Update, update, holy crap - update! 8/28/15: The special edition this film should've gotten years ago has finally landed! It's a limited edition blu-ray/ DVD combo pack from OFDb Filmworks, with a plethora of extras from Red Shirt Pictures. The film's finally been released in its OAR, and its in HD. It's a pretty lavish set from Germany (so be prepared for Region B blu and region 2 DVD), and I just got my hands on it the other day, so let's take a look! Join me further down the page for a fresh comparison and look at all the new features.
Update 1/5/20: So in 2015, it was a German, region B release. Shortly after, Lions Gate really started cracking open their vaults with the Vestron Line. And tonight we wrap up our updating run with the one title they licensed to Scream Factory for a proper US release in 2017.
Update 4/25/26: I wasn't expecting this one. This past Halloween, Vinegar Syndrome upgraded The Resurrected to 4k, with a fancy new BD/ UHD special edition set. Also today, since it's Update Megaweek, I'm adding coverage of the indie documentary Andre Gregory: Before and After Dinner to the My Dinner With Andre page.
The Resurrected is one of the most direct, faithful adaptations of Lovecraft on film, starring Chris Sarandon (who, by the way Lions Gate, starred in the also underestimated Fright Night, which wound up selling out its entire blu-ray run in only two days. Just sayin'.) as Charles Dexter Ward, whose wife hires a private detective (24's John Terry) to find out why he's disappeared to a remote cabin with a strange man. Mad science, gruesome murders and a sequence set in the 1700s stand between them and the monstrous answer. Impressive effects, music by the always reliable Richard Band and some atmospheric cinematography (though you wouldn't know it from the full screen version) add up to a quality horror flick just dying to be rediscovered by a broader audience. The Lurker In the Lobby: A Guide to the Cinema of H.P. Lovecraft calls it, "the best serious Lovecraftian screen adaptation to date."
Admittedly, part of the difficulty The Resurrected has had finding its audience is that the film ran into some difficulty in post production. The producers took the film away from O'Bannon, who said he felt it was his best work at the time, and re-cut it themselves. So it went through a couple titles (Shatterbrain and The Ancestor) and a final version O'Bannon wasn't so pleased with. And tragically, Dan O'Bannon has passed away, so it's too late to hope for his involvement in any kind of special edition. But thankfully, his director's cut already exists! He made it before he passed and it's already screened theatrically as early as 2013. It's frustrating that nobody's taken the opportunity to pull a Nightbreed and put out the still unreleased director's cut along with the theatrical version of the film. But we at least get deleted scenes taken from the workprint on both the OFDb and Scream Factory discs, which is a good step in the right direction.
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| 1) 2005 LG DVD; 2) 2015 OFDb BD; 3) 2017 SF BD; 4) 2025 VS BD; 5) 2025 VS UHD. |
Well, that issue is clearly taken away with the new 4k scan, and VS has upgraded the source from an interpositive to the original camera negative. Still 1.85:1, VS's new scan pulls back to reveal a tiny bit of extra information along all four sides. The color timing is very much like Scream's, as opposed to the earlier editions, but there's an extra photo-realistic authenticity, particularly to the UHD. Compare the skin-tones in the first set of shots to see what I mean. That said, it's not an upgrade that jumps right out at you. Zoom in and you finally see how finely rendered the film grain is and what a higher quality product we've got now. But casual viewers might file these distinctions under: Who Cares?
The 2005 DVD just offered the original stereo track with no subtitle options. OFDb bumped that up to DTS-HD, plus both 2.0 and 5.1 DTS-HD mixes of the German dub with optional German subtitles. Scream Factory and Vinegar Syndrome keep just the stereo track in DTS-HD and gives the film optional English subtitles for the first time.
So it's great to have a widescreen release of this film, finally, but where OFDb has really excelled is the extras. Now, this is a German disc, so there are a couple of bits that are German only. But most things - all the important stuff - is completely English-friendly.
First up is an audio commentary (yes, in English) with the film's producers Mark Borde and Kenneth Raich, writer Brent V. Friedman, special effects artist Todd Masters and actor Robert Romanus (he played Lonnie). Brent Friedman and Todd Masters also comes back for on-camera interviews, running 18 and 16 minutes respectively. This and all the other interviews are in English with optional/ removable German subtitles. The other interviews include star Chris Sarandon (16 mins), composer Richard Band (10 mins), and production designer Brent Thomas (8 mins). There's also a brief acceptance speech by Dan O'Bannon at the Chainsaw Awards, introduced by Bruce Campbell and Quentin Tarantino, and two trailers for the film. Finally and perhaps most excitingly of all, there's over 18 minutes of recovered footage of the director's cut from the workprint tape. As you'd expect, it's from fuzzy 4:3 tape, but it actually looks a lot cleaner than most workprints I've seen, looking essentially like a commercial VHS release. It's missing music cues, and there's the occasional "shot missing" card for big effects moments; but this is really the stuff fans have been wanting to see since final cut was first taken from O'Bannon back in 1991. These are all on the blu-ray and in HD.
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| 2015 OFDb DVD. |
And Scream Factory? Thankfully, they've imported everything except the German-language commentaries. Even that photo gallery. And most excitingly, they've also come up with a little bit more. First is an on-camera interview with ST Joshi, the Lovecraft expert we've seen on several recent Lovecraft discs, like Dagon and Beyond Re-Animator. Then, even better, they interview female lead Jane Sibbett. Apparently, she doesn't like horror movies, but she's a good sport. Scream's release also comes with reversible cover art.
Vinegar Syndrome carries everything over, too, but they don't add too much more to the pot. But to be fair, there aren't many gaps left to fill. They basically conducted three new on-camera interviews. The first of which is Chris Sarandon, which is nice, but we've already heard from him and he doesn't have a whole lot more to say. The second is an expert: Kim Newman, who also struggles to find things to say that haven't already been said on these discs. And third is Robert Romanus, who was already on the commentary. It's nice that they made the effort, but nothing to get excited about. Their release has reversible artwork, and the initial limited edition also came in a slipcover.
OFDb's release turned out to be absolutely everything I was asking and hoping for when I wrote the original version of this post, and Scream Factory's is even better. Then Vinegar Syndrome came along and gave us a truly definitive edition, unquestionably the one to buy if you're just starting out with this movie. But you'd have to be pretty hardcore to justify triple-dipping if you've been keeping up with every step.































































