Arrow
Films (UK) to release Day of Anger,
Blind
Woman's Curse,
and Mark of the Devil in the US
via
MVD Entertainment Group
MVD
Entertainment Group announces the distribution of Arrow Video in
North America with a host of cult titles receiving deluxe treatment in video,
audio, supplements and artwork. Arrow's global reputation as one of the finest
labels in the world has come about through consistent high quality product and
a focus on fan-based products always at its core. This includes a major
investment on restoring original material through modern techniques as well as
pioneering packaging solutions and newly commissioned artwork for each release.
Arrow
launch titles include Tonino Valerii's Spaghetti Western Day of Anger [I Giorni
dell'ira, aka Gunlaw] starring genre icons Lee Van Cleef and Giuliano Gemma;
Michael Armstrong's bloody and brutal critique of state-funded religious
corruption Mark of the Devil in a director-approved release; and the
thrillingly bizarro yakuza-samurai-ghost story-horror hybrid from Teruo
Ishii, Blind Woman's Curse (1971, also known as Black Cat's Revenge).
Future releases include films never-before-released on DVD and/or Blu-ray from
European and Japanese cult directors.
The
launch l kicks-off with North American Blu-ray premieres of Mark of the
Devil on
March 17th, followed by Blind Woman's Curse on March
24th and Day of Anger on March 31st.
DAY
OF ANGER (Blu-ray / DVD):
When Sergio Leone turned Lee Van Cleef into a major star with For a Few
Dollars More and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, the actor sensibly stayed in
Italy to make several more spaghetti westerns, including this one from Leone's
former assistant Tonino Valerii that genre aficionados rank amongst the best
ever made. Giuliano Gemma plays street cleaner Scott Mary, relentlessly bullied
by the people of the small town of Clifton. When legendarily ruthless master
gunfighter Frank Talby (Van Cleef) rides into town, Scott seizes the
opportunity to lift himself out of the gutter, and possibly even surpass
Talby's own skills. But what is Talby doing in Clifton in the first place? This
lively, intelligent western, notable for the chemistry between its charismatic
leads, some memorable action set-pieces (including a rifle duel on horseback
that has to be seen to be believed), and a jazzy Riz Ortolani score, is
presented here in an exclusive high-definition restoration from the original
Techniscope negative.
BLIND
WOMAN'S CURSE (Blu-ray / DVD):
A thrilling Yakuza film featuring eye-popping visuals, sensational fight
sequences and the gorgeous Meiko Kaji (Lady Snowblood, Stray Cat Rock), in her
first major role. Akemi (Kaji) is a dragon tattooed leader of the Tachibana
Yakuza clan. In a duel with a rival gang Akemi slashes the eyes of an opponent
and a black cat appears, to lap the blood from the gushing wound. The cat along
with the eye-victim go on to pursue Akemi's gang in revenge, leaving a trail of
dead Yakuza girls, their dragon tattoos skinned from their bodies. A bizarre
blend of the female Yakuza film and traditional Japanese ghost story, with a
strong dash of grotesque-erotica (the same movement was a sensibility of
Edogawa Rampo whose works were adapted by Ishii in Horrors of Malformed Men),
Blind Woman's Curse is a delirious mash-up of classic genre tropes, of which
Ishii was no stranger, having directed everything from Super Giant films to
Biker movies!
MARK
OF THE DEVIL (Blu-ray / DVD):
Once
proclaimed as "positively the most horrifying film ever made", Mark
of the Devil arrives in a director-approved edition featuring a new restoration
of the feature. A bloody and brutal critique of religious corruption, Mark of
the Devil sees horror icon Udo Kier (Flesh for Frankenstein, Suspiria) play a
witchfinder's apprentice whose faith in his master (Herbert Lom) becomes severely
tested when they settle in an Austrian village. Presided over by the sadistic
Albino (a memorably nasty turn from Reggie Nalder), the film presents its
morality not so much in shades of grey as shades of black. Written and directed
by Michael Armstrong, who would later pen Eskimo Nell, The Black Panther and
House of the Long Shadows, this classic shocker has lost none of its power over
the years.
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