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Showing posts with label cult films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cult films. Show all posts

Monday, February 27, 2017

DRIVE-IN MASSACRE -- Blu-ray Review by Porfle



When a movie is described as "so bad, it's good", often the "it's good" part is solely up to the charity and goodwill of the viewer.  If you simply don't like bad movies at all, chances are DRIVE-IN MASSACRE (1976) won't appeal to you at all.  But if you qualify as a bonafide junk-film junkie, then this no-budget little effort will likely tickle your fancy in a big way even though, at times, it really does tend to get just a tad dull.

What it mostly does for me is to let me indulge in some good old-fashioned nostalgia and wallow in hazy, golden memories of things like drive-in theaters (natch), renting obscure VHS horrors from the local hole-in-the-wall video store (which is how most people probably first caught this one), and reliving those crazy wonderful early days of slasher flicks before the genre wore itself out through sheer repetition.

Like BLACK CHRISTMAS and THE TOWN THAT DREADED SUNDOWN (and before HALLOWEEN and FRIDAY THE 13TH), DRIVE-IN MASSACRE was right there on the ground floor of the slasher era, when poor but plucky filmmakers were still making up the rules and flying by the seat of their pants.


Here, of course, most of the film's shortcomings--limited funds, rushed schedule, less than stellar acting and dialogue, crude gore effects--are, in hindsight, what makes it so endearingly fun to watch. 

And speaking of gore, there's considerably less here than in the average H.G. Lewis movie, but what there is scores major fun points.  My favorite is the guy who leans out his car window to snag a speaker and gets his head cleanly lopped off by a samurai sword. 

Most of the kills happen to people sitting in their cars watching the drive-in movie, including a double skewering (later reprised in FRIDAY THE 13TH) and a sword through the throat which elicits a wonderfully expressive reaction from the actress (that's her on the poster).


While semi-competent police detectives Leary (co-scripter John F. Goff as "Jake Barnes") and Koch (Bruce Kimball as "Michael Alden") bumble their way through the murder investigation in seriocomic style, suspects include foul-tempered drive in manager Austin (Robert E. Pearson as "Newton Naushaus") and feeble-minded janitor Germy (Douglas Gudbye)--both of whom happen to have carnival experience working with knives and swords! 

(Note: all the cast aliases have something to do with SAG rules.)

There's also a perv named Orville (Norman Sheridan as "Norman Sherlock") who likes to creep around from car to car, peering in at the more amorous couples and--err--"gratifying" himself.  While we're busy keeping up with all the potential suspects and red herrings, much screen time is devoted to those couples yakking away (some of the dialogue is amusing) while the guy tries to score. 

Not all the action is confined to the drive in, however.  In addition to scenes of the two cops grilling people at the station or running down (literally) suspect Orville who flees an interview at his house, there's a lengthy detour in which another likely candidate gets cornered in a warehouse while holding a young girl hostage.


This nutty-looking psycho is none other than familiar character actor "Buck" Flowers (ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK, THE FOG), who, it turns out, co-wrote the screeplay along with Goff and director Stu Segall (as "Godfrey Daniels"). 

Buck's hostage here is his own daughter Verkina Flowers, and the cat-and-mouse sequence that follows her escape, while nominally entertaining, seems most likely intended to pad out the running time. 

This is also true of a long interlude in which former carnival geek Germy wanders through a brilliantly-lit carnival at night for several minutes while dialogue from earlier in the film wafts through his mind.


While the scene serves little purpose, it's beautifully photographed (looking particularly good in Blu-ray) and offers yet more nostalgia value, this time for the days when a carnival was just about the most fun place I could imagine being at.  Besides a drive-in, of course.

The Blu-ray from Severin Films (which boasts a cool reversible cover) is widescreen with 2.0 English audio and optional English subtitles. Severin comes through again with some cool extras which include an informative director's commentary, a trailer, and recent interviews with star/co-writer John Goff, actor Norm Sheridan, and director Segall. Despite some occasional imperfections (or, in my case, because of them), the picture is a joy to behold.

Many people, of course, will have no idea why this cheap little gore flick would appeal to anyone at all.  But if you're one of those to whom the very sight of the cover of DRIVE-IN MASSACRE elicits a giddy tingle of excitement, no explanation is necessary.  It's just plain fun, period.


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Blu-ray
DVD

Release date: March 14, 2017


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Saturday, March 27, 2010

THE FERNANDO ARRABAL COLLECTION 2 -- DVD review by porfle



Spanish director Fernando Arrabal has what some would call a "skewed" outlook on life, a fact that's quite obvious to anyone who's encountered any of his paintings or films. While I've not seen his first three films, VIVA LA MUERTE, I WILL WALK LIKE A CRAZY HORSE, and THE TREE OF GUERNICA, trailers and various clips hint that his earlier output is the most aggressively bizarre. With THE FERNANDO ARRABAL COLLECTION 2, Cult Epics has assembled the remainder of the director's works--which run the gamut from the almost-but-not-quite conventional to the unremittingly strange--in a set that his fans will no doubt want to add to the first one.


Arrabal's CAR CEMETERY, aka Le cimetière des voitures (1983), is a punk-dystopian retelling of the Christ story, replete with nudity, sado-masochism, graphic depictions of a laundry list of other perversions, bizarre surrealistic imagery, and an irreverent (though somehow non-blasphemous) sense of humor. But despite all this, Arrabal's oddly ineffectual film adaptation of his own play comes off as a low-budget cross between JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR and GODSPELL as conceived by Ken Russell.

In a post-nuclear society where fascist police search the ruins for rebellious young punks who still believe in peace and love and all that stuff, a leather-clad rock 'n' roll messiah named Emanou (Alain Bashung, who died in March '09) gathers his followers in an auto graveyard to dispense divine wisdom and perform miracles. His true believers are a motley bunch given to bacchanalian excess while availing themselves of the carnal wares of fat pimp Milos as he presides over his bustling auto-brothel.

Milos' star attraction is the beautiful Dila (Juliet Berto), who still turns tricks although her heart and soul belong to Emanou. In one of the film's loveliest images, Dila performs as a mermaid in Milos' prized pre-apocalypse water tank along with some dolphins. She also allows herself to be dressed as a human wedding cake and wheeled around to attract potential customers. Dila receives holy messages from a tiny guitar-plucking angel she keeps in a glass jar (I'm not sure, but it looks like Arrabal doing a cameo), although it's not clear how she happens to possess such a thing.

An apparent disciple shortage limits us to two rather sorry specimens, the derby-domed Topé (Boris Bergman), resident Judas equivalent, and Fodère (Dominique Maurin), who seems just as faithless and doubting as his associate. We know Fodère is meant to remind us of Peter, since in an early scene he idly muses something about how he thinks that soon, he may deny Emanou three times before the cock crows. This statement just comes out of nowhere and the character does nothing else to remind us of anybody in particular, much less an ardent disciple.

Much time is spent depicting the lecherous indulgences of characters both beautiful and grotesque, although I don't recall any of this sort of thing still being all that shocking in 1983. From time to time Emanou will amaze everyone by performing a resurrection, healing the afflicted, or re-enacting various other passages from the New Testament as his onlookers "ooh" and "aah" and groove on how cool he is. In one scene, he blandly performs highlights from the Sermon on the Mount while standing on a wrecked car, and in another, he feeds the hungry mulitude not with two loaves and two fishes, but with two Big Macs. (He neglects to ask anyone if they'd like fries with that, however.)

As all this is going on, two members of what pass as the police are roaming the scorched countryside in a bulldozer searching for the right car cemetery where the rebellious punks and their anarchist messiah are hiding out. A tall, matronly woman and a wiry bulldog of a man, the two comical cops supply most of the film's humor as she incessantly urges him to work out to utter exhaustion in order to beat some unknown record, while he plies her non-stop with ardent sexual pleas. "My giant is crying," he implores her. "Smell my candelabra, Lasca."

An amusing flashback shows us Emanou's birth in a garage, where he's visited by three wise beauty pageant contestants (Miss Myrrh, Miss Oro, and another whose banner I couldn't read though I assume she's Miss Frankincense or something) bearing gifts. There's the obligatory Last Supper, not all that different from Leonardo da Vinci's depiction save for the guy with the saxophone and the fact that Dila has her head in Emanou's lap.

And, of course, after Topé betrays him to the cops with a (French) kiss, there's the crucifixion, which consists of Emanou being chained to a wrecked motorcycle and hoisted aloft. We then skip the resurrection (an unfortunate omission reflecting JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR's secular tone, which this film, interestingly, has largely avoided) and go straight to the ascension, depicted by a badly-animated cartoon dove, and the fadeout, which is surprisingly anti-climactic.

The Cult Epics DVD is in 1.66:1 anamorphic widescreen with Dolby Digital French-language soundtrack and English subtitles. Extras consist of trailers for the Arrabal films contained in the first collection (THE TREE OF GUERNICA, VIVA LA MUERTE, and I WILL WALK LIKE A CRAZY HORSE). The film lacks the sort of driving rock music soundtrack I expected, although the song Emanou performs during his final concert does have a catchy bass line.

Despite the extremely garish trappings, the Biblical events are recounted in a relatively straightforward manner, so rather than being satirical I think Arrabal is more interested in drawing a parallel between Christ's persecution and that of his own father, who was imprisoned for political reasons at the start of the Spanish Civil War (a subject which dominates his earlier work as well). Beyond that, CAR CEMETERY is mainly an exercise in absurdity and excess that didn't engage me on an emotional level. Most of its impact as a story is diluted by the main character, Emanou, since he's pretty much a cold fish without any kind of charisma whatsoever. Even during the Passion, he lacks passion.


I think I remember seeing a VHS copy of Arrabal's THE EMPEROR OF PERU, aka L'odyssée de la Pacific (1982), in a budget bin somewhere once, with a different name and a really crappy-looking cover, and thinking that it was just about the last thing in the world I'd even think of watching. Now I'm glad I got a chance to see it, but I really wish I'd seen it when I was a kid.

This low-budget French-Canadian production starts out looking like one of those obscure foreign children's movies that your local station might've pawned off on you on Saturday afternoon along with PIPPI LONGSTOCKING or SUPERBUG. Certain elements, however, raise this odd effort above the norm as it matter-of-factly explores some rather serious territory while often veering into a pleasingly headscratching surrealism.

Toby and his older sister Liz are a couple of playful, somewhat spoiled kids living with their rich uncle and aunt, who also take on a Cambodian refugee named Hoang for the summer as he awaits placement in foster care. The three children become fast friends and have many biking adventures in the woods, where they meet a crippled old former railroad engineer named Tubo (Mickey Rooney) living in a vine-covered freight car converted into a hermit's shack.

Toby discovers a derelict locomotive engine near an abandoned roundhouse, and with Tubo's help the children restore it to working order. Their plan is to travel to Cambodia and find Hoang's mother, who had to give him up during their flight from oppression, so that he can marry her. This is complicated when the mayor shows up and announces that the city council has voted to place Tubo into a rest home for his own good. As the police descend on his secluded shack with lights flashing, the children scramble to prepare the locomotive for their escape.

Much of the film's running time is devoted to depicting Toby's wild flights of fantasy in which sees himself as a champion drag racer, a dashing astronaut, a celebrated orchestra conductor, and a courageous fire chief braving the raging flames to rescue his beloved duck, Federico, from a burning building. The segments are narrated by a breathless play-by-play commentator ("Braver than Popeye! Braver than Joan of Arc!" he exclaims) and also feature a deadpan Hoang as trenchcoated ace reporter Bumphrey Gokart. This is the usual kid-fantasy stuff done in a light and entertaining style and is quite amusing.

Taking the film beyond such fluff, however, are Hoang's startlingly serious flashbacks of life in Cambodia, one of which shows sadistic soldiers invading his village and holding a child upside-down by his feet, threatening to shoot him. We also learn that his father has been taken away to a concentration camp, and witness Hoang's traumatic separation from his mother during their escape from Cambodia. She makes him promise that he won't cry, which explains why Hoang always seems so solemn and stoic--he's still trying to keep his promise.

In a quietly intimate conversation late at night in Hoang's bedroom, he reveals to Liz his intent to find his mother and marry her. Liz asks, "And when you marry your mommy, will you know how to kiss her? Like in the TV ads?" In an accompanying flashback, his mother's comforting face is replaced by that of Liz herself. This is the kind of thought-provoking stuff Uncle Walt probably wouldn't have felt inclined to include in his version of the story.


As in those old Swedish PIPPI LONGSTOCKING movies (which I love), adults are either sympathetic allies who are themselves childlike, or absurdly officious nincompoops. Mickey Rooney's "Tubo" is the former, introducing himself as the Emperor of Peru when they first meet and offering the kids a cigar. When told that cigars give you cancer, he retorts, "That's not true! Doctors with all their hogwash. I'll tell you what gives you cancer--soap and water! Washing all the time! That gives you cancer, only faster." Toby responds brightly, "I'll have a cigar!"

Clearly, this isn't one of those films intent on pounding sundry lessons into young viewers' heads. The kids are shown having outrageous adventures free of adult supervision and doing pretty much whatever they want, existing in their own world which operates by their own rules. They even discover an old coal mine thanks to some indigent circus performers they encounter and start mining coal for the locomotive's steam engine, which the severely screw-loosed Tubo thinks is simply grand.

Rooney, one of the greatest actors who ever lived, has a ball in his role, clearly ad-libbing much of his dialogue and letting his own vast stores of natural nuttiness fully round out the character. In Tubo's own fevered fantasies, he's either a bewigged emperor with an army of midgets or, fittingly enough, Napoleon, and in one segment reminiscent of the old TV faith-healer shows we get to see him rising joyously from his wheelchair thanks to Toby, the world's greatest doctor. "Marry your mother?" Tubo bellows in response to Hoang's plan. "Why, if more of my subjects had only married their mother, we'd have had less divorces!"

This movie has been released on VHS with such titles as ODYSSEY OF THE PACIFIC and TREASURE TRAIN. The only other DVD version I could find online was called LITTLE CHAMP and was paired with Shirley Temple's THE LITTLE PRINCESS as a two-fer. The DVD from Cult Epics is in 1.66:1 anamorphic widescreen with both English and French soundtracks and English subtitles. There are no extras. Edith Butler's musical score contains both the usual jaunty kid-movie music and some nice New-Agey stuff.

THE EMPEROR OF PERU falls a tad short of strict political correctness, and may actually be a little weird, but I think sometimes that's good for kids. It causes them to form their own thoughts instead of simply absorbing someone else's. And the strangely open-ended fadeout--which reminded me, believe it or not, of the end of RUNAWAY TRAIN--will probably leave you wondering what the heck you just watched, no matter how old you are.


Disc three in the set contains a trio of shorter films, each about an hour long. 1992's ADIEU, BABYLONE! is shot on video and tells the story of a strange, radically non-conformist young woman (Lelia Fischer) who roams the streets of New York carrying a velveteen rabbit and a giant pencil. She begins to murder people whom she decides don't deserve to live, bewitching them and applying garish makeup to their faces before ceremoniously gutting them like carp and scampering away. "All that flows in your veins is the blood of the most insipid turnips!" she tells one of her potential victims. Since she resembles a demented Elaine from "Seinfeld", these images are doubly strange. "I walk, a herring beneath my dress; I am nauseous," she writes in her diary. "What a life--I wish I were shipwrecked."

At one point, she recalls her childhood with a Cambodian refugee named Hoang, and we see a scene of them together which is taken from THE EMPEROR OF PERU. Is this Liz grown up? Weird. Arrabal's bizarre stream-of-consciousness narrative is an endless barrage of surreal verbage matched by the dazzling montage of images he's photographed and strung together, accompanied by some quacky, hilariously chipper little songs.

Next comes JORGE LUIS BORGES: UNA VIDE DE POESIA (Borges, a Life in Poetry, 1998), in which video of the blind, elderly Brazilian writer's final address before an audience is interspersed with Arrabal's usual surreal images and music. It's slow going, but Borges is such an interesting character that listening to his philosophies on art and life is a rewarding experience.

The final film, ARRABAL, PANIK CINEASTE (2007), features the director himself talking about his films and how his life experiences have influenced his art, and recounting the formation of the Panic Movement with like-minded iconoclasts Roland Topor and Alejandro Jodorowsky. Also appearing are actress Nuria Espert, who played his mother in the autobiographical VIVA LA MUERTE, Alain Bashung of CAR CEMETERY, and Alejandro Jodorowsky. The film, while very informative to anyone interested in Arrabal, is deadly dull. But after seeing clips from his earlier efforts, I have to concur with Henri Chapier when he asserts: "Many psychoanalysts have taken an interest in Arrabal's work."


THE FERNANDO ARRABAL COLLECTION 2 comes in three separate keepcases housed in a heavy cardboard box which, along with disc 3, is illustrated with Arrabal's own intriguingly odd artwork. A grab-bag of mostly worthwhile efforts, it should provide fun viewing for those seeking the rare and unusual.

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Monday, October 26, 2009

ATTRACTION -- DVD review by porfle


attraction aka nerosubianco aka black on white (1969) is a story told in images and sounds about a woman wandering through her life unsatisfied, not knowing what she wants, she seems to be experiencing a sexual awakening, a growing awareness that's beginning to dawn on her as she observes the changing world around her, a new way of thinking and behaving that she's drawn to but afraid to embrace

stream of consciousness images in the park, on a city street, her mental musings merging with ambient voices and snippets of radio ads that are mostly sexual in nature, ads about sex aids and orgasms

freestyle editing of a cascade of images, a constant wave of visual impressions

a musical group seems to appear wherever she goes and sings about what she's seeing and feeling as she drifts through one montage of images and sounds after another

a handsome, mysterious young black man begins to fascinate her and she fantasizes about him, we see snippets of her fantasies, as he follows her, his civilized fascade, the wild man she imagines him to be chasing her naked through the forest

naked people boldly romp in public, and she imagines herself naked, shedding inhibitions

she ducks into a beauty salon and imagines the customers as cows, and her emotionless lover calling a doctor to treat her nonresponsiveness, and the doctor becomes the black man

she relaxes on a ferry and observes the lives of people in peephole-vision through their windows, surreal images that seem to be only in her mind, she smiles

she recalls watching television with her husband and he becomes so unresponsive as to grow as stiff and malleable as a doll

the boat ride becomes a heady experience as she drifts through fantasies of mechanical lovemaking with her lover becoming indistinguishable with repetitive fitness exercises while a woman's voice speaks of whether or not it's a sin to have orgasms while doing chin-ups, she pictures herself naked in a steamy spa that's like the misty recesses of her subconscious

she runs outside into the rain and the black man is there with an umbrella, she sees her lover at the door and shoots him with a toy gun, her lips and the black man's lips almost touch over the lover's body

she goes to a seaside amusement park and takes a ride through the love tunnel, but instead of fanciful things she sees real people with painted faces behaving impulsively, and the black man keeps appearing over and over, all very symbolic innit

her lover appears as a glowering priest and sternly announces that all prohibited scenes of nudity and lovemaking will now be replaced by acceptable scenes of violence and war, racial injustice and horror, and sure enough we're bombarded by a visual assault of shocking images that are like a splash of cold water in the face

she finds herself at an anti-war rally and the black man is there too, at the dawning of her political awareness--"now you see the people in another light, and it plays upon your brain" the singer sings

a wonderfully comic moment at a photo booth devolves into a clockwork orange-like nightmare, the woman begins to be overcome by her irrational fears as she is overwhelmed by the ugliness of the world around her

finally she returns to the park where it all started--will she take the next step? bite the apple? does she really even want to?

suddenly it occurs to me that i've pretty much described the entire movie scene by scene, suffice it to say that attraction is about a repressed and unfulfilled woman trying to find herself during a weird day filled with new experiences and sensations

attraction (originally released in the usa as a heavily-edited softcore sex flick retitled "the artful penetration of barbara") smashes 60s taboos all over the place and remains a fascinating and wildly experimental film experience from start to finish, with camerawork and editing and a sensibility not unlike that of the monkees' "head" except there's an actual story and it definitely isn't a comedy or as clumsily pretentious as this review

i like the actress (anita sanders) who plays the woman because she's beautiful and serenely expressive, while terry carter (the black man), needless to say has a million likability points already from being in stuff like "mccloud" with dennis weaver and the original "battlestar galactica"

each phase of the film is like a free-form late 60s acid-rock music video by freedom, a group consisting of the remnants of procol harum, and these guys are awesome

i want the soundtrack to this movie until i realize that the dvd itself is pretty much the soundtrack to this movie

i notice that this "cult epics" dvd release is an italy/uk co-production in 1.85:1 widescreen with dolby digital 2.0 sound, taken from film promoter radley metzger's rare 16mm print, and the dvd also features a lobby card gallery and trailers

i feel that attraction is, as they say "a trip", a cinematic carnival ride, an extended peek into a woman's psyche as she in turn observes us, a vivid waking dream by a wildly imaginative filmmaker (tinto brass), and i wouldn't be surprised if roger waters has seen it on acid at some point in his life and it blew his mind.

buy it at amazon.com
buy it at hk flix
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Thursday, August 7, 2008

The Creeping Terror Screencaps from BCI's Drive-In Cult Classics Vol. 2

Whoever thought The Creeping Terror would look this nice. Nice Job BCI!










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Thursday, June 26, 2008

Don May Jr. announces Synapse's first two Blu-Ray Titles!

http://www.avmaniacs.com/forums/showthread.php?p=593564#post593564

In response to a question at AVmaniacs forum Don May Jr., President of Synapse films discussed his companies Blu-Ray Plans.

Well, we have been quietly working on a few BLU titles already... we just didn't blast the public with the info using press releases for titles that have no release dates yet, because, well, we don't know when they'll be ready at this time.

I actually DO have a nice Blu-Ray of our MANIAC COP at home right now, sans menus, though... a beauty of a VC-1 encode with uncompressed PCM 5.1! You'll all get to experience it probably close to the beginning of 2009.

We're working on MANIAC COP, plus THE IMAGE (with a SMOKIN' brand-new HD transfer... we were even able to get rid of the green scratch during the cafe scene) as our first two BD titles.

More to come, obviously, if we actually succeed in making some money with those two. Probably STREET TRASH is the next candidate.

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Friday, October 12, 2007

Midnight Movies: From the Margin to the Mainstream

Get Midnite Movies at Amazon.com and help support HK and CULT FILM NEWS.

MIDNIGHT MOVIES:

FROM THE MARGIN TO THE MAINSTREAM

Pushing the Boundaries November 13th on DVD


BURBANK, CA – In 1970, a Mexican Western opened at the Elgin Theater in New York City. Due to its “uniqueness,” theater management decided that the film would only be shown at midnight. The film was Alejandro Jodorowsky’s surrealist classic El Topo, and what started as a cautious experiment in alternative cinema soon became a cultural phenomenon. Relive the glory years when movies offended sensibilities and challenged audiences!


On Tuesday, November 13th, Starz Home Entertainment releases the Starz Originals documentary Midnight Movies: From the Margin to the Mainstream on DVD. Exploring the anything-goes era of 1970s cult films and their continuing influence on pop culture and modern society, Midnight Movies: From the Margin to the Mainstream promises an unforgettable trip down a Memory Lane strewn with flesh-eating ghouls, transvestite extraterrestrials, reggae masters, alienated stepfathers with big hair and probably the most famous “eating” scene in motion picture history! SRP is a palatable $19.97 and pre-book is October 11th

.

Based on the book by noted film scholar and documentary filmmaker Stuart Samuels, Midnight Movies: From the Margin to the Mainstream focuses on the six low-budget films released between 1970 and 1977 that not only defined the midnight movie phenomenon, but ultimately transformed the way we watch and make movies: Jodorowsky’s El Topo, George Romero’s landmark horror film Night of the Living Dead, John Waters’ ode to bad taste Pink Flamingos, Perry Henzell’s outlaw reggae classic The Harder They Come, David Lynch’s disturbing Eraserhead and, perhaps the film that truly defined the genre and redefined audience participation, The Rocky Horror Picture Show.


Featuring startling clips (including the infamous ending shot of Pink Flamingos), rare archival footage and revealing reminiscences with the films’ directors, distributors, exhibitors and supporters, including John Waters, David Lynch, Roger Ebert, George Romero, Richard O’Brien, Alejandro Jodorowsky, Perry Henzell, and many more, Midnight Movies: From the Margin to the Mainstream details the surprising stories behind the movies that defied mainstream America – by reinventing cinematic sensibilities. In this cinematic netherworld, nothing is sacred – and everything is shocking!


Midnight Movies: From the Margin to the Mainstream premiered in August 2005 on the Encore premium cable channel to immediate critical acclaim. The Hollywood Reporter called the film “an affectionate glimpse into those countercultural times,” while The Guardian proclaimed “this is a documentary that makes you regret the loss of the midnight movie culture.” Matt Roush from TV Guide declared it “entertaining,” while Giant Magazine said “this documentary explains how without these iconic, low-budget flicks we wouldn’t have ‘ South Park ,’ Kill Bill or even Jaws.”


MIDNIGHT MOVIES: FROM THE MARGIN TO THE MAINSTREAM

Street Date: November 13, 2007

Catalog #: P3004

UPC : 0 1313 83004-8 5

Run Time: 86 Minutes

Rating: Not Rated

SRP : $19.97


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Sunday, July 22, 2007

Ebola Syndrome DVD Review

Screencaps will follow later on.

Video: Discotek has created a new HD-based master for the restoration of this wonderful film. Herman Yau along with his DP Puccini (yep that’s his name) intentionally filled the film with bright colors and it really shows on the screen. There are no transfer problems present and the picture is nearly mint (there is some very minor print damage at a couple of points during the film). Still this is quite minor and limited. This disc looks better than the newer Universe disc and the old Dutch disc.

Audio: The Cantonese Mono track sounds fine and is accompanied by TWO subtitle tracks. One is a newly re-mastered and re-translated version that is leaps and bounds of the older versions. Still the older one is retained as a sort-of extra feature listed on the cover as the “craptacularly funny original subtitles”. Great job on the part of Discotek!

Extras: This is one of the best DVDs I have ever seen for a cult Hong Kong film. First off is the legendary deleted footage from the film. Basically three to four minutes of violence, rape, forced sodomy, gore, and human flesh grinding. No plot extensions or anything, which I’m sure no one will mind. I think Herman Yau himself decided not to restore this to the main film (he doesn’t say it directly, but he hints that he’s happy with the current version of the film in the interviews). As indicated there is about a 15-20 minute with Herman Yau and Anthony Wong (who occasional says something, you’ll see when you watch it). The interview is in English. Great interview, and that’s not just because they used one of my questions. Selby from Discotek kindly asked for suggestions at asiandvdguide.com’s forums for questions to ask Herman and Anthony and it's nice to see he used some of the fan's suggestions. Also find out the mysterious role of Wong Jing in the film lol. Rounding out this great disc is a subtitled commentary with both Anthony Wong and Herman Yau. Discotek smartly included names next to the subtitles of who is speaking (granted once you get to know Anthony Wong’s voice it's pretty easy). Really informative track featuring a great line by Anthony Wong asking “why do Europeans like this movie?”

Overall: Buy this disc! Really if you’re a fan what are you waiting for? If you have never seen this wonderful feel-good movie than this is the perfectly time to curl up with a loved one and enjoy the magic of The Ebola Syndrome. Great job by Discotek.


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Sunday, July 8, 2007

And Your Wallet Will Know Terror! Upcoming Classic Horror and Sci-Fi on DVD

Upcoming Classic Horror and Science Fiction DVD’s

Today we’re going to take a look at some of the upcoming DVD releases that the major studios have planned for the near future, in the hope of making sure fans know what to save up for. The source of this information comes from the wonderful denizens of Classic Horror Film Board, and also George Reis of DVD-Drive In and Jim Clatterbaugh of Monsters From the Vault.

Universal
Notes: Both sets are planned to be Best Buy exclusives.
Release Date:
Not known.
Retail Price: Not confirmed, but thought to be twenty dollars.

Sci-Fi Collection:

  • - Deadly Mantis
  • - Leech Woman
  • - Land Unknown
  • - Cult of the Cobra
  • - Dr. Cyclops

Horror Collection:

  • - Horror Island
  • - Man-Made Monster
  • - Night Monster
  • - Captive Wild Woman
  • - Black Cat (1941)

Fox and MGM (distributed by Fox)

The Fly Classic Collection
Release Date: September 11th
Retail Price: No known.

  • -The Fly
  • -Return of the Fly
  • -Curse of the Fly
  • -A fourth disc with unknown extras will also be present.

Fox Horror Collection
Release Date: Halloween
Retail Price: Unknown

  • -Chandu The Magician
  • -The Undying Monster
  • -The Lodger
  • -Hangover Sqaure
  • -Man Hunt

Vincent Price Gift Set Volume One
Release Date: September 11th
Retail Price: $39.98

  • -The Abominable Dr. Phibes
  • -Dr. Phibes Rises Again
  • -Tales Of Terror
  • -Twice-Told Tales
  • -Theater Of Blood
  • -Madhouse
  • -Witchfinder General
  • -An extras disc on Vincent Price

Roger Corman Collection
Release Date
: September 18th
Retail Price: $39.98

  • -The Premature Burial
  • -X--The Man with X-Ray Eyes
  • -The Young Racers
  • -The Trip
  • -Bloody Mama
  • -Gas-s-s-s
  • -A Bucket of Blood
  • -The Wild Angels

Midnite Movies
Release Date
: September 11th
Retail Price: $14.98

  • -The Conquer Worm (Special Edition)
  • -Food of the Gods

Release Date: Unknown, but thought to be October
Retail Price: Not known, but suspected to be 14.99.

  • -The Beast Within/The Bat People
  • -Blueprint For Murder/Man In The Attic
  • -Chosen Survivors/The Earth Dies Screaming
  • -Devils Of Darkness/Witchcraft
  • -Gorilla At Large/Mystery At Monster Island
  • -The House On Skull Mountain/The Mephisto Waltz
  • -Tales From The Crypt/Vault Of Horror
  • -Yongary, Monster From The Deep/Konga
  • -Pharaoh's Curse/Curse Of The Faceless Man
  • -The Vampire/The Return Of Dracula
  • -Phanton From 10,000 Leagues/Beast With A Million Eyes

Columbia (Sony)

Sam Katzman Boxset
Release Date
: Halloween (?).
Retail Price: $24.95

  • -The Werewolf
  • -Creature With The Atom Brain
  • -Zombies Of Mora Tau
  • -The Giant Claw
  • -One Chapter of the serial Mysterious Island

Warner Brothers


Unknown Title or Size (Possibly Cult Camp Classics)
Release Date
: ???
Retail Price: Not Known.

  • -Frankenstein 1970
  • -POSSIBLY The Walking Dead

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Saturday, June 9, 2007

Robinson Crusoe on Mars DVD Features

Robinson Crusoe on Mars (soon from Criterion)

Thanks to CapnDunsel

The link above has the text of an email from Criterion about their forthcoming DVD release of Robinson Crusoe on Mars.



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Friday, June 8, 2007

GODFREY HO SPEAKS!

Did Godfrey Ho know he was a bad film maker?

Well, check out this interview with one of the most infamous directors of all time.

Thanks to theportlykicker

HKCinemagic has an interview with the man (and the myth) himself.

Check it out: www.hkcinemagic.com/en/page.asp?aid=230

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Tuesday, May 29, 2007

BBC Dracula coming to R1

BBC Dracula finally hitting US stores!

On September 25 Warner/BBC Video are going to release the 1977 miniseries Count Dracula on DVD for $14.98


Thanks to thebrainfollower, check the link above for the discussion about it at CHFB
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New DVD Sets Coming in Time for Halloween!

New DVD Sets Coming in Time for Halloween!
Link above to CHFB for the full story!

At the CinEvent Film Conference in Columbus I ran into reps from studios that are releasing some classics for the Halloween season this year (Thank you Michael, Jessica and friends). Three classic horror box sets are coming to DVD this fall. One from Columbia and one from Fox. The Columbia set will include THE WEREWOLF (1956 with Steven Rich), CREATURE WITH THE ATOM BRAIN (1955 with Richard Denning), ZOMBIES OF MORA TAU (1957), THE GIANT CLAW (1957) and one other title to yet announced. The suggested retail price will be around 24.95. They will not be released separtately. The Fox set will include CHANDU THE MAGICIAN (1932 with Bela Lugosi as Roxor), THE UNDYING MONSTER (1942, Fox's answer to THE WOLF MAN), THE LODGER (1944 with Laird Cregar), HANGOVER SQAURE (1945, also with Cregar) and MAN HUNT (1941 with Walter Pidgeon, Joan Bennett, George Sanders, John Carradine and Roddy McDowell). Finally Kino will be packaging some of their horrors in a new box set (all previously released on single discs).

Special thanks to Jim Clatterbaugh
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Monday, May 28, 2007

Hercules Against the Moon Men (1964) Review


Hercules Against the Moon Men

I first came across HATMM when I was watching Mystery Science Theater 3000 a year or two ago. I had stumbled across a very funny little film full of action, bright (well their faded now) colors, and crazy rock men. I had figured I would never see it again outside of the MST3K episode, but much to my surprise it was on a 50 pack Sci-Fi DVD set from Mill Creek Entertainment, which was likely taken from a copy put out by Retromedia (which looks just like the print on MST3K).

So I put the film film in yesterday not sure what to expect, but much to my surprise, besides the infamous sandstorm thrid act which really slows the picture down, I found a really fun sword and sandal film. It succeeds generally in being a briskly paced (once again ignoring the sandstorm) Italian epic with nice costumes and sets and some really out there villains in regards to the rock people of the moon. Hercules must help liberate a kingdom ruled by a Queen of pure evil, who makes the villagers scrafice their children in order to please her cruel moon men overlords (nice, huh?).The action is generally pretty good too as Alan Steel (aka Sergio Cian) (as Hercules plays a really upstanding guy full of energy and also blessed with a decent dubber), finds creative ways to dispatch his enemies. This is instead of the simple, toss a guy across the room school of ass-kicking. While I like the voices on the dubbers the lip-syncs are really off (not as a tech error, just poor syncing in the script), but once you get into the swing of things you no longer mind it as I said the voices are generally good. The costumes like on most Italian epics are gorgeous and a pleasure to look at.

This title can be found easily on numerous PD sets or from Retromedia (it is the same print through). I highly recommend you give this great Italian sword and sandal film a try.

Here is a little fun fact from wikipedia:

In the original Italian language version, the hero was not Hercules but Maciste, and its original Italian title was Maciste e la regina di Samar (Maciste and the Queen of Samar). Its French title was Maciste contre les hommes de pierre (a rough translation would be Maciste vs. the Stone Men), but the English distributors dubbed him to be Hercules, because Maciste, originally a hero in silent Italian cinema, was not well-known to American audiences.


Join the discussion of the film at Classic Horror Film Board:
Hercules Against the Moon Men

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Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Sly is back as JOHN RAMBO! Insane Violence Returns Too!

Most of you will have already seen this clip provided by AICN of JOHN RAMBO, the new Rambo film. Still, if you haven't you missing out on some insane violence and as a public service HKFCN wants to make sure you not missing a thing! Still we were asking ourselves where is the classic Jerry Goldsmith theme!?!?!

Enjoy!


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Bruno Mattei Passes Away at 75.

Bruno Mattei Dies at 75

Bruno Mattei, a cult director known for some insane films including one that featured gobs of stocked nature footage (Hell of the Living Dead), his own version of Predator (Robowar), and a post-apocalyptic epic (Rats) passed away recently while in coma brought on by stomach complications. While his films were not art by any means one could never say that a Bruno Mattei film was anything (for better or worse), but a unique experience to watch. More details at the link above at CHFB.
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Sunday, May 6, 2007

Final Thoughts on Frankenstein Meets the Space Monster

Final Thoughts on Frankenstein Meets the Space Monster.

I have to say I really enjoyed the second half of the film as it was a nice way to unwind after a day of work. The movie in the end did not disappoint as I thought it may. Too often do films have great starts and then limp towards the end. The story evolved in a natural and actually pretty logical manner. The story once again has some really neat plot threads that could easily be overlooked such as the returning of Frank Saunders from being a simple monster, giving him more of a character than most movie monsters seem to get. Frank Saunders could easily have just remained a mindless killing machine.

I have to say also that the make-up for a supposed low budget film looks great, as it really reminds the audience of the violence that Frank Saunders has gone through and is a nice match of flesh and machinery. The costume and make-up for Mull the titular Space Monster also looks great, conjuring up images of a yeti, mutant, and a Cthulhu mythos creature. In short, it manages to be a creative in design, and yet still functional in its execution and use. The helps to allow for some excellent combat between the two participants. While some maybe argue that the final battle is short and the end extremely abrupt, I only ask the reader to think back to Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man and the pacing of the end. It also avoids one of the great sins of b-movie of letting an exciting situation bog down and become boring.

One other plot thread that I found interesting was the rejection and killing (as ordered by Nadir) of certain captive women for being unacceptable for breeding purposes. Nadir displays a kind of sick enjoyment in the process, signaling his decision for death with the motions of breaking something small in half. It’s quite creepy as it gives the alien invasion a direct parallel to eugenic applications as practiced by the Nazi’s and other governments. The movie takes a scene which in theory would normally just be an excuse to show off attractive women into one with callbacks to Nazi Germany or at the very least the abuses of the eugenic movements around the world.

Still the film moves at a decent clip as I mentioned earlier to an erratic and frantic battle at the end of the film with all parties involved. Some may criticize the use of stock footage, but I personally don’t mind it partially due to its common use in other films. By and large it never cuts (as some films do) between scenes of a large stock footage army to a half a dozen actors. In the end I greatly enjoyed this sci-fi monster romp and would highly recommend it. I’ll add a DVD reviewer a little later when I can take some screencaps of the film.

Hope you enjoyed this review!
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Saturday, May 5, 2007

The Most Awesome Piece of Film EVER is coming out!!

This is a long time favorite of mine. I must have watched it a dozen times at least and that was only when I was a kid. The cover art shown is actually the same cover art that was on the VHS tape I would rent all the time as a kid despite what Foy would indicate.

More on this awesome news from the Foywonder



Attack of the Super Monsters on DVDIf ever there was proof that everything and anything is getting released to DVD these days, the announcement that Attack of the Super Monsters will soon be permanently enshrined on digital media is surefire proof of it. If you've never even heard of Attack of the Super Monsters, then this DVD is a must-see for you, especially if you like Japanese monster movies and Inframan-level insanity.

Attack of the Super Monsters, originally released in 1982, is actually a badly English dubbed movie compilation of the first four episodes of a low budget Japanese TV show from 1977 called "Dinosaur Wars Aizenborg" that was produced by Tsuburaya, the folks responsible for "Ultraman". This was not one of their prouder productions.

....


For the full article

http://tinyurl.com/yq34l5

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Frankenstein Meets the Space Monster!


























I got Frankenstein vs. the Space Monster in via Blockbuster Online yesterday and had a chance to watch about 40 minutes, before I had to leave for work today. Now I should add a preface to this, ever since I saw a trailer for this film on a Frankenstein "doc" 2 tape VHS set (which I suspect was put out by some pre runner to ALL DAY, as most of the same content appears on the disc, except for times when stills where used for films or a few other films are added) I have always wanted to see it as it looked like an amazing blend of Alien Invasion and Creature Feature. The trailer made it look like an interesting and fun romp. Later, I read more and more about the film and didn't expect too (as most coverage of it is negative) much when the disc came yesterday. Happily, I've been enjoying the living daylights out of the film so far. For reference, I stopped the DVD at the point where Frank Saunders is discovered in the cave by the scientists also my rental did not come with the liner notes.

For me FmtSM reminds me of the dime-store epic of Invisible Invaders, It Conquered the World, and others. It has a very ambitious plot of Alien Invasion, Cyborgs on the loose, Space Exploration (that doesn't get too far), plus the plot thread of passing off a cyborg as a human (with a funny if for the wrong reasons (the idea is not bad, just the still), press conference). I don't even mind the stock footage as it mostly makes sense, say as opposed to a herd of water buffalo that appeared in one film I know of. I really enjoyed the take-off sequence (it worked really) with the surf punk in the background (which along with other surf punk and stock scores actually create a decent soundtrack so far.

I think the story so far is quite enjoyable, it is simple in its execution, but grand its plotting. While I can imagine some scoff at the creature being treated as a Frankenstein creature, I would say to combat this that as the dialogue suggests he is made from human parts. In a sense it is actually advances the concept of Frankenstein into a new age fusing the concept with robotics. The aliens are generally interesting (even with the less than stellar make-up, but hey that happens with Kung Fu movies and wigs all the time). The cast is enjoyable too, with some wonderfully goofy aliens and the scientists are interesting, if a little sedated (that and Karen is really being played poorly in terms of line delivery). The Frank Saunders character is interesting because of the fact that he is played both as a human being at times and monster at others (giving it an unpredictable Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde dynamic. I really cannot wait to get home and finish the film. I suspect some readers maybe thinking that I’m insane, but so far Frankenstein Meets the Space Monster is a really good flick. Stay tuned for my final thoughts later and a Mini-DVD review of the Dark Sky Disc.
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Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Watching now: The Swarm!

Ever wondered what kill Irwin Allen's career well folks I'm watching it right now. The Swarm the massive budget, 156 minute killer bee opus. This movie is beyond goofy. To quote what I wrote at DVD Maniacs:
I love this film. I rented it randomly a year or two ago and man was it worth it. Just seeing the Irwin Allen formula (which I never found interesting) applied to bees is brilliant. Its like a satire except for the fact that you know it wasn't meant to be anything but serious. Kids with the Molotov, the attempts to destroy the bees, Michael Caine GETS INTO A MISSILE SILO BY HIMSELF! Pure art.
Seriously ladies and gents expect some youtube clips latter. This films is a joy to revel in! Heck, just go and rent it right now or buy it. It retails for less than 14.99 and can probably be found a lot cheaper.
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