Archive for the 'Reviews' Category


The Twilight Zone - Season 1

Monday, December 19th, 2005

Submitted for your approval: The Twilight Zone’s inaugural season, all 36 episodes complete with Rod Serling’s original promos for the following week’s episode, not seen since their original broadcast. To discuss television’s greatest anthology series whose title has become pop culture shorthand for the bizarre and supernatural is to immediately become like Albert Brooks and Dan Aykroyd in Twilight Zone: The Movie; a can-you-top-this recall of famous shocks and favorite twists. Several essential episodes hail from this season, among them, “Time Enough at Last” starring Burgess Meredith as a bespectacled bookworm who is the lone survivor of an atomic blast; “The After-Hours” starring Anne Francis as a department store shopper haunted by mannequins; and the profoundly disturbing “The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street,” in which fear and prejudice turns neighbor against neighbor (and, by the by, whose alien observers inspired Kang and Kodos on The Simpsons).

From an unsettlingly persistent hitchhiker to a malevolent slot machine, The Twilight Zone’s first season did plumb “the pit of man’s fears.” One forgets how moving the series could be. Three of this season’s most memorable and enduring episodes are the poignant and primal “stop-the-world-I-want-to-get-off fantasies, “Walking Distance,” “A Stop at Willougby” and “The Sixteen-Millimeter Shrine,” in which desperate characters seek refuge in a simpler past. Serling’s few stabs at comedy (”Mr. Bevis,” “The Mighty Casey”) have not aged well, but the series finale, “A World of His Own,” starring Keenan Wynn as a playwright whose fictional characters come to life, has a brilliant capper. The episodes are more deliberately paced than one might remember. Less patient younger viewers might be anxious to get to the payoffs, but once they settle into the rhythm, they will savor the literate writing and the performances by such veteran actors as Ed Wynn, Everett Sloan, and Ida Lupino, and newcomers such as Jack Klugman. The extras, including the unaired version of the pilot episode, “Where is Everybody?”, audio commentaries and recollections, and a Serling college lecture, truly take this six-disc set to another dimension. –Donald Liebenson

# Episodes include: Where Is Everybody?, One for the Angels, Mr. Denton on Doomsday, Sixteen Millimeter Shrine, Walking Distance, Escape Clause, The Lonely, Time Enough at Last, Perchance to Dream, Judgment Night, And When the Sky Was Opened, What You Need, The Four of Us Are Dying, Third from the Sun, I Shot an Arrow into the Air, The Hitch-Hiker, The Fever, The Last Flight, The Purple Testament, Elegy, Mirror Image, The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street, A World of Difference, Long Live Walter Jameson, People Are Alike All Over, Execution, The Big Tall Wish, A Nice Place to Visit, Nightmare as a Child, A Stop at Willoughby, The Chaser, A Passage for Trumpet, Mr. Bevis, The After Hours, The Mighty Casey, A World of His Own
# Remastered from new high-definition film transfers using the original camera negatives and magnetic soundtracks
# Audio commentaries by Earl Holliman, Martin Landau, Rod Taylor, Martin Milner, Kevin McCarthy, Ted Post and William Self
# Vintage audio recollections with Burgess Meredith, Douglas Heyes, Richard L. Bare, Buck Houghton, Anne Francis and Richard Matheson
# Rod Serling audio lectures from Sherwood Oaks College
# Isolated music scores featuring the legendary Bernard Herrmann, Jerry Goldsmith and more
# Rod Serling promos for “Next Week’s” show
# Original unaired pilot version of “Where Is Everybody?” with Rod Serling’s network pitch
# Rare Rod Serling blooper

The Twilight Zone - Season 1 (The Definitive Edition)

Product Description:

The complete first season of Rod Serling’s classic, groundbreaking series exploring the fantastic and the frightening.

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Peter Jackson - Dead Alive

Monday, December 12th, 2005

Now this is a Horror Movie. At least one with some creativity! If you have not seen this yet, do yourself a favor and order it as soon as you can.

I ordered Dead Alive a few weeks ago because a friend recommended it. For some reason it was not readily available at my local shop so I ordered it online. Well worth it.

Throw out all your preconceptions about the limits of horror! A new standard has been set with Dead Alive - The Mother of All Horror Films.

On a quiet street, in a small town, pure evil has come to stay. Lionel, an innocent young man, is forced to care for his domineering mother and finds the task a whole lot more demanding after she’s bitten by the cursed Sumatran rat monkey. Passing the point of death, Lionel’s mother sucks friends and family into her gruesome existence among the living dead and Lionel is sent spiraling into a ghoulish nightmare.

now a crazed zombie, she soon infects enough people to make it difficult for Lionel, still the faithful son, to keep the neighbors from suspecting that something is terribly wrong.

Dead Alive is dripping with state-of-the-art special effects that feature mutilations, rock ‘n roll dismemberments and household appliances, combining into the most bizarre ending ever filmed.

In case you forgot, Peter Jackson is also the director of The Lord of the Rings - The Fellowship of the Ring, The Lord of the Rings - The Two Towers, and The Lord of the Rings - Return Of The King.

I highly recommend Dead Alive for the gore loving splatter fiends!

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The Devils Rejects DVD

Friday, December 9th, 2005

Tagline: A Tale Of Murder, Mayhem and Revenge
Plot Synopsis: Sequel to ‘House of 1000 Corpses’ is set some months later with the Texas State Police making a full-scale attack against the murderous Firefly family residence for the 1,000+ murders and disappearances of the past several years. But three of the family members escape, including Otis, Baby Firefly and Baby’s father Captain Spaulding. The evil trio go on a road trip, leaving dozens of mangled bodies in their wake. Evading a massive Texas Rangers dragnet as well as a group of equally murderous bounty hunters led by Ken Dwyer (the brother of a policeman Mamma Firefly killed in ‘House of…’) who’s obsessed with finding the deadly killers, the surviving Firefly clan gather at a run-down amusement park owned by Captain Spaulding’s half-brother, Charlie Altamont, whom offers them shelter and a new base of operations for their killing spree as Sheriff Dwyer, the Texas Rangers, the FBI and others slowly close in.

Actors: Sid Haig, Bill Moseley, Sheri Moon, William Forsythe, Ken Foree, See more
Directors: Rob Zombie
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Widescreen, Ntsc

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Army Of Darkness

Saturday, July 2nd, 2005

NO matter what version of this movie you pick up, it’s sure to please your horror needs. It is Army of Darkness.And you can pick up the Boomstick Edition or the Official Bootleg Director’s Cut (which is the one pictured below :)

Army Of Darkness

Bruce Campbell vs. Army Of Darkness - The Director’s Cut (Official Bootleg Edition)

Widescreen, 15 minutes of additional footage including the original ending…

audio commentary with Sam Raimi, Bruce “Don’t call me Ash” Campbell, and Ivan. 4 never before seen deleted scenes and director storyboards.

A must have for not only the Raimi fan, but Bruce and the Evil Dead story line as well.

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Stuff Stephanie In The Incinerator

Friday, July 1st, 2005

The quest for the best Horror DVDs has once again led me not only to Troma flicks, but one arguably worthy for the shelf, or the trash can.

From the box:

Nightmares of the rich and famous! See what happens when the decadent desires of the super rich turn into perverted pleasures and monomaniacal obsessions. Stuff Stephanie In The Incinerator is a burning tale of macabre matrimonial murder and spine tingling suspense that is unlike anything ever before attempted on film! When your wife and best friend are after your hard-earned money, there is only one thing left to do… 1989 - color - 97 minutes - Rated PG-13

Well, it’s a poor attempt at a lot of things, but most of all an edge on horror/humor - which is one thing that is definitely hit or miss.

Horror and humor, go together in an awkward way. This movie tried to do too much with too little. The twists were silly, and of course good in a z-movie kind of way, but not in an entertaining way.

Worth a watch for the silly, even kinky death scenes, not spooky at all - but I own it :)

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The Lost Boys

Thursday, June 16th, 2005

Sometimes when I buy a horror dvd I ask myself “Why did I buy this?” Other times I play the DVD over and over.

I am not quite sure why I bought The Lost Boys DVD. BUt I have played it a few times since, and again, I know not why.

Could it be the thematic and cheesy 80’s songs that accompany the bad acting, or is it childhood actors that simply make me laugh. Corey Feldman and Corey Haim?

Sam and his older brother Michael are all-American teens with all-American interests. But after they move with their Mother to peaceful Santa Carla, California, things mysteriously begin to change. Michael’s not himself lately. And Mom’s not going to like what he’s turning into.

The Lost Boys reshapes vampire tradition, deftly mixing heart-pounding terror, rib-tickling laughs and a body-gyrating rock soundtrack. Under Joel Shumacher’s direction, a marvelous cast: Jason Patric, Jami Gertz, Kiefer Sutherland, Corey Feldman, and Corey “I Sell My Hair On eBay for drugs” Haim.

The text on the back of the DVD boxes always hypes up the movie so much don’t they? I added the sell his hair line. :)

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New Horror Movies

Sunday, June 12th, 2005

Check out the new horror movies!

Get your classics, zombies, black and white, and more! Order online and save money on great horror movies.

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Classic Demon Movies

Sunday, June 5th, 2005

Here are some classic demon movies. The classic God TOld me To and The Demon, as well as the Exorcist rip Good gainst Evil!

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