Michael Scott

Moderator / Reviewer
Staff member
Thread Starter
Joined
Apr 4, 2017
Messages
5,258
Location
Arizona
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Yamaha TRS-7850 Atmos Receiver
Other Amp
Peavy IPR 3000 for subs
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Panasonic UB820 4K UHD Player
Front Speakers
Cheap Thrills Mains
Center Channel Speaker
Cheap Thrills Center
Surround Speakers
Volt 10 Surrounds
Surround Back Speakers
Volt 10 Rear Surrounds
Rear Height Speakers
Volt 6 Overheads
Subwoofers
2x Marty subs (full size with SI 18's)
Video Display Device
Sony 85 inch X950H FALD TV
MFKZ


full?lightbox=1&last_edit_date=1556055328.jpg

Movie: :2stars:
Video: :4stars:
Audio: :3.5stars:
Extras: :2stars:
Final Score: :2.5stars:



full?lightbox=1&update=1556055328.jpg
Movie

French animated cinema has long been a source of crazy, if not completely intense, sources of animated material. Tekkonkinkreet is an incredible film and one that I use to convert people over to French animated films (A Monster in Paris and Jack and the Cuckoo Clock Heart are another tow that are very accessible to the average animated viewer), but MFKZ glossed right under my radar when it initially arrived. The cover kind of turned me off (it has that sort of exploitation flavor to it that had me a bit leery), but that it came from Gkids as well as was associated with the people who produce the Animatrix AND Tekkoninkreet I was willing to give it a shot. Well, my initial gut reaction was right, as MFKZ (shortened from it’s international release for….well...you know) can only be described with one word. Bizarre. It’s a film that tries to be political, exploitative, and trendy all at once and fails spectacularly on all of them (In all reality, the movie is pretty tame, and the only people who will be really shocked over it are those who don’t expect the random four letter words and poop jokes).

Angelino (Kenn Michael) is a down and out blip on the radar who is just trying to make it in a dystopian society. He can’t keep a job, he can’t keep a girl, and his main friend is his roommate Vinz (Vince Staples), where they live in a cockroach infested slum. To set the backstory, Vinz and Angelino live in Dark Meat City (nicked named DMC for Depression, Murder and Crazy by the residents), a subsidy of “New California”, which is lorded over by Nazi like storm troopers, crime, violence, and general depression (which is probably where DMC came from), complete with some rather unorthodox characters. For example, Vinz is has a Ghost Rider (ish) appearance complete with flaming skull head, and everyone else just looks “off”in how they’re drawn.
full?lightbox=1&update=1556055328.jpg
When their apartment is raided by the Nazi looking stormtroopers, Vinz uses some of his latent “powers” to get them out of the apartment and into the wild. Helped out by their paranoid buddy Willy (Dino Andrade), and the angelic like Luna (Dasha Polanca) the group of misfits is on the run and escaping from a force that wants them for some less than nice reasons, catching them up in something that turns the nobodies directly into somebodies.

I’m not exactly sure WHAT MFKZ was trying to accomplish here. The film is definitely heavily dystopian, with the world portrayed as a visual slum, with fire, death, corruption, and open government fascism reigning supreme in this bizarre film. The visuals of dystopian society are all too familiar in the world of animation and film, but the PURPOSE is really what’s eluding me. Maybe there’s some societal implications going on in France that I’m not drawing a parallel with, but the end resulting film is one that is just a mishmash of fantasy dystopia along with Los Angelesesque gangster culture. The mix is a strange one, and to make matters worse, the script itself bounces all over the place. There’s no sense of cohesion or nuance with the plot, but rather it meanders over the place, sometimes focusing on interpersonal relationships, and then shoots over to esoteric takes on the world at large. Nothing ever truly is grasped as a focal point to the movie, and I’m left feeling like this was an experimental film rather than one that had a distinct message.




Rating:

Rated R for bloody violence, language and some sexual content




Video: :4stars:
full?lightbox=1&update=1556055328.jpg
The 2.39:1 framed AVC transfer is a very solid effort for Universal. The animation style is strange, but the details and colors imbued in the film are simply lovely. The dystopian world of Dark Meat City is both foreboding and grimy, but also colorful and full of life. The animation itself is well detailed, allowing us to see Vinz’s flaming skull head perfectly, as well as the graffiti covered streets of DMC. The animation is plagued by some banding that is pretty prevalent throughout the 95 minute run time, but the overall clarity and sharpness is very impressive. There’s a few jagged lines and some macroblocking here and there, but those are pretty fleeting, and except for the banding the image is very stable and clean.








Audio: :3.5stars:
full?lightbox=1&update=1556055328.png
It’s very rare that I find a new release film that has less than a 4/5 rating for audio, but MFKZ is one of the few titles that I’m forced to drop it down just a notch. It’s not that the film’s audio clarity is muffled, or the dynamics or vocals are weak, as it does all of those rather well. The bass line kicks in with a strong urban beat early on, and the vocals are all crisp and cleanly located up front. It comes from the gunfire and action sequences. While the score is blasting full throttle, and the LFE is pretty decent, the gunfire is just anemic and weak along with the fisticuffs. Gunshots that should ring out with authority just whimper out there, and crashes and hits that should shake the walls just leave you wondering “was that all there was?”. Outside of that suck out of low end for the action, the track itself is a very capable track that does everything asked of it well.






Extras: :2stars:
full?lightbox=1&update=1556055328.jpg
The Making of MFKZ - Featurette
• Theatrical Trailers
• English and French audio tracks







Final Score: :2.5stars:

The one good thing that he film has going for it IS the strange dystopian visuals. The animation is spotless, and the bleak and grimy world that is portrayed on screen is almost hypnotic with it’s bleak beauty. However, that really can’t make up for a film that can’t seem to grasp what it wants to be, and instead just rides the crazy train all the way to the end. If I had to sum it up in one word again, it would be that MFKZ is just plain bizarre for the sake of being….well…..BIZARRE! If you’ve read any of my foreign animated film reviews before you know that I have a love for the strange and twisted world of off kilter animation, but this one I just couldn’t wrap my head around, and the enjoyability factor is pretty weak. The video and audio are solid, but the weird film and the lackluster extras on the disc leave me recommending most people just skip it.




Technical Specifications:

Starring: Orelsan Gringe, Redouanne Harjane, Feodor Atkine, Michael Chiklis, Vince Staples, The RZA, Danny Trejo
Directed by: Shojiro Nishimi, Guillaume Renard
Written by: Guillaume Renard, Baljeet Rai (English Version)
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 AVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1, French DTS-HD MA 5.1
Subtitles: English, English SDH, Spanish, French
Studio: Universal
Rated: R
Runtime: 95 Minutes
Blu-ray Release Date: March 26th, 2019






Recommendation: Skip It

 
Last edited:

tripplej

AV Addict
Joined
Jul 13, 2017
Messages
6,866
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
NAD T-777
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Oppo 103 Blu Ray Player
Front Speakers
7 Paradigm Reference series 8" in ceiling speakers
Subwoofers
2 Paradigm SE Subs
Other Speakers or Equipment
Nintendo Wii U Gaming Console
Video Display Device
Samsung UN75F8000 LED TV
Remote Control
Universal Remote MX-450
Streaming Subscriptions
Sony PS4 Gaming Console, Panamax MR-5100 Surge
Thanks for the review. I had high hopes for this one. Oh man..
 

Michael Scott

Moderator / Reviewer
Staff member
Thread Starter
Joined
Apr 4, 2017
Messages
5,258
Location
Arizona
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Yamaha TRS-7850 Atmos Receiver
Other Amp
Peavy IPR 3000 for subs
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Panasonic UB820 4K UHD Player
Front Speakers
Cheap Thrills Mains
Center Channel Speaker
Cheap Thrills Center
Surround Speakers
Volt 10 Surrounds
Surround Back Speakers
Volt 10 Rear Surrounds
Rear Height Speakers
Volt 6 Overheads
Subwoofers
2x Marty subs (full size with SI 18's)
Video Display Device
Sony 85 inch X950H FALD TV
I had some hopes for it too, but sadly it was a swing and a miss for myself
 

Valerius Walls

New Member
Joined
May 7, 2019
Messages
24
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Don't have any
Main Amp
Don't have any
Additional Amp
Don't have any
Other Amp
Don't have any
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
PS3
Front Speakers
Don't have any
Center Channel Speaker
Don't have any
Surround Speakers
Don't have any
Surround Back Speakers
Don't have any
Front Height Speakers
Don't have any
Rear Height Speakers
Don't have any
Subwoofers
Don't have any
Other Speakers or Equipment
Headphones
Video Display Device
Don't have any
Screen
Big Screen TV
Remote Control
Big Screen TV Remote
Streaming Subscriptions
Don't have any
Are there any trailers on this disc? I'm about to say there might not be any PG rated previews since this movie is an R. But are there any trailers on this disc?
 

Michael Scott

Moderator / Reviewer
Staff member
Thread Starter
Joined
Apr 4, 2017
Messages
5,258
Location
Arizona
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Yamaha TRS-7850 Atmos Receiver
Other Amp
Peavy IPR 3000 for subs
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Panasonic UB820 4K UHD Player
Front Speakers
Cheap Thrills Mains
Center Channel Speaker
Cheap Thrills Center
Surround Speakers
Volt 10 Surrounds
Surround Back Speakers
Volt 10 Rear Surrounds
Rear Height Speakers
Volt 6 Overheads
Subwoofers
2x Marty subs (full size with SI 18's)
Video Display Device
Sony 85 inch X950H FALD TV
Are there any trailers on this disc? I'm about to say there might not be any PG rated previews since this movie is an R. But are there any trailers on this disc?

Universal loads trailers from the net in front of all their discs, so it's literally dependent on what they're streaming at the time.
 

Valerius Walls

New Member
Joined
May 7, 2019
Messages
24
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Don't have any
Main Amp
Don't have any
Additional Amp
Don't have any
Other Amp
Don't have any
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
PS3
Front Speakers
Don't have any
Center Channel Speaker
Don't have any
Surround Speakers
Don't have any
Surround Back Speakers
Don't have any
Front Height Speakers
Don't have any
Rear Height Speakers
Don't have any
Subwoofers
Don't have any
Other Speakers or Equipment
Headphones
Video Display Device
Don't have any
Screen
Big Screen TV
Remote Control
Big Screen TV Remote
Streaming Subscriptions
Don't have any
Okay, so what trailers are there on the disc, I might expect some things, but I'm not sure. So what trailers are there on the disc.
 

Michael Scott

Moderator / Reviewer
Staff member
Thread Starter
Joined
Apr 4, 2017
Messages
5,258
Location
Arizona
More  
Preamp, Processor or Receiver
Yamaha TRS-7850 Atmos Receiver
Other Amp
Peavy IPR 3000 for subs
Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
Panasonic UB820 4K UHD Player
Front Speakers
Cheap Thrills Mains
Center Channel Speaker
Cheap Thrills Center
Surround Speakers
Volt 10 Surrounds
Surround Back Speakers
Volt 10 Rear Surrounds
Rear Height Speakers
Volt 6 Overheads
Subwoofers
2x Marty subs (full size with SI 18's)
Video Display Device
Sony 85 inch X950H FALD TV
Okay, so what trailers are there on the disc, I might expect some things, but I'm not sure. So what trailers are there on the disc.

just the theatrical trailers for MFKZ
 
Top Bottom