Thursday, December 24, 2020
Christmas Eve on Sesame Street
Wednesday, December 23, 2020
It's a Wonderful Life
Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Christmas with the Joker
Monday, December 21, 2020
Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus
Sunday, December 20, 2020
Yule Better Watch Out
Saturday, December 19, 2020
A Chipmunk Christmas
Friday, December 18, 2020
Silent Night, Deadly Night 5: The Toy Maker
Thursday, December 17, 2020
A Christmas Quacker
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
Rudolph and Frosty's Christmas in July
Tuesday, December 15, 2020
Have Yourself a Merry Winslow Christmas
Monday, December 14, 2020
Grumpy Cat's Worst Christmas Ever
Sunday, December 13, 2020
A Terminal Christmas
Saturday, December 12, 2020
Christmas in Tattertown
Friday, December 11, 2020
Ernest Saves Christmas
Thursday, December 10, 2020
Deck the Halls
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
A Cup o' Tea an' a Slice o' Cake
Tuesday, December 8, 2020
Xmas Marks the Spot
Monday, December 7, 2020
Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer
Sunday, December 6, 2020
A Christmas Story
Saturday, December 5, 2020
Cricket on the Hearth
Friday, December 4, 2020
Santa Jaws
Rating: 41%
(Image from Amazon)
Thursday, December 3, 2020
A Bionic Christmas Carol
Rating: Forgiveness%
Wednesday, December 2, 2020
Sonic: Christmas Blast
Rating: Rings%
Tuesday, December 1, 2020
Christmas Show
Rating: Train Set%
Thursday, November 26, 2020
Garfield's Thanksgiving
Rating: Grandma's Sweet Potatoes%
(Image from IMDB)
Saturday, October 31, 2020
Nightmare City
Nightmare City is, technically, not a zombie movie. Umberto Lenzi, the director, wanted people to think of it as a "radiation sickness" movie. It has a lot in common with The Crazies and The Return of the Living Dead. The ghouls in the movie look a lot like the Toxic Avenger. They don't eat flesh like a zombie would, but they do drink the blood of the living. And while they are not opposed to biting people, they're just as likely to stab or shoot their victims. Since this is an Italian horror movie, it should come as no surprise that it has a funky score and lots of goopy gore. There are also a number of particularly dangerous looking stunts in the movie. And there's even an eye gouging sequence that almost rivals the splinter scene in Lucio Fulci's Zombie. The ending sucks though.
Rating: 65%
(Image from TMDB)
Friday, October 30, 2020
IT
An ancient cosmic fear monster terrorizes/murders kids in a small Maine town, so the local cadre of misfit preteens decides to stop it in 1960 and again in 1990. For a basically PG-13 rated TV-movie this is pretty well done. Though (SPOILERS) I do think it's a little bunk that while everybody goes out and gets rich the black kid has to stay behind to be a poor local historian and the Jewish kid kills himself before taking on It the second time.
RATING: 60%
Thursday, October 29, 2020
The Invisible Man
Rating: 69%
(Image from Wikipedia)
Wednesday, October 28, 2020
Graveyard Shift
In this completely forgettable adaptation of a completely forgettable Stephen King short story, some rats in a local cotton mill are wilding out because of their rat boss, a giant flying rat. Hey isn't a flying rat just a bat? That's what the Germans would have me believe anyway. Anyway who gets called in to solve the monster problem? A salvage crew of course!
RATING: 44%
Tuesday, October 27, 2020
Deadly Friend
Rating: 59%
(Image from Wikipedia)
Monday, October 26, 2020
Tales From the Darkside: The Movie
In this anthology, based on George Romero's TV show I've always wanted to see but it's never available to stream or rent, there are three little tales of horror/irony, including a mummy one, an evil cat one, and a gargoyle one. There's also a cannibal Debbie Harry wraparound one. The best one (and the one Stephen King and George Romero wrote) is "The Cat From Hell," in which an unscrupulous pharmaceutical dude hires a hit man to kill a cat he's convinced is trying to kill him. The one they clearly spent all their FX budget on though is the last one, which is also the most boring. Anyway, it's an ok if very 90s anthology if you want to see an extremely young Steve Buscemi, Julianne Moore, and Christian Slater.
RATING: 63%
Sunday, October 25, 2020
Shivers
Only minutes away from downtown Montreal, the Starliner Towers apartment complex has everything you could possibly need. Cable television in every room, an Olympic size swimming pool, onsite health care professionals, and parasites that send you into a sex crazed fury. Cronenberg's first commercial feature film, if you can call it that, proved to be both successful and controversial. Many critics balked at the film's combination of sex and violence. Some Canadian critics were especially upset that the film had received some of its funding from the federal government. The movie shares some similarities with Cronenberg's following film, Rabid, along with movies like Invasion of the Body Snatchers and The Crazies. Personally, the thing that surprised me most about the film was a car crash stunt that seemed just a little too realistic.
Rating: 65%
(Image from Wikipedia)
Saturday, October 24, 2020
Pet Sematary
A family moves to rural Maine just off a busy highway where they befriend Herman Munster, who helpfully directs the father to a secret resurrection burial ground whenever the family cat dies. The cat comes back, the very next day even, except it stinks and is extra jerky because of going against the laws of God and nature and science and etc. Hey I'd still do it to bring back any of my dead cats. As you can guess, the movie is not just about bringing pets back from the dead whenever the family's toddler is killed by a semi truck in a wild example of poor parenting. First, they shoulda put a fence around their yard as soon as the kid was almost hit by a truck months earlier. Second, the kid runs like 50 yards toward the busy road while the whole family watches and it only dawns on them to try and stop him when they see a truck in the distance. Anyhoo, the kid dies and is buried and his dad is like hmm, maybe I'll dig him up and try that titular sematary again. In movies and shows people are always digging up graves but I hope I never have to do it - it seems like hard work! The kid comes back a little jerkier and killier and nobody lives happily ever after but at least Denise Crosby gets in the last... jab.
RATING: 78%
Friday, October 23, 2020
Brain Damage
Brain Damage is a wildly original and inventive horror/exploitation movie. It's goofy and gross. It's trippy and tragic. It's clever and crass. The special effects, which are clearly low budget, are fantastic. Some of the acting in the movie is bad and broad, but the performances from the lead actor and Elmer the talking parasite are quite good. There is, however, one scene in the movie (quite possibly the most infamous scene in the film) which features an act of sexualized violence that is so over the top and cruel that it honestly tainted my overall enjoyment of the movie. Caveat emptor.
Rating: 68%
(Image from IMDB)
Thursday, October 22, 2020
The Running Man
In the distant future of (checks notes) 2019 the evil government frames a dude who wouldn't kill a bunch of innocent civilians in a food riot and sentences him to go on a game show where he fights... to the death! It's peak Arnold one-liner land, which isn't to say they're all winners, but even the bad ones are so unzing they work (hey lighthead!). And really, who, in a life or death situation with the fate of the country at steak would just make relentless pithy jokes, anyway? Oh right, memes.
RATING: 70%
Check out Creepshow 2 here!
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Strange Behavior
There's something wrong with the kids at Galesburg University. Instead of turning up for class, they keep turning up... dead. The police are baffled. The bodies are piling up. And no one, NO ONE, is safe.
Dead Kids
Rated R
Strange Behavior is both a slasher flick and a mad scientist movie, with hints of early Cronenberg and De Palma thrown in the mix. It's supposed to take place in rural Illinois, but it was clearly filmed in New Zealand. The pacing is a little slow and the narrative unfolds somewhat haphazardly, but it remains fascinating to watch. Well shot and scored, with an effective balance of tension and atmosphere.
Rating: 65%
(Image from Wikipedia)
Fun Fact: Scott Brady, who played Shea, played Sheriff Frank in Gremlins.
Tuesday, October 20, 2020
The Twilight Zone - "Gramma"
A kid is left home with his sickly grandmother that he's a little scared of - like, duh! Check out that picture! There's a lot of distracting internal monologuing that screenwriter Harlan Ellison decided to have the characters think aloud, but pretty decent dread from a mostly forgettable Stephen King story.
RATING: 53%
Monday, October 19, 2020
Don't Go in the Woods
Don't Go in the Woods is, essentially, about four campers getting stalked by a maniac in the mountains. And if I were to describe the movie in one word, that word would be "amateurish." Bad acting, crappy music, incomprehensible action, incompetent camerawork, and strained attempts at humor. The folks at Troma and the Asylum can rest easy knowing they make better movies than Don't Go in the Woods. In the interest of full disclosure, I did enjoy the scenery and one of the sets. Run, don't walk, away from this movie.
Rating: 42%
(Image from IMDB)
Sunday, October 18, 2020
Stand By Me
A group of four preteen boys hear about a kid's dead body and decide to hike to it in order to be heroes and/or get on tv. Along the way they learn a little bit about life and struggle and puking after a pie eating contest. It's got a great set of 80s kid actors (River Phoenix, Wil Wheaton, Corey Feldman, and Jerry O'Connell) who do a real good job goofin and cryin. I do question the frame of the author writing about this adventure, though - what does that add to the story? The ability to tell us who lived and who died? Like, why not add a narrator to a movie about King Arthur? "Everybody died a thousand years ago, deep." Also as a kid my neighbor and I used to blast the oldies soundtrack to this flick while drawing our own versions of Wacky Packages.
Saturday, October 17, 2020
The Spider
As far as giant insect movies from the 50s go, The Spider is average at best. It's really only notable because it was produced, directed and featured special effects created by Bert I. Gordon. Gordon was one of the many B-movie auteurs of the 50s and 60s. His gimmick was big stuff. Big monsters, big people, big bugs. You get the idea. He used a lot of process shots, rear projection and forced perspective tricks. He wasn't known for his screenplays, if you hear what I'm saying. It's fitting that The Spider was one of several Bert I. Gordon films featured on Mystery Science Theater 3000. It was practically tailor-made for the MST3K format.
Rating: 59%
(Image from IMDB)
Friday, October 16, 2020
Maximum Overdrive
A comet's tail covers Earth in space dust, bringing all machines to life! Well, not *all* machines, since a gun is a machine and those seem fine, but probably best not to think about whatever spurious iotas of science may or may not exist here. A rag tag group of strangers including Lisa Simpson, Gus Fring, and Emilio Estevez wind up trapped by a bunch of 18 Wheelers in a truck stop, sort of like a car version of Night of the Living Dead. People (including Stephen King, who wrote, adapted, and directed the movie) hate this one, but I think it's great - it'll kill anyone (including children), and the broad daylight that most of the movie takes place during gives it a very different feel than any other 80s horror flick.
RATING: 79%
Thursday, October 15, 2020
Dagon
Rating: 62%
(Image from IMDB)
Wednesday, October 14, 2020
Silver Bullet
A vicious serial killer is terrorizing a small town, but if that's not bad enough what if it's a werewolf kind of serial killer cuz it is! Of course the only person who believes that is a troublemaking kid with a souped up wheelchair and his drunk uncle. In movies they're always melting down jewelry to make silver bullets but how pure exactly does the silver bullet have to be to work? Couldn't it just be silver tipped to save some money?
RATING: 68%
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
Killer Crocodile
Rating: 60%
(Image from IMDB)
Monday, October 12, 2020
Tales From the Darkside - "Word Processor of the Gods"
A writer with such an awful life is gifted a word processor (an old shitty computer that only had like Microsoft Works) by his dead computer whiz nephew. Turns out anything he types comes true, which is good for him because it allows him to erase his nagging wife and guitar playing son without a second thought! I haven't read the short story in a quarter century or so but I don't remember it being so nihilistic.
RATING: 48%
Sunday, October 11, 2020
Pit and the Pendulum
Rating: 66%
(Image from IMDB)
*seven, if you count 1963's The Terror
Saturday, October 10, 2020
Firestarter
When I was ten and "not allowed to read Stephen King" I borrowed this book from a friend and felt like a real little badass secretly reading it at night, except I only got like 50 pages in because it was tres boring. It's about a little girl who has pyrokinetic superpowers and the government is after her and her pops because she's very dangerous and or useful. I am not supposed to think this, but I do kinda agree with the evil government agency here - you can't have some eight year old with anger issues just wandering around blowing things up with her brain! Much like the book the movie is mostly boring except for an amazing final action scene where the little girl totally loses her shit on some secret agents.
RATING: 61%
Friday, October 9, 2020
Children of the Corn: Runaway
Rating: 49%
(image from IMDB)
Thursday, October 8, 2020
Children of the Corn
A couple is taking a shortcut through the rural back roads of Nebraska when they hit a child with their car, yikes! Don't worry, though, the kid was already murdered when they hit him, they swear, officer. When they try to get help they wind up in a quaint little town where all the kids have murdered the adults so they can have their own quasi Christian corn cult. I think there's some kind of creature but the effects of the movie limit it to some flashing lights that eat up whoever's being sacrificed. In movies whenever a couple rescues a kid from some horrible traumatic thing they're always like "you can stay with us now!" Like I know you just went through some serious shit but you gotta at least fill out a form or two for that to happen!
RATING: 57%
Wednesday, October 7, 2020
A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child
Rating: 67%
(Image from IMDB)