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  • DUNE 4K UHD is Worth its Weight in Spice

    DUNE 4K UHD is Worth its Weight in Spice

    A staggering amount of special features and an unrivaled 4K transfer ease a long wait for ‘Dune: Part Two’

    Dune follows Paul Atreides (Timothée Chalamet), the heir to one of many powerful houses that exert a tenuous rule over the reaches of space. Ruled over by a powerful Emperor, each of the houses vie for control of the Spice—a substance that fuels everything from psychic powers to interstellar travel. Spice is only found on the massive desert planet Arrakis, once commanded by Baron Harkonnen (a very Captain Kurtz Stellan Skarsgård), who is suddenly removed by the Emperor and replaced with House Atreides. Facing a power vacuum the universe has never seen before, Paul and his family seek to earn the trust of the Arrakis natives, the Fremen, in order to form an alliance that could upend the balance of power forever. The Fremen also have their own prophecy of a Messiah—the Lisan al Gaib, an off-world prophet who may deliver them from the bondage of their oppressors. With Paul’s vivid dreams coming to shocking reality once he’s on Arrakis, the day of reckoning may soon be coming for all the houses vying for ultimate control of the universe.

    For all intents and purposes, I’m very much a Dune neophyte in that my only brushes with Frank Herbert’s source material have been with its varied cinematic adaptations. The early 2000s SyFy adaptation was ambitious in its own right, a fun bit of multi-night popcorn TV that did its best to tackle such dense material on a very made-for-TV budget. Despite its very vocal detractors, I’m a fan of David Lynch’s 1984 adaptation, which melds its director’s signature grotesque and insular vision with a grand, operatic scale that often feels more Lean than Lynch, with a Toto-composed soundtrack as an awesome bonus. Despite never ultimately making it to the screen, Alejandro Jodorowsky’s Dune feels like it would have been armrest-gripping and mind-melting, with its many liberties to the source material in the service of further interrogating the emotional and cultural connections its audience has with the original work. Herbert’s messianic sci-fi saga has provided inspiration for everything ranging from Star Wars to The Matrix to Harry Potter, but Dune in its own right has proven to be material that auteurs can vividly bring to life with their own signature approach—should they be up for the daunting task.

    Naturally, the internet went ablaze when Quebecois director Denis Villeneuve rose to the challenge, fresh off the success of 2016’s Arrival and 2017’s Blade Runner 2049. Here, Villeneuve ambitiously promised a sprawling, two-part film event akin to financier Warner Brothers’ recently-greenlit second half of Stephen King’s It, though much more in succession to Peter Jackson’s beloved Lord of the Rings. Where previous versions had been handicapped by length or budget, here was the potential for a Dune adaptation with the resources and patience it deserves. As with most things, though, there was a catch: while he was given a stellar ensemble and a sizable budget, the go-ahead for a Dune finale was conditional on the box-office success of Villeneuve’s first entry. A pandemic and a day-and-date agreement to simultaneously release Warner Brothers’ theatrical films on HBOMax later, signs pointed to a dire fate for Dune.

    Right off the bat with its Part One subtitle, though, Villeneuve’s adaptation doesn’t go quietly into that good night, and instead swings for the fences with intricately detailed worldbuilding, lived-in production design, scorchingly precise cinematography, and bombastic score. For all of its modern sleekness, Villeneuve and designer Patrice Vermette lean Dune: Part One directly into a timeless feel. Combining a neo-futuristic brutalist architecture, a nomadic and arcane natural aesthetic, and an endlessly retrofitted approach to technological advancement, the worlds of Dune: Part One feel like they bear the weight of centuries of progress and regression. A dedication to practical sets and effects, captured in staggering detail by cinematographer Grieg Fraser, makes Arrakis feel gritty and tangible, with blazing, windswept desert vistas that threaten to swallow defiant structures whole like the statue of Ozymandias.

    All of this design is in service to a story that is given ample time to organically develop emotionally, despite miring audiences in thick discourse over interstellar political intrigue. Villeneuve and co-screenwriters John Spaihts and Eric Roth manage to keep a delicate balance between visual spectacle and nitty-gritty scenework, knowing that big-budget bombast means little if we can’t latch onto why we give a damn about powerful dynasties fighting over sand. What’s more challenging is how Paul, as one of the original sci-fi everymen thrust into cosmic greatness, is pretty bland until he’s set onto the messianic path. The amount of time given to exploring Paul’s nascent positions of power, though, allows Spaihts, Roth, and Villeneuve to engage with his reluctance to assume a role he’s been groomed to take centuries before his birth. Nestled within this, too, is a reckoning with his concurrent role as part of a ruling class whose status is built on aggressively taking resources from conquered planets. With this version of Dune, Paul’s messiah isn’t just one who comes in to selflessly right wrongs as ordained: He’s a boy who must accept and learn from the flaws of those who bore him into the world, and determine what’s right from that rocky, sand-strewn path. As a result, this iteration of Dune becomes an emotionally satisfying standalone work, one that could succeed on its own merits regardless of how studio whims ultimately determined its fate.

    Warner Brothers’ 4K UHD release of Dune: Part One is a fantastic way to spend the next two years awaiting for a thankfully green-lit Part Two, with a lengthy library of in-depth special features that detail the immense intricacies of a mammoth production and champion a rarity in bold, big-budget genre storytelling.

    Video/Audio

    Warner Bros presents Dune in its original 2.39:1 aspect ratio in 2160p 4K resolution on the 4K UHD, and 1080p on the accompanying Blu-ray disc.

    Audio-wise, for the 4K UHD there are Dolby Atmos tracks available in English, German, and Italian; 5.1-Channel Dolby Digital tracks in English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish (Latin & Castilian); 5.1-Channel Descriptive Audio tracks in English (U.S. & U.K.); and a 2.0-Channel Descriptive Audio track in German. Included subtitles are in English SDH, Cantonese, Danish, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Italian, Korean, Mandarin (Traditional), Norwegian, Spanish (Castilian & Latin), and Swedish.

    On the Blu-ray, the English Atmos and 5.1-Channel tracks are duplicated, as are the 5.1-Channel Czech, French, Hindi, Hungarian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish (Latin), and English Descriptive Audio tracks. Included Blu-ray feature subtitles are in English SDH, Bulgarian, Czech, French, Hindi, Hungarian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese (Brazilian), Romanian, and Spanish (Latin). Blu-ray Special Features are subtitled in English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Czech, Hungarian, and Polish.

    For my money, this may be one of the most (if not the most) impressive home video presentations this year. While 4K and Atmos options were available during Dune’s day-and-date streaming period on HBOMax, this disc’s reference-quality 4K video and audio easily blow digital options out of the water and ensure that the theatrical experience prized by Dune’s creators has an honorable analog on home video. The sprawling architecture, chipped ship metal, and fine textures of Patrice Vermette’s production design and Jacqueline West and Robert Morgan’s costumes are all captured with exacting detail. This is no small feat, as the film must also contend with towering sandstorms made up of fine particles of spice and earth, as well as the thin, interlacing scales of monstrous sandworms. The HDR transfer particularly highlights the moments when Villeneuve and Frasier play with the vast color palette at their disposal, from the haunting blue eyes of the Fremen to the interplay of fire and shadow during the film’s midpoint Sardaukar battle sequence.

    The film’s Dolby Atmos track is equally stellar, finding a nuanced balance between the dialogue, Hans Zimmer’s primal and visceral score, and the complex layering of electronic noise and natural desert Foley work that brings Arrakis to life. It’s a mix meant for as many speakers as possible—and will welcomely push many home video enthusiasts’ setups to their limits.

    Special Features:

    [Note: all of the film’s special features are on the 4K UHD’s accompanying Blu-ray disc. Press notes state that on DVD-only copies of Dune, only the Royal Houses special feature is included.]

    • The Royal Houses: Villeneuve and the cast breakdown the overarching political conflict of Dune between House Atreides and House Harkonnen, and detail how their individual characters play their roles within them.
    • Filmbooks: Stylized after the virtual learning tools used by Paul before his arrival on Arrakis, these mini-mythology lessons in Dune lore provide a deeper dive into the sprawling universe Frank Herbert originally created, while also providing equally intricate glimpses into the extent of the film’s production design in realizing these details for the screen. Divided into House Atreides, House Harkonnen, The Bene Gesserit, The Fremen, and The Spice Melange.
    • Inside Dune: Villeneuve, the cast, and the crew guide us through three of the film’s stellar action sequences on a thematic and practical level. In the Training Room, choreographer Roger Yuan notes the specific styles of Kali martial arts that went into shielded sword fighting in order to reveal the characters through their specific approach to battle. In the Spice Harvester, the film’s concept artists and visual effects designers discuss how the sequence was broken down into its practicality, not just in terms of the film’s lore (how would a spice harvester really work?), but also in how the timing and length of each shot was carefully choreographed to preserve the film’s budget while delivering powerful imagery. The Sardaukar Battle highlights Jason Momoa’s dedication towards perfecting his legion-on-one fight sequence at the film’s climactic second act. Divided into The Training Room, The Spice Harvester, and The Sardaukar Battle.
    • Building the Ancient Future: The meticulousness of the film’s production design is on full display, with most efforts done practically, from the expansive concrete and wood of the film’s interiors to the hulking metal of the various air and spacecrafts featured throughout. It’s amazing to see the film’s crew dwarfed by the size of the sets in a world where a tenth of these sets are usually built to save time and money.
    • My Desert, My Dune: Villeneuve details how important nailing the natural elements of Arrakis were to the overall film, which has its own origins in respecting the original designs at the heart of Frank Herbert’s book.
    • Constructing the Ornithopters: The genesis behind the insect-like flying machines of Arrakis is broken down, from the deliberately low-tech impulses behind their creation to the insane amount of detail realized by the film’s VFX and production teams.
    • Designing the Sandworm: Decades of potential designs of Dune’s legendary desert creature went into the physicality and biology of this current design, skewing more towards realism in order to create a paradoxically fantastical emotional response in the audience.
    • Beware the Baron: Stellan Skarsgård’s brief yet terrifying antagonist is profiled, using prosthetics and Skarsgård’s natural talents to create a memorable villain that overshadows the action of the film.
    • Wardrobe From Another World: We dive into the inspirations and the logistical efforts behind the film’s sprawling costume designs, guided by designer Jacqueline West. Further detailed are the textures and colors specific to houses and characters.
    • A New Soundscape: Key to Villeneuve’s approach is to create a world that no one has seen before, an ambitious scope that extends to the film’s soundtrack and sound design, all of which were developed in tandem with the production process rather than after-the-fact.

    Dune is now available on 4K UHD, Blu-ray, and DVD courtesy of Warner Bros.

  • PARALLEL MOTHERS is Pedro Almodóvar and Penélope Cruz’s Best Collaboration Yet

    PARALLEL MOTHERS is Pedro Almodóvar and Penélope Cruz’s Best Collaboration Yet

    Inherited trauma bleeds through Almodóvar’s movie about memory and motherhood.

    Actress Penélope Cruz and filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar have worked together on several previous films — All About My Mother and Volver, among others — but Parallel Mothers may be their best collaboration yet. Cruz leads the cast as Janis, a professional photographer approaching 40 who becomes pregnant by her married lover. In delivery, she shares a hospital room with Ana (Milena Smit, Cross the Line) and befriends the sheltered teen.

    This is a very basic breakdown of the plot, but Almodóvar, as usual, has created a story with multiple levels and parallels. There’s even an uncertain timeline, which leaves the viewer guessing by the size of a child and a few quick glimpses of dates how much time has passed since the action of the film kicks off in 2016.

    Inherited trauma bleeds through Parallel Mothers. From the start, we hear about the murder of Janis’ great-grandfather, along with other men in his village, by Franco’s regime. Her strongest desire, one shared by many in her hometown, is to excavate the field where they suspect the bodies were left in a mass grave. Janis is overly patient, self-aware, and focused. She isn’t easily rattled, although factors lead to her becoming so. Cruz brings a tenacity and warmth to the character; it’s easy to see how others are drawn to Janis.

    Almodóvar chooses to explore different experiences of motherhood in the film: the mother whose husband was stolen from her life by a dictator; the mother who yearns for a career in acting and loses custody of her daughter; the mother whose child dies unexpectedly; the mother who can’t care for her child; and Janis, who loves her daughter but has certain doubts.

    The insistent scoring by Alberto Iglesias plays like it’s written to accompany a psychological drama or thriller, reminiscent of something by Bernard Herrman. I honestly felt a tad misled by the score, expecting something horrifying to be just around the corner while the film actually leans more towards a classic melodrama. I could appreciate the musical choices more upon my second viewing.

    The importance of community is central to Parallel Mothers, as women friends (such as Rossy de Palma, who plays Janis’ dearest friend) and neighbors care for each other. Israel Elejalde figures in as a love interest who also happens to be a forensic archeologist working on the mass grave, but the attention here is on the women left behind and the women they’ve raised. In this soulful film filled with unexpected twists, Pedro Almodóvar once again shows himself to be a filmmaker who knows the value of women’s voices and work.


    Parallel Mothers opens theatrically in Austin on Fri, Jan. 21 at Regal Arbor.

  • 2021: 25 Films

    2021: 25 Films

    Julian’s eighth annual video tribute to the Top 25 Films of 2021

    *Spoilers*

    2021 was an impossibly fantastic year for movies, and I hope this cut can hope do justice to how this year’s entries uplifted, provoked, and amazed all of us.

    The best films of 2021 allowed their audiences to connect with wildly diverse stories and themes in ways they never could before. Such storytelling feats often confronted us with points of view so far removed from our own, placing us headlong into situations, relationships, and conflicts that challenged long-held beliefs and dared us to deepen our sense of empathy and community. The films that I ultimately represented here in this absolute banner of a year are ones that pushed my cinematic boundaries, deeply moved me in the process, and ultimately encouraged me to believe that the world can possibly change for the better. Here’s hoping that 2022 can help bring their message to fruition.

    The 25:

    1. Licorice Pizza (Paul Thomas Anderson)
    2. The Green Knight (David Lowery)
    3. The Power of the Dog (Jane Campion)
    4. The Matrix Resurrections (Lana Wachowski)
    5. Benedetta (Paul Verhoeven)
    6. Pig (Michael Sarnoski)
    7. Memoria (Apichatpong Weerasethakul)
    8. Flee (Jonas Poher Rasmussen)
    9. The French Dispatch (Wes Anderson)
    10. CODA (Siân Heder)
    11. The Harder They Fall (Jeymes Samuel)
    12. Drive My Car (Ryusuke Hamaguchi)
    13. Mass (Fran Kranz)
    14. Titane (Julia Ducournau)
    15. Dune (Denis Villeneuve)
    16. Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes (Junta Yamaguchi)
    17. Spencer (Pablo Larraín)
    18. Nightmare Alley (Guillermo Del Toro)
    19. Quo Vadis, Aida? (Jasmila Žbanić)
    20. Passing (Rebecca Hall)
    21. The Novice (Lauren Hadaway)
    22. Petite Maman (Céline Sciamma)
    23. Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar (Josh Greenbaum)
    24. West Side Story (Steven Spielberg)
    25. BELLE (Mamoru Hosoda)

    Honorable Mention: I’m Your Man (Maria Schrader), The Execution (Lado Kvataniya), A Hero (Asghar Farhadi), Spider-Man: No Way Home (Jon Watts), Last Night in Soho (Edgar Wright)

    The Music:

    “Tell Me a Tale of Yourself, So That I Might Know Thee,” Composed by Daniel Hart (The Green Knight)
    “Legs Body Arms (Arms Body Legs),” Composed by Alex Weston (The Novice)
    “Life on Mars?,” Written and Performed by David Bowie (Licorice Pizza)

  • DOUBLE WALKER is a Haunting Tale of Vengeance and Loss

    DOUBLE WALKER is a Haunting Tale of Vengeance and Loss

    Colin West Delivers a Solid No Budget Ghost Story, Now on Blu-ray

    Hitting Blu-ray this week through Cranked Up Films, by way of Kino is Double Walker, the feature length debut by Columbus, Ohio native Colin West. The dreamlike horror narrative stars Co-Story/Co-Producer Sylvie Mix as an alabaster skinned apparition who stalks the streets of her small town on a quest for vengeance. Through flashbacks, we get her origin as young girl who was murdered and was presented with a choice — either have one day to say her goodbyes to those she loved, or live forever and be reincarnated as a ghost — only visible to “Sinners and Believers”. She chooses the latter and we follow her in the week between Christmas and New Years as she hunts the evil men in her small town, luring them away to the bloody demise.

    The trust between director Colin West and star Sylvie Mix is palpable, as the actor carries the low-budget ghost story armed with nothing more than a white t-shirt and a paralyzing gaze. It’s a recipe that could easily have fallen victim to its more exploitative trappings, due to her lack of wardrobe, but thankfully the camera never leers at Sylvie, even as she uses her sexuality to trap her prey. To complicate matters, this is mostly a silent character, so much is conveyed either with a simple twitch of an eye or a glance, which doesn’t phase the actor even in the slightest. It’s a rather complex performance, that supplements what the film may lack in budget or exposition with her unnerving battle between vulnerability and violence. Colin is also very careful however, not to overstay his welcome, the film runs at a scant 70 minutes and tells the story it needs to and then rolls credits.

    While a ghost story — the film dips its toes into folk horror for its mythos and like the best in the genre leaves the viewer with some food for thought, and a few questions left unanswered. Double Walker has an intriguing premise that is brought to life by the actor and a director who deliver what feels like a true partnership on screen, and the best case scenario for no-budget horror. Colin never falters in his approach to the material and Sylvie in her performance, and because of that the film is a solid watch. That being said my only negative about this haunting tale of vengeance and loss would be no extras are presented on the disc, other than a trailer. It would be interesting to get some idea on the inspiration and the thoughts behind the story or even some behind the scenes.


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  • Ambitious Desert-Set Thriller BORREGO Half-Succeeds, Half-Fails

    Ambitious Desert-Set Thriller BORREGO Half-Succeeds, Half-Fails

    Now in Theaters and on VOD

    Always remember to bring enough water for long desert hikes.

    Stuck uncomfortably in a limbo between genre exploitation and message drama, writer-director Jesse Harris’s (Living Life) second feature-length film, Borrego, half-succeeds at the former but fails with the latter. It doesn’t help as well that Harris chose to center Borrego on a white American woman, giving her selective, biased POV preference over every other character. It’s not all bad, of course. Working with an ace-level cinematographer Octavio Arias, Harris crafts a handful of attention-grabbing images to go along with an equivalent arresting sequences centered on its central, mismatched duo and their existential flight through an unforgiving desert environment and the Terminator-like drug dealer and his minions chasing them down.

    When we first meet Borrego’s ostensible protagonist, Elly (Lucy Hale, Truth or Dare, Scream 4), a new-to-the-desert botanist with an obvious preference for empty spaces over people-filled towns or cities, she’s not so much enjoying her work as allowing said work to dictate her actions and behavior. Elly fits into an overly familiar storytelling trope: Hesitant to speak or share her feelings or backstories, it becomes increasingly obvious she’s dealing with some kind of loss or life-changing disappointment in her past. Spoiler: Said character-revealing backstory will be revealed at a not-so-crucial moment somewhere in the back half of Borregos running time. Whether that revelation delivers the emotional impact Harris wants, however, is the key question: Sadly, it misses the mark, if only just.

    Desert burials are harder than they look.

    What really matters, however, isn’t who Elly is, at least initially, or even her profession as a botanist, it’s that her field studies in the desert make her a witness to a light plane crashing nearby. Like any good Samaritan, Elly rushes in to help the stricken pilot, Tomas (Leynar Gomez), from the crashed plane, only to immediately realize she’s made a terrible, possibly fatal mistake. Tomas isn’t a local recreational flyer who may have lost his way and/or the innocent victim of a catastrophic engine failure. He’s a drug mule working for a cartel and with Elly’s unexpected arrival, a hostage taker, forcing Elly to help him transport whatever drugs they can collect from the fallen plane so they can head out to the planned rendezvous with Tomas’s fearsome, brutal boss, Guillermo (Jorge A. Jimenez).

    While Tomas increasingly relies on Elly’s help and guidance to get him through the desert, their relationship unsurprisingly softening over time (though a barrier, language isn’t as insurmountable as it first seems), Guillermo suspects Tomas has betrayed him, stealing Guillermo’s property in the process. That, in turn, sets off a slow-motion, relatively non-urgent search and pursuit that feels like it was borrowed or at least inspired by the Coen Brothers’s Academy-Award-winning adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s novel, No Country for Old Men (minus, alas, the high stakes or the tension-tightening suspense). The involvement of a young woman, Alex (Olivia Trujillo), and the local sheriff, Jose (Nicholas Gonzalez), adds something non-marginal to the eventually combustible mix.

    Stockholm Syndrome in …

    Best known for her series-long run on Pretty Little Liars, Hale might not have been the obvious choice for the de-glammed, survivalist-oriented Elly, but she manages to deliver a performance with some range and depth. Though stuck with a seemingly passive, reactive role, Hale succeeds at conveying the panoply of emotions Elly experiences on her literal and metaphorical journey. With the exception of Jorge A. Jimenez as Guillermo, less the result of any deficiencies in Jimenez’s performance than an underwritten, borderline caricature role, the remainder of the cast also deliver relatively grounded, naturalistic, in-the-moment performances. Ultimately, though, they can do only so much to elevate Harris’s flawed script.

    Borrego will be released theatrically and OnDemand on Friday, January 14th.

  • Arrow Heads #93: Unboxing SHAWSCOPE Volume 1

    Arrow Heads #93: Unboxing SHAWSCOPE Volume 1

    Arrow Video’s celebration of the Shaw Brothers is a knockout

    Arrow Heads — UK-based Arrow Films has quickly become one of the most exciting and dependable names in home video curation and distribution, creating gorgeous Blu-ray releases with high quality artwork and packaging, and bursting with supplemental content, often of their own creation. From cult and genre fare to artful cinema, this column is devoted to their weird and wonderful output.

    Arrow Video continue their sterling work in championing home video releases with a celebration of venerated Hong Kong filmmakers, Run Run and Runme, aka the Shaw Brothers. Through their studio, they collaborated with notable talent in front of, and behind the camera, to release hundred of action films, famed for their kung fu kickassery, high production values, and distinct theatrical flair.

    Volume One of Arrow’s Shawscope series highlights 12 features from the 70s, generally regarded as a Golden age for their studio. King Boxer (aka Five Fingers of Death), The Boxer from Shantung , Five Shaolin Masters and its prequel Shaolin Temple, Mighty Peking Man, Challenge of the Masters, Executioners from Shaolin, Chinatown Kid, The Five Venoms, Crippled Avengers, Heroes of the East, and Dirty Ho. The Shaw Bros. made over 900 movies, so this release is obviously just a taster of their output, but a carefully curated one at that, with each film getting an all new 2K remaster.

    The whole package is rather resplendent, from the shimmery iridescence of the exterior to the bold and playful illustrations accompanying each movie, courtesy of artists Sam Gilbey, Matthew Griffin, Chris Malbon, Jacob Phillips, Ilan Sheady, Tony Stella, Darren Wheeling and Jolyon Yates.

    After a slew of oversized releases from various home video distributors, what many will appreciate is it’s rather compact form factor, standing just under 7 inches tall and 11 inches long. We’ll have more in depth coverage of the films and extra features over the coming weeks, for now, enjoy the unboxing of this fine collection.

    Inside the coverslip is a sturdily made card folder, and a booklet (more on that below). The folder opens up to present each page with custom artwork on the left, and on the right a breakdown of the disc contents and the sleeve space for the respective disc. The discs are pretty well held in place, and not difficult to extract. As you can see below, each disc contains a huge amount of extra features to enhance appreciation for the respective feature.

    Also included are two CDs of music from the De Wolfe Music library as heard in six of the films, an exclusive to this collection.

    Accompanying the disc folder, is an illustrated 60-page collectors book, featuring new articles by David Desser, Terrence J. Brady and James Flower. There’s pieces giving background on the genre and studio in particular, the key players in front of the camera, and info on the restorations. Each film has a dedicated section, covering cast, crew, synopsis, and extra tidbits about the production.


    SHAWSCOPE Volume 1 — Disc Contents

    DISC ONE — KING BOXER

    • Brand new 2K restoration by Arrow Films from a 4K scan of the original negative

    • Newly restored uncompressed Mandarin and English original mono audio

    • Newly translated English subtitles for the Mandarin audio, plus English hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dub

    • Brand new commentary by David Desser, co-editor of The Journal of Japanese and Korean Cinema and The Cinema of Hong Kong

    • Newly filmed appreciation by film critic and historian Tony Rayns

    • Interview with director Chung Chang-wha, filmed in 2003 and 2004 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    • Interview with star Wang Ping, filmed in 2007 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    • Interview with Korean cinema expert Cho Young-jung, author of Chung Chang-wha: Man of Action, filmed in 2005 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    Cinema Hong Kong: Kung Fu, the first in a three-part documentary on Shaw Brothers’ place within the martial arts genre produced by Celestial Pictures in 2003, featuring interviews with Jackie Chan, Jet Li, John Woo, Sammo Hung, Gordon Liu, Lau Kar-leung, Cheng Pei-pei, David Chiang and many others

    • Alternate opening credits from the American version titled Five Fingers of Death

    • Hong Kong, US and German theatrical trailers, plus US TV and radio spots

    • Image gallery

    DISC TWO — THE BOXER FROM SHANTUNG

    • Brand new 2K restoration by Arrow Films from a 4K scan of the original negative

    • Newly restored uncompressed Mandarin and English original mono audio

    • Newly translated English subtitles for the Mandarin audio, plus English hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dub

    • Interview with star Chen Kuan-tai, filmed in 2007 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    • Interview with assistant director John Woo, filmed in 2004 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    • Interview with star David Chiang, filmed in 2003 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    • Conversation between stars Chen Kuan-tai and Ku Feng, filmed at a Shaw Brothers reunion in 2007 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    • Hong Kong and German theatrical trailers, plus US TV spot

    • Image gallery

    DISC THREE — FIVE SHAOLIN MASTERS / SHAOLIN TEMPLE

    • Uncompressed Mandarin and English original mono audio for both films

    • Newly translated English subtitles for both films, plus English hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dub

    • Newly filmed appreciation of Chang Cheh by film critic and historian Tony Rayns

    • Interview with star Kong Do, filmed in 2003 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    Elegant Trails: David Chiang and Elegant Trails: Ti Lung, two featurettes on the actors produced by Celestial Pictures in 2003

    • Alternate standard-definition version of Shaolin Temple

    • Alternate opening credits from Five Masters of Death, the US version of Five Shaolin Masters

    • Alternate opening credits sequences for Shaolin Temple

    • US and German trailers for Five Shaolin Masters

    • Hong Kong and German trailers for Shaolin Temple

    • Image galleries for both films

    DISC FOUR — MIGHTY PEKING MAN

    • Uncompressed Mandarin and English original mono audio

    • Newly translated English subtitles for the Mandarin audio, plus English hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dub

    • Brand new commentary by Travis Crawford

    • Brand new interview with suit designer Keizo Murase, filmed in 2021 by Daisuke Sato and Yoshikazu Ishii

    • Interview with director Ho Meng-hua, filmed in 2003 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    • Interview with star Ku Feng, filmed in 2004 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    • Behind-the-scenes Super 8 footage from the archives of Keizo Murase

    • ‘Unrestored’ standard-definition version

    • Alternate opening credits from Goliathon, the US version of Mighty Peking Man

    • Hong Kong, US, German and Dutch theatrical trailers, plus US TV spot

    • Image gallery

    DISC FIVE — CHALLENGE OF THE MASTERS / EXECUTIONERS FROM SHAOLIN

    • Brand new 2K restoration of Challenge of the Masters from the original negative by Arrow Films

    • Uncompressed Mandarin and English original mono audio for both films, plus Cantonese mono for Challenge of the Masters

    • Newly translated English subtitles for both films, plus English hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dubs

    • Newly filmed appreciation of Lau Kar-leung by film critic and historian Tony Rayns

    • Interview with star Gordon Liu, filmed in 2002 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    • Interview with star Chen Kuan-tai, filmed in 2007 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    • Textless opening credits for Challenge of the Masters

    • Alternate English credits for Executioners from Shaolin

    • Hong Kong theatrical trailers for Challenge of the Masters

    • Hong Kong and US theatrical trailers for Executioners from Shaolin

    • Image galleries for both films

    DISC SIX — CHINATOWN KID

    • Brand new 2K restoration of the 115-minute International Version from original film elements

    • 90-minute Alternate Version

    • Uncompressed original Cantonese audio for the International Version, with newly translated English subtitles

    • Uncompressed original English audio for the International Version, with optional hard-of-hearing subtitles

    • Uncompressed original Mandarin audio for the Alternate Version, with newly translated English subtitles

    • Select scene video commentary by co-star Susan Shaw from 2021

    Elegant Trails: Fu Sheng, a featurette on the actor produced by Celestial Pictures in 2005

    • Hong Kong, US and German theatrical trailers, plus US TV spot

    • Image gallery

    DISC SEVEN — THE FIVE VENOMS / CRIPPLED AVENGERS

    • Brand new 2K restorations of both films from the original negatives by Arrow Films

    • Uncompressed Mandarin and English original mono audio for both films plus Cantonese mono for The Five Venoms

    • Newly translated English subtitles for both films, plus English hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dubs

    • Brand new commentary on The Five Venoms by critic Simon Abrams

    • Interview with star Lo Meng, filmed in 2003 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    Chang Cheh: The Master, a featurette about the director produced by Celestial Pictures in 2003

    • Hong Kong and US theatrical trailers for The Five Venoms

    • Hong Kong theatrical trailer for Crippled Avengers

    • Image galleries for both films

    DISC EIGHT — HEROES OF THE EAST / DIRTY HO

    • Brand new 2K restoration of Dirty Ho from the original negative by Arrow Films

    • Uncompressed Cantonese, Mandarin and English original mono audio for both films

    • Newly translated English subtitles for both films, plus English hard-of-hearing subtitles for the English dubs

    • Brand new commentary on Heroes of the East by Jonathan Clements, author of A Brief History of the Martial Arts

    • Newly filmed appreciation of both films by film critic and historian Tony Rayns

    • Interview with Heroes of the East star Yasuaki Kurata, filmed in 2003 by Frédéric Ambroisine

    • Alternate opening credits for Shaolin Challenges Ninja, the international version of Heroes of the East

    • Alternate English credits for Dirty Ho

    • Hong Kong theatrical trailer for Heroes of the East, plus US TV spot

    • Hong Kong theatrical trailer for Dirty Ho

    • Image galleries for both films

    DISC NINE — MUSIC FROM SHAOLIN TEMPLE, MIGHTY PEKING MAN AND CHINATOWN KID (CD)

    DISC TEN — MUSIC FROM THE FIVE VENOMS, CRIPPLED AVENGERS AND DIRTY HO (CD)


    Shawscope Vol. One, is available now via Arrow Video in a Limited Edition release.

  • Criterion Review: THE RED SHOES

    Criterion Review: THE RED SHOES

    One of the most beautiful films ever made gets 4K treatment

    Moira Shearer in THE RED SHOES.

    Criterion recently released a combo 4K/BluRay package of Powell and Pressburger’s classic of Technicolor and ballet, The Red Shoes. Did I jump at the chance to review it even though I already owned the previous DVD released from Criterion? You bet. The British production has been a favorite of mine since I first viewed it as a teen on TCM; the vibrancy of the Technicolor plus the doomed romance at the center of the work drew me in at first sight.

    Moira Shearer, a professional ballerina who had to be strongly convinced to try acting in film, plays Vicki, a young woman whose dream is to dance under moody Russian artistic director Lermontov (Austrian actor Anton Wolbrook, La Ronde, The Life & Death of Colonel Blimp). She joins his London corps de ballet at the same time as naive composer Julian Craster (Marius Goring, A Matter of Life & Death) is hired. Their lives move in a sort of parallel trajectory as they come to feature largely in Lermontov’s adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen’s The Red Shoes: Craster writing and conducting the score as Vicki is lead ballerina in its premiere.

    Anton Wolbrook in THE RED SHOES.

    Where other movies would show bits and pieces of a work, here’s where The Red Shoes throws in a full ballet, pre-dating American films that would do something similar, like An American in Paris or Singin’ in the Rain. The masterful cinematography by Jack Cardiff takes the viewer into a sort of creepy dreamscape, where newspapers come to life, knives turn into twigs, and the girl wearing the red shoes cannot stop dancing to save her life.

    Themes of creation, ownership and obsession run through Powell and Pressburger’s 1948 film, with Vicki stuck in the middle as Craster fights for her heart and Lermontov yearns for her soul (or at least the soul shown through her art). “You cannot have it both ways,” Lermontov comments to his choreographer as Vicki eavesdrops. Given the foreshadowing of Craster and Vicki flirting surrounded by a cloud of steam as a train passes under them, the haunting, screechy composition by Craster that plays under a pivotal moment between him and Vicki, or the tragedy imbued in Andersen’s original tale, the tragic ending to The Red Shoes isn’t too much of a shock — but that doesn’t make the work any less of a wonder to view. The clarity and beauty of the 2009 restoration is especially undeniable in this new edition.


    The special features included with this 4K/BluRay combo pack from Criterion:

    • 4K UHD of the 2009 digital restoration presented in Dolby Vision HDR (along with the BluRay with the film and special features on it)
    • an audio commentary track (from 1994) led by film scholar Ian Christie which includes pieces of interviews with fan Martin Scorsese, performers Moira Shearer and Marius Goring, composer Brian Easdale and celebrated cinematographer Jack Cardiff. Shearer talks about her casting process, Goring shares about his “conducting” experience, Easdale comments on the influences on his scoring, Cardiff discusses his Technicolor training, and Christie adds some dry bits of film history.
    • an audio track of actor Jeremy Irons reading excerpts from the later Powell/Pressburger novelization of The Red Shoes and Andersen’s original story
    • A photo gallery of Scorsese’s collection of memorabilia for the film
    • Notes on the 2009 restoration and a demonstration/comparison video led by Scorsese
    • a 2009 documentary on the making of the film, A Profile of “The Red Shoes”
    • a 1949 animated film, The “Red Shoes” Sketches, which uses storyboards created by designer Hein Heckroth for the Powell/Pressburger movie
  • The Austin Film Critics Association Announce their 2021 Award Winners

    The Austin Film Critics Association Announce their 2021 Award Winners

    Including Jon’s Top 10 of 2021

    With Cinapse being primarily based out of Austin, we like to remain entwined with local film related entities and events. We’re also very proud to have several of our contributors count themselves as members of the Austin Film Critics Association (AFCA), myself included. So their annual film awards are always of great interest, and usually holds some delightful surprises. The nominees, announced earlier this month showed some love for some less appreciated, but very worthy performances and films, and their list of winners also holds some surprises.

    The winners announcement sees The Power of the Dog, Pig, and Drive My Car, take home some of the big prizes, along with a Best Actor win for Nicolas Cage in Pig, Best Actress going to Agathe Rousselle for Titane, Summer of Soul taking best documentary, and The Mitchells vs. the Machines winning best animated feature. Checkout the release below for the full list of winners, along with my own personal top 10 for 2021.


    Jon’s Top 10 for 2021

    1. Pig
    2. Titane
    3. Dune
    4. The Green Knight
    5. Drive My Car
    6. Petite Maman
    7. The Worst Person in the World
    8. The French Dispatch
    9. Lamb
    10. Last Night in Soho

    Honorable Mentions: Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar, Benedetta, Mass, Red Rocket, Licorice Pizza, The Power of the Dog, Zola

  • Celebrate America’s Dad with These 6 Streaming Titles

    Celebrate America’s Dad with These 6 Streaming Titles

    FIELD OF STREAMS mourns the loss of Bob Saget with a few of his great roles that now streaming for our enjoyment

    Welcome to Field of Streams, Cinapse’s weekly guide of what’s playing on your favorite streaming services. What’s new on Netflix and Amazon Prime? What do we recommend on Kanopy, Hoopla, and Shudder? We’ve got it all. From topical roundups, to curated top 5 lists, to reviews of our favorites available now… it’s here. We built it for you, so come and join us in the Field of Streams.

    While there have been so many great losses in the world of the big and small screens over the past few years that we surely can’t keep up with, some hit us particularly hard. Recent losses of Betty White and Sidney Poitier come to mind, but for this child of the 80s, none hits harder than the All-American Dad, Danny Tanner.

    With a sudden and unexpected announcement of his death on Sunday evening, America was taken aback. We’d already lost America’s Grandma but now we lose America’s Dad too? At only 65, while actively doing standup dates and playing roles on TV, his life ended abruptly… as he was found dead in his hotel room, less than a day after a live performance. The suddenness is jarring, but thankfully he leaves us with a legacy of smiles. Today, we celebrate the laughs and good times that he gave us and can never be erased with 6 of the best Saget that the streaming services currently have to offer.


    FULL HOUSE (HBO Max)

    We have no choice but to start here. The entire series is over at HBO Max and is a real delight, especially if you like to don you nostalgia googles as much as I do. While the Olsen Twins and John Stamos are probably the biggest breakout stars of the series, it’s Bob Saget’s Danny Tanner that drives the ship. Without others, the show could probably almost always still figure it out… but without Saget, the should would completely fail. It’s truly a testament to his strength as an actor that he can carry 8 seasons of a sitcom with such ease.

    https://www.hbomax.com/series/urn:hbo:series:GYS_I_wTdDa6NwwEAAAAC


    BOG SAGET: ZERO TO SIXTY (Prime, Tubi, and Peacock)

    Around the time he was turning 60, Bob Saget returned to the comedy special stage to share his hilarious wit and wisdom. While maybe not his funniest special, it’s porbably his best, as he reflects on his life and what he’s learned. But… yeah… it’s still really funny, too.

    https://www.hbomax.com/series/urn:hbo:series:GYS_I_wTdDa6NwwEAAAAC


    THE COMEDY CENTRAL ROAST OF BOB SAGET (Paramount+)

    To me, this is the blueprint for the Comedy Central Roasts. It’s hilarious, irreverent, and feels a lot like friends just busting on each other. Infamous roasts from Norm McDonald and Cloris Leachman will leave you laughing out loud for ages, while Saget’s return zingers are also brilliant. This is great fun… but not for the family.

    https://www.hbomax.com/series/urn:hbo:series:GYS_I_wTdDa6NwwEAAAAC


    FULL MOON HIGH (Paramount+)

    While Saget’s role here as a sportscaster in 1981’s Full Moon High is not a big one, this PG horror comedy is a must for fans of the Teen Wolf movies. The younger Bob Saget is great in his small role and Larry Cohen directed the crap out of this oft overlooked and not particularly heralded gem. It’s so strange and fun that the lesser moments and aspects of the film are easy to forgive.

    https://www.hbomax.com/series/urn:hbo:series:GYS_I_wTdDa6NwwEAAAAC


    BENJAMIN (Roku and Hoopla)

    Directed by Saget, who also is one of the leads, this is actually a really solid dark comedy that really pushes the envolope. Yet, there are serious notes here about addiction, love, loss, and life. A unique film that seems to really exemplify the aging Saget’s sense of humor in a lot of ways.

    https://www.hbomax.com/series/urn:hbo:series:GYS_I_wTdDa6NwwEAAAAC


    ENTOURAGE (Sling, TBS, and TNT)

    While a small role in this film and small role in the show as a whole, Saget’s character of himself in Entourage is phenomenal. It’s hard to find a better self-deprecating cameo role than Saget exemplifying the family turned dirty old man neighbor. He was always a favorite part of the series and I truly enjoyed his brief moments in the film.

    https://www.hbomax.com/series/urn:hbo:series:GYS_I_wTdDa6NwwEAAAAC


    There are countless services to explore and great things to watch on all of them. Which ones did we miss that you would suggest to us? Tell us what we’re missing out on or what new services we should check out by leaving a comment below or emailing us.

    Till next week, stream on, stream away.

  • Criterion Review: ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI and the Powerful Weight of Legacy

    Criterion Review: ONE NIGHT IN MIAMI and the Powerful Weight of Legacy

    An astonishingly well-crafted feature debut by Regina King comes to Criterion Blu

    In One Night in Miami, we visit four legendary black icons—Muhammad Ali (Eli Goree), Malcolm X (Kingsley Ben-Adir), Jim Brown (Aldis Hodge), and Sam Cooke (Leslie Odom, Jr.)—on the evening of Ali’s boxing victory over Sonny Liston in 1964. While Lyndon B. Johnson is in office, the Voting Rights Act has yet to be signed, and within the year, two of these men will be killed. But where most biopics would spend far too much time on the contextual fringes bookending this climactic evening, One Night in Miami is rooted in the fierce dramatic immediacy of these vital hours, revealing the spirits perpetually at combat within these men as well as among each other. Whether they’ve chosen so or not, they each have become figureheads of the larger Civil Rights movement—and each of them wears that mantle with wildly contrasting degrees of humility, pride, reluctance, anger, and resolution.

    The evening is pivotal for each of the men for reasons far beyond what’s at hand. Muhammad Ali, in his last days as Cassius Clay, stands at the precipice of joining the Nation of Islam. His mentor, Malcolm X, struggles with leaving that same group, with both men preparing to upend the careers that brought them international renown and infamy. NFL star Jim Brown is about to do the same with his football career as he pivots into work as a film actor, embarking on new territory while still remaining in the ever-judgmental public eye; though white men bestow a value upon Brown as a football player, pivoting to acting could allow him potential financial, creative, and physical freedom. Singer Sam Cooke, still climbing the charts but fresh off a disastrous night at the Copacabana, wrestles with the same vital choice of publicly allying himself with “the Cause,” as Malcolm intones throughout, and risking his current public adoration and control over his career for a movement that has brought his friends so much scrutiny and rejection.

    Each of these men are stars in their own right, each meaning something extremely important for people of all races who idolize them. They each possess a power very few others do in 1964. But none of these men have quite faced anything like this singular confrontation with one another. Together, they reckon with their own shortcomings, failures, and dreams in the company of those who know them most, the only other Black titans of industry who know the weight of their particular struggle.

    Actor Regina King’s directorial debut feature is nothing short of confident and measured. One Night in Miami is a film that examines the power of these men’s legacies through the lens of how they struggled to create them. The close of the film acknowledges the measure of martyrdom in the name of brotherhood, but none of these men are prepared for the kinds of sacrifices they might face, let alone consider themselves wholly willing to make such selfless acts. In showcasing these four heroes’ selfishness and humanity, King and the film’s screenwriter, playwright Kemp Powers, avoid the glorification such a story could have in another’s hands. Regardless of their stature in history, each man is painted with flaws aplenty. Their decisions, though they may impact millions of people, are theirs alone to make, and King and Powers recognize the titanic weight they struggle to bear. None of them wants the choices ahead of them, but does anyone?

    One Night in Miami revels in the humor, hubris, and humility that fuels every step of their decision-making process, with each scene fueled by minutiae that historians will later imbue with the magnitude they must have. Ben-Adir, Odom, Jr., Goree, and Hodge play more into the spirit of these men rather than skew tightly to theatrical impersonations, allowing audiences to appreciate these figures as interesting and effective people first, with their historical importance a welcome and necessary second. What’s crucial about their performances, and King’s film at large, is how these men allow a vulnerability to exist amongst each other that the public almost expects them to somehow do without. Malcolm, outwardly a steadfast champion of civil rights, is full of doubt; Clay is full of youthful vigor, but comes to realize how a single impulsive decision has long-lasting weight; Brown, stoic and headstrong, is slightly embarrassed yet proud of his decision to stand further in the spotlight on his own terms; and Cooke, ever a showman, doubts just how powerful his voice can be if someone may reject it at any given moment. Together, they realize how human they really are—but they also help each other recognize that their humanity allows them to be world-changers in the eyes of others.

    Continuing Criterion’s fruitful collaboration with Amazon Studios, their package of One Night in Miami champions an important touchstone in Civil Rights cinema, and brings King into the Collection as the fourth of what should undeniably be many more Black women directors among their ranks.

    (King joins Euzhan Palcy’s A Dry White Season, Dee Rees’ Pariah, and Gina Prince-Bythewood’s Love & Basketball.)

    Video/Audio:

    Criterion presents One Night in Miami in its original 2.39:1 aspect ratio, with both the video and 5.1-channel surround audio tracks sourced from the original 4K digital master files.

    One of the benefits of One Night in Miami’s modern digital workflow is that absent a UHD transfer, this is quite possibly the best Regina King’s film can look. What’s more, as an Amazon film released on physical media like fellow releases Cold War and Time, Criterion’s pristine transfer of One Night in Miami isn’t beholden to variable buffering rates, ensuring it maintains constant quality throughout the film. The rich, vibrant colors of the reproduced Hampton House and the period clothing strongly pop as much as the individualized dialogue complexly layered in the sound mix. A lack of film grain helps this fictionalized piece of history feel as organic and real as possible, as does a strong balance between Kemp Powers’ dialogue and the foley work used to create the unseen yet perpetually present world outside of the Hampton House room where the film is set.

    Special Features:

    • An Essential Collaboration: Director Regina King and screenwriter Kemp Powers discuss their working relationship in-depth with critic Gil Robertson, ranging from the origins of Powers’ original play, the development and revision process for the stage, how this process differed for the screen adaptation, and finally how King and Powers ensured One Night in Miami was as cinematic as possible to retain the power of its stage origins without feeling beholden to them.
    • Becoming a Director: An incredible conversation between Regina King and fellow actor/director Kasi Lemmons (Eve’s Bayou, Harriet) recaps King’s career as an actor working in TV and film (227, Jerry Maguire, Boyz n the Hood, Poetic Justice, The Leftovers, Watchmen) and how her experiences as an actor fostered the drive and skills of her directorial efforts. The conversation truly comes alive when Lemmons and King connect in their shared experience of being an actor directing actors, and the thrill of unexpected editing decisions can wholly reshape a film.
    • Regina King and Barry Jenkins: Originally recorded as part of The Director’s Cut — A Director’s Guild of America Podcast, King reunites with her former If Beale Street Could Talk director Barry Jenkins to discuss her journey towards the material, the material she’s attracted to as a director, her working relationship with screenwriter/playwright Kemp Powers, how she endeavored to “take the titles away” from her iconic subjects, the careful tact of expressing directorial intention without being overbearing, and the practical methods of shooting on set and on location as contrasted between their films. It’s a thrilling VC conversation recorded at the peak of COVID and quarantine, and even in a virtual setting, King and Jenkins’ personal and professional friendship shines throughout.
    • Building Characters: Regina King anchors a discussion with Kingsley Ben-Adir, Leslie Odom, Jr., Eli Goree, and Aldis Hodge on how each actor approached bringing to life their respective historical icons as well as bringing them down to Earth by unrelentingly showing their all-too-human flaws and faults. Also discussed is how the chemistry between the actors organically developed over the course of production, and how King worked with her collaborators to carefully chart the evolution of the characters over the course of the film’s near-real-time runtime.
    • Sound Design: Grammy-winning producer Nick Baxter and One Night in Miami’s re-recording mixer/sound editor Andy Hay and production sound mixer Paul Ledford discuss the unique challenges of crafting the aural soundscape of the film. The team painstakingly re-recorded each of Sam Cooke’s three-track-recorded songs in the film with period equipment for a more complex 5.1-surround mix, and took great pains to isolate recordings of each actor’s dialogue on-set using lavalier, boom, and strategically-planted set mics to create a more dynamic playing field in post-production, bringing the sonic elements of the film’s tension to the fore.
    • Making One Night in Miami: Created by Criterion exclusively for this release, director King, screenwriter/playwright Powers, producer Jody Klein, editor Tariq Anwar, director of photography Tami Reiker, costume designer Francine Jamison-Tanchuk, and set decorator Janessa Hitsman recap what drove them to adapt this play, and how their unique contributions to King’s film resulted in a wholly realistic, vulnerable, and energetic screen adaption.
    • Trailer for One Night in Miami’s theatrical release.
    • Booklet featuring an essay by Newsday film and jazz critic Gene Seymour which delves into the historical contexts of the film, its inspirations, and the original play, ranging from the Civil Rights movement, the election of Barack Obama, and the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the murder of Trayvon Martin. The essay centers One Night in Miami as its own unique turning point in the ever-evolving conversation of race and civil rights in America, much like the subject matter it features.

    One Night in Miami is now available on Blu-ray and DVD courtesy of The Criterion Collection.