originality 

We have a three couples on this trip, including a same-sex couple played by Scout Taylor-Compton (Rob Zombie's Halloween) and Olivia Luccardi (It Follows) who turn out to be the most tenacious of the group, I'm a big fan of the gap-toothed Olivia Luccardi from not just It Follows but from Channel Zero, she plays vulnerable and strong well here, working well against Scout Taylor-Compton. 

The film doesn't offer a whole lot of new to the viral/undead genre, a standard kids go in the woods kids get dead (or infected) sort of flick, not awful but I much preferred the last time IFC Midnight and Scream Factory entry that went this route with Wildling, which wasn't a viral undead film but was more certainly feral than anything this flick could muster up.