
 
Color, 1984, 78 mins. 54 secs. / 83 mins. 4 secs.
Directed by David Blyth
Starring Michael Hurst, Margaret Umbers, William Upjohn, Norelle Scott, Gary Day, David Letch, Bruno Lawrence
Severin Films (Blu-ray & DVD) (US R0 HD/NTSC), Umbrella (Blu-ray & DVD) (Australia R0 HD/PAL) / WS (1.85:1) (16:9)
first gore film unleashed from New Zealand before the  
breakthrough of Peter Jackson, Death Warmed Up is one of those titles that seemed to pop up on the shelves of every single independent video store in the 1980s thanks to its striking Vestron Video artwork. Cut to some extent almost everywhere outside of New Zealand (with little rhyme or reason for some of the deletions), it has since proven to be a tough one to bring back due to the lack of complete film elements and various restoration issues. However, after a seemingly endless wait, the film has made it back to the marketplace about as well as possible given the circumstances, restoring a key piece of the Down Under horror movie puzzle. 
of the 
doctor's ongoing experiments in chemically altered slavery that could cost the friends their lives. 
music getting the brunt of the channel separation 
here. Also included on the Blu-ray only is the full-length New Zealand cut which runs four minutes longer, while a separate deleted and extended scene reel (15m56s) places them in context for a more in-depth look with optional commentary pointing out the exact bits (sometimes single random shots or lines of dialogue) that got slashed along the way. An audio commentary for the main feature with director David Blyth and writer Michael Heath has some good tidbits about the production about the shooting locations (including the story behind that island), the shooting chronology (with some actors coming a bit late into the shoot), and the attempts to take the time to hang out with and develop the characters more than what they consider (rather questionably) to be typical of the genre. They do tend to fall back into lengthy recitations about the on-screen as well though, so be prepared for that. A 2009 interview with Blyth and Heath (40m1s) covers some of the same material but also provides more background in their friendship and the film's origins as a cryogenics horror project. An interview with actor David Letch (26m31s), who plays "the super nasty Spider" in this "schlock horror," sheds some light on how he was recruited to do this while he was busy with theater work and and ended up having to choose between this and another film, sacrificing a role as Mozart along the way. Finally the disc rounds out with the theatrical trailer, synthy video trailers ("prohibited in Queensland!"), a TV spot, and a huge 107-image gallery of posters, video art, stills, and other odds and ends. SEVERIN FILMS (Export Cut)
SEVERIN FILMS (New Zealand Cut)
Reviewed on May 25, 2019.