Home Video
‘The Nun’ Comes Home to Digital and Blu-ray Before the End of 2018
With a nearly $400 million worldwide gross at the box office, director Corin Hardy’s The Nun is the biggest film in the entire Conjuring Universe to date, and it soon heads home!
We’ve learned today that The Nun is coming to Digital on November 20, followed by a Blu-ray release on December 4.
Special Features will include:
- A New Horror Icon
- Gruesome Planet
- The Conjuring Chronology
- Over 10 minutes of deleted scenes
In the film, starring Taissa Farmiga and Demián Bichir, “A priest with a haunted past and a novitiate on the threshold of her final vows are sent by the Vatican to investigate the death of a young nun in Romania and confront a malevolent force in the form of a demonic nun.”
Life slips away and latches onto darkness.#TheNun coming to you on Digital 11/20 & Blu-ray™ 12/4. https://t.co/O3DwUTJqvZ pic.twitter.com/5H8Vr9cbdk
— The Nun (@thenunmovie) October 23, 2018
Home Video
Brazilian Werewolf Fable ‘Good Manners’ Finally Gets Physical Media Release
One of contemporary horror’s best werewolf movies is 2017’s Good Manners, and it’s finally set to receive a proper physical media release.
Icarus Films is partnering with OCN Distribution to unleash a new Blu-ray that’s now available to preorder via Vinegar Syndrome. and with a limited edition slipcover.
Set in São Paulo, the film follows Clara, a lonely nurse from the outskirts of the city who is hired by mysterious and wealthy Ana to be the nanny of her soon to be born child. Against all odds, the two women develop a strong bond. But a fateful night marked by a full moon changes their plans.
Good Manners is the second collaboration between filmmakers Juliana Rojas and Marco Dutra, who write and direct. Zama’s Rui Poças‘ cinematography captures this unique werewolf tale described as “Disney meets Jacques Tourneur.”
Our own Trace Thurman wrote in his review, “With Good Manners, Rojas and Dutro have made one of the best werewolf movies ever made. That they are able juggle commentaries on racism and classism while still managing to tell two deeply affecting love stories is remarkable.”
BONUS FEATURES:
- Commentary from film critics Shelagh Rowan-Legg and Carolyn Mauricette
- 12-page booklet with an essay by film critic Nicolas Pedrero-Setzer
- Making-of short film: The Making of a Werewolf (2 mins)
- Two additional short films from the filmmakers: A STEM (15 mins), directed by Juliana Rojas & Marco Dutras, and DOPPELGANGER (24 mins), directed by Juliana Rojas


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