DVD/Blu-ray Reviews
DVD Reviews
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- By Loron Hays
“Goddamn. I feel like a crime is about to be committed.” With those words, Bat Pussy leaps to action, changing out of her loose nightgown (after it gets caught on her neck) and into cape and cowl. Hurray for the single take flicks out there! She’s ready – at least her super ...
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- By Loron Hays
Three adults stare back at the wrong end of a Colt .45 through much of this classic black-and-white exploitation film from 1963. The sweltering heat of the summer day has done a number on their car as they travel through California's Antelope Valley, but – more than anything ...
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- By Loron Hays
With cut-off Arabian souvenirs (hands) filling knick-knack shelves and other odd body parts popping up in the background of this twisted take on the submerged and the macabre, Night Tide is more than just an matinee-styled ode to the works of Edgar Allan Poe and gothic-minded ...
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- By Loron Hays
Augmenting a person’s DNA with limited technology during the Cold War is probably not the best of ideas. At least, for this group of soviet superheroes it isn’t. While it does provide them with extraordinary abilities – like ground and rock manipulation, turning into a werebear ...
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- By Loron Hays
Heavy. Metal. Horror. Rock on! I don’t know about you but a longhaired GIANT zombie, wearing gray sweats and a navy hoodie, stumbling through a recreation center swinging an aluminum bat sounds all sorts of crazy fun to me. The zombie eventually corners the ...
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- By Loron Hays
The Russians won the space race with the launch of Sputnik-1. They quickly followed their success with a bunch of interesting science fiction flicks that caught the eye and interest of famed producer Roger Corman. Some of these cinematic tales were peace offerings to ...
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- By Loron Hays
Women! Witchcraft! And b-movie maestro Jim Wynorski! This tightlipped tale has it all. Producer Roger Corman always has been a big fan of Edgar Allan Poe. Even before he made bank with his Poe pictures featuring Vincent Price, he was often returning to Poe’s ...
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- By Loron Hays
Deep in the Louisiana swamps, a strange man tackles a woman – who just stepped out of said swamp – to the ground. She is killed, marked with a hex symbol, and hung upside down from a cypress tree by her feet. She is then drained of her blood with a slash to her neck ...
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- By Loron Hays
Filmed in less than 30 days, The Lift answers the question that has long plagued mankind. If a blind man falls down an elevator shaft and no one sees him, does he make a sound when he lands? Why yes, yes he does. With a kickass spirit and a merciless kill ratio ...
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- By Loron Hays
“You know something, George? I think we’re dead.” Some films, no matter when they were made, remain connected with whatever audience comes its way. Topper, a supernatural comedy directed by Norman Z. McLeod ...
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- By Loron Hays
Satanic Scooby Snacks for everyone!!! Yea!!!! With a tiny church at its center, The Devil’s Rain gets some seriously good notes when it comes to its use of imagery and its overall quick pace. It is also seriously ...
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- By Loron Hays
“I think we’ve all learned a valuable safety tip here!” Darkman II: The Return of Durant shouldn’t exist. I mean, how Durant survives a viscous bridge-meets-helicopter fiery crash with only a few scratches on his head seems beyond...
Read more: Darkman II: The Return of Durant (1995) - Blu-ray Review
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- By Loron Hays
The world didn’t need a Darkman trilogy. We got one, thanks to the Direct-To-Video route, but both films in the series take our beloved and mostly insane Peyton Westlake down a kinder and gentler path in the narrative department, twisting the first film’s ending to ...
Read more: Darkman III: Die Darkman Die (1996) - Blu-ray Review
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- By Loron Hays
Rah! Rah! Rah! Devil worshipping and ice-cold beer makes me want to cheer! First these cheerleaders touch and then they tackle. These young girls mean business and Hell follows wherever they go, especially when they discover that Satanists in a small town in ...
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- By Loron Hays
There’s something really wrong with Mr. Franz (John Hoyt, When Worlds Collide). He talks to the dolls in his office as if they were real people. He even dresses them in all the latest fashions. And what’s with the secret laboratory with the NO ADMITTANCE sign painted ...
Read more: Attack of the Puppet People (1958) - Bu-ray Review
More Articles ...
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- Ruby (1977) - Blu-ray Review
- The Barn (2016) - Blu-ray Review
- The Being (1983) - Blu-ray Review
- Slithis (1978) - Blu-ray Review
- The Paul Naschy Collection II (2017) - Blu-ray Review
- The Old Dark House (1932) - Blu-ray Review
- Hangover Square (1945) - Blu-ray Review
- The Creep Behind the Camera/The Creeping Terror (2014) - Blu-ray Review
- A Lizard in a Woman's Skin (1971) - Blu-ray Review
- Batman vs. Two-Face (2017) - Blu-ray Review
- Mardi Gras Massacre (1978) - Blu-ray Review
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Movie Reviews
Morbidly Hollywood
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- Death of a Princess - The Story of Grace Kelly's Fatal Car Crash
- Joaquin Phoenix 911 Call - River Phoenix - Viper Room
- Screen Legend Elizabeth Taylor Dies at 79
- Suicide and the Hollywood Sign - The Girl Who Jumped from the Hollywood Sign
- The Amityville Horror House
- The Black Dahlia Murder - The Death of Elizabeth Short
- The Death of Actress Jane Russell
- The Death of Brandon Lee
- The Death of Chris Farley
- The Death of Dominique Dunne
- The Death of George Reeves - the Original Superman