6.8 | / 10 |
Users | 0.0 | |
Reviewer | 3.0 | |
Overall | 3.0 |
A typical night for a group of war veterans at the local VFW turns into an all-out battle for survival when a teenage girl runs into the bar with a bag of stolen drugs. Suddenly under attack from a gang of punk mutants looking to get back what’s theirs – at any cost – the vets use every weapon they can put together to protect the girl, and their VFW, in the biggest fight of their lives.
Starring: Stephen Lang, William Sadler, Martin Kove, Fred Williamson, Sierra McCormickHorror | 100% |
Action | Insignificant |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English SDH, French, Spanish
Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
Slipcover in original pressing
Region A (locked)
Movie | 3.0 | |
Video | 3.5 | |
Audio | 4.0 | |
Extras | 2.5 | |
Overall | 3.0 |
Young director Joe Begos (Almost Human, Bliss) returns with another slice of brooding cinema, this time a taut and tough throwback to violent 1980s action/horror in the spirit of John Carpenter by way of close-quarter nightmares like Green Room. Though it doesn't regularly meet -- let alone exceed -- its influences, VFW's go-for-broke approach to blood and guts should appeal to gore-hounds and genre fans alike. (It is a Fangoria picture, after all.)
Needless to say, VFW feels like a celebration of practical effects, at least the red and squishy kind -- there are no monsters to be found, but enough blood and guts to rival the two most recent Rambo installments. This unapologetic approach, though a bit shocking at first, feels like a natural fit for the film's dark, gritty, and synth-soaked atmosphere, where most of the light is supplied by flickering neon. It works in tandem with the largely likable lead performances, as VFW is populated by a handful of familiar faces from notable 80s and 90s flicks such as Tombstone, Die Hard 2, From Dusk Till Dawn, The Karate Kid, The Crow, and...uh...Spice World. While VFW probably won't eclipse any of those films in hindsight (expect maybe the last one), it is a reasonably satisfying "what you see is what you get" production that, with some more refined lighting and more capable supporting actors, would have been even better.
RLJ Entertainment's Blu-ray serves up a decent A/V presentation and fan-friendly extras to boot. A separate 4K combo pack is also available, but its boost in image quality isn't as
impressive due to the film's style of cinematography.
Presented in an appropriately claustrophobic 2.39:1 aspect ratio, this 1080p transfer offers a solid representation of tricky source material. VFW is a very noisy and grainy production, largely due to its extremely low-lit interiors and mostly nighttime atmosphere. While visual strengths are limited at first glance, exceptions to the rule -- daytime scenes, well-lit close-ups, bright neon signs -- prove that any perceived "problems" in other areas are likely part of the source material and not bad disc compression. That said, the grain and noise are rather clumpy at times with obvious signs of black crush here and there, which made it difficult to get a large number of decent screenshots. The good news is that VFW looks better in-motion, thanks to a stylish color palette and understated production design that fit its no-nonsense story like a glove. Keep your expectations in check and you won't find much to complain about.
The DTS-HD 5.1 Master Audio, on the other hand, offers a more immediately impressive experience. The driving force is an original score by Steve Moore (a frequent collaborator with director Joe Begos), who contributes a pulsing and effective synth-heavy score that creates a pretty strong atmosphere. Of course the frequent action scenes, loaded with gunshots and blood spurts, pack a strong punch as well -- clarity and dynamic range are well-balanced, and the mostly front-loaded dialogue is crisp and clear as well. Discrete channels and LFE are put to good use on many occasions, which easily keeps up with the demand of what's on-screen. No sync issues were detected along the way, and the optional English (SDH) subtitles are formatted perfectly and fit snugly within the 2.39:1 frame.
This two-disc set arrives in a standard keepcase with attractive cover art, a matching slipcover, and a promotional insert. The on-disc extras look good on paper but, aside from the commentaries, are pretty basic.
Joe Begos' grim and gritty VFW goes all-in with the bloodshed and brutality -- it's a pulpy throwback to over-the-top 1980s action/horror that gorehounds should enjoy. Although the actual story and some of the supporting performances never surpass the lead actors and special effects, it's still a decent way to kill 90 minutes. RLJ Entertainment's Blu-ray offers a fine A/V presentation and a few decent extras; it's recommended, but only to genre fans.
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