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Discussed in this episode:
The 10th Victim (1965): Read Shane Wilson’s review. Ursula Andress and Marcello Mastroianni fall in love while pitted against each other in a future reality show where contestants compete to assassinate their rivals. Kino Lorber re-releases it with a new commentary track from a pair of film historians. Buy The 10th Victim.
Antiviral (2012): Read Gregory J. Smalley’s List Candidate review. Brandon Cronenberg‘s sick debut satire gets a 4K UHD release from Severin, with new special features including Brandon’s short film “Broken Tulips.” Buy Antiviral.
Delicatessen (1991): Read the Canonically Weird review! A new 4K UHD disc from Severin with new and vintage special features. Buy Delicatessen.
The Mansion of Madness [AKA Dr. Tarr’s Torture Dungeon] (1972): Read Enar Clarke’s Apocrypha Candidate review. This horror-tinged Surrealist Poe adaptation, originally released in the US under the hilariously inappropriate title Dr. Tarr’s Torture Dungeon, is by a disciple of Alejandro Jodorowsky and has not been recently available on home video until this welcome Blu-ray from Vinegar Syndrome. Buy The Mansion of Madness.
Myth of Man (2025): A dialogue-free, steampunk-influenced mythological fantasia from Jamin Winans. This is a true independent release with no studio backing—on VOD or a self-published Blu-ray. Buy Myth of Man.
The Twilight World (202?): At 82 years old, Werner Herzog will attempt his first animated film: an adaptation of his own novel about a Japanese WWII veteran who refuses to believe the war is over. Michael “Tekkonkreet” Arias assists on the “dreamlike and expressionistic” screenplay. Read more at Variety.
WHAT’S IN THE PIPELINE: No guest scheduled for next week’s Pod 366, but Greg and Giles will return with their look at the week’s upcoming news and new releases. In written reviews, Shane Wilson slips into In Fabric, Gregory J. Smalley finally gets around to the long-overlooked Tommy, Enar Clarke reports on the “lost” Giulio Questi film Arcana, and Giles Edwards investigates The Myth of Man (see above). Onward and weirdward!