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[DVD Review] ‘Midnight Son’ Is ‘Martin’-esque

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Some of the best vampire movies don’t stick to the classic fangs and widow’s peak clichés we’ve become accustomed to. Hell, Near Dark never even uses the word ‘vampire’ once in the movie and it’s still an incredible film. Midnight Son, written and directed by Scott Leberecht, follows the same lead in a Martin-esque style, telling the story of a young man coming to terms with bodily changes he’s experiencing. Changes that could be building to his full transformation into a vampire.

The gradual, believable build of these changes are only part of what makes this movie so good; Zak Kilberg as possible vampire Jacob is the other part. Tall, thin, pitiful – Kilberg’s even kind of pretty – awkward, but pretty. All of the elements that lead to a sympathetic character that the audience desperately wants to survive. Night watchman Jakob meets Mary (Maya Parish), a coke addicted bartender – who is also struggling to figure life out – and a romance quickly develops. Mary is drawn to Jakob’s drawings of sunrises: she is always trying to see something special within them while he cannot actually see at all as the rays burn his skin within seconds. Even with a deep connection the same issue is constantly interrupting their intimacy: blood. From Mary’s coke nosebleeds to Jakob’s urge to drink blood – the two are brought together and torn apart – making for a convincing, intense love story.

Midnight Son is just that: intense. But the force is not what most would expect: the potency comes from purposely-framed shots, moments of stress and pain shown on Jakob’s face, and universal feelings of claustrophobia. While there is some action, the feats that characters must conquer have the most punch and the romantic elements are more believable than most anything portrayed in film today. Midnight Son is an intelligent, beautiful movie that deserves a second viewing.

Extras on the DVD include the standard commentary with Scott Leberecht and Zak Kilberg. Also included are a few very short deleted scenes that actually would add continuity if inserted back into the film, having to deal with the building of Mary’s character for the most part. The largest extra, and the best, are interviews with the cast and crew. Writer/Director Scott Leberecht gives great insight as to the inspiration for the film, what vampire lore he wanted to concentrate on and how being a vampire fan sculpted his own characters. Zak Kilberg speaks of what drew him to the role, how he prepared and how filming at night was beneficial to him. Maya Parish is delightful in her interview – a huge contrast from the dark, addicted Mary. She will hopefully, along with Kilberg, get more roles from this piece.

The trailer on the DVD gives a few too many glimpses into the ending of the movie, yet still provides exactly what a trailer should provide – the need and want to see the film. The only complaint about this DVD is the box art, which features a classic two puncture vampire bite on Mary’s neck. After viewing this lovely gem, I feel this marketing gimmick will trick people into thinking the movie is far from what it truly is. Presenting it as a clichéd vampire flick, in the end, only takes away from the film’s true beauty. Midnight Son is too refreshing to think of it as anything other than extraordinary.

Score: 4.5/5

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‘Scary Movie’ Heads to Blu-ray in September After $224 Million Box Office Win

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Over one month later, Scary Movie is still playing in theaters and still making money, with the franchise’s brand new installment slashing into $224.5 million at the worldwide box office.

In fact, the Scary Movie franchise has now collectively passed $1 billion in theaters!

Scary Movie is headed to Digital at home soon, and a listing on Amazon this week indicates that the film will be making its way to Blu-ray and DVD this coming September.

The film is listed for DVD and Blu-ray release on September 22, 2026.

We don’t have any additional release information at this time. Stay tuned.

Marlon Wayans (“Shorty”), Shawn Wayans (“Ray”), Anna Faris (“Cindy”), and Regina Hall (“Brenda”) reunite for the new Scary Movie, with the cast also including Dave Sheridan, Lochlyn Munro, Cheri Oteri, Chris Elliott, Jon Abrahams, Damon Wayans Jr., Gregg Wayans, Kim Wayans, Benny Zielke, Cameron Scott Roberts, Heidi Gardner, Olivia Rose Keegan, Ruby Snowber, Savannah Lee Nassif, Sydney Park, and Felissa Rose.

Twenty-six years after outrunning a suspiciously familiar masked killer (“Ghostface”), the Core Four are back in the killer’s crosshairs and no horror movie IP is safe…

Scary Movie will slash through reboots, remakes, requels, prequels, sequels, spin-offs, elevated horror, origin stories, anything with the word legacy in it, and every “final chapter” that absolutely isn’t. A whole lot has changed in the horror genre since the Wayans Brothers were in charge of the franchise; their involvement ended with Scary Movie 2 back in 2001!

Michael Tiddes (A Haunted House) directed the new Scary Movie.

[Related] ‘Scary Movie’ – Fedor Steer Played Art the Clown in the ‘Terrifier 3’ Parody Scene

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