DARK HORSE Crosses the Finish Line on DVD August 23rd

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Dark Horse – this year’s extraordinary new documentary about a pub barmaid from a poor Welsh mining town who takes on the “elite sport of kings” and breeds herself an improbable racehorse champion – crosses the DVD & Digital finish line August 23 from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. The Sony Pictures Classics release, a 2015 Sundance Film Festival winner directed by Louise Ormond (BAFTA nominated for Richard III: The King In The Car Park), won the Festival’s World Cinema Documentary Audience Award and was also premiered at the Toronto Film Festival. The film received an outstanding reception from audiences and critics alike, capturing a 96% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes and lauded as “heartwarming,” “irresistible,” “exhilarating,” “stirring,” “moving,” “delightful” and “inspiring.” Screendaily’s Allan Hunter concluded, “A heartwarming true story that has been expertly crafted into an irresistible, emotion-charged documentary.”

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Dark Horse begins in 2000 in Cefn Forest, a small town in Wales, when Jan Vokes hears one of her pub regulars talking about owning a share of a racehorse. On her way home, Jan ponders, “I’ve bred pigeons; I’ve bred whippets; how hard could it be?”  She convinces 23 friends and neighbors to pool their meager incomes to produce an unlikely foal who grows up to compete against some of the wealthiest horse families in the United Kingdom. Named ‘Dream Alliance’ after the group of investors, the horse suffers a near fatal accident, but then makes a remarkable recovery with the loving help of his owners, ultimately returning to the track for a heart-stopping comeback as a racehorse champion.

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 Dark Horse was produced by Judith Dawson and executive produced by Julian Ware, Lizzie Francke, Anna Higgs, Anna Miralis, and Adam Partridge. Director of Photography was Benjamin Kracun; Editor, Joby Gee; Line Producer, Jenny Mauthe. Additional photography was by Roger Chapman and Anne Nikitin was the composer. Special features include a photo gallery.

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Synopsis:

Set in Wales, Dark Horse is the inspirational true story of a group of friends who decide to take on the elite “sport of kings” and breed themselves a racehorse. Raised on a slagheap allotment, their foal grows into an unlikely champion, beating the finest thoroughbreds in the land, before suffering a near fatal accident. Nursed back to health by the love of his owners, he makes a remarkable recovery, returning to the track for a heart-stopping comeback.

Dark Horse has a run time of 86 minutes and is rated PG for some mild thematic elements and language.

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FED UP – The DVD Review

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I have an eating disorder. I have fought for years to try and keep my weight down. I am one of those people who have gained and lost the same 50 to 75 pounds so many times it is now very difficult to lose the weight at all. Yet I am determined to get my weight down to a healthy level and keep it there. I always thought I was doing something wrong, well obviously I have been, but I have had no help from the food industry in these United States. Along with recent documentaries about the unhealthy food we have available in our grocery stores and restaurants such as Food Inc, Super Size Me and Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead you can, and should, see Fed Up, an infuriating look at the processed foods we all have access to in our grocery stores.

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Fed Up is definitely one sided, but for reasons that are obvious. Doctors, nutritionists, health care advocates and others are more than willing to talk about what’s wrong with the food industry. Those who produce the food? Not so much, very few are willing to talk on camera about what they do. In the end credits we see that Coke, Pepsi, Schwanns, McDonalds, and many other food producers refused to be interviewed on camera.

Katie Couric narrates and admits from the start that this documentary began as a short news item on NBC, but the more the journalists at the network dug into the story the more alarming it became. A featured player is First Lady Michelle Obama who caught a lot of flak for suggesting that children in school should have healthy food to eat. What are kids fed now in school? McDonalds, Pizza Hut, Burger King and lots of Coke and Pepsi. Easy to see how chronic and epidemic morbid obesity is taking over the citizens of our country. Like I said I have my own weight problem, I finally got down to just below 300 pounds, trust me, I have lost weight recently, but I need to lose a lot more. As recommended in Fed Up and in a diet plan put together by Dr. Joel Fuhrman I avoid processed foods as much as possible. I gave up drinking soda years ago, soda is one of the worst drinks you can have, no nutritional value and lots and lots of sugar. Juice is just as bad, juicing takes out every bit of nutrients you need from fruit or vegetables. You are better off eating one orange than drinking 6 gallons of orange juice.

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I read Dr Fuhrman’s excellent book Eat to Live a few years ago. He is not included in this documentary but many Doctors, nutritionists, journalists other people concerned with the obesity problem in this country agree with him. The food we eat, most of the food in our grocery stores, is killing us. Obese children used to be rare, not any more. Childhood diabetes, high blood pressure, stroke and heart attacks used to be nonexistent. No longer. In Fed Up we meet several children with obesity problems, one of them actually contemplates gastric bypass surgery, something that used to be unheard of, now commonplace.

Yes I have a weight problem but I am doing everything I can to correct that, after seeing Fed Up I started reading the ingredients on any processed foods I look at in a grocery store. As pointed out in Fed Up almost all processed foods have added sugar, a lot of added sugar. Under the slightest bit of pressure from the government food companies started reducing the fat content of their products. And as we hear in Fed Up, you take the fat out and food doesn’t taste like much of anything, so they started adding sugar, a lot, an awfully lot of sugar. Seriously this documentary will make you nauseous. Sugar is addictive, sugar is as much a legal drug and as addictive as tobacco, caffeine or alcohol, and about as healthy. Don’t get me wrong, I love a good doughnut and a cup of coffee as much as anybody. But my breakfast now is several pieces of citrus fruit, oranges or grapefruit, a couple of apples and whatever else is in season. Georgia peaches are good right now. Sometimes oatmeal and not the instant kind. I take my lunch to work while my co workers almost always get take out. While they have pizza or fried chicken or Chinese takeout I have raw vegetables, broccoli, carrots, celery, lettuce, tomatoes, steamed potatoes and beans or hummus. Sounds great right? Trust me, I would love to eat fried chicken or pizza every day for lunch, but that’s how I got to be over 300 pounds to begin with.

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Eating vegetables every day I feel a lot better and that much fiber fills me up. After work I have a protein smoothie with some fruit and non dairy milk. I work in a call center; have been in call center customer service for well over 15 years, so like a great many Americans I have a sedentary job that is also stressful. But in addition to trying to eat right I go to a gym, I try to go at least twice a week, and take a yoga class, I walk as much as I can. And it’s still hard to lose weight, but I consider myself lucky, I have worked with a great many people who are so obese they have trouble getting out of a chair. I have watched some co workers take as long as 10 minutes to get out of a chair to take a 15 minute break.

Florida has a lot of people who have become so obese they are now on disability and ride around in the little electric carts that have taken the place of wheel chairs. All of this and so much more is touched on in Fed Up. This is one documentary that is infuriating. Any time there is any talk in the Government about regulating the food industry, especially in terms of school lunches, the corporate flacks come out of the woodwork to whine and snivel about “the nanny state!” And oddly enough I somewhat agree, I don’t want the government telling me what to eat, but it would be nice if the food companies at least had to label their products with the percentage of sugar added. Seriously, they don’t have to put the sugar percentage on the ingredients. You’ll see how many grams of sugar a product has, not the percentage! As someone wiser than me once said “Dude, that’s messed up!” It would also be nice if the food companies did not target and market to kids that are still in school. Comparisons are made with the fight to get tobacco labeled as the killer substance that it is. Big tobacco insisted for decades that their product was actually healthy despite all evidence to the contrary. The same thing with the processed foods industry. And as Fed Up points out, the obesity epidemic bodes ill for our country. Health care costs are already extremely high, the obese among us will always have health problems that are hard and expensive to treat. And who will be our first responders? Who will staff the military, police, emergency services?

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Not long ago I tried working for a funeral home, transporting the dead. I picked up several people from hospitals and medical examiners offices who weighed well over 300 pounds, not an easy task. My coworkers told me they had to pick up a person who weighed almost 500 pounds, from a mobile home. They had to have help from firefighters, ambulance personnel and police to get that person loaded.

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Fed Up is one documentary that needs to be seen by every person in this country, especially if they have children. The point is made that we would be outraged if our kids had unsafe water to drink, or if the air was poisoned in schools. Why should we not be outraged that instead of school lunches that are real food prepared by professional food service workers (cue Adam Sandler’s Lunch Lady song from Saturday Night Live!) kids are served lunch by McDonalds and Pizza Hut? I give Fed Up five out of five stars. If you see any people who fit this profile at WalMart or McDonalds please don’t be quick to judge, with the food that’s available in our grocery stores this can happen to anybody! Now I’m going to have some celery and an apple, I am out of here!

NO MEN BEYOND THIS POINT – Mockumentary Debuts on DVD July 12th

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NO MEN BEYOND THIS POINT  is a  hilarious mockumentary that takes a unique look at what the world would be like if men were obsolete!

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Anne Caughlan, Shuswap Film Society calls NO MEN BEYOND THIS POINT:

“INTELLIGENT, FULL OF HUMOUR, AND THOUGHT-PROVOKING.”

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The festival favorite NO MEN BEYOND THIS POINT debuts on DVD and digital July 12 from Samuel Goldwyn Films and Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. The film was written and directed by award-winning filmmaker Mark Sawers (Camera Shy) and stars Rekha Sharma (“The 100”), Ben Cotton (Battlestar Galactica: Blood & Chrome), Patrick Gilmore (Cabin in the Woods), Hilary Jardine (“Van Helsing”), Tara Pratt (“Standard Action”) and Bruce Harwood (“The X Files”). NO MEN BEYOND THIS POINT took home awards for Best Feature Audience Award, Best Feature Actor (Patrick Gilmore), Best Script (Mark Sawers) and Best Feature Editing at the 2015 Other Worlds Austin Sci-Fi Film Festival and Best Supporting Actress in a Canadian Film (Tara Pratt) from the Vancouver Film Critics Circle.
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Synopsis:
Imagine a world where, since 1953, women have been able to reproduce without men and they are no longer giving birth to male babies. Now, over 60 years later, this deadpan mockumentary follows the youngest man still alive – 37 year-old Andrew Myers. Working as a housekeeper for a family of women, Andrew finds himself at the center of a battle to prevent men from going extinct. NO MEN BEYOND THIS POINT is a feature film that asks the question, what would the world be like if women were in charge?

Written and directed by Mark Sawers, NO MEN BEYOND THIS POINT is produced by Galen Fletcher and Kaleena Kiff and executive produced by Mark Sawers.

NO MEN BEYOND THIS POINT has a run time of approximately 80 minutes and is not rated.

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GODS OF EGYPT Bleed Gold on Blu-ray and DVD May 31st

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“I tore the wings off my wife. Imagine what I’ll do to YOU!”

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The ultimate struggle to rule the world begins when Gods of Egypt arrives on Digital HD on May 17 and on 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack (plus Blu-ray and Digital HD), 3D Combo Pack (plus Blu-ray, DVD and Digital HD), Blu-ray™ (plus Digital HD), DVD (plus Digital) and On Demand May 31 from Summit Entertainment, a LIONSGATE Company. Directed by Alex Proyas (I, Robot), written by Matt Sazama (The Last Witch Hunter) & Burk Sharpless (The Last Witch Hunter), and featuring stunning visual effects and production design, Gods of Egypt stars Nikolaj Coster-Waldau (TV’s “Game of Thrones”) with Gerard Butler (London Has Fallen) and Academy Award® winner Geoffrey Rush (Best Actor, Shine, 1996).

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The ultimate battle between good and evil threatens to destroy all creation in this epic fantasy-adventure bursting with spectacular action and amazing special effects. Gerard Butler and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau star as rival gods Set and Horus, who are locked in a war to rule the universe. To defeat the merciless Set, Horus joins forces with a brave mortal for a journey that will take them across Egypt, through the heavens, and into the afterlife in an unforgettable quest to save mankind.

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 The Blu-ray and Digital HD releases feature an in-depth look behind-the-scenes with six featurettes, plus storyboards of deleted scenes. The Blu-ray release also includes next-generation DTS:X immersive audio, which replicates and conveys the fluid movement of sound to create a richer soundscape by moving sound to precisely where the audio mixer placed it.

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Gods of Egypt will be available in the following physical formats on May 31:

  • 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack – $42.99 SRP
  • 3D Combo Pack – $39.99 SRP
  • Blu-ray – $35.99 SRP
  • DVD – $29.95 SRP

BLU-RAY/ DIGITAL HD SPECIAL FEATURES*

  • Deleted Storyboards
  • “A Divine Vision: Creating a Cinematic Action Fantasy” Featurette
  • “Of Gods and Mortals: The Cast” Featurette
  • “Transformation: Costume, Make-up & Hair” Featurette
  • “On Location: Shooting in Australia” Featurette
  • “The Battle for Eternity: Stunts” Featurette
  • “A Window into Another World: Visual Effects” Featurette

 

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DVD SPECIAL FEATURES*

  • “The Battle for Eternity: Stunts” Featurette
  • “A Window into Another World: Visual Effects” Featurette
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BOTTLE SHOCK – The ‘Tribute to Alan Rickman’ Review

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I HATE wine!  Seriously, no kidding, I cannot drink it, smell it and I don’t like to talk about it.  The origin of this distaste for fermented grape juice?  It was when I was in the Navy (there he goes again!) I was on liberty in Brindisi, Italy (Bill remembers!)  We were in a restaurant on a bright, sunny Italian Sunday afternoon.  We ordered food and wine.  The wine came in pitchers, not bottles.  I don’t recall the food ever arriving, don’t remember leaving the restaurant, going back to the ship, none of that, complete blackout.

Literally one minute in the restaurant, the next lying face down in my rack strangling on my own sick.  I won’t go into any more sordid details, I’ll spare you that.  Sufficient to note I was in trouble with the Navy, had gotten horribly sick on a liberty boat, paid the penalty by standing “the drunk watch” the next night, helping other hammered Navy personnel get off liberty boats and back to their racks.  And I swabbed up sick out of three liberty boats as penance for my misbehavior, a most appropriate punishment, as you can imagine.  Just an aside, an Italian bay is the best and most convenient place to rinse out a mop fouled with upchuck, very handy.

The result?  I said “never again” and I have stuck to that ever since, the mere smell of a glass of wine causes my intestines to curl up in knots and bile to rise in the back of my throat.  Not to mention my loathing of the “wine connoisseur!”

There is no more pretentious and snobbish drivel in human conversation than wine fans swirling some in a glass and smelling and sipping and gargling a “smoky little cabernet with just a hint of fresh peaches and Old Spice after shave and yack yack yack!”

The last word on that is the wonderful Roger Corman movie Tales of Terror, wherein one tale is a combination of Cask of Amontillado and The Black Cat.  If you are a true movie geek you’ve seen it, an already hammered Peter Lorre stumbles into a wine tasting where Vincent Price (at his most effete and foppish) is pronouncing the origin, year, province and what part of the vineyard different wines came from, just from a taste.  He takes elegant little sips from a silver cup, Lorre is his equal at wine knowledge but he chugs down entire glasses and never bothers to “swirl and sniff!”

I say all this as an introduction to a wonderful movie about…wine, and the tasting and judging of wine, as well as the growing of grapes, the fermentation, bottling, marketing and, well, all the nuts and bolts of the wine business.  And I wish to pay tribute to one of the recently departed, who appears in Bottle Shock, the always wonderful Alan Rickman.

Bottle Shock tells the true story of how California wines became popular all over the world, after a certain Napa Valley winery had its chardonnay win a blind taste test, in France, the world capital of wine snobbery.   It’s a true David and Goliath story, taking place in 1976, but it’s also a fish out of water tale.  In fact the prime mover in this story is out of place in two countries, this would be Steven Spurrier, played by Alan Rickman.  He runs a wine shop, in Paris, where of course, as an Englishman he is more than a little looked down upon.  His best friend is an Italian American wonderfully played by Dennis Farina, another fine actor taken from us much too soon.

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It’s Farina’s character who gives Spurrier the idea to go looking for wine elsewhere in the world to compete with the French wines.  Which brings him to Napa Valley and meetings and tastings at several wineries, including Chateau Montelena, owned and operated by Jim Barrett (Bill Pullman) sometimes with the help of his “hippy” son Bo, played by Chris Pine.

Spurrier wants to take some of the local wines to France, including ones from Chateau Montelena, Jim Barrett wants no part of it and also doesn’t believe his son Bo will ever be capable of running the family wine business.  Long story short Bo and Spurrier make it to the biggest blind taste test in the world and, against all the odds, win in every category.  And Bo steps up and takes over the winery.  A wonderful making of feature includes the real people who inspired this story, Bo still runs the winery, with his Father’s help.

With Spurrier’s help not only did California wines become more popular, wine from Australia, Chile and several other countries found a niche in the world market.  Some great wine is produced in Missouri, (so I’m told) around the area where Meramec Caverns still lures in tourists.

Make no mistake, Bottle Shock is somewhat by the numbers.  If you know anything about wine you know how it ends.  This is the kind of low budget, independent movie I feel it is my duty to report on for We Are Movie Geeks.  This is one that fell through the cracks, I had never heard of it until I found it at one our local libraries.

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Bottle Shock has a lot going for it, you can’t help but root for the Americans putting their product up against the best the French have to offer.  Pullman and Pine are quite good (the only problem I had with Bottle Shock is Chris Pine’s ridiculous “hippy” wig,) all the supporting players are good, especially Freddy Rodriquez as Bo’s best friend who wants to start his own winery.

But it’s Alan Rickman who really makes Bottle Shock something special.  Throughout the movie Rickman wears an expression as if he just discovered dog poo on the heel of his shoe.  His trip through the Napa Valley wine country is precious indeed, especially his encounter with a bucket of KFC!

Alan Rickman will probably always be remembered for his part in the Harry Potter series,( a franchise adored by everyone on Earth it seems, except me, for reasons I am not about to go into here.)  But Rickman made every part he ever accepted into something special.

Like most movie geeks I first knew of him in Die Hard, “Yippee kai yay mother…!”   And then in the Kevin Costner Robin Hood movie.  He brought an obvious intelligence, a great sense of humor, generosity to his fellow artists and a strong professional attitude to everything he did.

He worked just about constantly, Perfume, Love Actually, Sweeney Todd.

I’ll always remember him for Truly, Madly, Deeply, one of the best movies ever made about the changes we go through when we lose a loved one.  But my personal favorite of his films?  One of the most perfect films I can think of, Galaxy Quest!  A wicked satire and a loving tribute to one of the most iconic television shows ever produced, every actor in Galaxy Quest is at the top of their game.  I treasure moments from Tony Shalhoub “that was a hell of a thing!” Sam Rockwell “what’s my name?!?”  Sigourney Weaver “It’s a stupid job but I’m going to do it!”, Tim Allen “My ship is trailing mines!” and most especially Alan Rickman “By Grapthar’s Hammer…”

Like most of the great English actors Rickman came from the working class, his Father worked in a factory, his background was English, Irish and Welsh.   He brought a great deal to every project he worked on.  A better  tribute than mine was given by Kevin Smith on his Facebook page.  Rickman worked with Smith on Dogma, playing God himself.  I can’t think of a better actor to play the Supreme Being.  Alan Rickman will be sorely missed.  And Bottle Shock is as good a way to say goodbye as any I can think of.

 

LEARNING TO DRIVE Now Available on DVD

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When Cate Marquis reviewed Patricia Clarkson and Ben Kingsley in LEARNING TO DRIVE here at We Are Movie Geeks, she wrote: “…LEARNING TO DRIVE is a charming little film, with fine performances, appealing characters and nice little message about both friendship and learning something new, no matter your age.” (read all of Cate’s review HERE

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As her marriage dissolves, Wendy (Patricia Clarkson), a Manhattan writer, takes driving lessons from Darwin (Ben Kingsley), a Sikh instructor with marriage troubles of his own. In each other’s company they find the courage to get back on the road and the strength to take the wheel. Now you can own what’s been called “An extraordinarily moving and funny film”. LEARNING TO DRIVE is now available on DVD from Broad Green Pictures.

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The LEARNING TO DRIVE DVD is presented in 1.78:1 Anamorphic widescreen with a Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack. A Spanish dub and English subtitles are available.The only extra is a photo gallery consisting of 31 publicity and behind-the-scenes stills.

Check out the hilarious trailer for LEARNING TO DRIVE:

LTD_08-26-13_517-544_R_COMP_CROP (l to r) Ben Kingsley stars as Darwan and Patricia Clarkson as Wendy in Broad Green Pictures upcoming release, LEARNING TO DRIVE. Credit: Linda Kallerus/Broad Green Pictures

 

 

 

 

SHOCKWAVE DARKSIDE – The DVD Review

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Review by Stephen Tronicek

To anyone who has played a 90’s video game that was on CD-ROM, the phrase FMV will be very familiar. They were these exciting videos that would have real people acting as characters in the game setting up the story. They were…awesome. Cheesy beyond belief, but awesome in their own way. You’re not supposed to make an entire movie like that though.

That said just like the FMV’s, there are parts of SHOCKWAVE DARKSIDE that seem awesome-ish. The story concerns a group of space soldiers trying to get to an extraction point on the moon after a brutal attack. Their story  begins horribly with a large battle sequence going down. The filmmakers might have been too ambitious in their attempt to stage this.  While there seems to be lots of work put into it, the whole thing is choreographed and shot in an unexciting, and uneventful way.  But after that the whole film barrels down, and actually becomes a couple of soldiers walking across the moon it actually gets good. Sure, it looks like an FMV and sounds like an FMV, but once it gets to this point the film starts to becomes engaging. The dialogue isn’t good, but it’s just ok enough to create a sense that the soldiers however silly their personalities are,  human…enough.

The film’s main problem is the way that it’s themes almost seem understated. There’s a huge idea of religion revolving around the movie that is only hinted at through the dialogue, and then shows up as a huge plot point during the last 20 minutes of the film. Why this is understated is because the dialogue hasn’t really given any context as to the importance of religion in the film. There is a sense of bafflement when it tries to make a twist out of that.

Overall SHOCKWAVE DARKSIDE didn’t really work, but was still ok at times. The beginning, and the end are no fun, but the middle is full of dialogue that tends to work while you’re watching it, but is supposed to set up ALL the context of the film. SHOCKWAVE DARKSIDE is a better film then one might expect when getting into it but there were low expectations in the first place.

SHOCKWAVE DARKSIDE is available on Video on Demand and DVD.

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NIGHTMARE CODE – The DVD Review

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Review by Stephen Tronicek

Great horror movies stick with us because they have a great story and a chilling underlying fear sitting under the surface to stick with us. Subpar horror films have the story, but lack the underlying fear. Bad horror films lack both. NIGHTMARE CODE is a subpar horror film because it’s missing something. The same problem afflicted this year’s highly acclaimed IT FOLLOWS, but in reverse order. It had the deep seeded fear, but lacked the storytelling chops to actually do anything with them. NIGHTMARE CODE has the story, but lacks deep seeded fear.

NIGHTMARE CODE is the story of Brett Desmond (a surprisingly excellent Andrew J. West), a convicted ex-hacker who is brought in to finish a code with a team of experts. The code in question is thought to have caused the last lead coder to go on a massacre in the office before executing himself. The premise is intriguing enough, but never pays off. The film has such an interesting, and intense story line, but doesn’t back it up with anything that should really scare the audience. NIGHTMARE CODE doesn’t build too much tension outside of its middle climax, and final act and its mysterious nature demands more than that.

The reason for this lack of tension is quickly seen too. The film seems unfocused. At one moment it’s being comedic, and a little sexist, and the next a man shoots a couple of people in an office. The jarring tone shifts provide some interesting parallels between scenes, and does a ratchet up some tension, but that’s not enough to balance the sense that NIGHTMARE CODE is all over the place.

The filmmaking creates an excellent juxtaposition for this point too. The entire film is found footage, and mostly shot from an angle of a character facing a computer screen. Much of the runtime is represented on a frame with four cameras running at the same time. A four square isn’t exactly ideal for an intimate horror thriller. Throughout the entire film there’s a sense that if the filmmakers had used a more dynamic camera the film may have been much more exciting. It also all but cripples the relationship between the people working on the project not really allowing them to feel bonded as a team.

The performances offered here are actually pretty good though. Andrew J. West brings a nice everyman performance, and he keeps the film believable as the story becomes more and more preposterous. The other notable here is Googy Gress playing the villain of the piece Foster Cotton. Gress doesn’t actually fight the preposterous nature of the story, he dives in head first, and benefits from it. Many of the other actors fall on either side of this spectrum, and most are at least entertaining to watch.

NIGHTMARE CODE has an original, refreshing story, but lacks a sense of fear or tension because of the filmmaking choices made. It’s still an interesting debut for director Mark Netter, and there’s still promise in the enticing stories he could bring to the table.

NIGHTMARE CODE is available on Video on Demand and DVD. Details can be found HERE

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THE ASSASSIN Arrives on Blu-ray January 26th

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St. Louis-based We Are Movie Geeks readers  may have seen THE ASSASSIN when it played at The St. Louis International Film Festival this past November or can still see it on the big screen when it plays at Webster University’s Moore Auditorium January 15th through the 23rd. If you can’t see it there, the good news is that the acclaimed film arrives on Blu-ray (and DVD) on January 26th.

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Back with his first film in eight years, award-winning Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-hsien (Flight of the Red BalloonThree Times) wowed this year’s Cannes Film Festival (where he won Best Director) with his awe-inspiring THE ASSASSIN, debuting on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital HD January 26 from Well Go USA Entertainment. Rich with shimmering, breathing texture and punctuated by brief but unforgettable bursts of action, THE ASSASSIN is a martial arts film like none other. The visually stunning, action-packed film blends tragic historical drama with thrilling swordplay and martial arts in this story of an exiled assassin (Shu Qi, Tai Chi HeroThe Transporter) who must choose between love or duty when she receives orders to kill a man (Chang Chen, Crouching Tiger, Hidden DragonThe Grandmaster) from her past. With a Certified Fresh rating of 83% on Rotten Tomatoes, THE ASSASSIN also stars Zhou Yun (Let the Bullets Fly) and Tsumabuki Satoshi (The Vancouver Asahi).

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In addition to winning Best Director at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival, THE ASSASSIN also won the Cannes Soundtrack Award for Composer Giong Lim and was nominated for the prestigious Palme d’Or.  At the 2015 Golden Horse Film Festival, the film was nominated in 10 categories, taking home prizes for Best Director, Best Feature Film, Best Cinematography, Best Makeup & Costume Design and Best Sound Effects. THE ASSASSIN is Taiwan’s submission for Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards®.

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Synopsis: In 9th-century China, Nie Yinniang is a young woman who was abducted in childhood from a decorated general and raised by a nun who trained her in the martial arts. After 13 years of exile, she is returned to the land of her birth as an exceptional assassin, with orders to kill her betrothed husband-to-be. She must confront her parents, her memories, and her long-repressed feelings in a choice to sacrifice the man she loves or break forever with the sacred way of the righteous assassins.

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The critics have been raving about THE ASSASSIN:

Alison Willmore at Buzzfeed said:

“It’s so lovely, from the brocade draped interiors to the mist moving over a landscape in the half light, like a series of confounding paintings placed end to end.”

Peter Canavese at Groucho Reviews remarks:

“A Hou film and, therefore an aesthete’s delight…THE ASSASSIN breathes more than it talks, patiently taking in its landscapes and its silk-curtained interiors.”

Laura Clifford at Reeling Reviews says THE ASSASSIN:

“…features scene after scene of heart stopping beauty, all set to one of the year’s most inventively evolving scores…It’s all simply glorious.”

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There are plenty of nice extras on the Blu-ray and DVD:

Behind-the-Scenes Featurettes:

  • Nie Yinniang
  • The Actors: No Rehearsals
  • The Fights Between Masters
  • A Time Machine To The Tang Dynasty
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VAMPIRA AND ME – The DVD Review

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Review by Sam Moffitt

Being the first is not always a good thing. Many ground breaking artists who introduce something new into the cultural mix do not always fare well after they have changed the rules and the game. Take, just as one example, Orson Welles who changed forever how movies were made as well as radio drama and stage productions. Although Welles made out better than Maila Nurmi, also known as Vampira, the subject of the incredible and unforgettable documentary Vampira and Me.

H Greene first got to know Maila Nurmi when he interviewed her for a documentary called Schlock! The Secret History of Hollywood, (a good documentary in its own right.) Nurmi had grown distrustful of just about everyone, and with good reason. Yet for reasons Greene doesn’t even speculate on she trusted Greene and gave him almost two hours of interview time and discussed every last moment of her bizarre, glorious, hypnotic and finally tragic and horrifying career. If in fact you could say Maila Nurmi had a normal “career” at all.

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Maila Nurmi created Vampira, the first horror movie show host, the first ever “Gothic” personality, one of the first major television stars and may very well have been the first performance artist.   Vampira became a character onto herself who may or may not have actually been Maila Nurmi!

Despite the lack of any major amount of footage of Maila Nurmi in character Greene has fashioned a wonderful and in depth look at a major personality who never, ever got the credit due her, and certainly never made any money despite being a major television personality, and a LOCAL personality at that, who never the less became a worldwide phenomenon! Something unheard of in 1954 or any time since.

Greene, using found footage of all types to illustrate the story of Maila Nurmi and her descent into the Hollywood maelstrom, takes us step by step on the journey to Vampira and the shocking aftermath.

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Like many young women of the 1940s and 1950s (and to this day for that matter) Maila Nurmi had dreams of Hollywood stardom, but on her own terms. Always a rebel, always outside the main stream, Maila embraced the “Beat” generation early on. In fact, in the only film clip with Maila playing a part other than Vampira we see her in the movie The Beat Generation (appropriately enough) reciting vintage beat poetry in a coffeehouse, to the accompaniment of bongo drums, while caressing a white rat and smoking a cigarette! In the audience are Jackie Coogan and Steve Cochran who both admit, they don’t get it! And the Beats are NOT the good guys in this movie!

Maila taped herself for a possible autobiography or memoir which she never finished and in one of several fascinating audio clips stated that as a teenager she declared “that man on the radio is a genius and he is my friend!” Her Mother cautioned her that “of course he is a genius he is Orson Welles! Everybody knows he is a genius but he is not your friend, you work in a canning factory and will never know anybody like Orson Welles!” Maila states that she did meet Orson Welles who advised her to tell her Mother that he was in fact “her friend and her Mother should have more faith in people!”

AS we follow the arc of Maila’s strange and frustrating career, we find out she was actually under contract to Howard Hawks! She got a weekly paycheck from Hawk’s production company but rarely got in front of the cameras for any acting. She declares that she thought Hawk’s was “stupid!” Don’t get me wrong, I love Maila and Vampira but find the idea that the man who directed Red River and Bringing Up Baby and Rio Bravo might be a bit thick in the head a little hard to accept… but I digress.

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Maila tore up her contract with Hawks, which may have sealed her fate right then, before the 1950s even began. She became a top “cheesecake” model, she even has to explain to Greene what cheesecake actually was. These photos show just what a staggeringly beautiful young woman Maila really was. We learn that East Coast modeling was dominated by no less than Betty Page,(herself the subject of an excellent documentary) the girl next door who just happened to be tied up and strapped in with black leather. West coast cheesecake was all about the beach, surfing, and the then new bikini bathing suits. Pretty tame stuff by today’s standards.

By fate, coincidence or the stars being in alignment Maila made a costume for herself based on Charles Addam’s cartoons and went to a combination costume contest and beauty pageant called the Bal Caribe. She was spotted by a television producer named Hunt Stromberg, who signed her almost immediately and put together what became Vampira’s Midnight Madness.

Maila’s original idea in creating Vampira was to get an Addam’s Family tv show off the ground, with herself as Morticia. I love The Addam’s Family show as it became, with Carolyn Jones in the role, but if Vampira had actually succeeded and played that part The Addam’s Family would have been something else entirely!

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1954 became the year of Vampira, Maila Nurmi put together a character that sent shock waves through American culture that is still being felt to this day.   In what can only be described as a perfect media storm Vampira became a household word, all over the world, while only being seen on a local Los Angeles television station! The tip of the iceberg was an article in Life magazine complete with wonderful photographs and a text describing what the Vampira Show was like. I used to have that issue of Life! Hate to tell you what happened to it!

Maila states that KABC, the station that aired Vampira, never paid one nickel for marketing or promotion, they got all the free publicity they wanted, every photographer and journalist in the country wanted to cover the Vampira phenomenon. And we see dozens of these photos and articles. The station did hire a classic, convertible car to drive Vampira around Los Angeles, which created chaos and pandemonium where ever Vampira stopped to talk to her fans, resulting in true street theater.

Maila Nurmi was part of a new wave in Hollywood, it seemed predestined that she would be linked with another Hollywood icon, and tragic figure, none other than James Dean. Maila was a very spiritual, metaphysical person. She tells us that she and James Dean knew each other in a previous life, and I see no reason to doubt that. They were good friends and kindred spirits, not lovers. In the tragic aftermath of his death Maila was blamed. No less a voice than Hedda Hopper told the world that James Dean collided with dark forces unleashed by Vampira, which led to his doom. Maila attempted suicide after that column saw the light of day.

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It gets worse. KABC tried another female movie host, Voluptua, also known as Gloria Pall, who hosted romantic movies from her boudoir while clad in lingerie. She lasted only 7 weeks and did not have Maila’s sense of post modern irony and bohemian intellect. Running less than a year Vampira’s show was canceled at the height of its popularity. Maila descended into dire poverty and has-been status from which she never really recovered. The rest of the story is quite frankly, horrifying. But while she was on top Vampira was all over television, most of which is now lost. She appeared on game shows and variety shows. On a special Halloween show of Red Skelton’s she appeared in a comedy sketch…with Bela Lugosi! Of course the footage is lost but some tantalizing stills remain, how I would love to see that kinescope!

There does remain a promotional film of Vampira doing a very basic intro for the show, and a recently unearthed piece of footage has a Vampira appearance on the George Gobel Show. Which leads to some interesting information about Vampira, Maila Nurmi herself always referred to Vampira in the third person, either by name or as “she.” Performers who appeared on the same shows with Vampira admit they liked Vampira, but never really met Maila Nurmi! Vampira was always Vampira, Maila never stepped out of character when making any appearance, including the street theater she became a part of. Greene advises us that this is “dangerously close to performance art!” Do you think?

The George Gobel Show footage is especially precious. Vampira owns the sketch from the moment she opens a door, Gobel seems genuinely unnerved by the whole experience. But then Gobel always did strike me as something of a sniveling weasel.   Gobel ends the sketch by literally running away from it and closing the stage curtain himself!

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Vampira was famous for her 17 inch waist, we learn that did not come easy. Maila would not eat for 48 hours before every broadcast, and then cinch herself into a semi-rigid corset on show night. She also tenderized her own flesh with papaya powder! She put herself through a weekly ordeal that would make Lon Chaney wince!

That hunger artist routine would come back to haunt her, Maila ended up in such a dire financial predicament friends would leave bags of food on her doorstep, knowing she was too proud to answer the door to receive a handout.

In the aftermath of Vampira’s cancellation she took a few acting jobs, most famously her appearance in Ed Wood’s now legendary Plan Nine From Outer Space.   Even though she was billed as Vampira, Maila herself does not consider that character, (The Ghoul Woman) to actually be Vampira. She calls that role “Maila in an alpha state!” Robbed of that great voice Maila did not speak in Plan Nine because she utterly rejected Wood’s entire inane dialog. I will always be curious as to what words Ed Wood attempted to put into Vampira’s mouth! Could they have been worse than “Inspector Clay is dead, murdered, and someone’s responsible?!”

There is no mention of Maila’s brief appearance in Bert Gordon’s The Magic Sword. Any acting jobs were few and Maila opened an arts and crafts store which failed. She cleaned houses, laid linoleum and worked in restaurants just for something to eat. As if poverty were not bad enough Maila was repeatedly hounded and assaulted by James Dean fans who blamed her for Dean’s death! In the worst of these incidents, while living in New York, she was beaten, dragged up and down stairs by the hair of her head and threatened with mutilation and death! A shocking photo has Maila sitting on a desk pointing to her bruises. Don’t get me wrong, I like James Dean as much as any movie geek, I’ve seen all three of his movies in theaters, some of them more than once. But rabid James Dean fans are among the scariest I have ever encountered. That kind of behavior is despicable, for any fan.

Even worse still, these assaults were treated like a joke by the police, the media and the general public. Maila Nurmi endured crap that would have driven a lesser soul to suicide.

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Late in life she was finally embraced by the Goths, and the punk bands who specialized in horror themed music, such as the Misfits, who got her into a studio to record her own songs and managed to get her some paychecks. She found kindred spirits in all sorts of marginalized groups, especially movie geeks like myself who grew up as monster kids in the 60s and 70s.

I said this before and I’ll reiterate. Maila Nurmi and Vampira never got the credit they were due, Vampira was the first horror movie show host. To illustrate how ahead of the curve she really was, the official date for the beginning of the Monster Craze was 1957, the year Screen Gems released a package of Universal Horror movies called Shock Theater to television stations. Local stations were encouraged to use Horror Hosts to introduce the movies on late night tv. Zacherley, Svengoolie and many, many others followed. In St. Louis we had Zone 2 hosted by Jack Murdock as “Cronos,” in 1965. And in 1958 the first issue of Famous Monsters was published by James Warren and Forry Ackerman. Vampira premiered in 1954, three years ahead of the first wave, and she did not have access to the classic Universal horror movies! Her show made do with movies that were probably already in public domain, White Zombie, 13th Guest, King of the Zombies. Not mentioned in the documentary Forry Ackerman never did respond to accusations that Vampirella was based on Vampira.

Vampira was the first horror show host but also the first Goth, one of the first icons of the Beat Generation, as important as William S Burroughs or Jack Kerouac, and the first performance artist. Most importantly she presented an image of strong, even dangerous female empowerment, sexual, provocative, predatory, in the most famously chauvinist era in American History. We see throughout the documentary clips from tv shows, commercials, educational and promotional films of the submissive, dish washing, cooking and cleaning stay at home woman, contrasted with the outrageous behavior of Vampira! Quite a comparison!

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If you’ve seen the movie Ed Wood you have seen Lisa Marie attempt a Vampira impersonation. Again, I like Lisa Marie, but she can’t even come close to Vampira’s charisma. While Vampira was still a going concern imitators began cropping up. We see a clip from another Red Skelton show with a blatant Vampira imitator in a Honeymooners sketch with Skelton and Peter Lorre.

Of course Vampira and Me deals with the still controversial (to my mind) creation of Elvira. Maila was attempting to revive the show in the 1980s, and walked away due to creative differences. The producers then brought in Cassandra Peterson. Maila introduced a lawsuit claiming copyright infringement, which sounds right to me. In a heartbreaking moment we see the actual handwritten note from Maila dropping the suit due to lack of legal representation and money to pursue the claim.

Again, don’t get me wrong, I love Elvira, have enjoyed her for years. I got her autograph at a car show in Springfield, Missouri in 1992. In Vampira and Me we get side by side comparisons of the two, uncanny, like seeing a gothic Mother and Daughter carry on the same routine.

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Elvira has always been more like a fan girl herself, poking fun at the movies, herself and her fans. Elvira always seemed accessible, friendly, she could be a friend, or even a girlfriend, to fan boys like us.

Vampira on the other hand had chunks of guys like you and me (and George Gobel) in her morning stool! Vampira, to quote Jimi Hendrix “drank the blood from a jagged edge!” Maila herself admits that she may have tapped into something truly dark and powerful when she created Vampira, something she could not control, and which back fired on her and led to her miserable situation. Which may put her in the same arena as yet another Jim: Morrison. The Lizard King had a Gothic sensibility and deliberately turned Doors concerts into ceremonial Magik rituals and may very well have unleashed occult forces he could not begin to deal with.

One incredible bit of information, Maila informs us that Vampira’s trademark scream at the beginning of every show was meant to be autoerotic! Vampira would scream bloody murder and then do a fake orgasm! I cannot imagine any other actress, especially on 1950s faking an orgasm on live television and getting away with it! Lucy and Ethel? Audrey Meadows? Molly Goldberg? Then again, the orgasm may not have been faked!

It’s entirely appropriate that Vampira would be linked with other Hollywood tragedies like James Dean, Bela Lugosi and Orson Welles (although I doubt Welles considered his life a tragedy, I’ll have more to say about Welles in another review.)

H Greene has put together an amazing documentary, I have watched Vampira and Me three times and have not got to the bottom of it yet. Vampira and Me belongs in every movie geeks collection. There have been many good show business documentaries recently, subjects as varied as Roger Corman, Stanley Kubrick, Tab Hunter, George Takei. Add Vampira and Me to the list.

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In a better world than the one we live in Vampira would have stayed on KABC, gone into syndication, been preserved on kinescope and video tape for future generations to enjoy, and the release of the Shock theater package would have ramped the show up to a whole new level. Vampira and Maila Nurmi would have gotten much more work in acting, and most importantly Maila Nurmi would have made a whole lot of money and been idolized at fan conventions and poetry readings.

In the end Vampira and Me is many things all at once, cultural history, a meditation on identity, the trap of fame and the grind of poverty. But I think any feeling person can gather a lot of inspiration from Vampira and Me. Maila Nurmi was a survivor, she endured and she lived and she got to a place where she could talk about her misfortunes and laugh about them. Throughout the interview footage shot by Greene I never saw one moment of self pity or sadness or lingering anger. Only when talking about James Dean does her heart grow sad. Maila Nurmi is gone but Vampira will live forever.

So let us celebrate what we do have, the few minutes of precious Vampira footage and the long interview that make up Vampira and Me are truly a cause to celebrate. With another Halloween fast approaching let’s all light some black candles on All Hallow’s Eve, turn the lights down low and watch Vampira and Me. You’ll be glad you did!

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