Blu-ray

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Anton van Beek  |  Apr 19, 2013  |  0 comments

Having re-invigorated the sci-fi genre with Star Wars, George Lucas turned his attention to the fantasy world in 1988. Sadly, Willow failed to live up to expectations, thanks to the combination of its relentlessly formulaic narrative and Ron Howard's lifeless direction. Indeed, these days it's only really remembered for its use of early digital morphing effects.

Anton van Beek  |  Apr 18, 2013  |  0 comments

Any adults hoping for some Studio Ghibli-style thrills from this CG-animated 'toon made to celebrate Fuji Television's 50th anniversary are bang out of luck. While it borrows familiar story elements from Miyazaki's output, it's aimed squarely at kids and offers little in the way of real emotional heft to engage older viewers. The Blu-ray disc itself is another story, delivering a pristine AVC 1.78:1 1080p encode, lively DTS-HD MA 5.1 audio (in both Japanese and English incarnations) and a boatload of Japanese promotional supplements.

Anton van Beek  |  Apr 17, 2013  |  0 comments

Having cleaned up at the box office with 1957's The Curse of Frankenstein, it's hardly surprising that the following year found horror studio Hammer doing it all over again with Dracula. And while Bram Stoker's tale offered a similarly gory full-colour tale of terror, it added a new and even more scandalous element to the mix – sex!

Anton van Beek  |  Apr 17, 2013  |  0 comments

It's hard to know what exactly to make of Paul Thomas Anderson's latest film. On the surface it's a simple tale about a WWII Navy veteran who gets involved with the charismatic leader of a religious movement known as 'The Cause'. But Anderson's oblique storytelling renders The Master so open to interpretation that it's either a brave experiment in movie-making techniques or he's trying to dupe us with the cinematic equivalent of The Emperor's New Clothes.

Anton van Beek  |  Apr 16, 2013  |  0 comments

The found-footage genre reaches a new nadir with this latest sequel to the popular horror franchise. Devoid of story and lacking any fresh ideas outside of an over-used Xbox Kinect 'night vision', Paranormal Activity 4 is undoubtedly one of the worst films we've ever had the misfortune to be called on to review. This Blu-ray does nothing to help matters, adding an extra 11 minutes of tedium to create a new extended cut of the film (and featuring an extra half-hour of deleted footage as the sole extra). The disc's AV credentials are every bit as predictable as the film itself, being on a par with all the previous instalments.

Anton van Beek  |  Apr 15, 2013  |  0 comments

Gossip Girl's Jessica Szohr adds a smidge of international glamour to this British horror-comedy that pits a quartet of unlikeable Inbetweeners wannabes against a werewolf. Neither funny nor scary (outside of the fact that some people genuinely believed that it was worth financing), Love Bite should be avoided like a werewolf avoids silver. The only thing of note about the Blu-ray release is the richly-hued AVC 2.40:1 1080p encode, as even the DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundtrack is limited in its aspirations and 29 minutes of interview soundbites are the only extras. 

Anton van Beek  |  Apr 14, 2013  |  0 comments

Barry 'Rain Man' Levinson makes a surprise foray into the world of low-budget eco horror with this found-footage flick. Smart and gruesome, with a real message to impart, The Bay is definitely worth a watch. And yet, outside of a couple of clever conceits (and cost-saving implications), it's hard to see just how much was really gained from tackling the material this way, rather than in a more straightforward manner.

Mark Craven  |  Apr 13, 2013  |  0 comments

In this sharply-scripted black comedy, Colin Farrell's struggling screenwriter has a title for a movie – Seven Psychopaths – but nothing else, so turns to his dog-napping friends (Sam Rockwell and Christopher Walken) for input. Yet they have problems of their own, having accidentally grabbed the beloved pet Shih Tzu of a violent mobster (Woody Harrelson). Soon the trio are having to deal with psychopaths of their own...

Anton van Beek  |  Apr 12, 2013  |  0 comments

Sex and violence make arresting bedfellows in Kaneto Shindo's 1964 period horror. Every bit as beautiful as it is chilling, Onibaba's magnificent black-and-white photography certainly holds up well in high-definition. Eureka's AVC 2.40:1 1080p encode is easily the best it has delivered to date for an Asian film, courtesy of its immaculate detailing and near perfect contrast. LPCM dual-mono audio exhibits some background hiss, though. Extras may appear fairly slight (just a filmmaker's commentary, video intro from Alex Cox, on-set footage, trailer and 36-page booklet) but they complement the film extremely well.

Anton van Beek  |  Apr 11, 2013  |  0 comments

Radley Metzger is one of the more intriguing US directors to have ever worked in the world of softcore erotica. Like much of his work, this 1970 feature mixes art-house sensibilities with softcore nooky, the end effect in this case being akin to a smutty version of Alain Resnais' French New Wave darling Last Year at Marienbad. And it's doubtful that the film has looked this good in a very long time thanks to Arrow's pleasing AVC 1.85:1 1080p transfer (a full restoration is needed, but would undoubtedly be far too expensive for a movie such as this).

Anton van Beek  |  Apr 10, 2013  |  0 comments

What is it going to take to convince Joel and Ethan Coen to stop messing around with remakes of classic British crime capers? While they didn't actually direct Gambit (unlike 2004's The Ladykillers), they're still responsible for the laugh-free script that forms the backbone to this Colin Firth and Cameron Diaz 'comedy'. Clearly realising that the film was a dud, the distributor hasn't bothered with any extras beyond a promo featurette and trailer. Still, at least the detail-rich AVC 2.40:1 1080p visuals show that no corners were cut when it came to presenting the film in HD.

Anton van Beek  |  Apr 09, 2013  |  0 comments

Having already written Training Day and Dark Blue, it's safe to say that David Ayer feels at home in the world of cop movies. End of Watch is undoubtedly his most accomplished work in the field to date, using a fractured mix of found footage and cinema vérité styles to put viewers bang in the middle of the action. As expected given the source material, the AVC 1.85:1 1080p encode has some issues – but it's undoubtedly true to the original photography.

Steve May  |  Apr 08, 2013  |  0 comments

Steven Spielberg’s inspirational Holocaust classic Schindler’s List makes a visually impressive high-definition debut with this 20th Anniversary release.

Anton van Beek  |  Apr 05, 2013  |  0 comments

In the wake of ITV's sucess with the rating juggernaut that is Downton Abbey, the BBC really needed to pull out all the stops to re-establish itself as the king of Sunday evening costume drama. But who on Earth would have guessed that the Beeb would try to do it with a Daily Mail-baiting cop show set in Whitechapel circa 1889? Both gripping and ripping, this gory crime series' meticulous attention to detail shines through the Victorian gloom on Blu-ray thanks to six sultry AVC 1080i encodes. If only they were accompanied by worthwhile extras or something more acoustically involving than constrained DTS-HD MA 2.0 soundtracks...

Anton van Beek  |  Apr 04, 2013  |  0 comments

Back in 1984, young Disney animator and aspiring filmmaker Tim Burton made a live-action short about a young boy who brings his dog back from the dead. Naturally, it didn't fit the Disney ethos and was locked away in a vault – only to finally see the light of day in the mid-'90s. Skip forward the best part of two decades and Burton has revisited his homage to Frankenstein as a feature film – only this time as a Disney-sanctioned stop-motion animation.

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