• Home
  • Movie News
  • Movie Trailers
  • Reviews
    • Cinema Reviews
    • Home Entertainment Reviews
      • Blu-ray Review
      • DVD Review
  • Competitions
  • Features
    • Interview

Movie Muser

Have your say about cinema

Nightbirds (Blu-ray & DVD) – Nicolas Winding Refn brings a lost film back to life

27th May 2012 By Tim Isaac


Until relatively recently Nightbirds was thought to be a lost movie from cult director Andy Milligan, who’s best known (although he’s not known that much, as his cult is pretty small) for slightly bizarre horror flicks. However at least one print remained, which Drive director and Milligan aficionado Nicolas Winding Refn managed to get hold of. He then approached the BFI about giving Nightbirds the first proper release it’s ever had, as it hardly even saw the inside of a cinema when it was first made.

This proved trickier than you might expect, as Refn’s solitary print was missing several key scenes, which had literally been cut out of it to make the six-minute trailer. However working with a company that had a copy of that trailer, they’ve managed to put the movie back together and create this new Blu-ray and DVD release. The real question though, is whether it was all worth it?

On one level, yes it was, as it would be sad to completely lose a work by such an idiosyncratic director, and also one that’s different to much of the rest of his work. That said, while it’s hopefully now been preserved for all time, I doubt it’s ever going to find much of an audience.

Although Milligan was an American, in the late 60s and early 70s he relocated to Britain and made five films here. This is one of them and is essentially a chamber piece that has the slight feel of a film played (Milligan had a background in underground New York theatre).

Dee (Julie Shaw) comes across young homeless man Dink when she finds him vomiting on the dingy London streets and invites him back to her falling-to-bits flat. While Dink is almost child-like and a virgin, he’s soon drawn into an intense affair with Dee, which becomes increasingly extreme, cycling between deep passion, extreme jealousy and Dee’s controlling behaviour. Dink’s life increasingly becomes about his new lover, but as time passes she shows signs of being oddly detached.

A curious film and an antidote to the usual image of London being a hip, swinging place in the late 60s, Milligan’s film is interesting without being all that absorbing. Berwick Kaler as Dink is very good in his first screen role (he went on to appear in the likes of Coronation Street and now writes and plays the dame in York’s panto), but Julie Shaw rather undermines things with a somewhat weak performance. It’s particularly problematic as the changes in her mood and the reasons for her cruelty are key to the film and Shaw doesn’t really do much with it. Nightbirds sexual frankness is interesting though, working as a bit of an antidote to the free love mantra of the time.

It’s kinda interesting and while Milligan’s OTT tendencies are kept in check here more than they are in most of his other films, you can feel his presence. That’s certainly true of the film’s slight edge of misogyny, something that Milligan’s been accused of in many of his films. He also didn’t have the patience (or budget) for a lot of post-production finesse, resulting in some rough editing and audio jumps.

While not sold as such, this is essentially a double-feature release, as it also includes another of the director’s British films, The Body Beneath. It’s one of his rather camp horror efforts and fans will be pleased to hear it includes the slight sense of incoherence, oddly out of time setting and bad costumes he’s known for. A vicar arrives in a British village from Canada to reopen an old church. However he’s secretly a vampire, who has three ghoulish women (who literally look like their make-up is painted-on food dye) and a hunchback (played by Kaler) in tow.

One of the most accessible of Milligan’s efforts, it fun while being utterly bizarre and having a plot that goes all over the place. Like many of the director’s film, there’s the constant sense that he knows his backers are looking for enough sex and violence to make it commercial for an exploitation audience (with many of these scenes seeming oddly arbitrary), while he’s having fun inbetween. Strange, garish and definitely an acquired taste, it’s definitely something different and one for the most cultish of horror fans.

With both movies, the films look as good as could be expected, especially as neither has exactly been preserved well in the last 40 years. Neither has been given an overly aggressive cleaning, so that the HD master is quite grainy and the audio is rather muddy at times. It’s as it should be though, giving us the best version we can have without giving it a false cleanliness it never even had when Milligan first made it.

Overall Verdict: An interesting release for those interested in Milligan, the swinging 60s and the most cultish of horror, but although both films are kind of interesting, they’re easier to appreciate than like and will only ever have a very limited following.

Special Features:
Audio Commentary With Berwick Kaler
‘The Body Beneath’ Feature Film
Optional dialogue only tracks
Trailers
Booklet

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

Related

CHECK OUT THESE RELATED ARCHIVES:

Filed Under: Blu-ray Review

Search this site…

Get Social

RSSTwitterFacebook

Get new posts by e-mail

Get the latest in our daily e-mail

Latest Cinema & Home Ent. Reviews

Mortal Engines (Cinema Review)

Anna and the Apocalypse (Cinema Review)

Suspiria (Cinema Review)

Overlord (Cinema Review)

King of Thieves (Cinema Review)

Isle of Dogs (DVD Review)

Mission: Impossible – Fallout (Cinema Review)

Tomb Raider (Blu-ray Review)

The Bridge 4 (DVD Review)

My Friend Dahmer (Cinema Review)

Latest News & Trailers

Detective Pikachu Trailer – Pokemon is going live action with Ryan Reynolds

Toy Story 4 Teaser Trailer – Woody & the gang are coming back once more

Aladdin Teaser Trailer – Guy Ritchie directs Disney’s latest live-action adaptation

New Glass Trailer – The worlds of Unbreakable and Split meet

Aquaman Extended Trailer – Jason Momoa goes to war under the seas against Patrick Wilson

New Overlord Trailer – Soldiers take on Nazi-created zombies in the JJ Abrams produced movie

The Mule Trailer – Clint Eastwood is an octogenarian drug runner opposite Bradley Cooper

Vice Trailer – Christian Bale transforms into former Vice President Dick Cheney

Mary Queen of Scots Trailer – Saoirse Ronan & Margot Robbie get Elizabethan

New Mortal Engines Trailer – London is literally on the move in the steampunk fantasy

Handpicked MediaHandpicked MediaCopyright © 2025 Muser Media · Powered by WordPress & Genesis Framework · Log in
Movie Muser is a member of The Handpicked Media network

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.Accept Read More
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT