Primal Scream (1987) is a dystopian sci-fi thriller that emerges from the analog depths of the VHS era with a potent mix of low-budget grit and ambitious world-building. Set in the then-near-future of 1993, the film stars Kenneth McGregor as Corby McHale, an embattled ex-cop who inadvertently uncovers a corporate conspiracy centered on a revolutionary energy source known as HELLFIRE. Marketed as the salvation for a planet on the brink of energy collapse, HELLFIRE proves to be anything but benign–harmless in its stable form, but catastrophically volatile in its raw state. As McHale digs deeper, he finds himself caught between underground activists, a ruthless private corporation, and a secret powerful enough to destabilize civilization.

The film combines elements of eco-thriller, cyberpunk noir, and classic detective narrative, deploying a rough-hewn aesthetic that mirrors its themes of decay and techno-paranoia. Director William J. Murray exploits urban locations in Philadelphia and Atlantic City to give the film a distinctively industrial and claustrophobic atmosphere, eschewing the clean futurism of big-budget contemporaries in favor of a more tactile, analog vision of the future. This tone is amplified by a cast that includes Mickey Shaughnessy in his final screen role, bringing gravitas to a film that thrives on its outsider sensibilities.

Restored from original 35mm film elements and presented here with a 2K scan, this Blu-ray edition marks the first time Primal Scream has been available in high definition. It features a comprehensive suite of bonus materials, including a candid making-of documentary, crew commentary, and the rare 1981 promo reel for the original Hellfire concept. More than just a nostalgia piece, Primal Scream is a compelling study in scrappy science fiction filmmaking–an essential addition for aficionados of underground genre cinema and a case study in resourceful, vision-driven storytelling under constraint.