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Prom Night III: The Last Kiss – Canada, 1990 – reviews

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‘Alex thinks he’s dead and gone to heaven. He’s half right.’

Prom Night III: The Last Kiss is a 1990 Canadian comedy horror feature film directed by Ron Oliver (Are You Afraid of the Dark?; Goosebumps series) and Peter Simpson from a screenplay written by Oliver (who also scripted Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II). It was produced by Ilana Frank and former actor Ray Sager. The movie stars Tim Conlon, Cyndy Preston (Carrie, 2013), David Stratton and Courtney Taylor.

This third entry in the Prom Night franchise continues the storyline involving the murderous ghoul Mary Lou Maloney.

Plot:

Trapped in Hell, murderous prom queen Mary Lou Maloney (Courtney Taylor), who burned to death in 1957, manages to escape her chains by severing them with a nail file.

Returning to her place of death, Hamilton High School, Mary Lou kills the school janitor and one of her many former boyfriends Jack Roswell (Terry Doyle) by electrocuting him with a jukebox to the point that his pacemaker bursts from his chest.

The day after, Principal Weatherall (Roger Dunn), officially opens Hamilton High’s recently reconstructed gymnasium, accidentally severing one of his own fingers while cutting the ribbon with a pair of scissors, an act which prompts an unseen force to wreak havoc through the gym with powerful winds…

Reviews [click links to read more]:

“Without a care for its story or characters, the film’s detachment makes it tough to appreciate other than as a late-night time-waster. In the Prom Night pantheon, this is the weakest entry in the series. Although, if death by jukebox sounds appealing to you, then sit back and enjoy.” Canuxploitation!

” …an undistinguished rehash of clumsy clichés and stupefying stereotypes […] Since it’s all been done before, there’s not much pizzazz in Ron Oliver’s directing or writing.” John Stanley, Creature Features, Berkley Boulevard, 2000

“Favorite line, spoken when some newbies turn up in Hell, “It’s okay when you get used to the smell”. The film then mixes this approach up with one devoted to playing around with teen film gags. When it’s funny, Prom Night III is good but that’s not all time.” Digital Retribution

“The effects, particularly the animation surrounding Mary Lou’s appearances and disappearances, are not particularly convincing. Courtney Taylor lacks any conviction as Mary Lou – the bitchiness comes with a dreadful vapidity […] too cheerfully tongue-in-cheek a film to be considered bad but lacks anything to be much more than that.” Moria

“It’s a slasher that attempts to be funny and doesn’t always succeed, but it’s hard to say that it isn’t simply fun nonetheless; as the years go by, I’ve come to enjoy these types of slashers more and more. Even though the gore here is simply decent, the script devises some ridiculous methods of dispatch…” Oh, the Horror!

“The connection to previous Prom Night films is a little obscure, but at least Paul Zaza – the James Horner of tax shelter horror – returns with another of his comfortingly familiar scores […] Prom Night III is at best boringly competent and nonsensical, and at worst simply boring.” Caelum Vatnsdal, They Came from Within: A History of Canadian Horror Cinema, Arbiter Ring Publishing, 2014

They-Came-from-Within-Caelum-Vatnsdal-Revised-Updated-Edition-Arbeiter Ring Publishing

Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

Choice dialogue:

Sarah’s mom: “You’re going to the prom, Sarah. That’s an order!”

Cast and characters:

  • Tim Conlon … Alex Grey
  • Cynthia Preston … Sarah Monroe
  • David Stratton … Shane Taylor
  • Courtney Taylor … Mary Lou Maloney
  • Dylan Neal … Andrew Douglas
  • Jeremy Ratchford … Leonard Welsh
  • Roger Dunn … Principal Weatherall
  • George Chuvalo … Mr Walker
  • Lesley Kelly … Ms Richards
  • Terry Doyle … Jack Roswell
  • Robert Collins … Darren
  • Nicole Evans … Gail
  • Tim Progosh … Reporter

Release:

Prom Night III: The Last Kiss was released theatrically in Canada on April 13, 1990.

The film was released direct-to-video in the United States on June 28, 1990.

The version released on a double feature DVD with Prom Night IV: Deliver Us from Evil is the edited for television print.

The post Prom Night III: The Last Kiss – Canada, 1990 – reviews appeared first on MOVIES & MANIA.


Prom Night IV: Deliver Us From Evil – Canada, 1992 – reviews

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‘They ditched the prom for a private party. Now it’s their last dance.’

Prom Night IV: Deliver Us from Evil is a 1992 Canadian slasher horror feature film about a psycho Catholic priest murdering teenagers on their prom night. It was also released as Prom Night: Evil of Darkness

Directed by Clay Borris from a screenplay written by Richard Beattie, the Norstar Entertainment production stars Nicole de Boer, J.H. Wyman, Joy Tanner and Alle Ghadban. Former actor Ray Sager produced and has a cameo role.

Despite its title, the movie has no connection with Prom Night (1980), Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II (1987) or Prom Night III: The Last Kiss (1990).

Review:

Like Hello Mary Lou and Prom Night III, Prom Night IV also opens with the 1957 prom. Now, of course, the 1957 prom was famous for the fiery death of Mary Lou Maloney but apparently, that wasn’t the only death that occurred that night. While Mary Lou was getting ready to be named prom queen, two other students were making out in the parking lot. When a homicidal priest named Father Jonas came across them, he stabbed them to death a sharpened crucifix.

Thirty-five years later, Father Jonas is hidden away in a church basement. He is being kept in a drug-induced coma.  Father Jaeger (Kenneth McGregor) is his guardian but when the Jaeger passes away, the young Father Colin (Brock Simpson) takes his place. Foolishly, Colin decides not to give Jonas his daily injection.  Jonas wakes up, murders Colin, and then sets off for his old church. While Jonas is out murdering sinners, the Cardinal tries to cover up any evidence of his existence. In case you hadn’t guessed, Prom Night IV is probably one of the most anti-Catholic films ever made.

What Jonas doesn’t know is that the old church is now a summer home.  Four teenagers — virginal Meagan (Nikki de Boer), her boyfriend Mark (J.H. Wyman), his best friend Jeff (Alle Ghadaban), and his girlfriend, the adventurous Laura (Joy Tanner, who later played Fiona and Declan’s mom on Degrassi) — are spending the night at the house. After all, who wants to waste prom night by actually going to the prom? Mark’s younger brother, Jonathan, is also hanging around outside the house, secretly filming everything that happens inside.  Or, at least he is until Jonas shows up and kills him.

There really aren’t any big surprises to be found in Prom Night IV but the film is still a step above the average slasher film. Director Clay Borris keeps the action moving and does a good job maintaining a properly evil atmosphere. Some of the shots of the snow falling over the isolated house are actually quite stunning. As played by James Carver, Jonas is a truly menacing and ruthless villain. Seriously, Jonas is so mean! Even the fact that he utters a few regrettable one-liners does nothing to diminish Jonas as a threat.

Prom Night IV may be missing both Jamie Lee Curtis and Mary Lou Maloney but it’s still a surprisingly effective little horror film.  And remember: It’s not who you come with … it’s who takes you home.

Lisa Marie Bowman, guest reviewer via Through the Shattered Lens

Other reviews:

“The actresses pose in lingerie like a 1992 Cinemax movie, and one of them receives a nude body double scene that’s hilariously unconvincing. This is a stealth Christmas movie, but it’s no Black Christmas. It brings the series to an unexpected conclusion – with a high school prom movie that doesn’t bother with the high school and doesn’t show us the prom.” Midnight Only

 

“If Prom Night IV is a course correction from the previous entries, then it is accomplished, for better or worse (okay, mostly worse). Both films are plagued by stagnant middle acts and split the difference on various elements. The original has (marginally) better characters, while this one has a bigger body count and a less generic killer…” Oh, the Horror!

“If you’re alright with the entirely predictable then you could do worse than Prom Night IV […] It’s plainly obvious that goody-two-shoes Meagan (de Boer) will be the last one standing but there are some decent riffs thrown into the mix…” Vegan Voorhees

“While this is a bit slow on deaths and the religious themes in the script aren’t explored much (in fact the whole plot thread about the church “containing” the killer is mostly forgotten) this is still an entertaining sequel with an alright killer (gotta love his cross/knife combo weapon) and some decent mood.” The Video Graveyard

Choice dialogue:

“Hey, don’t call me stupid and don’t tell me what to do!”

Cast and characters:

  • Nicole de Boer … Meagan (as Nikki de Boer)
  • J.H. Wyman … Mark (as Alden Kane)
  • Joy Tanner … Laura
  • Alle Ghadban … Jeff
  • Kenneth McGregor … Father Jaeger (as Ken McGregor)
  • James Carver … Father Jonas
  • Brock Simpson … Father Colin
  • Krista Bulmer … Lisa
  • Phil Morrison … Brad
  • Fab Filippo … Jonathan
  • Colin D. Simpson … Larry (as Colin Simpson)
  • Thea Andrews … Louise
  • Bill Jay … Cardinal
  • Deni DeLory … Jennifer (as Deni Delroy)
  • Carolyn Tweedle … Sister Jude (as Caroline Tweedle)
  • Tyler Daniels … Dave
  • Ray Sager … Rafe
  • Brad Simpson … Rick
  • Suzanne Vaillancourt … Suzi
  • Garry Borris … Father (uncredited)

Filming locations:

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

The post Prom Night IV: Deliver Us From Evil – Canada, 1992 – reviews appeared first on MOVIES & MANIA.

Biohazard: The Alien Force – USA, 1994 – reviews

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‘The end of the world has just been born.’

Biohazard: The Alien Force is a 1994 American science-fiction horror feature film about a genetically-engineered creature on the rampage.

Directed by co-producer Steve Latshaw (Return of the Killer Shrews; Death Mask; Jack-O; Dark Universe; Vampire Trailer Park) from a screenplay co-written with Patrick Moran (who also stars), the Sharan-American Independent Productions movie stars Christopher Mitchum, Steve Zurk, Susan Fronsoe and Tom Ferguson.

The bio-monster and mutant bio-baby were created by John Carl Buechler.

Plot:

Triton Industries has created a genetically-engineered creature using DNA from human sources. During the course of the experiment, however, the host mother carrying the mutant escapes from the laboratory compound, giving birth shortly thereafter.

The intelligent “baby” beings hunting down and killing its male DNA donors, while at the same time trying to mate with its female donors. The head of the lab wants to destroy the monster before the press can get wind of the story, but the former head of security wants to expose the whole thing.

Reviews [click links to read more]:

“This movie does what I never considered. Take bad ideas from other bad movies and make them even worse […] I think the thing that pissed me off the most about this movie is the fact that it is the same thing as Syngenor. It’s not a little like Syngenor, it is Syngenor.90 Minutes Lost

“The cast is ridiculously stupid. The effects are laughable. Cool nudity, but I can buy magazines for that. Has anyone noticed the monster here is a genetic mutation, thereby negating the title?” Charles T. Tatum Jr.

Biohazard: The Alien Force is from the same writer/director team that gave us Dark Universe or the monster in a marsh movie. They believe in no-frills, straight-ahead B-movie making. Monster, victims, death, the end. It gets the job done. That’s not to say the job was done well mind you. Just done.” Dr. Gore’s Movie Reviews

“This is a really cheap movie with one-dimensional characters that never seem to have any defined point as to why they were doing anything. I guess everybody was vaguely out to stop the monster, but the good guys had the exact same goal as the bad guys, and at the end everything blows up, so I guess they both win?” Films in Boxes

It’s not just Italian movies that feature J&B whiskey

“For the discriminating fan of awfulness, Biohazard has enough moments of hilarity to make it worth a watch. The actors are uniformly bland and/or awful and there are more than a few awkward moments and flubbed lines. Most of the budget was likely poured into the main creature’s suit…” Movie Feast

Choice dialogue:

Mike Reardon [Steve Zurk]: “So, it’s going to f*ck us or suck us! Some superior genetic being.”

Cast and characters:

  • Christopher Mitchum … Donald Brady
  • Steve Zurk … Mike Reardon
  • Susan Fronsoe … Nicki Carstairs
  • Tom Ferguson … Quint
  • Patrick Moran … Doctor Lynch
  • John Maynard … Lt. Warren
  • John Alexander … Detective Morley
  • Catherine Walsh … Doctor Phillips
  • Dorothy Best … Caitlan Palmer
  • Ryan Latshaw … Ryan Palmer
  • Katherine Culliver … Shana Alexander
  • Paul Austin Sanders … Mutating Husband
  • Maddisen K. Krown … Mutating Pregnant Wife (as Rebecca Wicks)
  • Robin Chapman … Newspaper Editor
  • Trevor David … Donner
  • William Grefé … Mr. Babb (as Bill Grefe)
  • Ken Kupstis … Male Model
  • John Latshaw … Kelly
  • Charles Maginnis … Brandon Wellesley
  • Gersh Morningstar … Mr Esper
  • Jack Nieberlain … Driver
  • Keith Tuxhorn … The Fixer
  • James L. Miles … The Bio-Monster
  • Christopher Ray … Special Guest Bio-Monster

Filming locations:

Apopka, Daytona Beach, Oviedo and Universal Studios Florida, Universal Orlando Resort – 1000 Universal Studios Plaza, Orlando, Florida
Bahamas

Notes:

Director Steve Latshaw later said it was one of his favourite films: “Because of the wonderful memories of Florida, our cast and crew, and the fact that we broke all the rules and made an action-packed sci-fi adventure with 28 speaking parts, 50 locations, car chases, helicopter battles, running and jumping fights, more car chases at Universal studios, exploding lab complexes and Chris Mitchum. And all for about $50,000.”

Trivia:

William Grefé‘s movies Sting of Death and Death Curse of Tartu are mentioned in a bar scene involving the director himself.

Despite the title, there is no alien.

The post Biohazard: The Alien Force – USA, 1994 – reviews appeared first on MOVIES & MANIA.

Dark Universe – USA, 1993 – reviews of trashy Alien-in-a-swamp movie

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Dark Universe is a 1993 American science-fiction horror about a group of scientists searching the Florida swamps for a crashed spaceship only to discover its pilot has mutated into a bloodthirsty creature.

Directed by Steve Latshaw (Return of the Killer Shrews; Jack-O; Biohazard: The Alien Force; Vampire Trailer Park) from a screenplay written by Patrick Moran (as Pat Moran). The movie stars Joe Estevez (Fangs vs. Spurs; Doctor Spine; Axe Giant: The Wrath of Paul Bunyan), Blake Pickett (They Bite; HauntedWeen; Vampire Trailer Park), Laurie Sherman and Bently Tittle. Fred Olen Ray and Jim Wynorski were executive producers.

Reviews [click links to read more]:

Dark Universe is the definition of ideological catharsis. With mere minutes of substantial entertainment, it’s about as shortchanging an experience as you can have in this life or the next. Which is putting it mildly.” 90 Lost Minutes

“There’s killer spores, Joe Estevez, stock footage, gratuitous breasts (thanks, Jim, you made it a trademark), stereotypes, long talky bits, long dull stretches, bad music, bad effects, a photo of William Grefé and cinematography that makes you notice how substandard it is.” Down Among the Z Movies

“This was a typically lame B sci-fi movie.” Dr Gore’s Movie Reviews

“The special effects look like they were done on someone’s home computer, and Estevez was obviously filmed at a different time since all of his scenes feature just him alone. Dark Universe is awful. There is not one good thing here, and it is not even funny on a “bad” level.” eFilmCritic

“Most of the dialogue here is forgettable, but we do get a few decent lines here and there. But for a regional indie, I expected a bit more outlandish dialogue from this one. On the crazy scale, we have a bargain-basement xenomorph, a killer armadillo, food that animates and attacks, and some humorous performances.” Marc Fusion

“And so it came to be that the boundless possibilities of an entire Dark Universe of action and suspense unceremoniously crash-landed in a nice, cheap swamp. Of course, if the opening scenes in space are any indication, we should be glad to be staring into a poorly lit bog instead.” Something Awful

Release:

Dark Universe is currently available to watch on Amazon Prime.

Cast and characters:

  • Joe Estevez … Rod Kendrick
  • Blake Pickett … Kim Masters
  • Laurie Sherman … Judy Lawson (as Cherie Scott)
  • Bently Tittle … Tom Hanning
  • John Maynard … Frank Norris
  • Paul Austin Sanders … Jack Reese
  • Patrick Moran … Carlson
  • Tom Ferguson … Denning
  • Steve Barkett … Steve Thomas
  • Dave ‘Squatch’ Ward … Birdwatcher (as Dave Ward)
  • Beth McCollister … Birdwatcher
  • Henry Laurence … Old Trapper
  • Frank Peacock … Boat Pilot
  • Grant Austin Waldman … Tourist One
  • F. Grace O’Hea … Tourist Two

Filming locations:

Gatorland, Kissimmee, Orlando, Sanford, Titusville, Winter Park, Florida
Los Angeles, California (scenes with Steve Barkett and Joe Estevez)

Technical details:

82 minutes

Notes:

Not to be confused with Dark Universe from 2015.

The post Dark Universe – USA, 1993 – reviews of trashy Alien-in-a-swamp movie appeared first on MOVIES & MANIA.

Cruel Jaws aka Jaws 5: Cruel Jaws – Italy, 1995 – reviews

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crueljaws

Cruel Jaws is a 1995 Italian action horror feature film directed by Bruno Mattei [as William Snyder] (Hell of the Living DeadRats: Night of TerrorZombies: The Beginning). It is also known as Jaws 5: Cruel Jaws; The Beast and its original title Fauci crudeli.

The movie stars David Luther, George Barnes, Jr., Scott Silveria, Kirsten Urso, Richard Dew, Sky Palma, Norma J. Neshei, Gregg Hood, Carter Collins, Natasha Etzler, Larry Zience and Jay Colligan.

Cruel Jaws victim on beach

Review:

It’s hard to know where to start with such a shameless and inane film. Cruel Jaws is far, far beyond your average rip-off. The story is essentially Jaws with smatterings of Jaws 2 and Jaws 3-D thrown in. Scenes from the Spielberg classic are recreated verbatim, and dialogue is directly lifted.

Explaining the plot of Cruel Jaws is almost pointless if you’ve seen Jaws. But the twists on the original tale are rather hysterical, such as the inclusion of Dag, essentially the film’s Quint. Dag Snerensen (Richard Dew) bears a striking resemblance to Hulk Hogan. His name “Dag” also mustered a lot of confusion as I thought characters were referring to him as “Dad”.

Anyway, Dag owns a shoddy version of Sea World (their attractions consist of two dolphins and a seal). He’s in trouble because he owes his bullying landlord, Samuel Lewis (George Barnes Jr.), “fifteen years rent”. This is a problem because Dag has a young daughter whose legs don’t work and who apparently has no reason to live other than swimming with dolphins.

But all this is completely irrelevant. While this pathetic little soap opera is playing out, a giant tiger shark is chowing down on the locals! (The tiger shark, by the way, is not actually a tiger shark. Practically all the stock footage used on the screen features great white sharks.) Luckily, Billy (Gregg Hood), the film’s lame reincarnation of Richard Dreyfuss’s Hooper, happens to be back in town ready to help Sheriff Francis (David Luther) in his hunt for the shark. For a marine biologist, Billy really hates sharks referring to them as “sort of locomotive with a mouth full of butcher’s knives”.

Sheriff Francis and Billy try to get the beach shut down, but, with an attitude strangely reminiscent of the another shark-plagued town’s mayor, Mayor Godfrey (Kevin Dean) and aforementioned rich bully Sam scoff at the shark claims. It’s tourist season! There’s a big windsurfing event coming up! How could they possibly close the beaches?! It’s all very familiar and only moments featuring Dag, the Hogan lookalike, remind us we’re not watching Jaws… for example, this touching scene where Dag puts his daughter to sleep with an impressive use of hypnotism…

It’s hard to pick the worst actor from the cast. They’re all so phenomenally bad. The villainous George Barnes Jr. stumbles through his lines with wide-eyed determination. Richard Dew may look like Hulk Hogan, but he’s a much worse actor, and Hulk Hogan is a terrible actor. Gregg Hood and David Luther are atrocious heroes. Hood as Billy is particularly awful coming across like a socially inept lunatic. There’s a surreal moment where Dag rambles at Billy for ages about whales while Hood fiddles with a radar looking ready to explode.

Not that the actors have much to work with. The script, which unbelievably took three people to write is a fabulous mess. The dialogue swings from ludicrous shark diatribes to incomprehensible insults. Subplots and characters are tossed around with little regard for logic. In a jaw-droppingly stupid party scene full of head-scratching lines (a girl says “I wanna dance!” while dancing), two (apparently) hot babes hook up with a couple of jocky antagonists. This would be fine if it weren’t for the fact that only a few scenes earlier they were chanting “dickbrain, dickbrain, dickbrain” in their dumbfounded faces.

Bruno Mattei doesn’t stop at merely lifting story elements from JawsCruel Jaws has the audacity to steal footage from Jaws, its sequels and even Italian shark efforts like Enzo G. Castellari’s awesome Great White (1981) and Joe D’Amato’s Deep Blood (1990). He even “borrows” the theme song from Star Wars, remixing it slightly and playing it over a few scenes and the end credits! The hack didn’t even bother building his own fake shark, which in my books is a crime against shark films.

In shark attacks scenes, the film cuts madly between so many different rubber sharks that it’s almost seizure-inducing. Footage from Great White and Deep Blood is awkwardly wedged into scenes with no regard for continuity. The stock footage of sharks is completely random, darting between different sizes and even different species. Mattei doesn’t even bother to throw any blood into the water for the few pathetic shark attack scenes he actually bothered to film.

I struggle to say Cruel Jaws is one of the worst films I’ve ever seen because I had such a ferociously good time with it. It’s the hardest I’ve laughed during a movie, comedy genre included, for some time. While it may be the laziest and shittiest work of his career, and it’s certainly the most shameless, Bruno Mattei (R.I.P.) made trash movie magic with Cruel Jaws. Stupid magic, but magic nonetheless.

Dave Jackson, MOVIES & MANIA, guest reviewer via Mondo Exploito

Other reviews:

Cruel Jaws is pretty overlong though, at nearly a hundred minutes, and it does drag in the second half. There’s also a confusing plot point about a wrecked ship that the shark’s connected to, that brought in right out of left field. So in closing, Jaws 5 is probably better than Jaws: The Revenge, and it’s worth a watch, especially for fans of Jaws, and Bruno Mattei.” Not This Time, Nayland Smith

” …awe-inspiring in its badness and shamelessness. It’s a one-stop-shop that rolls incoherence, absurdity, and disparate shark footage into a ball that perfectly summarizes Mattei’s career as Italy’s best hack auteur.” Oh, the Horror!

“What really makes Cruel Jaws interesting is that, while 90% of the film is lifted from other films, the 10% that isn’t is truly weird. For instance, the film’s hero is named Dag Snerson and he owns a water park that is apparently made up of exactly two dolphins and a sea lion. His daughter is probably the most cheerful wheelchair-bound child ever. There’s a subplot involving the Mafia.” Lisa Marie Bowman, Through the Shattered Lens

Availability:
Cruel Jaws has a handful of Euro DVD releases. They are available via Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk 

horrors of the deep piranha the last jaws tentacles

Buy Horrors of the Deep: Piranha + The Last Jaws + Tentacles DVD Collection from Amazon.co.uk

Cast and characters:

  • David Luther … Francis Berger
  • George Barnes Jr. … Samuel Lewis (as George Barnes)
  • Scott Silveria … Bob Snerensen
  • Kirsten Urso … Susy Snerensen (as Kristen Urso)
  • Richard Dew … Dag Snerensen
  • Sky Palma … Glenda
  • Norma J. Nesheim … Vanessa
  • Gregg Hood … Bill Morrison
  • Carter Collins … Ronnie Lewis
  • Natasha Etzer … Gloria Lewis (as Natasha Etzler)
  • Larry Zience … Larry
  • Jay Colligan … Tommy
  • Coleman Ray … Glenn
  • Dick Robison … Ramon
  • Dana Paul … Head Thug
  • Danny Ray Bullington … Matt – Thug 1 (as Danny Bullington)
  • Mike Guzman … Bud-Thug 2
  • Chris Bodegaard … Beach Man
  • Rhonda Hemond … Beach Woman
  • Sharon Raye … Beach Girl
  • Lamar Davis … Policeman
  • Heather Brooks … Nurse
  • Mike Mangan … Coroner
  • Jean Wynn … Council Woman
  • Ski Zawaski … Scuba 1
  • Tim Fahey … Scuba 2

Technical details:

  • 95 minutes
  • Audio: Dolby
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85: 1

Trivia:

Re-uses footage from Steven Spielberg’s Jaws (1975), Jeannot Szwarc’s Jaws 2 (1978), Joe D’Amato’s Deep Blood (1990) and mainly from Enzo G. Castellari’s The Last Shark (1981).

The post Cruel Jaws aka Jaws 5: Cruel Jaws – Italy, 1995 – reviews appeared first on MOVIES & MANIA.

Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday – USA, 1993 – overview and reviews

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‘Evil has finally found a home.’

Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday is a 1993 American slasher horror feature film directed by Adam Marcus (Secret Santa; co-writer of Texas Chainsaw 3D) from a screenplay by Dean Lorey and Jay Huguely, based on a storyline by the latter and Marcus. It was produced by Sean S. Cunningham, director of the first Friday the 13th in 1980.

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The film is the ninth instalment of the Friday the 13th franchise and the first to be distributed by New Line Cinema rather than Paramount Pictures. New Line intended the film to be the last in the Friday series, thus the subtitle of the movie and to set up Freddy vs. Jason, hence the inclusion of the final scene.

Due to major development issues over several years, New Line Cinema wasn’t sure if Freddy vs. Jason would ever get made. To tide over fans they made Jason X in 2001. Since this film was subtitled the The Final Friday, they decided against a repeat of the Friday the 13th title, and set it in the future so as to avoid continuity problems with a possible Freddy vs. Jason film. The latter was eventually released ten years after this film, in 2003.

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Buy The Complete CollectionAmazon.co.ukAmazon.com

A lone woman is staying at a rundown cabin on Crystal Lake. After a shower, she encounters Jason in a hallway. As he is about to slash her, she dodges him and falls over a railing to the floor below.

A chase ensues throughout the forest with Jason hunting the woman. She comes to a clearing, turns around to see Jason. She jumps aside, someone yells ‘Now!’, and huge floodlights are flashed upon Jason. We see a government task force begin to repeatedly shoot Jason hundreds of times, with no effect on him. They launch a grenade that blows his body apart into several pieces, scattering around the area.

We discover that the woman in question was undercover FBI agent Elizabeth Marcus, as the FBI set a trap to stop Jason once and for all. The agents are celebrating the victory, and we cut to a mysterious figure in the forest questioning what the government just did saying “I don’t think so”.

Jason’s remains are sent to a morgue. The coroner is processing the autopsy making various notes, including the heart being twice the size of a normal human heart. As he brings a scalpel to the heart, it begins to beat slowly, then faster and faster. The coroner becomes hypnotized by Jason’s beating heart and is compelled to eat it.

This causes spirits to emanate from Jason’s scarred body parts, and the coroner becomes possessed by the ‘spirit’ of Jason. We see this as the reflection of newly hosted coroner is that of Jason’s original form.

The now possessed coroner begins a killing spree in route to Crystal Lake. Along the way he kills hospital guards (one being actor Kane Hodder – who portrays the ‘masked’ Jason character in this and the previous two films), along with several teenagers…

Reviews [click links to read more]:

“All told, I rather suspect that had this movie simply been billed as a non-series horror flick in the vein of Shocker or The First Power, it would probably have been much better received by the fans. Indeed, it is when it operates most visibly within traditional Friday the 13th territory that Jason Goes to Hell is at its weakest.” 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting 

” …as a movie that has nothing to do with the Friday the 13th film, this is an ok action/horror opus with lots of gore and nudity. But as a Friday the 13th sequel, this one misses the boat, betraying the die hard fans and straying too far from it’s source. He’s wearing a hockey mask, has a machete but he’s not the Jason I know.” Arrow in the Head

“As a film, Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday is well made – it is one of the few films in the Friday the 13th series that could be said to be directed with style and suspense rather than only being a catalogue of novelty deaths. It also the only Friday the 13th film in which a character can be seen crying over the slaughter of one of the victims.” Moria

jason-goes-to-hell-movie

“I’ve read quite a few reviews that have argued that Jason Goes To Hell is the worst installment in the franchise but I disagree. It’s close, but it’s marginally better than both Part 3 and Jason Takes Manhattan. It’s saved from being a total disaster by that clever opening and likable performances from John LeMary and Kari Keegan.” Through the Shattered Lens

” …it’s pretty much the same old same old verging on self-parody, except for the plot elements blatantly stolen from The Hidden and a pervasive casual sadism.” Mike Mayo, Videohound’s Horror Show

Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

“The unrated version contains some of the series’ most unrestrained gore FX, provided by KNB, as well as some of the most interesting nude scenes in the history of the franchise. […] The magic dagger stuff is still really silly and has no place in the franchise, series composer Harry Manfredini’s musical score is purely laughable, and Jason himself is only in the film for around 10-15 minutes, tops.” DVD Drive-In

Jason Goes to Hell is an unconventional sequel that expands the mythology of Friday the 13th and – like it or not – set the stage for the blockbuster Freddy vs Jason. But I’m not saying that if you don’t like it, you don’t “get it”. It ain’t philosophy. It’s just a gory-as-hell thrill ride with lots of titties and a classic villain.” Oh, the Horror!

“On the whole Jason Goes to Hell is a pretty good effort, with a decent B-movie cast and some nice (if not entirely original) ideas. But it’s not really a Friday the 13th film. Hockey-masked Jason is on screen for less than half the running time, and there isn’t much teenage slaughter, although there’s a fair amount of nudity and more gore than the last instalment.” Jim Harper, Legacy of Blood: A Comprehensive Guide to Slasher Movies

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” …the opening seven or eight minutes – really recaptures the stalk n’ slash ambience of the 80s movies. After that, it’s downhill fast, although during this re-watch, I noticed the subtle (and not so) homoerotic nuances lurking beneath a few scenes; Adam Marcus allegedly ‘made up’ for the girls-only nudity rule of the previous eight movies with more naked guys and the very obscure shaving scene.” Vegan Voorhees

“The big thing that takes away from the film, and really the series as a whole is the body jumping plot. It’s bad enough that there is a distinct absence of our main goalie mask wearing monster Jason but to add in the weird borderline sci-fi plot, heavily borrowed from the film The Hidden, is just mind boggling […] It does have its high points, such as a large body count, nudity and some brutal kills, however.” Ronnie Angel, Slashed Dreams: The Ultimate Guide to Slasher Films

Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

Jason Goes To Hell: The Final Friday is the worst of the series by a long way. Yes, it’s good to see a series try and reinvent itself and try something new (Halloween III: Season of the Witch anyone?) but when it’s executed as poorly and sloppily as this, it’s not worth the effort. Skip the film and just watch the Freddy bit on Youtube.” Popcorn Pictures

Cast and characters:

  • John D. LeMay as Steven Freeman
  • Kari Keegan as Jessica Kimble
  • Steven Williams as Creighton Duke
  • Allison Smith as Vicki
  • Erin Gray as Diana Kimble
  • Steven Culp as Robert Campbell
  • Rusty Schwimmer as Joey B.
  • Leslie Jordan as Shelby
  • Billy “Green” Bush as Sheriff Landis
  • Kane Hodder as Jason Voorhees/FBI Guard/Freddy Krueger’s claw
  • Andrew Bloch as Deputy Josh
  • Kipp Marcus as Randy Parker
  • Richard Gant as Phil the Coroner
  • Adam Cranner as Ward
  • Julie Michaels as Elizabeth Marcus
  • James Gleason as Agent Abernathy
  • Dean Lorey as Eric Pope
  • Adam Marcus as Officer Bish
  • Mark Thompson as Officer Mark
  • Brian Phelps as Officer Brian
  • Blake Conway as Officer Andell
  • Madelon Curtis as Officer Ryan
  • Paul Devine as Paul
  • Michelle Clunie as Deborah
  • Michael B. Silver as Luke
  • Kathryn Atwood as Alexis
  • Jonathan Penner as David
  • Brooke Scher as Stephanie Kimble

Other media:

A three-issue comic adaptation of Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday written by Andy Mangels was published by Topps Comics. As the comics are based upon the original shooting script of the film, elements that were left out of the film are used in them. Topps also released a series of trading cards for the film.

Retrospective:

In November of 2017, Adam Marcus, the film’s director revealed that an apparently overlooked plot-point of the movie is that Jason Voorhees is actually connected to the Evil Dead franchise. The filmmaker told Horror Geek Life:

“[Pamela Voorhees] makes a deal with the devil by reading from the Necronomicon to bring back her son. This is why Jason isn’t Jason. He’s Jason plus The Evil Dead, and now I can believe that he can go from a little boy that lives in a lake, to a full-grown man in a couple of months, to Zombie Jason, to never being able to kill this guy. That, to me, is way more interesting as a mashup, and Raimi loved it!

It’s not like I could tell New Line my plan to include The Evil Dead, because they don’t own The Evil Dead. So it had to be an Easter egg, and I did focus on it…there’s a whole scene that includes the book, and I hoped people would get it and could figure out that’s what I’m up to. So yes, in my opinion, Jason Voorhees is a Deadite. He’s one of The Evil Dead.”

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Bad Moon – USA, 1996 – reviews and new ‘5-Minute Movies’ overview

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‘Half man. Half wolf. Total terror.’

Bad Moon is a 1996 American supernatural horror feature film written and directed by Eric Red (Body Parts) and produced by James G. Robinson. It is based on the novel Thor by Wayne Smith, which mainly tells the story from the dog’s viewpoint.

The movie stars Mariel Hemingway (Rise of the Zombies; Tales from the Crypt ‘Loved to Death’), Michael Paré (Abbatoir; Bone Tomahawk; Sicilian Vampire), and Mason Gamble.

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A few seconds were cut from the opening scene in order to avoid an NC-17. The film was a box office flop – grossing just over $1 million domestically on a $7 million budget – although it has since built up a decent cult following.

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Bad Moon was released on Blu-ray by Scream Factory on July 19th 2016 with the following special features:

  • The high-definition theatrical cut of the film, plus a new director’s version supervised and approved by Eric Red (30 seconds difference – there’s slightly more gore and nudity in the prologue, while the digital transformation at the climax is trimmed down)
  • “Nature of the Beast: Making Bad Moon” featuring interviews with writer/director Eric Red, actors Michael Pare and Mason Gamble, Special Effects Make-up artist Steve Johnson, and stunt coordinator Ken Kirzinger
  • Audio Commentary with writer/director Eric Red (Director’s version only)
  • Audio Commentary with writer/director Eric Red and actor Michael Pare (Theatrical Cut)
  • The unrated opening scene from the Director’s first cut (Sourced from VHS)
  • Three Storyboard sequences
  • Original Theatrical Trailer

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Plot:

While on assignment in the jungles of Nepal, photojournalist Ted Harrison (Michael Pare) and his girlfriend are savagely attacked by a hideous beast which tears the woman to shreds and leaves Ted badly mauled.

He later returns to the States to live near his sister Janet (Mariel Hemingway), nephew Brett (Mason Gamble) and their German shepherd Thor, hoping the presence of family will dispel the horrific memories… until the inevitable effects of a werewolf curse begin to surface.

As Ted’s humanity begins slipping away, only the family dog begins to suspect something is wrong — but poor Thor ends up being the chief suspect in a string of recent mutilation murders…

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 Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Reviews

Bad Moon doesn’t have what one would call a complicated story. The wayward brother becomes a werewolf and moves in with his sister. That’s it. But the werewolf makeup was great and the kills were fantastic. The hot babe who gets it at the beginning was appropriately bloody and, of course, the big climax scene with Thor was great.” Dr Gore’s Movie Reviews

“This movie was so unbearable that I would have preferred a literal translation of the title. Two hours of looking up at Marlon Brando’s butt cheeks squashed flat against a glass tabletop would have been a preferable to this werewolf masterpiece — and probably more hairy.” Mr Cranky

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“While it is constantly dragged down by the complete lack of logic and shoddy performances, there are two distinct features that make this a hit amongst fans: Christopher Allen Nelson’s gory effects and one of the most convincing costume designs ever conceived … The film would be otherwise unremarkable were it not for the terrifying creature effects, but they are impressive enough to make this one of the better werewolf entries out of the 90’s.” I Like Horror Movies

“Michael Pare does a damn good job as villainous Ted, working hard to convey a sense of rotted humanity within him, doing the work until Red reveals the werewolf in the light, and then the bang up special effects complete the transformation. Considering the budget and period, the special effects and monster of “Bad Moon” still looks incredible in motion and Red’s strong direction matched with the excellent editing offer up a wonderful climax…” Cinema Crazed

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Bad Moon isn’t a great film, but it is a competent one with enough inspiration and individuality to impress. It is easy to see why it has built up an affectionate little following over the last few decades.” The Blu File

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

“It’s impossible to hate any movie in which the hero is a magnificent German Shepherd, but that angle is about all that Bad Moon has going for it … extremely thin on the narrative side, and Paré’s character fails to make consistent sense, but the effects aren’t bad.” Creative Loafing

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Cast and characters:

  • Michael Paré — Uncle Ted
  • Mason Gamble — Brett
  • Mariel Hemingway — Janet
  • Ken Pogue — Sheriff Jenson
  • Hrothgar Mathews — Flopsy
  • Johanna Lebovitz — Marjorie
  • Gavin Buhr — Forest Ranger
  • Julia Montgomery Brown — Reporter
  • Primo — Thor

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Legion – USA, 1998 – reviews

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‘Their mission was simple… kill something that couldn’t be killed’

Legion is a 1998 science fiction action horror feature film set in the future about a special forces team comprised of convicts that are sent on a deadly mission.

Directed by Jon Hess from a screenplay written by Evan Spiliotopoulos, the movie stars Parker Stevenson, Terry Farrell, and Corey Feldman.

Plot:

In the year 2036, a special forces team led by Major Agatha Doyle (Terry Farrell) and formed from death-row prisoners is sent on a deadly mission.

Former war hero and now death row prisoner Captain Aldrich (Parker Stevenson) is offered the chance at a pardon if he will join the team and undertake their mission to infiltrate an enemy facility…

Reviews [click links to read more]:

Legion isn’t worth watching. Everything about it lines right up with my wheelhouse (Aliens rip-off and whatnot) but it sucks to the point where I needed multiple attempts to view it and still almost turned it off to check The Weather Channel.” Bulletproof Action

“By not showing even a hint of the monster until the very end, the thrills rapidly lose their credibility. During the closing scenes, when things are ultimately explained (in a meaty monologue) but remain unoriginal, the film resembles a bad episode of The X-Files or Star Trek (which is particularly curious considering that Farrell had just finished – abruptly – her run in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine).” Gone with the Twins

“The budget is somewhat cramped in terms of models and action and the film distinctly down around the B level. However, the film is filled with a series of fine character tensions – in fact, it is these that tend to drive Legion more so than the action element. Intriguingly, the film is crafted as a psychological version Alien (1979) or The Thing of sorts…” Moria

“This is an action-packed sci-fi/horror film drawing on plot devices of some of the best horror films of the 70s, 80s, and 90s. The sweaty Terry Farrell and boyish Parker Stevenson will keep fans of cheesecake and beefcake satisfied.” Zisi Emporium for B Movies

“It’s just the usual alien monster cover up type thing but its fun to guess who it is. An adult Corey Feldman and 80’s pop idol Rick Springfield give good performances and make it quite suspenseful. It just turns into a rip-off of Predator at the end though.” The Yeti

Cast and characters:

  • Parker Stevenson … Captain Aldrich
  • Terry Farrell … Major Agatha Doyle
  • Corey Feldman … Siegal
  • Rick Springfield … Ryan
  • Troy Donahue … Flemming
  • Audie England … Doctor Jones
  • Trevor Goddard … Cutter
  • Richmond Arquette … Koosman
  • Elston Ridgle … Poe
  • Gretchen Palmer … Karlson
  • Patricia M. Peters … Goodis (as Tricia Peters)
  • Bob Bancroft … Yastremski
  • Matthew Allen Bretz … Prisoner

Filming locations:

San Diego, California

Technical details:

Stereo
Aspect Ratio: 1.33: 1

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Split Second – UK, 1992 – reviews

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‘He’s seen the future… Now he has to kill it.’

Split Second is a 1992 British science fiction horror feature film about a maverick detective hunting an inhuman serial killer in flooded London.

Directed by Tony Maylam (The Sins of Dorian Gray; The Burning) from a screenplay written by Gary Scott Thompson (Timecop: The Berlin Decision; Hollow Man – story), the movie stars Rutger Hauer (The Sonata; Dracula 3D; The Hitcher; et al), Kim Cattrall (Big Trouble in Little China; Good Against Evil), Alastair Duncan (The Batman TV series; The Hound of the Baskervilles, 1978) and Michael J. Pollard (House of 1000 Corpses; American Gothic).

Plot:

The year is 2008. Global warming has melted much of the polar ice caps, resulting in serious flooding around the world – including the city of London, much of which is now under several feet of water. In the ensuing chaos, a new killer has emerged. One that’s unnatural, unrelenting and unstoppable.

Maverick veteran policeman Harley Stone (Rutger Hauer) has a link with the killer – it murdered his partner.

As new rookie Detective Dick Durkin(Alistair Duncan) is assigned to him, Stone must find the killer, rescue his girlfriend Michelle (Kim Cattrall), and fight off his own inner demons as he gets closer to his mysterious adversary.

But when the killer is a vicious ten-foot-tall alien creature, even in the future, there aren’t guns big enough to stop the creature’s deadly reign.

Reviews [click links to read more]:

“There are no big special effects, but this is something that actually helps the film a lot. Maylam and cinematographer Clive Tickner (Getting It Right) use a number of excellent locations and a variety of dark and cold colors and shadows to give the film what can best be described as an organic industrial look.” Blu-ray.com

Split Second is great – unintentionally hilarious, reasonably well-made and very, very wet […] utter rubbish, with possibly the worst final scenes ever. Even the name of the film doesn’t make sense…” British Horror Films

“Worth watching if you’re really bored, but I can’t really recommend it. The story’s not strong enough, the action scenes are pretty forgettable and the gritty story sprinkled with comedy moments made the whole thing feel uneven.” Happyotter

” …the film looks great, the monster is reasonably impressive (if somewhat familiar) and kept very mysterious for most of the film, there are some very funny moments (particularly what happens to his partner after their first encounter with the creature, and one line mostly stolen from Jaws), Rutger and Alastair Duncan both give excellent performances…” Rivets on the Poster

“Very fast-paced, Split Second is an example of the men-versus-monster genre, with a British setting providing a fresh twist. The film’s speed drowns any questions an audience may have about the presence of so many Americans in London or the apparent lack of interest by the whole police force in a creature that can crash through its mortuary’s steel door.” TV Guide

“Climax in a London subway is well directed by Ian Sharp, but the man-in-a-rubber-suit monster is a poor imitation of Alien with lots of dripping petroleum jelly. Hauer harrumphs his way through a role that merely parodies his previous fantasy films, while newcomer Neil Duncan fares better in a multidimensional assignment.” Variety

” …Split Second is a bit slow in the beginning, but it gets better as it goes along and by the end, it’s pretty kick ass. The plot is similar to Predator 2 in some ways and it would probably make a great double feature with that flick. The Giger-inspired monster is also rather boss and looks cooler than most Giger-inspired monsters you’d see in this sort of thing.” The Video Vacuum

 

Split Second is a film clearly influenced by Blade Runner. It’s aesthetically very similar, and the score reminds me somewhat of Vangelis’ work, but nonetheless, it manages to be different enough from Scott’s masterpiece that it can be said to be influenced by without being a copy.” Werewolves on the Moon

Main cast and characters:

  • Rutger Hauer … Harley Stone
  • Kim Cattrall … Michelle McLaine
  • Alastair Duncan … Detective Dick Durkin (as Neil Duncan)
  • Michael J. Pollard … The Rat Catcher
  • Alun Armstrong … Thrasher
  • Pete Postlethwaite … Paulsen
  • Ian Dury … Jay Jay
  • Roberta Eaton … Robin
  • Tony Steedman … Pat O’Donnell
  • Steven Hartley … Foster McLaine
  • Sara Stockbridge … Tiffany (as Sarah Stockbridge)
  • Colin Skeaping … Drunk
  • Ken Bones … Forensic Expert
  • Dave Duffy … Nick ‘The Barman’
  • Stewart Harvey-Wilson … The Killer
  • Paul Grayson … The Killer
  • Chris Chappell … Rat Catcher’s Assistant (as Chris Chappel)

Filming locations:

  • Hartley Jam Factory, Tower Bridge Road, Southwark, London, England
  • London, England
  • Tower Bridge, London, England
  • 17th June 1991 to 9th August 1991

Technical details:

  • 90 minutes | 96 minutes (extended)
  • Audio: Dolby SR
  • Kodak Eastman
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.85: 1

Trivia:

Tube train and ‘additional sequences’ were directed by Ian Sharp

Watch a clip on YouTube

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Tales from the Darkside: The Movie – USA, 1990 – reviews and Blu-ray news

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Tales from the Darkside: The Movie will be released by Scream Factory as a Collector’s Edition Blu-ray on June 30, 2020. The new cover artwork is by Laz Marquez with the original poster art on the reverse side. Special features will be announced in May.

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‘Four ghoulish fables in one modern nightmare.’

Tales from the Darkside: The Movie is a 1990 American horror anthology feature film directed by John Harrison, and based on the anthology television series Tales from the Darkside.

The movie depicts a kidnapped paperboy who tells three stories of horror to the suburban witch who is preparing to eat him, à la Hansel and Gretel.

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Wraparound:

The movie opens with Betty, an affluent suburban housewife and a modern-day witch (Deborah Harry), planning a dinner party. The main dish is to be Timmy (Matthew Lawrence), a young boy whom she had captured earlier and chained up in her pantry. To stall her from stuffing and roasting him, the boy tells her three horror stories from a book she gave him, titled Tales from the Darkside.

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Lot 249:

In the first segment, Michael McDowell adapts Arthur Conan Doyle’s short story, “Lot No. 249”. A graduate student named Bellingham (played by Steve Buscemi) has been cheated by two classmates, Susan (Julianne Moore), and Lee (Robert Sedgwick), who framed him for theft to ruin his chances of winning a scholarship for which they were competing.

As revenge, Bellingham reanimates a mummy and uses it to murder them both. Susan’s brother Andy (Christian Slater) kidnaps Bellingham and burns the parchment and mummy. He considers killing Bellingham, but in the end, can’t bring himself to commit real murder…

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Cat from Hell:

George A. Romero adapts a Stephen King short story of the same name. Drogan is a wealthy, wheelchair-bound old man (William Hickey) who brings in a hitman named Halston (David Johansen from The New York Dolls) for a bizarre hire: kill a black cat, which Drogan believes is murderously evil.

Drogan explains that there were three other occupants of his house before the cat arrived: his sister, Amanda (Dolores Sutton), her friend Carolyn (Alice Drummond), and the family’s butler, Richard Gage (Mark Margolis). Drogan claims that one by one, the cat killed the other three and that he is next.

Drogan’s pharmaceutical company killed 5,000 cats while testing a new drug, and he is convinced that this black cat is here to exact cosmic revenge…

The third and final segment is written by Michael McDowell (Beetlejuice) and based on yuki-onna, a spirit or yōkai in Japanese folklore or more specifically Lafcadio Hearn’s version in Kwaidan: Stories and Studies of Strange Things. A despondent artist named Preston (James Remar) witnesses a gruesome murder committed by a gargoyle-like monster.

The monster agrees to spare Preston’s life as long as he swears never to speak of what he saw and heard or describe the monster’s appearance to anyone. The monster vanishes, leaving Preston traumatized and confused, but bound by his oath never to talk about the incident.

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After that night, Preston’s life takes many turns for the better. He meets a beautiful woman named Carola (Rae Dawn Chong), and they fall in love, marry, and have two children. Preston’s struggling art career becomes wildly successful, and life seems promising, but he is tormented by memories of his encounter with the monster, and his vow of silence weighs on him…

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Epilogue:

Betty remarks that Timmy saved the best story (“Lover’s Vow”) for last, but he says that he hasn’t told her the really best story yet and that this one has a happy ending. She tells him that he should have done it earlier, because now it’s too late and she has to start cooking him to be ready in time for her party, and that none of the stories in the book has happy endings.

Buy DVD: Amazon.com

Reviews [click links to read more]:

” … nothing about Tales from the Darkside is likely to give anyone much of a scare. But thanks to casting that is savvier than the horror norm, and to direction by John Harrison that is workmanlike and sometimes even witty, at least it’s fun.” The New York Times

“In front of the camera, you’ve got dependable (if not exactly brilliant) performers like Steve Buscemi, Christian Slater, and Rae Dawn Chong. Dick Smith did the special effects. The screenplay for “The Cat from Hell” was written by George Romero from a story by Stephen King. All that talent really should have added up to more than a decent, but by-the-numbers, horror anthology.” 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

Cast and characters:

Wraparound Story:
  • Deborah Harry as Betty
  • Matthew Lawrence as Timmy
Lot 249:
  • Steve Buscemi as Edward Bellingham
  • Julianne Moore as Susan Smith
  • Christian Slater as Andy Smith
  • Robert Sedgwick as Lee
  • Donald Van Horn as Moving Man
  • Michael Deak as Mummy
  • George Guidall as Museum Director
  • Kathleen Chalfant as Dean
  • Ralph Marrero as Cabbie
Cat from Hell:
  • William Hickey as Drogan
  • David Johansen as Halston
  • Paul Greeno as Cabbie
  • Alice Drummond as Carolyn
  • Dolores Sutton as Amanda
  • Mark Margolis as Gage
Lover’s Vow:
  • James Remar as Preston
  • Rae Dawn Chong as Carola
  • Robert Klein as Wyatt
  • Ashton Wise as Jer
  • Philip Lenkowsky as Maddox
  • Joe Dabenigno as Cop #1
  • Larry Silvestri as Cop #2
  • Donna Davidge as Gallery Patron
  • Nicole Rochelle as Margaret
  • Daniel Harrison as John

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“Definitely an improvement on the lamentable Creepshow or Cat’s Eye, but Harrison never quite transcends the inherently limited format.” Time Out

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Lost in Space – USA, 1998 – overview and reviews

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‘Get lost’

Lost in Space is a 1998 science fiction action feature film about the Robinson family that goes into space to fight for a chance for humanity. They end up fighting to live long enough to find a way home.

Directed by Stephen Hopkins (The Reaping; Predator 2; A Nightmare on Elm Street 5) from a screenplay written Akiva Goldsman, based on characters from the Irwin Allen television series, the movie stars William Hurt, Gary Oldman, Mimi Rogers, Matt LeBlanc, Heather Graham, Lacey Chabert and Jack Johnson.

Review:

A mighty trilogy from New Line Cinema that would take turn-of-the-20th-century viewers to incredible new worlds of fantasy, lore and adventure!!!… Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings cycle? No. A few years before that, a three-parter had apparently been determined for Lost in Space, an FX-laden relaunch of a nostalgically remembered American TV show from the 1960s.

Mediocre reception for 1998’s $70 million (back when that was rather a lot of money) Lost in Space movie meant that the continuing adventure… never did. But that sure does explain a few things for me with this costly, eye-filling epic: subplots and characters introduced that never pay off, dangling storylines, meandering motivations, and an overarching sense that the whole thing was simultaneously overthought and underthought.

Behold Earth of 2058 (already looking as inaccurate as did the 1965 TV show’s fictitious incept date of 1997). With the planet’s resources tapped out, scientists aim to send humanity looking for more upscale real estate in the cosmos. Professor John Robinson (William Hurt), the developer of a faster-than-light drive, gets to test the technology in the maiden voyage of the Jupiter 2 saucer, his whole family aboard in a symbolic exploratory hop to a distant star.

But terrorists with no clear agenda have paid freelance traitor Doctor Zachary Smith (Gary Oldman) to sabotage the flight. Smith gets trapped aboard the Jupiter 2 when it uncontrollably warps to a random spot in the galaxy.

With an unrepentant Smith their perpetual prisoner and foil, the Robinsons and their would-be macho guest pilot Don West (Matt LeBlanc) rush at comet velocity through perils sewn together by director Stephen Hopkins in the style of a 64-bit video game set to demo mode. There’s an excursion to a mysteriously adrift starship crawling with ferocious, giant bugs (for those who didn’t get enough of that cliché in Men in Black and Starship Troopers), hastily followed by a sojourn on a nearby, unstable planet, as the Jupiter 2 castaways try to determine a way back home. Though, of course, if they really did succeed in that, there would be no call for the planned sequels.

TV’s original Lost in Space, produced by big-things-going-boom Hollywood mogul Irwin Allen, was a sci-fi version of the venerable Swiss Family Robinson castaway premise. The network program was noteworthy not only for an early John (“Johnny”) Williams score but also for its schizoid arc, beginning in black-and-white as fairly sombre Mercury Space Program attitude, then morphing – with the introduction of colour cinematography and studies of what was most appealing to American viewers – into garish silliness. Grimly confronted alien threats got replaced with galactic long-haired bikers and, at one point, a half-man-half-carrot.

TV’s Doctor Smith (thespian Jonathan Harris gamely running the gamut) started out a genuine menace but ended a simpering comic-relief buffoon, squalling “the pain, the pain!” and playing off his squabbles with the Robinson’s trusty Robot (“You bubbleheaded boobie!”) or the young science prodigy Will Robinson (Billy Mumy in the show, Jack Johnson in this feature).

Welding the unmatching bits together for the New Line reboot, fell to blockbuster screenwriter/producer Akiva Goldsman, fresh off doing two campy Batman movies that were generally considered not the Dark Knight’s finest hour. Thus there are lots of clever comic-bookish lines, a front-loading of cameos by actors from the original show (June Lockhart, Marc Goddard, etc) and other inside jokes.

Silicon Graphics, responsible for lots of spiffy f/x in otherwise empty movie spectacles when CGI was Hollywood’s latest bright shiny toy, churned out great eye candy in terms of bubble-hood spaceships, domed cities, shimmering force fields, clattering arachnids, and a squirmy alien pet the Robinsons acquire, Hollywood’s most nauseatingly cute sci-fi lifeform since the Ewok. Jim Henson’s workshop built not one but two animatronic iterations of young Will’s famed Robot. In case some of the imaginative ergonomic gadgets and production designs (Stephen Hopkins went with a futuristic veneer that largely eschewed right angles) flashed past too fast, toy versions were available at retailers everywhere.

What Lost in Space needs more is a sense of wonder, suspense, involvement, terror, discovery… Key sensations even Irwin Allen’s original TV show managed to stir on occasion. In the evolution of sci-fi on American television, the debut of Star Trek right after Lost in Space is considered by many science-fiction fans to be when the medium at long last Got It Right. But in this 1998 version one watches the explosions and glitz with detachment and dry palms, appreciating mainly the gigabytes of hard-drive storage and hours at some terminal it must have taken to envision it.

What relaunched/re-lost Lost in Space should be remembered for is the contrast between the 90s Robinsons and their counterparts of yesteryear. Products of the pre-Vietnam, pre-feminist mindset (occasional encounters with space hippies notwithstanding), the ’60s Robinson clan was the idealised American household, with a wise and brave father, serenely domestic mother, and a trio of straight-A kids. The worst that ever happened was daughter Penny’s teen crush on Major West, or Will forgetting to keep his elbows off the table at dinner.

This one presents a Space Family Robinson for the downsized and dysfunctional ’90s, when the moms and dads (if any) must work three jobs just to pay the interest on the credit cards and kids get to run wild. Workaholic John Robinson rarely sees or listens to his children, and missed Will’s science fairs. Will hacks the school computer and isn’t above a PG-13 expletive. Penny (Lacey Chabert) is a truant goth chick. Judy is cold and emotionless in mimicry of dad, and mom (Mimi Rogers) mediates between the combatants. In the course of cataclysmic adventures, Professor Robinson learns to Always Be There for His Family, which was a standard Hollywood story arc of the era (I often wonder how many movie-industry marriages fell apart while the talents involved laboured overtime on save-your-family tales.

Gary Oldman, in the “coveted” role of Doctor Zachary Smith, expounds that he’s made a “profound philosophical choice” of evil over good, to forever be the serpent in the garden, Do What Thou Wilt and all that, as Goldsman’s dialogue tries to throttle-up the dialogue out of the juvenile realm. At least the thespian did a public service preventing other worthy
Brit actors (Sir Anthony Hopkins, Ben Kingsley, Terence Stamp, Jeremy Irons… Dame Maggie Smith, even) from selling out as one more upper-crust baddie in Hollywood drivel. O my brother, where were you when Malcolm McDowell needed you?

Following the iffy flight of this Lost in Space there came an unrelated Lost in Space Netflix series in 2018 that did indeed make Doctor Smith a female (Parker Posey); I haven’t made the acquaintance. As for this one, it’s there on video with the pretty pictures and the what-ifs? for viewers (and Akiva Goldsman’s bank account) if the rest of the spectacles had ever been made.

Charles Cassady Jr. – MOVIES & MANIA

Other reviews:

“Oldman should have stayed at home. LeBlanc comes courtesy of Dial-A-Hunk. Graham makes you forget she was in Boogie Nights. Rogers makes you forget. Hurt looks miserable as if he strayed onto the wrong sound stage. Chabert could have stolen the picture but is given nothing to do in the second half.” Eye for Film

“Without a clear narrative drive, there doesn’t seem to be much of a point to the whole endeavor. The desire to get home doesn’t generate the level of urgency one might reasonably expect, and the movie ends up feeling like a few episodes of Star Trek: Voyager strung together. ” Reel Views

“The film, running a tad over two hours, at times gets lost in its own kind of space, not sure which end is up. But a deft interplay among swaggering Major West, the muttering Professor John (protective of his daughter) and cute scientist Judy helps keep the trip fun.” San Francisco Chronicle, April 3, 1998.

Choice dialogue:

Major Don West: “Ok, last one to kill the bad guy gets the beer.”

Major Don West: “Ok, I’m puttin’ the pedal to the metal. Here goes.”

Doctor Smith: “I loathe children.”

Cast and characters:

  • William Hurt … John Robinson
  • Mimi Rogers … Maureen Robinson
  • Heather Graham … Judy Robinson
  • Lacey Chabert … Penny Robinson
  • Jack Johnson … Will Robinson
  • Gary Oldman … Doctor Smith / Spider Smith
  • Matt LeBlanc … Don West
  • Jared Harris … Older Will
  • Mark Goddard … General
  • Lennie James … Jeb Walker
  • Marta Kristen … Reporter #1
  • June Lockhart … Principal
  • Edward Fox … Businessman
  • Adam Sims … Lab Technician
  • Angela Cartwright … Reporter #2

Filming locations:

Principal photography began on March 3, 1997, at Shepperton Studios in Surrey, England.

Box office:

Lost in Space reportedly cost $80 million and grossed $136.2 million worldwide.

Technical details:

  • 130 minutes
  • Aspect Ratio: 2.39: 1
  • Audio: DTS | Dolby Digital | SDDS

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Dolly Dearest – USA, 1991 – reviews and Vinegar Syndrome Blu-ray news

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Vinegar Syndrome is releasing Dolly Dearest on Blu-ray for the very first time, in a brand new 2K restoration on April 28th 2020. The limited-edition embossed slipcover designed by Earl Kessler Jr. (as above) is limited to 2,500 units. Special features:

  • Region Free Blu-ray/DVD combo
  • Newly scanned & restored in 2k from its 35mm interpositive
  • “Playing With Dolls” – an interview with lead actress Denise Crosby
  • “Dressing the Part” – an interview with actor Ed Gale
  • Reversible cover artwork
  • SDH English subtitles

Here is our previous coverage of the movie:

‘It’s time to play’

Dolly Dearest is a 1991 American supernatural horror feature film written and directed by Maria Lease, based on a story by Rod Nave and Peter Sutcliffe, and produced by Daniel Cady (writer of Kiss of the Tarantula; Dream No Evil; Garden of the Dead). The Trimark Pictures-Channeller Enterprises production stars Denise Crosby, Sam Bottoms, Chris Demetral, Candy Hutson and Rip Torn.

Plot:

An American family moves to Mexico to fabricate dolls, but their toy factory happens to be next to a Sanzian grave and the toys come into possession of an old, malicious spirit…

 

Reviews [click links to read more]:

“This movie can’t decide on what it wants to be, an Omen rip-off or a Child’s Play rip-off so it tries to be both and fails miserably. This is a horror movie that wants to play it straight but forgets that in order to do that you need a good script otherwise it comes across as bad.” Arrow in the Head

“It goes from creepy parts to boring parts. The story is alright, but there isn’t enough false scares and stuff like that to keep it interesting until the real shit starts going down. It’s basically a drama until a doll decides to kill someone.” Awful Horror Movies

 

“One major issue is this film falls very short in the death department. In fact, I think there are no more than three, maybe four, kills all together. Moreover, with that comes a lack of Dolly’s presence…” Chuck Norris Ate My Baby

“The blending of dolls-n-devils is interesting, if not carried out to a logical, satisfying conclusion. The effects aren’t terrible, and there’s plenty of Dolly running around action. Dolly Dearest’s biggest fault (aside from the… uh… what’s thinner than paper-thin? annoying characters and the lousy acting) is that there’s simply not nearly enough killing…” Final Girl

” …this is a better movie than Child’s Play.  The acting on a whole is better, it’s actually scary, there’s no slow bits, it all kind of makes sense and you don’t have to suspend your disbelief quite as much as there’s not the voodoo stuff to contend with.” I Spit on Your Taste

“The effects are quite good, and the doll herself looks creepy and the illusion of her coming alive works for me. Not much on the gore front though, expect when a character gets his hand stuck in a sewing Machine. Dolly Dearest also has slick look and could pass for a bigger horror movie….” Ninja Dixon

 

” …a truly terrible little Child’s Play ripoff that’s as overtly low-budget as it is eye-scratchingly stupid.” DVD Talk

 

” …ends miserably, a climactic sequence so preposterous that it had me rolling my eyes. Yet even this didn’t kill the movie for me. Sure, Dolly Dearest will never be regarded as a classic […] but it does have its moments.” 2,500 Movies Challenge

“As the young heroine who comes under her Dolly’s spell, Hutson is an impressively precocious adorable/hateful character […] Some clutzy dialogue is film’s chief drawback. Serious mood is also undercut by corny reversion to the genre cliche of having the Dolly shout dumb one-liners during the final reel.” Variety

“Competently directed with a well done first doll attack; this is still mostly skippable due to its by-the-book plotting and a really poor finale that has the dolls spouting lame one-liners. The effects are okay though a bit jerky at times…” The Video Graveyard

Hand-drawn poster from Ghana

Cast and characters:

  • Denise Crosby … Marilyn Wade
  • Sam Bottoms … Elliot Wade – Uncle Sam; Up from the Depths
  • Rip Torn … Karl Resnick – RoboCop 3; Scarab; A Stranger is Watching; The Man Who Fell to Earth
  • Chris Demetral … Jimmy Wade
  • Candace Hutson … Jessica Wade (as Candy Hutson)
  • Lupe Ontiveros … Camilla
  • Enrique Renaldo … Estrella
  • Alma Martinez … Alva (as Alma Martínez)
  • Will Gotay … Luis
  • Rene Victor … Nun at the Convent
  • Luis Cortez … Peter
  • Jaime Gomez … Hector
  • Brass Adams … Bob Larabe

Filming locations:

Santa Clarita, California
UNAM University, Mexico City, Mexico

Technical details:

  • 93 minutes
  • Ultra Stereo

Doll horror

Horror from 1991

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Killer Condom – Germany, 1996 – overview and reviews

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Killer_Condom_FilmPoster

‘The rubber that rubs you out !!!’

Killer Condom – original title Kondom des Grauens (translation: “Condom of Horror” – is a 1996 German comedy horror feature film based on the comic book of the same name by Dylan Kenyon.

The film was directed by Martin Walz and featured Kurt Scobbie as its special effects coordinator. Artist H.R. Giger (Species; Alien) was a creative consultant. It was distributed in the United States by Troma Entertainment.

Plot:

New York City: Gay detective Luigi Mackeroni (Udo Samel) has been hired to investigate a series of bizarre attacks at the Hotel Quickie in which male guests have all had their penises mysteriously bitten off.

killer-condom-1996-detective

Whilst at the crime scene, he enlists the services of a gigolo named Billy and invites him up to the crime room. Before the two men engage in sex, a carnivorous living condom interrupts them and bites off Mackeroni’s right testicle.

Now on a personal vendetta, Mackeroni begins his lone quest to not only bring a stop to the rash of condom attacks, but also face his true feelings toward Billy the gigolo…

Killer Condom

Reviews:

‘One part crime drama, one part comedy, one part ultra-low budget horror movie (dig the cardboard cut out of a nurse float pass the door in the hospital) and one part gay movie. That’s right, this certainly isn’t a movie for everyone. If you have a problem with seeing naked guys together, you best leave right now and not look back.’ IGN

“The carnivorous contraceptive, which admittedly shares some similarities to Giger’s work on the sandworm from Dune, has teeth like a lamprey and makes cartoon sound effects as it squirms around … Killer Condom is not your average B-movie, but if you’re looking for something a bit different, it definitely is awfully good.” Jason Adams, JoBlo.com

killercondom2

” …we still have the danger of AIDS this is a film that is willing to show you the dangers of carnivorous condoms. On top that this film poke fun at the stereotypes of macho men and action hero’s. Also the film has a nice gritty sleaze feel to it being full of hookers, perverts and religious fanatics.” Horror News

killer-condom-poster

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Nightmare Concert (A Cat in the Brain) – Italy, 1990 – reviews

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Nightmare Concert (A Cat in the Brain) – Italian: Un gatto nel cervello – is a 1990 Italian horror film directed by Lucio Fulci (The House by the Cemetery; Zombie Flesh Eaters; A Lizard in a Woman’s Skin; et al) from a screenplay co-written with Giovanni Simonelli and Antonio Tentori.

Nightmare Concert is one of Fulci’s final films and is notable for self-reflexively summing up his career. The film is a meta-film in which the director appears playing himself, a tortured horror filmmaker who is driven by the violent visions that he experiences both behind the camera and off the set.

Feeling like he’s losing his grip on reality and disturbed by murderous fantasies, Fulci consults a psychotherapist. The “shrink” exploits the director’s vulnerabilities to his own murderous ends.

Buy Blu-ray: Amazon.com

Juxtaposing gory horror clips from several of his own recently horror films that he either directed and/or produced, Fulci shot a wrap-around segment and used Vincenzo Tomassi’s film editing (as well as his own voice over) to create the storyline – a personal insight into the effects of horror filmmaking on the psyche. The resulting film was composed almost entirely in post-production. The wrap-around segments featuring Fulci were largely shot in and around Rome’s famous Cinecittà Studios.

Reviews [click links to read more]:

“Most of the gore effects are pretty shoddy, but they’re so over-the-top that they tend to nauseate regardless (naturally, the film was banned in the U.K. for a number of years). The acting (especially when watching the English language version) is mostly laughable, though Fulci is fascinating to watch as himself in a series of ambiguous routines.” George R. Reis, DVD Drive-in

Buy Blu-ray: Amazon.co.uk

“Fulci keeps the feature trashy, spotlighting nudity and sex with loving detail, and there’s enough unexplained events to blur concentration on the production’s limitations, finding a few violent outbursts merely hinted at. It’s wildly silly stuff at times, but there’s a darkness to Cat in the Brain that’s convincing, even when pieces of this puzzle are never meant to join together.” Brian Orndorf, Blu-ray.com

You might find yourself, like I did, wondering what the point is. But the more time you spend with Cat in the Brain, the more it grows on you. Fulci’s work in front of the camera becomes more interesting, the humor in his performance and in the dialogue more obvious and more biting and the whole vibe a bit more playful, despite the fact that, yeah, it’s clearly malicious. This isn’t the man’s best film, not by a wide margin, but it’s certainly one of his more interesting.” Ian Jane, Rock! Shock! Pop!

“Chainsaw eviscerations, decapitations, piano-wire throat slashings, intestines being fed to ravenous pigs, eye-gougings, masses of T&A, graphic knifings, tongue-rippings… all and much more are present and correct. And I mean much more!” Chas Balun’s Deep Red

“Although punctuated by grisly visions of death, putrefaction and dismemberment, the mood of the film is almost as facetious as The Touch of Death. The insane psychiatrist Swharz (David L. Thompson) exhibits the same sort of maniacal glee as Halsey in the earlier film. His risible amalgam of ‘crazy’ grins and goggle-eyed mirth squanders what could have been an interesting idea.” Stephen Thrower, Beyond Terror: The Films of Lucio Fulci

Buy Beyond TerrorAmazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

“Newcomers to Fulci will definitely wonder what the fuss is about: the acting is uniformly terrible, the visuals are crude at best, and Fabio Frizzi’s score awkwardly mixes new muzak compositions with excerpts from his past glory days (mainly The Beyond). Scene for scene, this may be Fulci’s goriest film, and this aspect alone has earned it some fan loyalty; on another level, it’s a bizarre cry for understanding…” Nathaniel Thompson, Mondo Digital

“It’s all very nasty stuff, that even heavy use of Edvard Grieg’s classical-music hit “In the Hall of the Mountain King” can’t serve as a reliable salve. It really is like a proto-Wes Craven’s New Nightmare, but one that most video viewers won’t have the stomach to take. I can’t say I really blame them.” Rod Lott, Flick Attack

Cast and characters:

  • Lucio Fulci as Himself
  • Brett Halsey as Human Monster [footage from Touch of Death]
  • David L. Thompson as Professor Egon Swharz
  • Jeoffrey Kennedy as Officer Gabrielli
  • Malisa Longo as Katya Schwarz
  • Ria De Simone as Sopran [footage from Touch of Death]
  • Sacha Darwin as Woman in the oven [footage from Touch of Death]
  • Robert Egon as Himself/Second Human Monster [footage from Ghosts of Sodom]

Filming locations:

Rome, Italy

Wikipedia | Image credits: Mondo Digital

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Herschell Gordon Lewis – filmmaker

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Herschell Gordon Lewis (June 15, 1929 – September 26, 2016) was an American filmmaker, best known for creating the “splatter” subgenre of horror films.

He is often referred to as the “Godfather of Gore”, though his film career has included works in a range of exploitation film genres including juvenile delinquent films, nudie-cuties, two children’s films and at least one rural comedy.

Herschell Gordon Lewis was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1929. His father died when he was six years old. His mother never remarried; and his family then moved to Chicago.

After graduating from high school, Lewis received a master’s degree in Journalism at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. A few years later, he became a professor of English literature at Mississippi State University.

In 1953, Lewis began working for a friend’s advertising agency in Chicago while teaching graduate advertising courses at night at Roosevelt University. He began directing TV commercial advertisements.

living-venus-48867-poster

Lewis served as producer on his first film venture, The Prime Time (1959). He would assume directing duties on nearly all of his films from then on. His first in a lengthy series of collaborations with exploitation producer David F. Friedman, Living Venus (1961), was a fictitious account based on the story of Hugh Hefner and the beginnings of Playboy.

The two continued with a series of erotic films in the early 1960s. Typical of these nudies were the comedies Boin-n-g! (1963) and The Adventures of Lucky Pierre (1961).

blood_feast_poster_01

With the nudie market beginning to wane, Lewis and Friedman entered into uncharted territory with 1963’s seminal Blood Feast, considered by most critics to be the first “gore” film.

Blood-Feast-Jack-the-Ripper-Sky-Vue-Drive-In

Incredibly cheap and cheesy, the film nonetheless stunning audiences with the jaw-dropping gore on display. They formed queues at drive-ins to see it. The splatter sub-genre was born!

The far superior Two Thousand Maniacs! (1964) followed, with a whole town getting in on the mayhem. And this one included great singalong ditty ‘The South’s Gonna Rise Again’

Color Me Blood Red (1965) followed the same formula but was about a deranged artist and more low key. Still, the full-color gore on display in these films caused a sensation, with horror film-makers throughout the world gradually saturating their productions with similarly shocking visual effects.

two thousand maniacs + night of blood feast drive-in ad mat

Outside the gore sub-genre, Lewis pursued a wide gamut of other exploitation avenues. Some of the subjects he explored include juvenile delinquency (Just for the Hell of It, 1968), wife swapping (Suburban Roulette, 1968), the corruption of the music industry (Blast-Off Girls, 1967), and birth control (The Girl, the Body, and the Pill, 1967).

He was also not above tapping the children’s market, as with Jimmy the Boy Wonder (1966) and The Magic Land of Mother Goose (1967), which were padded out to feature film length by incorporating long foreign-made cartoons.

monster a go-go synergy

Lewis financed and produced nearly all of his own movies with funds he made from his successful advertising firm based in Chicago. Always resourceful despite the low budgets he worked with, Lewis purchased the rights to an unfinished Bill Rebane film and completed it himself, re-titling the film Monster a Go-Go (1965). This approach demonstrated Lewis’s business savvy; by owning the rights to both features, he knew he would not get fleeced by theaters juggling the box office returns, a common practice at that time.

Lewis’s third gore phase served to push the genre into even more outrageous shock territory. Starting with The Gruesome Twosome (1967), he went onto The Wizard of Gore (1968, released 1970) featured a stage magician who would mutilate his volunteers severely through a series of merciless routines.

By The Gore Gore Girls (1972) he had begun to lampoon himself and this last dark comedy would mark his semi-retirement from film altogether. He decided to leave the filmmaking industry to work in copywriting and direct marketing, a subject on which he published several books in the 1980s.

amazing-herschell-gordon-lewis-daniel-krogh-book

Meanwhile, throughout the 1980s and 1990s, interest in his splatter movies continued to grow as more and more horror fans began to appreciate the naive charm of his outlandish oeuvre. Sequels to Two Thousand Maniacs! and a remake of The Wizard of Gore proved that Lewis’ lasting influence on the horror genre had been firmly established.

In 2002, Lewis himself was finally drawn back into the film world, released his first film in thirty years, Blood Feast 2: All U Can Eat, a sequel to the first film. It featured a cameo appearance by John Waters, a devotee of Lewis’ work.

BloodMania-Herschell-Gordon-Lewis-2016

In 2016, he proved to still be a draw as Canadian anthology movie Herschell Gordon Lewis’ BloodMania was filmed with his name as part of the title. The same year, Blood Feast was remade in France with a small cameo role for Lewis. He was still enjoying being the Godfather of Gore!

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Xtro 3: Watch the Skies – UK | USA, 1995 – overview and reviews

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Xtro 3 is a 1995 British-American science fiction horror feature film about US marines being terrorised by an alien on a seemingly deserted island. The film was promoted as Xtro 3: Watch the Skies

Directed and co-produced by Harry Bromley Davenport (Haunted Echoes; Whispers of Fear) from a screenplay written by Daryl Haney (Masque of the Red Death; Lords of the Deep; Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood), the movie stars J. Marvin Campbell, Douglas Cavanaugh, Robert Culp (Santa’s Slay; Spectre, 1977) and Andrew Divoff (The Hatred; Night of the Living Dead 3D: Re-Animation; Wishmaster franchise). It is sequel-in-name-only to Bromley Davenport’s Xtro (1982) and Xtro II: The Second Encounter (1990).

Plot:

A group of military personnel have been assembled to, they believe, locate and disarm old active explosives which have been left unattended at a former army testing site on a remote island. However, when they arrive at the deserted island, they soon discover that something doesn’t seem quite right about their mission.

Soon enough, they uncover a strange concrete block which, after accidentally blowing up, unleashes an indestructible, bloodthirsty alien being which will stop at nothing to kill them. As the survivors band together in order to stay alive and try and find a way to outwit the diabolical creature, they realize that their entire mission might have been a trap and that the military is using them as pawns in their own vicious plan…

Reviews [click links to read more]:

“When it comes to the special effects, though they looked dated by today’s standards. They’re never less very effective. Standout moments include the scene where the military dissect the alien’s mate and a scene where one of the soldiers gets trapped in a web-like substance and the alien slowly tortures them.” 10K Bullets

“The special effects are particularly bad; when there’s a flashback to the 1950s, it’s so bad they had to be doing it intentionally badly. There’s a soundtrack that works against the action. There’s plenty of bad acting, though it’s nice to see Robert Culp get some work.”  Down Among the Z Movies

“The only actor in the bunch any good at their craft is Andrew Divoff, who always brings fierce intensity to his performances. I suppose Robert Culp is fine in a role that he clearly shot over the course of a single day, maybe two. As for the rest, I can’t say a single actor in the bunch is capable of delivering a line with any sense of conviction.” Dread Central

“The biggest hurdle that handicaps this film is its ultra-low budget, which results in some terrible early CGI and a goofy-looking alien. The rubbery creature can camouflage itself with a cloaking device to sneak up on victims and it has a long serpentine tongue as a weapon. The cinematography by Irv Goodnoff (Evilspeak) helps the picture look bigger than it is, but it still appears pretty cheap.” Horror DNA

“The movie takes a bit to really get going but is sort of fun when it does. The effects range from stupid to amusing. The alien occasionally looks good, although people like me can distinguish real blinking from ‘puppet blinking.’ Less jaded people may actually be able to deal with the stupidity and forgive this movie for its ambitiousness.” Mondo Bizarro

“Basically a ’50s monster movie at heart and a lot less perverse than the original film, this one doesn’t even try to be more than a  pulpy time killer and succeeds on that front. The characters aren’t terribly developed and are mostly interchangeable […] The alien itself is quite a fun design in a low-budget practical effects sort of way, and it all moves along quickly with little muss or fuss.” Mondo Digital

” …it is hampered by slow pacing at the beginning as well as during the alien vs. human scenes on the island which become repetitive as you realize all the running around isn’t actually advancing the story. Still, it is an occasionally entertaining and unexpected end to a weird and not very good film franchise.” Monster Hunter

“Any time the alien is on screen and wreaking havoc the movie is gold and the movie winds up an interesting mix of action, sci-fi and horror tropes. The acting is rarely amazing but all involved are at least enthusiastic and Andrew Divoff is pretty fun to watch (though to be fair, Andrew Divoff is always fun to watch, he just has that quality about him). This isn’t as legitimately weird as the first Xtro movie, it’s too Predator influenced…” Rock! Shock! Pop!

“It’s hard to keep up with this script, and the dialogue isn’t helping. Also, these aren’t your typical 1990’s special effects. They’re undoubtedly the most interesting aspect of Xtro 3. It’s like half the cast and crew were passionate about this project, and half couldn’t care less.” Tales of Terror

Release:

Vinegar Syndrome released Xtro 3 as a limited edition Blu-ray on March 31st 2020. Order via Amazon.com

Bonus Features:

  • Region Free Blu-ray + DVD combo
  • Newly scanned & restored in 2K from its 35mm camera negative
  • “Winning and Losing” – an interview with director Harry Bromley Davenport
  • “Acting like a Writer” – an interview with writer/actor Daryl Haney
  • Original trailer
  • Reversible cover artwork
  • English SDH subtitles

Cast and characters:

  • J. Marvin Campbell … Biber
  • Douglas Cavanaugh … Wolf
  • Robert Culp … Major Guardino
  • Andrew Divoff … Captain Fetterman
  • Virgil Frye … Survivor
  • Nigel Gibbs … Smythe
  • Daryl Haney … Private Hendricks
  • Jim Hanks … Private Friedman
  • Paul Hayes … Mr Atkins
  • Andrea Lauren Herz … Corporal Banta
  • Bridget Hoffman … Waitress
  • Sal Landi … Lt. Martin Kirn
  • Lisa London … Melissa Meed
  • Robert Madrid … Shaye
  • Karen Moncrieff … J.G. Watkins
  • Jeanne Mori … Erica Stern
  • David M. Parker … Private Dermot Reilly
  • Al Ruscio … The General (1955)
  • Martin Schienle … Biff Atkins
  • James Spinelli … Johnson
  • David Weininger … Segall

Technical details:

97 minutes

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Hated: GG Allin and the Murder Junkies – USA, 1993 – reviews

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“I hate everyone.”

Hated: GG Allin and the Murder Junkies is a 1993 documentary film directed by Todd Phillips  (Joker; The Hangover and sequels; Starsky & Hutch). The film is about the life of GG Allin, a punk rock musician who was infamous for extreme behaviour (violence, obscenity, drug abuse) and his stage shows becoming confrontational events. Performing naked was one of Allin’s most common traits. Dee Dee Ramone joined the Murder Junkies for about a week before leaving once he realised what he’d gotten into.

Plot:

Documentary filmmaker Todd Phillips attempts to profile extreme-transgressive American rock star GG Allin, although the most heartfelt communication he takes away from the performer is when Allin phones from prison asking to be bailed out.

In its initial VHS debut Hated was one of a handful of offbeat, boundary-pushing or just-plain unmarketable films released on a small video label originated by the seminal magazine of cult cinema, Film Threat.

Review:

Long before his success in the comics-to-motion-pictures translation Joker (2019), Todd Phillips was a co-coordinator of the New York Underground Film Festival and gave the world another character study – well, attempted character study is more like it – of a very underground show-business personality, extremist punk rock vocalist Kevin Michael ‘GG’ Allin.

Leading a variety of bands but earning his greatest notoriety fronting the Murder Junkies, the Vermont-born Allin screamed foul lyrics (many about serial killers) while committing obscene and loathsome acts onstage and off – eating his own faeces was one such attention-getter. He spent time in jail for assaulting audience members and he promised to kill himself in a concert on Halloween night, 1992. Phillips gets slightly more introspection into GG from his brother Merle (who cultivates a Hitler-style moustache); they grew up in a working-class household under a father who was abusive and possibly mentally ill. It is claimed GG had a personality change after Merle slipped him some LSD at a fast-food restaurant.

In any case, his outrageous, deliberately offensive personality and semi-nude performances lure in thrillseekers who thought they’d seen it all and it was not uncommon for GG to finish a show bloody and bruised. “My mind is a machine gun! My a bullet! The audience is a target” he roars. But Allin reneges on the pledge to commit suicide onstage, dying privately instead of a drug overdose the following year.

Phillips manages to speak to one of Allin’s old schoolteachers (“My first impression of Mr Allin was that he would be pretty easy to get along with”) and there is a melancholy sense of sadness that any boy could go so grotesquely wrong, even if he appeared at some point fully intended to, in some sort of self-mythologizing death wish. The film’s obviously low-budget and uncooperative subject leave the presentation a little sloppy and less than fully satisfying – but can you prove that GG Allin would not have wanted it that way? At the very least?

Even GG’s ‘music’ is hardly listenable; the most well-known Murder Junkies tune (we will not print the title on a reputable website like this) was, in fact, a profane parody of someone else’ song entirely, the anthemic “Longhaired Redneck” by country-and-western “outlaw” music trailblazer David Allen Coe – all around, a far more interesting music figure, by the way.

Still, if one had to make a measure of how much a low-water mark rock could possibly have met in seeking the ultimate in nihilistic degradation and utter human slime and filth, one could argue that GG Allin could even have taught the Sex Pistols a thing or two. Does that make him an artist of note in any conceivable sense? One might argue that Joker, with its madman hero, has at least some of its conceptual DNA in Hated as well as Batman’s comic-book Gotham City.

Charles Cassady Jr., MOVIES & MANIA

Other reviews:

“If you think you’ve seen everything, definitely seek this out. You’ll be glad you’re in the safety of your own home and that Allin is no longer able to knock on your door.” Combustible Celluloid

Hated is a powerful and messed up movie about a total anomaly of a man. Philips does a good job of remaining impartial to his subject, neither judging him or praising him in his film, merely letting the man and his actions speak for themselves. Love him or hate him, there was only one GG Allin, and that’s probably a good thing.” Rock! Shock! Pop!

The post Hated: GG Allin and the Murder Junkies – USA, 1993 – reviews appeared first on MOVIES & MANIA.

Hot Wax Zombies… on Wheels! – USA, 1999 – overview and reviews

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‘Prepare for no hair!’

Hot Wax Zombies… on Wheels! is a 1999 American comedy horror feature film about a fishing village terrorised by a band of hairless zombies on motorcycles. It is usually promoted as Hot Wax Zombies on Wheels

Directed by Michael Roush [as Mike J. Roush] from a screenplay written by Elizabeth Bergholz (as Elizabeth S.J. Bergholz), the movie stars Jill Miller, Gwen Somers, Trevor Lovell and Jon Briddell

Reviews [click links to read more]:

“If you’re a fan of the genre, you’ve seen many filmmakers do much better with much less available to them. Hot Wax Zombies on Wheels is not fun, not scary, not entertaining, not gory, and not worth the time of anyone who might think of picking it up based on the title.” Movie Feast

“It’s certainly got some funny scenes (though admittedly, the humor probably won’t be to everyone’s tastes, it is, after all, a very subjective thing) and it’s fairly well made compared to the rest of its ilk. It’s competently directed, the acting is about as good as the story needs it to be, and it’s got a lot of boobies on display.” Rock! Shock! Pop!

“You might already have guessed that the insatiable sex drive part of the plot is an excuse to show some skin […] I suppose the concept is sort of original, and you could even look at it as a commentary on how the obsession with cosmetic appearances turns people into mindless drones, but the execution leaves much to be desired.” ZombieRama

Zombie-lightbulb-idead.png

Cast and characters:

  • Jill Miller … Sharon
  • Gwen Somers … Yvonne Wayne
  • Trevor Lovell … Sven (as Tre Lovell)
  • Jon Briddell … Mick
  • Kimberly St. John … Carrie (as Kimberly Johnson)
  • Renee Steward … Martin (as Renee Stewart)
  • Randall St. George … Obadiah
  • John Gilbert … Zebediah (as John Rawling)
  • Lynne Hatcher … Marian
  • Forrest G. Wood … Matt the Mayor
  • Joe Babicki … Self-Serve Ted
  • Skip Belyea … Bancroft Hutchenreuther
  • Bill Blum … Frank ‘Press’ Miller
  • Catherine Brewton … Nurse Lydia
  • Paul LeClair … Pepe the Fisherman
  • Robyn Lewis … Manicurist Ruby
  • Robert Ciancimino … Big F-ing Deal Desk Cop
  • Ed Herbstman … D.J.
  • Gian Gregor … Engineer (as Greg Albanese)
  • John Michael Vaughn … Ken the Mailman (as John-Michael Vaughn)
  • Gaelle Comparat … Teddi
  • Lindsey Nicole Brooks … Tiffany (as Lindsay Brooks)
  • Tino Jordan … Towel Boy / Receptionist
  • Hannah Yesk … On Her Bike Stevie
  • Jonathan Blum … Running Man
  • Jennifer Marks … Female Worker
  • Eric Blum … Male Worker
  • Jean Mann … Wax Woman 1
  • Lori Dowling … Wax Woman 2
  • Sindy Tennes … Zombie Assistant
  • John Chayachinda … Sushi Chef
  • Bill Goldstein … Rescue Worker 1
  • Robert Yesk … Rescue Worker 2 (as Bob Yesk)
  • Bradley Bernstein … Bodybuilder
  • Erica Scott
  • Nils Allen Stewart … Elvis

Technical details:

  • 82 minutes
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.85: 1
  • Audio: 4-Track Stereo

The post Hot Wax Zombies… on Wheels! – USA, 1999 – overview and reviews appeared first on MOVIES & MANIA.

Breeders aka Deadly Instincts – UK, 1997 – overview and reviews

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‘It’s time to prey’

Breeders aka Deadly Instincts is a 1997 British horror feature film about an alien that emerges from a meteorite on a college campus to mate with humans.

Written and directed by Paul Matthews (Berserker: Hell’s Warrior; Grim), the movie stars Todd Jensen, Samantha Womack (aka Samantha Janus), Oliver Tobias and Kadamba Simmons. It is a very loose remake of the 1986 American film of the same name.

Reviews [click links to read more]:

” …it’s deathly dull. The shower scenes and explosions seem to be a desperate attempt to wake people up. Maybe this would have been a good Outer Limits episode- at maybe 45 minutes. But at an hour and 34 minutes, it drags, drags, drags.” The Bad Movie Report

“Truly, outside of Samantha Janus’ lower half, there’s not a lot to recommend in this one […] the actors struggled mightily with just about everything, part of this being… I’m guessing… that the majority of them were British trying in vain to fake American accents, and the pacing was too erratic and when it wasn’t erratic it was just slow.” Film Critics United

“Paul Matthews is the man who wrote and directed the film, and I can only imagine how much fun it is to be inside his mind. The plot is ridiculous, the characterisations are awful, the special effects are ropey (but enjoyably so) and the acting is woeful from everyone involved.” For It Is Man’s Number

“Even with all the derivativeness and storytelling deficiencies (and mediocre sound effects and bad music), most unforgivable of all is the pacing, which allows for far too much time to pass in between sequences of suspense. In the end, Breeders is more offensively boring than anything else.” Gone with the Twins

“I found myself wondering when they were going to explain the creature’s origin and then bam they just dump all the info at once at about the forty-five-minute mark.  Build-up- what’s that?!?  This one is generic and it is bad, but the suit design and silly story keep it from being terrible.” Mondo Bizarro

“We get a lot of unnecessary scenes involving our couple, some gratuitous nudity, and, very occasionally, a look at the alien–he’s not as impressive as he is on the cover of the movie. None of this really adds up or makes much sense, but it all leads to an ending that is as disjointed and bizarrely entertaining as the rest of the movie.” Quick Horror Movie Reviews

“Starts off okay, in a bad sort of way, but quickly clones Aliens and loses in every aspect of comparison. On its own, this is a mostly drab outing with too many sluggish scenes.” Splatter Critic

“To give Matthews’ version of Breeders some credit, at least he went for the traditional man in a rubber suit instead of relying on CGI like so many b-films of today; as a result, unlike so many b-films of today, the monster looks pretty OK—sometimes even effectively mean and nasty. Regrettably, little else in the film is either effective or nasty…” A Wasted Life

“Is Ashley’s proclivity to engage in pre-marital sex with his students indicative of the treachery women face at institutions of higher learning?  Can a slimy, toothy monster from a far off galaxy find happiness in a college orgy? I guess that’s an easy one. Breeders is a fun film and the ending is wild.” Zisi Emporium for B Movies

Choice dialogue:

Moore: “Drink, drugs, I’ve seen it all before. But alien monsters? That’s a new one.”

Blu-ray release:

Dark Force Entertainment is releasing Breeders on Blu-ray on May 26, 2020. Buy from Amazon.com

In the meantime, the movie is available on Amazon Prime in the USA and UK and presumably other territories.

Cast and characters:

  • Todd Jensen … Ashley
  • Samantha Womack … Louise (as Samantha Janus)
  • Oliver Tobias … Moore
  • Kadamba Simmons … Space Girl
  • Nigel Harrison … Horace
  • Clifton Lloyd Bryan … Alien (as Clifton Lloyd-Bryan)
  • Melanie Walters … Roper
  • Katy Lawrence … Myra
  • Richard Harrington … Jack
  • Robert Gwyn Davin … Staines
  • Geraint Morgan … Poole
  • Graham Anderson … Taylor
  • John Danks … Police Sergeant
  • Amanda Prothero-Thomas … Styles
  • David Artus … Talbot

Filming locations:

  • Douglas, Isle of Man
  • King Williams College, Isle of Man

Technical details:

  • 97 minutes
  • Aspect ratio: 4:3

Alternate titles:

Grim II was the pre-production title, it was filmed as Rampage

Some image credits: A Wasted Life

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Legion – USA, 1998 – reviews

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‘Their mission was simple… kill something that couldn’t be killed’

Legion is a 1998 science fiction action horror feature film set in the future about a special forces team comprised of convicts that are sent on a deadly mission.

Directed by Jon Hess from a screenplay written by Evan Spiliotopoulos, the movie stars Parker Stevenson, Terry Farrell, and Corey Feldman.

Plot:

In the year 2036, a special forces team led by Major Agatha Doyle (Terry Farrell) and formed from death-row prisoners is sent on a deadly mission.

Former war hero and now death row prisoner Captain Aldrich (Parker Stevenson) is offered the chance at a pardon if he will join the team and undertake their mission to infiltrate an enemy facility…

Reviews [click links to read more]:

Legion isn’t worth watching. Everything about it lines right up with my wheelhouse (Aliens rip-off and whatnot) but it sucks to the point where I needed multiple attempts to view it and still almost turned it off to check The Weather Channel.” Bulletproof Action

“By not showing even a hint of the monster until the very end, the thrills rapidly lose their credibility. During the closing scenes, when things are ultimately explained (in a meaty monologue) but remain unoriginal, the film resembles a bad episode of The X-Files or Star Trek (which is particularly curious considering that Farrell had just finished – abruptly – her run in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine).” Gone with the Twins

“The budget is somewhat cramped in terms of models and action and the film distinctly down around the B level. However, the film is filled with a series of fine character tensions – in fact, it is these that tend to drive Legion more so than the action element. Intriguingly, the film is crafted as a psychological version Alien (1979) or The Thing of sorts…” Moria

“This is an action-packed sci-fi/horror film drawing on plot devices of some of the best horror films of the 70s, 80s, and 90s. The sweaty Terry Farrell and boyish Parker Stevenson will keep fans of cheesecake and beefcake satisfied.” Zisi Emporium for B Movies

“It’s just the usual alien monster cover up type thing but its fun to guess who it is. An adult Corey Feldman and 80’s pop idol Rick Springfield give good performances and make it quite suspenseful. It just turns into a rip-off of Predator at the end though.” The Yeti

Cast and characters:

  • Parker Stevenson … Captain Aldrich
  • Terry Farrell … Major Agatha Doyle
  • Corey Feldman … Siegal
  • Rick Springfield … Ryan
  • Troy Donahue … Flemming
  • Audie England … Doctor Jones
  • Trevor Goddard … Cutter
  • Richmond Arquette … Koosman
  • Elston Ridgle … Poe
  • Gretchen Palmer … Karlson
  • Patricia M. Peters … Goodis (as Tricia Peters)
  • Bob Bancroft … Yastremski
  • Matthew Allen Bretz … Prisoner

Filming locations:

San Diego, California

Technical details:

Stereo
Aspect Ratio: 1.33: 1

The post Legion – USA, 1998 – reviews appeared first on MOVIES & MANIA.

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