Showing posts with label Peter Stormare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Stormare. Show all posts

Friday, June 19, 2015

DARK SUMMER (2015)

DARK SUMMER (2015) 

Label: Scream Factory I IFC Midnight
Release Date: July 7th 2015
Region Code: A
Duration: 82 Minutes
Rating: Unrated
Audio: DTS-HD MA 5.1 with Optional English SDH Subtitles 
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen
Director: Paul Solet
Cast: Keir Gilchrist, Maestro Harrell, Grace Phipps, Peter Stormare, Stella Maeve


It's been six years since director Paul Solet brought us the indie horror film Grace (2009), a solid film dealing with some disturbing and unsettling maternal issues, a film I would call a success, yet we had to wait six years for his follow-up feature, what is up with that? Apparently having a solid debut film under your belt does not mean that financiers will come crawling out he woodwork to finance your next movie, or maybe Solet's just not in a hurry to get to the next project, I have no idea, but whatever the reason for the delay it was worth the wait.  

Dark Summer has a set-up that will be familiar to most, it brings to mind Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window with an awkward young man named Daniel (Keir Gilchrist) having been placed under house arrest for committing cybertsalking, having hackd into the online account of classmate Mona (Grace Phipps), an odd young woman whom daniel  has had a crush on for years. However, he's a bit awkward and unsure of himself and has never had the courage to approach her in person or ask her out on a date, which is too bad, as the film plays on you will see why. 

Daniel is assigned a probation office named Stokes (Peter Stormare) who placed an ankle monitor on the young man and explains that he is not allowed to leave his property, cannot use the Internet (they are tracking his IP address) and cannot have his friends over. Of course, as soon the PO leaves his friends Kevin (Maestro Harrell) and Abby (Stella Maeve) show up with an iPad connected to wi-fi from another home, and he immediately sets about hanging poolside with his cohorts smoking weed before attempting to hack into Mona's cloud storage, this guy just doesn't wanna do right, but somehow he comes across as a likable guy. 

That night alone inn his room he receives a video chat from Mona who then proceeds to ramble off some cryptic words before putting a gun in her mouth and shooting herself dead. Afterward Daniel is understandably devastated, believing his violation of her online privacy might be the reason she committed suicide. Soon after he begins to experience a strange haunting of sorts, it seems that Mona's spectre is haunting him and she may be out for revenge against her cyberstalker. Not sure what the spirits motives might be Daniel and his pals begin to pry further into Mona's troubled life, all while keeping it on the down low from Stokes who comes off as slightly sinister himself.


I like the set-up, I like how they reference the Rear Window knock-off Disturbia (2007) which itself I believe was on the receiving end of a lawsuit for ripping Hitchcock, or the writer of the source material off. On top of the familiar thriller elements they layer in a supernatural and occult angle and the story takes a detour along the way, straying from what it originally seemed to be, which I appreciated. It's not too often these days anyone actually comes up with a twist that is nt broadcast from quite distance, and this one managed to keep the surprises pretty close to the vest. 

I am on board for pretty much anything Peter Stormare chooses to be part of and his presence here is appreciated, a soft-spoken but menacing authority figure who bares witness to the strange goings on from the outside looking in. The trio of cast members who make up the teen protagonist and his best friends are solid, Keir Gilchristis believable as an awkward sort of creepy cyberstalker, aloof but with a genuine presence, likewise his friends are decent teens too, but you do have to suspend your disbelief to a point when they go about sleuthing Mona's home in the dark of night, they go full-on into it without batting an eyelash, but when I was a teen I made a lot of stupid decisions, too. There's a decent subplot of Abby having had an unrequited crush on Daniel,, she having been off to the side admiring him from a distance and f course he never noticed, till now, which angers the vengeful spectre. I also enjoyed the way the movie subverted the creepy-stalker aspect of Daniel and Mona, turning that on it's head as the film progresses, not unloading all it's secrets at once, but slowly feeding them to you until the finale, which again turns on itself. 

The occult and supernatural elements are handled nicely, the movie is stylish and well shot, the supernatural elements are heightened by the atmospheric visuals further enhanced by a great score that takes advantage of haunting piano and cello orchestrations and electronic manipulation, it makes for a nice blend of the electronic and organic, creating a great tone and atmosphere throughout the movie.

I don't have any negatives about this one, unless you consider the languid pace a detraction, which I do not. I love a slow burn and at just 82-minutes it would be difficult to call it slow, but the pace can be a bit languid and measured, but with a purpose. I loved the twists and turns of the plot, but I can see the somewhat abrupt end not sitting comfortably with a few folks, though I have to say that I liked they way they brought it to a close and left it slightly open.

Dark summer arrives on Blu-ray courtesy of a fruitful distribution deal with Scream Factory and IFC Midnight which also brought us The Babadook (2014) and Extraterrestrial (2014) from the Vicious Brothers. The disc has some decent bonus content several short interview with director Paul Solet, the cast, composer Austin Wintory and a lengthier one with actor Peter Stomrare who speaks fondly of Solet and talks a bit about the acting lessons he picked-up on from working with cinema legend Ingmar Bergman. Additionally there's an audio commmentary from the director and a theatrical trailer, plus a slipcase cover. 

Special Features
- Audio Commentary With Director Paul Solet (2 Mins)
- Atmosphere And Style Featurette (2 Mins)
- Director Paul Solet Featurette (2 Mins)
- The Art Of Dark Summer Featurette (14 Mins)
- The Music Of Dark Summer Featurette ( 8 Mins)
- A Conversation With Peter Stormare Featurette (16 Mins)
- The Kids - Cast Interviews (2 Mins)
- Theatrical Trailer (2 Mins) 


Good to see Paul Solet making movies again, I hope it doesn't take another six years to see his next project come to surface. Dark summer is very good supernatural themed teen movie -- and there's not a lot of those these days -- the sort of movie you wished all those Twilight fans would support, its smart, stylish and doesn't play down to the audience. 3/5

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Blu-ray Review: BAD MILO! (2013)

BAD MILO! (2013) 
Label: Magnet Releasing
Region: A
Rating: R
Duration: 84 Minutes
Video: 1080p Widescreen (1.85:1)
Audio: English DTS-HD Master 5.1 Audio with Optional English Subtitles
Director: Jacob Vaughn 
Cast: Ken Marino, Gillian Jacob, Peter Stormare, Patrick Warburton, Erik Charles Nielson, Steve Zissis, Toby Huss

At it's heart Bad Milo! is a scatalogical version of David Cronenberg's The Brood (1979) by way of 80's horror comedies Critters (1986) and Basket Case (1982) starring Ken Marino (Role Models) as an average put-upon guy under enormous emotional strain. He has a devoted wife Sarah (Gillian Jacobs) who wants a baby, a manipulative boss (Patrick Warburton, TV's The Tick), an annoying co worker (Erik Charles Nielson, TV's Community) and free-spirited mother (Mary Kay Place, TV's Big Love). All of these elements add to his distress and that stress is manifesting itself as a painful gastrointestinal anomaly which he believes might be an ulcer and what the doc diagnoses as polyps. They're both wrong, the cause of Duncan's gut-churning is a vicious, pint-sized ass monster, a toothsome and clawed monstrosity that carries out Duncan's subconscious desire to hurt those who have done him wrong, it emerges from his clenched-sphincter from time to time killing, the ensuing string of deaths are blamed on a rabid raccoon by the media. 

It's a fun watch with some great comedic moments including a nightmare dinner scenario with Duncan's mother who invites an annoying  fertility specialist (Steve Zissis, Baghead) to speed along the baby-making process for her son while her way-younger husband Bobbi (Kumail Nanjiani, TV's Portlandia) whom makes uncomfortable comments about the size of his cock and the difficulty of squeezing into Duncan's mothers ("just-the-tip Tuesday"), eww. 

The film has a great cast heavy with TV comedy players, plus Peter Stormare Toby Huss (HBO'S Carnivàleplays a humorous proctologist with a colorful bedside manner ("you've got a trooper in your pooper") and an estranged new age father played by News Radio's Stephen Root who is always a pleasure, it's a tremendous cast.
(The Big Lebowski) as a new age hypnotherapist with a mouthy pet parrot who convinces Duncan he must bond with his deadly inner-turd to curb it's murderous tendencies.  

The creature design of Milo is pretty awesome, a cute and dung-demon that's equal parts wide-eyed Gizmo from Gremlins (1984) and grotesque Belial from Frank Henelotter's Basket Case (1982) rendered onset by puppeteers with very little digital enhancement which gives it a particular 80's feel, loved it. Unfortunately the blood spatter is digital but it's not awful. 

There's not a ton of gore but what there is of it is fun stuff, including a painful penis-shredding, ouch. When Milo initially renters Duncan's sphincter the clawed-creature crawls up the leg towards his anal-nest, that made my leg twitch. 

Bad Milo! is a decent horror-comedy with a quirky heart and a fun premise and a great cast who keep this absurd comedy entertaining. It definitely plays up the comedy more than the horror while dealing with real-world issues of fatherhood fears, abandonment issues and relationships wrapped up in toilet humor, fun stuff.


Blu-ray: Magnet give Bad Milo! a very nice 1080p widescreen presentation with an active DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track with a nice set of extras. My only beef with the release would be that they opted not to use the theatrical poster and went with a generic photo shopped cover.

Special Features:
- Audio Commentary with Ken Marino, Gillian Jacobs, Director Jacob Vaughn and Writer Benjamin Hayes
- Trailer (2:10) HD
- Magnet Trailers (9:08) for Last Days on Mars, How I Live Now, Best man Down, Mr. Nobody HD 
- Extended Outtakes (7:40) HD
- Extended Dinner Scene (7:01) HD
- Deleted Scene: Veterinarian (1:20) HD
- Behind Milo: The Puppeteers! (1:33) HD
- Behind Milo: Raw Take (1:04) HD
- Interview with Ken Marino  (9:49) HD
- AXS TV: A Look at Bad Milo (3:03)

Verdict: At the end of the day Bad Milo! is a fun weekend watch. I'd highly recommend this to fans of Deadly Spawn (1983), Brain Damage (1988), Ghoulies (1985) and Critters (1986). A b-movie horror-comedy with heart, that's not particularly clever but pretty darn entertaining. 3.5 Outta 5