OnVideo

New Releases for the Week of Oct. 25

From the Big Screen:

“Lights Out.” For more information on other releases this week, see the Weekly Guide to Home Video Releases.

This Week’s Best Bets:

This week’s best bets include a selection of very dark films, beginning with Arrow Video’s gigantic boxed set “The Herschell Gordon Lewis Feast.” In 1963, director Herschell Gordon Lewis pulled a cow’s tongue out of an actress’ mouth on camera, and in doing so, changed the landscape of horror cinema forever. That sequence was just one of numerous gruesome gags featured in “Blood Feast,” the film credited as being the world’s first gore movie. It’s no exaggeration to say that the modern gross-out movies of today owe their very existence to the pioneering efforts of H.G. Lewis. But whilst Lewis is most widely celebrated for his blood-and-guts epics (“Two Thousand Maniacs!”, “The Wizard of Gore,” etc.), there’s more to the prolific director than splatter. From tales of sordid photographers (“Scum of the Earth”) to sex robots (“How to Make a Doll”), from biker girl-gangs (“She-Devils on Wheels”) to youths-run-amok (“Just for the Hell of It”), and from psychic witches (“Something Weird”) to hard liquor-loving hillbillies (“Moonshine Mountain”), the filmography of H.G. Lewis reads like a veritable wish-list of exploitation movie madness. Now, for the first time ever, Arrow Video presents 14 of the Godfather of Gore’s most essential films on seven Blu-ray Discs and seven DVDs (including nine Blu-ray world debuts), packed full of eye-popping bonus content. The Blu-ray/DVD Combo set has a retail price of $229.95 but is selling for $159.99 online. Read more here. From Arrow Video/MVD Entertainment … Next up is a 4K digital restoration of director Leslie Stevens’ long-missing 1960 thriller “Private Property” (2015), starring iconic American character actor Warren Oates in his first significant screen role. A major rediscovery for noir and crime fans,” Private Property” had essentially vanished following a very brief release in the early 1960s. Two homicidal Southern California drifters (played to creepy, Peeping Tom perfection by Oates and Corey Allen) wander off the beach and into the seemingly-perfect Beverly Hills home of an unhappy housewife (Leslie Stevens’ real-life spouse, Kate Manx). Shimmering with sexual tension and lensed in stunning B&W by master cameraman Ted McCord (“The Treasure of the Sierra Madre,” “East of Eden”), “Private Property” is both an eerie, neo-Hitchcockian thriller and a savage critique of the hollowness of the Playboy-era American Dream. Oates delivers his first great screen performance here as one of the murderous vagabonds, years before he emerged as one of the finest character actors of his generation; his bizarre, voyeuristic Lennie-and-George relationship with the underrated Allen (James Dean’s hot rod rival in “Rebel Without a Cause”) is fueled by a barely-suppressed homoeroticism. Shot almost entirely in the Beverly Hills home where director Stevens and lead actress Manx lived at the time, the film is a simmering thriller tinged with deeply unnerving elements of autobiography — and all the voyeurism anyone could ask for. From Cinelicious Pics … Rounding out the trio is “The Executioner” (1963), a masterpiece of black humor, beloved in Spain but too little seen elsewhere, a scathing critique of Franco-era values through a macabre farce about an undertaker who marries an executioner’s daughter and reluctantly takes over her father’s job so the family can keep their government-allotted apartment. As caustic today as it was in 1963, this early collaboration between Luis García Berlangan and his longtime screenwriter Rafael Azcona is an unerring depiction of what Berlanga called “the invisible traps that society sets up for us.” A furiously funny personal attack on capital punishment, “The Executioner” escaped the state censors who sought to suppress it, and today is regarded as one of the greatest Spanish films of all time. On DVD and Blu-ray, with a new, restored 4K digital transfer, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack on the Blu-ray. From The Criterion Collection

To lighten things a little, Sony has on offer “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby 10th Anniversary” (2006), in an ultimate two-disc Blu-ray fan edition. The comedy stars Will Ferrell as #1 NASCAR driver Ricky Bobby, who stays atop the heap thanks to a pact with his best friend and teammate, Cal Naughton, Jr. (John C. Reilly). But when a French Formula One driver (Sacha Baron Cohen) makes his way up the ladder, Ricky Bobby’s talent and devotion are put to the test. Includes the theatrical version of the film fully remastered in 4K, plus over 90 minutes of new special features including 13 never-before-seen deleted and extended scenes, interviews with Ricky & Jean, “Raw Takes,” director Adam McKay’s video diaries, auditions and more. The set also includes the unrated version of the film, along with all archival bonus material: “25 Years Later” commentary, commentary with director Adam McKay, deleted and extended scenes, gag reel, “Line-O-Rama,” interviews, “Will Ferrell Returns to Talladega” featurette, bonus race footage, “Walker & Texas Ranger” featurette, Ricky and Cal’s commercials and public service announcements, more.

From TV to DVD:

Based on MC Beaton’s best-selling mystery novels, the Acorn TV Original Series “Agatha Raisin” (2016) makes its DVD debut. In this funny and intriguing new mystery series, a London PR whizz, Agatha Raisin (Ashley Jensen), turns amateur sleuth as she becomes entangled in mischief, mayhem, and murder when she opts for early retirement in a small village in the Cotswolds. Agatha finds her hopes of a quiet life are dashed when more murders start occurring in her village. Drawn into their mysteries, Agatha attempts to solve the crimes … often in rather unorthodox ways. Three-disc set with eight episodes … “American Masters: Norman Lear: Just Another Version of You” (2016) is the first documentary about the 94-year-old television writer/producer legend who was largely responsible for the explosion of bold American television in the 1970s. With unprecedented access to Lear, his work and his massive personal archives, the film combines stories from his turbulent childhood and early career with his groundbreaking TV success (“All in the Family,” “The Jeffersons,” “Good Times,” “Maude”) and social activism. The documentary also features colorful stories from Lear’s family, friends and collaborators, including John Amos, George Clooney, Alan Horn, Bill Moyers, Rob Reiner, Phil Rosenthal and Russell Simmons, as well as cinéma vérité moments with Mel Brooks, Carl Reiner, Jon Stewart, Amy Poehler and Lena Dunham. Release timed to coincide with national broadcast premiering on PBS October 25 after a July-August theatrical release.On DVD, Blu-ray Disc from PBS Distribution … “Ancient Aliens: Season 9” (2014) is a four-disc set with 12 episodes. Pyramids … hidden beneath the ice of Antarctica. Egyptian hieroglyphs of flying ships … carved on sandstone walls in Australia. As technology advances, scientists and archaeologists are making new, groundbreaking discoveries at an unprecedented rate. According to Ancient Astronaut theorists, these discoveries may reveal not only that extraterrestrials visited Earth in the distant past, but that they may still be among us today. From Lionsgate … Award-winning actress Marta Dusseldorp returns in Acorn TV’s enthralling Australian legal drama “Janet King, Series 2: The Invisible Wound” (2016). In Series 2, still reeling from her own personal tragedy, Janet and her team leave the courtroom to lead a Royal Commission into gun crimes. In Series 2, Janet remains devastated by the unsolved murder of her partner, Ash, two years earlier. Her professional life is no less challenging, as the attorney general tasks Janet with heading a royal commission into serious firearm crime. Recruiting some of her old team from the Department of Public Prosecutions, Janet begins piecing together how illegal guns enter the country. When the commission discovers evidence related to Ash’s murder, Janet comes closer to finding the killer who tore her family apart. But uncovering the truth makes Janet and the high-profile commission a target for criminals and politicians alike. Three-disc set with eight episodes.

Buzzin’ the ‘B’s:

    Foreign Films:

    Uruguayan film programmer-turned-director Federico Veiroj’s critically acclaimed film “The Apostate” (2015 — Spain/France/Uruguay) channels the likeness of Luis Buñuel and Éric Rohmer in the existentialist tale of unlikely hero Gonzalo Tamayo’s (Álvaro Ogalla) quixotic quest to abandon the Catholic Church. In love with his cousin, engaged in dubious errands for his crooked father, and struggling to complete one final credit for his university degree in philosophy, a seemingly lost Tamayo must establish who he truly is. In a quest to change the person he has been forced to become, Tamayo’s opposition manifests itself in the increasingly quixotic mission of formally having his name struck from the Catholic church’s baptismal record. Stars Alvaro Ogalla, Marta Larralde, Barbara Lennie, Vicky Pena, Kaiet Rodriguez, Juan Calot, Andres Gertrudix, Jaime Chavarri, Mercedes Hoyos. From Breaking Glass Pictures … “Men & Chicken” (2015 — Denmark), starring Mads Mikkelsen, David Dencik, Nikolaj Lie Kaas, Søren Malling and Nicolas Bro, is a darkly hilarious slapstick comedy starring Mikkelsen follows a pair of socially-challenged siblings who discover they are adopted half-brothers in their late father’s videotaped will. Their journey in search of their true father takes them to the small, insular Danish island of Ork, where they stumble upon three additional half-brothers — each also sporting hereditary harelips and lunatic tendencies — living in a dilapidated mansion overrun by barn animals. Initially unwelcome by their newfound kin, the two visitors stubbornly wear them down until they’re reluctantly invited to stay. As the misfit bunch get to know each other, they unwittingly uncover a deep family secret that ultimately binds them together. In a Blu-ray/DVD Combo from Drafthouse Films/MVD Entertainment.

    For the Family:

    “Captain Fantastic” (2015): Deep in the forests of the Pacific Northwest, isolated from society, a devoted father, Ben (Viggo Mortensen), dedicates his life to transforming his six young children into extraordinary adults. But when a tragedy strikes the family, they’re forced to leave their self-created paradise and begin a journey into the outside world, leading to a confrontation with his father-in-law (Frank Langella), who wants his grandchildren to have a normal life — challenging Ben’s idea of what it means to be a parent and bringing into question everything he’s taught them. On DVD, Blu-ray Disc from Universal.

    Special Interest:

    In “Bruce Lee: Tracking the Dragon” (2014), Bruce Lee expert John Little (“A Warrior’s Journey”) tracks down the actual locations of some of Bruce Lee’s most iconic action scenes. Many of these sites remain largely unchanged nearly half a century later. At monasteries, ice factories, and on urban streets, Little explores the real life settings of Lee’s legendary career. The film builds on Little’s earlier short, “Pursuit of the Dragon,” to present a comprehensive view of Lee’s work that will change the way you see the films. In such pivotal films as “The Big Boss,” “Fist of Fury,” “The Way of the Dragon” and “Enter the Dragon”, Lee staged the elaborately choreographed action sequences that revolutionized the martial arts field. They took on a mythic status and it is highly informative to see how he expertly built traditional locations into his story lines to give them added dimension. From MVD Visual … “Peggy Guggenheim: Art Addict” (2015) is a feature-length chronicle about the life of Peggy Guggenheim, the collector, gallerist and Guggenheim family heiress who became a leading figure in the modern art movement as she assembled one of the world’s great troves of modern art. The second feature directed by Lisa Immordino Vreeland (“Diana Vreeland: The Eye has to Travel”), This documentary reveals Guggenheim to be a remarkably vibrant character who was not only ahead of her time but helped to define it. As she moved through the cultural upheaval of the 20th century, she collected not only art, but artists. Her colorful personal history included trysts, affairs and marriages with such figures as Samuel Beckett, Max Ernst, Jackson Pollock, Marcel Duchamp as well as many others. While also fighting through personal tragedy, she maintained her vision to build one of the most important collections of modern art, which is today enshrined in her famous Venetian palazzo. Based in part on Guggenheim’s sole authorized biography, Jacqueline Weld’s 1986 “Peggy: The Wayward Guggenheim,” the documentary recounts the New York-born collector’s life through never-before-heard interview tapes; conversations with relatives, artists, dealers and industry experts; and hundreds of astounding and beautiful images spanning decades of artists, galleries, parties, travels and other colorful scenes. Interviewees include noted art dealers Larry Gagosian and Arne Glimcher; noted curators Hans Ulrich Obrist, Karole Vail and Diego Cortez; and artist Marina Abramovic. From Music Box Films … “Steve McQueen – The Man & Le Mans” (2015): By 1970, Steve McQueen ruled Hollywood. He was the “King of Cool” and the world’s most notorious ladies’ man. Hot off the back of classics like “The Thomas Crown Affair” and “Bullitt,” the racing fanatic began production of his passion project, “Le Mans,” centered on the 24-hour car race in France. But the infamously troubled production was plagued with financial troubles, on-set rivalries and the star’s own personal issues. This documentary film interweaves stunning, newly-discovered footage and McQueen’s private recordings with original interviews to reveal the true story of how this cinema legend would risk everything in pursuit of his dream. Official Selection of the 2015 Cannes Film Festival. From Filmrise/MVD.

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