Sizzlin’ Summer of Subterranean Psychotronica 2026: Angels of Tokyo Decadence (2026)

Week 2 (June 28 – July 4) – Dawna Lee Heising: Our beautiful QWEEN

According to his bio on Letterboxd, Jamie Grefe is a director, producer, screenwriter and consultant who summons narratives of twisted suspense, horror and poetic sensuality. Actively collaborating across genres, Grefe is adept at crafting confrontational works that mesmerize and entrance audiences worldwide.

His site says, “XENOSLIT CONSOLIDATED CINEMA and VERTICAL MICRO-DRAMA SYSTEMS: A propulsive script provides the hook, but the camera stays close enough for performances to become exposed, volatile, and difficult to fake. Time pressure creates urgency. Imperfect spaces become visual texture. Shadows, reflections, repeated gestures, and abrupt cuts make the drama feel lived rather than manufactured. For vertical micro-drama, the method delivers what the format needs: immediate emotional stakes, memorable images, actor-driven intensity, efficient production, and moments designed to stop the scroll. It is poor cinema without looking cheap. Market-aware cinema without becoming anonymous. A repeatable method for capturing something unrepeatable.”

There are more than 40 of his movies on Tubi.

I feel like I am late and have so much to catch up on.

This film begins with Dawna Lee Heising as Miss Yamamoto saying, “Ah, Tokyo. What a decadent city. This will be the perfect spot for my lovely angels. I’ll make sure they feel the power of the orb.”

 

This is followed by 67 minutes of Vanessa (Cynda McElvana) and Regina (Martina Monti) wandering around a neon‑drenched, rain‑slicked future Tokyo on the brink of cybernetic collapse. Or a noodle shop set and a hotel room.

Anyway, this disjointed descent revolves around John (director and writer Grefe), who is put through a wringer of psychological and physical torment by these women. They don’t just attack him once; they cycle through a series of roles that blur the lines of his reality. One minute they are his girlfriend, the next they are high-priced call girls, and then they shift into his boss or subordinate. 

From what I’ve read, this film is part of Grefe’s “static” series, continuing his signature blend of stylized visuals, dreamlike pacing and psychological intrigue. That means an atmospheric sci‑fi setting with cyberpunk and giallo‑influenced visuals; philosophical themes of love, reality and control; surreal pacing, with moments of surprise revelation, mystery and identity exploration as core drivers.

It reminds me of Jess Franco’s end-of-career SOV hotel and apartment films, like Montes de VenusLa cripta de las condenadasSnakewoman and Jess Franco’s Passion and Perversion. Formless films that seem to have some great message behind them but that remain nearly impenetrable. I mean that as high praise.

You can watch this on Tubi.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: Joy of Sex (1984)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Joy of Sex was on USA Up All Night on June 17, 1994; February 11 and October 27, 1995 and February 17 and April 12, 1996.

Did everybody’s parents have a copy of Dr. Alex Comfort’s The Joy of Sex? What a frightening book that was, what with its Chris Foss (Flash GordonGuardians of the Galaxy, Jodorowsky’s Dune) illustrations of incredibly hairy flower children engaging in all manner of marital congress.

Paramount Pictures thought that with the name of the book, they’d have a big movie, too. They spent all kinds of money to get the right and then paid Charles Grodin — who was told the movie could be about anything — to write the script. So he wrote a script about writing the script. That movie was eventually made as Movers & Shakers.

Next, John Hughes was to write a script that Penny Marshall would have directed and John Belushi would have starred in, but then Belushi died. That would have been a National Lampoon movie, and the studio tried to keep their name on the film before the publisher, Matty Simmons, made a huge deal of the Lampoon having nothing to do with the film.

Finally, Paramount was running out of time, with just four months left on its option. They went to TV producer Frank Konigsberg, who said, “They knew that in television you do things quickly. We threw together a script. They wanted me to use director Martha Coolidge, who’d just made Valley Girl. It was a job. We just had to get it done. I didn’t think it was a successful movie at all. It was awful. Martha hated it. I hated it.”

As for Coolidge, she would say, “Paramount insisted on topless girls running down the hall because they thought the formula demanded it, and it was totally gratuitous. I hated putting them in for no reason and argued against it. But when the film was previewed, the audience, particularly young women and girls, hated the nudity, so Paramount then asked me to cut as much of it out as I could!”

She described that experience as miserable, telling her official site, “We were under constant pressure and scrutiny to do the impossible, we had eight days of prep, 20 days to shoot, and my A.D. quit because he was so angry.”

By the end, she applied for an Alan Smithee credit for her directing. However, her name stayed on. She’d follow it up with Real Genius, which I hope was a more rewarding experience (It was — despite turning it down twice, once it was rewritten, she came around to the film and really got into it after producer Brian Grazer told her, “Making a movie should be fun!” She said that he ended up being “supportive, great to be around and knowledgeable about comedy and film production.”).

As for the movie, it’s all about high school senior Leslie Hindenberg (Judy from Revenge of the Nerds, who left acting to practice Zen Buddhism), who gets a mole checked and learns she only has six months to live. That leaves her with one goal in life: to lose her virginity.

There’s a good cast with Cameron Dye (Valley GirlOut of the Dark) as the love interest and Christopher Lloyd as Leslie’s gym teacher dad, plus Colleen Camp, Ernie Hudson, Darren Dalton and Canadian scream queen Lisa Langlois (Happy Birthday to MeDeadly Eyes).

But otherwise, if you were expecting something better, this isn’t it. I don’t blame Coolidge for this film’s failure.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: Barbarella (1968)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Barbarella was on USA Up All Night on January 23 and October 9, 1993 and November 19, 1994.

Shot directly after Mario Bava’s Danger: Diabolik, this Roger Vadim-directed movie is based on the comic book of the same name by Jean-Claude Forest. The film stars Vadim’s then-wife Jane Fonda as Barbarella, a United Earth agent sent to find scientist Durand Durand, who has created a weapon that could destroy humanity.

Vadim was hired to direct this film after producer Dino De Laurentiis purchased the rights. This led to Vadim looking to cast several actresses in the title role, including Virna Lisi, Brigitte Bardot (that’s who the character was originally based on) and Sophia Loren before ending up picking his wife.

In case you’re wondering why this movie is such a mess, Charles B. Griffith was the last writer to work on it, saying that he had done uncredited work on the script after fifteen other writers — including Terry Southern — worked on the movie.

This film is packed with fashion, amazing sets — you can credit Bava’s film for some of that, and great characters, like John Phillip Law (who used the break in shooting to be in the aforementioned Danger: Diabolik) as Pygar the angel, Anita Pallenberg (Performance) as the Black Queen, Milo O’Shea as Durand-Durand, Marcel Marceau in a rare speaking role as Professor Ping, David Hemmings (Deep Red) as Dildano and even cameos from Fabio Testi and Antonio Sabato (who was originally to play the role that Hemmings ended up doing).

So yeah. This is a gorgeous film that makes no sense whatsoever. Is that such a bad thing? I first watched this as a child on HBO and I think when the part came in which the birds tear apart Barbarella’s clothes, my parents decided that it was time for me to go to bed. I was hooked on movies that were seen as being wrong for me to watch and Italian-shot films.

A sequel was planned with producer Robert Evans called Barbarella Goes Down, but it never happened. Nor did a 1990 remake, a Robert Rodriguez idea or a potential project with Nicolas Winding Refn, who moved on to other projects, saying, “…certain things are better left untouched. You don’t need to remake everything.”

Tales from the Darkside S3 E3: The Bitterest Pill (1986)

We start in domestic bliss if your idea of bliss is a hot day with a father, Harlan (Joe Carafello), who acts like he’s one bad day away from an explosion. The family dynamic is basically a pressure cooker until they hit the $10 million lottery. Naturally, the dad keeps being a jerk, the mom (Catherine Battistone) is a social climber, and the kid (Jason Horst) is just looking for a way out.

Then the plot takes a sharp turn into sci-fi absurdity. In walks Tinker (Mark Blankenfield, Jekyll and Hyde… Together Again), a guy who tried to cuckold Harlan on his wedding night and is now back with a get-rich-quick scheme that would make a mad scientist blush. He’s peddling a drug that grants total recall—the ability to remember everything, ever—but with a catch: it gives you a killer headache and makes you act like a total weirdo.

Harlan wants no part of it, but little Jonathan? He’s all in. While his parents are busy trying to figure out how to blow their new fortune and ditch their kid with a sitter, Jonathan gobbles up Tinker’s pills. Because his young brain is still plastic, he doesn’t get the debilitating headaches or the twitchy mania that turned Tinker into a broken shell. Instead, he gets absolute, terrifying genius.

Now, the child ends up outmaneuvering his parents, having them declared incompetent and putting himself in charge as their legal guardian. He finishes the film like a pint-sized corporate overlord, denying them cable and—in a final, hilarious jab—tossing his own autobiography, The Bitterest Pill, at them, the same way his dad once threw books at him,

Based on a story by Frederik Pohl, this episode was directed by Bryan Michael Stoller and written by Michael Kube-McDowell and Jule Selbo.

B & S About Movies podcast Episode 144: Religious Movies

The Lock-In and Journey to Hell are earnest movies that want to save your soul. Me? I’m a jerk with a podcast.

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

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Sizzlin’ Summer of Subterranean Psychotronica 2026: Apex Predators (2021)

Week 2 (June 28 – July 4) – Dawna Lee Heising: Our beautiful QWEEN

Director and writer Dustin Ferguson has delivered a film that feels less like a motion picture and more like a collection of stitched-together iPhone-shot action and stock footage. Do you like people walking? How do you feel about underwater footage that appears to have been licensed from Pond 5 rather than shot for the production?

As always, Ferguson assembles a bizarre patchwork of performers, including Brinke Stevens as Dr. Charlene Brinkman (Stevens earning her undergraduate degree in biology from San Diego State University before studying marine biology at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, none of which helps her here); Dawna Lee Heising as Pamela; Mel Novak — always — as Robert Clouse Williamson and Raymond Vinsik Williams as the hero who enters the ocean armed with what looks like two plastic hamburger patties to defeat the titular predators. He wakes up; it’s all a dream, but then the city is on fire because of a shark so large it appears in the sky.

Somehow, there’s a sequel. For some reason, I will watch it.

You can watch this on Tubi.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: Jocks (1986)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Jocks was on USA Up All Night on November 3 and 4, 1989; April 7 and November 17 and 24, 1990; June 8 and October 4 and 19, 1991; April 4, May 22, September 12 and October 9, 1992; April 19 and August 3, 1996 and April 4, 1997. Someone at USA liked this movie or maybe they just owned it.

Yes, there are two movies named Jocks. There’s this one — a ripoff of Revenge of the Nerds down to even having Donald Gibb in the cast — and the Italian disco movie. Guess which one I would have rather watched?

Well, anyway, Richard Roundtree is the coach of the wackiest tennis team you’ve ever seen, led by The Kid (Scott Strader, in his last movie), who is the kind of person who would be the villain in any other teen movie. The real star of the team is Jeff (Perry Lang, who became a director).

The team is made up of all manner of madcap characters — can you guess how many Porky’s and Police Academy films and their rip-offs I’ve watched — like Chito (Trinidad Silva), whose entire character is that he’s Mexican and the aforementioned Gibb, who plays Ripper, who is really just Ogre. That said, I don’t think anyone expects Gibb to do anything other than to show up in a sleeveless shirt with iron-on letters and scream unintelligible nonsense at the screen before burping and farting.

Somehow, this maelstrom of a movie catches so many talented people in its wake, like Mariska Hargitay in her third role (she was in Ghoulies and Welcome to 18 before this, but who’s counting?), character actor R.G. Armstrong, Stoney Jackson (that’s right, Phones from Roller Boogie), Tom Shadyac (the director of Ace Ventura: Pet Detective), Katherine Kelly Lang (Evilspeak) and perhaps most improbably, Christopher Lee. Yes, Sir Christopher Lee as a college dean.

Director Steve Carver also made the American parts of The Arena, as well as Big Bad MamaAn Eye for an Eye and Lone Wolf McQuaid. Roundtree, Armstrong and Lee all did this movie as a favor for him, which is nice, but man, that’s asking so much.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: The Blade Master (1984)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Blade Master was on USA Up All Night on June 15, 1989 and March 3, 1990.

Joe D’Amato wanted to make a prehistoric movie like Quest for Fire called Adamo ed Eva that read a lot like 1983’s Adam and Eve vs. The Cannibals. However, once he called in Miles O’Keefe to appear in the film, the actor said he couldn’t be in it for moral and religious reasons. One wonders why he was able to work with Joe D’Amato, a guy who made some of the scummiest films around.

Born Aristide Massaccesi, this man of many names had his paws in everything from being a camera operator on Bava’s Hercules in the Haunted World to cinematography on What Have You Done to Solange? before directing his own films like Death Smiles on a Murderer, Beyond the DarknessAntropophagus2020 Texas Gladiators, Endgame, and so many more. He also worked with porn stars like Rocco Siffredi on Tarzan X – Shame of Jane before being an early innovator of porn-based parodies/cover versions of other works of art, such as Shakespeare porn (Othello 2000), mythology (Hercules – A Sex Adventure), famous icons (ScarfaceAmadeus) and, of course, plenty of looks into the deviance of the Roman Empire.

This time around, Aristide Massaccesi is known as David Hills, for those keeping score.

Akronos has found the Geometric Nucleus and is keeping its secret safe when Zor (Ariel from Jubilee) and his men attack the castle. The old king begs his daughter, Mila (Lisa Foster, who starred in the Cinemax classic Fanny Hill and later became a special effects artist and video game developer), to find his student, Ator (O’Keefe).

Mila gets shot with an arrow pretty much right away, but Ator knows how to use palm leaves and dry ice to heal any wound, a scene which nearly made me fall off my couch in fits of giggles. Soon, she joins Ator and Thong as they battle their way back to the castle, dealing with cannibals and snake gods.

Somehow, Ator also knows how to make a modern hang glider and bombs, which he uses to destroy Zor’s army. After they battle, Ator even wants Zor to live, because he’s a progressive barbarian hero, but the bad guy tries to kill him. Luckily, Thong takes him out.

After all that, Akronos gives the Geometric Nucleus to Ator, who also pulls that old chestnut out that his life is too dangerous to share with her. He takes the Nucleus to a distant land and sets off a nuke.

Yes, I just wrote that. Because I just watched that.

If you want to see this with riffing, it’s called The Cave Dwellers in its Mystery Science Theater 3000 form. But man, a movie like this doesn’t really even need people talking over it. It was shot without a script to compete with Conan the Destroyer. How awesome is that?

Sizzlin’ Summer of Subterranean Psychotronica 2026: Quakeasaurus (2022)

Week 2 (June 28 – July 4) – Dawna Lee Heising: Our beautiful QWEEN

The film wastes no time getting to the action. An earthquake strikes Los Angeles—a scenario we have seen a thousand times—but with a twist: the tremors reveal a prehistoric subterranean ecosystem. Out of this fissure emerges a winged dinosaur — on fire, no less — with a grudge against humanity.

Directed by Dustin Ferguson, who wrote it with Ken May, this is a 60-minute movie and 10 minutes of credits, so it’s not a big time investment for you. 

The cast includes Butch Patrick as Mayor Myers; indie streaming queen Dawna Lee Heising as Laurie Myers; Stacey Nelkin from Halloween 3 as Dr.Cochran; Ferguson as a stoner; Mel Novak as Roy Rollin and Ken May as Dick Steel: Bounty Hunter, who has energy blades that might be able to stop a cryptid or whatever this giant bird is and by halfway through the movie, it’s killed Eddie Munster, Dawna and Mel Novak. 

Can a monster movie be shot on an iPhone? This movie says yes.

You can watch this on Tubi.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: The Great Alligator (1979)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Great Alligator was on USA Up All Night on April 13, 1990.

Sergio Martino directed some of my favorite films of all time, such as The Strange Vice of Mrs. WardhAll the Colors of the Dark2019: After the Fall of New YorkYour Vice is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key as well other completely out there films like Hands of SteelTorsoAmerican TigerThe Mountain of the Cannibal God and The Case of the Scorpion’s Tail. Throw in a script co-written by one of my favorite Italian scuzzfest actors and directors, George Eastman, and you have the recipe for a movie that should blow my mind.

The Great Alligator should be, well, great. And there are moments where it feels like it’s going to be, as it attempts to be a mash-up of Jaws and Cannibal Holocaust, which again, seems like a great idea. Throw in the gorgeous Barbara Bach before she married Ringo Starr, Claudio Cassinelli (Murder Rock) and Mel Ferrer — who went from the A-list and marrying Audrey Hepburn to appearing in some of the most crazed films, like The VisitorNightmare City and Eaten Alive! to name but three — and you have a cast ready to make it happen. And the central theme of the movie — tourists anger the god of a resort island who then becomes a giant alligator and eats them all — is great, too.

Turns out that Kuma, that river god, doesn’t like how Mel Ferrer runs Paradise House and wants none of his native people to work with the whites any longer. The natives then wipe out anyone that works there, no matter where they come from, and Cassinelli and Bach must climb the waterfall that Stacy Keach fell off of in The Mountain of the Cannibal God to find the only person who may be able to save them, Prophet Jameson (Dr. Menard from Zombi 2).

That said, once the face-painted natives and a giant alligator attack everyone, burning down Paradise House and menacing screaming tourists, who survives and what will be left of them is up for grabs. Look for appearances by Bobby Rhodes (the pimp from Demons), Romano Puppo (Trash’s father from Escape from the Bronx) and Sylvia Collatina (Mae Freudenstein, the ghost girl of The House by the Cemetery)!

The huge body count, numerous alligator attacks and attempts to be something more than a Spielberg clone — aside from the way the attacks are filmed and Ferrer keeping everything a secret so tourists keep coming — make this a movie I enjoyed on some level. But much like Martino’s post-giallo efforts, I keep wishing he’d go from simply good to flat-out amazing. The ideas are there. The execution, however, is not.