Release date: 2001-10-15 RRP: £5.99 Price: £0.01
Review Hollowman / Columbia Tristar:In Paul Verhoeven's appropriately shallow Hollow Man, Kevin Bacon plays a bad-boy egotistical scientist who heads up a double-secret government team experimenting with turning life-forms invisible. How do we know he's a bad boy? Because he (a) wears a leather overcoat, (b) compares himself to God, (c) drives a sports car and (d) spies on his comely next-door neighbour while eating Twinkies. Sadly, this is the most character development anyone gets in this undernourished action/sci-fi thriller, which boasts some phenomenal, seamless and Oscar-worthy computer effects and some amazingly ridiculous plot twists. After experimenting rather ruthlessly on a menagerie of lab animals, Bacon finally cracks the code that will turn the invisible gorillas, dogs and so on back into their visible forms, and promptly volunteers as a human guinea pig. Sure enough he is rendered invisible, organ by organ, vein by vein, and then proceeds to spy on his female co-workers in the bathroom and molest his comely next-door neighbour. Soon, Bacon is thoroughly psychotic, and it's up to Elisabeth Shue (Bacon's co-worker and ex-girlfriend) and hunky Josh Brolin (her current snuggle bunny) to defeat the invisible man, who's picking off the science team one by one. You'd think this would be a prime opportunity for copious amounts of cheesy sex and aggressive violence-which Verhoeven served up so well and so exuberantly in Starship Troopers and Basic Instinct-but if anything, the director seems to tone down the proceedings, and really, who wants a muted Paul Verhoeven movie? -Mark Englehart, Amazon. com On the DVD: In the audio commentary with director Paul Verhoeven and star Kevin Bacon, Hollow Man scriptwriter Andrew Marlowe reveals that the story had been in development for some nine years before it got made, and that he had worked on it for "a number of years". An amazing revelation, given that the main attraction of this DVD is surely the cutting-edge special effects and the fascinating behind-the-scenes deconstruction of them. The DVD viewer cannot help but wonder how anyone could have spent years on a script that looks like it was cobbled together over a weekend as an excuse to play around with some really neat CGI effects. [+]
The various documentary features on the disc break down all the key FX scenes in exhaustive detail, showing the creative blend of live action and CGI and all the painstaking methods by which it was achieved. Director Verhoeven is appropriately profiled as "Hollywood's Mad Scientist" in the "Anatomy of a Thriller" featurette (in the commentary he makes a comparison with Hitchcock's Rear Window that only serves to underline the gulf between his ambitious vision and its execution). Elsewhere, legendary composer Jerry Goldsmith provides a commentary to his music, which gives hope to fans that he will now do the same for some of his better scores. There are deleted scenes, trailers, storyboards and a really neat menu interface to round off an enjoyable DVD package. Anamorphic picture and sound quality are impeccable. -Mark Walker.
Actors & Directors
- Gibson Gowland
- Mary Philbin
- Edward Sedgwick
- Arthur Edmund Carewe
- Ernst Laemmle
- Norman Kerry
- Rupert Julian
- Lon Chaney
- Lon Chaney
Release date: 2000-01-24 Run time: 88 min. Creator: Gaston Leroux RRP: £7.99 Price: £12.99
Review The Phantom Of The Opera [1925] / Castle Pictures (Defunct Label):
Actors & Directors
- Richard Wenk
- Sandy Baron
- Chris Makepeace
- Robert Rusler
- Gedde Watanabe
- Dedee Pfeiffer
Run time: 93 min. Creator: Donald P. Borchers
Review Vamp:
Actors & Directors
- David Copperfield
- Roger Spottiswoode
- Derek McKinnon
- Jamie Lee Curtis
- Ben Johnson
- Hart Bochner
Release date: 1993-08-16 Run time: 93 min. Price: £10.99
Review Terror Train [1980] / MGM Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Shelley Duvall
- William Hurt
- Josh Klausner
- Austin Pendleton
- Tobin Bell
- Juliette Lewis
Release date: 2001-05-07 Run time: 86 min. Creator: John Thompson RRP: £5.99 Price: £0.78
Review The 4th Floor [1999] / Paramount Home Entertainment:In The 4th Floor interior decorator Juliette Lewis inherits a handsome, huge New York apartment at the rent-controlled monthly bargain of $400. It looks too good to be true: it is. Walking into the creepiest collection of neighbours since Roman Polanski's The Tenant, she's accosted by nosy first-floor busybody Shelley Duvall ("Is that your boyfriend? Oh, you like older men?"), a surly caretaker who isn't allowed his own set of keys, a mystery tenant who flees at the sight of her, and a reclusive fourth-floor neighbour who turns a war of wills into an all-out guerrilla campaign of terror. When her place is overrun with rats and maggots (yuck!), pushy boyfriend William Hurt insists she leave, but she's determined to continue her first bout of independence. even if it kills her. First-time director Josh Klauser manages an entertaining if not totally engaging piece of urban paranoia-what apartment dweller hasn't worried about a secretive neighbour?-but lets it all slip into a silly, half-baked climax and a thoroughly predictable final twist. He also slips in references to Rear Window and Pacific Heights (two other paranoid tales of nasty neighbours), but none of it compares to morning-show personality Hurt's creepy TV weather clown routine: he sings, he dances, he chirps "Rise and shine" with the droopy-eyed intensity of an over-caffeinated drug addict. Now that's scary. [+]
-Sean Axmaker, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Paul Anderson (III)|Laurence Fishburne|Sam Neill|Kathleen Quinlan
Release date: 1998-09-07 Run time: 92 min. RRP: £14.99 Price: £0.88
Review Event Horizon [1997] / Paramount Home Entertainment:Drawing from Andrei Tarkovsky's heady science fiction meditation Solaris by way of Alien and Hellraiser, this visually splendid but pulpy piece of science fiction schlock concerns a mission in the year 2047 to investigate the experimental American spaceship Event Horizon, which disappeared seven years previously and suddenly, out of nowhere, reappeared in the orbit of Neptune. Laurence Fishburne stars as mission commander Captain Miller and Sam Neill is Dr. Weir, the scientist who designed the mystery ship. Miller's T-shirt- and army-green-clad crew of smart-talking pros finds a ship dead and deserted but further investigations turn up blood, corpses, dismembered body parts and a decidedly unearthly presence. It turns out that the ship is really a space-age haunted house where spooky (and obviously impossible) visions lure each of the crew members into situations they should know better than to enter. The ship is gorgeously designed, borrowing from the dark, organic look of Alien and adding the menacing touch of teeth sprouting from bulwark doors and claw-like spikes inexplicably shooting out of the engine room floor. Unfortunately the film is not nearly as inventive as the production design-it turns into a woefully inconsistent psychic monster movie that sacrifices mood for tepid shocks-but the special effects are top-notch and ultimately the movie has a trashy B-movie charm about it. -Sean Axmaker.
Actors & Directors
- Brendan Fraser
- Stephen Sommers
- John Hannah
- Arnold Vosloo
- Rachel Weisz
- Jonathan Hyde
Release date: 2001-05-07 Run time: 120 min. RRP: £14.99 Price: £0.39
Review The Mummy [1998] / Universal Pictures UK:For his breakthrough into the blockbuster big time, director Stephen Sommers (Deep Rising) was determined to avoid the hackneyed Hollywood Mummy clichés of flailing bandages, somnambulant zombies and wooden acting. If you're happy to settle for two out of three then the finished film could be your cup of Egyptian tea, fully delivering on its visual promise, but occasionally mired in a quicksand of stilted dialogue and plot contrivance. When disgraced high priest Imhotep (Arnold Vosloo) is awoken from his ancient prison, he unleashes his vengeful wrath in a whirl of computer-generated pestilence and plagues, all devised by the effects wizards at George Lucas' Industrial Light and Magic. No gory detail is spared as the mummy sets about rebuilding his decayed body and reviving his forbidden lover, aided by hordes of swarming, flesh-eating scarabs and an army of the dead. Among the more human cast, Brendan Fraser (Blast from the Past, George of the Jungle) brings an infectious Boys' Own enthusiasm to his Indiana-Jones-style adventurer, while such supporting players as Rachel Weisz and John Hannah are mostly eclipsed by the spectacle on offer. Ultimately, The Mummy is great fun and offers digital thrills ideally suited to the DVD format which will wow even the most CGI-sated viewer. On the DVD: commendably, the extras on this DVD are on a par with the Region One offering, including deleted scenes and director's commentary, and both picture and sound quality are excellent. Most interestingly, veteran ILM effects supervisor John Berton presents step-by-step guides to some of the film's most extraordinary CGI shots, from early animatics to 3-D modelling and compositing. There's also the obligatory "making of" programme, in which everyone insists their primary concern was to ensure the effects never superseded the story. Unfortunately, this only makes you more aware of the script's shortcomings. [+]
-Steve Napleton The modestly titled Ultimate Mummy Collection is an extravagant four-disc package that contains both The Mummy Ultimate Edition and The Mummy Returns Special Edition two-disc sets. For his breakthrough into the blockbuster big time, director Stephen Sommers was determined to avoid the hackneyed Hollywood Mummy clichés of flailing bandages, somnambulant zombies and wooden acting. If you're happy to settle for two out of three then the finished film could be your cup of Egyptian tea, fully delivering on its visual promise but occasionally mired in a quicksand of stilted dialogue and plot contrivance. Anrold Vosloo is disgraced high priest Imhotep, awoken from his ancient prison to unleash his vengeful wrath in a whirl of computer generated pestilence and plagues; Brendan Fraser brings an infectious boyish enthusiasm to his Indiana Jones-style adventurer, while supporting players Rachel Weisz and John Hannah are mostly eclipsed by the spectacle on offer. The lavish DVD extras include deleted scenes, a director's commentary and, most interestingly, veteran effects supervisor John Berton presenting a step-by-step guide to some of the film's most extraordinary computer generated shots. There's also the obligatory "making of" programme in which everyone insists their primary concern was to ensure the effects never superseded the story. Unfortunately, this only makes you more aware of the script's shortcomings. -Steve Napleton The Mummy Returns has an even more relentless pace and hammer headed tone than the first film-more explosions, more action and more mind-numbingly endless computer generated effects, set to a headache inducing surround soundtrack. The original cast are reunited and joined by WWF star The Rock (in a cameo role designed to plug his spin-off vehicle The Scorpion King) and young actor Freddie Boath who plays an English eight-year-old in the 1930s whose dialogue borrows from Bart Simpson. Still, despite the wearying relentlessness of its computer generated effects, endless chases and fights, this is undeniably fun popcorn fodder and provides some memorable scenes along the way, notably Rachel Weisz and Patricia Velasquez battling it out for the affections of nasty old Imhotep. Extras in this generous two-disc set include a decent commentary from the director and producer, DVD-ROM features, a 20-minute "making-of" documentary and a five-minute interview with the Rock. Best of all are the detailed special effects breakdowns of key sequences. -Mark Walker.
Actors & Directors
- Ben Affleck
- Rose McGowan
- Joe Chappelle
- Peter O'Toole
- Liev Schreiber
- Joanna Going
Release date: 2003-02-03 Run time: 92 min. Creator: Joel Soisson RRP: £9.99 Price: £1.95
Review Phantoms [1998] / Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainm:Well, Dean Koontz shouldn't adapt his own bestsellers, or his 1983 novel Phantoms was a pack of horror clichés to begin with, or this movie is 15 years past its due date. What might have seemed fresh at the time of Poltergeist now feels like it was made from a derivative script with pages missing. Plagued by reckless leaps of logic, the movie starts with adequately eerie atmosphere and a perversely twisted performance by Scream 2's Liev Schreiber, but decays into a familiar hash of gross-out effects, resulting from the annihilation of a small Colorado town by an evil force known as "The Ancient Enemy". In a dreary role that insults the twilight of his distinguished career, Peter O'Toole plays a palaeobiologist whose crackpot ideas have become tabloid fodder, but he holds the key to conquering the beast. Or does he? Sure enough, an obligatory coda leaves room for anticlimactic doubt. Phantoms has a few genuinely creepy highlights, including a devilish beastie resembling an angry flying scorpion, and horror fans will surely find something to admire, but everyone else is advised to proceed with caution and lowered expectations. -Jeff Shannon, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Joseph Cawthorn
- John Harron
- Madge Bellamy
- Victor Halperin
- Robert Frazer
- Bela Lugosi
Release date: 1993-09-13 Run time: 64 min. Creator: Garnett Weston Price: £12.99
Review White Zombie [1932] / Redemption Films:
Actors & Directors
- Kim Greist
- Christopher Curry
- Douglas Cheek
- Daniel Stern
- John Heard
- Laure Mattos
Run time: 88 min. Creator: Shepard Abbott
Review C.H.U.D.:
Actors & Directors
- Adam Dubin
- James Hetfield
- Metallica
- Wayne Isham
- Lars Ulrich
- Jason Newsted
- Kirk Hammett
Release date: 1998-12-07 Run time: 140 min. Creator: Marc Reiter RRP: £15.99 Price: £15.12
Review Cunning Stunts [1996] / Universal Pictures UK:
Actors & Directors
- Sean Connery
- Peter Boyle
- Frances Sternhagen
- Kika Markham
- James Sikking
- Peter Hyams
Run time: 104 min. RRP: £4.99 Price: £0.62
Review Outland [1981] / Warner Home Video:Outland is another in a long line of Westerns retooled for science fiction. Writer-director Peter Hyams (Capricorn One, 2010, Timecop) re-stages High Noon in outer space, with Sean Connery as O'Neil, the marshal for a settlement on one of Jupiter's moons. While investigating the deaths of some miners, O'Neil discovers that mine boss Peter Boyle has been giving his workers an amphetamine-like, work-enhancing drug that keeps them productive for months-until they finally snap and go berserk. When Boyle sends killer henchmen to neutralize the lawman, O'Neil is unable to get the miners to back him up. Outland is no classic but it offers solid suspense in an otherworldly atmosphere. It also stars Frances Sternhagen, James B. Sikking (Howard on television's Hill Street Blues) and John Ratzenberger (later to become famous as Cliff on the sitcom Cheers). -Jim Emerson.
Actors & Directors
- Carolyn Lowery
- Jay Harrington
- Ricco Ross
- David Beecroft
- John Eyres
- Ravil Isyanov
Run time: 100 min. Creator: Michael D. Weiss
Review Octopus:
Actors & Directors
- Chris Tucker
- Ian Holm
- Luc Besson
- Bruce Willis
- Milla Jovovich
- Gary Oldman
Release date: 1998-04-27 Run time: 121 min. Creator: Robert Mark Kamen RRP: £15.99 Price: £3.79
Review The Fifth Element [1997] / Pathe Distribution:Ancient curses, all-powerful monsters, shape-changing assassins, scantily-clad stewardesses, laser battles, huge explosions, a perfect woman, a malcontent hero-what more can you ask of a big-budget science fiction movie? Luc Besson's high-octane film The Fifth Element incorporates presidents, rock stars, and cab drivers into its peculiar plot, traversing worlds and encountering some pretty wild aliens. Bruce Willis stars as a down-and-out cabbie who must win the love of Leeloo (Milla Jovovich) to save Earth from destruction by Jean-Baptiste Emmanuel Zorg (Gary Oldman) and a dark, unearthly force that makes Darth Vader look like an Ewok. -Geoff Riley Luc Besson's high-octane film The Fifth Element incorporates presidents, rock stars and cab drivers into its peculiar plot, traversing worlds and encountering some pretty wild aliens. Bruce Willis stars as a down-and-out cabbie who must win the love of Leeloo (Milla Jovovich) to save Earth from destruction by Jean-Baptiste Emmanuel Zorg (Gary Oldman) and a dark, unearthly force that makes Darth Vader look like an Ewok. Ancient curses, all-powerful monsters, shape-changing assassins, scantily-clad stewardesses, laser battles, huge explosions, a perfect woman, a malcontent hero-what more can you ask of any big-budget science fiction movie? -Geoff Riley.
Actors & Directors
- Siu-Ming Lau
- Tony Leung Chiu Wai
- Yuk-Ting Lau
- Jacky Cheung
- Shun Lau
- Hark Tsui
- Siu-Tung Ching
Release date: 1999-10-04 Run time: 97 min. Creator: Roy Szeto RRP: £13.99 Price: £10.60
Review A Chinese Ghost Story II / Made in Hong Kong:
Actors & Directors
- Stephen Blackpool
- Stan Brakhage
- Dian Bachar
- Trey Parker
- Dan Brother
- Trey Parker
Release date: 1998-08-03 Run time: 97 min. Creator: Matt Stone Price: £12.99
Review Cannibal! The Musical [1993] / Screen Edge:Alferd Packer was the only man in the United States ever convicted of cannibalism-what better hero for fellow Coloradan and future South Park creator Trey Parker to celebrate in music? Blue-eyed and boyish Parker was still in college when he wrote, directed, composed the songs for and took the starring role as the innocent young Packer in this film, giving a gee-whiz performance as an ambitious pioneer who joins an ill-fated trek west that ends up stranded in the mountains. At times resembling a perverse community theatre parody of Rodgers and Hammerstein ("My heart's as full as a baked po-ta-to!"), Parker bounces back and forth between cheery production numbers and goony songs ("Let's build a snowman", sings one starving-mad hiker) and grotesque gore (bloody body parts, festering sores, human hors d'oeuvres). It lacks in style and consistency and the juvenile gags and fart jokes wear thin over the course of a feature film, but Parker's sheer energy and inventiveness carry the overlong picture to a rousing conclusion. Regular Parker collaborators Matt Stone and Dian Bachar co-star in this tuneful barbecue. -Sean Axmaker.
Actors & Directors
- Darren McGavin
- Carol Lynley
- Simon Oakland
- Ralph Meeker
- John Llewellyn Moxey
Release date: 1998-03-16 Run time: 74 min. Price: £10.99
Review The Night Stalker [1971] / Pearson New Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Geoffrey Blake
- Jena Malone
- Robert Zemeckis
- Jodie Foster
- David Morse
- Matthew McConaughey
Release date: 1998-10-26 Run time: 143 min. Creator: Michael Goldenberg RRP: £15.99 Price: £1.94
Review Contact [1997] / Warner Home Video:The opening and closing moments of Robert (Forrest Gump) Zemeckis's Contact astonish viewers with the sort of breathtaking conceptual imagery one hardly ever sees in movies these day-each is an expression of the heroine's lifelong quest (both spiritual and scientific) to explore the meaning of human existence through contact with extraterrestrial life. The movie begins by soaring far out into space, then returns dizzyingly to earth until all the stars in the heavens condense into the sparkle in one little girl's eye. It ends with that same girl as an adult (Jodie Foster)-her search having taken her to places beyond her imagination-turning her gaze inward and seeing the universe in a handful of sand. Contact traces the journey between those two visual epiphanies. Based on Carl Sagan's novel, Contact is exceptionally thoughtful and provocative for a big-budget Hollywood science fiction picture, with elements that recall everything from 2001 to The Right Stuff. Foster's solid performance (and some really incredible alien hardware) keep viewers interested, even when the story skips and meanders, or when the halo around the golden locks of rising-star-of-a-different-kind Matthew McConaughey (as the pure-Hollywood-hokum love interest)reaches Milky Way-level wattage. Ambitious, ambiguous, pretentious, unpredictable-Contact is all of these things and more. Much of it remains open to speculation and interpretation but whatever conclusions one eventually draws, Contactdeserves recognition as a rare piece of big-budget studio film making on a personal scale. -Jim Emerson.
Actors & Directors
- Max Schreck
- F.W. Murnau
- Greta Schroeder
- Gustav Von Wangenheim
Release date: 1993-09-16 Run time: 47 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £5.20
Review Nosferatu [1921] / Redemption Films:
Actors & Directors
- Lyndon Chubbuck
- David Warner
- Pamela Anderson
- Dean Stockwell
- Clayton Rohner
- Brian Krause
Release date: 1997-09-08 Run time: 98 min. Creator: Frank Dietz RRP: £5.99 Price: £3.38
Review Naked Souls / 4 Front Video:
| Models & Brands: Hollowman, The Phantom Of The Opera [1925], Vamp, Terror Train [1980], The 4th Floor [1999], Event Horizon [1997], The Mummy [1998], Phantoms [1998], White Zombie [1932], C.H.U.D., Cunning Stunts [1996], Outland [1981], Octopus, The Fifth Element [1997], A Chinese Ghost Story II, Cannibal! The Musical [1993], The Night Stalker [1971], Contact [1997], Nosferatu [1921], Naked Souls |