Category: Cult

Dancin’, The Tubes contribution to the Xanadu soundtrack is either a parody of or the pinnacle expression of male sexual aggression and female-as-property mentality inherent in popular music.  Though we may be disgusted by the deranged sentiments of the lyrics of Dancin’ we can at least applaud the frankness of the brutality.  The song is unreserved and unapologetic in its overt adolescent male demands and its masturbatory uses of a partner it praises implicates the entire American music industry in the collective psychic rape of the feminine in our culture.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Hcd02rr-1I[/youtube]

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Posted By: Juan Mateo

How an 80s hunk delivered eternally relevant pop magic

by Andy Brooks

still from eddie and the cruisers of Paré

Though not exactly a household name as a Film Actor, Michael Paré ought to be recognized as a Golden Boy of movie soundtracks. During a two-year span in the early 80s, the stupendously hunky, often glistening, and always-enigmatic Paré appeared as the tough guy lead in a pair of moody rock n’ roll fantasies. And though the films in question — 1983’s murky “Eddie and the Cruisers” and 1984’s Runyonesque “Streets of Fire” — were definitive box office duds, they did go on to produce two sturdy little numbers that continue to receive play in doctor’s offices, bus stations, and supermarkets the world over.

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Posted By: Andy Brooks

If we’re all going crazy we should at least have a little fun along the way…

woman trys on Onibaba demon mask

Top 5 Japanese Existential Horror Movies of the 1960s
By Juan Mateo

Contemporary Japanese cinema has fallen flat with its cardboard surrealism, assembly line horror and banal historical romances. Of course there are always exceptions and for the most part Japan can be proud it has a few talented and seriously disturbed quacks in its film industry. But there certainly was a time when the films produced in Japan were dripping with that brain sauce that oozes out of the ear of the truly mad. These were not mere movies but rich tasty desserts of poison lovingly baked in the ovens of hell. This was the Japan of the 1960s.

1. Matango (1963)

Dvd for Matango

Matango is one of my all time favorite films. The film is based on a short story by the sadly neglected turn of the century horror writer William Hope Hodgson and directed by Ishiro Honda, who directed the first Godzilla movie as well as the insanely good Godzilla Versus Mothra, which introduced the Shobijin, the tiny twins that sing to Mothra. Matango is literally Gilligan’s Island on mushrooms; a group of castaways find themselves on an island where all they can find to eat is a resilient mushroom that has taken over the island. What follows is a fun descent into madness and terror.

Trailer:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_q40cvm0Fwc[/youtube]

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Posted By: Juan Mateo

Filed Under: Cult Film Foreign Horror

The Conservative Schadenfreude of 70s Sci-Fi Dystopias

Charlton Heston with machine gun mowin down vampires aka hippies!

Hold it right there hippy...

Aside from some of these great films being vehicles for bible thumping, NRA pimping Charlton Heston, the amazing sci-fi films of the 70s were largely a conservative Hollywood’s reaction to the peace and love culture explosion of the 60s; a paranoid response to the experimentation, exploration and radical questioning of traditional American values by the Vietnam war generation. Sci-fi authors and filmmakers seemed to be ‘working for the man’ and sought to paint a future gone mad should the new values of this young generation become idealized and realized.

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Posted By: Juan Mateo

Any nerd that grew up during the 70s and 80s knows the name of Ralph Bakshi, the only American animator of his generation with any balls. His Wizards is a testament to Bakshi’s prowess as a warlock so fearsome that even the powerful Satan cowers before him and allows Bakshi carte blanche access to the mysteries of his conjuring magics.

Wizard Sketch

Bakshi doodle for Wizards

The real nerds also know, and rage with that knowledge, that Peter Jackson won an Oscar by blatantly ripping off Bakshi. Jackson’s Lord of the Rings was a flat out uncredited re-make of Bakshi’s 1978 Lord of the Rings, which was much more atmospheric and ten times more affecting and authentic but lacking the lazy Hollywood sentimentality. Bakshi’s Lord of the Rings was about the warring archetypes, Jackson’s rings was about crappy acting and fast food CGI. Visit ihopepeterjacksoncontractshemorrhoidsonhisface.com for more details.

One to Rule them All

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WcJbPlAknw[/youtube]

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Posted By: Juan Mateo

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XNV7hKVu-Xg[/youtube]

I remember turning Night Flight on one night when I was a kid and seeing this!

I’m still trying to find a full version of this

To this day it is still one of the most bizarre movies that I have ever seen!

Posted By: ocalex

Filed Under: Cult Film