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created 12/15/97. |
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added: 10/10/01
So
here goes...
I
guess we're going to try this once again. So here goes. Welcome, one
and all, to the newly revamped and this time weekly (I promise)
Doogan's Views column starring
me, Todd Doogan. Thank you, thank you, thank you. This is a place
where we will discuss DVD issues and developments, movies, porn, my
life and anything else that catches my fancy. This is also a place
where I will discuss assorted issues and letters sent to me about
DVDs we've reviewed, not reviewed and might have no intention of
ever reviewing - so there. You know, all the stuff like that. Who
knows, you may even find your very own letters printed in these
pages - questioning me, saluting me or condemning me to hell.
But what does all of that mean for you? Well, I'm glad you asked.
The most important meaning you can pull from this is you'll have a
regular voice that sounds a lot like mine joining Bill's on this DVD
web site collectively known as The
Digital Bits.
But guess what? That's not all, not by a long shot. I'll also be
taking the time to look at smaller DVD releases that wouldn't
regularly get reviewed on the site. In my column each and every
week, you'll find a handful of reviews that will give you a better
idea of whether or not you should pick up a disc. There may or may
not be a rhyme or reason to the selection of discs I pick each week.
It could be themed, it could be by a director I like or dislike or
it could be a gaggle of stuff I just watched over the weekend. It
could even be stuff I watched last year and never got around to
talking about. Any way you slice it, you'll be getting some reviews
in here. And that's a good thing, I promise.
One more feature of the new and slightly improved
Doogan's Views, is that each
and every Friday I'll let you know about ten DVDs coming out the
following week. Must-haves, stay-away-froms and
wow-didn't-see-that-comings all included. It'll be fun, it'll let
you know what to expect and it'll let you know what to get your
money lined up for.
So let's get to it. Below, I'm looking at five horror type movies
to get you ready for the Halloween season. I'll be looking at horror
movies all month, so this is just a taste. And just F.Y.I., all
Doogan's Views Reviews
(they're coming right at you - you know, like the
New Zoo Revue... oh, forget
it) will be indexed like always in the
Reviews
section of the site, just with a small DV
denoting them as a Doogan's View.
Not too confusing I hope.
Anyway... ready, steady and go with the first of the weekly
Doogan's Views!
Terrorism sucks, huh? I was pretty glad I subscribe to the DVD
format after a while. Everything on TV was news, footage and tears
for a while. And now we're in a rah-rah stage, and I'm still glad
for DVD. I think I spun more platters in the last three weeks than I
did for the entire year before that. And I looked at some good
stuff, including
The
Godfather box which I reviewed separately this week. But
since I'm in a Halloween mood, I also watched some really great
horror titles. What do you say we get rid of this stupid column and
move on to some DVDs I watched this past weekend? |
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Friday
the 13th: A New Beginning
1985 (2001) - Paramount
Film Rating: C-
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras):
A/B+/C-
Specs and Features:
92 mins, R, letterboxed widescreen (1.85:1), 16x9 enhanced,
single-sided, single-layered, theatrical trailer, film-themed menu
screens, scene access (14 chapters), languages: English & French
(DD mono), subtitles: English, Closed Captioned
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With
a smacked TV on his head, Jason (not to rhyme) is d-e-a-d dead. Or
is he? Pause, and cue mysterious music. Yes, he is. I'm not going to
fool you. Young Tommy, who defeated Jason in the previous film, is
now a bit off in the noggin' and is sent to a halfway house for
unbalanced youth. He doesn't say much and has a hard time fitting
in, but so what? We got some killing to do. When a chocolate bar
munching man child bothers a psychopathic teenager with an axe, said
man child gets lopped up real good... and this only starts things
off in a wild direction as assorted townspeople and crazy teens
start falling victim to a watcher in the woods clad in the trademark
work clothes and hockey mask. But who is it? Is it really Jason, or
Tommy or the weird loner guy who shows up to "fix" things
of the local wackjob crazy lady and her son? Find out in this lame
ass sequel that should never have been.
This marks the second time Jason wasn't the killer in a
Friday film and that's nothing
more than a bit of trivia because the film sucks. I think there are
plenty of people out there who love the Friday
films and who will avoid this film like an anthrax plague. And it's
Paramount's fault, really. The price on this thing is close to 25
bucks and it's got nothing but a trailer on it. Paramount really has
to rethink their pricing and soon. A lot of small town distributors
won't even pick up their product anymore because of the price.
That's not a good thing for DVD fans because that forces you to hunt
stuff down.
Other than the price, New Beginning
is a great DVD in terms of video and audio. The picture is nice and
colorful with hard blacks and stiff solid lines. The anamorphic
presentation is better than I've ever seen this film on video or
laserdisc. It's a very nice looking. The sound is a standard Dolby
Digital mono in English and French, which gets the job done with
nice play and clear dialogue. The ch-ch-ch-ch-ch's all sound great.
As I said before, the only extra is a trailer. That's a shame
because Paramount really should have worked something out with
Fangoria to put some of the
articles they had in back issues on the Friday
films on here. Because of those articles, I remember these film
being more horrific than they actually are. I was actually shocked
at how tame these films are when viewed in this day and age. |
Friday
the 13th: A New Beginning
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Friday
the 13th, Part VI: Jason Lives
1986 (2001) - Paramount
Film Rating: C+
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras):
A/B+/C-
Specs and Features:
87 mins, R, letterboxed widescreen (1.85:1), 16x9 enhanced,
single-sided, single-layered, theatrical teaser trailer, film-themed
menu screens, scene access (16 chapters), languages: English and
French (DD 2.0), subtitles: English, Closed Captioned
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The
schmuck going around posed as Jason is killed, and somehow that's
not enough for Tommy. No. He wants to go to Jason's grave and make
sure the clichéd killer is dead for good. So, grabbing his
buddy Horseshack, he digs up Jason and slams a cast iron fence post
into Jason's chest. But at that exact moment a lightning bolt shoots
out of the sky and reanimates Jason's maggot-filled body with
electric Evil. Jason kills Horseshack and heads back to town to kill
everybody he finds once again. Cut to credits. The rest of the film
is the usual: no-one-will-believe-Tommy and camp counselors charged
with bringing Crystal Lake back to full use are hunted and killed in
new and interesting ways, all with an Alice Cooper soundtrack. It's
not a bad Jason film, but that's not saying much is it?
I always enjoyed Jason Lives
because it's fun and stupid and makes no bones about what's going
on. Jason kills people, plain and simple. That's all this film is
about. The acting is bad and the dialogue is dumb but the murders
are inspired. Skip Friday the 13th: A New
Beginning. But if you're a Friday
fan, this is a good flick to own.
This DVD is as good as the other, with a very nice anamorphic
presentation featuring nice color representation and artifact free
blacks. The sound, again in Dolby Digital 2.0 English and French, is
as good as you'd want or expect. Extras are light with only a
trailer. Jason Lives doesn't
deserve the hefty price tag, so shop for a bargain if you can. |
Friday
the 13th, Part VI: Jason Lives
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The
Forsaken
2001 (2001) - Screen Gems (Columbia TriStar)
Film Rating: C+
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): A/A/B-
Specs and Features:
90 mins, R, letterboxed widescreen (1.85:1), 16x9 enhanced, full
frame (1.33:1), dual-sided, single-layered, audio commentary with
writer/director J.S. Cardone, 3 deleted scenes,
Hard-Body Co-Stars featurette,
Actor Profile: Brendan Fehr
featurette, theatrical trailers (for The
Forsaken, Bram Stoker's
Dracula, John Carpenter's
Vampires, Hollow Man
and John Carpenter's Ghosts of Mars),
cast and crew filmographies, film-themed menu screens, scene access
(28 chapters), languages: English (DD 5.1 & DD 2.0) and French
(DD 2.0), subtitles: English, French, Chinese, Korean and Thai,
Closed Captioned
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Sure,
the film starts off great with former Coyote
Ugly bartender Izabella Miko washing blood off her lovely
breasts. But that sort of pace wasn't meant to be kept up. A guy's
vampire flick through and through, The
Forsaken stumbles and falls often enough to be put into a
geriatric community. Thinking back on it, it's hard to even say what
the film is about really. A young man who obviously works at Troma
in LA wants to go to his brother's wedding or something on the East
Coast, so he agrees to drive a car. Along the way, he picks up a
vampire hunter who gets him involved in a vampire hunt. Everyone
basically gets infected, but the vampire hunter has a serum to slow
the vamp-out factor down. Now they're running against the clock to
save their souls and kill the head vampire. It sounds better on
paper than it actually is, believe me.
Director J.S. Cardone wanted to make the first vampire road movie,
but I guess he never saw Near Dark.
Actually he cites that as a predecessor to this, but it's not a road
movie because the action takes place in one town. Still, there are a
lot of cars, open roads and gritty deserts in that film. Plus, that
one is actually worth seeing. The
Forsaken is as lame as the WB stars that litter it's
wasteland landscape. The best moment is the opening shot, and even
that has a limited audience.
The Forsaken is here in both
full frame and anamorphic widescreen on a flipper disc. The picture
is very good and quite colorful. It could have benefited from using
a dual-layer disc. As compressed as it is, we're left with a few
artifacted blacks. But for the most part it's a good clean picture.
The sound, in both Dolby Digital 5.1 and 2.0, is also clean. Both
tracks are pretty forward-friendly with play, but the 5.1 track is
more aggressive and fuller obviously. Surprisingly, this little disc
is packed with supplements. First off is a boring commentary track
with writer/director J.S. Cardone - it's not very worthwhile. You'll
also find three deleted scenes and a couple of featurettes:
Hard-Body Co-Stars (all about
the cars in the film which is pretty lame considering the cars are
pretty lame) and Actor Profile: Brendan
Fehr (which is even more lame than the cars). Rounding
out the disc are theatrical trailers for The
Forsaken, Bram Stoker's
Dracula, John Carpenter's
Vampires, Hollow Man
and John Carpenter's Ghosts of Mars
and some cast and crew filmographies. Not thrilling, but pretty
packed, huh? I wouldn't run out and pick it up, but it certainly
won't hurt if it's the only thing left at Blockbuster one Friday
night. |
The
Forsaken
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13
Ghosts
1960 (2001) - Columbia Pictures (Columbia TriStar)
Film Rating: B-
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras):
A/B+/A-
Specs and Features:
84 mins, NR, full frame (1.33:1), dual-sided, single-layered,
The Making of Illusion-O
featurette, theatrical trailers (for 13
Ghosts, Ghostbusters
and The Tingler), Ghost
Viewer, film-themed menu screens, scene access (28 chapters),
languages: English and French (DD mono), subtitles: English, French,
Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean and Thai, Closed Captioned
|
No,
I didn't get my hands on an advance copy of the new upcoming horror
film (that, in the trailer, actually looks like it could be quite
creepy). This is the original version done up in high carnival style
by William Castle. So don't expect spooky or thrilling. Instead,
expect fun and entertaining. Because Castle was behind the film, you
can also expect a gimmick. And what's the gimmick? Well, the film
was done up in a process not unlike 3-D, but in this case the film
was processed (or more specifically color tinted) so that the normal
eye couldn't see any of the ghost action scenes in the film. The
process, called "Illusion-O", necessitated a special "Ghost
Viewer" that filtered the film so you could see the ghostly
horror unfold on your screen. Of course, even back then you could
see the action whether or not you used the Viewer, but it was a neat
gimmick nonetheless. The story is about a lower middle class family
that inherits a house from an eccentric uncle who collected ghosts.
12 in all. But why, then, is the title 13
Ghosts? Well, that's a mystery to be unfolded as you
watch the film. Mooooohahahahahahahaha (choke, cough) hahahaha.
The film is cheesy. But it's incredibly fun cheese, and that's fun
with a capital F. Columbia sent this DVD out as a dual-sided flipper
that lets you watch the film in either "Ghost Mode" (with
the color gels fully intact) or plain black and white on the other
side. The Ghost Mode version has a neat little intro by
producer/director and gimmick king William Castle, showing you how
to use the Viewer. Both sides are full frame and look very nice even
for their age, which is to be expected from Columbia. The prints
have seen better days in spots, but they're pretty well off
considering. The audio is standard in English and Spanish Dolby
Digital mono and sounds better than you'd expect.
The extras on the disc include a nice little documentary on the
film, entitled The Making of Illusion-O,
with a running time of around 8 minutes. It covers the process and
also sheds some light on Castle and his gimmicks. You'll also get
your very own Viewer, made in the likeness of the original viewer
handed out in the 60s, and a coupon is included in the notes insert
so you can buy more to share with friends and family. 13
Ghosts is worth checking out. |
13
Ghosts
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The
Vanishing
1988 (2001) - Cine International (Criterion)
Film Rating: B+
Disc Ratings (Video/Audio/Extras): A/B/C
Specs and Features:
106 mins, NR, letterboxed widescreen (1.66:1), 16x9 enhanced,
single-sided, RSDL dual-layered (layer switch at 52:45, in chapter
12), theatrical trailers, animated film-themed menu screens with
sound, scene access (24 chapters), languages: French and Dutch (DD
mono), subtitles: English
|
Although
not a standard horror film, The Vanishing
will scare the pants off of any responsible male. I'm being slightly
sexist here, because as a male, we have a protective instinct built
into us either by family, society or genetically. The idea that one
moment you're standing with your loved one and the next they are
gone without a trace is crippling. I myself won't let my wife go to
the bathroom in a mall unless I'm standing outside, and if I leave
her in a car, I have her lock the door. She could probably kick the
ass of anyone that would chance to bother her, but still. It makes
me feel better.
The Vanishing follows a young
man whose girlfriend disappeared from a rest stop in France. He's
Dutch and on a road trip with her for his birthday. When she goes in
to grab a beer and a coke, she never comes back. Years later, he's
still looking for her when a man approaches him and tells him that
he can show him what happened to her if he comes with him. Got that?
The rest is for you to see.
Told in a neat back and forth way, we see the methodology of the "bad
guy" and the psychology of the film. The
Vanishing is a really well created flick and blows the
American remake (done by the same director, George Sluizer) out of
the water. This is the scariest flick in this column, no ifs ands or
buts.
Criterion, of course, gives us a grand presentation with an
anamorphic transfer. Letterboxed at 1.66:1, the detail is very nice
with bold colors, clean blacks and a beautiful print. The sound is
Dolby Digital mono, as originally created, and is also pretty clean
and free of problems. The only extra on the disc is a trailer, which
sort of sucks, because this is a DVD that could really have some
great extras on it. A commentary from anyone or some insight on the
original source would have been nice. But alas, what are you going
to do? For a movie-only disc, The
Vanishing is still very nice and it's a creepy-as-shit
flick. |
The
Vanishing
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And
that's it for my first weekly column. Felt good to get it off my
chest. We'll do this each and every Wednesday for the rest of my DVD
career here at The Bits. And
check back on Friday for an upcoming list of DVDs coming out next
week.
Thanks for reading, and keep spinnin' those discs!
Todd Doogan
todddoogan@thedigitalbits.com |
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