Recently in DVD Review Category
This is my review of the The Curious Case of Benjamin Button on Blu Ray. For more please check out www.behindthebigscreen.com.
This is the DVD Review of the Lionsgate DVD Screener BTK. Brought
to you by your friends at Behindthebigscreen.com and HauntedReport.com.
My first Blu-Ray movie. What an experience. Not only did it have amazing graphics and killer surround sound. It also froze everytime I tried to play the first chapter. Talk about a FAIL moment. However using the scene selection I was able to get started on this good little horror movie. But still not a good impression. Was it the disk or my player? Anyone else have this issue?
Anyway the producers of THE RING and DISTURBIA bring you a Korean Knock Off called THE UNINVITED. Okay to be fair I did like this film and it did have some cool parts. Heck their was even some wirework thrown in for a sweet effect. The plot goes like this following the suspicious death of their mother, sisters Anna and Alex become entangled in a deadly battle of wills when their father becomes engaged to Rachel,their mothers former caretaker/nurse. As the two sisters investigate Rachel's strange past, they areconfronted with ghostly visions, terrifying nightmares and deadly situations. All to an ending so it shockingit will make you shiver. All in all I like this film. Although it's one of those that sells itself as one thing and ends upbeing another. I thought "horror/slasher flick" and it ended up being more of a well done psychologicaldrama which was a good thing. The acting was okay although there was a lot of pouty teen in this film. Theone part that excelled was the locations and lighting. The lighting in this film was amazing.
The Blu Ray Disc extra features were not really there. Just your standard Deleted Scenes
and your standard Alternate Ending (which was lame). I did enjoy the Behind The Scenes
but it was more talking heads that anything else.
All in all I would say wait and rent this one. B-
Anyway the producers of THE RING and DISTURBIA bring you a Korean Knock Off called THE UNINVITED. Okay to be fair I did like this film and it did have some cool parts. Heck their was even some wirework thrown in for a sweet effect. The plot goes like this following the suspicious death of their mother, sisters Anna and Alex become entangled in a deadly battle of wills when their father becomes engaged to Rachel,their mothers former caretaker/nurse. As the two sisters investigate Rachel's strange past, they areconfronted with ghostly visions, terrifying nightmares and deadly situations. All to an ending so it shockingit will make you shiver. All in all I like this film. Although it's one of those that sells itself as one thing and ends upbeing another. I thought "horror/slasher flick" and it ended up being more of a well done psychologicaldrama which was a good thing. The acting was okay although there was a lot of pouty teen in this film. Theone part that excelled was the locations and lighting. The lighting in this film was amazing.
The Blu Ray Disc extra features were not really there. Just your standard Deleted Scenes
and your standard Alternate Ending (which was lame). I did enjoy the Behind The Scenes
but it was more talking heads that anything else.
All in all I would say wait and rent this one. B-
Wow. Seriously? Do you really hate me that much Barnholtz Entertainment? What did I do?
"BASELINE KILLER" was horrible. It looked like something straight off YouTube. And by that
I mean not YouTube HD, not YouTube online, more like pirated off of YouTube. The quality is
horrible, one of the girls is obviously wearing a wig, the diaglouge is boooring, and the killer?
He uses a shotgun with a scope? Why would a shotgun have a scope on it? Also serial killers
don't use guns? They like to get close to their victims.
Uggg. Sometimes the actors flub lines and they just keep going! Also this movie has the WORST sound fx I have EVER Heard. I must of laughed for like ten minutes when I heard them start "shooting". In "BASELINE KILLER" - inspired by the real life story of the Baseline Killer of Phoenix Arizona arrested in 2006 - a group of friends have reunited to share stories of their lives, gossip about lost friends and catch up on old times.Engrossed in lively banter, they are unaware of the threatening man stalking them in the darkness.
Seriously though. This is the worst movie I have watched in 2009. You know in High School when the drama dept puts on a really bad play and then someone tapes it? Well imagine watching that with really bad sound fx added. Sigh. I also enjoyed that in the end they simply go into titles to explain the rest of the story. No acting needed! FAIL. Well actually maybe that was a good thing.
Avoid this at all costs. FAIL.
Unless you just want to laugh. F+
Uggg. Sometimes the actors flub lines and they just keep going! Also this movie has the WORST sound fx I have EVER Heard. I must of laughed for like ten minutes when I heard them start "shooting". In "BASELINE KILLER" - inspired by the real life story of the Baseline Killer of Phoenix Arizona arrested in 2006 - a group of friends have reunited to share stories of their lives, gossip about lost friends and catch up on old times.Engrossed in lively banter, they are unaware of the threatening man stalking them in the darkness.
Seriously though. This is the worst movie I have watched in 2009. You know in High School when the drama dept puts on a really bad play and then someone tapes it? Well imagine watching that with really bad sound fx added. Sigh. I also enjoyed that in the end they simply go into titles to explain the rest of the story. No acting needed! FAIL. Well actually maybe that was a good thing.
Avoid this at all costs. FAIL.
Unless you just want to laugh. F+
So I was bored this weekend and hit the mall, something I rarely do. I thought I'd head into the local video store to see what I could find.
I came across 2 for $20 section and found the 20th anniversary edition of Dirty Dancing and since I know my wife loved the movie I thought I'd pick it up.
It had been a few years since we watched this movie so I thought it would be a good way to spend a Saturday evening.
We put the DVD in and right away it seemed different - I didn't remember it starting the way the DVD does.
The movie, in case you haven't heard of it, is about a 1960's family which goes on vacation to a summer resort in upstate New York's Catskill Mountains. It focuses mostly on the youngest child, nicknamed "Baby", played by Jennifer Grey.
She is opposed to the idea of a family vacation but soon gets over it when she sees the resort's dance instructor Johnny (Patrick Swayze).
Through a series of events she Baby ends up in a dance contest with Johnny and it is through the practice and preparations for the dance competition that they fall for each other.
Baby's father finds out about the affair and forbids Baby to see Johnny again, and shortly after Johnny is fired from his position for a crime he didn't commit (stealing people's wallets).
In the end, though, Johnny returns for one last dance with Baby at the final event of the resort's season.
One thing I've always thought is that music is the unsung supporting character in most movies. The movie's soundtrack can make or break a movie.
With this one, the music definetly helped it along. If you are a fan of late 50's and early 60's music then you will like this movie (if you haven't already seen it that is).
And to me, that's the best part of this movie. Don't get me wrong, the movie is alright, but the music is the best part. I mean, it's a dance movie, and the dancing is good, the acting is ok, but it's the music which really sets up this movie.
And since this is a 20th anniversary edition, it is longer and comes packed with a bunch of bonus features. For example the bonus disk has a bunch of deleted scenes including a few scenes which were removed from the beginning of the movie.
It also has some of the screen tests done by actors in the movie and has a pretty good clip with what looks to be a fairly recent interview with Patrick Swayze.
Should you watch this movie? Well if you haven't seen it then probably. If you are looking for a "chick flick" to impress your girlfriend or wife, yet want something you too can watch then most definitely watch this.
I came across 2 for $20 section and found the 20th anniversary edition of Dirty Dancing and since I know my wife loved the movie I thought I'd pick it up.
It had been a few years since we watched this movie so I thought it would be a good way to spend a Saturday evening.
We put the DVD in and right away it seemed different - I didn't remember it starting the way the DVD does.
The movie, in case you haven't heard of it, is about a 1960's family which goes on vacation to a summer resort in upstate New York's Catskill Mountains. It focuses mostly on the youngest child, nicknamed "Baby", played by Jennifer Grey.
She is opposed to the idea of a family vacation but soon gets over it when she sees the resort's dance instructor Johnny (Patrick Swayze).
Through a series of events she Baby ends up in a dance contest with Johnny and it is through the practice and preparations for the dance competition that they fall for each other.
Baby's father finds out about the affair and forbids Baby to see Johnny again, and shortly after Johnny is fired from his position for a crime he didn't commit (stealing people's wallets).
In the end, though, Johnny returns for one last dance with Baby at the final event of the resort's season.
One thing I've always thought is that music is the unsung supporting character in most movies. The movie's soundtrack can make or break a movie.
With this one, the music definetly helped it along. If you are a fan of late 50's and early 60's music then you will like this movie (if you haven't already seen it that is).
And to me, that's the best part of this movie. Don't get me wrong, the movie is alright, but the music is the best part. I mean, it's a dance movie, and the dancing is good, the acting is ok, but it's the music which really sets up this movie.
And since this is a 20th anniversary edition, it is longer and comes packed with a bunch of bonus features. For example the bonus disk has a bunch of deleted scenes including a few scenes which were removed from the beginning of the movie.
It also has some of the screen tests done by actors in the movie and has a pretty good clip with what looks to be a fairly recent interview with Patrick Swayze.
Should you watch this movie? Well if you haven't seen it then probably. If you are looking for a "chick flick" to impress your girlfriend or wife, yet want something you too can watch then most definitely watch this.
Sometimes when you are bored you will stray from the top rentals and find a movie you've never heard of.
Of course, more often than not, the movies found in the middle aisles are old or lame or both.
But sometimes you come across one you've never heard of but are impressed by the cast so you figure "what the heck, how bad can it be?"
That was the case recently when I found this DVD - The Way of the Gun.
What caught my eye was the cast - relatively big names in a move I'd never heard of before, or at least don't remember hearing about.
In this movie, Phillippe and Del Toro are a couple of guys who prefer the shadier side of life. The movie starts with them starting a fight and Del Toro hitting a loud mouthed woman a few times in the face!
These guys kinda drift through life until the find out that there's a woman who is pregnant and worth a million dollars to the father.
So they arrange to kidnap her, ending up in a gun battle with her security before managing to grab her.
The story follows them as they head for Mexico to hide out and arrange for the safe return on the girl upon payment of a large sum of money.
They soon realize, however, that the father of the unborn baby is actually a well known mobster
The movie ends with the 2 in a big gun battle with the mobsters men.
They almost get away with it too, but are stopped at the end with gunshot wounds to the legs and hands, effectively hobbling them until the police arrive.
The reason I liked this movie is because there seem to be a lot of subtle things going on that make you wonder if things will work out for these guys, or even if one might end up stabbing the other in the back.
In the end you hope they do make it and you start to cheer for them. You find that they aren't necessarily as bad as they seem.
Would I recommend you run out and buy this film? Not unless you are a huge fan of one of the actors and have to have every movie they've ever done, but I would recommend getting out and renting it.
I give this movie a 7 out of 10.
Of course, more often than not, the movies found in the middle aisles are old or lame or both.
But sometimes you come across one you've never heard of but are impressed by the cast so you figure "what the heck, how bad can it be?"
That was the case recently when I found this DVD - The Way of the Gun.
What caught my eye was the cast - relatively big names in a move I'd never heard of before, or at least don't remember hearing about.
In this movie, Phillippe and Del Toro are a couple of guys who prefer the shadier side of life. The movie starts with them starting a fight and Del Toro hitting a loud mouthed woman a few times in the face!
These guys kinda drift through life until the find out that there's a woman who is pregnant and worth a million dollars to the father.
So they arrange to kidnap her, ending up in a gun battle with her security before managing to grab her.
The story follows them as they head for Mexico to hide out and arrange for the safe return on the girl upon payment of a large sum of money.
They soon realize, however, that the father of the unborn baby is actually a well known mobster
The movie ends with the 2 in a big gun battle with the mobsters men.
They almost get away with it too, but are stopped at the end with gunshot wounds to the legs and hands, effectively hobbling them until the police arrive.
The reason I liked this movie is because there seem to be a lot of subtle things going on that make you wonder if things will work out for these guys, or even if one might end up stabbing the other in the back.
In the end you hope they do make it and you start to cheer for them. You find that they aren't necessarily as bad as they seem.
Would I recommend you run out and buy this film? Not unless you are a huge fan of one of the actors and have to have every movie they've ever done, but I would recommend getting out and renting it.
I give this movie a 7 out of 10.
"Friday the 13th" part 2! That's right, with the exclamation mark and everything. I'm not making
this up. That's really how the titles shoot out at you in part 2. Welcome to the early 80's. And
welcome to my favorite Friday The 13th so far. Why? Well keep reading.
Five years after the massacre at Camp Crystal Lake, the nerve racking legend of Jason Voorhees and his diabolical mother lives on. Despite omninous warnings from the locals to stay away from "Camp Blood", a group of counselors at a nearby summer camp decide to go exploring. All too soon they encounter horrors of their own and the killings begin again.
Why was this my favorite so far? Simple. Strong Female Lead. Not only does she attack Jason with a chainsaw at one point (Hot) she also actually put on his dead mothers old sweater to trick Jason and then attempts to behead him. It's really nice that even in 1981 they were writing in strong female leads. Random fact: between 11 sequals this series has generated over 1 Billion Dollars.
Special features include: Inside"Crystal Lake Memories", Jason Forever, Theatrical Trailer, Friday's Legacy : Horror Conventions, Lost Tales from Camp Blood - Part 2. Once again the Behind the Scenes features on this DVD are amazing. For the Jason Forever featurette we get to see four Jason's all together answering all sorts of crazy horror fans questions. Really good stuff and filmed very nicely. Kane Hodder is a real nut. And we love him for that. Plus be sure to check out "Crystal Lake Memories" which is an interview with an author who wrote THE book on "Friday The 13th".
All in all another classic in the series. Once again enjoy the special 3D cover. Rent it and buy it today.
I give it a A.
Five years after the massacre at Camp Crystal Lake, the nerve racking legend of Jason Voorhees and his diabolical mother lives on. Despite omninous warnings from the locals to stay away from "Camp Blood", a group of counselors at a nearby summer camp decide to go exploring. All too soon they encounter horrors of their own and the killings begin again.
Why was this my favorite so far? Simple. Strong Female Lead. Not only does she attack Jason with a chainsaw at one point (Hot) she also actually put on his dead mothers old sweater to trick Jason and then attempts to behead him. It's really nice that even in 1981 they were writing in strong female leads. Random fact: between 11 sequals this series has generated over 1 Billion Dollars.
Special features include: Inside"Crystal Lake Memories", Jason Forever, Theatrical Trailer, Friday's Legacy : Horror Conventions, Lost Tales from Camp Blood - Part 2. Once again the Behind the Scenes features on this DVD are amazing. For the Jason Forever featurette we get to see four Jason's all together answering all sorts of crazy horror fans questions. Really good stuff and filmed very nicely. Kane Hodder is a real nut. And we love him for that. Plus be sure to check out "Crystal Lake Memories" which is an interview with an author who wrote THE book on "Friday The 13th".
All in all another classic in the series. Once again enjoy the special 3D cover. Rent it and buy it today.
I give it a A.
It has been a while since I watched this series, and my family has never seen it so we decided as a family to sit down and watch the 3 movies. While we didn't do it back to back, we did watch them all over the span of a few days.
Even though it has been at least a year since I watched them I have to say that I'm still incredibly impressed with these movies.
Not only that, but my wife who isn't a big scifi/fantasy fan really enjoyed them as well. In fact it was at her urging that we finish these off this weekend, which we did.
In case you don't already know, this trilogy is based on the three books in the series of the same name.
They are about one hobbit's trek through foreign, often dangerous, lands on a quest to destroy the "Ring of Power."
A lot of people didn't think that the Lord of the Rings could be made into movies. After all, we're talking of over 1,000 printed pages of a mythical and magical land where Elves, Dwarfs and Orcs interact with humans and each other.
If you've ever read the books then you know how detailed the book's Author, JRR Tolkein gets in describing what the various characters see around them.
And this isn't lost in these movies. In fact, as I was watching them these past few days, a thought occured to me - both the musical score and the scenery found in these movies should be considered characters in the movies as they are essential to our appreciation of the scale of this story.
Not only that, but I also found something else.
You see, when I first saw this trilogy it was on my 27" TV at home. We recently upgraded to a much larger screen and I found the movies much more entertaining. Not that they weren't before, but I found myself immersed that much more into the stories.
The other impressive thing about these movies is the special effects. You generally can not distinguish between what's real and what's manufactured. From Hobbit homes embedded into the hillsides to impressive large statues carved out of stone that look so old, you'd believe not only are they real but they've existed for thousands of years.
One thing about these movies which could be a detractor for some viewers is the length of them. They all top out around 3 hours a piece. The extended director's cut versions are even longer.
But they have to be for you to appreciate the depth of the stories involved.
Despite that, I give this trilogy a very enthusiastic 2 thumbs up and rate it a 10 out of 10.
Even though it has been at least a year since I watched them I have to say that I'm still incredibly impressed with these movies.
Not only that, but my wife who isn't a big scifi/fantasy fan really enjoyed them as well. In fact it was at her urging that we finish these off this weekend, which we did.
In case you don't already know, this trilogy is based on the three books in the series of the same name.
They are about one hobbit's trek through foreign, often dangerous, lands on a quest to destroy the "Ring of Power."
A lot of people didn't think that the Lord of the Rings could be made into movies. After all, we're talking of over 1,000 printed pages of a mythical and magical land where Elves, Dwarfs and Orcs interact with humans and each other.
If you've ever read the books then you know how detailed the book's Author, JRR Tolkein gets in describing what the various characters see around them.
And this isn't lost in these movies. In fact, as I was watching them these past few days, a thought occured to me - both the musical score and the scenery found in these movies should be considered characters in the movies as they are essential to our appreciation of the scale of this story.
Not only that, but I also found something else.
You see, when I first saw this trilogy it was on my 27" TV at home. We recently upgraded to a much larger screen and I found the movies much more entertaining. Not that they weren't before, but I found myself immersed that much more into the stories.
The other impressive thing about these movies is the special effects. You generally can not distinguish between what's real and what's manufactured. From Hobbit homes embedded into the hillsides to impressive large statues carved out of stone that look so old, you'd believe not only are they real but they've existed for thousands of years.
One thing about these movies which could be a detractor for some viewers is the length of them. They all top out around 3 hours a piece. The extended director's cut versions are even longer.
But they have to be for you to appreciate the depth of the stories involved.
Despite that, I give this trilogy a very enthusiastic 2 thumbs up and rate it a 10 out of 10.
"Friday the 13TH". What can I say? It's a classic still today. And this is the ultimate collectors
edition. Now is it scary to a modern audience? Well the problem is that I don't count. I'm a horror
freak. To me it's something you watch with awe, the dawn of an epic movie series. This thing spawned
eleven sequals. Most of them crap. But not this one. It's a classic.
If you have been living under a rock at crystal lake the story goes like this. A new owner and several young counselors gather to reopen camp crystal lake, where a young boy drowned and several vicious murders occured years earlier. They ignore the locals warnings that the place has a death curse..and one by one they find out unlucky the Friday 13th can be as they are stalked by a violent killer.
Now when you watch this put on your rose colored glasses and imagine it's 1980 and you are in the theatre watching this. You would be scared out of your mind.
The lighting, the story, randy teenagers, the twist in the plot + the suprise ending. All this was new and scary at the time. And it's still a good story today. And this it he ultimate DVD of this by Paramount. This includes Commentary by Sean S. Cunningham, The Friday the 13th Reunion, Fresh Cuts: New Tales from the Set, Lost Tales from Camp Blood, and the man behind the Legacy: Sean S. Cunningham. These are great, well produced and a lot of fun. It's great to hear the actors stories from Savini shooting arrows, to how they cloned Halloween, to why they chose the make-up for Jason.
All in all this is a classic for any collection. And enjoy the special 3D cover. Rent it or buy it today. I give it A.
If you have been living under a rock at crystal lake the story goes like this. A new owner and several young counselors gather to reopen camp crystal lake, where a young boy drowned and several vicious murders occured years earlier. They ignore the locals warnings that the place has a death curse..and one by one they find out unlucky the Friday 13th can be as they are stalked by a violent killer.
Now when you watch this put on your rose colored glasses and imagine it's 1980 and you are in the theatre watching this. You would be scared out of your mind.
The lighting, the story, randy teenagers, the twist in the plot + the suprise ending. All this was new and scary at the time. And it's still a good story today. And this it he ultimate DVD of this by Paramount. This includes Commentary by Sean S. Cunningham, The Friday the 13th Reunion, Fresh Cuts: New Tales from the Set, Lost Tales from Camp Blood, and the man behind the Legacy: Sean S. Cunningham. These are great, well produced and a lot of fun. It's great to hear the actors stories from Savini shooting arrows, to how they cloned Halloween, to why they chose the make-up for Jason.
All in all this is a classic for any collection. And enjoy the special 3D cover. Rent it or buy it today. I give it A.
