<i> Video News</i> : New Releases : Movies
No more Christmas-y new video films this week; the fresh batch of releases are more ghoulish and foolish than Yule-ish.
Leading off is “Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master†(Media, $89.95, R), strictly for anyone who isn’t burned out yet on that nightmare guy Freddy Krueger. The horror sequel did $50 million at the box office this year, and Media is claiming the video version “makes the perfect stocking stuffer.†Yeah, right. A grenade would fit nicely, too.
Further proof that it’s a good week for singing Christmas carols and skipping a visit to the video store:
“Bloodsport†(Warner, $89.95, R), a martial-arts picture starring the ever-popular Jean Claude Van Damme and Bolo Yeung that did a not-bad $12 million at the box office; “White Ghost†(TWE, $79.95, R), an action film set in Southeast Asia and starring William Katt; “Blood Money†(J2, $79.95), a waste of the acting talents of Andy Garcia and Ellen Barkin and just as terrible under its new title as it was when shown on cable as “Clinton and Nadineâ€; “The Tracker†(HBO, $89.99), another cable movie, this one a Western starring Kris Kristofferson; “Stormquest†(Media, $89.95, R), an essential addition to your collection of jungle warrior-women films (Brent Huff stars); and “Gor†(Warner, $79.95, PG), which features a barbaric fantasy land (Gor), a magical ring, a wily sorcerer, and veteran actors (Jack Palance, Oliver Reed) with nothing better to do.
Other Videos
Open sesame: There are two new tapes this week featuring two U.S. Opens--tennis and golf. “The Official 1988 U.S. Open Home Video†(CBS/Fox, $19.98) is 60 minutes worth of Seffi Graf, Martina Navratilova, Ivan Lendl, et al. “The 1988 U.S. Open: Strange Days at the Country Club†(VIEW, $29.95) links 50 minutes of golf highlights with narration by Jim McKay.
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.