Catching up on some titles from the weekend...
Tenney, 1988
Look, this thing is a total piece of crap, but I love it nonetheless. Fits snuggly into the so-bad-it's-good catalog of 80s horror, even if it doesn't quite reach the legendary status of stuff like Troll 2. I just had to put this on Friday night after a chance encounter at work with two of the film's cast. As soon as I get a frame, I will proudly display my signed one-sheet. Excellent makeup and a fun soundtrack complete the package in this cult classic trash horror.
Gore, 2023
Anyone else here miss Attack of the Show!? This documentary is a love letter to a freer time, a more offensive time, a silly time. Film Threat's Chris Gore does a great job covering the rise and fall of G4 TV, and its flagship hour of over-the-line nonsense, Attack of the Show!. Where else could you see two morons slam 11 shots of Cholula hot sauce in an attempt to one-up each other? Participate in a a live colonoscopy with commentary? Watch a scantily clad Olivia Muff jump into a giant pie? The Mayans were right: The world ended on December 31, 2012.
Cunningham, 1980
Ah, 1980. The year we were blessed with a low budget suspense flick chock full of bad acting, cultural appropriation, braless wonders, and one hell of an original score. I doubt the tiny crew of actors and crew had any idea what sort of cultural zeitgeist they would start with this little film. By picking up the ball that had started rolling with Black Christmas and Halloween - that of the Killer's POV as he stalked his victims - Friday the 13th cemented the formula of the genre for the next decade. The funny thing is that this franchises main draw - its infamous hockey mask wearing killer - wasn't even in the film. I mean, he was, but more so as a catalyst for the slayings, himself a victim of alleged neglect by horny camp counselors.
Most people cite Friday the 13th Part 2 as the strongest of the bunch, and they certainly have an argument, especially since most of the films are pretty bad, but I will always hold the original in the top slot for its inventiveness and reliance on actual suspense. It's actually a pretty damned great little film, IMO. Was it diminished by an endless parade of crappy sequels? Probably. But I still put it on every year in the fall, and I never grow tired of it.
Night of the Demons
Tenney, 1988
Look, this thing is a total piece of crap, but I love it nonetheless. Fits snuggly into the so-bad-it's-good catalog of 80s horror, even if it doesn't quite reach the legendary status of stuff like Troll 2. I just had to put this on Friday night after a chance encounter at work with two of the film's cast. As soon as I get a frame, I will proudly display my signed one-sheet. Excellent makeup and a fun soundtrack complete the package in this cult classic trash horror.
Attack of the Doc!
Gore, 2023
Anyone else here miss Attack of the Show!? This documentary is a love letter to a freer time, a more offensive time, a silly time. Film Threat's Chris Gore does a great job covering the rise and fall of G4 TV, and its flagship hour of over-the-line nonsense, Attack of the Show!. Where else could you see two morons slam 11 shots of Cholula hot sauce in an attempt to one-up each other? Participate in a a live colonoscopy with commentary? Watch a scantily clad Olivia Muff jump into a giant pie? The Mayans were right: The world ended on December 31, 2012.
Friday the 13th
Cunningham, 1980
Ah, 1980. The year we were blessed with a low budget suspense flick chock full of bad acting, cultural appropriation, braless wonders, and one hell of an original score. I doubt the tiny crew of actors and crew had any idea what sort of cultural zeitgeist they would start with this little film. By picking up the ball that had started rolling with Black Christmas and Halloween - that of the Killer's POV as he stalked his victims - Friday the 13th cemented the formula of the genre for the next decade. The funny thing is that this franchises main draw - its infamous hockey mask wearing killer - wasn't even in the film. I mean, he was, but more so as a catalyst for the slayings, himself a victim of alleged neglect by horny camp counselors.
Most people cite Friday the 13th Part 2 as the strongest of the bunch, and they certainly have an argument, especially since most of the films are pretty bad, but I will always hold the original in the top slot for its inventiveness and reliance on actual suspense. It's actually a pretty damned great little film, IMO. Was it diminished by an endless parade of crappy sequels? Probably. But I still put it on every year in the fall, and I never grow tired of it.
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“It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance.” ― Thomas Sowell