Re: Synapse Films
Posted: Fri Jun 10, 2022 2:35 am
And now Synapse has tweeted that they are going to announce a standard edition of The Kindred soon.
Synapse's site is in maintenance page with a picture of an audio cassette getting hit by lightning and a timer counting down to noon EST tomorrow, presumably because they are finally putting this up for ordering.dwk wrote: Mon Apr 24, 2023 3:43 pm Synapse announced they, along with Red Shirt Pictures, will be releasing Trick or Treat (1986) on Blu-ray and UHD. They did not announce a release date.
That's promising. They had been saying just days ago that they had no plans for such a release.dwk wrote: Sat Oct 26, 2024 2:48 am Synapse tweeted that they will be announcing the standard release soon.
That's a shame, although that was an excellent run of titles over the years, beginning with the introductory trailer compilation DVD in 2010 (one of the indispensible trailer compilation sets up there with the 42nd Street Forever, Trailer Trauma and Ozploitation: Trailer Explosion series) and then covering all sorts of different subgenres over the course of its thirteen year run. I may be wrong but I seem to remember at the outset that Synapse/Impulse stated that they were going to do 25 titles, and they went past that initial number by a long way, with Yasuara Hasebe's Assault: 13th Hour being the 46th numbered release. The series was mostly on DVD (with a few titles even on that format having to put disclaimers on their back cover about the quality of the materials available), but did surprisingly venture into Blu-ray for five titles: Love Hunter; two films by Koyu Ohara with Fairy In A Cage and Zoom Up: Murder Site; Masaru Konuma's notorious S&M film Flower & Snake (which got remade in 2005 by Takashi Ishii and led to a string of sequels for the next decade); and perhaps the most infamous title of all with relentlessly nihilistic sex-horror film Star of David: Beauty Hunting (which was the only entry in the series to feature extra features beyond a theatrical trailer, with a commentary and interview from director Nofiumi Suzuki ported forward from earlier releases)dwk wrote: Tue Feb 04, 2025 10:51 pm Diabolik DVD posted on Blue Sky that Synapse's Nikkatsu Roman Porno releases are going OOP.
Hello Mary Lou is a masterpiece. Up with Paper House as the most creative horror film of the second half of the 80’sdwk wrote: Fri Mar 07, 2025 1:51 am Apparently Michael Felscher announced on a live broadcast on Red Shirt's Facebook page that he is partnering again with Synapse to release the following titles:
Fright Night II
Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II
Prom Night III
Prom Night IV
Angel of H.E.A.T.
976-Evil II
Doubt it, they are from different licensors and the Prom Night sequels, and the other films mentioned, are Red Shirt Pictures releases, which Synapse is only doing the audio and video work and distribution of.jazzo wrote: Fri Mar 07, 2025 2:26 pm
I haven't seen any of the others, but I assume, since Synapse released the first Prom Night, a box set is in order?
The second is all you truly need. The four films do have one character who weaves through all of them, but they’re fundamentally independent of each otherdwk wrote: Fri Mar 07, 2025 5:10 pmDoubt it, they are from different licensors and the Prom Night sequels, and the other films mentioned, are Red Shirt Pictures releases, which Synapse is only doing the audio and video work and distribution of.jazzo wrote: Fri Mar 07, 2025 2:26 pm
I haven't seen any of the others, but I assume, since Synapse released the first Prom Night, a box set is in order?
Synapse did say that they hope to do a UHD of the first Prom Night but that depends on access to, and quality of, the elements.
domino harvey wrote: Sun Feb 05, 2012 2:53 pm Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II (Bruce Pittman 1987) Few things are as frustrating for a filmgoer than a film that has a good premise and decent elements but fails to capitalize on its potential out of laziness, ineptness, or both. This sequel in name only has at the very least an entertaining opening ten minutes set in 1957, where the titular hellcat tears up her high school prom, only to meet a gruesome end at the hands of her jilted ex. Thirty years later her spirit is back to raise literal hell for denizens of the same high school. Great, sounds like an entertaining-enough premise for a fun slasher flick. However, the film, like many slashers that came up in the post Elm Street lottery, fills the running time with nonsensical scare sequences and dream-bound phantasms, and also inexplicably hides its vivacious villain in body possessions and hallucinations for most of the film. There are a couple great little moments that hint at the film this could be, as when Mary Lou invades the body of our boring good girl heroine and has her come onto her doting dad (and the dad's into it!), and the film has a surprisingly nasty anti-religious bent (Mary Lou attacks one of her former greaser boyfriends, who reformed as a priest following her death, by telling him there is no afterlife and then stabbing him in the mouth with a crucifix) that gives it a little something extra. And the film does its best to sidestep the obvious Carrie comparisons. But there's also nonsense kills (death by vote tallying computer?) and the characters all share a rather callous attitude towards each other (the previously likable goofball who forces a Prom Queen hopeful to blow him serves to provide what, exactly, besides an awful sexist punchline?). But when the ghoulish gal of the title finally reemerges, it makes one wish the film had followed through on its promise of a female villain in the spirit of Freddy or Jason-- that would have been actual novelty, though.