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#1 |
Banned
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From a NEW 2K Scan, widescreen and loaded with extras
https://www.facebook.com/11354494868...type=1&theater |
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#2 |
Blu-ray Knight
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I absolutely hate the Retromedia WIDE SCREEN covers. It's 2015 do you really have to say it's widescreen anymore? 99% of home video releases are widescreen. It made sense when they started doing it, but at this point it's just cluttering up the cover art. smh.
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#4 |
Banned
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An update on Facebook -
It looks to be released by the end of June ![]() https://www.facebook.com/The-Officia...3544948689048/ Plus he is releasing the Brides Wore Blood at some point.. |
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Thanks given by: | NoirFan (05-14-2016), The Great Owl (05-14-2016) |
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#8 |
Special Member
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Alien Factor is only available through Amazon. If you're interested in it, I suggest you don't put it off for too long. It's limited to 1000 copies, and Retromedia's previous limited edition signed blu-rays have sold out fairly quickly. BIOHAZARD and HOLLYWOOD CHAINSAW HOOKERS are both fetching $100 and up on the 2nd hand market...
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#12 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Thanks given by: | Val Lewton (06-20-2016) |
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#13 | |
Power Member
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I really only want ALIEN FACTOR and SCALPS so far, but I don't care about signatures by Stover and so forth (with all due respect to George, he's great! - I just don't care about sigs). So are the sigs the main point of the LE's? Sincerely asking.... |
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#14 | |
Special Member
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It's possible that he will repress BIOHAZARD w/o the sig, especially if he feels there is still a market for it. But on this title, I'm a little skeptical that there's a large enough market to warrant a repress. |
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#15 | |
Power Member
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Thanks given by: | Val Lewton (06-20-2016) |
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#17 |
Special Member
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Wow, just ordered. Been wanting to see this, and didn't even know it was out already! Came across it by accident basically. Makes me nervous about missing out on future titles, but it looks like I got all of them so far. Also don't care about sigs, just want the movies!
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#18 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Last night, I watched my Retromedia Blu-ray of The Alien Factor.
On Blu-ray, this movie looks better than I've ever seen it before. That's not saying much, since my previous exposures to the film were by way of a television showing back in the early 1980s and a bad Mill Creek 50-movie pack DVD set a few years back, but I feel that this is an impressive high definition presentation, given the source material. There's some print damage, there are a few odd "jumps" in the picture, and such, but, for the most part, the detail and clarity are miles above my previous viewing experiences. The audio quality is good, once again considering the source material. (The actors in this film all sound as though they're speaking their lines through a replayed tape recorder, and no Blu-ray presentation is going to change that.) Ahhh...The Alien Factor... The Alien Factor is a bad movie, but it's my bad movie, meaning that it was a film that I saw at a young age that allowed for a thrill of discovery. I first saw The Alien Factor by way of an afternoon television airing back in 1982 or so, when I was 10 years old. My mother was watching the film as well, and this made for quite an amusing experience. Throughout the movie, my mother kept laughing about how silly it was, and about how unbelievable the story was, but I, by contrast, was glued to the screen and I was freaked out by the alien creatures and the many killings. The movie made quite a mark on my psyche at that young age, even though I was fully aware that it was not in the same league as, say, Star Wars or Planet of the Apes. All I knew was that the deaths in the film were unsettling to my 10 year-old eyes. The Alien Factor hits the ground running with the first killing, and then maintains a fast pace, although all of the scenes not involving the actual aliens are somewhat of a chore. This film features a notably amateur cast, and the effect is somewhat like watching a bunch of cardboard pizza boxes try to act their way through a movie. This is part of the charm, though. There are also quite a few funny inconsistencies. During one scene, a man watches an invisible alien in his snow-covered yard, the scene shifts to children playing soccer in a field where no snow is in sight, and then, finally, it shifts to the three kids staring at the man's dead body. The real strength of The Alien Factor is that the aliens are cool-looking, despite the obviously crude makeup and effects. One crustacean-like creature was reportedly made of cardboard covered with enamel, but it works for the purposes of the film. Another alien, a hairy Bigfoot-type creature, is obviously an actor wearing Gene Simmons KISS style platform boots. This sort of thing beats out computer effects any day of the week, though. One invisible creature that manifests itself later in the story is a pretty good example of stop-motion. Finally, an alien that disguises itself to assimilate with the human race is an insanely spooky character with red eyes and an unsettling face that makes me think of Native American tribal masks and such. I was not able to watch all of the extras last night, but I plowed through a couple and got the general gist. The Alien Factor is homemade small town 1970s science fiction in all its endearing glory. |
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Thanks given by: | agooga (06-24-2016), Automaton-X (11-15-2016), bruce holecheck (06-24-2016), chriszilla (06-24-2016), Monroville (11-15-2016), NoirFan (06-24-2016), RickWJ324 (06-24-2016), Val Lewton (06-24-2016) |
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#19 |
Junior Member
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I thought the Retromedia release of The Alien Factor was well worth the $20 investment. I was very happy with the picture quality but I found the sound mix a little irritating. Some of the synth effects really spiked. But considering the source material and what we're used to with z-level films like this, no serious complaints. Some nice bonus features, including a very earnest George Stover walking us through a few of the props and wardrobe items, and a convention appearance that looked like it was attended by about 12 people!
There's just something magical about movies like this, and perhaps Don Dohler pictures in particular. Made with no money, but a lot of love and sincerity, they did the best with what they had-- the mayor lives in a crappy blue-collar house and the deputy rolls up in a VW bug. God, there's just something so refreshing to me about the lack of pretentiousness. On top of that, I was a fan of Dohler's magazine, CineMagic in the 70s and 80s and was fascinated by the stories in there that dealt with the making of TAF and other films. And frankly, there is some decent FX and makeup work in his films. The foreground miniature of the crashed ship, made in one night in Dohler's basement according to Stover, is ALMOST worthy of a big-budget feature. The Alien Factor and Nightbeast are films that will always be with me. They aren't great or even "good" films, but they represent something that is near and dear to me: Love of cinema. Love of the process. And that spirit of independence and daring to go out there and DO IT! Don Dohler 4Ever! |
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Thanks given by: |
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