B Movie Nation

Foundational Cinema

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The Orange Man – Review

When Stephen Folker has a vision for a new film, he drops everything and puts all his effort into making it. His latest film  The Orange Man is a solid campy comedy/slasher film with a unique plot. The film will…

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Blood & Donuts (1995)

After 25 years of slumber, a vampire is awakened by a golf ball crashing through his window and hitting him. What to do? Hang out at the local donut shop and fall in love… So the film has vampires, mobsters,…

Mirror Mirror (1990)

Where credit is due, ‘Mirror, Mirror’ is a hot and steamy little Gothic horror oddity that won’t blow you away from its originality, but by confident performances (headed by the likable Karen Black and Yvonne De Carlo) and director Marina…

Hostage (1987)

Starting with some AM soft rock, we see a family from New York that has moved somewhere near Nairobi, Africa. Col. Shaw (McCarthy) is an important politician who brought his daughter Nicole and grandson Tommy there. Meanwhile, actress Laura Lawrence…

Videodrome (1983)

Well, Mr. Convex, too bad for you… Videodrome, David Cronenberg’s first masterpiece, tells the tale of one Max Renn. Played with expert sleaziness by James Woods, Renn oversees a low-rent, exploitative cable network, which specializes in showing increasingly violent and…

Fast Company (1979)

Almighty B-movie he-man William Smith calls his own shots, fights to keep his integrity and stubbornly refuses to knuckle under to the Man’s rigid stay on the narrow path and just do what you’re told nonsense as fiercely autonomous and…

Salma Hayek Comes Home:Everly

  “Everly” is the sort of gonzo guns and Ginsu knives thriller Tarantino made back before he discovered the joys of bloat. It’s the sort of movie where the titular heroine (Salma Hayek) takes bullets and stabbings and keeps coming…

Under the Skin

Delving into the realm of existential science-fiction, director Jonathan Glazer (“Sexy Beast,” “Birth”) examines what it means to be human. Accompanied by a shadowy, silent motorcyclist, there’s an expressionless, extraterrestrial stalker (Scarlett Johansson) on a mission. Driving a white cargo van, this…

Hardbodies (1984)

Hardbodies, which was released in the summer of ’84, came out around the same time as Ghostbusters and is similar with the latter in the respect that they are both classic films of their respective genres. This movie excels on…

Future War (1997)

Daniel Bernhardt (The guy who starred in Bloodsport II) stars as a slave from a different planet who escapes cyborgs and dinosaurs in a future where Earth is heaven to the alien humans who ditch the slave planet run by…

H.O.T.S. (1979)

The mistreated and downtrodden college girls at FU University(..ha ha), picked on by the rich gals at the local sorority, decide to form their own little club, repairing a bedraggled and unkempt house, naming themselves H.O.T.S.(each letter named after the…

It Came from Beneath the Sea (1955)

When an atomic-powered submarine runs afoul of something most bizarre on their radar, its Commander Pete Matthews decides not to risk the $ 55 million dollar naval submarine he commands and tries to head out of the area but suddenly…

Nightmare City (1980)

Perfecticality would ruin most Italian exploitation films. Zombie ones in particular. Such is the case of the title I know this film best by, and my favorite of the titles, “City Of The Walking Dead.” A surprising tame offering from…

The Omega Man (1971)

This action packed and thought-provoking sci-fi drama has been one of my personal favorites for over 30 years. Charlton Heston found his definitive role here, as the last man on earth, a scientist fighting a single handed battle against hundreds…

Humongous (1982)

This Canadian slasher is definitely one of the better slashers of the 1980s and is unjustifiably panned by everyone. When HUMONGOUS was released the biggest criticism against it was how predictable or derivative it was and it was dismissed as…

The Monster That Challenged the World (1957)

The studios were scratching their heads during those years trying to come up with which creature should be enlarged and terrorize everyone and you have to give them credit for thinking of mollusks and then making them scary looking. Kudos…

The Phantom Planet (1961)

One of the first revelations that this was going to be a fun camp film was it’s setting in the way distant future of 1980, replete with space age jargon and a goal to find out what’s been happening to…

First Spaceship on Venus (1960)

The amazing imaginative fiction author Stanislaw Lem wrote this visually stunning East German space exploration film with a dated but still thoughtful message. The Sets of Der Schweigende Stern are detailed and beautiful – giving the film an amazingly alien…

The Dark Night Of Joel Goodson: A Reflection on Risky Business

Now when I was a young boy, at the age of five My mother said I was, gonna be the greatest man alive But now I’m a man, way past 21 I had lot’s of fun I’m a man “Muddy…

Red Planet Mars (1952)

Expect a real treat from one of the most intelligent sci-fi films of the 1950s — although it gets little credit (largely because some people are uncomfortable with the overt Christian message). But first a word of warning: in this…