Tuesday, July 5, 2022

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Preps 4K Ultra HD Editions Of I Know What You Did Last Summer (Sept. 27) And Bram Stoker's Dracula (Oct. 04)

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment announced this past week that director Jim Gillespie’s very clever mixed-genre thriller, I Know What You Did Last Summer, will be celebrating its 25th Anniversary on Sept. 27 with a new 4K Ultra HD/Blu-ray Combo Pack edition.

Jennifer Love Hewitt and Sarah Michelle Gellar shine in this part-slasher horror film and part-mystery whodunit after a tragic accident sets a series of revenge murders in motion.

Bonus goodies include an alternate ending, a half-dozen deleted scenes and two new featurettes — “My Own Summer” and “He Knows What You Did.”   Plus, there are also a vintage commentary track on the companion Blu-ray disc, the music video by Kula Shaker titled “Hush,” the short film titled Joyride and the vintage featurette, “Now I Know What You Did Last Summer.”

Also getting a 4K Ultra HD/Blu-ray Combo Pack release is auteur filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola’s Sony Pictures Home Entertainment will celebrate the 30th anniversary of Francis Ford Coppola's 1992 presentation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula.

DVD & Blu-ray Release Report, Ralph Tribbey

This will be a 30th Anniversary edition, which will be available for genre fans to enjoy on Oct. 04.

Bonus features include the newly prepared featurette titled, “Blood Lines – Dracula: The Man, The Myth, The Movies” and the Annie Lennox music video, “Love Song for a Vampire.”

Vintage bonus goodies include two commentary options with Francis Ford Coppola.  One, solo, and the other with visual effects director Roman Coppola and makeup supervisor Greg Cannom.   There are deleted and extended scenes, an introduction by Coppola, and a half-dozen vintage featurettes — “Reflections in Blood: Francis Ford Coppola and Bram Stoker's Dracula,” “Practical Magicians: A Collaboration Between Father and Son,” “The Blood Is the Life: The Making of Bram Stoker's Dracula,” “The Costumes Are the Sets: The Design of Eiko Ishioka,” “In-Camera: Naïve Visual Effects” and “Method and Madness: Visualizing Dracula.”

 

 

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