Glenn Erickson's
Review Page and Column

Tuesday July 7, 2026

“Merry,  Merry,  more to bury, how does my garden grow?  With marble stones and ankle bones and relatives all in a row.”

Deep Crimson  — 4K UHD 07/07/26

The Criterion Collection
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

A big welcome to reviewer Terry Morgan, a critic who also writes for Trailers from Hell. Terry digs into modern Mexican horror with Arturo Ripstein’s colorfully murderous adaptation of the Lonely Hearts murder spree, transposed to rural Mexico in the late 1940s. Regina Orozco and Daniel Giménez Cacho are the loco de amor couple that express their undying devotion thru homicide. It’s the restored director’s cut, that clocks in 22 minutes longer than previous editions. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
07/07/26

Soylent Green   — 4K UHD 07/07/26

Arrow Films
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

Richard Fleischer’s dystopian drama takes place in 2022, which makes it four years past its ‘sell by’ date. Is our world beginning to resemble Harry Harrison’s grim tale of overpopulation chaos?  Charlton Heston essays another tough-guy Sci-fi hero, a detective who’d rather be paid in scarce grocery items than money. In his final film role, the great Edward G Robinson strikes a painful sentimental note. The big twist ending of this futuristic Eco-horror became a cultural joke … but An Inconvenient Truth has confirmed that the joke is on us. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from Arrow Films.
07/07/26

CineSavant Column

Tuesday July 7, 2026

 

Hello!

Yet another Joe Dante steer to a an excellent webpage … A site called Animation Obsessive has an article up from April 12, 2026, with the inside story of a mini-studio whose output we hold dear: United Productions of America, or simply UPA.

UPA is much more than Gerald Mc Boing Boing cartoons. We reviewed a sensational  DVD Collection years ago that came with good text on the company, but AO’s coverage in this article puts the subject in a new light. There’s even a downloadable full book available — on the company that began as an alternative for animators, away from the control of the Disney studio.

The photos from the early 1950s are really impressive. All these crazy-talented creatives come to work dressed as if for an architectural firm. Here’s the link:

 

Stepping Inside UPA
 


 

Just a bit of poking around reveals an even more CineSavant-friendly article from Animation Obsessive, this one from April 25, 2026.

It’s about another UPA masterpiece that I remember seeing more than once at kiddie cartoon matinees around 1960 —  The Tell-Tale Heart. If the designs look familiar to Roger Corman fans, it’s because the artist-animator Paul Julian also put together several title sequences for Corman’s early pictures. On his own, Julian animated the creepy political fable  The Hangman as well.

Also, the article appears to answer the fan speculation about a 3-D version of The Tell-Tale Heart: it says that the 3-D version was finished, and describes an (exaggerated?) account of a screening. But Columbia ‘forced UPA to scrap the 3-D version.’  Interesting.

The article has the whole story, nicely illustrated:

 

How UPA Injected Horror into Cartoons
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

The Pornographers   — 4K 07/04/26

Radiance Films
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

The Japanese New Wave strikes — in a challenging, entertaining art picture where all the perversity is in the characters’ heads. Shôhei Imamura’s unflinching view of low-level vice is a full menu of bad behavior — personal, social, legal — that makes us wonder if the problem is consumer society or human nature itself. The show comes on as a clinical exposé, but also a disturbing black comedy with a lot to say. We’re thankful for the excellent extras. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from Radiance Films.
07/04/26

The Navy vs. the Night Monsters 07/04/26

Leomark/Shoreline
Blu-ray

Whoa … Red Flag Down. We’re so spoiled by improved transfers of Public Domain titles that we forget that poor quality PD releases are still with us. This Sci-fi thriller was never a winner and can’t claim a positive reputation, but that doesn’t stop us completists from wanting to take a look … The cast has Mamie Van Doren, Bobby Van, Billy Gray and monster plants, so there must be a little fun to be had. Beware this release, however — it’s worse than an inferior YouTube copy. On Blu-ray from Leomark/Shoreline.
07/04/26

CineSavant Column

Saturday July 4, 2026

 

Once again Joe Dante sends along an article we can’t resist. Twenty years ago I listened from the next room while my teenagers keenly watched the TV show The X-Files. I’m not sure I ever saw a single episode all the way through, and I’ll accept that I must have missed something good. On the other hand it was their show, and they didn’t need Dad around, popping balloons with his obnoxious opinions.

Here’s one episode I clearly need to see. Having been a serious Buster Keaton fan, I think I would have picked up on the connections raised here by writer Marya E. Gates. It’s explained in a nice article from Cool People Have Feelings Too, dated June 28, 2026.

We love the photos, especially the one of Buster looking so sober in the middle of his crazy gag-men.

 

Who Was Clyde Bruckman And Why Did  The X-Files  Name An Episode After Him?
 


 

Second up, Michael McQuarrie isn’t letting go of the  Destination Moon theme, and we like it that way.

He’s uncovered this full comic book tie-in, in excellent condition. George Pal didn’t miss a trick, when it came to marketing. I wonder if he tried to interest a toy company in little rockets … or if they said kids couldn’t handle a pointy rocket toy, because, “You’ll put your eye out!”

Being the impish sorts that we are, we can’t help notice that the comic adaptation sticks close to the film’s science … but skips entirely the Cold War theme or Red sabotage/disinformation that’s so important in the movie. But it’s probably been dropped because it was considered ‘adult’ content.

The comic artists seem to have respected the film’s visuals!

 

Destination Moon — Original Comic Book
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday June 30, 2026

TCM recently showed a new remaster of this suspense thriller too. Is a new Woody Strode Blu-ray in the works?

Destination Moon 06/30/26

Film Masters
Blu-ray

After decades of neglect, George Pal’s history-making Sci-fi breakthrough arrives in a worthy video transfer. The milestone production is as original as Kubrick’s 2001 and arguably more influential, as it spurred the public to believe that space travel was a practical possibility. Filmed in Technicolor, Pal’s moonscapes captured the world’s imagination, and his silver-winged craft Luna set the standard for spaceships in the pre-NASA era. As is often pointed out, the real moon landing 19 years later bore numerous similarities … right down to a last-minute improvised landing adjustment. The special edition contains an entire extra feature in HD, Walter Mirisch’s Flight to Mars. On Blu-ray from Film Masters.
06/30/26

Thirty Seconds over Tokyo 06/30/26

The Warner Archive Collection
Blu-ray

One of the best combat films of World War II is this MGM ode to the 1942 Dolittle Raid, the strike at the mainland of Japan conducted as a needed morale booster in the early months of hostilities. Some Hollywood films were an outlet for public outrage against the enemy; Dalton Trumbo’s screenplay records honest sentiments and attitudes on what was essentially a suicide mission. Arnold Gillespie’s special effects deliver realistic visual illusions, some so good that audiences wondered if they could be real. It’s possibly Van Johnson’s best movie, with Spencer Tracy offering a moral argument for ‘symbolic’ revenge. Cast members Phyllis Thaxter and Robert Mitchum deliver Dalton Trumbo’s secondary message of hopes and dreams for a better future. On Blu-ray from The Warner Archive Collection.
06/30/26

CineSavant Column

Tuesday June 30, 2026

 

Hello!

This is an article forwarded by Joe Dante, about a screening/lecture series that most of us will miss. The article is fascinating in itself.

From IndieWire on June 26, 2026, writer Jim Hemphill describes the spell cast by Guillermo del Toro in his lecture series at the Academy Museum. Fresh thinking on Alfred Hitchcock is not easy to come by. Even the brief quotes given here express how knowledgeable, insightful, and articulate del Toro is.

The series is in motion now … when it is finished, del Toro will have covered Hitchcock’s Notorious,  Shadow of a Doubt,  North by Northwest,  I Confess,  and  Frenzy.  It sounds like a dream date for old-fashioned film students.

 

Guillermo del Toro
Reveals the  Alfred Hitchcock Secrets  That Changed How He Makes Movies
 


 

We got a good reader response from last Saturday’s Buster Keaton short subject, an informercial for a housing tract.

We’re intrigued by the fact that these ‘humble’ assignments don’t diminish the stature of the all-time top filmmaker, not one bit. He’s still Brilliant.

Michael McQuarrie tracked down more proof that Mr. Keaton didn’t stand still when studios weren’t calling.

We think these TV spots are really creative. They go for variety — the first has Buster as a mailman, and the vocations advance from there.

 

More  Buster Keaton:  in  Alka-Seltzer  Commercials
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday June 27, 2026

TCM showed an A+ digital remaster a few weeks back … can a New Blu be in the works?

My Neighbor Adolf 06/27/26

Cohen Media Group
Blu-ray

Here’s a rather good picture that’s a tough sell. We especially admire its comic tightrope act … there’s no humor in the Holocaust, but there always is in human nature. It’s a potentially grim story positioned as comedy, or an odd kind of anti-comedy. David Hayman is a cranky old concentration camp survivor living in self-imposed isolation in South America, who witnesses the impossible happening next door. All the clues point to his mystery neighbor (Udo Kier) being the most reveiled monster of the century, somehow still alive. Is it really a comedy?  The Polish-Israeli film goes where few comedies dare to tread. We liked it. On Blu-ray from Cohen Media Group.
06/27/26

Without Apparent Motive 06/27/26

Vinegar Syndrome
Blu-ray

Sans mobile apparent.  Star Jean-Louis Trintignant and composer Ennio Morricone dominate this cheerfully attractive serial killer tale, shot in sunny Nice. A mad sniper is nailing Frenchmen right and left, and Inspector Trintignant is fresh out of clues. Philippe Labro directs from a book by Ed McBain, with Dominique Sanda, Carla Gravina, Laura Antonelli and Stephane Audran taking turns as eye candy diversion … or targets for the killer. Vinegar Syndrome’s presentation is flawless, for both picture and sound. On Blu-ray from Vinegar Syndrome.
06/27/26

CineSavant Column

Saturday June 27, 2026

 

Hello!

Congratulations to filmmaker and disc producer Bret Wood. His very good 2002 feature documentary Hell’s Highway: The True Story of Highway Safety Films is getting a theatrical release on August 5 from Kino Cult.

The notorious docu is described as a ‘morbidly curious exploration of the near-mythical driver education films shown to American schoolchildren in the 1960s and ’70s. Produced in Mansfield, Ohio, films such as Signal 30 (1959) encouraged safety by force-feeding high school kids color footage of careless driving’s dark consequences: blood-stained wreckage, injured bodies, fresh corpses.’

It’s the kind of movie The Addams Family would watch to cheer themselves up. We reviewed it for DVD Savant,  back in 2003. It has reportedly been remastered and reconstructed, with new scans of the old Driver’s Safety pictures, and Wood’s 16mm interviews.

A Blu-ray will follow on September 8.

A new trailer has been prepared … the authentic live-action material always feels disturbing, like an invasion of privacy:

 

Hell’s Highway:  The True Story of Highway Safety Films
 


 

The dependable Michael McQuarrie has found us something cute — a prime example of a classic 16mm sales film, this one commissioned to sell a tract of houses in Arizona.

The reason we’re watching is that this one stars Buster Keaton. Mike says it’s from 1961. It’s in good color and the cinematographer is Hollywood’s Leo Tover; the director Joe Parker  worked in TV.

We can see Keaton checking that the money was good, showing up, and working directly with cameraman Tover when setting up his smooth gags. Buster gets distracted by an attractive woman (uncredited). He does terrific work for these real estate people!

I recognize the music under the title as a Fox cue from  The Gang’s All Here.

 

Buster Keaton  in The Home Owner
 


 

And this news just arrived in 187 languages along with their various dialects and sub-tongues … a deluxe 4K Ultra HD disc set of MGM’s Forbidden Planet is coming late in September. Content-wise it hews very close to the 2010 Warners Blu-ray, except that the new release is coming out under the Arrow Video label.

This promises to be something special. We’ll be keen to see what the ‘new’ colors look like, as we always suspected that the subdued pastels of the Blu-ray were the result of hard work on a faded negative. Just how do they decide what exact shade of green the sky is supposed to be?  In many ways, the show is a pinnacle of Sci-fi in 1950s Hollywood.

Promised new extras are a Perspecta Stereo audio option, and a new featurette on the ‘electronic tonalities’ creators Bebe & Louis Barron. As before, an encoding of The Invisible Boy will be included. As is Arrow’s modus operandi, 4K and Blu-ray editions will be separate.

This conjures nice hopes for fab 4K releases of more Warners-controlled fantasy, horror and Sci-fi.

 

Forbidden Planet  on 4K Ultra HD on September 28
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday June 23, 2026

This Russ Meyer pic arrrived just as reviewers (Roger Ebert!) started admitting that his movies existed.

The Hunt for Red October  — 4K 06/23/26

Paramount
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray Steelbook

I bet that Russians would enjoy this Cold War thriller as much as we do — the villains are Reds but Sean Connery charms everyone. 36 years later, the cast really shines: Connery, Alec Baldwin, Scott Glenn, Sam Neill, James Earl Jones, Richard Jordan, Peter Firth, Tim Curry, Skarsgård and Jeffrey Jones. Tom Clancy’s seagoing tale has marvelous action above the waterline, and underwater effects that impress even when they don’t really convince. We can see Alec Baldwin’s stardom being confirmed — he’s terrific. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray Steelbook from Paramount.
06/23/26

Monty Python’s  Life of Brian  — 4K 06/23/26

The Criterion Collection
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

Charlie Largent reviews Terry Jones’ & Monty Python’s most daring comic production. The misadventures of a misunderstood prophet are as irreverent as we expect, but the backbone of the thesis is thoughtful and humane. The prophet Brian Cohen is born on the same day as Jesus, one door down from the manger. Brian resents the Roman occupation as much as any good rebel; mixups become inevitable when every fumbled notion that comes from Brian’s mouth is recorded as holy doctrine. Pontius Pilate is comedy relief, with a wholly non-PC speech impediment. Do Criterion’s extras make sense of it all?  When financiers got cold feet at the 11th hour, George Harrison once again came to the rescue. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from Criterion.
06/23/26

CineSavant Column

Tuesday June 23, 2026

 

Hello!

We had a good time reading and reviewing Joseph McBride’s latest book last month,  I Loved Movies, But… — but we also enjoyed this piece from FilmInt, an interview of the critic / author / educator conducted by Jonathan Monovich, from June 19.

Monovich gets quite efficiently to the center of Joe McBride’s main issues … his personal connection to film history through directors like Orson Welles and John Ford, his writing for the trades, for the AFI and for a major cult film. That’s capped by decades of experience teaching film.

The best thing about Joseph McBride is that his opinions don’t waffle — you always know where he stands. We can hear that in any of his audio commentaries. The best are as good as film history gets, as with his tracks for a set of John Huston’s  WWII informational films.

Are the movies dead?  Is film education dead?  Are new generations disconnecting from classic film appreciation?  The ever-opinionated Joe has sharp thoughts on several topics.

 

Love and Frustration: Joseph McBride on  I Loved Movies, But…
and the Evolution of Film Education
 


 

An in-progress Disc Organization Report.

Some readers are following the oh-so-important CineSavant project of making the horde of discs here more manageable. I’ve been doing it for maybe 6 hours a week since February or so, and so far it appears to be going okay. After being ill for a week I’m looking forward to getting going again on ‘enveloping’ more discs.

In the process of logging old CineSavant and DVD Savant Columns, I came across an article entry from DVD Savant in 2008. It’s funny — I’m whining about the exact same problem, apparently with the hope that a reader-correspondent will write in with the perfect solution. If my present project does work it will be by following the lead of friend Craig Reardon, who never let his disc collection overwhelm his house space or organizational capacity.

I have crossed the 3,000 mark in disc – filing, and have cleared 1.5 rooms of stacked boxes. I’m guessing I might be enveloping as many as 4 or 6 thousand more individual discs. Knowing what’s there and being able to Find Stuff will be an enormous benefit, besides not leaving an impossible mess for somebody else to straighten out / dispose of. It’s a worthy quest — I hope.

Here’s the link to the old 2008 article, with its reader responses, from David Martin, Jordan Benedict, Bill Shaffer, Dick Dinman, David Fletcher and Stuart Galbraith IV:

 

Neck Deep in Discs   Or, the Practical Pitfalls of DVD Collecting
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson