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Category:    Home > Reviews > Thriller > Crime > Drama > Kidnapping > Rape > Cable TV > Gangster > Prohibition > Depression > Nighttime So > Big Driver (2014/Lionsgate DVD)/Boardwalk Empire: The Complete Fifth Season (2014 Final Season/HBO Blu-ray Set)/Dallas: The Complete Third Season (2014 Final Season/Warner DVD Set)/Open Windows (2014/

Big Driver (2014/Lionsgate DVD)/Boardwalk Empire: The Complete Fifth Season (2014 Final Season/HBO Blu-ray Set)/Dallas: The Complete Third Season (2014 Final Season/Warner DVD Set)/Open Windows (2014/Cinedigm Blu-ray)/A Walk Among The Tombstones (2014/Universal Blu-ray w/DVD)


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



Here are some various crime dramas, including two successful series coming to a final end...



Mikael Salomon's Big Driver (2014) is a telefilm adaptation of the Stephen King novel about a woman (Maria Bello) who is assaulted, beaten and sexually violated in a questionable early scene, then the story starts to take twists and turns that make it more and more unlikely and idiotic in what is hands down the worst adaptation of anything King ever wrote, no matter what his quote might say. This is the nadir of all involved, trivializes rape, is unsuspenseful and awful all the way.


Olympia Dukakis and singer Joan Jett also show up in this mess co-produced and written by Richard Christian Matheson, but WOW is it a mess for 90 minutes of my life I will never get back. Skip it!


The only extra is Digital HD Ultraviolet Copy for PC, PC portable and iTunes capable devices if one cares.



Boardwalk Empire: The Complete Fifth Season (2014) is the Final Season of the HBO/Martin Scorsese-produced series with Steve Buscemi as Nucky Thompson, who has ruled the original Jersey shore and made a financial killing during the Depression and Prohibition. His enemies and other criminal opportunists start gathering together against him like a storm cloud, though he does have (unbeknownst to him) a possible out in a new relationship with an enterprising Senator Joseph Kennedy, but that might not be enough to help him survive, let alone have any kind of legacy.


Some of his allies are in trouble too and those following the show know how many of them are now dead. The episodes start to intersect with more familiar stories about Elliott Ness, Al Capone, Lucky Luciano and other unstoppable historic events. More than a few have complained that this final set of shows was anticlimactic and that has some validity since some outcomes will be obvious, especially to those who know history and the Gangster genre, but there are a few other issues.


Seems the writer this time around have forgotten certain qualities or basis for the characters, including Nucky, so some scenes don't match and ring true consistently with the earlier seasons and being how well Nucky was developed and established, he makes some odd, pedestrian mistakes he should never have made as written here. You can see for yourself if you start form the beginning, but the money, talent, look and feel of the show remain and at least the show ends on a note of consistency and quality if nothing else. I just think the makers lost control of their show a bit and that's a shame.


Extras include Digital HD Ultraviolet Copy for PC, PC portable and iTunes capable devices, while the Blu-rays add the Scouting The Boardwalk featurette and audio commentary tracks for four of the episodes.



Dallas: The Complete Third Season (2014) is the Final Season of the relaunched nighttime soap opera that managed to get most of its cast back together and somehow make the show work enough that the fans came back and a few new ones were made. Of course, Larry Hagman passed away so with the main antagonist of J.R. Ewing gone, all this season can do is tie up the loose ends,but it does it better than the still-humorous last episode of the original run of the show where J.R. Gets a very special visitor.


We get 14 episodes over 3 DVDs and it is about as good as an average season of the old show, which might be faint praise, but this is a soap opera after all. Original cast members Linda Gray, Patrick Duffy and Ken Kercheval are joined by Mitch Pileggi, Jordana Brewster, Josh Henderson, Jesse Metcalfe, Brenda Strong and Emma Bell, all whom have melded well into their roles. This is really for fans only or the very curious, but at least it is consistent.


Extras include a booklet with episode guide, while the DVDs adds Deleted Scenes.



Nacho Vigalondo's Open Windows (2014) shows that Elijah Wood will sign onto anything that is different, no matter how ill-advised, and this time it is a tale of internet sex turned torture pron and murder, but the visuals are always moving around since we get literally hundred of PC screen shots overlapping each other for its 110 minutes that lack form, ideas and never gel. If the idea was to do something freestyle that might be intriguing, it is a total failure, though Wood seems to think it will and gives an acting performance that at least he believes in.


Sasha Grey is also wasted here and with its cast of unknowns and it should be added that the computer graphics are dated upon arrival, guaranteeing it will date badly, quickly and that's a good thing.


Extras include a Visual Effects Reel, Making Of featurette and Original Theatrical Trailer.



Scott Frank's A Walk Among The Tombstones (2014) is an attempt to put Liam Neeson into another franchise like Taken, but with more edge and gore. As good as anything from that formulaic money machine, he is a former cop and detective named Matt Scudder who still takes on the occasional job despite his alcoholism and not even officially being a PI anymore. Here, a fellow AA friend has another 'friend' whose wife was kidnapped and killed (her body dismembered after she was tortured, killed and who knows what else), but the guy is a drug trafficker. Matt immediately passes until he hears the audiotape the killers sent of the torture murder and takes on the case.


From there, the film is very hit and miss with every good scene followed by one that is silly, odd, preposterous or unnecessary. He also has a young homeless kid who wants to help him out and does at least have some good reference skills as Matt does not know how to use a computer. It is a good idea, but it is not well-integrated into the plot as much as it could be. Despite its many problems, it is one of those rare cases they should try a sequel, even if this debut entry did not totally work out because this has more potential than most forced franchises of the last few decades and Neeson has more of a character to work with.


Extras include Digital HD Ultraviolet Copy for PC, PC portable and iTunes capable devices, while both discs offer the Making Of featurette A Look Behind The Tombstone and the Blu-ray exclusively adds a Matt Scudder: Private Eye featurette.



The anamorphically enhanced 1.78 X 1 image presentations on Driver and Dallas are soft, but Driver tends to be weaker throughout, equalling the poor performance of the anamorphically enhanced 2.35 X 1 image on the Walk DVD, but its 1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image Blu-ray transfer has an interesting, inky look throughout that is consistent and interesting, though the 1080p 1.78 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Empire has more money and style on screen along with more detail. Only a few shots disappoint, if that.


That leaves the 1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on Windows with its goofy mix of ill-focused images, computer windows and shaky camerawork that is a mess, but looks a little better than any of the DVDs here for what that's worth. It does have a DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mix that tends to be as awkward that cannot match the same across the episodes of Empire or on Walk. They have some minor weak points, but play well, but Walk goes a little more all out being set in the present and the lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 on its DVD version is not bad, yet no match for the Blu-ray's DTS. The lossy Dolby Digital 5.1 on Driver and Dallas are passable and cannot compete with the rest of the discs here.



- Nicholas Sheffo


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