New Roger Corman DVDs, and a Lesson in Great Titles
Buena Vista Home Entertainment was kind enough
to send me review copies of four new Roger Corman DVDs they’re releasing
this week. They are Death Race 2000 – Special Edition, Big Bad
Mama - Special Edition, Rock
‘n’ Roll High School – Special Edition, and Dinocroc. Of the four films three have been on
DVD before, but these are the best editions
yet.Three first three films have
been released under the banner of “Roger Corman: Early Films.”
It’s pretty funny to note that some of these “early” films
come nearly 30 years into Mr. Corman’s career. It’s incredible how
long this guy has been producing
movies.
Death Race
2000 (1975) is one of my favorite movies. It
amazes me every time I see it just how incredibly entertaining it is. In the
far-flung future of the year 2000 the most popular sporting event is a cross
continent race where the contestants are scored by both how fast they go and how
many pedestrians they kill. Every racer is a flamboyant, over-the-top character
with a bizarre custom car to match: Calamity Jane’s car looks like a bull,
Machine Gun Joe Viterbo (Sylvester Stallone in an early role) drives a car with
Tommy guns on the front, etc. The main character is the masked racer
Frankenstein, played by David Carradine, who is the most popular hero the race
as ever produced. The movie wastes no time getting to the race (it starts
minutes into the movie) and never slows down while delivering a constant supply
of action, gore, nudity, corny puns, silly satire, and plot
twists.Death Race
2000 is presented at an aspect ratio of
1.78:1, which appears to be cropped from a full frame master. While this means
that you may have seen a bit more image on the top and bottom of the image in
the previous fullscreen home video presentations of this film, the new edition
certainly represents how the movie would have been presented in theaters. The
print appears to have some mild wear, but looks colorful and sharp. I get the
sense that Corman didn’t keep take good care of his masters as he jumped
from company to company (if he kept them at all), so this is probably the best
transfer we can expect.On Amazon.com
right now there’s a review of this DVD that complains that it
doesn’t deserve the label “special edition” because it
doesn’t include any deleted scenes. Dude, this is a Roger Corman film --
there were no deleted scenes. Corman didn’t put up money to shoot scenes
that weren’t going to be in the final cut. If anything, any scene he paid
for might be reused in three or four later films he produced. What we do get on
this disc is a short retrospective, the original trailer, and an audio
commentary with Roger Corman and Mary Woronov (who played Calamity Jane). Corman
manages the neat trick of being unapologetic yet faintly embarrassed by the
frequent gratuitous nudity in the
film.
Big Bad
Mama (1974) is a sex-soaked version of the
Ma Barker story, with Angie Dickinson as Ma, and Tom Skerritt and William
“Double Emmy-Winner” Shatner as two of her beaus. The movie is
probably better as a primer on how to recreate the Depression-era American
heartland on a budget than as a biopic, but you can’t argue with that
cast. Big Bad
Mama is presented in open-matte fullscreen,
with a retrospective and a new audio commentary with Roger Corman and Angie
Dickinson. Always honest, Roger attributes the film’s relative success to
the title. (And Angie Dickinson, but she’s sitting right next to
him.) I
have to admit up front, I have never seen
Rock ‘n’ Roll High
School (1979). I’ll remedy that soon.
BVHE’s special edition DVD includes almost all the extras from the
previous “Roger Corman Classics” release, including the audio
commentary with the crew, audio out-takes of the Ramones big number, radio ads,
and adds a new commentary with Roger Corman and Dey Young (in place of the
previous disc’s interview with Corman) and a
retrospective.
The most recent film is
Dinocroc
(2004), labeled aspart of the “Roger Corman: Sci-Fi Collection.”
This movie premiered on the Sci Fi Channel last year so you probably know
what to expect: washed up stars (Costas Mandalor), minimal monster appearances,
bad CGI. I’m also still not sure what a “Dinocroc” is, even
after seeing the movie.And insert
included with the DVDs suggests that the next set of four releases will
include Loose
Screws (1985) and
Beach
Balls (1988), both part of “Roger
Corman: Comedy Collection,” and two more “Early Films”;
Caged
Heat (1974) and
The Big Doll
House (1971). That last one, a Jack Hill
flick, I’m particularly looking forward to. Hopefully we’ll get some
extras and maybe even an explanation of that bizarre dubbed-in last line of
dialogue in the film.
Posted: Tue - December
13, 2005 at
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My name is Scott Hamilton and I live in St. Petersburg, Florida. My e-mail is Scott (at) stomptokyo.com.
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Published On: Jul 16, 2006 10:41 PM
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