Weekly New Releases – March 17, 2020

Alex will post his comments and picks when his tech issues have been sorted out.

Amityville Island
Amazon
Aquarion
Amazon
Aquarion Logos
Amazon
Attack on Titan
Amazon
Bamboozled (Criterion Collection)
Amazon
Bamboozled (Criterion Collection)
Amazon
Benji Collection
Amazon
Black Christmas
Amazon
Black Christmas
Amazon
Cannibal Apocalypse aka Cannibal in the Streets aka Invasion of the Flesh Hunters
Amazon
Cannibal Apocalypse aka Cannibal in the Streets aka Invasion of the Flesh Hunters
Amazon
Contractor / Fan Double Feature
Amazon
Fit to Kill
Amazon
Force 10 from Navarone
Amazon
Hard Hunted
Amazon
Intrigue: The Films of Julia Crawford Ivers
Amazon
Intrigue: The Films of Julia Crawford Ivers
Amazon
Jumanji: The Next Level
Amazon
Jumanji: The Next Level
Amazon
Jumanji: The Next Level
Amazon
Jumanji: The Next Level / Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle
Amazon
Londers / Dragon vs. Needles of Death
Amazon
Man in the Shadow
Amazon
MIrror Mirror
Amazon
Mirror Mirror 2: Raven Dance
Amazon
Nature: Hippos: Africa’s River Giants
Amazon
Nines
Amazon
One Piece: Stampede
Amazon
Point Doom
Amazon
Release the Spyce
Amazon
Richard Jewell
Amazon
Richard Jewell
Amazon
Stalking Moon
Amazon
Superman: Red Son
Amazon
Tales of the Abyss
Amazon
Tom and Jerry Golden Collection
Amazon
Ultraman Geed Movie – Connect the Wishes!
Amazon
Ultraman Orb Movie – The Power of Bonds!
Amazon
Universal Horror Collection
Amazon
Comments Includes Night Key, Night Monster, The Climax, and House of Horrors.

Finally, the picks of the week. Blaine says, “I see nothing super exciting here, although I have heard good things about the new Jumanji film.”

5 replies on “Weekly New Releases – March 17, 2020”

  1. I’m kind of a fan of Tom & Jerry – without knowing what shorts it contains, I’d say that collection looks like a fun addition to my collection.

  2. It’s perhaps worth noting that the Black Christmas in question is not the low-budget, uneven but groundbreaking production that set the template for the Slasher genre, but its most recent remake, which has received abysmal reviews and audience response, though it has generated some entertaining reviews.

    And, as advertised, this edition of the Universal Horror Collection contains some lesser-known films. They might be of interest to genre fans, but even the best-known of the lot, House of Horrors, is no masterpiece. It does, however, feature Rondo Hatton, the pop-cult figure who put his physical disfigurement to use as a bit-part player and, in his final years, horror movie actor. He inspired both Scooby-Doo’s “Creeper” and The Rocketeer‘s Lothar, and has cropped up as a reference in everything from The Rockford Files to the works of Stephen King.

  3. I saw the new Jumanji. If you enjoyed the last one, you’d enjoy this one, too.

    I also enjoyed watching Red Son, but we discussed that last week, didn’t we?

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