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Category:    Home > Reviews > Horror > Comedy > Murder > Shorts > Sexploitation > Haunted House > Aliens > Drama > Swords > Epic > Killer > We > The ABCs Of Death (2012/Magnolia/MagNet Blu-ray)/Dark Skies (2013/Weinstein/Anchor Bay Blu-ray w/DVD)/Land Of The Pharaohs (1955/Warner Archive DVD)/Pretty Little Liars: The Complete Third Season (201

The ABCs Of Death (2012/Magnolia/MagNet Blu-ray)/Dark Skies (2013/Weinstein/Anchor Bay Blu-ray w/DVD)/Land Of The Pharaohs (1955/Warner Archive DVD)/Pretty Little Liars: The Complete Third Season (2012 – 2013/Warner DVDs)/Teen Wolf: Season Two (2012/MGM/Fox DVDs)/Tomorrow You’re Gone (2012/RLJ/Image Blu-ray)

 

Picture: B-/B- & C/C+/C+/C+/B-     Sound: B-/B- & C+/C+/C+/C+/B-     Extras: C/C-/B-/C-/C/D     Main Programs: C-/C-/C+/D/C/C-

 

 

PLEASE NOTE: Land Of The Pharaohs is only available from Warner Bros. through their Warner Archive series and can be ordered from the link below.

 

 

Now for a mix of different genre works that have problems working…

 

 

We start with a high concept dud that should have been a no-brainer, but is pretty awful.  The ABCs Of Death (2012) has 26 “filmmakers” come up with shorts based on a letter of the alphabet to do a story to and keep the theme of death.  Instead, we get a bunch of surprisingly forgettable, lame, goofy shorts in a sort of omnibus pastiche that is barely an anthology and is more interested in being gross, sexual, cutting up bodies, telling bad sick jokes, getting gross (translation: smug and self-impressed) and it is a sad work.  A few shorts had some potential, but we get zero suspense and if this is meant to be a cult item, it fails there too.

 

Five featurettes have the makers try to explain what they did and why they did it, so they should be able to try and explain themselves, but it did not matter and in most cases, I did not buy what they were saying.  This is uncut NC-17 material, so beware if you view it, but I would say skip it altogether.

 

 

Scott Stewart’s Dark Skies (2013, not to be confused with the TV series) is an attempt by the ultra-cynical producer of Insidious and horrid Paranormal Activity “films” to do a haunted house movie and try not to be goofs about it, even hiring Kerri Russell and John Hamilton as the parents of two boys who slowly start to discover something is wrong in their home.  Unfortunately, they are also dumb enough to stay behind and this lands up looking more like a Scary Movie installment than coming across as anything to do with terror.

 

It is just a tired idea done in a tired way and even the one twist we get is done in the lamest way possible.  This was just awful and awfully boring to the point that I hoped the Wayans would show up.  Skip this one too.

 

Extras include Alternate & Deleted Scenes that would have made no difference and a feature length audio commentary track with the Director and everyone he can drag into the studio.

 

 

Showing that even great filmmakers can get into genre trouble, Howard Hawks’ Land Of The Pharaohs (1955) was the groundbreaking filmmakers’ only use of CinemaScope and his only time to take on the swords & sandals epic.  Jack Hawkins plays the Pharaoh who has his people build him the most impenetrable pyramid yet so he and his treasures can be together in his afterlife.  Hawks was more interested in how a pyramid would be built when he took this film on, being an architect in real life.

 

Oddly, many building sequences have singing that turn this film unintentionally into a bizarre musical more times than it is often noted, meaning what little narrative the script has comes to a further halt often.  The pother actors here, including Dewey Martin, are not bad, but it turns out that a young Joan Collins saves what little of the film can be saved when she shows up as a possible gift to the Pharaoh and lands up becoming much more.  She steals every scene she is in and saves this from being a total dud.  However, it was the one genre Hawks never cracked and he would never try it again, but it is still one of the more interesting entries in a genre that was often so repetitive, cheap and campy.  That is why it is worth a look and manages to be the best title on this list, by default or otherwise.

 

The only extra here is a terrific one, a feature length audio commentary track by the great filmmaker and film scholar Peter Bogdanovich, with excellent history and observations about the film, those involved, the genre, Hollywood history and from his archive, audio clips from Hawks!  This commentary alone is worth the price of this entire disc.

 

 

Somehow hanging in there, Pretty Little Liars: The Complete Third Season (2012 – 2013) has painted itself into the odd corner it seemed it would when I covered the debut season a while back.  The lying is deadly, a killer is on the loose, who is up to what and do we want to stop the murders or see what happens because the show wants to turn it into a sort of celebrated ugliness?

 

Of course, the female cast is attractive, but I would be a big liar if I recommended this show.  Too cynical for its own good, it is like a one-joke work except that this is no comedy, just a sick, sad gimmick.  I hoped they would possibly find a better direction, but I was too predictably correct.

 

Extras include a Gag Reel, Unaired Scene, Bonus Webisodes, a Making Of featurette and some Alternate Ending which smacks of a show whose makers could not even decide what to do with it.

 

 

Named after the Michael J. Fox comedy, Teen Wolf: Season Two (2012) is really a show in name only because there is no comedy here and this is a soap opera with some nudity, more than enough blood, formula drama and nothing we have not seen before.  As a matter of fact, the soapy parts are so overdone that the horror and suspense elements are almost nonexistent and the Werewolves are more like a bad Twilight rehash meets a bad Halloween party.

 

You do not need to start with the debut season of this show to see what a dud it is, made literally for MTV, it is a joke from the world go and unless you are a young teen (esp. one who is not a horror fan), than you might like the show.  We get 12 episodes over 3 DVDs.  Don’t operate heavy machinery when viewing.

 

Extras include a Gag Reel, six Making Of featurettes, Shirtless montage, audio commentary tracks on three episodes, Alternate, Deleted and Extended Scenes.

 

 

Finally we have David Jacobson’s Tomorrow You’re Gone (2012) tries to experiment with the crime drama but setting up a sort of character study without enough study as Stephen Dorff plays a man just out of prison, immediately visited by the man (Willem Dafoe) who helped him out, but wants him to return the favor.

 

Our ex-con lead finds things more complicated when he meets a woman (Michelle Monaghan) who he takes an interest in and vice versa, though we have to wonder if she is up to no good.  All involved try to create a mood piece out of this and they have good actors and some good ideas, but the problem here is that none of this adds up to anything and they had 92 minutes to try.  It might become a curio for some, but I was disappointed because they were at least on track to maybe making this all work.  Oh well.

There are no extras.

 

 

The three 1080p digital High Definition Blu-rays tie as the image champs, but considering they are all styled down or limited in detail and depth, that only says so much.  ABCs has all 26 shorts at 1.78 X 1, leaving the other Blus at 2.35 X 1.  They are the kind of digital productions that seem a little dated on arrival and none of the images on any of them really stuck with me, though Gone was the best-looking of the three and the Skies DVD (anamorphically enhanced) is the softest-looking disc of all these releases.

 

The anamorphically enhanced 1.78 X 1 image on Teen and Little are also soft and about even (slightly darkened and downstyled throughout) throughout all their respective episodes.  I doubt Blu-ray could make them look much better.  That leaves the anamorphically enhanced 2.55 X 1 WarnerColor image on Land that has the usually flaws and distortions the CinemaScope system produced, but this is very, very narrowly the best looking DVD on the list.  The print could use some more work.

 

All three Blu-rays offer DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless sound mixes that have inconsistent soundfields, but are also the sonic champs on the list.  Gone has the most realistic sound design of the three.  The lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 on the Skies DVD, plus Teen and Little episodes are next up, but they do not have soundfields that are that good.  Thus, the lossy Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo on Land can actually compete despite possibly showing its age at times, helped by a fine score by Dimitri Tiomkin, though I wonder where the four-track magnetic soundmaster might be.

 

 

To order Land Of The Pharaohs, go to this link for it and many more great web-exclusive releases at:

 

http://www.warnerarchive.com/

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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