A Good Person is a drama starring Florence Pugh, Morgan Freeman and Molly Shannon and arrived on Blu-ray March 30th.
A Good Person is a drama starring Florence Pugh, Morgan Freeman and Molly Shannon and arrived on Blu-ray March 30th.
Kamikaze is a 1986 sci-fi suspense-thriller comedy film scripted by Luc Besson and stars Richard Bohringer, Michel Galabru and Dominique Lavanant.
Joy House is a 1964 suspense-thriller from director Rene Clement and stars Alain Delon, Jane Fonda and Lola Albright.
The Experts is a 1989 comedy film directed by Dave Thomas and stars John Travolta, Arye Gross, Kelly Preston and Charles Martin Smith and is available on Blu-ray May 9th from Kino Lorber.
Stone Cold is a 1991 B/C-movie action-thriller that attempted to make NFL superstar Brian Bosworth into an action hero with spectacular failure, but still a fun cheesy movie nevertheless.
Shazam: Fury of the Gods is a perfectly entertaining time-waster (frankly, not unlike Black Adam) but it does lack the charm of its predecessor, however Zachary Levi still is great in the lead.
Max Fleischer’s Superman debuts on Blu-ray through the Warner Bros. and features include three featurettes.
Terminal Invasion debuts on Blu-ray through Kino Lorber program featuring a 1080p high-definition transfer. This 2002 made-for-TV movie stars Bruce Campbell.
The Great Caruso debuts on Blu-ray through the Warner Archive Collection program featuring a new 1080p transfer, a documentary and trailer.
Batman: The Doom That Came to Gotham comes to 4K Ultra HD and Blu-ray and comes with a commentary track and featurette.
In the Cut arrives on Blu-ray from Mill Creek Entertainment on May 16th. This suspense-thriller stars Meg Ryan, Mark Ruffalo and Jennifer Jason Leigh.
Wild Orchid 2: Blue Movie Blue debuts on Blu-ray from Scorpion Releasing and stars Wendy Hughes, Tom Skerritt, Robert Davi and Nina Siemaszko as ‘Blue’.
I can give some credit to writer-director Damien Chazelle’s vision and what he was trying to accomplish, and it does seem this was a passion project but with a 3-hour running time, there was a good chunk that could’ve been removed.
Heat is a movie that’s passably entertaining if only for Burt Reynolds’s charisma but otherwise the plot plods along and like the 2015 re-adaptation Wild Card, it’s nothing special and an altogether forgettable crime-thriller.
Backtrack had an interesting enough premise, a hitman falling for his target, but the execution was less than effective, though Dennis Hopper’s performance was something to behold.