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Blu-ray Review: Anchor Bay’s ‘After.Life’

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Anchor Bay gave After.Life a traditionally crappy Anchor Bay theatrical release earlier this spring, but DVD/Blu-Ray is where it will find its audience, so I don’t know why they bothered. 75% of the movie takes place in a mortician’s lab, and nothing much happens – it’s hardly the type of movie you have to see on the big screen. It simply plays better at home, and also makes a 2nd viewing (or at least some rewinding) much easier on your wallet.Because, you see, After.Life is one of those movies that they never quite come right out and answer its central question; in this case, whether or not Christina Ricci’s character is alive and being held by a nut (Liam Neeson), or if she truly IS dead and Neeson is just trying to settle her soul (he claims he can communicate with the dead). Either scenario is plausible to a certain extent – there are some minor plot holes either way (if she’s dead why isn’t she decomposing after this many days; if she’s alive how come she never gets hungry or thirsty), but both work, and I don’t think believing one over the other really matters, ultimately, since the real question of the film is what it actually MEANS to be alive (or dead).

See, Ricci’s character is pretty unlikable – she gets angry with her boyfriend (Justin Long, more or less playing his Drag Me To Hell character, albeit less comic relief-y) for no reason, acts cold toward others, etc. As Neeson asks her later in the film, even when you were alive, were you REALLY alive? It seems she wasn’t getting anything out of life, so her technical death shouldn’t even matter to her. It’s an interesting backdrop, and gives writer/director Agnieszka Wojtowicz-Vosloo some creative license to use stock “hostage” clichés (trying to find the right key, trying to call for help, etc) under unique circumstances, making them feel less generic.

DVD will also help you with the most crippling flaw of the film – it’s too damn long. 102 minutes isn’t exactly Gone With The Wind, even for a horror movie, but when the plot is this thin, we really should be into 80-85 minute territory (with credits), tops. There are only so many times we can watch Neeson talk to Ricci after catching her in some escape attempt, or watch Paul try to convince someone that Neeson is up to no good, before you start to wonder if you are indeed dead yourself, your hell being caught in a moebius strip of scenes. And the fact that they never provide a clear answer to things makes the length even more frustrating – it delays a non-resolution.

However, Vosloo does give the answer in both her commentary track and the film’s lone extra feature, which is a brief interview that’s sort of a cliff’s notes version of the commentary. I was somewhat delighted to discover my initial interpretation was wrong (I’d rather be wrong than tell you exactly how a movie will play out just after watching the opening ten minutes), and then got to feel nice and dumb about missing some fairly obvious clues (though in my defense, I actually went to grab a drink at one point and missed the most telling one). Some are more subtle than others, obviously, and it will be fun for any viewer to see how many they caught (or missed). I would have liked something a bit different, but the recycled aspect of the two features is also kind of nice – if you really liked the movie you can watch the commentary; if you just want to know if you were right or wrong, you can watch the 8 minute interview.

I also noticed something odd about Anchor Bay’s blu-rays – they do a much better job with their catalog titles than their newer releases, at least for the video portion. The sound mix (available in both uncompressed PCM and Dolby Digital 5.1) is terrific, with Neeson’s unmistakable voice coming through loud and clear (it’s a very talky movie) and the quite good score by Paul Haslinger sounding like he was in the room with you. But the video was far short of demo quality – while stuff like Children of the Corn and Hellraiser look positively majestic on their high def releases, After.Life, like Grace, looks a bit softer than I would expect. The colors and contrast ratios are definitely there (especially in the scenes of Ricci wearing her bright red slip in the otherwise cold/green lab scenes), but details are much less impressive than on their other films. Hopefully Frozen (which was released before After.Life in theaters, yet is hitting DVD later) won’t have the same problem. I want to see droplets of water on those snowflakes, goddammit!

Film: 6/10
Extras: 6/10
AV: 7/10
Overall: 6/10

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Dev Patel’s ‘Monkey Man’ Is Now Available to Watch at Home!

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monkey man

After pulling in $28 million at the worldwide box office this month, director (and star) Dev Patel’s critically acclaimed action-thriller Monkey Man is now available to watch at home.

You can rent Monkey Man for $19.99 or digitally purchase the film for $24.99!

Monkey Man is currently 88% Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, with Bloody Disgusting’s head critic Meagan Navarro awarding the film 4.5/5 stars in her review out of SXSW back in March.

Meagan raves, “While the violence onscreen is palpable and painful, it’s not just the exquisite fight choreography and thrilling action set pieces that set Monkey Man apart but also its political consciousness, unique narrative structure, and myth-making scale.”

“While Monkey Man pays tribute to all of the action genre’s greats, from the Indonesian action classics to Korean revenge cinema and even a John Wick joke or two, Dev Patel’s cultural spin and unique narrative structure leave behind all influences in the dust for new terrain,” Meagan’s review continues.

She adds, “Monkey Man presents Dev Patel as a new action hero, a tenacious underdog with a penetrating stare who bites, bludgeons, and stabs his way through bodies to gloriously bloody excess. More excitingly, the film introduces Patel as a strong visionary right out of the gate.”

Inspired by the legend of Hanuman, Monkey Man stars Patel as Kid, an anonymous young man who ekes out a meager living in an underground fight club where, night after night, wearing a gorilla mask, he is beaten bloody by more popular fighters for cash. After years of suppressed rage, Kid discovers a way to infiltrate the enclave of the city’s sinister elite. As his childhood trauma boils over, his mysteriously scarred hands unleash an explosive campaign of retribution to settle the score with the men who took everything from him.

Monkey Man is produced by Jordan Peele’s Monkeypaw Productions.

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