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THE EPITAPH VOL. 21 - SUPERGIRL: THE COMPLETE FOURTH SEASON (2019) - FOREVER KNIGHT: THE COMPLETE SERIES (1991-1996)- TRUE BELIEVER (1989) - THE MAN WHO KILLED DON QUIXOTE (2017) - GOODBYE PARADISE (1983) - THE SHADOW (1994) - UNDER THE SILVER LAKE (2017)

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THE EPITAPH - VOL. 21
Brief Remembrances of the Recently Released 

SUPERGIRL: THE COMPLETE FOURTH SEASON (2019) - FOREVER KNIGHT: THE COMPLETE SERIES (1991-1996)- TRUE BELIEVER (1989) - THE MAN WHO KILLED DON QUIXOTE (2017) - GOODBYE PARADISE (1983) - THE SHADOW (1994) - UNDER THE SILVER LAKE (2017)

SUPERGIRL: THE COMPLETE FOURTH SEASON 
Warner Bros.  

While I could never get into Arrow I've been with CW's Supergirl from the beginning, which is not to say I love it always but I dig it enough to keep tuning in week to week. This season's best storyline involved the introduction of arch villain Lex Luthor as portrayed by John Crier (Sixteen Candles)! He's clearly having a lot of fun chewing it up  here, and in my opinion is the best Lex we've seen yet, not too grandiose but driven by more than shady real estate dealings at least! On the downside I am not a fan of all the alien politics happening on the show, while I am left-leaning myself I don't need the left-leaning real-world shadings they've pepper this show with from the begining. Something I loved but I wanted more of was the continuing story of Red Daughter. The evil Supergirl we got a peek of in the final episode of season three gets a decent multi-faceted story-line this season, though I was a bit disappointed with the warp-up of that arc. we also get a bit too much of Agent Liberty and Manchester Black, both of whom I had my fill of by the end of the season. Lena Luthor continues to be an exciting element of the series for me, a smart, powerful but flawed woman caught between doing good and being bad, I 
hope she gets more meat in the season five story line. And lastly, if i am being honest, if they could just write-off James Olson I would be A-OK with that, his new/action man just bore me to tears. All in all a decent season with some cool elements that kept me tuning in all season, and it finished strong, which is more than I could say about the previous season. The 4-disc Blu-ray set from WB features the same extras that we saw on the recent releases of The Flash and Arrow, all three of the Elsewhere episodes, plus we get some deleted scenes and a gag reel, and a digital copy of the season in HD. 

FOREVER KNIGHT: THE COMPLETE SERIES 
Mill Creek Entertainment 

When I was in highschool I watched a lot of Forever Knight on late-night TV, the story of Toronto-based  Detective Nick Knight (Geraint Wyn Davies), who is secretly an 800-year-old vampire who after centuries of draining humans of their blood is trying to reconcile his past by doing good in the world, working the night beat to solve crimes. With the help of a local medical examiner Natalie Lambert (Catherine Disher, The Border), whom he has revealed himself to, he is trying to bring back his humanity through experimentation, while the ancient vampire who turned him originally, Lucien LaCroix (Niegl Bennett, The Shape of Water) tries to pull him back to the dark side of vampire life. I watched the first two seasons back in the day and was pretty into it, but I sort of drifted away from the show when Knight's original cop partner Detective Donald Schanke (John Kepelos, The Breakfast Club) who was killed off in the third season. He was the comedic relief of the show and I missed his chemistry with Geraint Wyn Davies. Finishing up the third season now with this set I was rather disappointed with how it wrapped up open ended. I was also struck some thirty years later how cheap the show looked in hindsight, appearing to have been shot on video from the looks of it. Limitations and waning interest in the final season do hurt it a bit, but I tell you what, I still get a wave of 90's nostalgia watching the, Geraint Wyn Davies
 was a fine leading man for the series, and Niegl Bennett made for a solid villain. One of my favorite parts of the show were the flashbacks to various points in Knight's 800-year-long life, which really gave the show some soul. The 12-disc DVD set arrives from Mill Creek Entertainment in the original 1.33:1 broadcast aspect ratio with Dolby Digital audio, no extras and no subtitles for this one though. Not a huge fan of how the discs are packaged dual-sided cardboard slips but I dig the thick slip-box they're housed in, with the exception of the flimsy flip top, but for the price I cannot really complain all that much.

TRUE BELIEVER (1989) 
Mill Creek Entertainment 

This courtroom drama starring James Woods (Videodrome) as a former hippie turned activist lawyer in the 80's fighting the war on drugs, taking on a younger lawyer into his firm by way of a very young Robert Downey Jr. who encourages his boss to re-open a gang related murder conviction, reigniting the activist fire within Woods hippie-lawyer. I really found this one to be a by-the-numbers yawner, I couldn't get into it, making this the bad apple in the bunch of this week's capsule reviews. The film arrives on Blu-ray as part of MCE's Retro-VHS style packing with a cool-looking slipcover. The 1080p HD image is a bit rough looking with compression issues and some dirt n' grit throughout, but at least it includes a DTS-HD MA 2.0 audio track that is serviceable.

THE MAN WHO KILLED DON QUIXOTE (2017) 
Umbrella Entertainment

The 2002 documentary 'Lost in La Mancha' documented director Terry Gilliam's seemingly cursed production of the film The Man Who Killed Don Quixote starring Johnny Depp, a film that fell apart due to production disasters, natural disasters and human drama, it was a film that many thought would never see the light of day. Somewhat beyond belief Gilliam regrouped years later and finished his passion project with a new cast, this time starring Adam Driver (The Dead Don't Die) as Toby, a director on location is Spain filming a commercial. While there he experiences some trouble of his own after slipping it to his bosses wife, finding himself on the run through the Spanish countryside where he is reunited with the cast of a student film he made in the area a decade earlier, a film called 'The Man who Killed Don Quixote', starring a local shoe cobbler named Javier (Jonthan Pryce). He discovers that in the years since the old man has lived with the delusion that he is the actual Don Quixote. Meanwhile Toby also reconnects with the local teen girl Angelica (Joana Riberio) who also appeared in the student film, and has since followed her dreams of Hollywood stardom, but instead finds herself the possession of wealthy Russian in the area who treats her cruelly. The film follows Toby's journey with Angelica and Javier, finding himself falling into the old man's delusions, becoming the Sancho to his deranged Quixote, on a mission of chivalry and danger. It's a gorgeous and sprawling tale, mixing attractive visuals and fantastical dreamscapes to form an epicly strange and poignant film. The 2.35:1 widescreen DVD from Australian distributor is region-free (NTSC format) but is bare-bones with no extras or subtitles, but the anamorphic image looks solid throughout. If you're a fan of Gilliam, or an adventurous movie-goer this comes highly recommended.

GOODBYE PARADISE (1983) 
Umbrella Entertainment

Also coming from Umbrella is this Aussie-centric neo-noir starring Ray Barrett as a cop turned author, but his tell-all political corruption book is cancelled by the publisher following an outcry from wary local politicians. To pay the bills he takes on a private investigator job tracking down the missing daughter of a wealthy politician. Along the way he gets mixed up in a political coup, a cult leader and an attempt on his life, all wrapped up in a uniquely Australian veneer that has plenty of charm. I love Ray Barrett's colorfully comedic, semi hard-boiled noir-narration over this one, with colorful dialogue like "I had a mouth like an Ayotollah's armpit and a pressing need for a drink...". Prior to this release from Umbrella I'd never even heard of this 80's Oz-noir, so hats of to the Aussie distributor for giving this gem of an unusual noir film, while I didn't love it I found it entertaining. Umbrella have released this as part of their 'Ozpoitation Classics' line-up, on DVD in cropped fullframe, I am assuming these are the only known elements for the film, and it looks alright for what it is. There's no start-up menu on the disc but after the main feature there's a half-hour interview with the director speaking about his career. 

THE SHADOW (1994) 
Umbrella Entertainment

Directed by Russell Mulcahy (Razorback) the 90's pulp superhero film The Shadow (1994) is set in '20's era New York City, and stars Alec Baldwin (Beetlejuice) whom by day is a smug playboy in New York City, but by night dons the cape and hat and fights crime with the supernatural ability to cloud the minds of his enemies, which allows him to seemingly disappear and influence the thoughts of others.  He's also armed with a pair of twin nickle-plated .45's and a creepy maniacal laugh that unnerves criminals. Baldwin is pretty great here, he suits the role just fine, and he finally meets a villain more his caliber by way of an ancient descendant of Genghis Khan, who is also versed in the mystical arts, leading to a city wide conflict with the fate of the city hanging in the balance. Some of the digital effects on this one do not hold-up but the film is still a ton of fun and doesn't rely too heavily on digital. The film has a strong supporting cast including the lovely Penelope Ann Miller (Big Top Pee-wee) as a mind-reading love interest, and Sir Ian Mckellan (Apt Pupil) as a scientist whose invented a weapon of mass destruction who finds himself caught up n the battle of good vs. evil. Umbrella give the film a solid-looking 1080p HD presentation with an English DTS-HD MA 5.1 audio mix that highlights the tasty Jerry Goldsmith (Gremlins) score. Sadly no extras on this region-free release, but still a solid no-frills presentation. 

UNDER THE SILVER LAKE (2017) 
Umbrella Entertainment

Director David Robert Mitchell's follow-up to cult-hit It Follows is the L.A. neo-noir headtrip Under The Silver Lake (2017) which follows the dizzying descent into conspiracy and  corruption by aimless L.A. slacker Sam (Andrew Garfield), who following the disappearance of a woman in his apartment building follows a breadcrumb trail of conspiracy and hidden messages that take him on a wild ride through East L.A. where he will encounter the conspiracy obsessed editor of an underground comic zine, dog killers, an owl-faced seducer-killer, the homeless king of L.A., a prostitution ring of out of work actresses a songwriter-Illuminati responsible for every hit song for the past fifty years, from Elvis to Smells Like Teen Spirit! It's a wild wide dripping with paranoia, at times feeling like Roman Polanski's Chinatown, but slathered in Hitchockian vibes, on a bad acid trip. It's a hot mess at times for sure but I've watched this thing three times this week and I cannot get enough of it, I'm obsessed with it - this is my new Donnie Darko. The film lands on region-free DVD from Umbrella Entertainment with an attractive looking 2.35:1 widescreen transfer and Dolby Digital 5.1,  with no extras and no subtitles.   

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