'Death Proof' is back — in the European version
By Terry Lawson
Detroit Free Press
When "Grindhouse" was released with much fanfare and to less-than-adulatory response in the spring, directors Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino claimed they were looking to re-create the experience of those urban movie theaters that churned out gore, soft-core sex and kung-fu movies 24/7.
Rodriguez's "Planet Terror" delivered that (as did the phony "trailers" between the separate movies) but Tarantino's "Death Proof" wasn't as much grindhouse as it was an homage to producer Roger Corman's 1970s films, which generally had production quality far above grindhouse fare — and had wide first runs at drive-ins.
"Death Proof" (Genius) is now available in the extended, unrated version that played in Europe as a stand-alone film. (A longer cut of "Planet Terror" is to appear in October.)
In the new version, Corman's influence is even more obvious. Kurt Russell takes the role that might have once been played by Tarantino favorite David Carradine, as a Hollywood stunt driver who's gone around the bend. In "Death Proof," he spends the first half-hour terrorizing a group of women out on the town, but the tables are turned when he subsequently stalks far savvier — and better-driving — prey.
It is a better movie than the cut in "Grindhouse," fleshed out and with more action to balance the endless patented Tarantino gab. What hasn't been changed is the female dialogue; it still has the characters sounding like tough babes who have seen too many Tarantino movies.
If you want to make the comparison yourself, it's made easy with the new "Roger Corman Collection" (MGM) that collects eight Corman-produced movies on four two-sided discs.
New to DVD is Corman-directed " Bloody Mama," his 1970 attempt to cash in on the "Bonnie and Clyde" phenomenon, with Shelley Winters playing Depression-era gangster Kate (Ma) Barker, planner of the crimes executed by her devoted sons, played by Robert Walden, Clint Kimbrough, Don Stroud and, in one of his first screen appearances, Robert De Niro.
Also new to disc is 1963's "Young Racers," about the competition between two young drivers on the European racing circuit. The sound man on this shoot was another legend-to-be, Francis Ford Coppola. Everything else here was released before. But you're missing some of the best of the B's if you don't have the archetypal biker movie, "Wild Angels" from 1966, with a hell-on-wheels Bruce Dern and Peter Fonda; 1967's "The Trip," written by Jack Nicholson, and starring Fonda seeking nirvana under the guidance of guru Dern; and 1970's "Gas-s-s-s," a crazed comedy about a biological weapon that kills everybody over 25. Left alive are Cindy Williams, Ben Vereen and Tally Coppola, soon to be known as Talia Shire in "Rocky."
Corman also produced a string of loose Edgar Allan Poe adaptations, of which "Premature Burial," starring Ray Milland, is included here, as is "X: The Man With the X-Ray Eyes," in which Milland is a scientist who invents a serum that allows him to see through solid objects, a gift he naturally is tempted to misuse.
ALSO NEW
It's becoming common for directors to revisit movies on DVD. Oliver Stone is attempting to salvage lost honor in taking his third shot at "Alexander, Revisited: The Final Cut" (Warner). It's restructured like his improved "Director's Cut" of the conqueror's tale, but adds 45 minutes. Now it runs 3 1/2 hours and has an intermission.
Wolfgang Petersen's "Troy," with Brad Pitt in the role of Achilles, now re-released as "Director's Cut: Ultimate Collector's Edition" (Warner), adds 40 minutes of footage, most of it clarifying the story.
"Commando: Director's Cut" (Fox) adds five minutes to Mark Lester's 1985 action film starring Arnold Schwarzenegger. It has been so long since I've seen the original, I am hard-pressed to tell the difference.
There also is a new two-disc "20th Anniversary Edition" of Oliver Stone's "Wall Street" (Fox), though Stone resisted the temptation to improve his examination of greed in America. He added commentary and deleted scenes. Incidentally, a sequel may be in the works.
TV ON DVD
Boxed up this week:
The British miniseries "Jekyll" (BBC).
FAMILY PICK
"Robinson Crusoe on Mars" (Criterion Collection) is that rare alien creature: An intelligent sci-fi film that happens to be family friendly. Released in 1964 and previously released only on laser disc, "Robinson Crusoe on Mars" is exactly what the title suggests, a reworking of the Daniel Defoe classic adventure.
This version shipwrecks a solitary astronaut (Paul Mantee) on the red planet, with only a test monkey for company. There he has to figure out a way to survive a hostile environment where he and monkey Mona are the only earthlings, but perhaps not the only living organisms. It's beautifully filmed and restored, with great old-school special effects by Lawrence Butler.