Juicy, supernatural soap opera featuring the fabulous Jaqueline Bisset as the wife of an aspiring concert pianist who has her world turned upside down by a gaggle of satanic cult members.  Plenty of post Flower Power saturated colors, soft focus lenses and semi risqué goings on.  Very enjoyable time waster that plays like the cinematic equivalent of a melodramatic romantic novel.  Featuring a cast of great character actors including Willian Windom, Bradford Dillman, Curt Jurgens, Alan Alda and Barbara Parkins.
The 1970’s were rife with speculation about what mysterious force could be behind all the missing and vanished boats, ships and planes which entered the region known as The Bermuda Triangle and then were never seen again.  There are many books and television shows which have delved into this haunted spot.  Are there natural forces to blame for the swallowing up of all these vessels or is it something supernatural?  This scary TV picture thought that The Devil was at work in the area.  Doug McClure and Kim Novak get stuck in the middle of all this mess and try [More]
A lovely, wet weather, stay inside creep fest to indulge in and then pay the price by looking over your shoulder or seeing things out of the corner of your eye when the movie does what it’s supposed to do and scares the Hell (House) out of you.  A scientist and his hand picked psychics and sensitives venture to a sprawling estate long rumored to be infested with ghosts.  The investigators’ purpose is to gather evidence and finally prove that there is a form of life after death: that ghosts really exist.  Heavily atmospheric and unsettling.  Good performances from Roddy McDowall and Clive [More]
What a cool concept!  A haunted house walk through at Universal Studios in Hollywood of psycho Michael Myers’ various killing grounds.  In this scenario, you go toward the hulking Shape and he and other scary figures  jump out at you.  No nasty slashing or blood spilling is involved.  You may soil your shorts but at least you’re doing this in the dark.  You may get away with no one seeing it.  
Another major contributor to the horror field has died.  Wes Craven has left behind a legacy, love it or hate it.  I liked this first entry in the “Nightmare on Elm Street” series.  There were a few sequels that I didn’t much care for.  And after awhile, Freddy Kreuger’s wisecracks can get grating and tiresome.  There are some style points to consider though.  Craven incorporated a lot of dazzling effects in this film that still retain the power to creep out the viewer.  There are elastic walls groping toward intended victims with claws and bodies busting through.  There is the [More]
It gets to be a drag commenting on the great personalities who are no longer with us.  “Rowdy” Roddy Piper just passed at too young an age.  Roddy Piper made his name in the wrestling ring and established himself as one of the most memorable heels ever.  You were never quite sure what stunt Piper would resort to as he became increasingly wound up and then exploded in some violent act of lunacy.  Sports Entertainment never looked so good when this maniac was present.  Piper branched out into action flicks and turned up in this John Carpenter directed paranoid fantasy.  [More]
  Christopher Lee commented that he welcomed this take as Dracula because it was a role that followed the novel source material closer than the Hammer Film’s series which brought Lee to international stardom.  Lee also had a chance to emote beyond the various snarls, grunts and invectives that the Hammer Dracula required.  I look back fondly on this film, admittedly. a low budget affair.  Yes.  The interior sets look a bit prefabricated and cheap and spray on spider webs adorn Dracula’s castle to an uncomfortable degree but there are many charming exterior sequences that sustain my interest.  There is [More]
Very cool compilation of different zombie types that are found in movies and TV.  We find that there may be multiple ways to be turned into a zombie including plagues, solar flares, voodoo, etc.  The general consensus is, though, that in order to end a zombie’s miserable existence is to your advantage to severely wound or damage the head area of said zombie.  If your aim is steady and accurate enough, use a gun or rifle to shoot the zombie in the head.  Seems to do the trick in most cases.  Always nice to watch these cats shamble around on [More]
This immortal classic has been making the cable TV rounds this holiday season and “Alien”, for me, still holds up as my favorite science fiction/horror film EVER!  I have always been partial to the first part of the film where the crew find out about the strange “distress” signal they are sent to investigate, up until Kane (John Hurt) is brought back to the ship from the surface of the planetoid with a “guest” attached to his face.  There is nice cast interaction and an effective depiction of a trek across a rather hostile planet.  The rollercoaster ride of horror aboard ship which [More]
“An American Werewolf in London” gets my vote for the best realized hybrid of the horror and comedy movie genres.  But, to be sure, the emphasis is clearly on the horror of the entire situation.  Two young Americans are on a backpacking trek across the lonely expanses of Britain when they encounter the completely unexpected.  Both are savagely attacked by a giant wolf creature.  One is killed but the other unlucky soul lives to experience the nightmare of werewolf transformation.  Humor in the style of “Animal House” and “The Blues Brothers” but what would you expect from the director of all three [More]
This clip is a masterfully staged study of the shark hunter Quint from Steven Spielberg’s “Jaws”.  Quint, played by Robert Shaw, recounts his earlier in life run in with man eating sharks.  The profound horror of this life threatening event probably played no small part in his decision to hunt sharks for a living.  “Jaws” is still an amazing thrill ride of a movie after all these years.  I think it may be Spielburg’s best picture.  This scene is eminently creepy and evocative.
I stumbled upon this movie late at night and was instantly appalled!  What a horrific, nightmarish spectacle it all is.  A unit of Russian soldiers during World War II are unfortunate enough to wander into the Hell of a den of nearly unstoppable human/robot hybrids.  The soldiers’ mission is to apprehend a latter day descendant of the evil Dr. Frankenstein himself and put a stop to his hideous killer creations.  They should have gone AWOL and fled the mission.  The creatures featured in this lovely gore fest are pieced together from dead bodies and curious mechanical parts the good doctor [More]
We visit Forrest J. Ackerman, the creator of “Famous Monsters of Filmland” magazine, and take an abbreviated  tour of the “Ackermansion” memorabilia collection Ackerman amassed in Southern California.  Plenty of pad puns and dusty monster/horror/science fiction movie artifacts await.  How did Ackerman remember where everything was stored?
Great Sixties science fiction/horror film from master fantasy director Mario Bava.   Two ships in outer space end up setting down on an alien planet.  After losing communications with one of the ships, the crew of the other vessel goes to investigate.  Many of the occupants are found dead, having seemingly lost their minds and killed each other.  Many crew members cannot be found.  It appears that there is an alien presence on the planet that has taken over the bodies of one of the space crews. A struggle to survive the alien vampires and escape the evil planet and get back into [More]