Comedy Rod Lott
Reveals Big Tits Zombie
lead actress Sora Aoi in the disc's behind-the-scenes footage, "We have
action, nudity, striptease, zombies, and splatter." Oh, you guessed
that already? Either way, her eight words could double as a review.
Action Rod Lott
For the first 10 minutes, I wondered if Kill ’Em All
weren’t a movie at all, but a collection of unrelated action vignettes —
a bomb hit here, a knife throw there, fists and feet everywhere — as
seemingly unrelated characters fight, but hardly speak, with no story
given.
Action Rod Lott
While not fully lucid, Painted Skin: The Resurrection excels from a standpoint of visuals. Whether that’s worth an entire viewing depends on your tolerance for fantastical whimsy.
The whole story behind the music, now ‘In Your Eyes.’
Documentary Rod Lott
Peter Gabriel’s 1986 album, So,
found the former Genesis vocalist at his commercial and critical peak.
Now, to celebrate its 25th anniversary, it’s not only been reissued in a
three-disc box set, but is the subject of the Classic Albums documentary series.
Horror Rod Lott
For being A Vampire's Tale, the story sure is dominated by an antiquities dealer named Jacob (Doug Bradley, the Pinhead of the Hellraiser series). With his hateful stepdaughter and newly pregnant wife, Jacob moves to the country to live on a farm.
Horror Rod Lott
Says a concerned mother in the opening scene, "If I've told you once,
I've told you a hundred times: Stay away from vans. Only bad people own
vans." Truer words, ne'er spoken, especially in the case of Creep Van, an independently funded flick of horror from the heart.
Thriller Rod Lott
I should have listened to Ron Backer. In his new book, Mystery Movie Series of 1930s Hollywood,
he more or less warns would-be audiences away from trying any of the
early 1930s’ half-dozen movies based on Erle Stanley Gardner's Perry
Mason character.
Action Rod Lott
By sheer coincidence, Osombie arrived on my desk the same day I screened Zero Dark Thirty, Kathryn Bigelow's Oscar-worthy depiction about the hunt for Osama bin Laden. Osombie begins where Zero ends: with the American military raid on bin Laden's compound on May 2, 2011. Whereas Zero puts bullets in the al-Qaeda leader's body, Osombie lets him inject himself with an aggressive pathogen so that, once he washes up on the Arabian Sea, he's a full-fledged zombie.