Showing posts with label DVD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DVD. Show all posts

Sunday, October 26, 2025

Movie: Alvin and the Chipmunks Meet the Wolfman (2000)

 Release: August 29, 2000 (USA, direct-to-video)
Directed by: Kathi Castillo (credited as Kermit Miller)
Voices: Ross Bagdasarian Jr., Janice Karman, Maurice LaMarche, Frank Welker, Rob Paulsen, 
June Foray
Produced by: Universal Cartoon Studios
Distributed by: Universal Pictures Home Entertainment

Before diving into this 2000 gem, it’s worth remembering where the Chipmunks came from. Created back in 1958 by Ross Bagdasarian Sr., Alvin and the Chipmunks didn’t start as cartoons. They began as a music act, built around speeding up human voices to sound like chipmunks. The first hit, The Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don’t Be Late), became a Christmas classic and turned Alvin, Simon, and Theodore into household names.


 Decades later, the legacy was carried on by Ross Bagdasarian Jr., who took over the voices of Alvin, Simon, and Dave Seville. His wife, Janice Karman, joined in to voice all three Chipettes and Theodore. Together, they’ve been the creative force behind nearly every Chipmunk project since the 80s.

By the time Alvin and the Chipmunks Meet the Wolfman came out, the big Chipmunk boom was long past, but this movie somehow caught the old spark again.

I watched the Universal UK DVD, which sadly had no extras. Just the movie, no behind-the-scenes or commentaries. A bit of a letdown since I like seeing how these films are made, but honestly, the movie itself made up for it. It’s got that old-school charm.

The voices are great, the acting feels spot on and the story has a lot more heart than you might expect. Under all the chaos and slapstick, it’s really about pride and loneliness and how people (or chipmunks) deal with fear and change.

The setup centers on a school play of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, where the Chipmunks take part with their usual enthusiasm. The play´s director treats this production like his life’s work, obsessed with making everything perfect. Things start to unravel when strange events begin happening in the neighborhood, especially with Mr. Talbot, the mysterious neighbor with a cane shaped like a wolf’s head.



Mr. Talbot is voiced by Maurice LaMarche, who’s one of the legends of animation. You’ve probably heard him as The Brain in Pinky and the Brain or Kif from Futurama. His performance gives the film that classic monster-movie vibe that fits so perfectly.

There’s also Frank Welker, the same guy who voices Scooby-Doo and Megatronm, here he is handling creature growls and sound effects. It’s a small detail, but you can feel the experience in how the sound design adds perfect tension.

The animation itself was done by Universal Cartoon Studios, the same team that handled The Land Before Time sequels and An American Tail: The Treasure of Manhattan Island. Even though it was a direct-to-video release, the animation has solid craftsmanship and that slightly darker, moodier color palette that fits the theme.


 This movie also stands out for how it treats Theodore. He gets one of his best storylines here, going from shy and scared to finding courage when it matters. The transformation scenes, both literal and emotional, make the story surprisingly heartfelt.

The Chipettes play their part too, bringing balance to the chaos and some funny moments that keep it from getting too gloomy.

By the time the credits roll, it’s clear this was more than just another kids’ film, it’s a piece of animation history. In fact, Meet the Wolfman ended up being the last traditionally animated Chipmunks movie before the 2007 live-action reboot. It closed the door on an era that started in the 50s and carried through generations.

It’s also worth noting that this movie came right after Alvin and the Chipmunks Meet Frankenstein (1999), which started this little horror crossover trend. Both films are love letters to the old Universal Monsters movies, with that mix of spooky fun and gentle comedy.

I found out there is a glow in the dark slip cover.
Photo found on Ebay 
https://www.ebay.com/itm/236110731249 
   

So I give this a perfect 10/10. This month is a horror month after all, so get in on the howling and watch this dark yet heartwarming movie.

Article written by: Sonny Mikszath

  

Sunday, October 12, 2025

Movie Event: Visionärernas Dag – Säsong 2 (2025)

 A Night of micro Chaos, Cinema and Community

 

After months of planning and anticipation, I hosted this local event again in Tidaholm, Sweden. Visionärernas Dag - Säsong 2 (Day of the Visionaries - Season 2) returned with bigger ambition, digital guest messages and a deeper love for independent cinema. Last year’s event focused heavily on my own short films. This year I wanted to expand, bring in outside creators, exclusive content and a wider audience. It happened.

 

Around 25 people attended, a lively mix of age and film lovers. Curious locals including a spontaneous group of kids who brought unpredictable energy throughout the night. Day of the Visionaries isn’t a red-carpet festival. It’s raw, personal and driven entirely by passion.


🎥 Film #1 – Fungi (2023)Swedish Thriller


Directed by: Sofia Brattwall, Björn Engström, Lottie Johansson & Ove Valeskog

The evening began with Fungi, a Swedish thriller set in a world struck by a mysterious fungal pandemic. Humanity is split between isolated survivors searching for a cure and another group lurking outside with some more evil planes. I’ll admit my focus drifted, hosting nerves are real, but one performance stood out to me: Estrid Gustafsson-Fjellheim, who controls drones with only her hands. Her scenes, especially during a special drone attack (you know when you see it), was really chill. Kinda funny she had theater study at the same school I have also attended, though I read photography, some years before at Fridhems folkhögskola (School of Adult Education).


🥤 The Cola Incident

Midway through the film, a group of kids showed up. All was peaceful until an entire 2-liter cola vanished for our place. Kids goon....Minutes later, a couple of them returned and said:
“They ran off with it… but we’re feeling nice today, so we’ll buy a new one.”
They did. We got two new 2-liter drinks. Pure chaos, with honor. The kids calmly stayed the evening. 


🎁 Giveaways, Lynch-Style


To choose winners for our mystery film bag, we used David Lynch’s “Today’s Number Is…” as the official lottery system. It was so strange it needs to become a tradition for the event.
Play some with it here yourself:
https://shorturl.at/YY9VX only 850 lottery pulls xD


🧑‍💻 Guest Appearances & Exclusive Content


🍕 Pizza 

One giant pizza and two normal pizzas arrived from Dana Pizzeria and vanished instantly, I had a small idea to take a photo, but there was nothing left to take a photo of xD


🐇 Film #2 – Rabidts (2024)

Directed by: Jake Fertig (USA)
Rabidts was pure indie madness. It started as a fairly long road trip and mutated into a creature-feature chaos with interdimensional killer rabbits. Practical effects, stop motion and even re-edited footage from Georges Méliès’ A Trip to the Moon (1902), that edit explained the rabbits origin. It felt like a crowdfunded fever dream with bizarre deaths and eccentric characters. I don’t not know if it was crowdfunded, but the thanks to list in the credit was huge. Overall a funny movie. After some detective work I found it was indeed a crowdfounded project.

 
 





Rating: 6/10
More info here:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt21335724
https://www.facebook.com/groups/609764062978760/?locale=sv_SE
https://tinyurl.com/4t5cfa8h (indiegogo campaign, under another name)


🎬 Final Thoughts

Great films, fun guests, a bit micro chaos, but ok, it´s not everyday you see Gremlins like killer rabbits!
I give the event 10/10 and can’t wait for the next one.
I do wonder what will happen then...live guest...who knows... not me.. not yet...

Thanks to: 
Studioförbundet Vuxenskolan
Dana Pizzeria
Direkten Nöje 

Article written by: Sonny Mikszath

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Movie: AINBO – Spirit of the Amazon (2021)

Festival Release: Imagina Film Festival of Animation 9 Feb 2021 (Peru)
Public Release: 28 May 2021
Written by José Zelada and Brian Cleveland
Directed by José Zelada and Richard Claus
Starring Lola Raie, Naomi Serrano, Dino Andrade, Bernardo De Paula
Distribution: Cinema Management Group | Produced by Tunche Films and Cool Beans

A Surprise Discovery

Movie nights don’t always go as planned. Me and some friends had one movie in mind but for different reasons it didn’t work out this time. Instead we landed on AINBO: Spirit of the Amazon almost at random. None of us were thrilled but we hit play anyway.

 

We watched the Swedish version on DVD, released by Noble Entertainment and for some reason the original English dub wasn’t included. While the film still worked, we all agreed it would have had a completely different feeling in its original language. Some of the nuances, humor and emotional beats were probably lost or softened, which may made certain scenes feel less impactful than they might have in the original version.

At first it felt like a patchwork of Disney influences: a girl called to go beyond her village (Moana), lead talking to a tree (Pocahontas), plus two goofy spirit guides (The Lion King´s Timon and Pumbaa). We thought we knew exactly where it was going.   

 A very pretty concept art photo of a scene.

Then the film shifted. Suddenly it wasn’t just a fantasy adventure. It became a story about the destruction of the Amazon rain forest and the fight of indigenous people to protect their home. That twist turned the film into something much more powerful.

At first the animation style didn’t grab me. It felt a bit rough compared to big-budget films. But as the movie went on, the characters grew on me, especially Ainbo. Her expressions, movements and energy started to feel natural and charming. The supporting characters and spirit guides also gained personality as the story progressed. By the end, the style felt warm and fitting for the story, matching the heart and passion behind the film.  

 

It was also interesting that the spirit guides were not random animals. Ainbo is guided by Dillo the armadillo and Vaca the tapir, both species found in the Amazon rain forest. This choice makes the magical elements feel connected to the real forest it represents. 

The directors José and César Zelada were inspired by their mother and her hometown in the Peruvian Amazon. Knowing this the passion in the film makes sense. It is rooted in real love for land, culture and people.

The Scary Reality Behind the Story

The Amazon is often called “the lungs of the Earth.” Yet millions of trees are cut down every single day for logging, mining or cattle ranching. In the last 50 years almost 20% of the forest has been destroyed. Scientists warn that if this continues the rain forest could collapse in our lifetime. It would turn into dry savanna, release enormous amounts of carbon and speed up climate change worldwide.





 

 

 

 

AINBO uses myth and magic to tell its story but the real story is already terrifying. The Amazon is burning, it is falling and once it’s gone, there is no bringing it back. That is the message at the heart of this movie. 

8/10 for bringing an alarming topic forward while still telling a good story.

Article written by: Sonny Mikszath