Monday, April 23, 2018

Wild Eye Releasing Selects June 12 For The DVD Debut Of Milko Davis' The Jurassic Dead


DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey
Wild Eye Releasing, with sales and distribution expertise provided by MVD Entertainment Group, will be delivering dino-bites (or chomps, as the case may be) of their own on June 12 with the DVD debut of director Milko Davis’ Jurassic Dead.
 
It goes head-to-head with Universal Pictures June 22 theatrical rollout of Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, which will be a summer blockbuster.   So there is no comparison between the two, right?   

It is sort of a yes and no answer.   On the surface Jurassic Dead — a story about a crazed scientist who has developed a zombie-like dinosaur (and things far worse) — and Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom are worlds apart, but when you look at the production budget for each film you will see something that is scaring the hell out of the studios; driving them crazy with fear.   

Director J.A. Bayona’s Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom likely has a film budget well in excess of $200 million, while Davis’ Jurassic Dead is probably somewhere south of $75,000.   So?  What’s the big deal?   

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey
It goes like this, back in the 1920s and ‘30s, stop-motion was state-of-the-art (King Kong and The Lost World are great examples) for creature features; monsters … dinosaurs, T-Rex and the like.   Sci-fi films of the 1950s were fun and delivered what was promised, but the special effects were often wanting (Tarantula is a terrific film, by 1955 special effects standards, but today the big spider looks cheezy).   The ‘70s saw Alien and Star Wars … things were getting better, but still nothing like today’s standards.

Skip ahead to the current world of CGI and f/x and for under $100,000 an independent filmmaker like Milko Davis — and his co-director Thomas Martwick — get an on-screen T-Rex that is pretty damn good.   Indeed, indie filmmakers are methodically mastering the film technology that was once reserved for the big-budget studio players … Jurassic Dead is a marvelous example of just how far indie filmmakers have come.

For genre fans, while they wait to queue up for Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, they will be well-served to check out Wild Eye Releasing’s Jurassic Dead … 82 minutes of non-stop action, with a damn good-looking dinosaur at the heart of it.

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey




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