These are the Damned
The Hammer Horror loving Bloke Down The Pub is fascinated by what people had to worry about in the sixties while relishing in the apocalypse, thanks to 1962 film They Are The Damned featuring Oliver Reed.
Ninja III The Domination
Michael Campochiaro is down among the ninjas, Lycra aerobic pants, glowing swords, big hair, sweat and V8 juice for his cult classic review of Ninja III The Domination
Swamp Thing
Aaron Carruthers takes a look at 88 Films’ Blu-Ray release of one of the earliest “comic book movies”, Wes Craven’s compromised but charming B-Movie tale of monsters, mad men and inter-species love.
Hollywood Chainsaw Hookers
Michael Campochiaro knows a great, enduring cult classic when he sees one. Read his look back at Fred Olen Ray’s immortal, sleazy, satirical exploitation movie, Hollywood Chainsaw Hookers starring Michelle Bauer, Linnea Quigley and Gunnar Hansen.
Cannibal Terror
Aaron Carruthers takes a look at 88 Films’ Blu-Ray release of the notorious and hilariously bad “Video Nasty”, Cannibal Terror, directed by Alain Deruelle.
Triple Threat
Read our review of the latest martial arts spectacular from director Jesse V Johnson and stars Tony Jaa, Iko Uwais, Scott Adkins, Michael Jai White, Tiger Chen, Celina Jade, Michael Bisping - Triple Threat
Green Inferno AKA Cannibal Holocaust 2
Aaron Carruthers takes a look at 88 Films’ Blu-Ray release of Antonio Climati‘s Green Inferno AKA Cannibal Holocaust 2.
Wacko - Vinegar Syndrome Blu-Ray Review
Thanks to Vinegar Syndrome, Jon Cross finally gets to sit down again and watch Wacko, a movie he hasn’t seen in over 20 years and which was something of a weird, messy holy grail quest, which is finally at an end! Read his review of the film and its new Blu-Ray here.
World On A Wire - Second Sight UK Blu-Ray Review
Aaron Carruthers takes a look at the new, U.K., Limited Edition Second Sight Blu-Ray release of Rainer Werner Fassbinder's acclaimed and influential science fiction classic World on a Wire.
The Unnamable - MVD Unearthed Classics Blu-Ray Review
Jon Cross takes a look at MVD’s Unearthed Classic Blu-Ray release of The Unnamable, a rare, low budget, late 80s monster movie based on an H.P. Lovecraft short story.
SUNDANCE review: Abe Forsythe’s Little Monsters
Lisa Gullickson is still bringing us reviews of the films she had the pleasure of seeing at Sundance and hopefully will be hitting our multiplex or streaming screens sometime soon - this time around it’s Abe Forsythe’s Aussie zombie/comedy Little Monsters starring Lupita Nyong’o, Alexander England, and Josh Gad.
SUNDANCE Review: Johannes Nyholm’s Koko-Di Koko-da
For her latest Sundance review Lisa Gullickson gets caught in a perpetual Swedish, nightmare, fairytale loop with Johannes Nyholm’s Koko-Di Koko-da.
Sundance Review: Alex Lehmann's & Mark Duplass' "Paddleton"
Lisa Gullickson gives another review of a film she saw in Park City, Utah at the Sundance Film Festival. This time it’s the buddy dramedy, Paddleton starring Mark Duplass and Ray Romano.
Dracula AKA The Horror of Dracula
For his 50th Hammer Horror review, The Bloke Down The Pub talks about why 1958’s Dracula AKA Horror of Dracula remains the quintessential Hammer film and the benchmark by which all others are measured.
Also we reveal The Bloke Down The Pub’s true identity!!!
Sundance Review: BEDLAM
Lisa Gullickson starts her Sundance Film Festival reviews with a powerful and important documentary on mental health - Bedlam, the documentary passion project of Kenneth Paul Rosenberg, MD
The Big Heist steals our hearts, minds and souls with debut MO75
Jon Cross delves deep into the sprawling, dense and delightful masterpiece that is MO75 Vol 1-3 by The Big Heist and comes out an enriched and changed man.
The Vampire Lovers
The Bloke Down The Pub, lover of all things Hammer, sometimes does things a bit backward, like reviewing the first part of “The Karnstein Trilogy “, 1970's The Vampire Lovers, last. Delight as he struggles not to go on and on about bleedin’ Tudor Gates!
Quatermass and the Pit
Our resident Hammer fanatic, The Bloke Down the Pub, wrestles with bonkers plot biscuits and the looming spectre of the BBC in his review of 1967’s Quatermass and the Pit AKA Five Million Years to Earth.
The Shadow of the Cat
Our Hammer loving Bloke Down The Pub is done with debating whether or not it’s strictly a Hammer film and instead wants to talk about what kind of film 1961’s The Shadow of the Cat is!
Gustav Möller’s The Guilty
Lisa Gullickson takes a look at original, claustrophobic and tense thriller, Gustav Möller’s The Guilty.