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Foundational Cinema

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The Lost Empire: Found with trailer launch

The new trailer from Polyscope. The Lost Empire, the picture that launched the career of Jim Wynorski. The film digitally remastered under the watchful of Jim Wynorski, Polyscope will be bringing this exploitation masterpiece back to screens this fall. After…

Enter The Dragon

Asian martial art films were being produced and were popular in Asia long before Enter The Dragon appeared. But this movie set the standard for the genre, and opened the door for a host of real martial artists who became…

Ninja: Shadow of a Tear

American movies are messy, always shot so that you can’t actually see what is going on. I’m paraphrasing Ninja: Shadow of a Tear director Isaac Florentine, whose introduction to the premiere of his new movie at Fantastic Fest came packaged…

A Look Back At The Day After

The nuclear autumn of 1983 was arguably the tensest and most dangerous season of the entire Cold War. It involved at least two close calls. It was bookended by a diplomatic crisis and a destabilizing missile deployment. The popular culture…

Atlas Shrugged Off

Ladies and gentlemen, start your gloating: The producers of Atlas Shrugged, the critically derided, out-of-work-sitcom-actor-infested film “trilogy” based on Ayn Rand’s iconic Libertarian doorstopper, are begging in public. This Monday, the A.V. Club broke the news that they’ve started a…

CHESTERFIELD: Sci-fi film

Space – the final frontier has inspired sci-fi fans to venture into the world of film-making. But anyone thinking of a big-budget production in a Hollywood studio is from a different planet as this intergalactic adventure cost around £500 and…

The Wicker Man

Sex, human sacrifice, a notorious bum double and gleeful ritual transvestitism all wrapped in four decades of conspiracy theories: movies don’t come more cult than The Wicker Man. It was dismissed as an ‘interesting failure’ (The Telegraph) on its 1973…

Vanishing Point

The movie director Richard C. Sarafian, who died last week, was a fascinating, immensely likable man with a long, mostly unlucky career. In the late 1950s, after bumming around New York University (where, as a lark, he took a screenwriting…

Damnation Alley

Throughout the beginning of the last half of the 20th century, multiple films have been made that were based off of novels that took place in dystopic wastelands after nuclear fallout. This was all due to the U.S. and Russia…

Robert Englund Appearing At This Years B Movie Celebration

In conjunction with the Hollywood Boulevard, this year’s special guest with be genre great Robert Englund For More information about the B Movie Celebration Please go to www.bmoviecelebration.com Robert Barton Englund is an American actor, voice-actor, singer, and director, best…

The trailer for Big Ass Spider

Following a debut at SXSW 2013 in the Midnighters section, Big Ass Spider, a Ray Harryhausen-esque monster movie where a massive spider attacks Los Angeles, is coming to theaters and VOD. The unlikely heroic duo of a blue-collar exterminator (Greg…

ENZO G. CASTELLARI

Many of Enzo G. Castellari’s classic movies were made over thirty years ago and I’ve seen them over and over again, with each passing viewing feeling just as fresh and powerful. Mr. Castellari exploded the Italian crime film movement in…

Black Rock

Ostensibly, Black Rock (2012) appears to present a gritty thriller via a noticeably female perspective. Directed by actress Katie Aselton (from a script via husband Mark Duplass) she is also one of the three main actresses whose characters form the…

What Is The B Movie Celebration?

Zombies. Lake creatures. Amorphous killer aliens. These and more can be found at seventh-annual B Movie Celebration when it comes to the Hollywood Boulevard Cinema in Woodridge Illinois, from Sept. 25 to 27. Get ready for a weekend of artistry…

Rachel Hunter And Piranhaconda

0 0 ShareThis Oscar Wilde once wrote, and I am paraphrasing, if a man ever has two earth-shattering Rachel Hunter experiences in the one weekend, then he is the luckiest man alive. I am that luckiest man. It was the…

The Colony

We’re all doomed. From the various ways the world will end to the horrors any survivors have to suffer through just to see another day, our fiction is filled with apocalypses and their after-effects, of man showing his nobility via…

Pickup on South Street

4 January 1999 In this excellent Twentieth-Century Fox film-noir, the metropolis is a labyrinth of despair in which scavengers and predators survive by living off one another. Brooding cityscapes lower over puny humanity in bleak expressionist symbolism. A prostitute has…

Escape From Zahrain

A minor but reasonably entertaining action-thriller, Escape from Zahrain (1962) is a quirky little picture. Its small cast is a strange mix of actors while its screenplay is unusually unambitious for producer-director Ronald Neame, who had just made two outstanding…

How Italy saved the western with A Fistful of Dollars

A half-century ago in Rome, a camera technician named Enzo Barboni walked out of a movie theatre. He’d just seen Akira Kurosawa’s Yojimbo, about an amoral samurai who manipulates two warring merchant factions in a small village, and he liked…

Quentin Tarantino May Play Roger Corman In New Biopic

There are few Hollywood legends as beloved and bizarre as B-movie kingpin Roger Corman. He’s a director and producer who, through his various entities, was responsible for releasing foreign movies into art houses (things by Godard and Kurosawa). He also…