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  • Blu-ray Screen Comparisons: THE GRAND DUEL

    Blu-ray Screen Comparisons: THE GRAND DUEL

    Arrow Video release compared to Mill Creek’s 2012 Disc

    This article contains several comparisons contrasting Mill Creek Entertainment’s 2012 Blu-ray transfer with the Arrow’s newer version. The frames aren’t necessarily exact matches, but should give a solid indication of the visual differences.

    Earlier this year Arrow Video released The Grand Duel onto Blu-ray with a new restoration 2K restoration from the original 35mm camera negative, packed with new special features. One of the great spaghetti Westerns, it stars Lee Van Cleef as a roving sheriff on a mysterious mission of justice.

    It was previously released on Blu-ray in a single-disc double-feature edition with Keoma (previously covered), from Mill Creek Entertainment.

    https://cinapse.co/keoma-1976-blu-ray-screen-comparisons-arrow-video-vs-mill-creeks-2012-release-423be74ac50b

    That disc was a tremendous value, but featured noisy older transfers with plenty of room for improvement.

    As comparisons go, this one is pretty straightforward. Arrow’s image is clearly superior, with fine grain, a much more varied color palette, and a “larger” view capturing more of the frame on all sides.


    Top: Old Mill Creek / Middle: Arrow [English] / Bottom: Arrow [Italian]

    The first comparison above is sort of an anomaly, comparing the title cards. Mill Creek’s version employed digitally redone titles which are quite crisp looking. Arrow’s disc includes both English (“The Big Showdown”) and Italian (“Il Grande Duello”) versions.

    The Italian titles are from a notably softer source, but this segment is “spliced in”. After this sequence, both versions of the film on Arrow’s disc revert to the same restored picture until the end credits (when the Italian version goes soft again).

    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow
    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow
    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow
    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow
    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow
    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow
    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow
    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow
    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow
    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow
    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow
    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow
    Top: Old Mill Creek // Bottom: New Arrow

    Disc Specifications (as provided by Arrow):

    SPECIAL EDITION CONTENTS

    • New 2K restoration from the original 35mm camera negative
    • High Definition Blu-ray™ (1080p) presentation
    • Uncompressed mono 1.0 LPCM audio
    • Original English and Italian soundtracks, titles and credits
    • Newly translated English subtitles for the Italian soundtrack
    • Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing for the English soundtrack
    • New audio commentary by film critic, historian and theorist Stephen Prince
    • An Unconventional Western, a newly filmed interview with director Giancarlo Santi
    • The Last of the Great Westerns, a newly filmed interview with screenwriter Ernesto Gastaldi
    • Cowboy by Chance, an interview with the actor Alberto Dentice AKA Peter O’Brien
    • Out of the Box, a newly filmed interview with producer Ettore Rosboch
    • The Day of the Big Showdown, a newly filmed interview with assistant director Harald Buggenig
    • Saxon City Showdown, a newly filmed video appreciation by the academic Austin Fisher
    • Original Italian and international theatrical trailers
    • Extensive image gallery featuring stills, posters, lobby cards and home video sleeves, drawn from the Mike Siegel Archive and other collections
    • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Matt Griffin

    FIRST PRESSING ONLY: Illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by Kevin Grant and original reviews


    A/V Out.

    Get it at Amazon:
    If you enjoy reading Cinapse, purchasing items through our affiliate links can tip us with a small commission at no additional cost to you.

    The Grand Duel [Arrow Video Blu-ray]: https://amzn.to/2oAV7Ui

    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.

    https://cinapse.co/keoma-1976-blu-ray-screen-comparisons-arrow-video-vs-mill-creeks-2012-release-423be74ac50b

  • LIGHT OF MY LIFE: An Intimate Drama That’s Also Y: THE LAST MAN in Reverse

    LIGHT OF MY LIFE: An Intimate Drama That’s Also Y: THE LAST MAN in Reverse

    A father and daughter navigate a hellscape

    Children Of Men. The Road. A Quiet Place. Leave No Trace. All of these films come to mind and heavily influence writer/director/star Casey Affleck’s post-apocalyptic drama Light Of My Life. Fortunately, the 2019 film holds up well in comparison to those staggering achievements in cinema, while not quite equalling them.

    We open with Rag (Ann led to Raggedy Ann led to Rag) and Dad during story time in a tent in the middle of nowhere. Dad (Casey Affleck) struggles to tell a story that will please his increasingly smart and self aware daughter. Rag (Anna Pniowsky, impressing in her first screen performance) refuses to let the story be about her, and senses when Dad’s thin metaphors really are stories about her. She also calls him out when a story that was supposed to be about a female character just ends up being about a male character instead. It’s a long and claustrophobic sequence never leaving the interior of the small tent. It’s our introduction to the only two major characters in this high concept, intimate tale of the apocalypse.

    Our protagonists live in a world in which women caught some kind of plague, and they’re all gone. All except Rag and rumors. Naturally Dad has become consumed by his role as protector and provider. It’s all he lives for, never allowing himself a moment’s reprieve. Never taking any risks that might endanger Rag, even if it means isolation and lack of small comforts. Rag is dressed like a boy and keeps her hair short. The pair has all kinds of signals, contingency plans, and predetermined escape routes for everywhere they go. But it’s been years since the plague, and Rag is becoming a young woman. Puberty isn’t far off, and Dad really doesn’t have a long term plan for navigating this ravaged and woman-less world. His consumption with protecting Rag at any cost is veering into obsession and he’s losing sight of their humanity.

    Light Of My Life is incredibly meditative in its pacing, bordering on languid. What little does happen, plot-wise, in the first half of the film simply establishes the world they’re navigating and gives us lots of insight into our leads, their dynamic together, and even glimpses into a time before the plague when Elisabeth Moss (Mom) was still there.

    Many will dismiss Light Of My Life outright due to sexual harassment claims against Affleck. I certainly begrudge no one if this is the choice they make. Some may scoff at Affleck attempting to tell a story that deals so directly with female identity, gender dynamics, and parenthood in light of the claims against him. In that regard, I’d say this is also their right. I’ve found Affleck to be a remarkable screen talent and find the allegations against him troubling, but also found myself very drawn to the premise of this intimate film.

    Ultimately Light Of My Life uses the apocalypse as somewhat of a metaphor for parenting, as well as for letting our girls grow up and come into their own despite our instincts to shelter and protect them. As a father of a young daughter myself, I couldn’t help but empathize deeply with our characters’ plight and get extremely emotionally invested in their journey. Dad makes incredible sacrifices to raise his daughter, and proves his unending devotion to her time and again. But this isn’t a movie about a heroic and selfless father. It’s about a young woman coming of age in a world that wants to eat her alive and commodify her. Pniowsky proves an excellent performer and gives Oscar-winner Affleck a run for his money. Rag is a well-realized and complex young woman and Affleck’s screenplay gives plenty of room for our leads to achieve dimensionality even if it’s ultimately the performances that really sell the characters. Rag’s child-like purity keeps her dad sane, but it’s her increasing maturity and ability to lead the way that will provide their only hope of salvation.

    There’s danger and brutality in Light Of My Life, but it’s nigh impossible to consider this a thriller. It’s quiet, slight, and very character-focused. The film has an extremely small cast and was likely inexpensive, though also likely remained very challenging to create. It’s not perfect. There’s an enormous amount of time spent with Rag and Dad’s storytime. Some of that stuff probably wasn’t as subtle as Affleck may have hoped it would be, and it went on very long. I also found myself occasionally really disliking the look of the film and couldn’t quite tell if it was due to choices in cinematography and framing, or if it was that digital and cheap look that sometimes comes across in home video experiences.

    In the end, I found it to be a powerful viewing experience. There’s no question there’s some subjectivity involved here as thoughts of my own beautiful and whip-smart little daughter crashed into my psyche. I couldn’t help but wonder what I’d do if I were Dad. Would I even be strong enough to survive as far as they have when we meet them? Would I make some of the same mistakes Dad is making? Would my love for my daughter stand up to the crushing weight of a world gone wrong?

    And yet the simplicity of the tale and the high concept it’s nestled in do offer it up in comparison to other great high concept apocalypse and/or father-daughter films, and it often does not match the greatness of them. Even the comic book epic Y: The Last Man, a gender-reversed scenario that closely mirrors this story, feels more grand in scope and successful in execution. The very recent father-daughter drama Leave No Trace, or even Mickey And The Bear both feel more akin to this film than its apocalyptic counterparts. But even if Light Of My Life doesn’t cohere as strongly as those films do, there’s a lot of richness to be found here.

    Those who choose not to engage in Affleck’s work would do well to seek out some of the films I’ve compared Light Of My Life to. Each are fantastic in their own ways. If the concept of this film intrigues you, however, I’d recommend giving it a shot. There’s some real depth of emotion and powerful human lessons explored.

    The Package

    Light Of My Life has absolutely no bonus content whatsoever, though it’s exciting that it did get a high definition home video release. I recommend the film but this experience could likely be undertaken via a digital download or eventual streaming service and the Blu-ray purchase probably isn’t necessary for most curious seekers.

    And I’m Out.


    Light Of My Life is now available on Digital and On Demand and available on Blu-ray & DVD October 8th from Paramount

  • KIND HEARTS AND CORONETS: A Comedy Classic about Chopping Down the Family Tree [Blu Review]

    KIND HEARTS AND CORONETS: A Comedy Classic about Chopping Down the Family Tree [Blu Review]

    Alec Guinness’ hilarious eight-character/victim performance finds new life on Kino’s new release

    As a longtime devotee of Star Wars and a newfound admirer of Bridge Over the River Kwai, I was eager to check out a first-time viewing of Alec Guinness’ multi-character performances in Kind Hearts and Coronets. This was my first exposure to Guinness’ Ealing Comedies in general — of which Kino has also recently released The Lavender Hill Mob and The Man in the White Suit alongside this film. I’m glad to say that after Kind Hearts and Coronets, I certainly need to check out the others: Kind Hearts and Coronets is a delightfully dark comedy featuring a king’s ransom of fantastic performances by Guinness as well as leads Dennis Price, Joan Greenwood, and Valerie Hobson.

    Louis Mazzini is hell-bent on revenge. After Louis’ mother married the Italian Opera singer who fathered him, she was forsaken by her family, the ruling D’Ascoynes of Chalfont, Louis’ mother was subsequently denied her birthright and burial in the family crypt. Now denied the respect and dignity of the woman he loves, Mazzini endeavors to kill off the immediate D’Ascoyne relatives that stand between him and ruling the D’Ascoyne estate.

    Guinness is a comedic powerhouse in Kind Hearts and Coronets, infusing his eight members of the D’Ascoyne family with individualized smarmy wit. Surprisingly, though, Dennis Price manages to outperform Guinness as much as he outlives his many incarnations — despite being a heartless serial killer at his core, Price ensures that Louis is endlessly hilariously relatable and charming. No matter how many people he kills, success permanently seems to elude him — a fact exacerbated by the two loves of his life, Sibella (played by a delightfully venomous Joan Greenwood) and Lady Edith (a headstrong, regal Valerie Hobson). The film is rife with endless variations of gallows humor, and writer-director Robert Hamer always knows just how to surprise the viewer with another unexpected and consistently devious plot to off another of Guinness’ characters.

    Long regarded as a crown jewel of British comedy and long-absent from video release since the Criterion DVD went out of print, Kind Hearts and Coronets makes a welcome return to shelves. Hopefully it will rightfully claim a place among viewers’ collections without leaving too populous of a body trail in its wake.

    Video: Kino presents Kind Hearts and Coronets in an 1080/24p HD master, which appears to have been sourced from the 2011 StudioCanal Blu-ray. Some imperfections and scratches are present, but on the whole this is a vibrant transfer rich in varied grays and blacks. It was once reported on some sites that this edition was to receive the recent 4K restoration released by StudioCanal in the UK, but this doesn’t appear to be the case. However, Kino Lorber looks to be working something out with StudioCanal to clarify this issue.

    Audio: Kind Hearts and Coronets is presented in 2.0 DTS-HD Master audio. The track is free of clicks and hiss typical of older films, leaving the film’s poisoned honey dialogue crisp and clear for enjoyment.

    Special Features:

    Audio Commentary by Film Historian Kat Ellinger: A newly recorded audio commentary by the Diabolique Magazine editor that dives deep into the history of Ealing comedies, Kind Hearts and Coronets’ production history, the troubled life of lead Dennis Price, and an elaboration on the themes that make this serial killer tale so charming and endearing.

    Introduction by John Landis: A succinct introduction by the director on the film’s comedic tone and Alec Guiness’ multiple performances.

    Those British Faces — Dennis Price: An episode of British TV series Those British Faces profiling Kind Hearts & Coronets’ main lead, from the start of his career in Post-War England to an ignominious end in the 1970s.

    Audio Interview with Cinematographer Douglas Slocombe: A half-hour archival audio interview with Kind Hearts and Coronets’ cinematographer, ported over from the Region 2 Vintage Classics DVD.

    Alternate American Ending: A version of the film’s conclusion for audiences across the pond, which makes the film’s final wry joke on its protagonist’s fate far more explicit.

    Theatrical Trailers: Included are Kind Hearts and Coronets, The Lavender Hill Mob, The Man in the White Suit, and The Captain’s Paradise.


    Kind Hearts and Coronets is now available on Blu-ray courtesy of Kino Lorber Studio Classics.

  • Trick or Treat 2019: Two Cents Hears the Maddest Story Ever Told, SPIDER BABY!

    Trick or Treat 2019: Two Cents Hears the Maddest Story Ever Told, SPIDER BABY!

    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

    The following are some of the names Spider Baby was released under during its strange, delayed, long roll-out into theaters:

    The Liver Eaters

    Attack of the Liver Eaters

    Cannibal Orgy

    The Maddest Story Ever Told!

    None of these titles are especially accurate to Jack Hill’s film, but in fairness, it must have been awfully difficult to come up with any title that could encapsulate this particular mad brew.

    Spider Baby stars Lon Chaney Jr. as Bruno, the chauffeur and caretaker of the Merrye family, a once esteemed family that has been laid low by a mysterious disease. Known as “Merrye Syndrome”, the illness strikes members of the family around the time they turn ten and causes their minds and bodies to regress to primitive states. Currently, the last generation of the family includes only hateful Elizabeth (Beverly Washburn), silent, savage Ralph (Sid Haig), and Virginia (Jill Banner) the titular “spider baby” whose favorite game involves wrapping strangers up in her nets and then ‘stinging’ them with some carving knives.

    Bruno has managed to create a bizarre sort of peace with these doomed, demented children, but that peace is destroyed by the arrival of distant family members, greedy Emily (Carol Ohmart) and bemused Peter (Quinn K. Redeker). Emily is convinced that “Merrye Syndrome” is a hoax meant to cover up a vast inheritance she wishes to snag a piece of for herself.

    She’s wrong, but just how wrong won’t become clear until the body count has stacked awfully high.

    This berserk Gothic was filmed in 1964 but due to legal issues it was not released until almost 1968. The film languished in obscurity for years, but has steadily amassed something of a following thanks to being the debut solo directorial film from Hill (who went on to direct stuff like Coffy, Foxy Brown, and The Big Doll House), one of Lon Chaney Jr.’s final films (and including arguably his best performance), and introducing the world to the captivating wonder that is Sid Haig’s face.

    Haig passed away recently, leaving behind multiple generations of fans who revere him in everything from his dozens of character-actor roles throughout the ‘60s and ’70s (including many of Hill’s films), to his renaissance as the iconic Captain Spaulding in Rob Zombie’s Devil’s Rejects series.

    We thought it only fitting to begin this year’s October series with a hat-tip to the big man himself. So join us as we get wrapped up by Spider Baby.

    Next Week’s Pick:

    Join us next week as we continue the Trick or Treat series with our first ever Halloween-season documentary.

    Horror Noire is available to stream on Shudder! And please don’t miss out on any of our other October offerings.

    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!


    Our Guests

    Chris Chipman:

    Wow…Spider Baby sure is…something!

    I am a sucker for the films of this era, particularly the horror/sci-fi fare that begin with a fair amount of exposition as to the oddities you are about to see. Spider Baby doesn’t disappoint in this regard, beginning with our “hero” Uncle Peter reading about the condition members of his family suffer where they regress in behavior to that of a child, followed by an animalistic (and cannibalistic) state.

    All of this, of course, is just an excuse to have a veritable house of horrors at the Merrye estate. Cannibalistic relatives locked in the basement, Sid Haig in an early and quite amazing physical performance and our “star” the daughter who plays “spider” with her victims by trapping them and cutting them up are just some of the treats that await in this insane asylum of a movie.

    What I found most striking, however, was how badly our hero is portrayed. Obvious drunk driving, extremely inappropriate physical encounters with his niece and allowing members of his family to be blown to pieces to eradicate the bad branch of his bloodline are only some of his negative marks on screen. I guess that softens the blow of the Twilight-Zoneish ending, but I feel bad for his poor wife…

    Verdict: TREAT (@TheChippa)


    The Team

    Justin Harlan:

    From the opening moments of the theme song, sung by the late great Lon Chaney, you know you’re in for a bizarre treat with Spider Baby. An early Sid Haig role, he shines as one of the deranged Merrye children. Haig was a Jack Hill staple in this era and it’s easy to see why.

    Somehow I’d gone through my life up until now without seeing this predecessor and strong influence to the Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Having seen it, the influence on TCM and other great genre fare is undeniable. It’s a black comedy with horrific moments and legitimate thrills. The characters are extremely interesting and well drawn. In fact, it’s not only an influence to what came after it, but it’s also a significantly better and more enjoyable film than many of them.

    I’ll miss Sid, but this is as good a time as any to dive into his early catalog and catch up on why he was considered a genre great long before Tarantino and Zombie brought him back to the scene. This film is a great start for the spooky season and a great way to celebrate a recently deceased legend.

    Verdict: TREAT (@thepaintedman)

    Brendan Foley

    Everyone who’s invoked Texas Chainsaw as a descendant of this one is bang on the money, but all I could think of while I was watching was that the Merrye family plays like the most demented sect of Addams Family cousins ever captured on film. It’s not just that they live in a big, spooky house filled with freaks and creeps, but the way Hill mines the juxtaposition between the family’s casual acceptance of their bizarre Gothic surroundings with their guests varying degrees of bafflement and disgust. I was a particularly big fan of Redeker as “Cousin Greg”, who responds to each new tidal wave of weirdness with a chipper, “boy, that’s neat!” attitude. Hill keeps his tone varying between horror and comedy, and shows a surprisingly deft hand in balancing the two out.

    Special mention has to be made of Lon Chaney Jr., delivering what I found to be easily his best performance. Chaney was always a weak-link in the classic Universal Monster movies, cast because of his name and clearly beaten down and aggravated by this fact. At a very rough-looking 60 or so, he was pretty near the finish line by the time he did this one and time had worked his face into a hangdog expression of infinite sorrow. But there’s a warmth and playfulness to Chaney in this film that wasn’t always present in his other work, and the result is that you can’t help but feel invested in poor Bruno and the doomed children he’s dedicated himself to protecting.

    Verdict: TREAT (@TheTrueBrendanF)

    Austin Vashaw:

    Spider Baby is actually a film I’ve kind of avoided for a long time. I’ve always taken an interest in seeing it, especially as a fan of Jack Hill, but I’ve always been repulsed by its aesthetic.

    As I’ve found is usually the case when I feel that way about classic horror movies (The Hills Have Eyes, The Last House on the Left) the film is actually much tamer and more palatable than what I’ve worked it up to be in my mind. In the case of the demented but gore-free Spider-Baby, it’s much more of a manic oddball comedy than a straight-up horror film,and its touted madness ends up being a ton of fun. As others have noted, it’s a more intense cousin of The Addams Family, and certainly a stylistic progenitor to The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, which stripped the comedic tone and emphasized the lurid nastiness.

    It’s also a delight as a meeting of generations — one of the last films for horror regular Lon Chaney Jr., but one of the first for both Sid Haig and director Jack Hill, who would go on to make many genre pictures both individually and together. In his later career, Haig would similarly take up that horror veteran mantle and collaborate with new blood Rob Zombie and his crew. Haig is a legend, and I’m glad to have finally caught him in one of his earliest and oddest roles.

    Verdict: TREAT (@Austin Vashaw)


    The Verdict:

    Trick: 0
    Treat: 4

    Unanimous verdict: TREAT!


    Next week’s pick:

    https://www.shudder.com/movies/watch/horror-noire-a-history-of-black-horror/4548652

  • THE GANGSTER, THE COP, THE DEVIL: It’s the Simple Pleasures

    THE GANGSTER, THE COP, THE DEVIL: It’s the Simple Pleasures

    A great idea executed solidly

    The cop is after the devil.

    The devil (a serial killer) randomly attacks the wrong man — the gangster.

    The gangster and the cop begrudgingly team up to catch the devil.

    It really is that simple.

    And while begrudging team ups between cops and gangsters really aren’t untrodden territory in the action-thriller-crime cinema landscape, it does feel fresh to throw the serial killer into the mix, not to mention handing the starring role over to Don Lee (aka Ma Dong-seok).

    Coming from relative newcomer, writer-director Won-Tae Lee, The Gangster, The Cop, The Devil feels like a pretty confident Korean crime film, and earns the buzz it has been receiving. Our titular cop, Tae-suk Jung, is played by the handsome and swagger-filled actor Mu-yeol Kim. This performance puts him on the map for me, though he’s appeared in smaller roles in a couple of films I was familiar with. He’s the archetypal young, upstart detective here… eager to break the case, unwilling to listen to his nakedly corrupt police chief, and most importantly: certain that they’ve got a serial killer case on their hands even when no one else will give his theory the time of day. Kim plays the role with just the right balance of disdain for both authority and gangsters, as well as the skills to back up his cocksure attitude.

    Ma Dong-seok has cemented a somewhat legendary status in Korean cinema in an extraordinarily brief amount of time. It was just 2016 when he broke out with his star-making supporting performance in international smash hit Train To Busan. Since then he’s become a hot property and a leading man to watch out for. He fits into the role of gangster boss Dong-soo Jang effortlessly here. Much cooler-headed than his cop counterpart, Don Lee’s swagger is just as pronounced, just older, wiser, and on the other side of the law. When word gets out that he’s been attacked on the street by a “civilian”, he must catch the attacker and mete out street justice in order to save face.

    Since our cop’s co-workers won’t believe his serial killer theory, and since our gangster needs the cop’s intel, a shaky and twisty alliance is born. 2010’s I Saw The Devil showed us that a rip-roaring Korean film could be crafted out of a life and death standoff between a cop and a serial killer, and this film simply adds another ingredient into that mix. Dissimilar in tone, however, The Gangster, The Cop, The Devil is much more concerned with fun and entertainment, where I Saw The Devil digs down deep into the depths of the human psyche. On that note, I do feel like serial killer K (Sung-kyu Kim) lays a distant third fiddle here. He’s more of a foil or a Mcguffin than a fully fleshed out character. Kim plays him suitably creepily, but his motivations and psychology are pretty surface level. This feels a little insufficient here in 2019 when we’ve got the brilliance of Mindhunters to compare against.

    The hook here — the interplay between our three leads and the twists, action, and humor that can be wrung from it- is the end all and be all of The Gangster, The Cop, The Devil. It’s designed to entertain you, and it does a great job at that. Don Lee strides through this thing with the calm demeanor of a tough guy who could beat you to death with an angry glance. The constant male posturing and moralizing of Kim’s cop character interplays wonderfully with Lee’s confident gangster, and the race between them to find and take down K is never not exciting. Fans of Korean crime cinema will almost certainly have a blast with this title and both new(-ish) talent Won-Tae Lee and star Mu-yeol Kim are put on my radar with this film as well. Check this out at your earliest convenience, and don’t let the competition get there first.

    The Package

    Fairly bare bones in terms of bonus features, there are probably a combined total of 10 minutes of behind-the-scenes featurettes, character profiles, and trailers. It’s a good-looking movie, however, so the high definition release is very appreciated. You’ll need to make the call yourself if you’d want to take the plunge to buy this one versus stream or rent it, but I’ll be pleased to keep this one in my collection as a highly re-watchable ride.

    And I’m Out


    The Gangster, The Cop, The Devil is now available on Blu-ray and Digital from Well Go USA

  • Announcing Two Cents Film Club’s Selections for Trick or Treat 2019!

    Announcing Two Cents Film Club’s Selections for  Trick or Treat 2019!

    This year’s edition of our annual Halloween series may be our wildest yet!

    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.

    Announcing our full lineup for Two Cents Film Club’s annual TRICK OR TREAT Halloween series!

    It’s our favorite time of the year here at Two Cents! Every October we try to top ourselves in curating a diverse series of spooky picks both new and old, from cult classics and major favorites to deep cuts from dark corners, and invite our readers to join in on the fun!

    Would you like to be a guest in our film club column? Simply watch and send your under-200-word reviews on the selections to twocents(at)cinapse.co!


    Week 1: SPIDER BABY (1968)

    First up, in memoriam of the great Sid Haig who passed away on September 21, is Jack Hill’s bizarre cult classic, “the maddest story ever told”, Spider Baby! Streaming on Amazon Prime and free (ad supported) on Tubi.

    Deadline: Oct 3

    Week 2: HORROR NOIRE (2019)

    Our second pick is our FIRST EVER Trick or Treat documentary selection, the celebrated Horror Noire: A History of Black Horror, exploring black voices in horror cinema! Streaming on Shudder.

    Deadline: October 10

    Week 3: MANDY (2018)

    Then it’s time to RAGE WITH CAGE and PANAVISION WITH PANOS COSMATOS. We’re watching Mandy! Available streaming on Shudder.

    Deadline: October 17

    Week 4: LAIR OF THE WHITE WORM

    What do you get when you mix a classic Victorian tale by Bram Stoker with the outrageous style of Ken Russell? We keep the surreal weirdness going with our fourth Trick or Treat pick, The Lair of the White Worm! Available streaming on Amazon Prime.

    Deadline: October 24

    Week 5: THE GATE

    Finally, we’ll cap things off with a sure crowd-pleaser, the most fun you’ll ever have accidentally opening up a portal to hell — The Gate! Streaming on Amazon Prime and free (ad supported) on Tubi.

    Deadline: October 31


    The best part of Two Cents Film Club is that YOU are invited! Just watch the films (any or all of them!) and send us your “2¢” — a review under 201 words — with a verdict of TRICK or TREAT, at [email protected], by Thursday of each week!

  • Fantastic Fest: THE VAST OF NIGHT is Spellbinding Sound-Driven Sci-Fi

    Fantastic Fest: THE VAST OF NIGHT is Spellbinding Sound-Driven Sci-Fi

    Director Andrew Patterson forgoes sci-fi spectacle for captivating communal campfire stories in a remarkable debut

    To me, one of the most magical hours in Pop Culture history is Orson Welles’ 1938 radio broadcast of The War of the Worlds. For a brief moment, radio audiences across the country were plunged into a world where science fiction crossed into reality, a world of terrifying and wondrous possibilities. It’s been decades since that broadcast, and radio’s given way to film and TV. Both media have the power to depict what radio could only describe — and modern sci-fi spectacles have also attempted an occasional sense of gritty realism. But one can’t help but think something was lost in the transition from radio to film: a sense of imagination that creators entrusted their audiences to have, one that allowed their stories to take deeper emotional root. Director Andrew Patterson’s debut feature, The Vast of Night, attempts to bridge that divide, creating a realistic sci-fi film rooted in the past that places as much (if not more) of an emphasis on its soundscape than its visuals. It’s a Sorkin walk-and-talk through a Bogdanovich-ian small town on game night as much as it is a Close Encounters gaze into the unknown. The result is one of the most immersive moviegoing experiences I’ve had this year, let alone at Fantastic Fest, and it’s one I eagerly await sharing with friends and family.

    Pitched as a TV episode of Twilight Zone knockoff Paradox Theater, The Vast of Night follows radio host Everett and switchboard operator Fay as they investigate the source of a mysterious signal across the local airwaves while the rest of their small town congregates for the night’s big high school basketball game. Their investigation doesn’t go the expected Stranger Things route of exposing local conspiracies or comically conspicuous infiltrations of military bases. Rather, much of Fay and Everett’s work is spent listening: to the faint flickers of electronic signals, to phone calls of something in the sky heading for town, to the stories of those who have witnessed their potentially extraterrestrial visitors firsthand. Each story, though, brings Fay and Everett that much closer to the prospect of seeing something out of this world, infusing the grounded, ordinary world of The Vast of Night with a remarkable sense of excitement and immediacy.

    The film rarely leaves the side of Fay and Everett, played by Sierra McCormick and Jake Horowitz as small town high school versions of His Girl Friday’s Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell. Everett’s the local newbie DJ working the graveyard shift at radio station WOTW (I see what you did there, Patterson). Fay works the night shift at the town switchboard, and has a burgeoning interest in radio reporting that leads her to turn to Everett as a mentor. Most of The Vast of Night’s endearing moments are spent away from the plot to look at the bubbling chemistry between the two; Fay’s admiration of Everett’s radio-gab prowess fueling his own slick confidence, and both see careers in radio as their ticket out of their stuck-in-time small town. Much like the fast-talking adolescent sleuths in fellow Fantastic Fest attendee Rian Johnson’s debut film Brick, Fay and Everett are kids eager to prove their mettle by taking on the impossible, solving larger-than-life mysteries out of the watchful eye of adults. The two are immediately captivating on screen, especially thanks to screenwriting duo James Montague and Craig W. Sanger’s whip-crack hard-boiled dialogue. Between Fay’s wide-eyed enthusiasm and Everett’s effortless coolness, The Vast of Night’s script infuses the repetitive, detailed tics of small-town gossip with the overlapping verbal chaos of Aaron Sorkin or Howard Hawks.

    At the same time, though, Montague and Sanger’s script knows precisely when its characters need to shut up and listen, plunging themselves and their unseen audience into a silence that’s mined by sound designer David Rosenblad for aural gold. The Vast of Night frequently invites us to lean in and listen, to heighten our listening senses and experience the real-time immediacy of the characters. We search the vacant airwaves, searching for a sign, any sign, of something lurking out there in the dark — a patience that is frequently rewarded in interesting ways.

    The best moments of The Vast of Night unite its love of dialogue and storytelling with its sound design ambitions, creating moments that harken back to the rapt attention given to Orson Welles’ chaos-inducing broadcast. Great writing allows imaginary characters to convince you of impossible things; in its most audacious moments, The Vast of Night uses either long, static takes or even removing visuals entirely so that the audience has no choice but to listen to the characters tell their stories. The dialogue completely draws you into a world of shadowy government intrigue, class and racial tension, and how these otherworldly visitors’ visits work — all without leaving the room the characters are in. Plunged in the darkness of the theater, we’re swallowed up by the surrounding voices in the dark, our imaginations painting a far more detailed picture than the biggest CGI wonder could ever depict. It’s a communal ghost story expertly told.

    But don’t worry — The Vast of Night contains its own visual flairs, too. There’s moments where, propelled by the immediacy of the dialogue, the camera takes off like a rocket through this small town. M.I. Litten-Menz’s camera explores the nooks and crannies left abandoned as everyone gathers for the big game, savoring each of the period details constructed by Production Designer Adam Dietrich and Art Director Jonathan Rudak. Frantic, fast-paced editing by Junius Tully has a knack for maintaining the film’s exciting tone as well as an unexpected comedic timing.

    While the Fantastic Fest entries by established auteurs like Bong Joon-Ho and Robert Eggers may top the final lists of those who attend (as they did mine), films like The Vast of Night are the ones I end up remembering and revisiting most. It’s a sci-fi story electrifyingly told, one that seeks unexpected and innovative ways of sparking a wonder in its audience that may have grown dormant after exposure to endless big-budget franchises.

    The Vast of Night had its Texas Premiere at Fantastic Fest 2019. Amazon Studios will release the film theatrically in 2020.

  • Fantastic Fest 2019: KNIVES OUT is Practically Perfect in Every Way

    Fantastic Fest 2019: KNIVES OUT is Practically Perfect in Every Way

    Rian Johnson stuns with the best of the festival

    Sure, Knives Out looked like a fun romp with an amazing cast coming from Rian Johnson, a writer-director with absolutely nothing to prove. Yet somehow I just wasn’t expecting this closing night film to become my very favorite of Fantastic Fest.

    Knives Out is that rare bird of a studio film that is not in any way based on a pre-existing intellectual property and which was produced for what would likely be considered in the “mid-budget” range. Relying on Rian Johnson’s name in his first post-Star Wars outing, and banking on an absolutely stacked cast full of both A-list and up-and-coming talent, Knives Out has plenty going for it. Add to that the fact that the film is very much an old-school murder mystery that, while remaining an original property, wears its admiration for Agatha Christie mystery novels on its sleeve, and you’ve got a film that will almost certainly appeal to a broad demographic of moviegoers as well. These are all observations one can make of the film from a distance or based solely on the trailer. And these were all elements I counted as appealing when assessing my own excitement about the film.

    The beauty of Knives Out, however, is in the script and the execution of said script. Snappy and witty from moment one, Johnson proves that he’s one of Hollywood’s greatest modern assets by penning an absolutely stunning screenplay. Knives Out balances quite a wide array of characters seemingly effortlessly. Johnson himself said this plot featured more characters than he was used to writing for in the Fantastic Fest Q&A. But even with such an expansive cast, everyone feels vital to the complicated murder mystery plot. And about that plot. Sure, it takes place in a grand old mansion and anyone can be a suspect. It’s familiar and comfortably falls into the murder mystery genre. But this thing twists and turns at a rapid pace and is virtually guaranteed to surprise even the most avid mystery solver.

    Just as important, Johnson effortlessly builds in societal commentary that burns with relevance even as it celebrates old school tropes. Amidst this very broad array of talent, the cast is still very white and loaded to the brim with privileged and wealthy characters, mostly members of the Thrombey clan, the patriarch of which (Christopher Plummer having a blast as Harlan Thrombey) has been discovered dead of a suspected suicide. Yet the central character of the whole narrative quickly proves to be Marta Cabrera (Ana de Armas, Blade Runner 2049), Harlan’s personal nurse and, by all accounts, a “part of the family”. It will be Marta and private investigator Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig continuing the hot streak of playing southern characters he began with Logan Lucky) who take center stage and star in this ensemble.

    Blanc has been brought in to investigate Harlan’s death, but even he is unsure of who has hired him. It was an anonymous payment that brought him to the Thrombey estate. The brilliant script quickly introduces us to a huge array of characters and catches us up on the details of Harlan’s death and final days through a series of police interrogations in which we meet Detectives Elliott (LaKeith Stanfield) and Wagner (Noah Segan), as well as Blanc. It’s here where the nuances of each character begin to shine through, and the script also quickly begins jumping around in time with breathtaking ease. Harlan had hosted an 85th birthday party and been found dead the next morning. The interviews begin the following week. And we’ll bounce around in time routinely as Knives Out’s delightfully twisty and complex narrative play out.

    De Armas turns in a star-making lead performance and its through her plotline that Johnson builds in some of his most incisive commentary. Harlan Thrombey dearly loved Marta and confided in her as a true friend. With his blood family, however, relations were not so good. Knives Out comments on old money versus new money, white privilege, and even occasionally veers into outright political commentary as some Thrombeys hold very right wing views, others left wing views, but all privileged beyond belief and varying degrees of insufferable as a result. The subtle and not-so-subtle ways in which Marta is made to feel “other” or “less than” are many, but de Armas’ performance is filled with dignity and Marta is written with a fair amount of agency and pluck.

    The entire cast turns in brilliant work as befitting a script that allows each to shine. It’s too much for one review to lay out each actor and character and communicate how they’re related, what makes them tick, and what motives they may have had for ending Harlan Thrombey’s life, but let’s just say that no one is above suspicion and Johnson is going to keep you guessing until the very end. He uses his post-Star Wars clout to assemble an absolute dream cast, lets them all loose to have fun with their characters, and makes every last dollar spent show up on that screen. It’s almost too hard to even single out a few actors as shining especially brightly, but Jamie Lee Curtis, Chris Evans, Toni Colette, and Don Johnson are pretty unforgettable. And the various ways in which [Rian] Johnson keeps you guessing feel fresh and new even in a dusty genre that’s been selling airport paperbacks since before there were airports.

    Knives Out truly has it all. Wildly entertaining from start to finish, with a mystery that keeps you guessing, a cast for the ages, and a wickedly smart sense of humor that skewers the aloof and privileged, while ultimately also having a heart of gold that celebrates goodness and human decency — this isn’t simply fantastic entertainment, it’s one of the very best films 2019 has to offer. Now we must all support this film in hopes that Johnson will pen many more adventures of Benoit Blanc in the future.

    And I’m Out.

  • Fantastic Fest: THE LODGE is a Beautifully Bleak Horror Film

    Fantastic Fest: THE LODGE is a Beautifully Bleak Horror Film

    Veronika Franz and Severin Fiala’s second feature is some ice-cold, nerve-shredding cinema

    A family succumbs to madness after a blizzard traps them in their mountain hunting lodge. It’s a classic horror premise, with variations employed to great effect by directors from Stanley Kubrick to John Carpenter. The Lodge is the latest entry in this chilly canon, but what sets the film apart is how writer-directors Veronika Franz and Severin Fiala and writer Sergio Casci involve The Lodge’s unwitting audience in an unbearably tense game of confirming and subverting expectations.

    Grace (Riley Keough) just wants things to get better. She’s engaged to Richard (Richard Armitage), the psychiatrist who not only helped Grace move on from her childhood in a suicide cult, but turned her experience into a series of bestselling books. Their relationship, however, had its hand in the tragic end of Richard’s previous marriage — which Richard’s children Aidan (Jaeden Martell) and Mia (Lia McHugh) still resent Grace for. In the hopes of patching things up, Richard drops the new family at his hunting lodge for Christmas. Richard plans to come back and join them once he takes care of some work in the city, and Grace looks forward to finally bonding with Aidan and Mia. But this idyllic stay soon becomes a nightmare when a blizzard hits and the family’s clothes and food go missing. Is Grace having a relapse? Is this just one of the children’s games? Or is there a more sinister presence hiding within the shadows of the lodge?

    From its shocking opening scenes on, The Lodge is a film that plays with the contextual clues an audience feeds on to form opinions about characters. Alicia Silverstone appears to be the main character — until she isn’t; it’s actually a film about Aidan and Mia, who dread Grace’s delayed arrival. Until the film arrives at its titular location, Grace is seen at a distance, through frosted windows and archival footage of her involvement with the cult. Before we even meet her, Grace is as much of a villain to us as she is to the children who hate and fear her. To that end, the children’s passive and intentional cruelty towards her feels oddly justified — until it isn’t. It’s a film whose perspective is endlessly shifting, leaving its audience on tenterhooks throughout each scene until the next subtly climactic action that reorients our worldview.

    It’s a strange effect — even though The Lodge invites us to invest ourselves in the three leads (and boy, do we), there’s a sinister undercurrent that nothing they say or do can be trusted. It’s one aspect of the film’s stellar performances by Riley Keough, Jaeden Martell, and Lia McHugh. All three are tasked with the challenge of portraying characters that must come across as both victims and masterminds, a fine line which all actors walk well. Keough arguably has the most difficult job of the three, given how the film’s first third is so heavily biased against her. But once she’s actually on-screen, Keough imbues Grace with a fragile resolution reminiscent of Mia Farrow in Rosemary’s Baby. Grace comes across as a woman who’s salvaged some humanity out of weathering the unspeakable, and must suddenly contend with being a part of a family that wants nothing to do with her. As much as they engender our sympathy, Martell and McHugh are wonderfully insidious as the children — in the wake of tragedy and clearly forced to grow up faster than others, there’s the sense that Aidan and Mia are capable of doing whatever they can to survive, no matter who or what may get in their way.

    As The Lodge ratchets up the tension, perspective shifts once more from unpredictability to an unstoppable feeling of dread and anxiety. Rather than save its reveals for the last few minutes, The Lodge telegraphs its reveals early on, reveling in the later consequences of the characters’ hidden motivations. As a result, The Lodge goes from deeply unsettling to truly terrifying…not because we don’t know what might happen next, but because we do — as much as we wish we didn’t. One might argue that’s a sign of how The Lodge really respects its audience: it never presumes to know more than its audience, instead mining its horror out of the slow confirmation of the audience’s worst fears, becoming a gut wrenching watch long before the film’s final act. Even more so than the directors’ previous film Goodnight Mommy, The Lodge is an unapologetically, relentlessly bleak as hell watch, one made all the more memorable by the commitment of the talent both behind and in front of the camera.

    The Lodge had its Texas Premiere at Fantastic Fest 2019. NEON will release the film in theaters February 7, 2020.

  • Fantastic Fest 2019: IRON FISTS AND KUNG FU KICKS Interview With Director Serge Ou

    Fantastic Fest 2019: IRON FISTS AND KUNG FU KICKS Interview With Director Serge Ou

    Scott Adkins is discussed, as is Cynthia Rothrock, break dancing, gun fu, & more

    It was one of those screenings where you sit down with one set of expectations and come away with a whole different perspective. Iron Fists And Kung Fu Kicks is an up and coming documentary about kung fu cinema and the Hong Kong film industry that played Fantastic Fest 2019 and will hit Netflix within the year. From the producers of such titles as Machete Maidens Unleashed and Electric Boogaloo, this documentary makes a surprisingly emotional argument for the world-changing impact that kung fu cinema has had on pop culture. With action cinema being my favorite genre, and the movie having such an impact on me, I was thrilled to get the opportunity to sit down with director Serge Ou (all the way from Australia to be at Fantastic Fest this year) and talk kung fu movies. I hope you’ll enjoy the conversation as much as I did.

    Ed Travis: I knew going into Fantastic Fest, “I’m going to check this movie [Iron Fists And Kung Fu Kicks] out.” When [Cinapse] did our most anticipated lists this was up there. But I really was just expecting a nice little educational film. Like I’m going to see things I love because I love kung fu movies and I’m going to learn a few things. But I just thought the film was very emotionally impactful. I was like “I’m not expecting to be feeling this emotional in this kung fu movie documentary”. So I just thought, man, let’s sit down and chat.

    Serge Ou: That’s so nice of you. And such kind words. Because filmmakers just want to connect with an audience. That sort of feedback is priceless. It gives me absolute warm fuzzies. Because that’s why you do it. You know what I mean? And if you can find that, that’s so rewarding. So thank you.

    Ed Travis: I looked up your IMDb and it looks like mostly Australian and New Zealand kinds of projects. How’d you get involved in this project?

    Serge Ou: Pop culture is a really big thing for me. A couple of years ago I made a doc called Stranded about the influence of Australian punk on the global punk scene. That’s a big thing for me because I was a first wave punk rocker back in the day. Punk has been really important to me. But what I loved about that was the subculture thing and how it seeped into the mainstream and it’s affected the mainstream in peculiar ways. And this film… look, I’ve always loved the [kung fu] genre and this to me does a very similar thing. And that’s what really turned me on. We had this opportunity and it was like, yes, I really want to tell this story. And I kind of knew the story I wanted to tell. It was just a blessing. The stars aligned.

    Ed Travis: So this was a package that was presented to you, like, “Hey, this movie’s going to be made and we’d love for you to direct” or can you talk about how that all worked out?

    Serge Ou: The producer, Veronica Fury, has made several films in this space. Machete Maidens Unleashed, she produced, about the Philippines. And Electric Boogaloo, which is about Cannon films. She’s my business partner. So we talk a lot about what we’d like to do so we came up with this and the opportunity arose. We spoke to XYZed… sorry, Z.

    Both: Laugh

    Serge Ou: They were keen, and Netflix were keen. So we had the opportunity to kick it and to go. The Melbourne International Film Festival is also really important for us because they came in as a partner and we premiered there just about a month ago.

    Ed Travis: So if Netflix were partners, does that mean this is going to be a Netflix film?

    Serge Ou: Yes. In December it’s on Netflix.

    Ed Travis: And is that global?

    Serge Ou: Yes, I believe so. I think only Australia and New Zealand is not on the list because we’ve got a distributor in Australia.

    Ed Travis: Great, so it’s going to be widely available for people to check out before too long. Very cool. In the film you follow some really interesting threads. I found the movie to be structured like “this inspired this, which inspired this, which inspired this”. It’s like never ending inspiration. That’s why I think I got so emotionally invested in it. So I’m learning some things like I assumed, but to see it all put together in this “A leads to B leads to C” structure was just really engaging. So can you talk about some of the thematic elements that, for you, really had to be in this movie? What were some non-negotiables?

    Serge Ou: I really wanted to talk about the breaking scene in New York. Because the rap component of the hip hop evolution is widely known. You’ve got Wu Tang and the RZA and that whole story is out there. But I wanted to share the connection to dance throughout the whole thing. Cheng Pei-Pei (Come Drink With Me) brings dance to the action. And Bruce Lee brings dance to his schtick. And I’m not saying that kung fu cinema was, you know, the origins of breaking. But there was this amazing influence that was happening there. And that’s something I really wanted to talk about. There’s a whole bunch of stuff I wanted to talk about but we couldn’t for different reasons.

    Ed Travis: What are some of those things?

    Serge Ou: Gun Fu. And the connection of John Woo and Chang Cheh. And this idea of bringing that operatic influence from Wuxia to create Gun Fu. It never panned out. We couldn’t quite get that all happening. And it was a duration thing. The Last Dragon was also really important to me because it kind of wrapped up that whole African-American New York thing. And how that sort of kicks into the mainstream. I love that idea, that subculture becomes influential on the mainstream and off it goes. We take that for granted. So that was unfortunate to have to leave out. And “girls with guns” was the other thing I really wanted to talk about. What’s interesting about that is that it’s really empowering for women. Then it gets co-opted and exploited. But I couldn’t get to those things. There’s a hundred things! Where do I begin? You know the genre. You could make a six part series on it.

    Ed Travis: Well… you know… please do!

    Both: Laughter.

    Ed Travis: You got a ton of really fantastic talent in your film. There are some obvious folks and some less obvious folks. It was really fantastic seeing people that I know and love pop up. Can you talk about some of that? Who was the toughest to track down? Who did you miss?

    Serge Ou: Andre Morgan was someone I really wanted to talk to. He doesn’t do a lot of press. He was one of the executives at Golden Harvest — the American with them. He was tight with Bruce Lee. He was actually formative in Bruce Lee’s career.

    Ed Travis: And he’s not someone I was really familiar with.

    Serge Ou: Totally. And he doesn’t do a lot of press. He lives in the mainland now. I reached out and he said, you’re not going to believe this but I’ll come to Hong Kong when you’re in Hong Kong. I wanted that perspective because Run Run Shaw is gone. I wanted someone who was part of that Bruce Lee story and he was an integral figure in that story. So he gave us that insight into what Bruce was going through, which was really good. Another one was Alan Hofmanus from Wakaliwood. Alan is in Uganda, you know. He has electricity about one day a week. Very poor internet, you know. He tries his best. He and I were talking for ages and we met when he was coming to New York so that aligned. It was a fortuitous thing. So they were a couple of the hardest interviews to secure.

    A couple of people couldn’t do it because of scheduling issues. I almost had Yuen Woo-Ping in Hong Kong. We were a day out. Which was kind of unfortunate because I would have loved to have spoken to him. But I didn’t pursue people like Jackie Chan or Donnie Yen or anyone like that because I think there’s the front of house story and there’s the back of house, sort of sloppy story. And that’s where I wanted to stay. And give some oxygen to some people who have done some incredible stuff and are doing some really cool stuff.

    Ed Travis: Yeah. I’m like the internet’s Scott Adkins cheerleader. I review all of his stuff and he’s been here at Fantastic Festival.

    Serge Ou: Scott is such a dude, you know? And he doesn’t get the kind of kudos he deserves. I don’t know if you agree with that.

    Ed Travis: Well actually that’s a question I was going to talk to you about. I grew up with action cinema. It’s just kind of what I’ve stuck with. Part of why I’ve stuck with covering it and writing about it on my own time is that I’ve felt like since the 2000s rolled around that action cinema hasn’t really gotten its due. I’m curious what you think some of the factors are culturally that have made it to where we are today. Like if Scott Atkins was born in, you know, the 50s and he was making the movies he’s making today in the 80s, they would be opening worldwide at megaplexes everywhere. I mean he’s kicking ass and he’s incredible. But his movies aren’t opening all around the world. What are some of your thoughts on the state of action cinema today?

    Serge Ou: That’s a really good question. It’s about timing. Like you said, if it was straight to video days, Scott would be Van Damme. He would be the guy. And not only that, but Scott can act. His work ethic is incredible. He can act and he’s really good at what he does. He should be a superstar. That’s what I’m hoping Ip Man 4 does for him. Because he deserves it. He so deserves it. But it’s really hard because a lot of stuff just doesn’t get any oxygen anymore with the Marvel universe out there. It’s just the sort of Marvel universe and a lot of a lot of stuff doesn’t get any oxygen anymore. That’s why fantastic Fest is the bomb. It takes risks. It shows films that are not going be able to fight in the multiplex scenario. But why isn’t Scott bigger? Why isn’t action cinema big right now? Let’s talk about John Wick. Explain that to me. Is that the most successful thing right now in action cinema?

    Ed Travis: Yeah! John Wick 3 is going off. And so you never know. Is that going to reignite something?

    Serge Ou: Maybe, you know, you see all these little pockets, right? It’s a kind of tough because I think in some ways it’s become more mainstream than ever. It’s always been mainstream, but it’s become more so. If you don’t get a gig in the Marvel universe, where do you go? Where do you go? Unless you’re someone bankable like Tom Cruise or Keanu, I don’t know what happens anymore. You know what I mean? Where there’s that kind of progression? Is that a bad answer?

    Ed Travis: No! I’ve thought often myself about CGI. I think CGI replaced the thrill of “Hey, we can see these people doing these fantastic things with their bodies on screen”. Now we can just do anything with CG so we have swung the whole pendulum to the other side. But I feel like we’re starting to get tired of CG and so someone like Tony Jaa, or Scott Adkins, who can do incredible things, are starting to come back. Part of why Keanu is so huge is that he’s doing this stuff. Audiences are starting to crave that reality again.

    Serge Ou: And isn’t that the beauty of the cinema? You look at it and it’s visceral and it’s real and it’s authentic. I really wanted to do this in the film, but looking at the Lethal Weapon fight with Gary Busey and Mel Gibson on the front lawn with the water going. It would have been interesting to dissect that, take it apart, show what the actors were doing and what they weren’t doing, and then put that against The Matrix. Why does The Matrix resonate? It’s because in Lethal Weapon they’re stunt guys half the time. Back then they didn’t have the commitment to learn that stuff. The Matrix did. There’s an authenticity that comes through. When you look back to the old kung fu stuff, they’re doing 40 moves in one shot. You can’t fake that.

    Ed Travis: I’ve been burning to ask this one. You got Don “The Dragon” Wilson in your film. That was great. And someone like Don or Cynthia Rothrock are perfect examples for this question. Wilson made nine Bloodfist movies. That’s a franchise that was popular enough at a certain point in time to get 9 installments. And yet I can’t get those movies in America today on home video. It makes me crazy. I’m wondering if you have a sense of what is going on there?

    Serge Ou: I don’t know. Because Roger Corman put those original films out. It’s a funny thing. China O’Brien is really hard to get.

    Ed Travis: I’ve been able to track down China O’Brien but I’ve never seen Yes Madam. I see it all over the internet in terms of memes and GIFs. It looks incredible. But why can’t I buy these things legally?

    Serge Ou: I think what happened in Hong Kong was a lot of these kind of films were made with shell companies. They popped up for a week for a film. And what I found in trying to license stuff was that a lot of times people didn’t know who owned what. So these companies have disappeared really quickly. They might have been made through Golden Harvest but as an independent. And they were doing 300 films a year, churning this stuff out. It kind of all got lost in the mix. I talk to some directors and they’re like “Sorry, I don’t remember that one”. For them it was just gig to gig to gig. They were into it, but that was just what they did. So a lot of those films are lost. You saw the quality of Yes Madam in our film was not great but that was the best we could get after months of searching. And the Bloodfist stuff is just rubbish quality. You need a Criterion to come in here.

    Ed Travis: I know. It just seems like a piece of the market that’s DOA. I just don’t know what’s going on there. You have Shudder, this super cool curated horror channel. Where is the action version of that? Let’s treat these things like royalty. The audience is all still around. Even the actors are still around doing their thing. Did you see VFW here at the festival? All those guys are kicking ass.

    Serge Ou: You’ve got some people that are picking up some bits and pieces. Isn’t Vinegar Syndrome doing some of that martial arts stuff?

    Ed Travis: Warner Archive just announced like a new Mister Nice Guy that’s going to be the original cut. There’s a company I’ve never even heard of before that just released this obscure John Woo movie Heroes Shed No Tears that looks gorgeous and I was able to buy it. It’s amazing, but I’d never heard of this company.

    Serge Ou: You’re right. You need a kind of curator that’s going to say “bang, we’re going to do these”. There’s a market! But it was really hard to find a lot of stuff. We all look at these films as treasures but they just made them and moved on.

    Ed Travis: Another thing that was really inspiring to me was just towards the end of your film where you started getting into what’s happening today, right now… the never ending chain of inspiration. You hinted at Wakaliwood and YouTube as possible futures for where this is going. Do you have any other thoughts on where you see the kung fu influence trickling out next?

    Serge Ou: It’s hard because looking at what happened in Hong Kong… it’s all moved to the mainland. The market is the mainland. And they’re very prescriptive about how things should be. So a lot of the Hong Kong filmmakers who are making martial arts films have to work on the mainland now because that’s where the money is. And so the films have kind of changed tone. They’re strangely political but in a different way than they used to be. And there’s some great martial arts in there, but it’s kind of a baton toss. We give it to you, we give it to you. What’s on the internet today is the exciting stuff.

    In the nineties we had the rogue independent filmmakers, you know, the Robert Rodriguez’s and the Quentin Tarantino’s who came out of that “Let’s make a film for five grand” framework. And now we’ve got the next wave, which is “let’s make a film for 800 bucks. On our phones”. The relay is happening and people are asking, what can I bring to it? And I think that’s where it’s going. What do you think is next?

    Ed Travis: That’s a great question. I love how you, in your film, communicate that kung fu is a catalyst and that it translates across any culture. In your film you had a moment talking about how there’s a fan somewhere in India today being inspired and who will make the next big action movie. And there are action guys in India doing some amazing stuff. Like there’s this movie Commando that I caught here at Fantastic Fest that featured this mind blowing guy who was doing his own stunts. So I do think it’s fascinating that this can come from any country.

    Serge Ou: It’s universal. You don’t need the dialogue. The stories are simple morality tales. Everyone gets it. And it’s expressed through kung fu, which I think is awesome.

    Ed Travis: Thank you very much.

    And I’m Out.