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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

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The Divide (DVD) – Lord Of The Flies in a basement

25th May 2012 By Tim Isaac


In the aftermath of a nuclear attack on New York, the residents of an apartment building take refuge in the basement, unable to venture out due to the toxic maelstrom the city air has become. As food and supplies begin to slowly dwindle, the patience and tempers of the residents starts to fray, as does their sanity.

While post-apocalyptic tales of humanity’s struggle to survive are nothing new, rarely has a film emerged with so claustrophobic a scope. Instead of disheartening treks through the desolate wilderness in search of somewhere safe to eke out an existence, the survivors spend the entire film trapped in the building’s basement. Surprisingly, it’s precisely the mundanity of this set up that proves to be The Divide’s strength.

A film’s characters being physically unable to get away from one another limits the scope of action, but at the same time also increases the required level of interaction between them. With each character displaying varying levels of reason (or lack thereof) right from the beginning, there is no shortage of friction to keep things interesting.

A refreshing variation on these kinds of films is that the reason for the initial attack and the perpetrators both remain irrelevant to the story. While there is some discussion as to who might have been responsible, the issue is swiftly abandoned as irrelevant when personality conflicts begin to escalate, although there’s not much in the way of justification given for why everyone goes all Lord of the Flies on each other, apart from the implication that the claustrophobic atmosphere drives people over the edge.

It’s a worrying but all-too-likely state of affairs that any women in a group of survivors will sooner or later be seen as little more than potential sex objects, and here is no exception. With the male to female ratio starting out at 3:1, such a development is inevitable, and is almost as unpleasant as the gruesome scenes of torture it’s juxtaposed by.

A problem with the film’s development is the unclear designation of how much time goes by between scenes. While we are to understand via the shots of supply stacks and waistlines both inexorably shrinking that some length of time is passing, the indistinct length of it makes the developments difficult to properly reconcile.

Aside from the gradual descent in to madness and anarchy, the greatest stand-out moment of eeriness comes soon after the initial attack when the blast door of the basement is opened with a blowtorch and a bullet-spraying assault by men in hazmat suits commences. Sadly, subsequent action sequences fail to live up to the expectation this generates.

Overall Verdict: A promising start is let down by indistinct character development and unanswered questions. More development of the ideas presented could have elevated The Divide beyond the merely average.

Special Features:
Behind the Scenes
Trailer

Reviewer: Andrew Marshall

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Lucky Luke (DVD) – The Artist’s Jean Dujardin goes madcap western

25th May 2012 By Tim Isaac


Despite the rather misleading packaging that presents it as a Leone style spaghetti-western with The Artist star Jean Dujardin playing a grim Man-With-No-Name type, Lucky Luke is in fact based on one of France’s most popular and enduring comic books and is essentially a live-action cartoon. Luke, with his superhuman gun-slinging abilities and talking horse, has been around in print since the 40s and his most famous stories were written by Rene Goscinny, the co-creator of Asterix. Indeed, the two characters are not dissimilar in that they’re both plucky, good-natured underdogs who are always coolly outsmarting their enemies and the stories share a sense of humour with their excessive puns, visual gags and sly references to the modern world.

So for any viewers who are uninitiated with the source material it may be a bit of a letdown to realise this is more Tom and Jerry than Butch and Sundance – probably a bit like going into Asterix & Obelix: Mission Cleopatra expecting to see a Gladiator-style epic. But if you accept it for the visually flamboyant, larger-than-life caper that it actually is, and you’re not adverse to a bit of juvenile silliness, then you’re probably going to have a good time.

For the first few minutes Lucky Luke keeps its cards close to its chest with a straight-faced prologue in which a young John Luke sees his parents murdered by the evil Cheaters Gang and vows both to avenge them and never to kill anyone. It’s only when we’re introduced to the grown up Luke in the shape of the insanely charismatic Dujardin and realise that he is now literally faster than his own shadow that the film’s true colours become apparent.

Luke is assigned by the President (Andre Oumansky) to return to his birthplace, Daisy Town, and attempt to bring his own brand of non-lethal law and order to what has become the most dangerous place in the West. Once there he comes up against murderous outlaws led by Pat Poker (Daniel Prevost), a slippery customer who’s almost as supernaturally talented with a gun as Luke himself. Eventually Luke is forced to team up with his old partner Calamity Jane (Sylvie Testud), the Shakespeare obsessed Jesse James (Melvil Poupaud) and Billy the Kid – a snivelling little brat who’s fond of lollipops and prone to hysterical tantrums, a gag made all the funnier by the fact he’s played by Michael Youn who is clearly in his late 30s.

At a 140 minutes, Lucky Luke is a little long to sustain the madcap pace, and now and then the flimsy plot is sidetracked and the film starts to feel like a sketch comedy show in which some of the jokes fall flat. But Dujardin’s earnestly goofy performance, Pierre Queffelean’s outlandish set design and James Huth’s Tex Avery meets Sergio Leone style direction add up to a satisfying piece of family entertainment. At least it would be family entertainment if it didn’t have a ‘15′ certificate which seems like an odd decision considering it only contains a bit of cartoonish violence and a few risqué jokes which would probably go over the heads of any kids watching anyway.

Overall Verdict: Occasionally hilarious, visually outstanding and with a winning central performance from Jean Dujardin, Lucky Luke is on to a winner.

Special Features:
None

Reviewer: Adam Pidgeon

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Island Of Lost Souls (Blu-ray) – A cult classic finally comes to disc, but appears rather dated

25th May 2012 By Tim Isaac


Considering that this film is a cult classic and one of a short list of films previously banned by the BBFC, I was unfamiliar with it. In fact I probably wouldn’t have been aware of it all if it hadn’t been the focus of a Simpsons’ Halloween episode, in which the whole family are turned into half-man half-animal creatures. So before viewing it I did some research, finding that people believed it had held up very well over time and was a great movie. But in all honesty I wasn’t that impressed with the film.

This might have been because its story was slightly spoiled by the Simpsons’ parody, with the reveal that the evil doctor has been making animals more like men not being shocking to me. The story in a nutshell is that a man, Parker, is shipwrecked and taken to a mysterious island where a mad scientist does unnatural experiments. I felt that there was very little story to it however. Parker is eventually found by his fiancé and taken home, while the doctor faces an uprising from his creations. This is probably the most interesting aspect of the film and unfortunately the film ends right when this is picking up.

The acting is hardly fantastic, ranging from hammy and theatrical (Laughton as Dr Moreau) to downright laughable (the ship’s captain, particularly his drunk ‘acting’). The hero of the story, Parker, is rather boring and unlikeable, with Dr Moreau being the only thing that kept me interested in the film. His theatricality keeps you gripped to the screen every time he appears. Interestingly famed actor Bela Lugosi appears in a small role as the head half-beast creature, in quite a good performance.

The film’s transfer to Blu-ray is unfortunately rather unimpressive, especially considering what has been done to films of similar age like Wizard of Oz. The picture is very grainy and the sound rather indistinct, making the dialogue hard to follow at times. There are also occasional noises present during the film that are clearly not supposed to be there.

In terms of special features the only one worth mentioning is a feature with horror critic Jonathan Rigby, who discusses the film and it’s adaption from the original novel. There is also the soundtrack for the film and its original trailer.

Overall Verdict: While the film isn’t a total write off, I feel that modern audiences will not be that interested in it. Strictly for fans of classic horror and Charles Laughton.

Special Features:
Historian Jonathan Rigby discussing the film
The original soundtrack
The original trailer

Reviewer: Matt Mallinson

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Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter Red Band Trailer – The history-supernatural mash-up gets violent

25th May 2012 By Tim Isaac

It’s still a toss up whether it’ll be great or a complete mess, but Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter is intensely intriguing and the trailers certainly look cool. That’s true of this new red-band effort, which brings the violence to the fore. Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter reimagines the American president as an axe-wielding, highly trained vampire hunter. Seth Grahame-Smith’s book, on which the movie will be based, gives new context to Lincoln’s rise to the presidency as well as the American Civil War (which was fought because the vampires were in league with the slave owners), suggesting these events were a lot more paranormal than history tells us, and stemmed from Lincoln’s mother’s murder by a vampire when he was a child. The film hits UK cinemas August 2nd.

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WIN! War of the Dead T-shirts and DVDs – Get your mitts on the Nazi zombie flick

25th May 2012 By Tim Isaac

To celebrate 28th May UK DVD release of War of the Dead (Momentum Pictures) we are offering one winner the chance to win an extremely limited edition money can’t buy exclusively designed t-shirt and a copy of War of the Dead on DVD. Two runner-ups will also win a limited edition War of the Dead t-shirt.

Dogs Soldiers meets Dead Snow in this action-packed shock-fest in which a small group of Allied soldiers comes up against a horde of Nazi zombies. Established documentary director Mark Makilasko’s debut feature is a stylish, fast-paced, hard-hitting war/horror movie hybrid that will appeal to fans of both genres.

The film stars Andrew Tiernan (300; The Pianist), Samuel Vauramo (The American), Mark Wingett (Snow White and The Huntsman; The Bill; Eastenders) and Jouko Ahola (Kingdom Of Heaven). War of the Dead (Momentum Pictures) is available to download and on DVD from 28th May 2012.

If you’d like to try and win the War Of The Dead DVD and t-shirt, sign in to the site below (or click here to register) and answer the multiple choice question (see below for more details on how to enter). The competition closes on June 7th, 2012, so get answering and good luck!

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