By Harley Lond - 07/03/18 at 04:10 PM CT
FROM THE BIG SCREEN:
In the involving spy thriller "Beirut," Jon Hamm stars as Mason Skiles, a former U.S. diplomat, who gets sent to Beirut to negotiate a swap for the release of a terrorist leader, believed to be imprisoned by Israeli secret police, in exchange for a CIA agent who has been kidnapped. Co-stars Rosamund Pike and Dean Norris. Extras include "The Story Behind Beirut" making-of featurette and a "Sandy Crowder" featurette, in which Rosamund Pike discusses her role as CIA Agent Sandy Crowder. From Universal ... The dull "7 Days in Entebbe" is inspired by the true events of the 1976 hijacking of an Air France flight en route from Tel Aviv to
Paris. A forced landing in Entebbe, Uganda, sets off a chain of events instigated by a terrorist group called Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, who want Israel's release of dozens of their members. The Israeli Defense Force is tasked with traveling to Entebbe in a raid to rescue dozens of innocent lives. Stars Rosamund Pike, Daniel Bruhl and Eddie Marsan. Extras include "The Entebbe Team" and "Inside the Raid" featurettes. From Universal ... In lightly funny anbd well-acted "Blockers," three parents stumble upon their daughters' pact to lose their virginity at their prom, and launch a covert one-night operation to stop the teens from sealing the deal. Stars John Cena, Leslie Mann, Ike Barinholtz, Kathryn Newton, Geraldine Viswanathan, Gideon Adlon, Graham Phillips, Miles Robbins, Jimmy Bellinger, Gary Cole, Gina Gershon. Extras include five featurettes, deleted scenes and a gag reel. From Universal.
THIS WEEK'S BEST BETS:
Here's a collectible package that cinema lovers have long been waiting for:
"Dietrich and von Sternberg in Hollywood
mystique was a perfect match for the provocative roles von Sternberg cast her in — including a sultry chanteuse, a cunning spy, and the hedonistic Catherine the Great — and the filmmaker captured her allure with chiaroscuro lighting and opulent design, conjuring fever-dream visions of exotic settings from Morocco to Shanghai. Suffused with frank sexuality and worldly irony, these six deliriously entertaining masterpieces are landmarks of cinematic artifice. "Morocco" (1930), "Dishonored" (1931), "Shanghai Express" (1932), "Blonde Venus" (1932), "The Scarlett Empress" (1934), "The Devil Is a Woman (1935). On DVD and Blu-ray, with new 2K or 4K digital restorations of all six films, with uncompressed monaural soundtracks on the Blu-rays. Extras include new interviews with film scholars Janet Bergstrom and Homay King, director Josef von Sternberg’s son, Nicholas, Deutsche Kinemathek curator Silke Ronneburg and costume designer and historian Deborah Nadoolman Landis; new documentary about Dietrich’s German origins, featuring film scholars Gerd Gemünden and Noah Isenberg; new documentary on Dietrich’s status as a feminist icon, featuring film scholars Mary Desjardins, Amy Lawrence, and Patricia White; "The Legionnaire and the Lady," a 1936 Lux Radio Theatre adaptation of "Morocco," featuring Dietrich and actor Clark Gable; new video essay by critics Cristina Álvarez López and Adrian Martin; "The Fashion Side of Hollywood," a 1935 publicity short featuring Dietrich and costume designer Travis Banton; television interview with Dietrich from 1971; a book featuring essays by critics Imogen Sara Smith, Gary Giddins, and Farran Smith Nehme. In a gorgeous boxed set from The Criterion Collection.More good stuff this week:
"The Last House on the Left (Limited Edition)" (1972) is the directorial debut of Wes Craven, the man behind such horror favorites as "A Nightmare on Elm Street," "The Hills Have Eyes" and "Scream," and the film justly retains its reputation as one of the most harrowing cinematic experiences of all time, nearly half a century on from its original release. On the eve of her 17th birthday, Mari and friend Phyllis set off from her family home to
the big city to attend a concert by shock-rockers Bloodlust. Attempting to pick up some marijuana on the way, the pair run afoul of a group of vicious crooks, headed up by the sadistic and depraved Krug (David Hess). Gagged and bound, the young women are bundled into a car trunk and driven to the woods, where the gang subject them to a terrifying ordeal of sexual humiliation, torture and murder. Unleashed on an unsuspecting public in 1972, "The Last House on the Left" shocked audiences with its graphic and unflinching portrayal of interpersonal violence, paving the way for a whole host of cheap imitators looking to capitalize on its success. It is Wes Craven's original alone, however, that remains one of the true watershed moments in horror (and indeed, film) history. Three cuts of the film, newly restored in 2K from original film elements, with original uncompressed Mono Audio, on Blu-ray, with a CD of the soundtrack. Extras include new and archival audio commentaries; interviews; "Celluloid Crime of the Century" archival documentary; "Still Standing: The Legacy of The Last House on The Left" archival interview with Wes Craven; "Scoring Last House on the Left" archival interview with actor/composer David Hess; "It's Only a Movie: The Making of The Last House on the Left" archival documentary' "Forbidden Footage" with the cast and crew on the film’s most controversial sequences; deleted scene; outtakes and dailies; trailers, TV Spot and radio spots; image gallery; double-sided poster featuring original and newly commissioned artwork; six lobby card reproductions; limited edition perfect-bound book featuring new writing on the film by author Stephen Thrower. From Arrow Video/MVD Entertainment.
Bill Gunn -- actor, playwright, novelist, and director of the art-horror classic "Ganja and Hess" (1973) -- teamed with novelist/essayist Ishmael Reed and poet/publisher Steve Cannon to produce what Reed has called a "meta-soap opera," "Personal Problems" (2017). This extraordinary, rough-edged ensemble piece explores black working-class lives with candor and emotional intensity and features a who's who of important artists including Walter Cotton, Vertamae Grosvenor, Jim Wright, and Sam Waymon, with music by Carman Moore, and cinematography by Robert Polidori. Rarely shown and, when screened, seen in a mutilated cut hampered by the poor quality of available materials, it appears for the first time in a full-length, two-part version restored from the original camera tapes. Seen in its
proper form, "Personal Problems" is nothing short of a revelation. New HD restoration, reconstructed from the original 3/4" U-matic camera tapes, with remastered audio. On DVD, Blu-ray, from Kino Classics ... Clint Eastwood's Man with No Name spawned imitations, variations and shameless rip-offs keen to emulate his success at the box office. Within months of "A Fistful of Dollars" release, Giuliano Gemma was playing Ringo, who was then followed by Franco Nero's Django, Tony Anthony's The Stranger and Gianni Garko's Sartana -- each providing their own twist on the Eastwood antihero, and each of them then subject to their own spate of unofficial sequels, spoofs and cash-ins. Sartana tapped into more than just his Spaghetti Western predecessors -- a mysterious figure, he has a spectral quality, aided by his Count Dracula-like cloak that also nods towards comic strip figure Mandrake the Magician, with whom he shares a penchant for card tricks. He takes pride in his appearance unlike Eastwood's dusty wanderer or Nero's mud-caked drifter. And there's a dose of James Bond too in his fondness for gadgetry and the droll sense of humor. Unsurprisingly, this unique figure in the genre was treated to four official follow-ups."The Complete Sartana (Limited Edition)" collects all five films, presented here in brand-new restorations: "If You Meet Sartana... Pray for Your Death," "I Am Sartana, Your Angel of Death," "Have a Good Funeral My Friend... Sartana Will Pay," "Light the Fuse... Sartana Is Coming," and "Sartana's Here... Trade Your Pistol for a Coffin," in which George Hilton replaced Garko in the lead role. Extras include commentaries; interviews; galleries; Brand-new video essay on the major actors and supporting players in the official Sartana films; limited edition packaging with reversible sleeves featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Matthew Griffin; illustrated collector's booklet featuring new writing on the films by Roberto Curti and an extensive Spaghetti Western timeline by Howard Hughes. In a six-disc Blu-ray set. From Arrow Video/MVD Entertainment.
BUZZIN' THE 'B'S:
"Don't Grow Up
In the apocalyptic thriller "The Cured
"Lady" Sandra Abbott (Staunton) discovers that her husband of 40 years (Sessions) is having an affair with her best friend (Lawrence), she seeks refuge in London with her estranged, older sister Bif (Imrie). The two could not be more different -- Sandra is a fish out of water next to her outspoken, serial dating, free-spirited sibling. But different is just what Sandra needs at the moment, and she reluctantly lets Bif drag her along to a community dance class, where she starts finding her feet. From Sony ... In "Another WolfcopFOREIGN FILMS:
"Ismael's Ghosts
SPECIAL INTEREST:
"American Socialist: The Life and Times of Eugene Victor Debs
Check out other new DVD/Blu-ray releases, streaming films, and information and reviews at OnVideo.




