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Showing posts with label Action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Action. Show all posts

Raw Force (1982)

A group of martial arts students are en route to an island that supposedly is home to the ghosts of martial artists who have lost their honor. A Hitler lookalike and his gang are running a female slavery operation on the island as well. Soon, the two groups meet and all sorts of crazy things happen which include cannibal monks, piranhas, zombies, and more!
"Raw Force" is like an ultra-sleazy and perverted version of Love Boat, with additional Kung Fu fights, demented cannibalistic monks, white slaves trade, energetic zombies and a whole lot of lousy acting performances. No wonder this movie was included in the recently released "Grindhouse Experience 20 movie box-set". It's got everything exploitation fanatics are looking for, blend in a totally incoherent and seemingly improvised script! The production values are extremely poor and the technical aspects are pathetic, but the amounts of gratuitous violence & sex can hardly be described. The film opens at a tropically sunny location called Warriors Island, where a troop of sneering monks raise the dead for no apparent reason other than to turn them into Kung Fu fighters. The monks also buy sexy slaves from a sleazy
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Mikadroid: Robokill Beneath Disco Club Layla (1991)

Mikadroid: Robokill Beneath Disco Club Layla is a Japanese original video directed by Tomo’o Haraguchi. It was released by Toho in Japan on November 8, 1991.
In the movie, a deadly half-man, half-machine called Mikadroid was developed by scientists in Tokyo during World War II. However, it was buried under rubble in an American bombing attack. Now 45 years later, a disco club has been built over the area and its patrons are completely oblivious to the fact that a soulless killing-machine buried beneath them won’t remain dormant for long.
At the end of the second world war the Japanese buried one of their projects to make a super armored soldier. Almost fifty years later it wakes up and begins to kill. Steam punk-esquire scifi action film is a pretty good little time killer. Its very pulpy and grind house like in that its just trying to tell a rip roaring little tale made before computer generated effects (ooo models). I have to be honest since this film was highly touted by the publisher of Asian Cult Cinema in his books on the subject. Back when he was still running Video Search of Miami this was high on my must see list, but for whatever reason I never ordered it. Now that its out in an official US release I've picked it up and found that too many years of waiting for a GREAT film have taken its toll. Its a good one but not a great one. Worth a look as a rental.
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Mutant Girls Squad (Blu-ray)

2010 seems like a lifetime away in the Sushi Typhoon universe. Mutant Girls Squad was initially finished nearly two years ago and had its premiere screening in Japan two years ago to the day before it's Blu-ray debut on US home video from Well Go USA. Part of the reason for the delay is the transition from FUNimation to Well Go of the Sushi Typhoon license, which happened almost exactly when this film should have hit store shelves. In the meantime, several more recent films have already been released to varying degrees of success, but if you've begun to suffer from Sushi Typhoon fatigue, I think this might be the time to give them another shot.
Mutant Girls Squad is the story of a young girl whose body changes in adolescence beyond what most of us would consider normal. While she's busy growing Freddy Krueger hands, and developing acrobatic martial arts skills, a special task force is sent to her house to dispose of her mutant father, and her co-conspirator mother. This random violence leads Rin (Yumi Sugimoto) down a path of vengeance, on which she's led by a revolutionary set of secret mutants led by a cross-dressed Tak Sakaguchi and fellow Mutant Girls, Yoshie (Suzuka Morita) and Rei (Yuko Takayama). Rin eventually discovers that their mission goes beyond revenge to complete domination over the human race, and fights back against her former general, in a massively kinetic final half hour that blows the roof off of the mother.
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Chinese Odyssey Parts 1 And 2 (1994 / DVD)

Dragon Dynasty.

A Chinese Odyssey Part One: Pandora's Box Inspired by the Chinese classic A Journey to the West, this film has the Monkey King (Stephen Chow) reincarnated in human form as Joker, a highwayman oblivious to his original identity and the fact that 500 years earlier, he and his master, The Longevity Monk (Kar-Ying Law), were punished to say human until they could complete the journey to the west. Pursued by mythical beings motivated to locate and kill the Longevity Monk, Joker finds himself subjected to extreme emotions of love and loss. Everything is a welter of randomness until he finds and opens the Pandora's Box, which carries him down memory lane to a land of nothingness five hundred years earlier.

A Chinese Odyssey Part Two: Cinderella In this sequel to Pandora's Box, now stranded five centuries in the past, Joker (Stephen Chow) is destined to meet Cinderella, a woman whom he will fall madly in love with and who will change his life altogether. He will also relive the scene of the Monkey King being subdued by Bodhisattva (enlightenment being). Reacquainted with the importance of Longevity Monk's journey to help suffering people, Joker finally agrees to become the Monkey King again and complete the journey to the west with his master. By doing so he must let go of all worldly desires, including love.
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Death Row Girls (Unrated DVD)

A man made hell turns into an earthly inferno as a female inmate in Japan's most notorious maximum-security prison wages a violent bid to survive while taking out as many of her captors as humanly possible.
It's called The Island, and it's an inescapable penitentiary populated by the most savage female criminals in all of Japan. But this isn't your typical prison, because once you go in, you never get out alive. Inmate 1316 is about to find out this grim truth the hard way, and she won't take the news lying down. Now, amidst a terrifying world of secret graveyards and mass executions, 1316 will use every weapon at her disposal - including her body - to fight back and make a daring escape. She's already been through hell, so she's got nothing to fear as she hacks, slashes, and blasts her way through the hordes of sadistic guards who would happily defile and dispatch her without a second thought. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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Battle Creek Brawl / City Hunter (Jackie Chan Double Feature DVD)

BATTLE CREEK BRAWL (1980)
A young Asian American martial artist is forced to participate in a brutal formal street-fight competition. (Also known as: The Big Brawl)
Well, I finally got to see it...mmmm I thought, not too bad..seeing as he didnt know much english at the time, and was well restricted by the American Film industry machine!. His Fight scenes were watered down and slow by all normal 'Jackie' standards but that apart,there are some great comic moments and Jackie wins through. He Radiates innocent charm and even manages to Rollerscate with gusto, although Im not too sure about the historical acuracy of some of the costumes..this was supposed to have been 1930s USA and Im sure spandex wasnt invented then!One interresting note for real 'died in the wool' Jackie fans , is the continued theme of the Lazy but tallented boy being trained in wierd and some would say inhumane ways by a 'sifu','master','uncle!'...amazing how this sort of idea managed to cross the pacific with him!.All in all a pleasent movie, although I can understand why Jackie was both Disappointed and Angry at the outcome at least it spurred him on to make greater and greater movies in HK.

CITY HUNTER (1993)
Extremely silly comedy about a self-indulgent private investigator who winds up on a cruise ship full of rich patrons, gorgeous women, murderous terrorists, and scarce food.
This movie was great. I ordered this movie and wasn't sure if I was going to like it, but I did. I also thought there wasn't going to be enough martial arts scenes, but I was wrong. There is lots! Even the humor made me laugh, and Hong Kong movies don't usually make me laugh. The fight scene between Gary Daniels and Jackie Chan is incredibly funny. They transform into characters from Street Fighter 2! I was also very impressed with the ending fight between Jackie Chan and Richard Norton. It is a good length, and well choreographed. I also liked this movie because it had all sorts of types of action: Explosions, fights, good gun play, etc. I have scene over 30 Jackie Chan movies, and this is probably my favorite. I suggest you buy City Hunter!


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Old Skool Killaz: A Daughter's Vengeance

This Maid is Just Plain Crazed!
Get ready for cinema of the insane when a seriously deformed "Snow Woman" raises a cutie named only "Snow Maid" to take vengeance on the man who knocked up her mother…a man known only as Golden Hair Mouse. Yes…Golden Hair Mouse. She pouts, she kicks, she swings swords and throws darts, but none particularly well, making the hard-working stunt and camera crew work overtime in this prize example of The Greatest Martial Art Turkeys of all time. It's so bad, it's great!
ABOUT THE PRINT: Indifferently full screened, and hilariously dubbed so the already perverse plot seems all the more demented.
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At War with the Army (1950)

I love this movie for countless reasons. There's a lot of cross appeal for so many collectors; WWII war time, Rat Pack, comedy, family friendly, Jerry Lewis, Dean Martin, American Standards music and dancing, black & white film, Polly Bergen, etc. It really should be a staple in any movie buffs collection.
Anybody that is critical of the Martin & Lewis schtick of pratfalls, slapstick, camp, jokes & gags, straight man -vs- monkey, just doesn't get it. Dean sings and Jerry goes nuts. It's Martin & Lewis! And this movie is truly a comedy classic. When originally released, it was a box office smash. "At War With the Army" was M&L's first starring vehicle. It's correct that they previously appeared in "My Friend Irma" and "My Friend Irma Goes West", but in supporting roles. It was "At War With The Army" that established Martin & Lewis as box office mega-stars and for the next 6 years they ruled the Paramount lot.
I've seen this movie at least 10 times, and now with this Film Chest restored version I'll be watching it for years to come.
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Sgt. Kabukiman N.Y.P.D. (1990)

If you like Troma's kind of silly, off beat, absurd humor then I'm quite sure you'll really enjoy a whole lot of scenes in this flick as well. There are lots of cartoonish, hilarious characters all of which have been acted out with confidence and conviction.
The story... well there's this American cop in NY who finds out he can get supernatural powers by changing into the Kabukiman, a kind of Japanese Samurai dude with lots of makeup. Our hero uses his new found powers to beat the crap out of some local small time crooks in various entertaining ways, but it turns out he really owns his powers to the fact that he was chosen to fight the Evil One, who is about to take over the world. He is reluctant to accept this responsibility at first, but a Japanese chick kicks some sense into him and then goes on to teach him how to use his new found skills properly.
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Blood on My Shoes (1983)

Agents across the globe take turns spying on and double-crossing one another in an attempt to locate a valuable formula encrypted in the music code.
An obscure Franco, apparently loosely based on Edgar Wallace's story 'Sanders of the River.', little-seen shoestring comedy/action/spy/thriller. A quintessential cast, Vernon goes characteristically and  gloriously over the top as the murdered - or is he? - missile inventor in full Mad Scientist key. Lina charms as a cabaret singer...or is she a spy? Or is she both? And Mayans is the most laid-back, unflappable tough guy you'll ever see.
Music plays a prominent role, in different ways...beyond the typically-awesome minimal jazz soundtrack (credited to Pablo Villa...aka Daniel White, a regular Franco collaborator...though some sources credit the music here to Franco himself).



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River of Death (1989) (Kino Lorber) Blu-ray

Released in May 2015
Kino Lorber have confirmed that they will release on Blu-ray director Steve Carver's film River of Death (1989), starring Michael Dudikoff, Donald Pleasence, Robert Vaughn, and Herbert Lom.
Synopsis: In 1945, with the Allies approaching, two German officers ransack a monastery in Greece and make plans to escape with the loot. However, one of the Germans is left behind by his partner, while the other escapes by submarine from Wilhelmshaven. Forty years elapse, a wealthy millionaire, Smith, hires Hamilton, allegedly an expert on the jungle, to lead him to the ruins of a lost Indian civilization recently discovered in the wilderness of the Amazon jungle in Brazil. The entourage faces giant anacondas, giant spiders, cannibalistic natives, and so on, discovering a settlement of Nazi war criminals and their descendants, living as if the Third Reich had never ended. It is soon clear that Smith's real purpose has little to do with archaeology, and more to do with revenge.
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Massacre Gun (1967)

Fine, jazzy, Japanese yakuza crime drama from 1967 and as cool as it gets. Starring, Jo Shishido (Branded to Kill and Youth of the Beast) Tatsuya Fuji (In the Realm of the Senses and Empire of Passion) and one of the first films directed by, Yasuhari Hasebe (Female Prisoner 701 Scorpion - Grudge Song and the Stray Cat series) who is considered the creator of the violent pink sub genre. Some pedigree then and not a disappointment, with non-stop action and surely more bullets than I've ever seen (or heard!) for it must have taken about 20 to 50 for each death. Performances are excellent all round, direction tight and confident with splendidly stylish photography. Low key jazz score helps maintain the atmosphere and this would be a great introduction to the world of Japanese 60s crime movies.

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Enter the Ninja (1981)

Officially, Chuck Norris' The Octagon is the film that first introduced ninjas to American cinema, but since "Enter the Ninja" is both blunter about their inclusion and provided stardom for the quintessential on-film shadow warrior, Sho Kosugi, I consider it to be at least as important in igniting the "ninja craze" of the 1980s. A production of our dearly departed Cannon Films, the movie initiates its particular subgenre with relatively tactless hammyness: it's pretty cheesy, and far from being a great martial arts film. Nevertheless, Cannon's made movies that are both far worse technically and far less entertaining. This one's worth seeing, if only for giggles.
The story: a world-weary war veteran-turned-ninja (Franco Nero, Django) visits his expatriate brother-in-arms (Alex Courtney, And the Band Played On) in Manila, where he becomes the only thing standing in the way of a greedy businessman (Christopher George, The Rat Patrol) attempting to seize his friend's plantation by force.

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Rhinemann Exchange, The (1977)

One of four miniseries comprising NBC's Best Sellers anthology, The Rhinemann Exchange was adapted from the Robert Ludlum novel of the same name.
Stephen Collins stars as American intelligence officer David Spaulding, who under cover of his musician father's concert tours embarks upon a number of fact-finding missions in Europe just before WW2. Once hostilities break out, Spaulding relocates to Aergentina, there to exchange industrial diamonds for a secret gyroscope needed for the American war effort. Naturally, the Nazis are equally interested in those diamonds, putting Spaulding in any number of perilous predicaments. 
Lauren Hutton costars as Leslie Hawkewood, one of those ravishing "mystery women" so common to espionage fiction. Originally running 5 hours and telecast in three segments on March 10, 17, and 24, 1977, The Rhinemann Exchange was later rebroadcast as a four-hour, two-part "TV movie." ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Destry: The Complete Series (1964 / John Gavin / 4 Disc DVD Set)

Destry, based on the popular westerns Destry Rides Again with James Stewart, and the Audie Murphy remake, Destry, premiered on February 14, 1964, with heart-throb John Gavin (Convoy, Psycho) taking the title role.
In the films, the main character was Tom Destry, a western lawman who was fast on the draw, but who preferred non-violent solutions in dealing with outlaws. In the television series, Gavin plays Tom s son Harrison, a lawman who had been framed and sent to prison. Upon his release, Destry roams the west searching for the men who framed him, but, like his father, his natural inclination was to avoid violence when he could, and Destry has a serio-comic element that makes it great fun to watch and Gavin s performance compares well with his predecessors , Stewart and Murphy.
Long thought to be lost forever, TMG and NBC Universal now bring you the complete series, all 13 episodes (over 10 hours) of Destry, re-mastered from original prints recently re-discovered in the Universal vaults, which is sure to please fans both old and new. Although lasting only one season, distinguished guest stars were featured each week, including Broderick Crawford, Don Hagerty and Claude Akins (The Solid Gold Girl), Lee Van Cleef and Barbara Stuart (Destry Had a Little Lamb), Una Merkel and Elisha Cook, Jr. (Law and Order Day), John Mitchum (Big Deal at Little River), Susan Oliver (One Hundred Bibles), and many more.
Includes a bonus feature: John Gavin Biography, a biography of John Gavin, the handsome star of television and movies, who went on to become not only President of the Screen Actors Guild, but Ambassador to Mexico during the presidency of Ronald Reagan!
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Avenging Force (1986 / Blu-ray)

NEWLY REMASTERED IN HD.
Martial arts expert Matt Hunter was one of the most promising operatives in Army intelligence until his parents were killed by terrorists, and he retired to the family's farm in Louisiana to take care of his 12-year-old sister Sara and their grandfather Jimmy. Larry Richards, a black man running for the Senate, is one of Matt's best friends. Larry has become the target of The Pentangle, a racist organization led by a man named Glastenbury, and Glastenbury doesn't want Larry to be elected. In an attempt on Larry's life during a Mardi Gras parade in New Orleans, The Pentangle kills one of Larry's sons. Matt lets Larry, his wife Daisy, and his other son move to the remotely located farm so they can hide from Glastenbury and the Pentangle, but the Pentangle strikes again, setting the farmhouse on fire. Matt and Sara escape as the only survivors. Then the Pentangle kidnaps Sara, sending Matt on a mission to rescue Sara from Glastenbury and the Pentangle.
SPECIAL FEATURES:
   Audio Commentary by Star Michael Dudikoff and Director Sam Firstenberg
• Intro by Director Sam Firstenberg
• On-camera interview with Star Michael Dudikoff
• Original Theatrical Trailer
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Billy the Kid vs. Dracula, Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter (1966)

Inspired by the Paramount Theatre's screening of James Whale's The Bride of Frankenstein at the Paramount Theatre (tonight and Friday, July 22nd and 23rd at 713 Congress Avenue in downtown Austin), the Austin Classic Movies Examiner has been examining the many sequels to the original Universal horror classics of the early '30s this week in a series entitled "Bastards of Horror." Today's entry takes a detour way out west with a couple of mind-boggling genre mash-ups from 1966, Billy the Kid vs. Dracula and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, both directed by the infamous William "One Shot" Beaudine.
Billy the Kid vs. Dracula stars Chuck Courtney as Billy the Kid and John Carradine as Dracula. The script for this mess plays fast and loose with vampire mythology while also ignoring the history of the old west. For example, everybody knows that sunlight will kill a vampire, right? Well, in this picture, ol' Drac walks around during the day with no ill effects. Not that it's easy to tell whether it's day or night in this movie, as they both kinda look the same. As for the history part, it is well-known that William Bonney a/k/a Billy the Kid was gunned down at the age of 19 by his old friend Pat Garrett in 1881, but in this movie, he's alive and well, having gone straight and is now working as a ranch hand at the Double Bar B.
The character of Dracula had been portrayed in films by several noted thespians, including Bela Lugosi, Lon Chaney, and Christopher Lee, each of whom brought their own brand of menace to the role. In Billy the Kid vs. Dracula, veteran character actor and notorious ham John Carradine plays the vampire as a dirty old man, a lascivious lech with a taste for young flesh. Check out the scene in the stagecoach, where he leeringly lusts after the photo of our heroine, Betty Bentley, played by the lovely Melinda Plowman. "18 and beautiful, eh?" What a filthy old creep!
Also look for Virginia Christine as Mrs. Oster, or as she was known in many a Folger's coffee commercial in the '60s and '70s, Mrs. Olsen, and a very special performance by a rubber bat on a string. Look for the prop man visibly manipulating the rubber bat on a string. He's right in the frame, and not just for a second, either. He's there as plain as day, baby. Well, that's why they called Bill Beaudine "One Shot," because he almost always printed the first take. Prop man in the shot? Print it! String clearly visible on the rubber bat? Print it!
As I mentioned, the character of Count Dracula is played by the great John Carradine, a man with over 300 motion picture and television credits, from his film debut in 1930's Bright Lights to his final screen appearance in 1995's Bikini Drive-In, which was released seven years after his death. A protege of John Barrymore, John Carradine was known as "The Voice" thanks to his deep-throated baritone, and starred on the stage as well as the silver screen. He was a member in good standing of director John Ford's stock company of actors, appearing in the Ford classics Stagecoach, The Grapes of Wrath, and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, among others. He also appeared in Grade-Z schlock like The Astro-Zombies, Hillbillys in a Haunted House, and Blood of Ghastly Horror.
As Carradine himself once said, "I've been in some of the greatest films ever made - and a lot of crap, too."
While Chuck Courtney's Billy the Kid is pretty nondescript, Carradine's Dracula is a hoot, a crusty old vampire pursuing an age-inappropriate relationship with a tender young thing, played by the fetching Melinda Plowman. Starting out as a child actress, Plowman specialized in sweet and innocent types, usually on televison. She first worked with director William Beaudine, on the Disney serial "The New Adventures of Spin and Marty," and also had a recurring role as Terry the babysitter on "Please don't eat the Daisies." Billy the Kid vs. Dracula was her last movie appearance, but she continued to work on the small screen until 1968, when she disappeared from the face of the earth, or married a rich producer, take your pick.
Billy the Kid vs. Dracula works equally well as a western and a horror movie, which is to say, not very well at all. However, as a comedy, it defintely has its moments.
The same cannot be said for Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, which originally played on the bottom half of a double bill with Billy the Kid vs. Dracula, simultaneously creating and destroying the horror western genre. It was shot in eight days at the Ray Corrigan Ranch in Simi Valley, California on a budget of a buck-eighty-five, give or take a dollar.
Now if you've seen Billy the Kid vs. Dracula, you know that you're in for a long scrape round the bottom of the barrel, cinematically speaking. If anything, Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter is even worse in every way, with bad acting, tossed-off dialogue, cheap sets, and laughable special effects making for a perfect storm of bad cheese. Unfortunately, this movie, unlike its companion piece, doesn't have John Carradine or any rubber bats to provide the necessary comic relief. However, the film does have its defenders, Joe Bob Briggs (who does the highly entertainly commentary track on one of the better DVD editions of the movie) among them.
Jesse James has been played by actors ranging from tough guys like Lawrence Tierney and Lee Van Cleef to Audie Murphy to Roy Rogers to Hugh Beaumont. That's right, the Beaver's dad played Jesse James. James Dean played him on TV in 1953, as did James Coburn in 1958. Robert Duvall played Jesse in 1972's The Great Northfield, Minnesota Raid, and more recently, Brad Pitt and Colin Farrell have played the part. But of all the actors to ever portray the legendary outlaw, surely the least notable interpretation ever is by the star of Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, John Lupton. Lupton was an actor who made his film debut in 1951'sSt. Benny the Dip, and was probably best known for co-starring with Fess Parker in the "Andrew's Raiders" TV series. More roles in TV westerns would follow, as well as numerous potrayals of military officers, policemen, and politicians. He was also particularly adept at playing a stuffed shirt.
Palying the part of Frankenstein's daughter, er, grand-daughter, is Narda Onyx. This movie is one of only three features she ever appeared in, and her only starring role. She played Eva Braun's sister Gretl in her previous film, 1962's Hitler, starring Richard Basehart as der Fuhrer. She worked a lot on television, and you may recall her role as Mademoiselle Denise on several different episodes of "The Beverly Hillbillies." Then again, you might not.
Without a doubt, the best known actor in this movie is Jim Davis, who plays Marshall McPhee. A veteran of scores of B-westerns and action movies, with titles like The Savage Horde, Border Lust, and Five Bloody Graves, Davis is best known for his gritty portrayal of Jock Ewing on the TV series "Dallas." Davis was no stranger to bad cinema, working in such trashploitation epics as The Road Hustlers, The Passion Pits, and alongside a wheelchair-bound J. Carrol Naish and a decrepit Lon Chaney Jr. in Al Adamson's dreadful 1971 ultra-cheapie Dracula vs. Frankenstein, also known as Blood of Frankenstein, also known as As I mentioned earlier, this movie was directed by William Beaudine. In a career that spanned seven decades, Beaudine was known for making low-budget quickies for poverty row studios like Monogram Pictures, where he helmed many a picture with Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, and the Bowery Boys. Beaudine's nickname, "One-Shot," came from his relectance to shoot any scene more than once. To him, re-take was a dirty word. As long as the scene he shot bore a passing resemblance to what was in the script, he always printed the first take. You'll notice that in Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, Beaudine more often than not sticks to a master shot, rarely going in for close-ups, and using the same set-ups over and over, despite the fact that Frankenstein manor is obviously a matte painting. Maybe ol' One-Shot was losing his touch. After the double whammy of Billy the Kid vs. Dracula and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, Beaudine only got a handful of directing assignments: two episodes of the 1967 "Green Hornet" TV series, a couple of Lassies, and an episode of "Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color."Teenage Dracula, and also known as Satan's Bloody Freaks.
As I mentioned earlier, this movie was directed by William Beaudine. In a career that spanned seven decades, Beaudine was known for making low-budget quickies for poverty row studios like Monogram Pictures, where he helmed many a picture with Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, and the Bowery Boys. Beaudine's nickname, "One-Shot," came from his relectance to shoot any scene more than once. To him, re-take was a dirty word. As long as the scene he shot bore a passing resemblance to what was in the script, he always printed the first take. You'll notice that in Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, Beaudine more often than not sticks to a master shot, rarely going in for close-ups, and using the same set-ups over and over, despite the fact that Frankenstein manor is obviously a matte painting. Maybe ol' One-Shot was losing his touch. After the double whammy of Billy the Kid vs. Dracula and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, Beaudine only got a handful of directing assignments: two episodes of the 1967 "Green Hornet" TV series, a couple of Lassies, and an episode of "Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color."
The bottom line is that the movie doesn't live up to its title. Unlike Billy the Kid vs. Dracula, there aren't nearly enough (unintentional) laugh-out-loud moments to make it truly worth your while, but it is better than, say, watching a marathon of "The Real Housewives of New York."
Up next: Bastards of Horror IV: The Ghost of Frankenstein vs. The Mummy's Ghost.
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Death Race 2000

On 100YearofMovies.net, Pat has what he called a “Shame List.” It’s not what you think.
Pat’s Shame List consists of classic films he hasn’t seen yet. I also have a shame list. I don’t have it listed out in Your Face! (though you’ll find a partial list in the poll at the end of this post), but there are a whole bunch of classics that I haven’t check out yet either. Of course, I have a slightly different definition of “classic” than most people.
Which brings us to the Roger Corman-produced Death Race 2000. Hey, Netflix says it’s a classic, so that’s good enough for me.
Death Race 2000 opens with some muscle car drawings made by a high school kid in shop class. It does not instill confidence.
Death Race 2000 opens with some muscle car drawings made by a high school kid in shop class. It does not instill confidence.
We’re in The Future, where all the TV personalities dress like George Jetson, and we’re tuning in for the 20th annual Transcontinental Road Race. The movie does not waste any time, moving directly to introducing the racers — all five of them. Yeah, I know. What Death Race 2000 lacks in quantity, it makes up for in quality. Anyway, here are the racers:
“Calamity” Jane, driving a bull-car, complete with giant bull horns
“The Swastika Sweetheart” Matilda the Hun, driving a fully stocked Nazimobile
The narcissistic “Nero the Hero,” driving a glammed-out lion car
“Machine Gun” Joe (Sly Stallone!), in what I assume is a mafia-themed roadster (because when I think “mafia,” I think about giant knives strapped to the hood of a car) — we know he’s the villain by the way Joe fires his tommy gun into the stands
The enigmatic “Frankenstein” (David Carradine), a caped gimp who has “lost a leg, lost an arm, half a face and half a chest, but has all the guts in the world!” and drives a big lizard of a car
After a quick word by Mr. President from his Stairway to Heaven, and we’re off! Vroom-vroom-vroom!! And then the commentators run down how many points each kind of pedestrian run down is worth.
Yeah, it’s a bit stunning. Not that the racers are encouraged to run over pedestrians or even the violence of watching nearly 20 people get run down. Even “euthanasia day” at the hospital isn’t so stunning. What’s stunning is that anyone would be on the road at all. Seriously: It’s the biggest televised event of the year, where for a couple days racers are actively encouraged to run over people – why are you having a picnic now?
You may be starting to suspect that Death Race 2000 is a very silly movie.
I went into it ready for all the awful auto-related violence that made this film so controversial at the time, but I can’t imagine how anyone took Death Race 2000 so seriously because it’s a very silly movie. It’s tempting to compare Death Race 2000 to such biting satires as Series 7: The Contenders, but tonally it’s a lot closer to The Running Man.
Or hell, even Hanna-Barbera’s Wacky Races.
And I haven’t even touched on the subplot involving Thomasina Paine’s resistance movement and her granddaughter covertly posing as Frankenstein‘s navigator. The Resistance strikes back at the Mr. President’s regime by ambushing the racers one at a time — including a priceless scene where a racer is detoured Wile E. Coyote-style through a fake tunnel to nowhere.
That’s the second time I’ve compared Death Race 2000 to a cartoon, and with good reason. In his original treatment of the film, Roger Corman played it straight and found the story to be “kind of vile” — hence the cartoonish approach. The end result is ridiculous… and ridiculously fun.
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HERCULES, PRISONER OF EVIL (1964)

Bulging muscles abound in this Italian sword and sandal adventure. This time Hercules must take on a powerful sorceress and her army of spellbound werewolves. But the sorceress seduces Herc and transforms him into a mindless beast! This installment of the Hercules legend was directed by master Euro-horror director Antonio Margheriti, who blends the sword-&-sorcery and horror genres.
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Wheels Of Terror (1987 / DVD)

Academy Award nominee Bruce Davison (Willard) stars with screen legends David Carradine (Death Race 2000) and Oliver Reed (Burnt Offerings) in this WWII adventure, based on an acclaimed novel by Sven Hassel.
When the 27th Panzers climb into a tank, it's the end of war, as civilized men know it! These rude, crude, lewd, last round draft picks straight out of the slammer engage in a detour of duty that leaves no head unbroken, no rule unbent and no doubt that they won't be back in prison when the fighting is finished.
Stylishly directed by cult director Gordon Hessler (The Golden Voyage of Sinbad) and featuring a strong supporting cast that includes David Patrick Kelly (48 Hrs.), Jay O. Sanders (The Day After Tomorrow) and Keith Szarabajka (A Perfect World).
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