March 3, 2026

JCVD Plays With Himself in DOUBLE IMPACT (4K)


DOUBLE IMPACT (4K UHD)
1991 / 110 min
Review by Mr. Bonnie, the Brainsmasher😼

Looking back at his lengthy filmography, it’s clear that Jean-Claude Van Damme’s favorite co-star is…Jean-Claude Van Damme. Giving ol’ Peter Sellers a run for his money, the Muscles from Brussels has played dual roles in no-less than four films, meaning he has shared the screen with himself more than any other actor he’s worked with.

1991’s Double Impact was the first of ‘em. He plays Alex and Chad Wagner, separated as babies after their wealthy parents were murdered by Hong Kong gangsters. Chad is raised in America by Dad’s former bodyguard, Frank Avery (Geoffrey Lewis), where he grows up to be a martial arts instructor. Alex, on the other hand, remains in Hong Kong, becoming a tough, streetwise smuggler. 


Chad learns about his twin when he and Frank go to Hong Kong, the latter informing both that they’re the proper heirs to their father’s tunnel project, which is currently under the control of Nigel Griffith (Alan Scarfe). Working with a Chinese triad, Griffith is also the man who had the Wagners’ parents murdered. So it’s payback time as Alan and Chad ultimately team up to go scorched-earth on Griffith and the gangsters.


Of course, we ain’t exactly talking The Corsican Brothers here (though Dumas’ novel was an apparent early inspiration). Double Impact largely coasts on the gimmick of two Van Dammes for the price of one. Other than that, it’s your usual revenge-fueled action fest, its perfunctory plot serving as a clothesline on which to hang gunfights, chases, roundhouse kicks and plenty of kaboom. Thrown in for good measure is a gratuitous, amusingly out-of-place sex scene between Van Damme and Alonna Shaw (on-hand to provide eye candy and be placed in peril).


"Aw...my wittle man has tummy twouble?"
While certainly no classic, Double Impact is fairly enjoyable. Stating the obvious, Van Damme has never been gifted with a lot of range (nor has he needed it), but does an adequate job establishing the distinctive personalities of each twin. He’s sometimes even kind of funny in scenes where Alex and Chad initially do not get along (a prerequisite for all buddy action movies). Elsewhere, the action scenes are handled with slick professionalism, offering plenty of opportunities for Van Damme and his favorite co-star to do their thing, which is ultimately why we pay our two bits in the first place. 

I’ll say this much…Double Impact may be little more than a B-movie guilty pleasure, but MVD has always done right by this one. It’s been previously released on Blu-ray with the same bounty of bonus features (the best being a feature-length retrospective documentary). Now it’s being given a 4K upgrade. Since I’m decidedly not a Van Damme completist, I can’t say whether or not the new transfer is a significant improvement, but overall, the film looks and sounds really good.


EXTRA KIBBLES

THE MAKING OF DOUBLE IMPACT - The best of the new bonus features, the two-part, feature length documentary is even longer than the film itself. Features plenty of interviews with the cast and crew, including director Sheldon Lettich and JCVD himself, who sometimes speaks nonsensically.

FEATURETTES - Anatomy of a Scene features director Sheldon Lettich discussing his favorite action sequence in the film; Double Impact Behind the Scenes is an archival making-of from 1991.

EPK INTERVIEWS & FILM CLIPS

B-ROLL CLIPS

MVD REWIND PROMO

MINI POSTER

TRAILER


March 2, 2026

4K UHD Giveaway: THE RUNNING MAN (SteelBook)


FREE KITTENS MOVIE GUIDE is giving away a 4K SteelBook copy of THE RUNNING MAN, courtesy of ALLIANCE ENTERTAINMENT and PARAMOUNT. 

From the novel by Stephen King and directed by Edgar Wright, The Running Man is a fun, unhinged deadly game show where contestants must survive 30 days while being hunted by professional assassins. 


TO ENTER:

Shoot us an email at freekittensmovieguide@gmail.com

Contest ends 3/15

U.S. Residents Only


THE RUNNING MAN Almost Goes the Distance


THE RUNNING MAN (4K UHD SteelBook)
2025 / 133 min
Review by Stinky the Destroyer😼

Stephen King’s dystopian sci-fi novel, The Running Man, was my favorite of those he originally wrote under the pseudonym of Richard Bachman. Gritty, brutal and exceedingly dark, I thought it would make a great movie. However, the 1987 version with Arnold Schwarzenegger wasn’t what I had in mind. Gleefully tossing damn near everything but the title, it was a garish, dumbed-down cartoon loaded with WWE glitz and plenty of Arnie’s eye-rolling one-liners. 

Sure, the movie is fun and still has a fanbase who embrace its kitchiness, but at the time, this was the biggest bastardization of a King story since Kubrick dug his mitts into The Shining. I walked out of the theater thinking The Running Man would still make a great movie…just not this one.


If nothing else, director/co-writer Edgar Wright has the right approach for the 2025 version, which is not-so-much a remake as another adaptation of the same source material. As such, it stays more faithful to the novel in terms of both the story, satiric elements and anti-authoriarian themes. And for the first two hours, this is The Running Man I’ve been waiting to see for 40 years. Too bad Wright doesn’t stick the landing. In fact, it’s more like a crash landing…the kind that leaves no survivors.


The Running Man depicts a dystopian future ruled by fascism, with nearly every aspect of daily life overseen by The Network, including televised entertainment created to placate the masses. Most programming consists of game shows in which financially desperate people have a chance to win cash by participating in dangerous (often fatal) competitions. The most popular one is The Running Man, where contestants win a billion dollars if they can stay on the run for 30 days without being killed by a squad of hunters, aided by an entire population who can also win cash for spotting contestants (or killing them themselves). 


One of those contestants is Ben Richards (Glen Powell), a married man who can’t hang onto a job due to “insubordination.” Desperate to provide real medicine for his sick daughter, he auditions for a show and is selected for The Running Man, mainly because producer Dan Killian (Josh Brolin) feels Ben's strength and anger issues will make great television. Despite the fact that no previous contestant has ever survived the full 30 days, Ben reluctantly agrees to participate.


The bulk of the film consists of Ben’s efforts to stay alive, made more challenging by the TV audience being manipulated into seeing him as an evil, violent man who deserves to die. He’s relentlessly pursued by the show’s masked star, Evan McCone (Lee Pace), and his hunters. Along the way, he’s assisted by some that want to see him go the distance, most notably those who are part of an underground resistance movement against the government. In addition to plenty of violent, explosive action, the film’s underlying themes are pretty timely, particularly those presenting the government controlled media as shamelessly manipulative (and not too far removed from what we’re experiencing in the real world right now). 


The selfie that launched a thousand restraining orders.
And up to a point, The Running Man is very entertaining and boosted considerably by Powell’s performance, who more-or-less embodies the Ben Richards I imagined when reading the book. Speaking of which, the film remains fairly faithful to the novel, if not always the plot, then definitely its spirit. Then there’s the climax. All I can say is…what happened? It’s one thing to make wholesale changes when adapting a novel into a film, which King fans should be used to by now. And I’m not necessarily opposed to such changes because films are a different medium than books, so I always remain open minded. After all, it was Frank Darabont (not King) who gave us one of horror’s most devastating endings with The Mist.

But without giving too much away, the climax of The Running Man is godawful, and straying from King’s original ending is the least of its sins. Not only is Wright’s conclusion unsatisfactory (and unnecessary), it hits us like a suckerpunch, presented in a way that totally negates the tone he worked so hard to achieve during the first two hours. It also happens to be really stupid, reflecting a rushed attempt to wrap things up with a denouement that plays more like an homage to the 1987 film than the novel it's based on.  


Until then, this is arguably the best adaptation of The Running Man that one can probably hope for. Despite its length, the film is fast-moving and boasts several impressive action sequences, as well as some amusing satire and a prevalent anti-authoritarian message (or warning?). Just be prepared to experience a bit of WTF whiplash during the climax. Or better yet, shut the damn thing off immediately after the airplane sequence (which King concluded his story with). 


For its home media release, Paramount has put together a great 4K/Blu-ray combo package featuring an excellent video and audio transfer for both formats, with vivid color, sharp detail and a booming Dolby Atmos track. The set also includes a big selection of interesting (sometimes pretty amusing) bonus features. The SteelBook release we reviewed boasts artwork that, if not particularly creative, at least reflects the movie’s overall vibe pretty effectively.


EXTRA KIBBLES

4K, BLU-RAY and DIGITAL COPIES (The 4K includes all of the bonus features listed below; the Blu-ray features selected ones).

FEATURETTES - The Hunt Begins features Edgar Wright discussing how he got involved; The Hunters and the Hunted showcases the cast & characters; Welcome to the Running Man: Designing the World is a look at the production design; Surviving the Game: Shooting The Running Man features a lot of on-set behind-the-scenes footage; Stunts Compilation; Hair, Make-up & Costume Tests.

AUDIO COMMENTARY - By director/co-writer Edgar Wright, actor Glen Powell and co-writer Michael Bacall.

THE RUNNING MAN COMMERCIALS - Faux commercials as seen in the film.

SPEED THE WHEEL and THE AMERICANOS - Footage of the fake shows as seen in the film.

THE APOSTLE - Similar to the above-mentioned features, this is footage of the Apostle’s broadcasts.

DELETED/EXTENDED SCENES

TRAILERS


February 27, 2026

THE POOP SCOOP: Death From Above Edition


UPCOMING KIBBLES THAT MAKE US PURR!

Finally! BLUE THUNDER Limited Edition 4K Coming May 5 from Arrow Video. This tale of airborne surveillance and institutional overreach became a defining genre snapshot of Reagan-era anxiety, shot through with Hollywood muscle and a prescient distrust of unchecked technology. Roy Scheider (Jaws) stars as Frank Murphy, a veteran LAPD helicopter pilot picked to test-fly Blue Thunder, an experimental attack chopper bristling with unprecedented surveillance capabilities. When Murphy uncovers a covert plot to weaponize the aircraft for domestic policing, he takes to the skies in open rebellion. Hunted through the city by his own unit and shadowy government architects, Murphy’s final patrol becomes a white-knuckle fight for justice – and survival. Co-starring Warren Oates, Malcolm McDowell, and Candy Clark, Blue Thunder delivers heart-pounding suspense and sky-high stakes. A landmark of analog-age futurism, it remains a razor-sharp thrill ride that fires on all cylinders from beginning to end. Includes numerous new and archival bonus features.

GREENLAND on 4K March 31 from Lionsgate. A family fights for survival as a planet-killing comet races to Earth. John Garrity, his estranged wife Allison, and young son Nathan make a perilous journey to their only hope for sanctuary. Amid terrifying news accounts of cities around the world being leveled by the comet’s fragments, the Garritys experience the best and worst in humanity while they battle the increasing panic and lawlessness surrounding them. As the countdown to global apocalypse approaches zero, their incredible trek culminates in a desperate and last-minute flight to a possible safe haven.


THE SUBSTITUTE on 4K March 17 from Lionsgate.  In this action-thriller favorite, now on 4K for the first time, a mercenary faces off against one of his most formidable enemies: a high school gang. Shale (Tom Berenger) is an ex-Vietnam vet reeling from a botched covert operation. Returning home, he reunites with his girlfriend, Jane (Diane Venora), a high school teacher who’s hospitalized after a beating by the Kings of Destruction gang. Hunting Jane’s attackers, Shale goes undercover as a substitute teacher, and uncovers a cocaine highway running through the school involving gang leader Lacas (Marc Anthony) and the school’s shady principal, Rolle (Ernie Hudson). Summoning his mercenaries, Shale goes to war with the Kings of Destruction – and rival guns for hire – on the unusual battleground of a high school, but for the usual stakes: life…and death


THE BLACK BELLY OF THE TARANTULA on 4K and Blu-ray May 12 from Celluloid Dreams. This giallo classic will arrive in a beautiful slipbox that features the film, along with a vast array of bonus features that provide more insight into the film and its production than ever before. It is now available for preorder on the Celluloid Dreams website.


GREENLAND 2: MIGRATION on Blu-ray, 4K and DVD March 31 from Lionsgate. In the aftermath of a comet strike that devastates most of the Earth, GREENLAND 2: MIGRATION follows devoted family man John Garrity (Gerard Butler) and his wife and son (Morena Baccarin, Roman Griffin Davis) after they’re forced to leave the safety of their bunker in Greenland to search for a new home in a shattered world. 


THE HOUSEMAID on Blu-ray, 4K and DVD March 17 from Lionsgate. From director Paul Feig, the film plunges audiences into a twisted world where perfection is an illusion, and nothing is as it seems. What begins as a dream job quickly unravels into something far more dangerous.


The New ANACONDA on 4K and Blu-ray March 17 from Sony. Doug (Jack Black) and Griff (Paul Rudd) have been best friends since they were kids, and have always dreamed of remaking their all-time favorite movie: the cinematic "classic" Anaconda. But things get real when an actual giant anaconda appears, turning their comically chaotic movie set into a deadly situation. 


POINT BLANK Coming to 4K and Blu-ray April 21 from Criterion Collection. Free Kittens’ CEO bought himself an older Blu-ray copy of this action classic, then literally the next day, Criterion announces this release! In addition to a 4K restoration, this disc comes with a bunch of bonus features.


MONTY PYTHON’S LIFE OF BRIAN on 4K and Blu-ray April 14 from Criterion Collection. Featuring ribald Roman puns, sharp political commentary, and an audacious crucifixion-themed musical number, the Pythons’ most ambitious film is a hilarious satire of dogma and blind faith in which nothing is sacred.


KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON on Blu-ray, 4K and DVD March 24, 2026 from Criterion Collection. An epic elegy of greed, betrayal, and murder, Scorsese brings a dark chapter of American history to the screen with gripping narrative power and a profound feeling for the weight of systemic injustice.


TESTAMENT, on Blu-ray March 17 from Criterion Collection Taking a hauntingly intimate approach to an often sensationalized subject, the singular Testament depicts one family’s daily life in the wake of nuclear devastation.

February 26, 2026

Watching STALKER With My Cat


STALKER (1979)
Starring Alexander Kaidanovsky, Anatoly Solonitsyn, Nikolai Grinko, Alisa Freindich. Directed by Andrei Tarkovsky. (161 min).
Essay by D.M. AndersonšŸ’€

I currently live with two cats, Pepper and Mr. Bonnie. Notice I didn’t say I have cats, because that would imply ownership. For as long as I’ve been alive, there have always been one-or-more cats in the house, and not once did I feet like I “owned” any of them. They’re more like freeloading roommates who never pay their share of the rent…unless you count the dead things they’d sometimes bring home. 

But when Pepper and Mr. Bonnie moved in, we decided they should strictly be indoor cats (too many coyotes in the neighborhood), so they aren't afforded the same hunting opportunities as previous tenants. Still, one of them did recently manage to kill a small mouse that was also living rent-free in the house. I’m grateful, of course, but sure wish I wouldn’t have discovered their handiwork with my bare feet. Thus far, neither cat has claimed credit for the kill, but my money is on Pepper because she watches a lot more television. 


While they don’t go outside, they are aware of the outside. Both enjoy sitting in the living room window to watch the neighborhood, but it’s Pepper who gets “the chatters” wherever a bird lands in the yard, her tail whipping furiously. Additionally, she’s the first cat I’ve ever lived with who’s demonstrated an active interest in TV. Depending on what’s happening onscreen, she’ll often jump onto the TV stand and swat at whatever is moving. One of the few downsides of high definition, I guess.


Pepper’s favorites are various YouTube videos made for the sole purpose of entertaining cats. Typically, they consist of birds or squirrels lured before the camera by food piled in a wooded area. These critters scurrying in and out of frame drive Pepper nuts, and though it’s kinda funny, I try not to encourage it too much because I just know the day is coming when I discover claw marks raked across my expensive 55” HD screen. It’s even gotten so Pepper sometimes comes running into the room when she hears the YouTube app intro music, ready to hunt.


TV and movies are nothing if not educational. If Star Trek can show me how to prevent a warp core explosion, it sure as hell can educate my cat on the wondrous wildlife in the world just begging to be disemboweled. But really, most anything featuring a lot of quick or sudden movement can hold her attention for a minute or two, such as hockey games, Looney Tunes and the occasional action movie, which is why I was initially perplexed that she appeared so keenly engaged in the movie, Stalker


"Sorry guys...I could've sworn it was Ladies' Night." 
Released in 1979, Stalker is a Russian science-fiction film directed by Andrei Tarkovsky, widely considered one of that country’s greatest filmmakers. On my side of the pond, he’s probably most remembered for Solaris, which is often compared to Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, at least regarding its pace and overall cerebralism. Tarkovsky’s movies are typically very slow, with plenty of looooong takes. Anyone who’s ever seen Solaris can concur that it makes 2001 look like it was edited with a Cuisinart.

But Solaris is a Michael Bay film compared to Stalker, which moves along at the speed of an oil painting. In fact, it often looks like an oil painting, the work of a tortured artist who starts their mornings with coffee, toast and suicidal thoughts. There are no special effects or action scenes, and nothing but some expositional dialogue to suggest it’s even science-fiction. If you were to watch it with the sound off (and sometimes you’ll feel like you already are), it’s just three stone-faced guys walking for two-and-a-half hours.


Those three stone-faced guys are the “Stalker” (Alexander Kaidanovsky), the “Writer” (Anatoly Solonitsyn) and the “Professor” (Nikolai Grinko). Stalkers hire themselves out to illegally escort people into a quarantined, fenced-off area known as “The Zone,” which has been rendered off-limits after an unexplained phenomenon occurred there 20 years earlier. Whether it was a meteor or something sentient (it's never made explicit), the area is now an unpopulated wilderness of forests, fields and ruins. Also within The Zone is a room where, upon entering, your innermost desires come true (for better or worse). 


Though he just recently got out of prison for previously entering The Zone, the Stalker agrees to take the Writer and the Professor there and guide them to the room, much to the chagrin of his wife, once-again left alone to look after their daughter. However, they really need the money. 


The Stalker informs his new clients that The Zone is a dangerous place, and potentially fatal if they don’t follow his explicit instructions during the journey. As he gravely warns, The Zone is a very complicated system of traps, and they're all deadly. I don't know what's going on here in the absence of people, but the moment someone shows up, everything comes into motion. Old traps disappear and new ones emerge. Safe spots become impassable. Now your path is easy, now it's hopelessly involved. That's the Zone. It may even seem capricious. But it is what we've made it with our condition. It happened that people had to stop halfway and go back. Some of them even died on the very threshold of the room.”


"I can't escape the feeling we're being watched."
But this ain’t a Saw movie. The entire middle act consists of their journey, through fields, swamps and dilapidated buildings, then through a series of dark tunnels and drab rooms. The Stalker must be a helluva guide, because the walk is largely uneventful (aside from the Writer and Professor occasionally antagonizing each other). We hear a lot of poetry along the way, too, but there’s nary a trap to be seen…no physical ones, anyway. We also learn more about these characters and their motivations, which aren’t quite what we’re initially led to believe. That's right, kids...Stalker is one of those metaphysical journeys.

Sure, Rod Serling probably could’ve told the same basic story in about a half-hour, but despite its epic length and glacial pace, Stalker is an immersive film that kind-of sucks you in with its beautifully bleak aesthetic, extended takes, nearly-imperceptible camera movement and the quiet desperation exhibited by these men. And as it turns out, there’s actually a hell of a lot at stake during the climax, as well as a WTF denouement that makes you wonder what the hell you just watched…if you can even get that far…


…which I barely managed when I first watched it. Stalker was recommended to me by a guy I sometimes do podcasts with, whose tastes are somewhat eclectic. When the end credits finally rolled, my initial thought was that it was marginally more interesting than watching an old TV test pattern for the same amount of time. But damn, if I didn’t think about the movie a lot afterwards…the imagery, the movement, the underlying themes and (especially) the resolution. So I bought a physical copy and have since watched it a handful of times, finding it very rewarding. Sure, I sometimes nod-off, but that’s another one of the cool things about the film. Even if one doesn’t necessarily care about the story or characters, it’s an agreeable movie just for the overall vibe.


Recently revisiting the film, I was about an hour into it when I noticed Pepper watching, too. She was sitting on the floor, about three feet from the TV, tale twitching during a scene where the three main characters are making their way through a field. Shot from a distance, they appeared very small among the grass, but their movement had Pepper’s complete attention. In fact, she jumped onto the TV stand and swatted at them. Perhaps she thought it was a bug on the screen (she likes those, too).


However, after that particular scene ended, Pepper returned to her spot on the floor and continued watching…for nearly 20 minutes (which is about 15 minutes longer than some of you might commit to the movie). What was it about Stalker that was keeping her attention? Since she never liked subtitles, it couldn’t have been the plot, and it wasn’t like the screen was teeming with birds or squirrels. 


Then it occurred to me…visually, much of Stalker actually resembles a lot of the YouTube videos that rile her up...minus the animals. Even the film’s ambient sound design is similar on occasion…wind, trickling water, footsteps crunching the ground, etc. Maybe she was waiting for some critters to scurry into frame, just like they do in those videos, which would be her reward for patiently enduring three bald guys contemplating their lives. 


Eventually though, she finally had enough, her attention suddenly diverted by Mr. Bonnie, who sauntered into the room and tackled her. Then the battle was on, the two rolling around on the floor for a few seconds, hind legs furiously kicking at each other, before bolting upstairs to zoom around the living room. Stalker may be one of those rare films that manages to be both a masterpiece and a sleep aid, but it can’t beat the frisky fun of scrapping with your bro.