Sizzlin’ Summer of Subterranean Psychotronica 2026: Ballet Mecanique (1924)

Week 4 (July 12 – 18) – Roots of the Underground: Film-makers’ Coop

The Film-Makers’ Cooperative is a non-profit dedicated to experimental and avant-garde cinema; almost all of the most well-known American experimental filmmakers have had works in their catalogue at some point. 

A Dadaist post-Cubist art film conceived, written, and co-directed by Fernand Léger in collaboration with the filmmaker Dudley Murphy with cinematographic input from the legendary Man Ray, Ballet Mécanique is as gorgeous and groundbreaking today as it was nearly a hundred years ago. This isn’t your standard narrative; it is sixteen minutes of pure, rhythmic sensory overload.

This movie is about the pulse of the machine age. The screen is dominated by flashes of imagery: a young woman, a repetitive smile and then the chaos begins. We are treated to a swirling, whirling world of technology where concentric circles spin into infinity, pistons and gears perform a mechanical dance, and cars hurtle through frames with frantic repetition. Even carnival rides get in on the act, pushing and pulling and never finding a resting state. It is a world perpetually in motion, repeating itself in a hypnotic, frantic cycle.

The history behind the audio is as chaotic as the visuals. The composer George Antheil wrote an original score for the film, but there was a massive technical hurdle: his music clocked in at a staggering thirty minutes, while the film itself ran only sixteen. Because the two pieces didn’t align, the film spent decades playing in total silence or with whatever music a theater had on hand.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: Babe Watch (1986)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Babe Watch was on USA Up All Night on April 18, 1987 and December 13, 1997.

Rick Sloane is the undisputed king of the USA Up All Night movie, and with Babe Watch, he manages to capture that specific lightning-in-a-bottle stupidity that makes his work—like the Vice Academy series—beloved works of, well, I guess art is the word.

The premise is exactly what the title promises: a collection of gorgeous lifeguards and dim-witted jocks descending upon lifeguard school. Also known as Bikini Academy, this series of vignettes centers on two lead girls locked in a rivalry for the guys, interrupted by frat-style pranks, volleyball games, and the occasional—and very begrudging—attempt at water safety. The plot serves as nothing more than a thin veil for beach shenanigans, allowing for a Smallest Bikini Contest and various other excuses to keep the camera at chest level.

The hero of this is Lucki (Raelynn Saalman,  Attack of the 60 Foot Centerfold), and she’s up against the nefarious Bodacia (Tane McClure, Midnight Tease), who comes from Silicone Valley. They’re joined by Ty-Dy (Ashlie Rhey), Brock (Steven Todd Lange), Crucial (Geoffrey Hughes), Dek (Christopher Tichy), Pittsburgh native Kelli Hoffman as Bambi and Derek (Steven Johnson), all led by the Miss Thelma Louise Devonshire of the beach, Miss Woodrow (Jordana Gowan).

As with all of Sloane’s movies, this is both goofy and trashy. There’s a scene featuring a rubber octopus attack that is so gloriously, aggressively cheap that it makes Ed Wood’s Bride of the Monster look like a high-budget creature feature.

Is it good? By any traditional metric, no. But if you have a soft spot for the specific brand of beach-blanket exploitation that defined the era, Babe Watch delivers exactly the kind of mindless, sun-drenched chaos you’re looking for.

I’m so happy I spent tons of money to get the secret Vinegar Syndrome version of this movie.

You can watch this on Tubi.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: Body Slam (1986)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Body Slam was on USA Up All Night on July 19, 1991 and January 20 and July 28, 1995.

This movie nearly didn’t come out. Dirk Benedict, who stars in Body Slam, has said that he and director Hal Needham (MegaforceRad) fought with the film’s writer-producer team, Steve Burkow and Shel Lytton. Burkow had no other writing credits, but Lytton wrote a series of teen books titled Mustang and a few episodes of Death Valley Days. However, they were lawyers, and between the verbal and physical fights, lawsuits kept the movie out of theaters for an entire summer. It ended up going straight to video.

Also, and this is my favorite part of this movie, Benedict needed to smarten up to the wrestling business. He plays M. Harry Smilac in this, a music promoter who only has one band left, Kick*. After falling for Candace (Tanya Roberts), Smilac tries to hire Rick Roberts (Roddy Piper in his second acting role after playing Leatherneck Joe Grady in The One and Only; his nickname isQuick Rick,which is ironic as Piper feuded withQuick DrawRick McGraw in WWF before that man’s untimely death) to be a performer before learning that he’s a wrestler. So he ends up managing Rick and his tag partner Tonga Tom (Sam Fatu, the Tonga Kid who was wrestling Madison Square Garden at the age of 18, ironically feuding with Piper; you can also see him teaming with Greg Gagne and Jim Brunzell to battle The Fabulous Freebirds in Highlander; he’s considered a relative of The Rock) and they have a pretty good run until they start dealing with politics.

Let me tell you, as someone who has spent way too many years in independent wrestling, I get it, M. Harry.

Captain Lou Murano (Captain Lou Albano, who had appeared in Below the Belt and Wise Guys before this) and his men, The Cannibals (SioneThe BarbarianVailahi and TomT. Joe KhanCassett) hurt all three of our leads and get them blacklisted, so they start booking themselves on outlaw rock and wrestling shows, getting back to the big time just in time to get a world tag title match.

This movie, beyond wrestling, features many 70s stars, including John Astin, Charles Nelson Reilly and Billy Barty. And if you look carefully enough during the main event, you can spot Ric Flair, Freddie Blassie, Adnan Al-Kaissie, Bruno Sammartino and Alexis Smirnoff during the match.

Speaking of that main event, the crowd turned on the match when they saw the moves being redone for filming. At this time, there was no such thing as sports entertainment. As fans began to say the f word — fake — all of the wrestlers started brawling for real, even throwing Needham out of the ring. It took a ton of people to break up the fight, leading to chaos amongst the crowd, cast and even the crew. When they all got backstage, Piper finally smartened Dirk Benedict up on why they had to make everyone believe it was real.

You can watch this on Tubi.

*Kick is made up of drummer Jack D’Amore (Rock Rose), Kelley Dillard, David Hallowren and Bruce Wallenstein, who composed the soundtracks to Twisted Nightmare and Demon Wind.

Sizzlin’ Summer of Subterranean Psychotronica 2026: POE (2012)

Week 3 (July 5 – 11) – Maverick Entertainment Group

One of the most overlooked and consistent low-budget film companies of the 21st century, they’ve been full steam ahead in the streaming era while other indies have cratered. From the Maverick Entertainment Group website:

Founded in 1997, Maverick continues to be a leading distributor and producer of niche independent and Black Cinema content. Having released more than 1,300 films over the past 26 years, Maverick currently distributes the world’s largest library of feature-length Black Cinema.

Dr. Andrew Casey (David Fine) is a man of refined tastes—refined, that is, if your palate runs toward human flesh. Known as The Chef, Casey was locked away at the Marathon County Asylum for 11 years after his wife stumbled upon his secret ingredient list.

Fast forward to his release: he’s declared rehabilitated and relocates to Los Angeles under the alias Mr. Jack Conway. Enter Johnathon Poe (Stelio Savante), a descendant of the legendary Edgar Allan Poe, whose own writing career is currently hitting a wall. His agent hooks him up with a contract to shadow the good doctor for a biography. Johnathon quickly realizes that Casey hasn’t exactly sworn off his dietary habits. Before long, our struggling writer is being forced to document a brand new spree of abductions and cannibalism.

I have to tell you that everyone says Casey like Cayce; The Chef has a bunch of women in love with him that beg him to eat them in a sexually tone, Big Guido from The FBI (Full Blooded Italians) in ECW is a henchman, The Chef is apt to drop c bombs and say sexual stuff to the point that if these were ad libs he should be in jail, the color palette of Saw, long speeches that go on for such a length that they may still be happening now and I’m dead and just dreaming of the infinite, a vibe that is totallyThe Case of Harry Billingsfrom Night Train to Terror, a pimp story shoehorned in and a black sex worker who says,I am one black bitch you’ve never get to eat, you maniac!and a nurse in an Andrew Lloyd Webber Phantom mask. 

No notes. Just stars.

You can watch this on Tubi.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: Mugsy’s Girls (1984)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Mugsy’s Girls was on USA Up All Night on June 26, 1992; July 14, September 3 and December 3, 1993; February 5, April 4 and May 7, 1994.

“Everybody knows wrestling is fixed.”

Also known as Delta Pi, this is a movie where the stakes are simple, classic and absurd. A group of sorority sisters discovers that the Delta Pi house is facing imminent financial ruin. Their solution? Packing their bags for Las Vegas to compete in a high-stakes mud wrestling tournament.

They’re led by Monica, who is played by Laura Brannigan, who was already well-known at this point for her covers of Umberto Tozzi’s “Gloria” and “Self Control.” Somehow, for some reason, she does not sing in this movie. As for Mugsy, that’s Ruth Gordon in the last movie she would ever film.

The girls — Jacqueline (Estrellita, who also had several hit songs in her native Spain), stoner Magic (Joanna Dierck), Karen (Rebecca Forstadt), Sharon (Candace Pandolfo), Laurie (Kristi Somers, who has the best background for this kind of movie, as she’s also in HardbodiesSavage Streets and Tomboy) — meet Shawn (James Wilder) and his partner Lane (Eddie Deezen, how else would you have a USA Up All Night movie without him?), who bring them to Vegas to take place in a mud wrestling tournament, which I guess was a thing in 1984.

Of course, the whole thing is run by the mob, led by the evil Jack Enoff (Steve Brodie). He even wants to kill the Delta Pi mascot, a bunny. As for the evil mud wrestling women, the Nevada Nasties, they’re Lungs (Annie Ample, who did adult as San Diego Annie and came up with the idea for Olympus Force: The Key), Terrible Tawny (Dee Booher, who was Queen Kong in roller derby and Matilda the Hun in GLOW), Madame Antoinette (Tantala Ray, who is also in Slammer Girls and Assault of the Party Nerds using the name Darcy Nychols), the very Cats on steroids Fang (a one-and-done role for an actress named Pillow), Mauling Mama (Katlyn Miller) and Bronco Billy (Cherie Standerfer). To add a little pro wrestling/boxing glamor, Jimmy Lennon Sr. is the ring announcer.

Director and writer Kevin Brodie only made two other movies: a C. Thomas Howell racing movie, Treacherous and A Dog of Flanders, which is the kind of message movie I try to avoid. He also acted in The Giant Spider Invasion and produced a 1981 VHS release of Female Mud Wrestling Championships, which explains a lot about this movie. I have to track this down, as Adam West and Rory Calhoun were the coaches and Marianne Marks from Russ Meyer’s Up! is the host.

While Laura Branigan was the star power, the heavy lifting on the soundtrack was actually handled by Joanna Dierck, who was married to Brodie. There’s a synth part that sounds a ton like “Automatic” by the Pointer Sisters that plays several times.

This suffered through the classic 80s distribution shuffle. It debuted in various markets throughout 1985 as Delta Pi, but by the time it hit the burgeoning home video market in 1986, it was rebranded as Mugsy’s Girls.

If you ever wanted to see Ruth Gordon mud wrestling, this is made for you.

Here’s Laura Brannigan introducing the 40th-anniversary screening.

You can watch this on Tubi.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: The Deadly Bees (1966)

Based on H.F. Heard’s 1941 novel A Taste for Honey, this Freddie Francis film-part of UK science fiction and horror history-predates the 70s killer bee craze by nearly 10 years.

You know, singers don’t just get exhausted today and have to escape from reality. They used to in 1966, Vicki Robbins (Suzanna Leigh, Lust for a VampireSon of Dracula) collapses on television and has to go to Seagull Island to get her life back together. Look for a young Ron Wood in the opening number.

Originally adapted from Heard’s novel by Robert Bloch, director Freddie Francis and writer Anthony Marriott worked to improve the script, but the film was poorly received, perhaps because it lacked expected stars like Peter Cushing or Christopher Lee, which might have influenced its reception.

Bloch never saw the completed film, although he was a gentleman in how he felt about Francis, Marriott and Amicus, the studio that produced the film. He did say, however, that the movie “buzzed off into critical oblivion, unwept, unhonoured and unstung.”

If you want to see a movie with plastic bees glued to the faces of thespians, by all means, this would be that film.

Tales from the Darkside S3 E4: Florence Bravo (1986)

Dr. David McCall (David Hayward, The Curious Case of the Campus Corpse) is a total slimeball. He’s stepping out on his wife, Emily (Pittsburgh royalty Lori Cardille), who is already mentally dangling by a thread. They buy a house from a perky real estate agent, Julianne (Carol Levy). It’s a real fixer-upper, mainly because it comes with a resident phantom: the spirit of a woman who spent her time needlepointing in a rocker while her husband bled out downstairs.

That woman, Florence Bravo (Lauren Klein), starts whispering in Emily’s ear, guiding her toward a hidden antique pistol and encouraging her to handle her husband’s infidelity with a little lead poisoning. The tension boils over when Emily overhears David talking to the real estate agent, Julianne. In a classic misunderstanding, Emily thinks it’s a tryst. It turns out David was just trying to move them closer to the university to save their marriage, but it’s too late.

If you know your Victorian true crime, you know the name: Florence was a real-life figure who allegedly poisoned her husband after discovering his infidelities.

This is one of three episodes directed by John Lewis, the only other work he’s done as a director. It was written by Edithe Swensen, who wrote ten episodes of the show (and also six of Monsters). 

B & S About Movies podcast Episode 145: Roller Derby

Kansas City Bomber and Unholy Rollers are the movies that tried to take the popular world of roller derby mainstream. Well, it was mainstream actually, so maybe they tried to take it from TV to the big screen.

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: Battlespace (2006)

Week 3 (July 5 – 11) – Maverick Entertainment Group

One of the most overlooked and consistent low-budget film companies of the 21st century, they’ve been full steam ahead in the streaming era while other indies have cratered. From the Maverick Entertainment Group website:

Founded in 1997, Maverick continues to be a leading distributor and producer of niche independent and Black Cinema content. Having released more than 1,300 films over the past 26 years, Maverick currently distributes the world’s largest library of feature-length Black Cinema.

Avatar meets two movies that are glued together by the thinnest sliver of voice-over narration.

In the first half, we follow Colonel Mara Shryyke (Eve Connelly), who spends the vast majority of her time wandering aimlessly through an alien desert—if space is Arizona—while being stalked by an enemy agent. They eventually have a CGI-blurred super-speed fight, and then Mara hitches a ride on a rocket plant, flies to space and gets blown up real good.

Then, we jump decades ahead to the third act to meet our new heroine: the Colonel’s daughter, Iva (also played by Connelly). We learn that everyone has flash drives implanted in them that record their life events, which serves as a convenient excuse for all the exposition-heavy flashbacks. Iva is stuck on a space station near a sun that randomly shoots fire. Other reviewers have claimed this sun can fart. I agree. It farts.

Iva has to stop the heat death of the universe, but just like her mom, she has no luck. The universe blows up anyway, and the film ends with a flash drive floating into space, presumably holding out for a sequel.

Paul Darrow, Avon from  Blake’s 7, is the voice of the computer. There’s a ton of CGI and a great cover. This also feels like you wandered into someone’s Warhammer campaign, you have no idea what is going on, and no one ever smartens you up. 

You can watch this on Tubi.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: Dr. Otto and the Riddle of the Gloom Beam (1985)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Dr. Otto and the Riddle of the Gloom Beam was on USA Up All Night on December 23, 1995.

Before the world outside of Nashville (he’s already been doing more than twenty different brands’ ads as Ernest) knew him as the denim-clad, nasally-voiced icon Ernest P. Worrell, Jim Varney was busy playing a mad scientist with a hand living on top of his head.

Directed by John Cherry—the architect of the entire Ernest cinematic universe—this flick is essentially the Big Bang. While it’s technically the first film to feature Ernest, it’s a far cry from the slapstick family outings that would later define Varney’s career. This is darker, weirder and plays fast and loose with reality, KnowhutImean?

Dr. Otto (played by Varney in heavy prosthetics) is a villain with a serious ego and a literal hand attached to his scalp. He’s intent on world domination using the Gloom Beam, a device designed to erase the contents of every bank on Earth, plunging humanity into economic collapse. To stop him, the powers-that-be call in Lance Sterling, an all-American hero who is essentially Otto’s polar opposite—born on the same day in the same hospital, but raised with love instead of, well, being the result of a botched abortion.

The real draw here is Varney’s sheer commitment to the bit. To dismantle Lance and his sidekick, Doris Talbert, Otto uses a changing coffin to assume a variety of bizarre disguises, like Australia child-trainer Rudd Hardtack, pirate captain Laughing Jack O’Cockney, the drug-dealing Auntie Nelda, and Guy Dandy, a wealthy playboy who is exactly as sleazy as he sounds.

The chase takes them through bizarre scenarios, including Russian roulette and accidental elevators that lead straight to the villain’s lair. In true B-movie fashion, the climax hinges on a binary choice between a Right Button and a Wrong Button, because why complicate things?

Jim Varney is the engine of this movie. He plays nearly every major role, showing off the manic energy that made him a commercial sensation long before the big screen took notice.

The supporting cast is led by Myke R. Mueller as the heroic Lance and Jackie Welch as Doris. You’ll also spot Bill Byrge—a staple of the later Ernest films—popping up as a gas station attendant. The production itself was a local affair, filmed in Tennessee spots like Fall Creek Falls State Park and Nashville.

This was intended to be the start of a massive franchise, and a sequel, Song of the Tarantula Women, was even in development. Plans for that were quickly scrapped when The Walt Disney Company came calling, looking to turn the Ernest character into a cinematic juggernaut.

As writer Coke Sams joked, “Disney intervened.”

You can watch this on Tubi.