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“The Blue Lagoon” played off the
appearance of young Shields and director Randal Kleiser’s
name – Kleiser, coming off “Grease,” used his newfound
success to get this adaptation of Henry De Vere Stacpoole’s
1908 book off the ground, and recruited his “Boy in the
Plastic Bubble” writer Douglas Day Stewart to pen the
script. Beautifully shot by Nestor Almendros in Jamaica and
other gorgeous locales, the movie is a silly, contrived but
quite entertaining (I plead guilty!) drama that’s
unquestionably enhanced by a lovely Basil Poledouris score.
Together with the movie’s cinematography, the picture offers
a cinematic antidote to winter’s doldrums on Blu-Ray, and
audiences of the day certainly ate it up in kind, turning
“The Blue Lagoon” into one of 1980’s Top 10 box-office hits.


New on Blu-Ray
and DVD
It’s during the movie’s later section
when “Looper” loses its momentum and asks the audience to
shift gears into something resembling a remake of
“Firestarter” – something that comes off as unexpected and
not entirely satisfying. The movie never regains the forward
narrative thrust of its first half, and is also hampered by
characters who are almost completely unlikeable –
Gordon-Levitt’s distracting make-up also doesn’t seem to
have been entirely necessary, as the actor would’ve been
capable enough to mimic Willis’ persona with less prosthetic
involved. Willis himself is fine, and Emily Blunt does
believable work as the child’s mother, but none of them are
particularly engaging or sympathetic. Johnson’s script also,
frustratingly, dangles questions in front of viewers without
making a strong enough connection to whether or not they
make sense dramatically (as it’s impossible to go into these
aspects without spoiling the plot, I won’t comment any
further, but they partially involve the picture’s ending).
It’s one thing to be ambiguous, but it’s another when the
dots are so weakly connected that the suggestion of certain
concepts seems to come out of thin air due to a lack of
development.
“Looper,”
then, is a cold and unusual film – less a “groundbreaking”
genre picture than it is an interesting B-movie with
intriguing elements but something fundamentally lacking in
its center.
Sony’s
Blu-Ray combo pack of “Total Recall” includes the movie’s
118-minute theatrical version as well as a specially
prepared Director’s Cut running 130 minutes and with some
interesting discrepancies (including a cameo for Ethan Hawke
cut out of the released version). While the disc is
bountiful in extras (commentary, featurettes, a
Wiseman-hosted “insight” viewing option), and the transfer
superb, the Dolby TrueHD audio frequently dropped out on my
receiver during bitstream playback. As viewers have
suggested on various message boards, setting your player to
‘LPCM’ playback (and streaming the lossless audio in PCM
form) will correct the problem.
New From Disney
From Fox
TV on DVD
New From Warner Archive
RANKIN/BASS HOLIDAY
TV HOLIDAY FAVORITES COLLECTION includes a
couple of oddball Rankin/Bass efforts, leading off with the
1981 network special “The Leprechauns Christmas Gold,”
sporting vocal work from Art Carney and Peggy Cass; the 1974
sequel “The Little Drummer Boy, Book II,” picking up where
the acclaimed 1968 Rankin/Bass special left off;
“Pinocchio’s Christmas” is an hour-long 1980 production
presented in the classic stop-motion style; while “The
Stingiest Man in Town” is a 1978 hand-drawn animated
Rankin/Bass musicalization of “A Christmas Carol” offering
Walter Matthau as Scrooge, in a remake of a ‘50s live-action
TV dramatization of Dickens.
From
A&E/NewVideo
From Lionsgate