Kent Conrad

Ray Harryhausen: Special Effects Titan Blu-ray Review: Master of Monsters Revealed

This feature-length doc on the special effects master reveals the artistry behind his creature features.

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Blood and Black Lace Blu-ray Review: Astonishingly Beautiful Depiction of Ugliness

Mario Bava’s seminal Giallo film couples a gleeful disregard for good taste with incredibly artful imagery.

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Nikkatsu Diamond Guys Volume 2 Blu-ray Review: Some Things Don’t Translate

A second volume of movies from Nikkatsu’s ’60s heyday branches out from just crime movies, with occasionally baffling results.

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The Assassin (2015) Blu-ray Review: Mesmerizingly Beautiful, Maddeningly Obtuse

Hsiao Hsien Hou won Best Director at Cannes for this gorgeous, but largely plotless and completely unsatisfying historical drama.

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The Zero Boys Blu-ray Review: A Thrill-less Thriller

Nico Mastorakis’ cult horror-action movie does nothing with an interesting premise, gets great Blu-ray release anyway.

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Barcelona Criterion Collection Blu-ray Review: Innocent Imperialists Abroad

Whit Stillman’s winning romantic comedy about politics set in late Cold War Spain.

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Outlaw Gangster VIP: The Complete Collection Blu-ray Review: Gangster and Outlaw, All in One

Six Yakuza movies from the ’60s, replete with knife fights, anguish, and women falling in love with the wrong gangster.

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Evangelion 3.33: You Can (Not) Redo DVD Review: Giant Robots with Daddy Issues

The third in the remake/reboot movies series, Evangelion 3.33 takes the story in completely new directions.

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Let There Be Light: John Huston’s Wartime Documentaries Blu-ray Review: From Propaganda to Trauma

This collection of documentaries includes a sobering look at PTSD that was suppressed for 30 years after it was made.

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Book Review: The Art and Making of Hannibal: The Television Series: A Gleefully Grisly Souvenir

An authorized look at the first two terrific seasons of TV’s handsomest (and most horrific) show.

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Nikkatsu Diamond Guys Volume 1 Blu-ray Review: Action Heroes ’50s Japanese Style

Three action/crime films from Nikkatsu studios that showcase their popular leading me of the late 50s.

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David Bowie, The Heart’s Filthy Lesson, Se7en, and Me

A creepy song on the end credits of a creepy movie created a lifetime fan.

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Bone Tomahawk DVD Review: Rare Horror Western Hybrid

Matching a Western setting with a horror story, Bone Tomahawk is that rare genre hybrid that gets both parts right.

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Wake Up and Kill Blu-ray Review: Gritty but Unengaging Criminal Bio-pic

This true crime story has a lot on its mind, but it doesn’t translate into arresting storytelling.

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Requiescant Blu-ray Review: Massacred Mexican Communist Revenge

Offbeat scenes and a determined Communist undertone offset this otherwise standard tale of Western revenge.

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Tenderness of the Wolves Blu-ray Review: Serial Killer Social Drama

Fassbinder proteges Ulli Lommel and Kurt Raab bring the disturbing story of child-murderer Fritz Haarman to lurid life.

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Attack on Titan: The Movies: Part 1 & Part 2 Review: Anime-Inspired Cinematic Insanity

A two-part adaptation of the anime series, these movies deviate from the original, but keep the crazy spirit intact.

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Big House, U.S.A. Blu-ray Review: Lean, Tough ’50s Crime

This surprisingly grim, unsentimental crime film with great character actor cast is a tough-minded winner.

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The Hee Haw Collection DVD Review: Stockholm Syndrome in the Cornfields

This five episode collection of the corniest TV show in history makes the show’s long life understandable… a little.

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Cemetery Without Crosses Blu-ray Review: Franco-Spanish Spaghetti Western

Robert Hossein’s Euro-Western is long on style and brooding, short on story and character.

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He Ran All the Way Blu-ray Review: Beautiful Cinematography Elevates Standard Noir

A small thriller (John Garfield’s last film) draped in spectacular black and white imagery by cinematographer James Wong Howe.

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Person of Interest: The Complete Fourth Season DVD Review: A.I. Supercomputer Battle Royale

Season Four is bumpier than average, but this season’s highlights more than make up for some weak patches.

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Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell Blu-ray Review: A Magical Series About Real Magic in England

A faithful adaptation of the modern classic novel, a complicated and convoluted fantasy story about rival wizards in 19th-century England.

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Stray Cat Rock Blu-ray Review: Motorcycle Girl Gangs and Hippy Crime Sprees

Five loosely connected Japanese exploitation movies capture the spirit, and looseness of their age.

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Society Blu-ray Review: Glorious Mess of an ’80s Horror Movie

Brian Yuzna’s bizarre directorial debut is wildly uneven, but never less than fascinating.

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The Searchers Blu-ray Review: Revisionist Western Before There Were Revisionist Westerns

John Ford’s justly praised western classic explores the contradictions of glory and brutality in the settling of the West.

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Retaliation Blu-ray Review: Japanese Gangster Exploitation Mayhem

Another fine Arrow release of a late-’60s era Japanese exploitation picture.

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The Friends of Eddie Coyle Criterion Collection Blu-ray Review: Crime, Lowkey, and Unsentimental

Peter Yates’ 1973 crime drama explores how important, and how expendable, “Friends” can be in Boston’s working-class criminal underground.

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Fast, Cheap & Out of Control Movie Review: Skewed Look at Human Behavior

Errol Morris’s meditation on human behavior as seen from four men with very strange jobs.

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Blind Woman’s Curse Blu-ray Review: Gory Japanese Ghosts and Yakuza Fun

A kitchen sink of Japanese genre elements from Japanese exploitation expert Teruo Ishii.

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A Walk Among the Tombstones Blu-ray Review: Somber, Slow Detective Throwback

This adaptation of Lawrence Block’s alcoholic detective series is true to the character, maybe to a fault.

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The Vanishing (1988) Criterion Collection Blu-ray Review: Thriller as Character Study

A woman’s disappearance creates a terrible bond between the man who took her, and the one who lost her.

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UHF Blu-ray Review: Constant Parodying, Semi-Constant Laughter

“Weird Al” packs a comic sensibility not at all conducive to feature films into a ramshackle movie.

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Cinema Sentries

Phineas and Ferb: Star Wars DVD Review: A Parallel Adventure in the Galactic Empire

Disney’s inventive duo run amiably amok through the story of Star Wars: A New Hope.

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Father Brown: Season One DVD Review: Uninspired Priest Detective Series

Catholic priest detective isn’t particularly Catholic, nor much of a detective, in this BBC series.

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Cinema Sentries

Any Given Sunday 15th Anniversary Blu-ray Review: Oversized Game Meets Oversized Filmmaker

Sprawling football epic looks at the game from all sides.

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Rocks in My Pockets Movie Review: Animated Exploration of Suicide and Depression

Rock in My Pockets, an independent animated film, explores the depths of suicide and depression, without itself being suicidally depressing.

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Hidden Kingdoms Blu-ray Review: Contrived Narratives Meet Astonishing Nature Footage

Hidden Kingdoms, from BBC Earth, showcases the world of small animals, mixing fictional stories with very real, very beautiful footage.

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The Book Thief Blu-ray Review: Familiar but Compelling Wartime Drama

Following a girl who comes of age in Nazi Germany, The Book Thief is a familiar, but quality story.

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Books Review: Starting Point: 1979-1996 and Turning Point: 1997-2008 by Hayao Miyazaki: Unique Memoirs from an Animation Genius

Starting Point and Turning Point memoirs provide insight into the work and life of Spirited Away director Hayao Miyazaki

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Dragons: Defenders of Berk Part 2 DVD Review: Mostly Satisfactory Season Ender

Concludes the second TV season of Dragon training on a satisfactory, not brilliant, note.

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Book Review: Weird Fantasy, Volume 1: Glossy Reprint of Classic SF Comic

The latest hardcover EC Archives release features the first six issues of this series digitally recolored.

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Dragons: Defenders of Berk Part 1 DVD Review: Another Half Season of Dragon Training

Dragons: Defenders of Berk Part 1 returns to the surprisingly good TV incarnation of How to Train Your Dragon.

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Himizu Movie Review: Compellingly Weird Coming-of-age Drama

Himizu is a strange, but compelling, coming-of-age drama about a boy trying to find normalcy in post-tsunami Japan.

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Guilty of Romance Movie Review: Sexy Thriller with Tacked-on Murder

Sion Sono’s Guilty of Romance is a sexy, strange, perverse thriller about a housewife’s forays into prostitution.

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Book Review: Gasoline Alley: The Complete Sundays, Volume One 1920-1922 by Frank King 

Lovingly restored, Dark Horse Comics collects the first two years of the beloved series Sunday run.

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Book Review: Hellboy: The First 20 Years by Mike Mignola 

Hellboy: The First 20 Years is an attractive artbook that charts the visuals of the Hellboy series.

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Wicked Blood Blu-ray Review: Southern Meth Generic Crime Drama

Wicked Blood, a crime drama seen through the eyes of a teenage girl begins promisingly, but sinks under generic plot.

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The Agatha Christie Hour: Complete Collection DVD Review: Agatha Christie’s Also-Rans

The Agatha Christie Hour adapted 10 short stories featuring lesser-known characters from Christie’s canon

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Milius Movie Review: The Director Who Wanted to be a General

Milius documents the rise and fall of raconteur and Hollywood rebel John Milius.

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