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DVD Review: The Complete ‘Vengeance’ Trilogy’!

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Now on DVD from Palisades Tartan is the most exciting, impressive and comprehensive Vengeance Trilogy box-set the world has ever seen! Featuring 8-discs and more special features then any other set on the planet (including the Korean version), celebrity essays as well as a few surprises, Park Chan-Wook’s Vengeance Trilogy is out and worthy of your purchase. Read Ryan Daley’s review below. Click here for full specs.
Looking back, the Asian horror fad of the early ’00’s is probably best remembered for the American remakes of The Ring and The Grudge, two nail-biting crowd pleasers that made bank at the box office. But as far as cultural infamy is concerned, the continued popularity of Asian cinema over the past decade rests squarely on the backs of two particular filmmakers: Takashi Mi’ike and Park Chan-wook. They’re like the Dario Argento and Lucio Fulci of today, two renegade artists shooting at the top of their game, out to throttle their eager American audiences with heavy emotion, mind-blowing plot twists, and a good dose of revulsion.

The pick of Park’s cinematic litter is undoubtedly his “Vengeance” trilogy–Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance (2002), Oldboy (2004), and Lady Vengeance (2005)–which has finally hit Blu-Ray in a 4-disc Vengeance Boxed Set. [It’s worth noting that a similar DVD boxed set released a few months ago contained 8 discs instead of 4, and until recently it was assumed that the Blu-Ray set would also consist of 8 discs. Even the print on the back of my metal tin insists that I’m holding an 8-disc set, but rest assured, there are only 4 discs total.]

The trilogy is stylish and heavy, and the Blu-Ray transfer perfectly captures the varying degrees of visual darkness that Park likes to explore, a richness that can be hard to appreciate when the films are viewed on straight DVD. The sound design is downright explosive, with every scrape and screech rendered in agonizing, ear-rending detail. Oldboy, a gut-punch of a revenge flick with a particularly heinous twist ending, is understandably the most renowned of the trilogy, and is therefore graciously allowed to spread its legs across two discs, leaving the other two films with one disc each. Oldboy is also the only film in the set to feature an (admittedly decent) English dub.

The Blu-Ray box comes packed with the same special features as the previously released DVD set: commentaries with Park, deleted scenes, an assload of special little documentaries, trailers, etc. Included with Lady Vengeance is a “Fade to Black and White” version: the feature is gradually drained of all color as the running time progresses. It’s a highly potent boxed set, loaded with all of the insight and info one could possibly hope for. Considering that Oldboy is currently the only film available for individual purchase on Blu-Ray, it may be a set worth picking up.

5/5 Skulls

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‘Hokum’ Heads Home to Digital Tomorrow Ahead of Physical Media Release in August

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Hokum Review - Hokum Digital Release Date

After scaring up a strong theatrical run, Oddity director Damian McCarthy’s Hokum heads home to Digital this week.

Settle in for a spooky supernatural chiller as Hokum arrives on all Digital platforms to rent or own beginning June 2, followed by a Blu-ray/4K Ultra HD Combo and DVD release on August 11, 2026.

Adam Scott (“Severance”) stars in Hokum as reclusive novelist Ohm Bauman. When he retreats to a remote Irish inn to scatter his parents’ ashes, the staff’s tales of an ancient witch haunting the honeymoon suite take hold of his mind. Disturbing visions and a shocking disappearance draw Ohm into a nightmarish confrontation with the darkest corners of his past.

Peter Coonan (“The Alienist: Angel of Darkness”), David Wilmot (“Station Eleven”), Florence Ordesh (“Departure”), Michael Patric (“Frontier”), Will O’Connell (“Game of Thrones”), Brendan Conroy (“Bodkin”), and Austin Amelio (“The Walking Dead”) also star.

Get a peek at the upcoming physical media release below, including a few special features.

Spooky Pictures’ Roy Lee (Weapons) & Steven Schneider (Insidious) produce alongside Image Nation’s Derek Dauchy (Late Night with the Devil), Tailored Film’s Ruth Treacy, Julianne Forde, & Mairtín de Barra, and Cweature Features’ Ken Kao & Josh Rosenbaum.

I wrote in my review for Bloody Disgusting, “A quaint Irish hotel with a deeply haunted history awaits an American writer in McCarthy’s third outing, continuing his streak for folkloric tales of supernatural karma and spine-tingling terror with a dark sense of humor.”

What’s next from Damian McCarthy? He’s currently writing a haunted house movie, but recent comments suggest he may be moving into other genres beyond that upcoming project.

 

 

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