4K UHD Review: Matinee

Blu-ray Reviews, Reviews, Top Story

This summer’s paltry theatrical box office returns have generated plenty of editorials about what is necessary to get people back in the seats. The one thing nobody seems eager to propose is finding a new William Castle. If you’re a fan of Svengoolie, you know all about William Castle. The director of horror films figured out how to get people back in the theaters by providing an experience you can’t get at home. He had flying skeletons, vibrating seats, and audience voting for the ending of a movie. He made it fun to buy a ticket. You wanted to see The Tingler in a packed theater. Director Joe Dante’s Matinee pays tribute to William Castle and other visionaries who made cinema a be here now experience.

Things are tense in Key West in 1962 as the Cuban Missile crisis puts the world on edge for a nuclear war. Gene Loomis (Band of Brothers‘ Simon Fenton) and his brother Dennis (The Brady Bunch Movie‘s Jesse Lee) are nervous since their father is on a submarine near Cuba. But they are also excited because Lawrence Woolsey (Raising Arizona‘s John Goodman) is coming to town to promote his latest SciFi epic Mant. Woolsey is a showman and he’s going overboard to pump up the experience for those lucky enough to get a ticket. From the outside he’s extended ant legs out of the marquee. But he’s doing so much more. He’s got two of his buddies (Dick Miller and John Sayles) ginning up anger in locals claiming the movie is just evil and must be protested. Inside he’s installed tons of gimmicks around the theater to make the film come alive including Rumble-Rama. Can the people of Key West ignore the impending atomic war to enjoy a movie about a man who turns into a giant radioactive ant? Can Lawrence Woolsey be the man to make it happen?

Many people just wrote off Lawrence Woolsey as merely a fictionalized version of William Castle (The Tingler). While Woolsey smokes a cigar, appears in his trailers and uses many of the same devices, Castle was a little less sleazy. Watch the documentary Spine Tingler! The William Castle Story to get a big picture of the real filmmaker. Woolsey is a composite of so many including Sam Arkoff, Roger Corman, Sam Katzman and others. Woolsey’s film logo is a tribute to American International Pictures. Goodman plays the role as big and Hollywood as possible and remain so believable. His partner in crime, Ruth Corday (Cathy Moriarty) has multiple roles in his life including being the female lead in Mant and the nurse who has to get people to sign a life insurance form in case they die of fright in the theater. This is my second favorite role of Moriarty after Raging Bull. Her voice and attitude hold together so many scenes that has her facing a mutant ant husband.

The big thing that makes Matinee work is director Joe Dante (The Howling and Gremlins). This is his love song to his youth with kids fearing nuclear disaster and loving Famous Monsters magazine. Even though this was written by Charles S. Haas (screenwriter on Tex and Over The Edge), the film comes off as Joe Dante’s Wonder Years. Dante gets to pay tribute to the genius of Castle and others who knew you should make a trip to the movies more special than turning on a television set. And Dante makes sure that this isn’t just a normal screening as things go overboard during the screening of Mant. This is a continuation of what happened when the Gremlins took over the theater. Matinee is a perfect nostalgia trip back to a tense time and gives a glimpse of what can be done to make you want to see a movie in the theater.

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The video is 1.85:1 anamorphic. The 4K restoration was done off the original camera negative and supervised by Joe Dante. The transfer brings out the best in John Hora’s cinematography. There’s a glow to the Florida locations and the black and white action sparkles. The audio is Dolby ATMOS, DTS-HD MA 5.1 and a Stereo version. The mix brings out the fun of the theater as the crowd gets shocked. The movie is subtitled.

Audio Commentary by Drew McWeeny and Eric Vespe has two long term bloggers excited to share their love of the film. They describe Joe Dante as the proto movie geek – even more than Lucas and Spielberg. They point out how Dante gets the details of the films that influence The Mant and the theater experience.

Blu-ray with the movie and all of the bonus features. This features the new transfer.

Florida Daydream (10:39) meets up with Kellie Martin. She did the movie during her break from the TV series Life Goes On. She recalls the audition process was rather rigorous before she met Joe Dante. She was competing with Claire Danes, Reese Witherspoon and others for the role. She had a lot of fun since the film was a flip of her serious drama show. She got to go on the rides at Univeral Studios Florida during the lunch breaks. Joe Dante made it a joyful experience. She gets into her character’s hair.

Cold War Thing (13:14) has actor David Clennon think that Joe Dante offered him the part on the word of Robert Picardo. He reflects on his own experience when the Cuban Missile Crisis was really happening. Even though he was in John Carpenter’s The Thing, he sees a different film he starred in as the biggest horror flick.

Master Of The Matinee (20:29) chats with Director Joe Dante. He discusses how much of the film reflected on his childhood love of these movies. He mentions the budget issues that were solved when Universal stepped in to fun the production.

The Leading Lady (12:02) interviews Cathy Moriarty. She had a lot of fun with John Goodman and the material.

MANTastic! The Making Of A Mant (25:12) allows Jim McPherson to describe making the Mant suit. Rick Baker set him up for the gig. Actor Mark McCracken talks about wearing the creation.

Out Of The Bunker (16:17) catches up with Actress Lisa Jakub. She loved Innerspace so it was a delight for her to meet Joe Dante.

Making A Monster Theatre (15:35) gets Production Designer Steven Legler to break down creating a movie theater worthy of a William Castle style production. Legler started working with Joe on The Howling. He was working on making the set in Los Angeles, but ended up using Universal Studio’s soundstages in Orlando.

The Monster Mix (11:39) allows Editor Marshall Harvey to breakdown working in color and black and white. He was nostalgic for the time too.

Lights! Camera! Reunion! (21:30) gets Director Of Photography John Hora to talk about a party for Joe where everyone gave the director ant themed presents. He got a couple week’s notice to shoot the film in Florida. He had to deal with the constant weather and lighting change in the Sunshine state. There’s weirdness that they had to rent lumber. John Hora passed away in 2021.

Paranoia In Ant Vision (32:37) is a French production that lets Joe Dante explain how the original script wasn’t quite the film. There was a vampire projectionist. They turned it into the movie we just saw.

Vintage Making Of Featurette (4:27) is the original hype for the film.

Behind The Scenes Footage (8:22) is video shot on the set. You can see the rented wood on the sets. The footage is courtesy Of Joe Dante.

Deleted And Extended Scenes (2:21) is mainly extra time with the kids.

Still Galleries (3:59) involves the development of the ant head, the theater and props.

Shout Factory presents Matinee: Collector’s Edition. Directed by: Joe Dante. Written by: Charles S. Haas. Starring: John Goodman, Cathy Moriarty, Simon Fenton, Omri Katz and Dick Miller. Running time: 99 minutes. Rated: PG. Release: January 25, 2024.

Joe Corey is the writer and director of "Danger! Health Films" currently streaming on Night Flight and Amazon Prime. He's the author of "The Seven Secrets of Great Walmart People Greeters." This is the last how to get a job book you'll ever need. He was Associate Producer of the documentary "Moving Midway." He's worked as local crew on several reality shows including Candid Camera, American's Most Wanted, Extreme Makeover Home Edition and ESPN's Gaters. He's been featured on The Today Show and CBS's 48 Hours. Dom DeLuise once said, "Joe, you look like an axe murderer." He was in charge of research and programming at the Moving Image Archive.