A special edition blu-ray of Slava
Tsukerman and Anne Carlisle's indie cult classic Liquid Sky
had been rumored on and off for pretty much as long as the format has
exited. As far back as 2007, when I worked at an indie video store
where the old DVD and VHS of Liquid Sky
were frequently-rented customer favorites (with a cash deposit or
valid credit card required to rent, since it was already out of print and outlandishly rare), the film was strongly rumored
for an upcoming Criterion Collection release, which was thought to be
just around the corner for several years. Whether these were just
baseless rumors or whether Criterion had trouble securing the rights
or the film elements I have no idea, but after a decade it was clear
that it wasn't happening, and I was starting to doubt whether this
film would ever get a blu-ray release at all, or if rights issues or
other complications meant that the old 4x3 tape-sourced DVD was all
we would ever get. Now Vinegar Syndrome has most unexpectedly come to
the rescue, with a truly spectacular special edition blu-ray. When I
say “unexpectedly,” I do not mean that as any kind of insult to
the company: they consistently put out excellent releases and
restorations, and have long been pulling ahead as one of the more
impressive niche labels out there. But historically they focus on
much more off-the-beaten-path cult fare which they often rescue from
pretty deep obscurity, and are consequently one of the most niche
labels of them all, so to see them release a legitimately iconic
classic of indie cinema which we expected from a company like
Criterion or Arrow instead represents a large stepping-up of their
game. This is the sort of release that announces “Criterion – we
are coming for you,” and to see VinSyn make such a bold move is
very exciting. The only question is, was this small boutique label
able to give Liquid Sky
the top-notch special edition treatment that it deserves? Let's take
an in-depth look at the disc to find out.
The
Film:
Liquid
Sky is
many things, and almost none of them are what most viewers would
expect. A dark, gritty, outlandishly entertaining slice of life from
the early-1980s New York City punk/new-wave club scene and its drug
culture. A philosophical musing on the fluid nature of gender and
sexuality, and the artificiality of gender performance (and, for that
matter, the performance of identity in general). A sometimes-painful
look at the feminist struggle for empowered and self-actualized
female sexuality in a world pervaded by patriarchal sexual violence
and double-standards. A high-concept sci-fi film which views all of
the above elements through the lens of alien invaders. It's a highly
unusual cocktail, rich with ideas and audacious in the uniqueness of
its style. Its aesthetic and its slice-of-life observation of
characters are an obvious influence on Party
Monster,
while its sci-fi narrative of sexuality was borrowed for a
first-season episode of Torchwood;
a combination very telling of the film's eclectic nature. Its
creators represent an equally eclectic combination of minds:
co-writer/director Slava Tsukerman and co-writer/producer Nina V.
Kerova are Russian documentarians who emigrated across the iron
curtain with visions of Andy Warhol in their minds to become
art-house filmmakers in New York, while co-writer/star Anne Carlisle
was a punk model turned acting and film student, who wanted to make a
cathartic and personal film project into which she could pour her
soul. With these different yet highly compatible sets of influences
and goals they collaborated to make a genuinely unique work of
cinema, and it is no surprise that Liquid
Sky
made such a splash in the indie film community when it was released
in 1982, or that it has been a beloved cult classic ever since.
In
slice-of-life fashion the film follows a loose crowd of models,
musicians, drug dealers, and addicts in New York's new wave night
club scene. At the center of this crowd is Margaret (Carlisle): an
androgynous, pansexual model trying to build her career while
navigating a toxic relationship with her abusive heroin-dealer
girlfriend Adrian (Paula E. Sheppard), and struggling to hold power
and control over her sexuality in world full of abusive and predatory
men who want to take that power from her. Into this world floats a
UFO containing formless aliens who kill people during orgasm and feed
on the endorphins in their brains, and suddenly Margaret's
existential crisis of sexuality becomes a lot more complicated –
and dangerous. But the aliens aren't really there to turn this into a
true sci-fi movie, so much as they are there to exacerbate the human
dramas and tensions already at work in this alternately beautiful and
cruel cultural landscape, and to turn Margaret and Adrian's rooftop
loft into a microcosm of the film's themes. These themes are
obviously very personal to Carlisle, who wrote much of the
character-related material (while Tsukerman wrote the script's sci-fi
side), and who brought much from her own life into the script. Many
of the film's most striking moments involve her character waxing
philosophical about gender fluidity, queer identity, the
artificiality of public personas, and the power dynamics of
sexuality, with the tension between feminism and patriarchal norms of
power therein. Often times the line begins to blur between the
scripted character of Margaret, and the real Anne Carlisle delivering
personal monologues, and this actor/character gray area is where the
script is most potent. Compounding the themes of the fluidity of
gender and the artificiality of its performance is the fact that
Carlisle also plays a second role, in extremely convincing drag, as a
male model who is an antagonist to Margaret.

Of course, it isn't a perfect film. Some of its juxtaposed plot
threads work significantly better than others, and some of the
character relationships don't really lead anywhere. In particular,
parts of its subplot about a German scientist investigating the
aliens fall a bit flat, and the subplot in general provides little
purpose outside of exposition. Also, the film does stumble a bit in
the last act, as it seems not entirely sure how to resolve its
ambitious cocktail of themes and ideas. But it is nonetheless a very
good film, and its combination of compelling themes and top-notch
style ultimately makes up for its weaker aspects. And honestly, being
a bit rough around the edges in places is rather keeping with the
film's punk aesthetic and DIY roots.
Between
Slava Tsukerman's excellent sense of visuals and uniquely eccentric
storytelling sensibilities, and Anne Carlisle's insightful,
semi-autobiographical writing and otherworldly charisma, these two
seemingly very different artists were a perfect match to create a
film as one-of-a-kind as this one. Liquid
Sky
has long been in a very peculiar situation as a cult film: the way
that it immediately resonated with adventurous indie audiences, and
its life throughout the 1980s and 90s as a cult staple on video, has
made it well entrenched in a certain (admittedly off-the-beaten-path)
vein of our pop-cultural consciousness as an iconic classic of its
time. But since it spent most of the last decade and a half out of
print and extremely rare, it's the sort of film which a lot of
people have heard of, but have never actually been able to see, or
else have only seen in passed-down, several-generations-from-original
bootlegs. Its reputation has certainly preceded it, but this is the
first time that people have been able to actually access non-bootleg
copies of Liquid
Sky
without paying a fortune in many years. I hadn't seen the film since
high school, so seeing it again on this blu-ray was like seeing it
for the first time. I am happy to report that its cult reputation has
not been overinflated: this movie is just as good (or at least, very
nearly so) as its reputation suggests. It is equal parts brilliant
style and though-provoking substance, with themes that resonate today
just as much as they did back then. Indeed, the themes about the
non-fixed nature of gender and sexuality, and the questions raised about rape
culture and patriarchal power dynamics are extremely relevant today.
Now that this film has been resurrected in HD for a new generation of
fans to check out and appreciate, I cannot recommend it highly
enough. It is an odd film, to be sure, and it definitely won't be for
everyone, but if you're on Tsukerman and Carlisle's unique
wavelength, you simply must check it out.
Score:
The Picture:
As
described in the review above, Liquid
Sky
is an extremely visual film, with an attention to detail which is
impressive for any movie, let alone a DIY indie of this kind. So what
a shame it was that, prior to this disc, it never got any sort of
visually high-quality release. Its circa-2000 special edition DVD,
though it had a decent amount of special features for that early in
the medium, was literally just a direct transfer of the film's 1983
Media Home Entertainment VHS master. That tape master was already on
the murky and too-dark side, and the DVD looked arguably even worse
because it added some noticeable digital artifacting on top of that.
Once that DVD went out of print, years of bootlegs just made the film
look worse and worse. Vinegar Syndrome's new 4K restoration is a
much-needed upgrade which marks the first time that Liquid
Sky
has ever been available in a 35mm-sourced digital presentation, and
the first time that the film has ever been released in its intended
aspect ratio outside of theaters.
Seeing it this way is a revelation: the movie looks like it never has
before, and the restoration is spectacular. The colors are
beautifully vivid, and while black levels are strong, the details in
the film's darkness are very clear – which is extremely important,
given that the film was shot very low-light. Details are visible in
this restoration which were obscured by the muddy darkness of the old
Media tape master, and the juxtaposition of black and bright neon
which forms the backbone of the film's aesthetic really pops. Despite
how low-light the film was shot, the picture is not excessively
grainy; indeed, this transfer makes it abundantly clear how well-shot
the movie was. But there is a healthy level of film grain present in
the picture, and there are no signs that any DNR was used - though I
wouldn't expect any DNR from a group of dedicated cinephiles like the
folks at Vinegar Syndrome. There are occasional blips of subtle
damage to the negative, and a couple sequences with some noticeable
vertical shuddering in the picture, but these are likely just
intrinsic to the negative, and are certainly nothing serious. Aside
from those small flaws, this is one beautiful restoration.
One
interesting thing that this remaster reveals is that the old 4x3
Media master was in fact open-matte, and not pan-and-scan, so there
will certainly be times when those who know the film well from
previous releases will find the framing tighter on this disc.
However, the 1.85:1 aspect ratio of this remaster is the film's
theatrical ratio as intended by Slava Tsukerman and cinematographer
Yuri Neyman, so while I certainly noticed some set-design details
that were hidden by the widescreen masking (especially in the opening
sequence consisting of dolly shots across Margaret and Adrian's
apartment), the film appears better-shot in general, with the shot
compositions looking much more deliberate and effective.
VinSyn
did a spectacular job with this remaster: the film looks absolutely
beautiful, and more well-shot and stylish than ever. Tsukerman
introduces the film on the disc, and speaks about how he has always
lamented the poor quality of past releases, and is thrilled that the
film can finally be seen the way it was meant to be for the first
time since theaters. I wholeheartedly agree, and I'm sure that anyone
who watches this disc as an established fan of the film will too:
this truly is Liquid
Sky
as you've never seen it before.
Score:
The Audio:
While
the remaster may present Liquid
Sky
as we've never seen it before, the audio does not feature nearly as
dramatic a change – though that doesn't reflect at all poorly on
VinSyn's excellent restoration. They simply run up against the
limitations of the source elements: the film was mixed and released
in mono, and in mono it stays. They restored the audio track
perfectly, as far as I can tell: it sounds totally free of any flaws,
the dialogue is extremely clear, and the memorable synthesizer score
sounds great. It definitely is a noticeable step up above the
previous Media master. I can't imagine the film sounding any better,
and since it was mixed for mono I am perfectly OK with them not
attempting anything like a fake surround track; it sounds like it is
supposed to sound, in the best quality possible, but the intrinsic
nature of that is never going to give your stereo too much of a
workout.
Score:
The Extras:

In addition to this doc, Vinegar Syndrome produced new interviews
with Tsukerman and Carlisle, in which the two go very in-depth about
their creative processes on the film, and how they both came to the
project. Both interviews are fascinating; Carlisle's because it
becomes very clear how much of Margaret was really her, and how
soul-baring and cathartic a project it was, and Tsukerman's because
he couldn't be more different from the characters in the film, and
the journey which brought him to this seemingly-unlikely project is
really interesting. Carlisle and Tsukerman are also present on a new
audio commentary, which likewise contains some very in-depth stories
about the film's production. At its best it is extremely interesting
and enlightening, but I must say that it is a bit of an uneven track,
as there are long stretches of silence when the two either get caught
up watching the film or can't think of what to say. Also, while
Tsukerman is more talkative, Carlisle is extremely quiet on the
track, and on a couple occasions goes almost ten minutes without
saying anything much. The disc also features a 2017 Q&A with the
filmmaker and actor duo from a screening of the film, which is again
very interesting, although by this point some of the information
overlaps significantly with the interviews, commentary, and
documentary. Between these various new extras, though, the
behind-the-scenes story of the film is extremely well-documented, and
fans will love all the insights available. Rounding out the extras
are an isolated music track, which is definitely a welcome thing
given how cool and unique the film's score is, and the small handful
of previous extras from the 2000 special edition DVD, which have all
been ported over. These consist of a ten-minute alternate opening
sequence for the film (which is cool to see, but I think he made the
right choice in changing the opening structure for the final cut),
and some vintage behind-the-scenes footage of the film's rehearsal
process, presented from Tsukerman's personal betamax tapes. Overall,
I can't imagine what else Vinegar Syndrome could have possibly
included. This is one spectacularly stacked special edition.
Score:
While it has been a very difficult film to see for a very long time,
revisiting Liquid Sky for this new blu-ray reveals that it
genuinely deserves its iconic cult reputation. While its decidedly
odd sensibilities won't be for everyone, it is a very good film,
driven by equal parts eye-grabbing style and high-concept substance,
both sides of which have held up beautifully. Now that Vinegar
Syndrome has rescued it from the netherworld of the out of print, and
from decades of poor-quality releases, those with an interest in
indie and cult cinema should definitely check this out. VinSyn's
release just debuted as a Black Friday-exclusive limited edition of
3,000, which promptly sold out before that holiday shopping weekend
was through, but fear not: only that particular packaging variant was
limited, and the same blu-ray in standard packaging will be getting a
non-limited wide release at the beginning of 2018. If you missed out
on the limited edition, be sure to check it out then.
Overall Score:
- Christopher S. Jordan
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