Calamari Wrestler DVD (Eastern Star)

Calamari Wrestler DVD (Eastern Star)

Calamari Wrestler DVD (Eastern Star)

RELEASE DATE: August 23, 2011

“Goofy, bizarre, yet surprisingly coherent, The Calamari Wrestler veils sharp social commentary with irreverent humor and corny romance.” –The New York Times

With a title like this, how can you possibly go wrong? Check out the trailer here.

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases |

August 9th brings 4 New Shaw Brothers DVD titles from Dragon Dynasty

Executioner from Shaolin aka Executioners from Shaolin DVD (Dragon Dynasty)

Executioner from Shaolin aka Executioners from Shaolin DVD (Dragon Dynasty)

Can’t get enough old-school Shaw Brothers action? Have no fear, Dragon Dynasty/Celestial Pictures are releasing four Shaw Brothers catalog titles on DVD today, August 9th. One of them even stars Jet Li!

If you’re wondering how these movies stack up against the rest of the Shaw Brothers’ filmography, we’ve got you covered with our reviews:

Martial Arts of Shaolin Review

Mad Monkey Kung Fu Review

Five Shaolin Masters Review

Executioner From Shaolin Review

Posted in News |

Mike Pecci’s Grindhouse Shorts DVD: Violence, tattoos and women!

Mike Pecci’s Grindhouse Shorts DVD: Violence, tattoos and women!

Mike Pecci’s Grindhouse Shorts DVD: Violence, tattoos and women!

Next Monday director & photographer Mike Pecci is self releasing all of his violent short films on one loaded DVD.

This is the definitive collection of what Filmthreat magazine called “Grindhouse done right”. It includes the director’s cut of Cold Hard Cash, a re-mastered Capture Device, Stray Bullet, and a new short featuring a chainsaw wielding Evalena Marie (from the upcoming film based on the “Remains” comic written by Steve Niles).

Each film is uncensored and loaded with sex, violence, and Suicide Girls! The DVD is jammed to the limit with interactive menus, behind the scenes clips, brand new recorded director’s commentaries and the infamous “Mom-mentaries” (where the director watches the films with his highly opinionated mother) and loads of hidden “Easter eggs.” The disks will be released with 3 limited edition variant covers with artwork from comic book and poster artists as well photography from Pecci. Check out the trailer and film clip.

DVD can be purchased here.

Posted in News |

Shaolin Blu-ray/DVD (Well Go USA)

Shaolin Blu-ray/DVD (Well Go USA)

Shaolin Blu-ray/DVD (Well Go USA)

RELEASE DATE: October 25, 2011

Well Go USA presents Shaolin (aka The New Shaolin Temple), a 2011 martial arts film directed by Benny Chan (New Police Story), starring Andy Lau (Fulltime Killer), Nicholas Tse (Stool Pigeons), Wu Jing (SPL: Sha Po Lang), Xing Yu (Ip Man), and Fan Bingbing (Bodyguards and Assassins), with a special appearance by Jackie Chan (Rush Hour 1-3).

It will be available on Blu-ray and DVD, with each format having a standard and Collector’s Edition set.

Check out the cityonfire.com review here.

Check out the Well Go USA trailer here.

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Martial Arts Titles |

Detailed look at Indomina’s Clash DVD coming August 9th!

Indomina's "Clash" DVD Artwork

Indomina's "Clash" DVD Artwork

From Indomina Releasing comes an action-packed, martial arts thrill-ride like no other as the heart-pounding film Clash (check out our review) hits DVD on August 9, 2011.

The blockbuster duo of Johnny Tri Nguyen (Spiderman, Spiderman 2 and X-Men: First Class stuntman) and Veronica Ngô reteam in what is, to date, one of Vietnam’s top-grossing action hits. Distributed by Vivendi Entertainment, Clash will be available on DVD at an SRP of $19.97.

Originally paired in Vietnam’s highest grossing film of all time, The Rebel, Johnny Tri Nguyen and Veronica Ngô reunite for this eagerly awaited martial arts tour de force as mercenaries on a mission to prevent the keys to Vietnam’s one and only satellite from being given to the Chinese Triad. Tensions run high as they are forced to determine each other’s motivations and decide if they can trust each other.

Selected to over 15 prestigious film festivals including The Tribeca Film Festival, The Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival, The Fantasia Film Festival and The San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival, Clash has received accolades from critics and action enthusiasts alike for its top-notch, no-holds barred action sequences, its compelling story lines and its stylish cinematography.

“A must-see for martial-arts freaks…” – Variety (John Anderson)

“A dazzling Vietnamese martial arts movie with a soul; a stylish, gorgeously photographed film.” – Los Angeles Times (Kevin Thomas)

“A must-see for martial-arts freaks…”- Variety

“A must-see for martial-arts freaks…”- Variety

SYNOPSIS: Trinh (Veronica Ngo) is a mercenary working for Hắc Long (Hoàng Phúc), an elusive criminal mastermind, who seeks a hard drive that controls the VINASAT.1, Vietnam’s first and only satellite. Hac has kidnapped Trinh’s daughter to get her to do his bidding and now she must give him what he wants so she can get her daughter back.

Trinh assembles a team of mercenaries and ex-convicts, including Quan (Johnny Tri Nguuyen), to recover the hard drive, but just as the mission is about to succeed, Trinh and her team are betrayed by one of their own and the hard drive falls into the wrong hands. Desperate to save her daughter, Trinh must hunt down the traitor before the hard drive is lost, but can she trust the remaining members of her crew?

DVD SPECIAL FEATURES: Aspect ratio: 16×9 2.35 Widescreen Version/ Sound: Vietnamese 5.1 Dolby Digital, English Stereo/ Subtitles: Englis / In Conversation: Johnny & Veronica / Cast of Characters / Anatomy of a Fight / Music Video / Original Trailer

“BREAKING THE RULES” CLIP
“FIGHT” CLIP
TRAILER

Posted in News |

A Beautiful Life DVD (New Video Group)

A Beautiful Life DVD (New Video)

A Beautiful Life DVD (New Video)

RELEASE DATE: December 13, 2011

A Beautiful Life is a 2011 romance film that explores the sweet and sour aspects of love. Directed by Andrew Lau (Infernal Affairs) and starring Shu Qi, Liu Ye, Tian Liang, Feng Danying, Sa Rina, Zhang Songwen and Gao Tian with a special appearance by Anthony Wong. Check out the trailer here.

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases |

If You Are the One: Love and Marriage aka If You Are The One 2 (New Video Group)

If You Are the One: Love and Marriage aka If You Are The One 2 (New Video)

If You Are the One: Love and Marriage aka If You Are The One 2 (New Video)

RELEASE DATE: December 13, 2011

If You Are The One 2 follows the comedic courtship saga of wealthy, middle-aged retiree Qin Fen (Ge You, To Live) and serious-minded young air hostess Xiaoxiao (Shu Qi, The Transporter). After an amusing prelude in which Qin presides over a lavish divorce ceremony for an amicably splitting married couple, he and Xiaoxiao decide to address their own relationship barriers her youth and beauty, his cynical, childish sense of humor by entering into a trial marriage while on a trip to the country s tropical southeast. Check out the trailer here.

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases |

Beginning of the Great Revival aka Founding of a Party in China DVD (New Video)

Beginning of the Great Revival aka Founding of a Party in China DVD

Beginning of the Great Revival aka Founding of a Party in China DVD

RELEASE DATE: January 24, 2012

A companion piece to “The Founding of a Republic“, “Beginning of the Great Revival” tells the story of the rise of China’s communists from the time of Russia s October Revolution of 1917 through the founding of the Chinese Communist Party on July 1, 1921, 90 years ago. Featuring an massive, all-star cast which includes: John Woo, Daniel Wu, Andy Lau, Liu Ye, Chow Yun Fat, Chen Kun, Chang Chen and many more. Check out the trailer here.

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases |

Angel DVD Collection: Angel, Angel 2: Avenging Angel, Angel 3: The Final Chapter (Image)

Angel DVD Collection: Angel, Angel 2: Avenging Angel, Angel 3: The Final Chapter (Image)

Angel DVD Collection: Angel, Angel 2: Avenging Angel, Angel 3: The Final Chapter (Image)

RELEASE DATE: November 1, 2011

Includes the first 3 films from the popular 80’s exploitational ANGEL film franchise: Angel, Angel 2: Avenging Angel, Angel 3: The Final Chapter. Think “Death Wish” meets “Pretty Woman”…

Trailers: Angel | Angel 2: Avenging Angel | Angel 3: The Final Chapter

Posted in DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Other Notable Titles |

Maniac Cop Blu-ray (Synapse)

Maniac Cop Blu-ray (Synapse)

Maniac Cop Blu-ray (Synapse)

RELEASE DATE: October 11, 2011

Innocent people are brutally killed on the streets of New York by a uniformed police officer. A young cop, Jack Forrest (Bruce Campbell) finds himself marked as the chief suspect after his wife is murdered. As Lieutenant Frank McCrae (Tom Atkins) investigates, the death toll rises and he suspects a mysterious police cover-up. This maniac cop must be stopped! Bonus Features include Maniac Cop Memories Featurette, Out the Window – Interview with Tom Atkins, Three Minutes with Danny Hicks Featurette, Motion Still Gallery, Additional Japanese TV Scenes, Theatrical Trailer, TV Spots, Spanish Radio Spot. Check out the trailer here.

Posted in DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Other Notable Titles |

Sucker Punch | aka Angel Wars (2011) Review

"Sucker Punch" Japanese Theatrical Poster

"Sucker Punch" Japanese Theatrical Poster

Director: Zack Snyder
Writer: Zack Snyder, Steve Shibuya
Producer: Deborah Snyder, Zack Snyder
Cast: Emily Browning, Abbie Cornish, Jena Malone, Vanessa Hudgens, Jamie Chung, Carla Gugino, Oscar Isaac, Jon Hamm, Scott Glenn, Gerard Plunkett
Running Time: 110 min.

By HKFanatic

NOTE: This is a review of the Theatrical Cut.

“Sucker Punch” is the rare film that falls under the banner of ‘Asian Related’ not because the production team featured any Eastern talent like Yuen Woo-Ping choreographing “The Matrix” or cast members trained in the martial arts like Steven Seagal, but because it is so visually indebted to Asian culture that it wouldn’t exist otherwise. With “Sucker Punch,” Zack Snyder pilfers every Japanese animation motif and cliche to digitally vomit out a world of computer-colored excess. The movie drives home a lesson I had previously learned while watching the live-action adaptation of the “Blood: The Last Vampire” anime: just because a cute gal in a schoolgirl outfit looks cool dodging monsters in slow motion in an anime does not necessarily mean they’ll look cool doing it in real life. In fact, in live action it’ll probably come across as downright…silly.

To be fair, the premise for “Sucker Punch” isn’t bad. Emily Browning plays a young girl who is unfairly imprisoned in a mental asylum by her cruel stepfather. For reasons unknown to this viewer, while she’s there she pretends she exists in another reality in which she’s a prostitute at a high-scale brothel and cabaret theater. She befriends some of her fellow dancers and together they plot their escape through the use of Emily’s extremely vivid imagination. In fact, it’s during her dance routine that she’s sent into various realms ripped straight from your average comic book geek’s mind: a snowy Japanese temple, the trenches of a steampunk World War I, a Dungeons & Dragons-style castle, and a futuristic city plagued by killer robots.

Each world she visits is about 90% greenscreen and looks about as realistic as the landscape inside a snowglobe, despite a purported budget of 82 million dollars. The action sequences follow a repetitive pattern where actor Scott Glenn tells the girls what to do and then they go out and do it, fighting enemy forces in bloodless combat along the way. These battles lack the R-rated sense of impact and consequence one would associate with a Zack Synder film. Even if you thought the slow-motion combat in “300” was a thing of beauty, chances are you’ll be underwhelmed here. This is about as cutting-edge and violent as that late 90’s Garbage music video where Shirley Manson was riding around in a CG plane shooting her bandmates down. Which is appropriate, as the storytelling here feels more fit for MTV than the big screen.

The poor girls in the cast are forced to recite Zack Synder’s dialogue. Even the most experienced among them, like Jena Malone (“Donnie Darko”), struggle to make their roles seem more than the shallow caricatures they are. The rest of the gals, like Vanessa Hudgens and Jamie Chung, just stand there looking pretty in lingerie or, when that fails, start crying. Sure, the girls look like they were trained to hold automatic weapons in military fashion during the action scenes but for Zack Synder to try and claim that “Sucker Punch” is some kind of feminist statement is beyond ridiculous. Everything about the film conforms to sexist stereotypes. It’s as though Synder sat and brainstormed about how he could get your 16 year-old kid brother to put down his Mountain Dew Big Gulp and Xbox 360 controller long enough to head to the local multiplex, and decided the best way was to add the Pussycat Dolls to the average video game equation.

The director’s cut, which I haven’t seen, runs 18 minutes longer than the theatrical cut. I imagine that some of the problems I mentioned, like tame and bloodless action, could be remedied in a longer, unrated version. At the same time, many of the film’s other flaws – weak dialogue, weak performances, its repetitive structure – probably aren’t going to change with a director’s cut. Considering how much “Sucker Punch” fails at basic storytelling principles and at inciting an emotional response (or even any sense of awe or excitement) in the audience, I think Superman fans have every right to be worried about Zack Synder’s upcoming Superman film “Man of Steel.” There’s no doubt that Synder will bring the action – I imagine that’s why Warner Brothers hired him – but after the tepid box office results of “Sucker Punch,” the studio has to be wondering if they bet on the wrong horse.

Synder’s films have always been “pretty” on a purely visual level, but by fully embracing a CG aesthetic based off a homogenized notion of video game cutscenes and Japanese cartoons he’s created a film so resoundingly fake and empty that the only thing left to appreciate is Emily Browning’s bee-stung lips.

HKFanatic’s Rating: 3/10

Posted in Asian Related, Reviews | Tagged |

Flying Guillotine DVD (Dragon Dynasty)

Flying Guillotine DVD (Dragon Dynasty)

Flying Guillotine DVD (Dragon Dynasty)

RELEASE DATE: November 29, 2011

The film that started it all! Hong Kong kung fu cinema is filled with all types of inventive weaponry, but few are as original, iconic or over-the-top as THE FLYING GUILLOTINE, and this was the first film to use it. Directed by Ho Meng-Hua (Vengeance is a Golden Blade) and starring the one and only Chen Kuan Tai!

Check out the cityonfire.com review here. Check out the trailer here.

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Martial Arts Titles |

Flying Guillotine 2 aka Flying Guillotine Part II DVD (Dragon Dynasty)

Flying Guillotine 2 aka Flying Guillotine Part II DVD (Dragon Dynasty)

Flying Guillotine 2 aka Flying Guillotine Part II DVD (Dragon Dynasty)

RELEASE DATE: November 29, 2011

The noteworthy sequel to the 1975 film. This time, Ti Lung (A Better Tomorrow) continues where Chen Kuan Tai left off, with director Ching Gong aka Cheng Kang (Sword of Swords) calling the shots.

Check out the trailer here.

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Martial Arts Titles |

Bunraku DVD (ARC Entertainment)

Bunraku DVD (ARC Entertainment)

Bunraku DVD (ARC Entertainment)

RELEASE DATE: November 1, 2011

A mysterious drifter (Josh Hartnett) and a young Japanese warrior Yoshi (Gackt) both arrive in a town that has been terrorized by outrageous and virulent criminals. Starring: Josh Harnett, Woody Harrelson, Gackt Camui, Kevin McKidd with Ron Perlman and Demi Moore. Check out the trailer here.

Posted in DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Martial Arts Titles |

Live Like a Cop, Die Like a Man (1976) Review

"Live Like a Cop, Die Like a Man" Japanese Theatrical Poster

“Live Like a Cop, Die Like a Man” Japanese Theatrical Poster

Director: Ruggero Deodato
Cast: Marc Porel, Ray Lovelock, Adolfo Celi, Franco Citti, Silvia Dionisio , Marino Masé , Renato Salvatori, Sergio Ammirata , Bruno Corazzari, Daniele Dublino
Running Time: 100 min.

By HKFanatic

“Live Like a Cop, Die Like a Man” – let’s just take a moment to reflect on how awesome that title is. During its opening minutes, the film seems like it’s actually going to live up its bad-ass moniker as our two tough guy cops, played by Marc Porel and Ray Lovelock, engage in a wordless motorcycle chase against some would-be purse snatchers. This sequence is a breathtaking ride through the rush hour traffic of Rome, which director Ruggero Deodato purportedly didn’t even have legal permission to film. The chase lasts for the better part of 10 minutes and represents the highlight of this sleazy, violent movie.

Ruggero Deodato is a name synonymous with exploitation cinema, thanks in large part to his 80’s shclockfest “Cannibal Holocaust,” which remains one of the most effective “psuedo-documentary” horror films of all time even if I find its onscreen torture of animals to be deplorable. Like a lot of Italian filmmakers, Deodato dabbled in many genres during the 70’s and 80’s, including a fantasy film with the Barbarian Brothers (appropriately titled “Barbarians”). “Live Like a Cop…” is his entry in the “Poliziotteschi” genre, or Italian police dramas from the 70’s. I must confess I’m more familiar with the Italian horror or “giallo” genre but I suspect “Live Like a Cop…” is a decent introduction to Italo-crime films, though these cops don’t exactly follow standard procedure.

Most movies about renegade cops give us one morally ambiguous protagonist to root for – “Dirty Harry” for instance. In “Live Like a Cop, Die Like a Man” we get two womanizing, sadistic cops who basically share everything together: an apartment, a motorcycle, a love of violence, and even their women. There’s no homosexual subtext except what’s splashed all over the screen. Both leads look like their jaws have been chiseled from granite. Marc Porel (“Don’t Torture a Duckling”) in particular seems to really embrace his role as an ultra-cynical, ultra-lethal cop. Porel had a dynamic screen presence and unfortunately died way too young at the age of 34.

Our two “heroes,” such as they are, represent a special squad of the Italian police. Their only mission is to stop the bad guys before they commit crimes – by any means necessary. There’s a great scene where they sneak up on a bunch of guys who are about to rob a bank and silently kill them off one by one in broad daylight, unseen amongst the crowds. These cops don’t answer to anyone except their police chief (played by Adolfo Celia AKA the bad guy from “Thunderball”) but even he lets them do as they please since they get results. It’s hard to root for such sadistic main characters but there’s admittedly a lurid thrill to watching them dish out so much hurt, like the scene where they hand-cuff a crook to a pole and use his body as a punching bag.

If there’s a critical flaw to “Live Like a Cop…” it’s that the screenplay lacks structure. The first hour of the film seems edited together in an almost non-linear fashion, as events just happen one after the other – Porel and Lovelock go after random batches of criminals with no over-arching narrative to connect scenes. It’s not until the last thirty minutes that the main plot really kicks in with the cops tracking down the biggest mobster in Italy, a guy whose last name sounds like a pasta dish. There’s a shoot-out in a rock quarry that is remarkably well shot and edited, the kind of kinetic setpiece that would make Quentin Tarantino stand up and take notice. Sadly, the ending is a major letdown with our less than scrupulous leads getting by through sheer dumb luck rather than their own cunning or cruelty. Hell, I’d rather have an ending that actually endorses police brutality than the one that’s in the film; Dedoato seems to throw his hands up and say, “Well, movie’s over! Go home now!”

Even with a screenplay that ignores the standard three-act structure and any concept of “rising action” to its own detriment, and an ending that feels like a pie thrown in the audience’s face, “Live Like a Cop, Die Like a Man” is an absorbing experience thanks to the effortless machismo of its two leads and the stunning pain they inflict on every bad guy that crosses their path. Roggero Deodato’s unique camera angles and POV shots, as well as the dangerous stuntwork and brazen film-without-a-permit attitude, are a case study on how to make your low-budget flick visually interesting. Now that RaroVideo U.S. has newly restored and released the film for DVD, there’s no better time for fans of Italian genre films to track “Live Like a Cop, Die Like a Man” down.

HKFanatic’s Rating: 7/10

Posted in Italian, Other Movies, Reviews | Tagged |