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Pictured: Connie Nelson Year: 1971 |
DRACULA VS FRANKENSTEIN: Here's an Al Adamson directed b-movie so tailor made for a drive-in theater, you might have to roll your car inside the living room to watch it...
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DraculaVFrankensteinSCORE: ** |
Not exactly a pairing-up of two classic monsters, DRACULA VS FRANKENSTEIN is more of an exploitation horror: Involving monolog-driven mad scientist J. Carrol Naish working out of a
carnival fun house with an axe-wielding idiot man-child, Lon Chaney,
sent to kill women for experiments to give his other employee, a
brooding Count Dracula, eternal life...
All the while reanimating
Frankenstein's Monster who resembles a melted cabbage... But the worst thing is that it can
be quite boring with tedious bouts of dialogue, spouted mostly by two
love-struck heroes: A man helping his new girlfriend find her lost
sister and eventually happening upon... all that stuff already
mentioned (a much cooler yet unlucky couple are beach lovers Connie Nelson and our pal, Gary Kent.) Although at times it can be somewhat involving: A fact which remains completely unexplainable.
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1982 rating: *** |
THE FOREST: The set-up to this woodsy body count low
budget slasher: the massacre of two couples arriving at the forest...
The women first and their boyfriends, who, for some reason, arrive later
on...
This is merely a bizarre platform for a subplot involving the ghosts
of two children and their crazy, cannibalistic father played by
director Don Jones's stock actor Gary Kent (SCHOOLGIRLS IN CHAINS), who
kills, then eats, all females that cross his path: a cheap horror with a lot of activity,
including a backstory involving the then-normal dad, kids, and a
cheating wife just screaming to be killed keeps you interested enough
to forget it's yet another FRIDAY THE 13th ripoff, but with a unique
personality all its own. NOTE: The killer's son, child/pre-teen actor Corky Pigeon, played a geek named Freddie (whose secret was tap dancing) on the 80's sitcom SILVER SPOONS.
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year: 1964 rating: *** |
SPIDER BABY: Whenever there's a horror film about a backwoods family of dimwitted yet
dangerous loons, it's usually compared to, or accused for stealing
from, THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE... but no longer.
This film, written
and directed by Jack Hill ten years prior, starring Lon Chaney as the
caretaker of two lethal sisters and their lanky, lughead brother played
by scene-stealer Sid Haig, is not only groundbreaking and shocking, but
lots of fun as most of the fear is implied: when outsiders visit the house,
will Lon be able to stop the twisted clan... especially gorgeous Jill
Banner, using knives like spider's teeth... from murdering them? And although things drag in the middle, it's still a minor classic.
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year: 1987 rating: ***1/2 |
THE STEPFATHER: A fantastic, fully-satisfying suspense/horror from Canada about a man
who always needs a new family to kill starring Terry O'Quinn, years
before gaining fame on LOST...
As the title character, one minute he's extremely bland
and unassuming, the next an intensely driven, strict "family values"
patriarch, and eventually a complete psychopath, yet never showing the
cards... Keeping protagonist Jill Schoelen, as the unfortunate new
step-daughter, on her toes. Meanwhile, a side-story involving a young man's search
for the Stepfather (before he strikes again) adds a nice peripheral
balance, reminiscent of Alfred Hitchock and Brian De Palma's best work.
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year: 1992 rating: ** |
INNOCENT BLOOD: Decent premise with good beginnings: A sexy, hungry
french Vampire (Anne Parillaud) in America sets her sights on mafia kingpin Robert Loggia... a clever gag has her being repelled by
Loggia's breath before she bits him... he's Italian, therefore reeking
of garlic.
Our anti-heroine bloodsucker, while feasting on various evil
mobsters, falls in love with undercover cop Anthony LaPalgia while they
both try stopping Loggia, who's not only head of the mob but now a
powerful vamp himself while director John Landis, returning to horror a decade after AMERICAN
WEREWOLF IN LONDON, balances humor and horror okay, but there's not
enough going for either genre... Unlike the Werewolf classic, BLOOD is neither
funny or scary: The choice of the vamps screeching like
rabid cougars is pretty lame. And in the Landis fashion, there are many
clips of other classic movies being watched on television by various
characters, but homage becomes too excessive: making one long for those
films instead.
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1983 rating: *1/2 |
AMITYVILLE 3D: Gone are the days when 3D meant things moving towards the camera in a
contrived manner. It's hilarious seeing this in 2D years later after the
gimmick not only wore off, but is seen as merely that. Yet this film
suffers from more than pretension of a 50s-era trend trying desperately
to regain itself in the 1980's...
Although the first ten minutes as Tony
Roberts and Candy Clark trick a pair of seance-giving charlatans is not
bad, the rest of the movie, after Roberts moves into the ghostly manor
with his gorgeous daughter Lori Laughlin (visited by her friend, Meg
Ryan), is quite stale. And those ever-buzzing flies just aren't scary... In fact, they never were.
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year: 1985 rating: *1/2 |
PHENOMENA:
It's hard to stare at bugs, especially maggots, for very long... Some can't even say the M word out loud...
But not
for teenager Jennifer Connely who has the power to read their little
minds, thus aiding Donald Pleasence, as a insect forensic expert, in
finding a serial killer roaming around much like the phantom in Dario's
SUSPERIA, which this is either a ripoff or, since it's the same man
behind it, a homage by crashing girl's heads through windows, using a
Goblin soundtrack but this time adding Iron Maiden and Motorhead tunes: So if you enjoy watching Jennifer Connelly, right after a flashback role in ONCE UPON A TIME IN AMERICA and before playing a sexy ingenue in her career making CAREER OPPORTUNITIES, this isn't bad... but
if you want a good horror flick, or a movie that actually goes
somewhere: best try something else.
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year: 1981 rating: **1/2 |
THE HAND: Michael Caine is terrific in this otherwise mediocre
thriller by first-time director yet already screenplay Oscar winning Oliver Stone. Story centers on a
cartoonist (Caine) who loses his hand in an automobile accident –
technically the most riveting scene. After which he rehabilitates while
the severed limb is, or seems to be, crawling around doing his dirty
work for him.
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Midnight Relocated |
Stone’s best direction occurs during taut conversations
between Caine and the people around him, providing a suspenseful base
liken to stage-influenced British horror films, building character
development in lue of cheap shocks. But scenes involving The Hand itself
look a bit cheesy, and sporadic cuts to black and white seem misplaced,
contrasting from our protagonist turned antagonist and revolving
side-characters Annie McEnroe (THE SURVIVORS, THE HOWLING II) as a tempestuous college student, Bruce
McGill as a temperamental shrink, and Caine’s cheating wife
Andrea Marovicci: his ultimate target.
The film has moments, but loses
its grip less than halfway through. Although, witnessing Michael Caine
slowly going mad – a role that, according to Stone, took a toll on the
actor’s real life – is worth the ninety minutes.
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