Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts

Let the Haunts Be Free: Clearcut

Sadly, we lost Graham Greene the other day.  He's one of the best - and most prominent! - Native American actors, period.  He really came to prominence in Dances With Wolves when he was nominated for an Oscar, though he'd been working for decades before that and has gone on to work constantly.  Even if you don't know who he is, you've seen him in everything from The Last Of Us to the MCU (he's Echo's grandfather).  And of course, he created the most beloved character in all of Canadian television.  So, when I heard about his passing, I thought I'd take a look at his overlooked but terrific horror outing: Clearcut from 1991.
I guess you could classify this as a supernatural slasher, though antagonist doesn't really do much slashing.  Based on the novel A Dream Like Mine by Canadian novelist MT Leroy, Clearcut tells the story of a white lawyer who takes up the side, rather unsuccessfully, of a native tribe feuding with a lumber mill.  He's taken on a dark kidnapping vision quest by Greene who may be the incarnation of a trickster spirit, or possibly just a local who's been pushed too far.  In the end, maybe it doesn't matter much anyway (from reviews I've read, apparently the novel takes at least as much of an ambiguous stance).  There's not a huge body count, the bulk of the running time is spent with just the three men (the third being Michael Hogan as the owner of the mill in a performance very reminiscent of Dabney Coleman in 9 To 5, but darker).  It's all pretty harsh and unflinching as this movie gets a lot of its strength from its anger.  And while everybody's good in this, Greene's shifty performance elevates the material, which might be a bit cliche or ham-fisted in certain aspects, to another level.
Severin gave us a pretty nice special edition BD of Clearcut as part of their celebrated 'All the Haunts Be Ours: A Compendium of Folk Horror' boxed set in 2021.  But if you don't have a couple hundred dollars to lay down, don't worry, they released it as a separate, single disc edition in 2023.  Before that, this film had only ever been released as a barebones German DVD from Capitol Films and a triple-feature AAFES DVD from Spartan Home Entertainment in 2002.  If you're not familiar, AAFES discs are DVD made for and sold through the Army and Air Force Exchange Service, which is basically the official tax-free department store of US military bases.  I have to admit, I'd be curious to check out this disc first-hand; but of course they don't sell these DVDs anymore.

Anyway, I'm sure they're the exact same discs.  But for the record, what I have here is the 2023 solo release.
2023 Severin BD.
The back of the case says this film is 2.35:1, but in fact it's even wider at 2.44:1.  Said case doesn't get into the source of this transfer, and this release doesn't come with a booklet... maybe the big 126-page book included with the boxed set spelled it out for us.  But it's pretty obvious that this is taken from a print, anyway, with it's high contrast and milky blacks.  Film grain is surprisingly light, too, when you can spot it at all.  This film has lots of nice landscapes and scenery, and a decent sense of style, which helps this film get away with looking as rough as it does.  I'd love to see it restored from the OCN some day, but I have a feeling we're lucky to have gotten what we've got.

Severin offers both a stereo (presumably the original) and 5.1 (surely a remix; a curious inclusion) track, both in DTS-HD with optional English subtitles.
They've also given this film a very satisfying special edition, which can't necessarily be said for every film in the Haunts set (which is perhaps why this film got a solo release, while a title like Robin Redbreast has not).  For starters, we have an audio interview with the director, which plays as a commentary over the film.  We also get a proper audio commentary, which is fairly insightful, by by scholar and anthropologist Shaawano Chad Uran.  The director also provides a video introduction, and then we get two excellent interviews, on by the composer and one, yes, by Greene himself.  As a whole package, I'd say these extras are very satisfying, answering most of the questions that come to mind when watching this film.
You Are On Indian Land
This disc also includes three short films (all in crisp HD), which is more a carry-over of this being part of the All the Haunts box, since they don't have anything to do with this movie or the people who made it, except for a general Native theme.  Two of them aren't even horror.  The first is a 1968 mini-doc called The Ballad Of Crowfoot.  In fact, it's more of an early music video for the folk song "The Ballad Of Crowfoot" by Willie Dunn, set to a collection of early photographs of indigenous people.  It also features optional audio commentary by Willie's son, Lawrence and co-producer Kevin Howes.  The best of these shorts is a 1969 documentary called You Are On Indian Land, filmed during a protest blocking a bridge between the US and Canada when the two governments tried to prohibit native trade (because it was crossing the border "off the books" by going through their reservation).  Finally, the last is a very low budget horror called Consume from 2017, about a troubled man plagued by visions of his disappointed ancestors.  It's interesting in concept, but has a very amateurish student film vibe, and it's all building up to the world's most obvious Tales From the Crypt-style twist ending.
So it's a great little horror flick that doesn't get enough attention, but thankfully still got a first class release.  And I'm glad it's been made accessible outside the pricey confines of the boxed set... though I have to say that box has a lot of other great stuff in it, too.  So if you can swing it, I'd recommend going all in.  But if not, at least be sure to pick up Clearcut.  And Eyes Of Fire.  And Viy.  And maybe some of those BFI DVDs.  Yeah, there's a lot you don't want to miss out on, including this.

RIP Graham Greene.

Clive Barker's Lord of Illusions

For our second Scream Factory pairing, well, I just couldn't leave out this essential Clive Barker film any longer.  Not that it's his only other worthwhile picture... I was pleasantly surprised with that Midnight Meat Train movie.  But this completes the trilogy of the only films he's actually directed, plus nipping at the heels of Hellraiser and Candyman, the trilogy of his best work on film.  So let's see what Scream Factory did with it.

Update 2/16/19 - 8/14/25: Scream Factory's done more with it this summer, with their 4k Ultra HD upgrade.  Let's get into it.
The premise feels a little self-indulgent, but Barker manages to pull all the elements together to work more effectively than they really should.  Scott Bakula plays an archetypal NY private eye. straight out of a 40's noir, hired by a mysterious and wealthy love interest (Famke Jannsen) to come to Hollywood and "help me help my husband... I know he's in some kind of trouble."  Said husband's a celebrity magician (the comic relief guy from The Mummy and Deep Rising, here for once in a convincing serious role) who's somehow mixed up with an evil cult in league with actual magical forces.  It gets pretty convoluted, with misleading illusions, classic noir plot twists and a huge cast of characters; but Barker manages to keep it all straight.
It's actually based on one of his Books of Blood stories, called The Last Illusion, but the story here goes in completely different directions.  It's full of eye candy, traveling from one exotic location to another, including the real Magic Castle in LA.  There's an army of vicious killers, an elaborate Vegas-style magic show, overt hetero- and homo-eroticism, secret doors, a killer monkey, flying monsters, gory special effects... clearly, Barker aimed to give audiences they could possibly want and mostly succeeds.  Not that it's a perfect film.  It's a detective story where we're introduced to all the villains before the hero, so the audience is mostly just waiting for the protagonist to get caught up and figure out what we already know.  And while most of the special effects are beautifully crafted by KNB, it also suffers from a terrible case of the Bad CGIs, being one of horror's earliest adapters and throwing some awful animation in our faces for what should be the film's biggest money shots.
a frame only in the theatrical cut
a scene only in the director's cut
And I suppose I should also talk about the two cuts of the film.  There's the original, R-rated theatrical cut, and then an extended director's cut that largely replaced it on home video.  It's a solid eight or so minutes longer, and movie-censorship gives a nice scene-specific breakdown of the distinctions.  But in short, the film was clearly cut for two different reasons at the same time: length for the studio and violence for the MPA.  So the extended cut gives us a nice dose of extra bits of nastiness as well as dry "regular" scenes that enrich the story and characters.  Barker's stated, and I strongly agree, that it's the preferable cut of the film.  The theatrical cut has very little unique footage, just a few trims and frames as specific edits are different - it's mostly just missing stuff.  Frankly, I see very little reason to ever revisit the theatrical cut; but hey, if labels want to give us the option, I'll take it.
MGM first issued Lord of Illusions on their DVD, which contains the director's cut, way back in 1998.  And except for them occasionally porting that disc over to another region, that's been all we've had right up until 101 Films commissioned it for blu-ray in 2014.  They put out a new HD transfer with a separate blu for each cut, and that's also what Scream Factory released State-side the same year, but with their reliably more fleshed out special features package.  Recently, the BD rights wound up in the hands of Sandpiper, who licensed a bunch of the MGM titles, and in 2024, they put out a barebones theatrical cut-only disc, which I guess is okay for a budget alternative?  But now in 2025, Scream's gone the opposite direction, releasing the director's cut on UHD, with all of their previous extras plus a little something more.  Yes, this is yet another instance of Scream releasing only one cut in 4k when they'd previously released two, but in this case they chose the right one, so it's all good.
1) 1998 MGM DVD; 2) 2014 SF theatrical BD;
3)
2014 SF director's BD; 4) 2025 SF UHD.


Unlike our last post, the difference between MGM's DVD and Scream's BD is huge.  That might be just as much about how surprisingly poor MGM's DVD is, though, considering it's a major studio disc of a modern film ...though it is a pretty old disc.  Anyway, it has a real murky look to it, almost like a tape source (but not) except with a bunch of artifacting, too, just in case you thought details weren't obscured enough.  Possibly they just up-res'ed the laserdisc?  It's at least anamorphic widescreen, and free of interlacing, but the DVD is distinctly below par, giving Scream an easy win.  For their part, the box just refers to their version as an "all-new, high definition transfer," and considering how light the grain is, this clearly isn't a fancy 2k scan or anything, but it's a pretty solid HD transfer that, again, stomps all over what came before it.  Besides the obvious boost in clarity and fine detail, and cleaner digitization, it also smartens up the color, which felt a little washed in a heavy red hue.  And they tighten up the aspect ratio from 1.77 to 1.84:1 (despite claiming 1.78:1 on the case).  Oh, and for the record, the theatrical and director's cut transfers are for all intents and purposes identical, though I did spot a little more film dirt/ damage on the few moments unique to the TC than the rest of either cut,  But even there, it's just a few sporadic moments, like the black spots you can see on the upper right of that TC screenshot I posted above.

That's all academic now, anyway, as Scream has struck an all new 4k master from the original camera negative, and issued it on a proper 4k disc in Dolby Vision HDR.  Grain is finally represented, so the image looks far more filmic, and more actual picture detail is discernible for the first time.  Look at dude's eyes in the first set of shots, for example.  Everything's just softer and less finely captured.  And the aspect ratio is now exactly 1.85:1, showing a little, but not unnoticeable, more picture along the left-hand side.  The color scheme for this movie is surprisingly muted, full of browns and gray shadows.  But the colors on the UHD still come off as more vivid and lifelike than ever before.
All the MGM and Scream discs feature a robust 5.1 mix, boosted to DTS-HD on the blus and UHD, with optional English subtitles.  But Scream has also gone back and recovered the original stereo mix, also in DTS-HD on the BD and UHD, which is a very nice touch.

And in terms of extras, Scream Factory certainly topped the 101 blu-ray, which only included the old commentary.  But they still came up surprisingly light in the special features department for this movie.  Almost all of the extras are legacy, which certainly doesn't mean that they're bad or anything, but I think we're just used to SF cooking up more goodies, especially on their "Collector's Edition," like this one. So yeah, the MGM has the commentary by Barker, plus a handful of deleted scenes, also with optional commentary by Barker.  He's a little stiff, but as the man so clearly behind all aspects of this production all the way back to the original short story, he has a lot of great insight to share.  They also have a text intro by Barker (definitely a laserdisc-era thing), an isolated music track, the trailer and an 8-page booklet.  And speaking of laserdiscs, as a former owner of the original 1996 one, I didn't notice until making this comparison that MGM dropped the 17-minute 'making of' featurette.
So one nice plus of the Scream disc is that they not only hold onto all the DVD stuff (except the isolated score... they dropped that for some reason), they bring back that little 'making of.'  And they dug up a substantial, hour long collection of behind-the-scenes footage, which is completely engrossing.  But in terms of newly produced features, there's just one thing: a 12 minute on-camera interview with the storyboard artist.  It's a good interview - even if you think storyboard artist doesn't rank high enough to pique your interests, I recommend giving it a watch - but that's it.  Well, that and a photo gallery, reversible cover art and a slipcover.  But for a Collector's Edition of such a high profile title, it kinda felt like the budget got somewhat slashed.

I suppose that's the case with the UHD, too, especially since we're down to a single disc.  But it's got everything from the 2014 edition plus a new interview with composer Simon Boswell, bringing us at least a little closer to a fully flush feeling special edition.  It's basically audio-only though (there's about 10 total seconds of black and white webcam they barely show), which is disappointing, but it's the first time we've heard from him regarding this film, so I'm glad to have it.  This 2025 comes in a slipcover, too, but no reversible artwork this time.  You do get an 18"x24" poster, though, if you order direct from Shout's site.
Scream's BD was already the best edition going, and an absolute must-upgrade over the DVD, unlike some of its peers (again, see how their Bubba Ho-Tep blu stacked up against MGM's initial DVD).  For such a widely released Barker film, you'd expect this film to have gotten more lavish treatment every step of the way.  But this upgrade to 4k levitates Lord of Illusions to a higher plane and feels more worthy of a permanent spot in our collections.

Enough Is Never Enough Of the Stuff!

Larry Cohen's extremely eccentric masterpiece The Stuff has been available on DVD since Anchor Bay released it in 2000. It was certainly a must-have for fans at the time, but it finally received a much needed HD upgrade in 2014, and man is it an improvement.

Update 1/5/15 - 7/29/25: "Update?"  More like a complete overhaul.  This is one of my earliest posts that didn't adhere to my now adopted format.  And it turns out I still had a page where the screenshots were all jpgs, so I had to replace everything.  But that's appropriate, because a complete overhaul is what Arrow's given The Stuff with their brand new, UHD/ BD release!
Admittedly, if I was a film producer and Mr. Cohen came to me with this script, I'd never back it. I'd be like, I loved your past work and you've proven yourself commercially for decades, but you've clearly dived far too deep into self indulgence with this one. You've taken the balance you usually strike of an underlying wit in your traditional genre films and pushed it way out of whack, becoming down right silly and bizarre. But I'm so glad he didn't listen to the profit protecting producers of this world, and made this movie anyway.

Superficially, The Stuff is a spin on the already off-beat cult flick, The Blob. That film starts off with an old man wandering off in the woods at night and finding a small, crashed meteorite. He touches it and a pink slime gets on his hand, which oozes up his arm and kills him by dissolving him. Well, in this film an old man is wandering out and finds a bubbling pile of white ooze on the ground in the snow. He touches it and... tastes it and it's wonderful. Suddenly, it's the new dessert sensation that's sweeping the nation. But it turns out to have a horrible secret. Soon, only a corporate saboteur played delightfully by Michael Moriarty, along with a small boy and Saturday Night Live's Garrett Morris wind up the only people who can save the world from a zero calorie doom.
If anything, it turns out to be more of a spin on Invasion Of the Body Snatchers, but it's a pretty broad spin.  This film has a terrific cast, including not only the names above but Danny Aiello, Paul Sorvino, Cohen regular James Dixon and even the original Where's the Beef lady reprising her role for an in-film ad campaign.  The special effects are mixed... some look great, some pretty poor.  But it all somehow works in this service of this story that's constantly veering off in new and entertaining directions.  This is a film that takes a specific mind set to really appreciate, but if that's you, you're going to love this movie.
This entire police station sequence is absent from the final cut.
Now, if you've heard any Larry Cohen interviews (including all of the ones on these discs), you know he's been unhappy with the final cut, regarding changes the distributors imposed on him.  He's talked about various scenes that were in the original cut but were now lost to the world, because he had no idea where that footage was.  Well, Arrow found it!  They've got a 35mm print of his original pre-release version, which turns out to be over half an hour longer.  It's also got a completely different score.

Is it better?  Well, yes and no.  There's some material I think they should've left in that I had a great time with, and other material that was better cut but still enjoyed.  The shorter run time does give the film a tighter pace, and some stuff, like the romance and extra Stuff commercials add some lag.  But any fan of The Stuff should be delighted to see this alternate version.  There are some great lines and weird moments (including a scene where the older brother performs The Telltale Heart for a for a perturbed cop).  And if you notice, the closing credits list five celebrity "special guest stars," but only four appeared in the film.  Well, now we've found that fifth one: Laurene Landon.  And the original score is pretty good, too.  It's definitely an alternate cut I'll return to for future watches.
Anchor Bay released the initial DVD in 2000, and it was pretty great for its time.  Then Image reissued it as a very skippable barebones edition in 2011.  But the next noteworthy release was Arrow's UK special edition blu-ray, first released as a BD/ DVD combo pack in 2014.  For the record, they went on to release it in the US in 2016, then they reissued it in the UK in 2017 and the US in 2019, but the only significant difference is that they were single disc BD releases.  It felt like the final word on the film, with its 2k restoration and all new special features, but 2025 has proven that wrong.  Now Arrow has restored the film in 4k on a proper UHD cooked up some more new extras, and of course unearthed that pre-release cut (on BD only, since it's taken from a print).
1) 2000 AB DVD; 2) 2014 Arrow DVD; 3) 2014 Arrow BD;
4) 2025 Arrow UHD; 5) 2025 Arrow BD (pre-release cut).

So they're all anamorphic widescreen, but the aspect ratio is shifting around here, which Arrow initially corrects from AB's 1.82:1 to 1.83:1, but as you can see, they also uncover a lot more information on the left side and along the top.  1.82 to 1.83 may not sound like much, but in this case, it's a big difference.  The UHD tweaks it a little further, to a proper 1.85:1, but it's a much more subtle fix.  Interestingly, the pre-release cut is also 1.85:1, but cropped back down the way the original DVD was.  Arrow's 2014 scan is a much cleaner, more natural image than AB's disc, though admittedly, the colors look a little faded. This was right around the time of Arrow's infamous Demons blu, though, and it's nowhere near as bad as that.  Especially since, in comparison, the DVD looks over-saturated and contrast-y.  But the film definitely looks its best in the new 4k scan.  The old blu has really nicely rendered film grain already, and there's not really anymore detail to add to the picture, but the colors are much more vibrant and absorbing.  The pre-release cut, meanwhile, is much more contrast-y and washed, but that's to be expected given the source elements.

All five versions have the original mono in 2.0, and the blus bump it up to LPCM.  Anchor Bay did not include subtitles, but all the Arrow discs include removable English ones, even the pre-release cut.
So Anchor Bay started us off with a Larry Cohen commentary, and if you've heard any of his, you know there's always great.  He has a fun attitude and is happy to share all his secrets.  They also threw in the theatrical trailer and an insert.  But disappointingly, Arrow's 2014 dropped the commentary!  They just about made up for it, though, with their original retrospective documentary, which runs almost an hour long, featuring interviews with Larry Cohen, producer Paul Kurta, special effects creator Steve Neill, female lead Andrea Marcovicci, and film critic Kim Newman.  It also featured the original theatrical trailer and an extra fun bonus: The Stuff's Trailers From Hell episode (more DVDs should include these!), featuring the director of Saw 2 & 3, Darren Bousman.  It also has reversible artwork and a 24-page booklet by Joel Harley.

The good news now is: the commentary is back!  Arrow's 2025 release has both the 2000 commentary and the 2014 doc.  And they have new stuff!  There's a lost interview with Cohen and Kurta (or technically two, edited together) that was shot but not used for the King Cohen documentary.  Unfortunately, they don't say anything they didn't already say, practically verbatim, in the doc and commentary.  But since Cohen's no longer with us, it's nice to get any piece of lost footage back.  Arrow's also recorded a new commentary, by two experts, who spend most of their time repeating what Larry said in his own commentary, along with reading peoples' filmographies and discussing other films.  In other words, thanks for making the effort, Arrow, but this one should absolutely be skipped.

Oh, and surprisingly, Arrow has also slapped the 2015 42nd Street Memories documentary (which I've written about here) on this disc.  It's already been included as an extra on multiple different releases of various films over the years, and it doesn't have much to do with The Stuff.  But if you don't already have it (I think this is the third time it's entered my collection), it's nice to have.  They've added a couple more trailers and TV spots, but disappointingly, they dropped the Trailers From Hell.  Honestly, I'd rather have that then all the new stuff, but just getting the documentary and Cohen commentary together on this release is already a win.  And hey, more is always better than less.  This one also has reversible artwork and comes in a slipcover, with a 32-page booklet with everything Harley wrote for the previous book, plus a new essay by  Daniel Burnett.
I know everybody's excited about Scream Factory's Day Of the Dead announcement (so am I!!), but I don't see anything toppling this release as disc of the year for me.  An underrated film I love getting a 4k remaster on UHD, an alternate version I never thought we'd get to see, the old commentary back with all new stuff?  This is the one I've been obsessively monitoring the mailbox for, and now that it's hear, it's everything I was hoping for.

Criterion Catch-Up 2, Part 5: Antichrist

Alright, after all those stoic documentaries and artsy dramas, I think it's time for something wilder.  How about a crazy psychodrama horror from Lars von Trier?  Criterion certainly has a release to fit that bill: 2009's Antichrist, starring Willem Dafoe and Charlotte Gainsbourg (Nymphomaniac, Melancholia).  There's a lot being explored in this one, with thoughtful writing, candid performances, gorgeous photography contrasted with some seriously gnarly images.
Whether or not this is a horror film depends how literally you take what you see on the screen.  I don't think Trier thinks witchcraft is real, naturally, but I also don't think he's trying to convince us they are within the world of his film either (in the sense that Tom Holland presumably doesn't actually believe in vampires, but within the context of Fright Night, he's telling us they're very real and just waiting to be invited into your home).  Here, He and She discuss the way women were perceived and persecuted as witches, and ultimately stumble into that perspective.
In the audio commentary, Trier and a film critic talk about how Antichrist deals with both the psychology of the characters and this mythology.  But I think our critic misses the central, unifying factor that the mythology was created, and recurs throughout different cultures, because it's born of our psychology.  So they aren't two separate poles on a spectrum which the film slides along in between.  The characters descend into the mythology because of our seemingly universal psychological nature.  To some degree, we're wired to slip into these belief systems.  ...Still, if you're after horror mood, gore and imagery, you'll certainly find some of the very best in Antichrist.
As to charges of misogyny, well, he obviously identifies with the female character here, not the male.  I mean, in one sense, this film is about how therapists are arrogant hypocrites who think they can understand and fix people whose issues are actually quite beyond them.  I mean, I certainly wouldn't presume to absolve Trier of whatever personal issues people accuse him of having.  But just in terms of this film, I think you're off base if you believe any finger he's pointing is directed at anyone but himself.
Now, it took a little while for Antichrist to hit DVD in the USA.  Maybe the controversy around the film had a hand in that, but that tends to be the way it goes for Trier's films.  So I imported Chelsea Cinema's 2010 DVD from the UK, which was a pretty loaded special edition.  Then, later in the year, Criterion announced their US edition, which I (eventually) wound up double-dipping for so I could own the film in HD.
2010 Chelsea DVD top; 2010 Criterion BD bottom.
So we're clearly using the same master, struck from the same digital DCP here.  Both transfers are 2.35; the color timing and everything else is identical.  The sole difference is the step up to HD.  This film was shot in 4k (meaning a UHD upgrade in the future wouldn't be an unreasonable hope), so there is definitely room to improve on the DVD.  There's no film grain to spy, but fine detail, like the hairs around Gainsbourg's face above, are distinct on the blu-ray, where they just kinda blur together into a common fuzz on Chelsea's release.  This is an often elegantly photographed film, with extreme close-ups and slow motion, asking you to really take in the image, making it a key film to see in high definition.

Chelsea's DVD has a Dolby 5.1 track plus, surprisingly an Italian dub with Italian and Danish subtitles (that's right, no English subs).  Criterion bumps the same 5.1 mix up to DTS-HD and replaces the two foreign sub tracks with optional English ones.
Chelsea's DVD was pretty packed with special features.  There's the commentary I mentioned earlier.  Trier always does great, insightful commentaries, and this is no exception.  And it has nine 'making of' featurettes, which you could essentially take as one feature-length (roughly 80 minutes) documentary broken up into nine chapters.  It also has on-camera interviews with both stars, Dafoe and Gainsbourg, and the trailer.  Criterion preserves all of that, and also conducts three additional on-camera interviews with Trier, Gainsburg (this one's almost 45 minutes) and Dafoe.  They also add two additional trailers and a 32-page booklet with an essay by British film scholar Ian Christie.
I mentioned it earlier, but I honestly don't see Criterion swinging back around to issue this on UHD (prove me wrong!).  Curzon might be more likely in the UK, but I don't hold out a lot of hope, and they probably wouldn't be able to license Criterion's exclusive interviews even if they did.  So if you don't already have this, you really can't miss.  Unless, of course, you just absolutely hate this movie.