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What’s New on Home Video – October 5 – Night of the Animated Dead, The Nevers, The Awakening, & More!

We have a small release slate this week, with no theatrical tentpoles, no major A-list releases, and a small amount of titles. Still, I bet there’s something interesting enough to watch for most people. Read on and find out!

Night of the Animated Dead – For those of you who don’t know the long and detailed history of Night of the Living Dead, let me boil it down to this: there were some legal and distribution issues when the film came out, resulting in it ending up in the public domain. Meaning pretty much anyone can release a home video version of it or use the name for the project or anything like that. Which leads us to projects like Night of the Animated Dead. This new animated film gives us an updated version of the classic George Romero film that started the whole zombie genre (effectively), this time in full color and, well, completely animated. With a strong cast (including Josh Duhamel, Nancy Travis, Will Sasso, and James Roday Rodriguez & Dule Hill from Psych), the film hews pretty closely to the original film’s storyline. And honestly, it’s a pretty easy watch. My biggest complaint is the animation style, which looks a lot like Saturday morning cartoons from the 80s. Now, that does give it a somewhat nostalgic feel, but I wish they had gone with a more robust and detailed animation style. As it is, it’s occasionally a little goofy as a result. Still, zombie fans looking for their next fix will find this one a curiosity, and I’m sure some will enjoy it quite a bit. 

The Nevers: Season One, Part One – I’ll be honest, I had no idea that Joss Whedon was involved in this show until I got this new Blu-ray set for review. Turns out, Whedon created, wrote, and produced these first six episodes, and then left the show (or was asked to leave, it seems.) The rest of the first season was delayed due to COVID, so this first season collection represents just the first half of what will eventually become a full 10 or 12 episode season. The show is set at the dawn of the 20th century, where a group of women (and some men) have gained powers and are called The Turned. Of course, in Victorian England, that means there are various groups of other people who are out to harm them, while The Turned work as set of a de facto superhero group. There’s an easy comparison to make to Whedon’s own Buffy The Vampire Slayer, just set in 1899 London. However, instead of easing viewers into a bigger mythology, Whedon decided to go big from the start, meaning there is an overwhelming amount of characters, events, conspiracies, and the like right from the first episode. Honestly, it all feels a little bit busy. I’m not sure if the post-Whedon version of this show will be better or worse, but it’s at least an interesting start, if not without its flaws. 

The Awakening – Originally released in 2011, The Awakening is an excellent and highly underseen horror film starring Rebecca Hall, Dominic West, and Imelda Staunton. The film got a limited release at the time and was quietly released to little fanfare on home video, so now Cohen Media Classics has given us a new Blu-ray release of the film, which I’m quite happy about. The film’s story won’t wow you when I boil it down to a sentence or two: In 1921 England, a boy at a boarding school is “scared to death.” Enter Rebecca Hall’s professional hoax debunker, who soon discovers that maybe there’s something real actually happening in this big, dusty building. So yeah, without saying more and ruining the story, it does sound like a movie we’ve seen a million times before. However, the film benefits from some neat twists and turns, an incredibly tense and chilling atmosphere, great cinematography, and a stellar central performance by Rebecca Hall. The film is creepy and intense, and if you’re watching it by yourself late at night, I can guarantee you you’re gonna end up sleeping with the lights on. While the film was never a big hit, I hope it finds a new audience with this new Blu-ray. 

Guilt: Season 1 – This four-episode Scottish series follows two brothers who accidentally hit a man with their car after a drunken night out, and then try to cover it up when they realize they might be able to completely get away with it. Of course, when you have two disparate personalities, nosy friends and neighbors, and the titular guilt eating at the characters, things aren’t going to go smoothly. Guilt is an interesting show. It has some darkly comic moments and some really tense moments, even if it occasionally veers slightly into silly territory. I think what makes it work is the fact that it’s only four episodes (although I believe there’s a second season either in production or already airing, but not included in this DVD release.) The fact that events aren’t dragged out over an entire full-length season makes the show much more gripping and gives hope that plot threads will resolve quickly and not be dragged out unnecessarily. Worth a watch for something a little different in the crime-thriller genre. 

Also Available This Week on Home Video:

What’s New on Home Video – October 5 – Night of the Animated Dead, The Nevers, The Awakening, & More!
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