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  • THE FAN (1996) & THE CONTRACTOR (2007): A Wesley Snipes Double Feature

    THE FAN (1996) & THE CONTRACTOR (2007): A Wesley Snipes Double Feature

    Any night with Wesley Snipes is a good night

    Mill Creek Entertainment does a fair amount of these types of double feature home video releases, with a couple titles featuring the same star on one disc with a bare bones menu and zero double features. That’s exactly what you’re getting here with this latest Mill Creek release featuring a couple of Wesley Snipes titles that have virtually nothing in common with one another at all besides Mr. Snipes. Neither film is a homerun, if you will, but I’d never seen either title before and as an active Wesley Snipes fan, this felt like an ideal opportunity to double feature these titles whilst on a nationwide COVID-19 voluntary quarantine. You’re going to get a couple of Wesley Snipes movies here, both on Blu-ray and on DVD. That’s it. Each film has its moments, so read on!

    The Fan (1996)

    Many will remember this one as it played to a wide theatrical release and came out between Demolition Man and Blade… so it’s pretty much peak Wesley Snipes era. What I didn’t personally remember at all until the film was playing before my eyeballs is that none other than Tony Scott directed this. And those are all the ingredients you need to know to make it worth checking out The Fan. You’ve got peak Wesley Snipes and the ever aesthetically pleasing Tony Scott behind the camera, so therefore you can sit back and enjoy the ride.

    The set up here is very much a kind of Cape Fear lite with Robert De Niro playing a genuine, fleshed out character who is going to eventually devolve into a frothing mad stalker of Wesley Snipes’ pro baseball star Bobby Rayburn. It’s not as though the beat by beat plot points are the same as Cape Fear, but it feels like extremely similar territory for De Niro. Of course, De Niro is great and brings his A game to the role. But The Fan is kind of underwritten and never really rises to any kind of greatness as a stalker thriller. There’s a lot here to pique your interest and keep you watching, but it never soars into the bleachers.

    Tony Scott’s energetic direction is the outstanding element of The Fan. The guy just makes this otherwise standard fare really pop. And as with much of his oeuvre, he visually grabs you right from the start and never lets go. The movie just looks and feels propulsive and menacing and Mill Creek’s Blu-ray does a solid job of conveying that vibe to your tv screen. It’s a San Francisco movie, with The Giants being the team Rayburn has recently signed to with an outrageous (for 1996) $40 million contract. So you do get some classic San Francisco visuals delivered right to you from Mr. Scott.

    The cast would be the other big standout making The Fan worth a watch. Snipes is not playing a jacked action hero here. He’s a dramatic lead, with a son to care for and a career stalling out even as he reaches the heights of superstardom. De Niro’s Gil Renard is actually the main character, however. You split a lot of time between Gil and Bobby, with a fair amount of tension building and character development going on. When things finally do escalate to violence and tragedy, it actually feels a little bit heightened and detached from the human drama that had been playing out previously.

    Perhaps the biggest disappointment of The Fan is that, while it should feel fresh and relevant today with social media allowing for a culture of toxic fandom to have taken over pop culture, it really doesn’t offer much in the way of insight. Gil is just a tragic figure. A man pushed to the breaking point who let his obsessive tendencies win the day and veer him down a tragic path of violence. Meanwhile Snipes’ Bobby Rayburn spends most of the movie not even knowing Gil exists and repeatedly asking “what do you even want from me?” once they become locked in a third act battle. You can certainly feel echoes of relevance to today’s rampant fan entitlement problem, but nothing ever really incisive ends up being divined from The Fan’s fairly weak screenplay.

    Beyond just Snipes and De Niro you’ve also got nice turns from Ellen Barkin and John Leguizamo, but while they do a lot with their limited screen time, neither character amounts to much and Barkin’s shock jock radio sports reporter gets totally sidelined by the end as just an observer, which is unfortunate.

    The Fan has a lot going for it with a great cast and even better director. It goes down smooth and easy and offers few surprises. You’ve seen this movie before, and you’ll see it again, too. But never with quite this mixture of talent in the dugout, which earns it a mild recommendation.

    The Contractor (2007)

    I’m going to be honest. I popped this one in and watched it first, because this is exactly my kind of movie. I adore direct to video action cinema for some reason, and I’m not daunted at all when a project like this happens, later in a star’s career perhaps, at a fraction of the budget of the projects they did in their career peaks. I’ve seen dozens and dozens of films just like The Contractor.

    It’s a pretty solid direct to video title on the spectrum of these types of things. It’s competently directed and written, tells a story with a beginning, middle, and end… and it lets Wesley Snipes be the badass leading man he is. The basics of filmmaking are all pretty much there. And trust me, this isn’t a given with DTV films of The Contractor’s ilk.

    The problem with The Contractor is that it commits the cardinal sin of DTV action cinema: It’s boring.

    Snipes stars as James Dial who is, oddly, not really a contractor at all. Rather, he’s a retired CIA operative who is given “one last chance” to kill the terrorist who had eluded him in a botched job that ended his career. Awesomely, Dial lives on a ranch in Montana, training horses. This kind of trope will never grow old, and Dial’s aloof badass vibe is perhaps the movie’s best character beat. Of course, the job goes south, Dial ends up on the run, and that’s when The Contractor commits its second unforgivable sin: It saddles Dial with a precocious kid sidekick. Fortunately actress Eliza Bennet actually fleshes out Emily quite well and that actress has gone on to work regularly, it appears. It’s just that this is an action movie trope that does get old with a quickness and didn’t help this film be any more thrilling. There’s never a moment where the action sequences surprise or stand out in any way. There’s no doubt whatsoever that Dial will turn the tables on those who are setting him up. Perhaps the film benefits from not making Dial some kind of super soldier, and focusing more on the human drama of an assassin on the run teaming up with a struggling teenaged girl. But it’s less fun with that approach.

    Frequently DTV films like this one feature ONLY the star above the title in terms of recognizable actors, but The Contractor managed to roll the dice in 2007 and cast a remarkable pre-Game Of Thrones duo with Charles Dance playing an aging British investigator and Lena Headey playing his daughter (and also an investigator). That’s right, The Contractor brings us a pre-Game Of Thrones father/daughter Lannister reunion. It’s the most remarkable thing about the film here in 2020, and sadly neither character really has much to do as written, though those two actors obviously shine with their sub-optimal parts.

    The Contractor is never remarkable, though it never dips into incompetence either. As Snipes is an innocent man on the run, you get a very “poor man’s U.S. Marshals” vibe while watching The Contractor. Which is unfortunate as U.S. Marshals was already a poor man’s The Fugitive. There’s little to recommend here beyond Snipes always being an enjoyable watch and the accidental casting coup of future Game Of Thrones stars in supporting rolls. I may have to revisit U.S. Marshals now, though, so The Contractor definitely inspired something within me.

    And I’m Out.


    The Fan / The Contractor double feature disc is now available as a Blu-ray/DVD combo pack from Mill Creek Entertainment.

  • FORCE 10 FROM NAVARONE Screen Comparisons: Kino 2K Restoration vs. 2009 Blu-ray

    FORCE 10 FROM NAVARONE Screen Comparisons: Kino 2K Restoration vs. 2009 Blu-ray

    On March 17, Kino Lorber Studio Classics brings the war-action film Force 10 From Navarone (1978) back to Blu-ray in a new edition (previously released by MGM in 2009).

    The sequel to the 1961 classic The Guns of Navarone features an all-star cast including Harrison Ford, Carl Weathers, Franco Nero, and a who’s who of the James Bond franchise: Robert Shaw, Richard Kiel, Barbara Bach, Michael Byrne, and Edward Fox, not to mention director Guy Hamilton.

    Kino’s new disc boasts a brand new 2K scan, and the difference in overall sharpness and visual fidelity is clear. Additionally, the new scan has done a much better job of capturing more of the full frame. (The movie’s file size also weighs in at 80% larger, though a small factor of that is attributable to a newly added commentary).

    Superior detail:

    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino

    Coverage of frame:

    Kino’s scan is consistently less tightly cropped, allowing more of the image to appear on the screen on all four sides. Here are a few shots where this difference is a bit easier to spot, based on the objects or tangents around the periphery.

    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino

    Color Correction:

    Extensive color correction has been applied to the film. A “rosy” blush apparent in many outdoor scenes has been mitigated, and ightly vivid green foliage has been scaled back to more natural tones.

    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino

    High Desaturation & Contrast

    Overall, Kino’s colors look quite great as the prior screens demonstrate — but at time the changes are overzealous. This is more readily apparent in lower light scenes, where some of the colors lose their lustre in favor of a more desaturated, high contrast appearance.

    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino

    As harsh as that last example appears, it’s worth noting that this choice does make the nocturnal scenes easier to “read” and less murky, and especially in motion— for example:

    Throughout the film there are also a few times where the old disc’s palette has simply has a more natural appearance, though these are in the minority:

    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino

    Notes on Revised Titles

    I don’t have a frame of reference for what the film’s titles originally looked like in 1978, but both Blu-ray editions appear to have recreated or retouched versions of the opening credits sequence.

    The 2009 disc features some especially garish, ultra-sharp bright yellow text which looks computer-created and is obviously not from the film’s era. Kino’s new disc has a much more subtle/natural appearance, though they opted to replace the setting test of “Somewhere in England” (left alone in 2009) to the same aesthetic.

    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino

    Additional comparisons:

    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino
    Top: Old MGM // Bottom: New Kino

    In addition to a new 2K scan, Kino’s disc also have some new bonus features:

    • Audio commentary by filmmaker Steve Mitchell and Author Jay Rubin (Combat Films: American Realism)
    • Theatrical Trailer (1:44)
    • Additional trailers: Ambush Bay (2:44), The Devil’s Brigade (3:46), Hornet’s Nest (2:39), The Secret Invasion (3:11), The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 (2:32), Tobruk (2:48)

    A/V Out.

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    Force 10 From Navarone — Kino Lorber Studio Classics Blu-ray

    Except where noted, all 16:9 screen images in this review are direct captures from the disc(s) in question with no editing applied, but may have compression or resizing inherent to file formats and Medium’s image system. All package photography was taken by the reviewer.

  • The Still Wonder of FIRST COW

    The Still Wonder of FIRST COW

    Kelly Reichardt made a western about friendship and it’s beautiful

    Courtesy of A24.

    After a mysterious open with a hiker and her dog making a discovery in a more recent time, First Cow moves back into the early 19th Century Oregon territory. Cookie (John Magaro, The Big Short) is near the end of his journey as a cook for a crew of fur trappers when he finds King-Lu (Orion Lee) hiding in bushes. Cookie takes care of King-Lu, and the two men, who both feel like outsiders in this wild northwest region, become fast friends. Meanwhile, a lone milk cow is making its way to the wilderness.

    Kelly Reichardt (Meek’s Cutoff, Certain Women) creates a vision of the west rarely seen in film. Inclusive casting provides a more realistic view of the trading post as it may have been. Indigenous women watch from shore as the cow is ferried across the water, and different accents are spoken by the men in the watering hole. King-Lu tells Cookie he loves the region because “history isn’t here yet.”

    Courtesy of A24.

    The wilderness is lush, with greens that pop off the screen. Reichardt and crew make this world appear one full of wonder and possibility, wherein a couple of friends could dream of opening a hotel together on funds they raise from Cookie’s baking talents. With no women around to place in a typical domestic role, Cookie and King-Lu are shown sewing, sweeping, and baking (such a unique sight in westerns that I found it noteworthy).

    Courtesy of A24.

    First Cow is based on a novel from Jonathan Raymond, who co-wrote the screenplay with Reichardt; they’ve collaborated on other films in the past. There’s humor to this story, which made our audience laugh out loud a number of times. Sure, the title celebrates the cow, but the film celebrates this friendship between two men of differing backgrounds. First Cow is a kind and gentle film, a sweet — but not saccharine — work that leaves the viewer smiling. Such a film is a balm in these uncertain times.

    First Cow is scheduled to open March 20 in Austin theaters.

  • LITTLE JOE: An Unsettling if Uneven Modern Body-Snatchers Tale

    LITTLE JOE: An Unsettling if Uneven Modern Body-Snatchers Tale

    Jessica Hausner’s psychological eco-thriller works best when creepy, subtle chaos finally takes root in this Cannes-fêted film

    Little Joe follows experimental botanist Alice (Cannes Best Actress winner Emily Beecham) as she puts the finishing touches on a flower species that’s genetically designed to boost the happiness of its caretakers. When she’s not diving headfirst into her work, Alice struggles to take care of her increasingly distant teenage son, Joe; Alice also reckons with her feelings of guilt and inadequacy as a mother with a psychiatrist (Lindsay Duncan). Determined to repair her relationship with her son, Alice brings one of the experimental plants home, which she dubs “Little Joe.” But when the plant’s super-effective pollen reveals a more sinister, Body Snatchers side to these new plants, Alice descends into a world where people’s outward emotions and appearances are not as they seem.

    There’s much to admire about Little Joe: the update of a Triffids or Body Snatchers storyline to today’s world of genetic engineering is a novel and timely one, and Hausner imbues her material with a deliberate, creeptastic unease. Little Joe also places much more of an emotional premium on the psychology of its characters, in particular Emily Beecham’s nuanced performance of a mother in crisis. Alice is a driven yet vulnerable lead, whose emotions are kept closely guarded lest any sign of weakness or workplace unprofessionalism slip out. She’s well-counterpointed by her coworkers Chris (Ben Whishaw) and Bella (Kerry Fox), both of whom struggle to contain their inner thoughts as Little Joe’s effect takes hold.

    Little Joe is at its best when exploiting this widening rift between emotion and personality. As the plant takes over their minds, the characters exist in this state of bliss, dispensing pleasantries in an increasingly frustrating jovial way. At the same time, all of their cares and worries shift solely onto caring for and propagating Little Joe, and it’s truly unnerving how “normal” this shift feels over the course of Hausner’s film. Another director would more than happily point a neon sign over this obsession over Little Joe to mark it as a stand-in for some other prescient societal ill, but Hausner’s skill is in her restraint in this regard. It’s far more fascinating to track this infectious obsession, as if Little Joe wasn’t taking people over completely, but instead exploiting what already lies dormant in its victims.

    At the same time, Little Joe’s restraint can work against in just as much as it does in its favor. The impenetrability of some of its characters can fairly be seen as vague inscrutability, and some of the later leaps of the film don’t feel as earned as the delicious dread that precede them. On the whole, Little Joe is an intriguing tale of rapid depersonalization, though its overall effect may vary depending on how much viewers are willing to imprint onto it.

    Video/Audio

    Magnolia presents Little Joe in a DVD-only release. The film is presented in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen with a 5.1 English surround audio track. English closed-captions are presented for the main feature. Image and sound quality are high for the format–especially as the film ventures into its more experimental visual and soundscapes. The film’s color palate remains rich and distinct without fading into lower-resolution crush, especially during the neon-red sequences in the Little Joe greenhouses.

    Special Features

    • Q&A: A half-hour post-screening Q&A with writer/director Hausner and actress Emily Beecham at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. Hausner and Beecham go into greater detail at nailing the uneasy tone of the film, Hausner’s ideas of a “happier” ending to Invasion of the Body Snatchers, and the use of color throughout the film.

    Little Joe is now available on DVD courtesy of Magnolia Pictures.

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    Little Joe — [DVD]

  • THE WITCH: SUBVERSION: A Solid South Korean Action Mystery

    THE WITCH: SUBVERSION: A Solid South Korean Action Mystery

    No, not that The Witch

    Ko Ja Yoon (Da-mi Kim) has erased the memories of her traumatic childhood. She’s grown and lives a somewhat idyllic life on a farm with her adoptive parents who found her unconscious and bloody after escaping a mysterious facility. But despite the loving home environment, pressures are mounting around the farm as Ko Ja Yoon’s mother begins succumbing to dementia and falling cattle prices threaten the viability of the farm. So, she does a very “normal teenager” thing and takes a shot at a big televised talent competition in order to win a big prize and save her family. But that tv appearance triggers unwanted visitors from her childhood, and it’s going to get explosive.

    The Witch: Subversion benefits from its very South Korean approach to its subject matter. There’s deep, dark violence lurking beneath frequently calm and collected faces. There’s K-Pop. There’s slick, fluid action sequences and seemingly a fair amount of depravity just beneath the pristine surface. And while the mystery does play out in effective ways, a lot of The Witch: Subversion feels familiar. Ko Ja Yoon very clearly has “powers” of some kind, as do those who are pursuing her. As such, the film falls pretty squarely into the superhero subgenre, feeling like a horror-infused X-Men story complete with a coming-of-age element. There’s also traces of the YA phenomenon here as a strong young female protagonist fights against a dark system of power. You even get a Superman (and Stranger Things?) vibe as Ko Ja is taken in by kind farmers and raised in isolation to protect her (and her powers) from the suspicious outside world. Lastly, in a page taken right out of serialized comics, it seems clear that this film is just the beginning of a much bigger story. This is made clear both by the original Korean title of the film, which included “Part 1” in there, and also by the ending of the film itself, which teases a sequel.

    I’m actually great with the concept of South Korean takes on the superhero genre. South Korean cinema is some of my very favorite from around the globe. And this film largely got its hooks into me. It does feel, however, that this story takes just a few too many cues from the unending wave of superhero cinema coming out of North America and perhaps suffers some from feeling too familiar.

    The biggest strengths in The Witch: Subversion’s corner are its action, its cast, and its writer/director. There’s frankly not enough action, but what’s there is incredible. You get these smooth, explosive moments where powers are used to break bones and guns become psychokinetic playthings. Then there are Matrix-like hints of super-powered and gravity-defying martial arts battles that kick all kinds of ass while never quite feeling totally unleashed. In terms of the cast, you can’t help but be excited about the villainous turn of Parasite’s Woo-sik Choi. He’s nameless, mysterious, playful, and cruel. Da-mi Kim in the lead role anchors things quite nicely especially as the mystery unfolds and our lead gains more and more dimensions to her personality. The cast is uniformly strong and sells the magical world existing beneath the cover of our own. Writer/Director Hoon-jung Park isn’t at his first rodeo, here, either. Having written modern Korean classic I Saw The Devil, this is a man who can bring the titillating depravity. Also responsible for writing/directing New World, V.I.P., and The Tiger over the past several years. He’s kept busy and he builds just enough of an intriguing world here to convince me that I need to check out future installments in this pulpy franchise to see just how buckwild this universe is going to get. If the action hinted at here is any indication, The Witch: Subversion could be just a taste of what is to come.

    And I’m Out.


    The Witch: Subversion hits Blu-ray, DVD, & Digital March 10th, 2020 from Well Go USA.

  • ROMA: Criterion and Netflix Bring About an Exciting Turning Point for Home Video

    ROMA: Criterion and Netflix Bring About an Exciting Turning Point for Home Video

    The first partnership between streaming and home video giants is a celebration of past and future in this stunning deluxe release

    First things first: it feels like a minor miracle that this release of Roma has happened at all.

    By releasing films by important new auteurs like Mati Diop and Sandi Tan and established legends like Martin Scorsese and Bong Joon-Ho (and, yeah, Michael Bay, too), Netflix has crafted a new image for itself as a dynamic distribution method for art-house and independent films that would once struggle to fill theater seats. The opposite side of the coin, naturally, is that Netflix’s rise as a distributor and its parallel scaling-back of its disc rental service has been heralded as a sign of the impending death of both physical media and the theatrical experience.

    But, like many others, I’m ride-or-die for Blu-ray and DVD. To me, Criterion has often been Netflix’s antithesis, a carefully curated selection of films that prize the film-school-in-a-box approach to home video, dedicating themselves to consistently quality A/V presentation and a substantial amount of supplements. And that’s the approach I treasure most. Anything that preserves movies as living documents, results of intense collaboration between creatives that deserve rewatch and further discussion. Anything that keeps them from being just consumable objects that live and die by the whims of limited-engagement licensing agreements or the strength of my internet connection.

    Roma, though, is the first of a surprising new partnership between the streaming giant and legendary Blu-ray label The Criterion Collection. What thrills me the most about this new agreement is the sense of stability and accessibility such a collaboration can offer. Netflix does provide an unprecedented amount of accessibility and funding for new independent work — but now there’s an outlet for these films to be championed untethered from the Internet, to be wholly owned again rather than be reliant on a monthly subscription. Most importantly, it’s an opportunity for films like Roma, The Irishman, Marriage Story, and hopefully many more to come to be seen wholly as their director intended: without buffering, notifications, or anything else getting in the way.

    So holding Roma in my hands with Criterion branding doesn’t feel like physical media is dying at all, nor does it seem like just a smart business decision by either company. It sincerely feels like a media staple has been wholly augmented and revitalized.

    In the context of both its story and the production behind it, it feels more than fitting that Roma is the first film to result from this new collaborative partnership. Alfonso Cuarón’s Roma exists at a nexus between past and future. Cuarón breathes new life into his childhood memories of 1970s Mexico City at the height of social and political crisis. His tools are the latest in digital filmmaking tech, as well as a veritable blank check from a company that nowadays feels like it can print money. There’s an unabated compassionate joy towards what wonders the world has in store — the thrill of racing through bustling city streets; the painful loss of a family member, be it physical or romantic; the fear and anxiety of being caught up in the waves of change; the intimacy in between climactic moments of change. Despite having lived them in some fashion once before, Cuarón feels like he’s exploring these moments as earnestly as his audience — and in so doing unearths how uniting those moments of chaotic change can be.

    This potent awe remains vibrant throughout Roma, no matter if viewed on the big screen or the small; and with Criterion’s new release of Cuarón’s film, it feels like past, future, and all the media formats in between have come together in such a satisfactory, gorgeous package.

    Video/Audio

    Criterion has sourced Roma from its original 4K digital master, and accompanies it with a 7.1 Dolby Atmos audio track.

    Cuarón and team’s decision to shoot Roma in Arri65 6.5K Digital has reaped rewards for this Criterion disc — the visual quality on this disc is absolutely stunning, and with a level of consistency that remains solid throughout. Without film grain to act as a filter between subject and audience, Cuarón’s lens feels like a pane-less window into a bygone era. Cuarón’s meticulously-crafted black and white visual palette is just as meticulously preserved here, as well as the intricately-detailed production design by Eugenio Caballero.

    Roma is the third Criterion addition to feature a 7.1 sound mix (next to re-mixes of Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me and Pan’s Labyrinth) and the only release to have a native Dolby Atmos sound mix. As illustrated in the supplements, as much care went into Roma’s sound design as its impressive visuals. The film’s soundscape is breathtaking, granting its audience perpetually heightened sensitivity to sound — the electric thrum of busy crowds, the terrifying roar of the ocean, the soothing scratch of broom bristles on tile. It’s a continuously immersive experience, one that will use any viewer’s sound system to its advantage.

    In a rarity for the label, English, Spanish SDH, and French subtitles are included with the film, as well as a 2.0 Spanish-language descriptive audio track for the Blind and Visually Impaired. It’s exciting to see such a variety of languages offered for Criterion’s first collaboration with Netflix, and a step I hope is the first of many future releases in broadening the accessibility of the brand.

    The one drawback, though, is that Roma’s English-language subtitles fail to caption the brief snippets of English-language dialogue that appear in one of the film’s sections, however brief they may be. This isn’t a new issue for Criterion; and given that English SDH subtitles are available on Roma’s Netflix stream and that Spanish SDH subtitles are included here, it feels like a strange oversight on Criterion’s part in the midst of this accessibility.

    Special Features

    Roma is presented in a sleek, matte digipak, with its supplemental book of essays presented inside the folding disc clamshell.

    • Booklet: A 108-page collection of essays by novelist Valeria Luiselli, historian Enrique Krauze, and author Aurelio Asiain; fold-out stills from the film; production design notes from design head Eugenio Caballero, accompanied by comparison shots of pre-production pre-visualizations and their equivalents in the final film.
    • Road to Roma: Newly created for this release by Netflix, this feature-length documentary intercuts color behind-the-scenes footage of Roma’s production and interviews with Cuarón and his creative team. It’s truly staggering how intensive the film’s production truly was, creating a photorealistic reproduction of Mexico City through a combination of practical effects and well-accented CGI. Throughout, it’s fascinating to hear Cuarón’s philosophical and personal motivations for developing and shooting this film, especially in seeking out the deeper universality in bringing his childhood memories to life.
    • Snapshots from the Set: A half-hour documentary featuring interviews with Roma’s cast and crew discussing their experiences in bringing Cuarón’s vision to the big screen. This documentary covers many of the same points as its longer BTS counterpart, but this supplement provides a welcome outside perspective from Cuarón’s creative counterparts.
    • The Look of Roma: Alfonso Cuarón, post-production supervisor Carlos Morales, editor Adam Gough, and finishing artist Steven J. Scott discuss the many nuances of Roma’s cinematography. Initially intended to be shot on film by frequent collaborator Emmanuel Lubezki, Roma was persuaded to shift to a 6.5K digital production. This supplement illustrates how this decision provided greater range in capturing and manipulating the images captured.
    • The Sound of Roma: The film’s sound design team, Skip Lievsay, Craig Henighan, and Sergio Diaz–join Cuarón and editor Gough, in an examination of how Roma utilized the immersive and intense Dolby Atmos system. The visualizations of Roma’s soundscape are jaw-dropping to see–and further illustrates just how much control Cuarón and his team had in creating this film.
    • Roma Brings Us Together: A look at Roma’s innovative theatrical tour through Mexico using the Cinemovil mobile cinema, which provided a way to screen Roma in areas of the country that couldn’t access Netflix or traditional theaters.
    • Teaser and Theatrical Trailers

    Roma is now available on DVD and Blu-ray courtesy of The Criterion Collection. The film, as well as its main supplement, Road to Roma, are also available to stream on Netflix.

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    Roma — [Blu-ray] | [DVD]

  • EMMA. Is. Fine.

    EMMA. Is. Fine.

    Not much new to this latest Austen adaptation

    When you are viewing a new adaptation of a work that has been translated for screen multiple times, you wonder, how will this stand out? Will a distinct voice shine through (see Gerwig’s Little Women)? Will this version make you take a closer look at a different aspect of the work?

    Sadly, with Autumn de Wilde’s Emma., I ended up comparing it to Heckerling’s Clueless and McGrath’s Emma. And once I started contrasting performances, costumes, screenwriting, etc… I kept wishing I was watching one of those earlier adaptations instead.

    There’s nothing really wrong with this new Emma (period), but there’s not much of the new here either. Emma (played by Anya Taylor-Joy) decides she has a knack for match-making and takes on a new friend, Harriet (Mia Goth), in hopes of pairing her up with a deserving partner. Emma is snobby, silly, and rather observant. She is unmarried and dotes on her father (Bill Nighy, as hilarious as ever). Family friend Mr. Knightley (Johnny Flynn) joins them often for dinner.

    Taylor-Joy emphasizes the extremes of Emma’s character, from her vain whims to her growing devotion to a new friend (“I only want to keep Harriet for myself,” she comments). She barely restrains her annoyance at chatty spinster Miss Bates (Miranda Kerr) and social climber Mrs. Elton (Tanya Reynolds, who almost steals the movie). She and Flynn share a slow-burn chemistry, which practically smolders onscreen during a dance at a ball.

    Excess is on display in de Wilde’s film; stacks of cakes sit on tables, dozens of colorful hats and fabrics serve as backdrop at a pastel-hued haberdashery, and a duo of footmen seem to follow Mr. Woodhouse’s every whim. The audio at my preview screening was annoyingly muffled, but I appreciated the arrangements of rustic hymns and traditional choral tunes (it reminded me of shapetone singing, but it’s not exactly that) incorporated into the story.

    But there’s not enough to this Emma. to make it distinct enough from another. While I enjoyed my viewing (despite the crappy theater sound), I found it rather forgettable.

  • For Your Consideration: Two Cents Goes Overboard for SWEETHEART

    For Your Consideration: Two Cents Goes Overboard for SWEETHEART

    Two Cents is an original column akin to a book club for films. The Cinapse team will program films and contribute our best, most insightful, or most creative thoughts on each film using a maximum of 200 words each. Guest writers and fan comments are encouraged, as are suggestions for future entries to the column. Join us as we share our two cents on films we love, films we are curious about, and films we believe merit some discussion.

    The Pick

    We’ve had a lot of fun working our way through some of 2019’s best films, and we thought we’d close things out with one of the hidden gems of the genre film scene from last year.

    Sweetheart sneaked onto Netflix with little fanfare late in the year, seemingly noteworthy due only to the ‘Blumhouse’ label slapped across its every image. Blumhouse is the reigning king of low-budget horror movies that make major bank, though sometimes it’s unclear why they choose certain films to get a big theatrical push while others, well… sneak onto Netflix with little fanfare.

    Co-written and directed by J.D. Dillard, Sweetheart stars as Kiersey Clemons as Jennifer, the sole survivor of a shipwreck. As the film starts, Jennifer washes up on the shore of a desert island and quickly starts to work putting together whatever resources she has on hand to try for both survival and rescue.

    That mission gets a complication when a large, carnivorous monster strides out of the water and sets its sights on Jennifer as its next meal. Jennifer’s struggle for survival becomes a literal fight to the death as she has to cull together her meager tools into some kind of defense against an opponent of implacable hunger and will.

    Sweetheart got a whisper of a release before being consigned to Netflix, but since then it seems like big things are being beget by this little movie. Dillard has been tapped by Disney to develop a new Star Wars movie, Blumhouse has even spun the title off for an anthology series of films, each one containing the word “Sweetheart” in the title and involving a young woman battling a monstrous opponent.

    So before we eagerly dive into the year ahead, let’s spare one last look back at the year we recently finished and take a deep dive with Sweetheart.

    Next Week’s Pick:

    A seminal work of German Expressionism boasting unprecedented production and character design which is still immediately recognizable, Das Kabinett des Dr. Caligari (The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari) opened on Febrauary 26th, 1920. Please join us in remembering this influential cinema classic — considered by many to be the first great horror film — for its centennial anniversary. As this film is public domain, you can find it just about anywhere, free and legal, but the quality varies wildly. The best quality version is the tinted Kino Lorber restoration, which is free to watch via Kanopy, and available to rent elsewhere.

    Would you like to be a guest in next week’s Two Cents column? Simply watch and send your under-200-word review to twocents(at)cinapse.co anytime before midnight on Thursday!


    The Team

    Justin Harlan:

    “You get torn into pieces and dragged into the middle of the ocean. That’s what happens here.”

    This survival horror flick isn’t just a simple castaway tale, as it evolves into an effective creature feature. Complete with a gaslighting dickhead boyfriend, a bitchy friend, and a good bit of spear fishing, this is a really solid thriller with some interesting relationship dynamics within it. Of course, those relationships only become of central importance after a solid 40+ minutes of Kiersey Clemons acting her ass off all by herself.

    It’s not necessarily a top film of 2019, but it’s surely a worthwhile film for any and all genre fans. If you miss this in 2019, there’s no time like the present to catch up on this take of isolation, survival, and a creepy sea creature who eats people. (@thepaintedman)

    Brendan Foley:

    I wrote about Sweetheart a little while back and my opinion on it remains unchanged: It’s a near-perfect creature feature that does exactly what you want from this kind of film: A familiar story, told with a neat hook, played out in full, executed with style and skill and wrapped up neatly before the 90 minute mark.

    Honestly I’m so used to seeing this sort of film attempted and the mixture getting messed up that my first time through I was nervous for much of the film, anticipating the moment where it finally put a foot wrong and flopped into mediocrity like so many others. Instead, Sweetheart keeps making the smart choices and steadily builds to a terrifically satisfying final stretch. Fingers crossed people make the time for it. (@TheTrueBrendanF)

    Austin Vashaw:

    “Low-budget Castaway Meets Predator wasn’t a combo that would’ve crossed my mind, but does it ever deliver. While some other cast members also play a role in the tale, this is mostly a one-woman show with Kiersey Clemons ably owning the role of a castaway realizing that the small island she’s landed on wasn’t the refuge from the sea that she thought.

    Because the creature that stalks her only seems to hunt at night, there’s a cyclical rhythm built into the framework. Preparation and pensive expectation, followed by terror and immediate threat.

    And when her friends show up, and don’t believe her about the creature stalking them — I don’t want to over-read this, but there’s a certain tragic truth in white people downplaying or not believing a person of color when they talk about the monster in their lives.

    Anyway, check it out — if for no other reason than that there’s one particular shot in that will go down as an all-timer creature reveal. (@Austin Vashaw)


    Next week’s pick:

    https://kanopy.com/video/cabinet-dr-caligari

  • Unboxing Target Exclusive FROZEN II Limited Edition 4K UHD Blu-ray

    Unboxing Target Exclusive FROZEN II Limited Edition 4K UHD Blu-ray

    A pictorial exploration of the “Filmmaker Gallery and Storybook” Edition

    Following their usual pattern for Disney titles, Target has released Frozen II in an exclusive Limited Edition 4k UHD “Gallery Book” edition. The package includes a 4K disc, Blu-ray disc, digital copy, digital-exclusive extras, custom packaging, and a handsome booklet.

    Outer Front and Back views, with and without J-card:

    A line of spines —

    The inner pack features a tri-fold design with multiple character art panels, a pocket for storing the booklet (and digital copy insert), and the requisite disc trays.

    The Gallery Book is actually a flipper book with the 22-page Production gallery on one side and a 13-page comic excerpt on the other side (most certainly not a graphic novel despite what the packaging says to the contrary).

    The squarebound booklet is printed on high-quality glossy stock throughout (not just on the covers). The Gallery Book features concept art, costumes, and design explorations. The comic is a short excerpt of the graphic novel adaptation of the film. The art is beautiful, but the excerpt is pointlessly short, only serving as an advertisement to purchase the actual book.


    A/V Out.

    All package photography was taken by the reviewer.

    Buy it:

    Further reading:

  • FROZEN 2: Some Things Never Change

    FROZEN 2: Some Things Never Change

    The Disney sequel’s Blu-ray package is packed with bonus material

    Sisters Anna and Elsa return in Frozen 2 , finding their way into an enchanted forest and dealing with the environmental ramifications of a dam their grandfather built. But before their heroes’ journey begins, we are shown a happy autumn day in Arendel, with Anna (Kristen Bell) singing to her beloved snowfriend Olaf (Josh Gad) that “Some Things Never Change.” The ironically titled song that shows us, indeed, things do change, prepares the viewer for an adventure in which the sisters will annoy each other, again be separated, and have to find some solution/reparation for the decisions of their ancestor.

    “The past is not what it seems,” troll Pabbie (Ciaran Hinds) warns the queen and her sister before they head to the enchanted forest of their father’s memories. Frozen 2 touches on themes of colonialism and whose stories are told and celebrated in such history. Their father witnessed a version of events as a teen, but what really happened?

    Elsa’s ice castle from FROZEN shows up on the route to the enchanted forest.

    Along with the recurring theme of sacrifice, Frozen 2 also deals carefully with overwhelming grief. It seems at first a heavy topic for an animated film geared towards children, but in these uncertain times, it is right that Anna’s separation anxiety and the eventual weight of her sadness are given emotional heft through her singing “The Next Right Thing.” [I recommend reading this powerful essay in SyfyWire about the importance of the song] Anna’s clinginess to Elsa is initially exasperating, but given the history between the sisters, of course the younger sister would hold close to her sibling after years of being apart… even if a period of time has passed after their reconciliation. And while Anna is determined to keep her sister close, Elsa misses taking care of things on her own. The stubborn aspect of her character once again makes an appearance as she delves into the mystery of the past.

    There is intricate detail to the animation in Frozen 2; you can see the impact of the previous research and work done on the waterscapes of Moana in the waves Elsa fights her way across. In the midst of some heavy topics there’s a whimsy in the depiction of the wind and fire spirits, as well as a fantastical beauty to the icy images and symbols Elsa creates with her magic (especially during her songs,“Into the Unknown” and “Show Yourself”). And Kristoff (Jonathan Groff) gets a power ballad, which apparently involved Groff recording more than a dozen harmonies with himself. There’s only one Frozen, but Frozen 2 is a powerful successor.


    The Frozen 2 BluRay/DVD/digital code package releases this week. Special features include:

    • Singalong version of the film & a fun song selector which allows you to pick specific numbers from Frozen 2, with onscreen lyrics
    • “Into the Unknown” in 29 languages (if you watched the performance at the Oscars earlier this month, you got a taste of this)
    • Deleted Scenes and Songs introduced by co-directors Buck and Lee
    • Outtakes: random clips of the cast goofing off during recording sessions
    • Did You Know???: a featurette on Frozen 2 trivia which plays like something made for the Disney Channel
    • Spirits of Frozen 2: Lee, Buck and animators from Disney talk about the research into Norse mythology which inspired some of the new characters in the sequel
    • Gale tests: test animation done for the windy character of Gale, including Anna & Elsa’s mom and pop
    • Scoring a Sequel: Christophe Beck, who previously scored Frozen, discusses how he incorporated more themes from the songs by the Lopezes into this film’s score. He also talks about involving a few instruments from the Nordic region, including a gemshorn, in his arrangements.
    • Music videos from Panic! at the Disco and Weezer