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I Sell The Dead(2008)
Body snatchers Arthur Blake and Willie Grimes have pillaged their last grave. With just five hours before Arthur follows Willie to the chopping block, he recounts his life story to Father Francis Duffy. It soon becomes clear that Blake and Grimes are no ordinary grave robbers. And through Arthur's story the priest learns that not all corpses are equal. For more about I Sell The Dead and the I Sell The Dead Blu-ray release, see the I Sell The Dead Blu-ray Review Starring: Dominic Monaghan, Larry Fessenden, Ron Perlman, Angus Scrimm, John Speredakos Director: Glenn McQuaid I Sell The Dead Blu-ray, Video QualityI Sell the Dead sells itself fairly well on Blu-ray, with a 1080p/AVC-encoded transfer that looks true to its source material. Of course, since the film makes due with a paltry budget, said source is not the cleanest, clearest, or most vibrant, but the look is better than you might expect. Aside from a few scenes that were actually part of McQuaid's previous short film, The Resurrection Apprentice—which look hazy, overly grainy, and indistinct—I Sell the Dead's stylized aesthetic is easy on the eyes. Yes, the green screen composites are incredibly obvious, a split diopter shot leaves Monaghan's ear oddly translucent, and the digital fog drifting over the photoshopped backgrounds looks disjointed and artificial, but it's all part of the film's on- the-cheap DIY approach. Clarity is actually decent—especially in close-ups, where you can make out a modest but appreciable amount of detail and texture—and the film's bleak color palette, though endlessly tweaked and desaturated in post-production, totally suits the mood. Black levels, which crush and/or go slightly milky on occasion, are adequately deep for most of movie, and aside from the aforementioned digital artificiality, there are no real problems on the technical/transfer side of things. I Sell The Dead Blu-ray, Audio QualityI Sell the Dead's DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track has one big thing going for it, and that's Jeff Grace's deliriously camp score, which calls to mind the serpentine oboe melodies of creaky B- movie orchestration and sounds excellent here. Harpsichords ring with metallic clangings, trumpets blast and strings swoon, all anchored by appropriately morose bassoons. The music fills the rear channels, where it's occasionally joined by slight environmental ambience, like rippling thunder, creepy bird caws, and a hush of wind broken by a vampiric moan. Still, most of the mix is shifted front and center, where dialogue is buoyant and easily understood. There's nothing here that stands out as impressive in terms of sound design, but it all comes together nicely to support the film's comic horror tone.
I Sell The Dead Blu-ray, News and Updates• I Sell the Dead Blu-ray Announced - February 15, 2010 MPI Media Group has announced I Sell The Dead for Blu-ray release on March 30. This horror comedy about Victorian grave-robbers (with some vampires and zombies also thrown in the mix), starring Dominic Monaghan and Ron Perlman, was highly acclaimed when it premiered ... I Sell The Dead Blu-ray, Forum Discussions
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