JUNESPLOITATION: Moontrap (1989)

DAY 20. 80’s Sci-Fi!

The sci-fi event of 1989!

Never mind that The Abyss came out that year.

Or even Dr. AlienCyborgDr. Caligari and Shocking Dark.

If you miss the days when science fiction movies relied on practical effects, wild concepts and pure imagination rather than endless CGI, there is this movie. Coming from the creative minds of Robert Dyke and Tex Ragsdale, this kicks off with a brilliant premise: during the 1969 Apollo 11 landing, a robotic eye secretly watches the astronauts leave. Fast forward twenty years and a routine Space Shuttle mission discovers a 14,000-year-old human corpse and a mysterious pod in orbit. Once on Earth, the pod does what any good 80s killer robot would do. It builds itself a cybernetic body out of lab equipment and human remains, leading to a glorious shotgun showdown.

From there, Moontrap turns into an Apollo-era search-and-destroy mission to the Moon. What makes the movie work so well is its casting. Sci-fi royalty Walter Koenig (Chekov from Star Trek) plays the cynical Colonel Jason Grant and he is paired perfectly with the legendary Bruce Campbell (Evil Dead) as Ray Tanner. Campbell brings his signature dry wit to the lunar surface, making the dialogue pop even when the plot dips into standard survival-horror territory.

Realizing the moon is basically a hotbed for killer robots, NASA dusts off the last remaining Apollo rocket and sends Grant and Ray Tanner, back to the lunar surface. Once on the moon, they find the ruins of an ancient human civilization and wake up a beautiful woman in stasis named Mera (Leigh Lombardi). She warns them about the Kaalium, killer cyborgs who love nothing more than turning organic life into spare parts. Before they know it, the Kaalium steal their lunar module, blow up their command module real good and leave our heroes stranded.

What follows is a great, claustrophobic survival story. Poor Bruce Campbell gets taken out (spoiler!), and Grant and Mera are captured and put aboard a massive Kaalium ship heading for Earth. But not before Grant makes a tent on the moon’s surface and despite being menaced by cyborgs, still has the time to feel up an ancient, reanimated woman. It’s a man’s world.

The cyborgs need the NASA tech to complete their ship, but Grant rigs the stolen module to self-destruct and he and Mera blow their way out into space, using the recoil of his gun to jet away like a couple of badass space cowboys while the alien vessel explodes behind them. They make it back to Earth, Mera learns English, and they live happily ever after… until the classic it’s not really over stinger shows a surviving Kaalium pod sitting in an Earth junkyard, getting ready to build a new body.

It would sit there for a long time.

James Glickenhaus—the legend behind The Exterminator—was ready to go big with a sequel titled Moontrap 2: The Pyramids of Mars. It sounds like the kind of high-concept, space-faring madness we all craved, but thanks to the usual grind of studio financial woes, it died. Fast forward to 2011, and Robert Dyke and Tex Ragsdale announced a graphic novel campaign. The idea was to use the art as a visual pitch to secure funding for a film. It was a noble effort, but the backers didn’t bite and the project got the axe before it even started.

But you can’t keep a good space-killer down. By 2014, the Moontrap team was back at it with a new project: Moontrap: Target Earth. Now, they were quick to clarify that this wasn’t a direct sequel, but a standalone adventure set in the same universe. Instead of just picking up where Grant and Mera left off, they pivoted to a story about an archaeological dig unearthing an ancient craft and a young woman (Sarah Butler) getting whisked off to the moon to unlock the mystery.

They actually got the cameras rolling in Michigan, bringing in Charles Shaughnessy to play the heavy and Damon Dayoub as our lead adventurer. It’s a different vibe, sure, but after all those years of what ifs and cancelled graphic novels, seeing the Moontrap movie try to become a franchise makes me happy.

I rented this from Prime Time Video as a kid and had a great time with it. If I ever get stranded on the moon’s surface, I’ll be looking to get lucky too.

Chattanooga Film Festival 2026: Assets & Liabilities (2026)

Zach Weintraub is known for hyper-realistic, slice-of-life character studies (The International Sign for Choking, Slackjaw). Assets & Liabilities marks a fascinating pivot where he injects genre-thriller DNA directly into his usual mumblecore-adjacent aesthetics. He plays Zach, who wonders how he went from skating DIY parks and staying up until 4 AM listening to minor-chord punk rock to worrying about mortgage rates, property taxes and the resale value of a suburban investment property. He’s also a dad suffocating under the weight of bourgeois expectation. He’s got the wife, the kid, the house and a piece of real estate he’s desperately trying to flip. He is the definition of a guy who made all the grown-up choices but lost his soul in the process.

When his family packs up for a short weekend trip, Zach doesn’t use the empty house to catch up on sleep or finish chores. Instead, the silence drives him crazy, and he decides to resurrect his ghost. He grabs his old skateboard, hits the pavement and tries to manifest the carefree, middle-finger-to-the-world attitude of his youth.

For a minute, it works. He crosses paths with a younger skater (Arsenio Salvante), and the camaraderie feels like a time machine. Zach is flying high on nostalgia and a cheap sense of victory. But this isn’t a feel-good indie dramedy. An unsettling connection between Zach and this kid comes to light, shattering the illusion of his rebel-without-a-cause afternoon. What started as a desperate grab for youth spirals rapidly into a tense, claustrophobic confrontation with his own class standing, his choices and a pitch-black reality he can’t skate away from.

That’s because this teen is the tenant Zach has been wanting to evict so he can make money off that real estate I wrote about a few paragraphs ago. One curse, and everything bad that can happen seems to happen. Then again, as a protagonist who starts the movie dealing with the massive turds of his cute little baby girl and who only has a moment of affection in this — other than an awkward kiss with his wife, he’s lying in bed watching a JOI ruined orgasm video — and then, basically, eats shit.

Maybe don’t do bong hits with someone you consider your enemy.

See, we all learned some lessons.

You can watch this either in-person or virtually at the Chattanooga Film Festival. For more info, visit the official site.

Chattanooga Film Festival 2026: American Theater (2025)

If you ever wondered what happens when the theater world’s hyper-progressive cancel culture collides head-on with MAGA counter-culture in the middle of the Georgia woods, American Theater is the answer. Directed by Nicholas Clark and Dylan Frederick, this 2025 Slamdance Grand Jury Prize winner plays out like a real-world, bizarro-universe Waiting for Guffman.

The film is a fly-on-the-wall documentary following Brian Clowdus, a real-life, openly gay conservative director who once possessed a massive regional reputation for staging over-the-top, immersive outdoor musicals. After being heavily ousted from the mainstream Atlanta theater circuit in 2020 following a flood of accusations regarding toxic leadership, unsafe sets and bigotry, Clowdus doesn’t apologize. He rebrands.

He retreats to an isolated, weathered cabin in rural Georgia and rounds up a dedicated troupe of right-leaning, conservative actors. His grand scheme for artistic vengeance? Staging an original, allegorical, fiercely political musical retelling of the 1692 Salem witch trials, casting himself and his cast as the true victims of a modern-day ideological witch hunt. As if the rehearsals aren’t high-stakes enough, the cameras capture Clowdus simultaneously running a chaotic, real-world campaign for the Florida House of Representatives.

Because this is a slice-of-life verité documentary rather than a scripted production, the actors are real-life historical figures from this specific theater subculture. I couldn’t believe this was real, but there you go. This article — thanks for sharing, Alexei Toliopoulos — goes quite deep into just how wild the star of this movie is. 

Clowdus is the larger-than-life center of gravity around which this movie spirals. Sporting a thick Southern drawl and endless energy, he treats his rehearsals like military operations and religious revivals rolled into one. He fills the screen with the kind of intense, unedited eccentric charisma usually reserved for cult leaders or grindhouse exploitation villains as he leads a collection of conservative-leaning actors who feel completely alienated by the mainstream arts community. The documentary captures them oscillating between intense vulnerability, fierce ideological conviction and genuine panic as they are subjected to Clowdus’s trademark dangerous theatrical choices. These include frighteningly close pyrotechnics, unpadded physical stunts and increasingly unhinged staging demands.

Directors Clark and Frederick use no talking-head interviews or voiceovers to guide your opinion. The camera just sits in the corner of the cabin and lets the madness unfold naturally, all in a literal cabin in the woods, as unsafe stage combat missed cues and show tunes tell the tale. And when the show gets canceled, everyone gets drunk and decides to test out being lynched, well… seriously, this was a real thing, not a script?

Watching this virtually at the Chattanooga Film Festival, I wished I had seen it live with an audience, because it’s one of the most uncomfortable movies I’ve seen. It goes from being funny at times to being frankly terrifying, as we’ve all built such walls around ourselves and have chosen such strange bedfellows in these most horrible of times. 

What a movie.

You can watch this either in-person or virtually at the Chattanooga Film Festival. For more info, visit the official site.

Chattanooga Film Festival 2026: Heavy Metal (1981)

I should not have seen this movie at nine or ten years of age, nor should I have read the magazine. I should have been blissfully ignorant of the mindblowing nature of what I was about to see and waited until I was ready, but here we are, literally forty years later, and not a day goes by that this movie doesn’t cross my mind.

Directed by animator Gerald Potterton and produced by Ivan Reitman and publisher Leonard Mogel, this movie takes on the near-impossible task of taking the stories of an unwieldy adult science fiction magazine and making them into a coherent story about, well, evil? Or something? Honestly, who cares? There’s animated Roger Corben and zombie bombers and half-nude warrior women riding dinosaurs and stabbing people.

Based on the comic book tale, “Soft Landing” starts the film. Created by Dan O’Bannon and Thomas Warkentin, it has a man flying a car from space to Earth. He’s an astronaut home to see his daughter, but in the next sequence, “Grimaldi,” what he brings back kills him, and his daughter soon learns of a galaxy- and time-spanning evil called the Loc-Nar. That entity is present in every story throughout the film and actually works really well.

Moebius’ “The Long Tomorrow” has become “Harry Canyon,” the story of a film noir detective in a 2031 New York City that looks and feels a lot like Blade Runner, because, well, Blade Runner looked a lot like Moebius. In this installment, the Loc-Nar is a Maltese Falcon-ish McGuffin.

In “Den,” based on the Richard Corben comic of the same name, that ultimate evil is the magical element that everyone in the world of Den wants. Our hero is a nerdy kid who has been transported to another world and has become a superheroic character that everyone wants either in their bed or in the dirt. For me, this is the center of the movie, and, aside from the closing section, it stands hands, shoulders and various nude parts above the other segments. Plus, that’s John Candy as Den.

Bernie Wrightson’s “Captain Sternn” follows, with Eugene Levy as the Sternn and a court trial that shows just how dirty a future spaceman its hero can be. A section called “Neverwhere Land” was deleted from the film, which would have connected these segments and formed a loop set to either Pink Floyd’s “Time” or Krzysztof Penderecki’s “Magnificat: Passacaglia.”

The zombie segment with the haunted “B-17” is next, followed by an adaptation of Angus McKie’s “So Beautiful, So Dangerous,” a tale of alien pilots, Earthwomen and lines of Plutonian Nyborg.

In the last story, based on “Arzach” by Moebius, “Taarna” and her reptile bird battle mutants and the Loc-Nar itself, sacrificing herself to save the world before she is reborn as a young girl in the framing device that began the story. As she walks outside, the reptile bird returns, and the adventure begins all over again.

The soundtrack to this movie — which kept it from being legally released for years — is amazing. There’s everything from Black Sabbath’s “Mob Rules” and “Prefabricated” by Trust to the theme song by Don Felder and Blue Öyster Cult’s “Veterans of Psychic Wars.” The band originally wrote the song “Vengeance (The Pact),” but the film’s makers thought it told the segment’s story too closely.  Both songs appeared on BÖC’s Fire of Unknown Origin.

For years, there had been talk of a reboot. Whatever ended up airing on Netflix as the series Love, Death & Robots.

You can watch this either in-person or virtually at the Chattanooga Film Festival. For more info, visit the official site.

Chattanooga Film Festival 2026: Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives (1986)

After the absolute mess of a psychological fake-out that was Part V: A New Beginning, the fans were ready to riot. Paramount originally wanted to transition the franchise into a new trilogy with a completely different killer, hinting that a traumatized Tommy Jarvis would inherit the hockey mask. Thankfully, audiences hated that idea so much that the studio had to do a hard pivot.

Directed by Tom McLoughlin, a veteran of plenty of made-for-TV movies and Sometimes They Come Back, as well as playing the robot S.T.A.R. in The Black Hole and Katahdin in Prophecy, did his best to right the ship. This is the film where Jason fully became supernatural, and it’s also one of the few films in the series to get good reviews, probably due to the humor throughout.

The original plan was for Tommy Jarvis to become Jason, but audiences were pretty unhappy with that hint at the end of the last film. So this one begins with Tommy (Thom Matthews, Return of the Living Dead) heading to Jason’s grave to destroy his body so that he can never come back. But of course, as soon as he stabs the murderer with a metal fence post, lightning strikes him, and he’s back from the dead — and kills Tommy’s friend Alan (Ron Palillo, Horshack from TV’s Welcome Back, Kotter) right away.

Tommy loses his mind, sprints to the local police station, and meets Sheriff Garris (David Kagen). Of course, the lawman thinks Tommy is just a lunatic off his meds and locks him up. Meanwhile, the town of Crystal Lake has rebranded itself asForest Greento distance itself from the body count, and actual kids are finally back at the camp. Tommy escapes with the help of the Sheriff’s rebellious daughter, Megan (Jennifer Cooke from V: The Original Series), but they’re fighting an uphill battle. To the new crop of camp counselors, Jason Voorhees is just an urban legend.

By the time the climax rolls around, Jason is an unstoppable juggernaut, cutting through deputies and counselors alike. Tommy finally lures the monster out to the center of the lake, wraps a heavy chain around its neck, and anchors it to a massive boulder at the bottom of Crystal Lake. Megan finishes the job by chewing up Jason’s face with an outboard motor propeller. But as the camera drifts underwater at the final frame, those dead eyes pop wide open. He’s home, and he’s waiting.

Again, this movie was a major big deal in my teenage years, particularly because it had a music video!He’s Back (the Man Behind the Mask)by Alice Cooper announced that Jason had survived the final chapter.

The working title for this installment was Aladdin Sane. I really enjoyed this installment, which even has a nod to James Bond in the beginning. In our movie basement, we have several versions of the poster for this one, which speaks to my love of this film.

You can watch this either in-person or virtually at the Chattanooga Film Festival. For more info, visit the official site.

Chattanooga Film Festival 2026: The Mothman Prophecies (2002)

I’ve been thinking about that song “Hobo Humpin’ Slobo Babe” by Whale a lot. The song is pretty crazy, best described as a dancy punky ditty about, well, who the fuck knows what it’s about. The video is even stranger, highlighted by lead singer Cia Berg cavorting about with red frizzy hair and braces. The whole album is pretty decent, with Tricky producing a lot of it.

I’m telling you that so I can tell you that the video for the song won the first MTV Europe award for Best Video. And its director, Mark Pellington, was the person who helped create today’s film (he also directed the video for Pearl Jam’s “Jeremy” and the movie Arlington Road).

As a Pittsburgher, this movie is somewhat important, as it was filmed here and in nearby Kittanning, PA. Which is somewhat humorous, as Point Pleasant, WV, isn’t far at all. They could have just filmed it there. There’s a mothman statue, after all.

A lot of the script was changed, as this movie is based on the work of John Keel, the paranormal researcher who wrote the book The Mothman Prophecies. Pellington rejected numerous screenplays that were literal takes on Keel’s work, instead wanting to explore the psychological damage that UFO witnesses endure.  In the book, Keel went into the deepest, darkest West Virginia to interview folks who had seen the huge, winged beast called Mothman. At the same time, he began receiving strange phone calls, reports of mutilated pets, visits from men in black (in fact, Keel coined the term!), and it all ended with the collapse of the Silver Bridge across the Ohio River.

Whereas the movie posits that the collapse was never solved, experts determined that an eye bar in the suspension chain caused the collapse. And in reality, 46 people died, not 36.

The movie is therefore fictionalized, sharing the story of Washington Post columnist John Klein (Richard Gere) and his wife Mary (Debra Messing) being involved in a car wreck that leads to her dying of a brain tumor. Before she passes, he finds a notebook filled with pictures of a strange beast.

Between time distortions and loops, strange phone calls, visitations from his dead wife and premonitions, this film does a good job of conveying the terror and confusion that the paranormal can unleash.

My theory has always been that nuclear waste near Point Pleasant created holes in the time/space continuum, and the mothman, a fifth-dimensional creature, was unleashed into our 3D space — bringing weirdness in its wake.

There’s a great shot at the end of this film, where the cars drift to the bottom of the river and holiday gifts float, and headlights stretch out into nothing. It’s probably the eeriest scene I’ve seen in a while. According to IMDB, Gene Warren III and five other model-makers, along with two production assistants, spent three full months fabricating every piece of the bridge set from scratch. He estimates that 20,000 individual pieces of steel went into the construction, so the ultra-photo-realistic 1/6th-scale model suspension bridge could support all the model vehicles and ultimately collapse like a full-scale steel bridge into the water. It really shows — this practical effect looks perfect.

I usually don’t enjoy big-budget films, much less ones that take so many liberties with their source material, but this one always wins me over. It’s worth a watch.

You can watch this either in-person or virtually at the Chattanooga Film Festival. For more info, visit the official site.

Chattanooga Film Festival 2026: Megaforce (1982)

In 1982, you could not read a comic book without seeing the ad for Megaforce. It’s the first hype I can truly remember, save for the similar ad strategy for 1977’s Orca. As a ten-year-old chubby geek, I needed to know all about Ace Hunter and his crew of super soldiers.

I wondered, “As a small child living in a small town, could I truly be ready to join Megaforce?” The answer was no. I was too small for the bikes, too rotund for the jumpsuits. But it was a dream. A dream I have refused to give up on.

The Republic of Sardun is peaceful. Gambia, a neighboring country, is not. So they send General Byrne-White (Edward Mulhare from TV’s Knight Rider and The Ghost and Mrs. Muir) and Major Zara (Persis Khambatta, Star Trek: The Motion Picture) to ask Megaforce for help. The conflict will bring their leader, Commander Ace Hunter (Barry Bostwick from The Rocky Horror Picture Show), into conflict with his former friend and now rival, Duke Guerrera (Henry Silva, Killer Kane from 1979’s Buck RodgersChained HeatFists of SteelAmazon Women on the Moon).

That’s alright, though. Megaforce has incredible motorcycles, dune buggies and a big RV. Things will all work out.

Zara decides to try out, and Hunter falls in love with her. She passes, but he cannot allow her to join them in combat — she’d throw off the rest of the guys. That’s right — an empowered woman succeeds against the odds but can’t make it to the team because these guys wear spandex and headbands and need to just be guys, alright? It was 1982. The glass ceiling for Megaforce was ankle level.

Megaforce attacks Gamibia and blows up the base, then has some trouble getting out of the country. Seems that all these tanks are in the way. No worries — the boys all make multicolored smoke come out of their vehicles, which self-destruct, and they leave on foot, except for Hunter, who flies his into the cargo plane. Even then, he gives Guerrera the thumbs up, which the bad guy returns. Again, this was 1982. America was back, baby, and if we wanted to blow up all the vehicles instead of saving them, no matter how great and unique they were, we were going to do it. Who the fuck are you to deny Ace Hunter? Does he come down on the corner and knock the dicks out of your mouth? Don’t presume to tell this bandana-clad gentleman how to lead Megaforce.

Barry Bostwick was all in on this movie. And why not—he had a three-picture deal in case things picked up. His interviews at the time are so wonderful, like when he said the Pentagon tried to stop the movie because of how close Megaforce was to covert CIA strike teams (one can only wonder if they all had flags on their bikes and crazy collared dress uniforms, too). Or when he opined that the world needed a real-life Megaforce.

Megaforce came to us from Hal Needham, a former stuntman who went on to direct Smokey and the Bandit, Hooper, The Cannonball Run, Stroker Ace and 80’s BMX megafilm (seriously, it ruled the video stores of my teenage years) Rad. He even had his own toy — the Hal Needham Western Movie Stunt Set! You don’t even have to guess if I had it as a kid.

Barry Bostwick and Hal Needham weren’t alone, though. There were other members of the team, like Dallas (Michael Beck from The Warriors and Xanadu), who had a Confederate flag on his uniform, because we didn’t understand racism in 1982. Other team members have one name and are one note, like Ivan, Suki, Sixkiller, Anton and Lopez. All of their clothes were designed by Mattel, who saw big toy potential in the film, but only ended up making a playset and some Hot Wheels. My brother and I had them, even if he would not allow anyone else to play with his Megafighter dune buggy. There was even an Atari game!

That said — the film flopped hard. It’s been forgotten by nearly everyone, save the ridiculous folks like me who kiss their thumb and give people the “Megaforce salute.”

In fact, two of those people were Matt Stone and Trey Parker. There is no way to watch  Team America: World Police without seeing echoes of Ace Hunter’s hard work.

And the government itself got really interested. After the military refused to aid the production, they asked Needham for the plans for the Megaforce vehicles. He happily handed them over and claimed that Desert Storm’s hardware came directly from this film.

I cannot stress how completely dumb this film is. No one is ever in danger. No one ever appears to be a real human being. Therefore, it is wonderful, and I also recommend that you seek it out. Deeds not words!

Bonus: I talked about this movie on my podcast.

You can watch this either in-person or virtually at the Chattanooga Film Festival. For more info, visit the official site.

Tales from the Darkside S3 E1: The Circus (1986)

The Circusis directed by Michael Gornick and penned by the master himself, George A. Romero. A cynical, muckraking journalist named Bragg (Kevin O’Connor) happens upon a ramshackle traveling freak show after a car wreck. He’s looking for his next big headline, and he thinks he’s found it in Dr. Nis (William Hickey), the eccentric proprietor of this nomadic carnival. Nis is only too happy to pull back the curtain, treating Bragg to a private tour of his performers, a collection of creatures that seem a little too real to be simple sideshow illusions.

Let’s talk about the creature design, because it’s the real star here. Forget suave, cape-swishing Lugosi. This vampire—brought to life with some gnarly, creature-feature practical effects—is all Nosferatu nightmare fuel. It’s animalistic, twitchy and genuinely unsettling, especially when it decides to make a snack out of a lamb right in front of our disgusted protagonist.

Then there’s the cast. Watching William Hickey and Kevin O’Connor go toe-to-toe is like watching a masterclass in genre acting. Hickey, in particular, carries a gravitas that grounds the ridiculous premise. The chemistry between the two is palpable; they are two sides of the same coin, each driven by their own rigid moral code, even if that puts them on a collision course.

The atmosphere here is thick with decay—that smell of sawdust, old canvas, and bad decisions. It’s a perfect example of what Romero could do when he was given a constrained set and a handful of talented character actors. It’s violent, it’s short and it’s devoid of a traditional villain  , which gives the whole affair a weirdly noble, melancholic edge that sticks with you long after the credits roll.

It’s not just a vampire episode; it’s a love letter to the dying art of the traveling freak show, wrapped in the dark, cynical bow of an 80s anthology classic.

B & S About Movies podcast Episode 142: The Shadow

The Shadow was meant to be a summer blockbuster and the starting point for a new film franchise. It was not.

You can listen to the show on Spotify.

The show is also available on Apple Podcasts, iHeartRadio, Amazon Podcasts, Podchaser and Google Podcasts

Important links:

Theme song: “Strip Search” by Neal Gardner

Closing song: “Botany 500” by Dawn Davenport and the Window Breakers

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JUNESPLOITATION: Street Wars (1991)

DAY 19. Black Filmmakers!

To understand Street Wars, you have to understand the man behind the curtain: Jamaa Fanaka.

He was part of the famous L.A. Rebellion at UCLA alongside guys like Charles Burnett and Julie Dash, but while they went high-art, Fanaka went straight for the exploit-o-meter. He gave us the Penitentiary trilogy and the absolutely mental, killer-dick classic Soul Vengeance (aka Welcome Home, Brother Charles). By 1992, Fanaka was frustrated with Hollywood and decided to make Street Wars.

Our guide through this madness is Sugar Pop (Alan Joseph), a deep-voiced, striking dude with piercing blue eyes who looks like a model but talks like a voiceover god. Any hero in a Fanaka movie gets a sugary name. Witness Too Sweet in those three prison boxing movies. As for Sugar Pop, he just graduated as the Top Gun of the Exeter Military Academy and is heading to West Point. His brother Frank (Bryan O’Dell) paid for it all. How? By running the local crack industry out of a spot called The Regal Social Club. A place with specials posted on a board and a drive-thru.

Frank’s right-hand man is Humungus (Clifford Shegog), a giant of a man. They belong to a secret council called The Knights of the Round Table, but they meet at a long, rectangular table. Forget logic. Anyway, when Frank gets taken out, Sugar Pop inherits the empire. Naturally, he rides around the hood on a scooter he rigged with a fire-spewing jet engine and applies military logic to running the streets.

Street Wars is torn between lamenting the neighborhood’s tragic conditions and treating Sugar Pop like a superhero. When he goes to war with rival gangs, the local news reports on him like a folk hero. At one point, the movie pauses the plot for Frank’s funeral, which turns into a full-blown gospel choir and choreographed dance number against a minimalist background. Real-life Nation of Islam spokesman Khalid Muhammad himself shows up as himself to give a eulogy!

But nothing will prepare you for the third act. Sugar Pop’s ultimate plan to win the drug war? He trains his lieutenants to fly ultralight motorized gliders and hang out of them, shooting Uzis. The news calls them the Ghetto Air Force. As Sugar Pop’s paraplegic buddy enthusiastically yells, “Looks like fun to me! Up there, I don’t need no legs!” Fanaka, who served in the Air Force, wanted to pay tribute to WWII dogfight movies. Sadly, he didn’t have the budget of a movie like Red Tails, so the dogfights are just limited, choppy footage of gliders buzzing around.

It’s great.

There’s also a moment that cuts between Frank and Humungus having sex with their ladies in different rooms while a song called “I Wanna Sex You Down” plays, all while cutting back to a random kid playing a furious drum solo. Humungus actually lifts his girlfriend completely onto his head and carries her up the stairs while going down on her. This is a highly advanced, Olympic-level bedroom maneuver that I would not recommend to the weak.

If this whole movie feels like a work-in-progress, well, it was. Fanaka actually sued the distributors for accidentally releasing an unfinished version with terrible sound mixing and dubbing. But that just adds to the dreamlike, surreal charm. What other gang movie would have the good guys have a trans member, and no one even brings it up? 

The movie ends with a text crawl saluting African-American filmmakers, listing everyone from Spike Lee to obscure exploitation directors like Dr. Roland Jefferson. Fanaka eventually got blacklisted by Hollywood for filing a massive lawsuit against the Directors Guild to force them to hire more women and minorities. He lost the suit, but he forced the industry to change.

His movies are never boring, either.

You can watch this on YouTube.