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4K Blu-ray Review: Why Soldier Feels More Vital in 4K Than Ever Before

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Frontier Feuds and Desert Dreams: Eureka’s "Adventure Calls!" Unearths the Lavish Karl May Legacy

The release of Adventure Calls! Karl May at CCC marks a significant milestone for North American fans of European cult cinema. For decades, the massive popularity of Karl May in Germany was something of a mystery to American audiences, but this collection from the Masters of Cinema series finally provides a definitive look at the lavish, globe-trotting spectacles produced by Artur Brauner. These films represent a bridge between the classic Hollywood adventures of the fifties and the more gritty, violent landscapes of the Spaghetti Western, offering a brand of escapism that is as visually stunning as it is historically fascinating. Karl May was a man who famously wrote about worlds he had never visited, yet his ability to capture the spirit of adventure made him a literary titan. Brauner’s CCC Film took that literary spirit and translated it into a cinematic language that dominated European box offices throughout the sixties. Old Shatterhand and Winnetou and Shatterhand in the Valley of...

VCI’s Creepy Double Feature Brings 1963 Drive-In Madness to Blu-ray with The Crawling Hand and The Slime People

When it comes to the golden age of the drive-in, few experiences could match the sheer, unadulterated joy of the double feature. It was a time when narrative logic took a backseat to high-concept monsters and the kind of atmospheric grime that only a low-budget production could provide. VCI Entertainment has tapped directly into that nostalgia with their Creepy Double Feature line, and their latest Blu-ray pairing brings together two titans of 1963 psychotronic cinema: The Crawling Hand and The Slime People. This disc is a celebration of a very specific era in independent filmmaking—a moment where the atomic dread of the fifties began to melt into the weird, pop-infused sensibilities of the early sixties. On one hand, you have the localized, noir-tinged horror of a space-borne limb terrorizing a California boarding house; on the other, a sprawling, fog-drenched vision of a subterranean invasion that turns Los Angeles into a claustrophobic wasteland. While these films were birthed from ...

Following Films Podcast: Todd M. Friedman on Last Shot

  Today, we are diving into a project that kicked off this year’s Dallas International Film Festival as the opening night selection. It’s a film that uses the backdrop of competitive youth basketball to explore much larger themes of family, grief, and the weight of expectations. Joining me today is writer and producer Todd M. Friedman to discuss his new film, Last Shot. Starring Jaime Pressly and Michael Rapaport, the story follows a young basketball prodigy navigating life after a significant loss. What makes this project particularly compelling is how it leans into a grounded, realistic drama—a narrative depth that stems from Todd’s own experiences on the sidelines and the unique decision to cast his son, Dylan Friedman, in the lead role. We’re going to talk about the transition from personal experience to the page, the collaborative process of indie filmmaking, and what it’s like to premiere a project of this scale.

Film Review: I Swear

The film I Swear is a work of profound empathy that arrives at a moment when cinema feels increasingly preoccupied with spectacle over the intricacies of the human condition. It is a film that refuses to blink, yet its gaze is never intrusive; it is a film that demands we look closer, not at a diagnosis, but at a person. As a father to a neurodivergent child, watching this film wasn’t just a cinematic experience: it was an act of recognition. It felt like someone had finally handed me a mirror that didn’t just reflect the surface of our lives, but the deep, often turbulent, and vibrantly colorful currents that run beneath it. For so long, the stories told about families like mine have felt like they were written by observers looking through a glass partition. They capture the behaviors, the clinical definitions, and the external stressors, but they often miss the soul. I Swear finds that soul and lets it breathe. The brilliance of I Swear lies in its commitment to the small moments. In...

The Game is Rigged: Edgar Wright’s Brutal, Synth-Driven Reclamation of The Running Man

The year 2026 has already seen its fair share of cinematic highs and lows, but few projects carried the weight of expectation quite like Edgar Wright’s reimagining of The Running Man. After decades of the 1987 Schwarzenegger vehicle serving as the definitive, if loosely adapted, version of Stephen King’s Bachman novel, Wright promised a return to the dirt and grit of the source material. What we’ve received is a film that is undeniably Wright, kinetic, sonically meticulous, and visually sharp, yet one that feels caught in a tug-of-war between its grim literary roots and the director's natural instinct for stylized spectacle. The most immediate departure from the 1980s classic is the casting of Glen Powell as Ben Richards. Gone is the invincible, one-liner-spouting tank of a man. In his place is a Richards who looks like a man who hasn't slept in three days because he's too busy worrying about how to pay for his daughter’s medicine. Powell, who has spent the last few years p...

Visions of the Afterlife: The Definitive 4K Restoration of The Eye

The Pang brothers’ 2002 supernatural horror film The Eye (original title Gin Gwai ) remains a seminal work within the East Asian horror boom of the early millennium. While it is often grouped alongside J-horror classics like Ringu or Ju-On , this Hong Kong and Thai co-production distinguishes itself through a unique blend of visceral body horror and a deeply empathetic character study. It explores the terrifying intersection of sensory perception and identity, asking what happens when the very tools we use to navigate the world become windows into a reality we were never meant to witness. The film is far more than a collection of jump scares; it is a meditation on the burden of sight and the inescapable weight of the past. The narrative follows Mun, a twenty year old classical violinist who has been blind since the age of two. When she undergoes a risky corneal transplant to restore her vision, the initial wonder of light and color quickly curdles into a nightmare. As her sight retur...

Chaos, Cinema, and a Lens of Her Own: Eleanor Coppola’s Hearts of Darkness Gets the 4K Treatment

Few films in history carry a reputation as volatile as Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now. The stories of its production have become the stuff of Hollywood legend, monsoons, heart attacks, and a budget spiraling out of control in the Philippine jungle. On May 19, 2026, cinephiles will get a definitive look at that chaos with the release of the Hearts of Darkness: The Art of Eleanor Coppola 4K Collector’s Edition. This exclusive Lionsgate Limited set doesn't just revisit the film; it honors the late Eleanor Coppola, whose fly-on-the-wall perspective captured the raw, unvarnished breakdown of a masterpiece in the making. What makes this release special is its focus on Eleanor’s unique artistic eye. While her husband was grappling with the "madness" of the Vietnam War epic, Eleanor was quietly documenting the collapse of order around them. This new edition presents the acclaimed documentary Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker’s Apocalypse in stunning 4K UHD, accompanied by a ...

The Poetry of Collapse: Why Lynne Ramsay’s Die My Love Demands Your Undivided Attention

With Die My Love, Lynne Ramsay has once again proven that she is one of the few filmmakers working today who possesses the rare ability to inject poetry into every frame of her work. Adapting Ariana Harwicz’s visceral novel was always going to be a high-wire act; the source material is a jagged, stream-of-consciousness descent into the claustrophobia of motherhood and domesticity, but Ramsay handles it not with the heavy hand of a traditional dramatist, but with the precision of a surgeon and the soul of a painter. This is a film that demands your total, unblinking presence. It is a masterpiece of sensory immersion that reminds us why we go to the cinema: to feel something that words alone cannot quite capture. From the opening sequence, it is clear that Ramsay is operating at the height of her powers. Her style has always been defined by a certain tactile intimacy, and here, that intimacy is heightened to a point of exquisite tension. She doesn't just show us the protagonist’s wor...

Bob Odenkirk Returns to Action as Normal Hits Theaters

Bob Odenkirk is reuniting with the creative team behind Nobody for a new neo-Western titled Normal, a project that promises to trade suburban grit for the deceptive stillness of the American Midwest. Directed by Ben Wheatley, known for the visceral style of Free Fire, the film follows Odenkirk as Ulysses, a substitute sheriff attempting to outrun a crumbling marriage and the heavy emotional toll of his past life. He takes a provisional posting in the quaint town of Normal, hoping the quiet environment will provide a much-needed respite from his previous moral injuries in the line of duty. The peace is short-lived when a botched bank robbery forces Ulysses back into action. As he investigates the crime, he inadvertently uncovers a dark secret that suggests the municipality is far more dangerous than its name implies. With a screenplay by John Wick creator Derek Kolstad and a supporting cast that includes Henry Winkler, Lena Headey, and Jess McLeod, the film appears to be leaning into an...