Thirty minutes of busting ghosts and having a good time doing it-nothing more was needed. I knew I could wake up every Saturday morning and have another adventure of the Ghostbusters awaiting me. Films were there to escape reality, not to remind you what awaits outside the movie theater. Arnold and his compatriot Sylvester Stallone destroyed all comers in cinemas because it was entertaining. The cynicism found in today’s films and TV wasn’t as apparent back in the day. From Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sylvester Stallone at their peak to The Real Ghostbusters on the small screen, the 1980s, for me, holds a lot of innocence within the pop culture zeitgeist. A lot of what made me the person I am trickles back down to the pop culture of this decade. Not only because Shout Factory did release the film as part of their Collector’s Edition series, through the subsidiary Scream Factory, but because I hadn’t seen the film in a handful of years. I sorted through eleven different discs before I saw Teen Wolf, and like that, I knew this would be the next movie for Feature Presentations. As I began to scour my physical media collection for the next film to check out, I forgot I had a pile of new discs that I had yet to add to my collection shelves. On my last edition of Feature Presentations, I made no promises that I would pull myself away from Arrow Video’s discs. With all that out of the way, today’s article will focus on Scream Factory’s Collector’s Edition release of Teen Wolf. The goal of this column is not to say whether a film is good or bad and worth picking up or not-I would like to highlight the discs that go the extra mile and provide film fans with enough tasty tidbits to satisfy even the hungriest of cinephiles. Welcome to my column dedicated to the appreciation of physical media supplements: Feature Presentations.
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