Ritchie's direction suits the movie's stripped-down, practically elemental 
energy. As is always the case in a Ritchie picture, there's some 
magisterial cross-cutting (by James Herbert), but it never feels busy or 
showy; it's more about the inevitability, fatefulness even, of the forces 
that these characters have unleashed. The final third is one of those 
tour-de-force adventures in heist exposition where the exposition and the 
heist are folded together, and the movie keeps cutting from toy vehicles on 
a diorama to real ones on the street. 
Flight From Hell Full Movie Hd 1080p

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*GALILEO:*To make the water contained in the basin of the 
Mediterraneanbehave as it does, surpasses my imagination, and perhaps that 
of anyone elsewho enters more than superficially into these reflections. 
Some say Aristotle,after observing the tides for a long time from some 
cliffs, plunged into thesea in a fit of despair and willfully destroyed 
himself for the mystery ofthem.

And so Galileo very carefully planned the publication of his letters 
ofsunspots. They're all oriented properly, so that you can see them from 
one dayto the next being sort of born on the Sun and dying there. All of a 
sudden, inthe middle of the Sun, there is...appears on one day a little 
spot. And thenext day it grows, and then it grows some more. And then it 
slowly goes off theedge.

Adventure? Excitement? Buck Rogers craves a lot of these things. After *Star 
Wars *blasted its way across movie screens dominating the box office and 
racking up massive dollars in merchandising and promotional tie-ins, the 
race was on to find the next big space adventure. A little late for the 
party, *Buck Rogers In The 25th Century *entered the scene when the strain 
of imitations taxed the attention span of audiences. Show creator Glen 
Larson already had a couple of entires in this field so he was a natural 
showrunner for a sci-fi adventure. Running on recycled sets, props, 
costumes, and even discarded spaceship designs from Larson's own *Battlestar 
Galactica *among other shows and films, *Buck *made his grand return 
decades removed from the classic Buster Crabbe serial adventures and comic 
strips to a new generation of science fiction fans.

The 1.85:1 1080p transfer for the feature film was reportedly sourced from 
a new 2K master and looks pretty damn terrific. This was actually the first 
movie I bought on Laserdisc when I was building my collection just over 10 
years ago now and the disc was so laser rot-riddled it was barely 
watchable. So obviously this is a nice upgrade from that disc! Most 
importantly it's a welcome upgrade over previous DVD outings offering an 
appreciable improvement in detail, a natural grain structure, along with 
strong inky black levels. Optical visual effects still hold up well, but on 
occasion, they can appear overly soft and/or the film grain can thicken. 
That's a cooked in artifact of the process and can't really be fixed, but 
it's more apparent with the added resolution. Some speckling and small 
scratches remain but nothing too distracting, and really only at their 
worst during special effects shots. Costuming and sets look great and the 
bold colors of this show really pop nicely. *4.5/5*

The television series generally looks pretty great all-around bringing the 
1.33:1 1080p imagery to life. The improvement in details is the first big 
thing I took away - and not always in a good way. The show was notoriously 
cheap so there are a lot of costumes and sets where you can practically see 
the glue holding things together. Closeups of Buck and Wilma's and other 
space fighter helmets and you can clearly see they used a basic biker 
helmet and hot-glued various bric-a-brac accessories onto them. But that's 
all a part of this show's charm! To that end, the masters used are 
essentially the same HD broadcast masters that have appeared on various 
networks over the last couple of years. Watching the pilot movie episode 
alongside its restored feature film version you can see the differences 
with the film looking much sharper with strong definition. 

When it comes to classic television and/or science fiction movies - I'm not 
much of a beggar in the bonus features department. I'm usually just happy 
to have the series on disc in good quality. Kino Lorber Studio Classics has 
been great about adding quality bonus features to their releases over the 
last couple years and for *Buck Rogers In The 25th Century, *they certainly 
went above and beyond. You have new audio commentaries for the film, and 
for ten episodes of the show with TV/Film Historian Jankiewicz - author of 
*Buck 
Rogers in the 25th Century: A TV Companion*, with some new cast interviews 
from Erin Gray and Thom Christopher. Apparently, they did try to get some 
participation from Gil Gerard but plans didn't work out.

*Buck Rogers in the 25th Century The Complete Collection *may not be the 
type of space adventure and excitement for everyone - but for classic 
television fans and lovers of the old school campy high-concept science 
fiction, this is a great ride. I watched old reruns as a kid and would 
check out the DVDs while I worked early mornings at Hollywood Video and had 
the run of the store. This was a great reconnect and a fun show that just 
brings joy. Sure, it's goofy as hell but it tried to bring the bigger than 
life adventures to television screens in a compelling way. And for the most 
part, it succeeded. Sadly its second season was cut short, but with the 
movie and the 32 main series episodes, you have hours of excellent 
entertainment value.
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