Sizzlin’ Summer of Subterranean Psychotronica 2026: Bones (2001)

Week 1 (June 21 – 27) – Welcome to HELL

The summer’s here, so get ready to broil!

As of late, director Ernest Dickerson has worked on numerous prestigious TV shows, including The Walking Dead, Dexter, The Man in the High Castle, and The Wire. But around here, he’s better known for his killer feature films like Juice and the undisputed EC Comics-style classic Tales from the Crypt: Demon Knight. He also cut his horror teeth directing episodes for the first two seasons of Tales from the Darkside, giving him a phenomenal eye for the macabre.

Before he jumped into the director’s chair, Dickerson was Spike Lee’s go-to cinematographer, lensing masterpieces like Do the Right Thing and Malcolm X. That explains why this movie features such an incredibly saturated, vibrant, gothic-in-the-hood aesthetic! Throw in hip-hop royalty Snoop Dogg as a vengeful spirit from a neighborhood’s past, and it looks like we have a movie!

Way back in 1979, Jimmy Bones (Snoop Dogg) was a smooth-talking numbers runner, but also a deeply respected and loved protector of his community who kept hard drugs off his streets. That all changes when he’s brutally betrayed by sleazy drug dealer Eddie Mack (played by Ricky Harris, whom hip-hop heads will recognize as many of the classic skit voices on Snoop’s early albums) and a crooked cop named Lupovich (Michael T. Weiss from The Pretender!).

They force Jimmy’s inner circle, including his friends Jeremiah (Clifton Powell) and Shotgun, as well as his gorgeous girl Pearl (the legendary queen of Blaxploitation herself, Pam Grier!), to become complicit in his gruesome murder. They stab him and bury his remains deep inside his own building. Soon after his demise, the neighborhood literally dies around the memory of Jimmy Bones, turning into a hotbed for crime and urban decay.

Fast forward to 2001: four enterprising teens, some of whom happen to be the literal children of the people who slaughtered Jimmy, buy up the old, dilapidated property to open a slamming underground hip-hop club. They accidentally disturb Jimmy’s resting place, and he’s soon back from the grave, bringing the literal fires of Hell with him as he systematically hunts down and takes the lives of each of the men who destroyed everything he once held dear.

The best parts of this movie are the surreal, gooey set pieces. We get everything from bleeding walls and flesh-eating maggots to the awesome practical effects of the talking heads of the people Bones has killed, fused right into the architecture of the building. And Grier is always dependable and incredibly fun here. She shines both in her ultra-stylish 1979 flashbacks and as the haunted, 2001 fortune-teller version of Pearl.

As long as you aren’t expecting high art and instead want a glossy, spooky love letter to 70s supernatural Blaxploitation cinema (heavily echoing classics like Blacula), then you’ll probably have a blast with this. Snoop’s exactly the kind of actor you’d expect him to be. He’s having pure, unadulterated fun making his own modern version of J.D.’s Revenge and romancing Pam Grier. We should all be so lucky.

You can watch this on Tubi.

WEIRD WEDNESDAY: Puzzle (1974)

Released in Italy as L’uomo senza memoria (The Man Without a Memory), Puzzle was directed by Duccio Tessari, who like many Italy exploitation directors had a career that went from genre to genre: peplum (he wrote several, including Goliath and the Vampires and Mario Bava’s Hercules in the Haunted World),  westerns (he wrote and directed A Pistol for Ringo and The Return of Ringo), Eurospy (Kiss Kiss…Bang Bang), blacksploitation (Three Tough Guys) and the giallo with The Bloodstained Butterfly and this film.

Tessari took the amnesia trope and gave it a cold, sharp, European edge. It’s less about a masked killer stalking fashion models and more about a man trapped in a labyrinth of his own making.

Eight months ago, Ted Walden (Luc Merenda) woke up from a brutal car crash with a clean slate and a vacant mind. He’s been trying to piece his life back together, but the universe seems to have other plans. Every time he crosses paths with someone from his former life, one of two things happens: they either pull a gun on him or they end up dead.

His ex-wife (Senta Berger) has moved on, thinking he’s been dead this whole time, which, in a way, he was. But the syndicate hasn’t forgotten him. They know he stole a million dollars before that fateful wreck, and they aren’t looking for an apology. If Ted can’t find the cash, he’s going to lose his life—and he’s going to take his ex-wife down with him.

What makes Puzzle stand out in the crowded Italian thriller landscape of the 70s is the character arc. It’s fascinating to watch Ted slowly realize that the man he used to be was an absolute piece of work. There is a delicious tension in watching a man use the ruthless instincts of his former, evil self to protect the decent man he’s accidentally become. And, because this is an Italian production from the 70s, let’s be honest: the man has taste. For an amnesiac, Ted knows his way around a wardrobe—the suits are sharp, the setting is moody, and the style is top-tier.

While it lacks the hyper-violent, glove-wearing killer obsession of some other Gialli, it leans hard into thediscovery of identitythriller subgenre. It’s a mystery that feels like it’s constantly folding in on itself, leading to a crowd-pleasing, high-stakes finale that lands with a punch. Interestingly, this movie hit the screens the same year as a certain grisly little film from Texas (you know the one), but Puzzle brings its own distinct brand of Euro-cruelty that demands your attention.

I kind of love that Ted slowly learns what a horrible person he used to be and how he can use it to remain the better person he has become. Also, for an amnesiac, he has not forgotten how to dress well. Less a murder-based giallo and more an exploration of identity — with a crowd-pleasing ending made the very same year as a certain film from Texas — this one surprised me.

You can watch this on Tubi.

NIGHTMARE USA EPISODE 1: Don’t Go In the House

In our first episode, Adam and Sam discuss Joesph Ellison’s debut film, Don’t Go in the Housewhich turns out to be very good advice for the women in this movie.

Don’t Go in the House is currently available on Blu Ray from Severin and Arrow. Also streaming on Amazon Prime Video and Tubi (subject to change of course).

Find the show wherever you get podcasts:

Email us at nightmareusapod@gmail.com

Follow us on Instagram: @nightmareusapod

Follow Adam on Letterboxd: @ashursey

Follow Sam on Letterboxd: @bandsaboutmovie

Visit Sam’s site B & S About Movies

Next episode: George Romero’s The Crazies (1973)

WEIRD WEDNESDAY: Psych-Out (1968)

Dude, Richard Rush has sure made some disparate movies. There’s Thunder AlleyHells Angels on Wheels and The Stunt Man, then there’s Air America and Color of Night. But he also made this, which reminds me that if I were alive in 1968, I would have died young.

Jenny (Susan Strasberg) is a deaf girl looking for her brother Steve, who left behind a note that said, “Jess Saes: God is alive and well and living in a sugar cube.” That leads her to Haight-Ashbury and the band Mumblin’ Jim, led by Stoney (Jack Nicholson).

Henry Jaglom, who wrote My Lunches With Orson: Conversations Between Henry Jaglom and Orson Welles, is an artist who does the band’s posters. When they go to see him, he’s so messed up on 2,5-Dimethoxy-4-methylamphetamine that he thinks everyone is the living dead and threatens them with a saw. But that’s where Jenny sees some of her brother’s art and learns that he’s become a traveling preacher known as The Seeker. Dave (Dean Stockwell), who left the band, offers to help them find him, but everyone nearly dies in the junkyard when the gang — led by John “Bud” Cardos — attacks.

The Seeker shows up, and yep, he’s Bruce Dern. He reveals that Jenny was beaten so badly by their mother that she had a stroke and went deaf. He wants to be clean from drugs when they meet. Meanwhile, his sister is caught between Stoney and Dave.

This movie ends as all hippy films must, in death and fire, as Stoney sets his shrine ablaze and Dave saves a tripping Jenny from a car coming right at her by sacrificing himself, remarking that he hopes death will be a good trip as he dies.

Dick Clark produced this, and like a true square, he wanted the drug message to show how wrong it was to get hooked. Ah, I’m being mean.

Let’s be nice — the stunts and special effects are by Gary Kent, whose adventures make up the documentary Danger God. The Strawberry Alarm Clock, The Seeds and The Storybook made most of the music in this, and the concert scenes are worth watching the entire film. Plus, Garry Marshall plays an undercover cop!

JUNESPLOITATION: Delusion (1981)

DAY 24. Slashers!

Now, if you’re like me, you spent the better part of the 80s and 90s digging through the bottom shelves of mom-and-pop video stores, looking for big, chunky VHS big-boxes with insane cover art. Back in ’84, you might have rented this one from Embassy Pictures under the name Delusion, or maybe you grabbed the UK import from Sultan Video called The House Where Death Lives. Either way, you were in for a trip.

Our story kicks off with Meredith Stone (Squirm herself, Patricia Pearcy), a nurse who takes a gig at the massive, spooky Fairlawn estate. Her patient? Ivar Langrock, a wealthy, elderly gentleman played by none other than classic Hollywood royalty Joseph Cotten! Seriously, seeing the guy from Citizen Kane and Shadow of a Doubt navigating a sleazy, early-80s regional psycho-slasher is worth the price of admission alone.

Meredith is barely through the door before she notices a locked room on the second floor. Naturally, she snoops and finds Wilfred, Ivar’s mentally challenged son, who is kept hidden away. But that’s just the tip of the dysfunctional family iceberg. Soon, Gabriel (John Dukakis), Ivar’s grandson who has been living on a hippie commune in Arizona, shows up, and that’s when the bodies start dropping.

First, the family dog is found hanging from a tree. Then Wilfred takes a fatal dive out of a window. Next, Phillip the butler gets absolutely pulverized in the wine cellar under a fallen wine rack and a sturdy table leg. When the estate gardener and a detective get brutally bludgeoned to death, too, attorney Jeffrey Fraser (David Hayward) starts pointing fingers.

Is it the creepy commune grandson? Is it a disgruntled employee? Or is Meredith’s own dark past—involving an institutionalized mother and a predatory father—bleeding into reality?

Back in 1981, critics like Arthur Cabasos of the Abilene Reporter-News absolutely hated this flick, calling itone of those boring horror movieswhere the killer couldn’t even find a cool weapon, opting instead fora sturdy coffee table leg to the temple.

Man, critics just didn’t get it, did they?

Delusion isn’t trying to be Friday the 13th or The Burning. It’s not an effects-heavy gore-fest. It’s an old-school, gothic whodunit wrapped in a sleazy slasher coat of paint. I mean, the poster art emulates the classic Charles Allan Gilbert All Is Vanity optical illusion! Cinematographer Stephen Posey fills the screen with dread, and composer Don Peake supplies a score that keeps you perpetually uneasy. Sure, it’s low-key. Sure, it’s a bit slow-moving. But the atmosphere is thick enough to cut with a knife (or, well, a table leg).

Look, if you need a body count every five minutes and teenagers getting decapitated in sleeping bags, Delusion might test your patience. But if you have a soft spot for regional Americana horror, gothic melodrama, and a psychological twist ending that completely flips the script on everything you just watched, this is for you.

Patricia Pearcy gives a wonderfully unhinged performance, Joseph Cotten brings that effortless class, and Alice Nunn (Large Marge from Pee-wee’s Big Adventure!) even shows up as Duffy! What more do you want?

You can watch this on Tubi.

Chattanooga Film Festival 2026: Lenore (2026)

This starts by introducing us to Lenore (Ruby Duncan), a high-profile influencer whose brand is built entirely on manufactured outrage and hyper-curated narcissism. When she vanishes, we meet our protagonist, Max Wren (Nicholas Jaquinot), who sees her loss as a way to become the main character in a true-crime story that is his real life. He starts digging into her digital footprint, hoping to find a secret to keep his obsession alive.

Instead, his screen-addicted life turns against him. The more he searches for her truth, the more the film peels back his own layers, revealing a man who has replaced his soul with algorithmic consumption and so many sins. By the third act, he’s not just hunting a missing person; he’s running from the literal and metaphorical monstrosities of his own sins.

Lenore leans heavily into the desktop or screenlife subgenre but avoids the clean, sterile look it often has. Instead, it opts for a glitchy, corrupted-file aesthetic with heavy chromatic aberration and frame-dropping that mimics a hard drive in distress. The title itself is a nod to Poe, obviously, but here the Lenore isn’t a lost love; she’s an unattainable digital ghost. It’s a clever subversion: the fan doesn’t want her back; he wants the idea of her back, and he’s willing to burn his reality down to get it.

Lenore isn’t a movie you watch to feel good; it’s the movie you watch when you want to look at your phone, feel a sudden wave of nausea and throw it across the room. It’s a bleak, hyper-modern descent into madness that fits right in with our obsession with the people we’ll never actually meet.

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 Red Eye #2: Evolver (1995)

Kyle Baxter (Ethan Randall, now known as Ethan Embry) is the kind of 90s teen computer nerd that was in 90s video game-based movies. After hacking a tournament to win the Evolver—a state-of-the-art robotic opponent designed for interactive laser tag—he thinks he’s scored the ultimate gaming peripheral. He couldn’t be more wrong. Every time you beat the robot, it learns, adapts, and evolves. Unfortunately, it doesn’t just learn better tactics; it develops a psychotic competitive streak. When the bot decides that foam balls are for losers, it switches to ball bearings. When it decides that bullying jocks are an obstacle, it switches to eye-gouging. Before long, our intrepid heroes are running for their lives from a machine that is essentially the Terminator with the personality of a sore loser.

Maybe that’s because the Q made it. Or at least John de Lancie, playing Russell Bennett, the Cybertronix creator who clearly didn’t read the safety manual on his own military-grade death machine. Yes, he made an army robot called S.W.O.R.D., and when it killed too many of its own men, he sold it as a toy. Paul Dooley plays the boss of Cybertronix, and Evolver looks like the child of Sico, the birthday robot from Rocky IV, and the Killbots from Chopping Mall.

And the real MVP, hidden because it’s just his voice?  William H. Macy, who provided the voice for Evolver. 

Between the baggy jeans, the clunky computer interfaces and the virtual reality sequences that look like a screen saver from 1994, it’s peak nostalgia for those of us who remember when the internet was still a novelty. This is so 90s that Kyle and his friend Zach (Chance Quinn) send Evolver into the girls’ locker room, so this movie for teens can feature topless nudity for foreign investors. Then, when the girls shove it into the boys’ lockers, it ends up shooting the bully, Dwight (Tim Griffin), right through the eye with a ball bearing.

Even better, you can’t have a 90s horror movie without the inevitableit’s not really deadstinger. That final shot of the glowing HUD screen reading KILL NOT CONFIRMED is the cinematic equivalent of a franchise sequel that never actually arrived. And there’s still time for romance between Kyle and Jamie (Cassidy Rae)!

Director and writer Mark Rosman also made The House On Sorority Row. Shout out to Jacques Haitkin, who shot this and was also the cinematographer for Galaxy of TerrorThe House Where Evil Dwells, the first two Elm Street movies, Faust, and The Silence of the Hams.

There’s still a laser tag place in the North Hills of Pittsburgh, but after this, I am afraid to go.

You can watch this on Tubi.

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

Introducing Toy Robot!

Toy Robot Video is proud to announce the launch of a temptingly-priced slate of cult-tastic titles on Blu-ray and 4K UHD this September, including ninja mayhem, a brand new slasher, kung-fu comedy action, a Blu-ray debut for a superhero classic and the 4k UHD debut of Dolph Lundgren’s original He-Man from 1987.

The new label – a subsidiary of Arrow Video – aims to recreate the wondrous experience of browsing titles at the local video store, with fabulous new cover artwork, film masters transferred from the best elements available, colorfully-branded OBI-Strips, slip cards, art cards, and extras – and at allowance-friendly prices, so you’ll have bucks left over for snacks!

Toy Robot Video’s Mike Hewitt commented: “We are thrilled to announce the launch of a new home entertainment video label across the US, Canada and the UK. With a resurgent interest in Physical Media, especially amongst younger film fans, Toy Robot Video is intended to be a fun and inclusive label, designed to complement our core Arrow Video brand, spreading the joy of physical media ownership outside of the boundaries of cult fans and cineastes.“

Toy Robot Video will deliver an expansive variety of content, incorporating a range of mainstream titles and genres, with even more comedy and even animation. We couldn’t be more pleased with our launch titles, including a 2-disc 4K UHD release of 1987’s Masters of the Universe in the U.S. and Canada, and we are incredibly excited about our forthcoming slate for the remainder of 2026 and beyond.”

Guyver: Dark Hero: Released on 2-disc Blu-ray September 8

Sci-Fi’s Most Powerful Alien-Human Hybrid Returns! He’s back and ready to take on an ancient evil from destroying the world. The world’s most powerful superhero battles to change his destiny and save the planet in this superb sequel to The Guyver, as Sean Barker returns to settle some unfinished business with the evil human mutants, the Zoanoids. Making its U.S. Blu-ray debut with a new master, this set contains two versions of the film – the Original 1994 version and an enhanced version, with added special effects.

Roaring Fire: Released on Blu-ray September 8

The grace of Bruce Lee. The speed of Sonny Chiba. The force of Chuck Norris. He’s total destruction. Hiroyuki Sanada (Shogun) and Sonny Chiba (Shogun’s Samurai) star in this wild Eighties martial arts action comedy, about a Texas-raised rancher settling the score after his brother’s death, available for the very first time in the U.S. and Canada on Blu-ray.

Masters of the Universe: Released on 2-Disc Blu-ray and 2-Disc 4k UHD on September 15

The Original Live-Action Motion Picture. Planet Eternia and the castle of Grayskull are under threat from the evil Skeletor (Frank Langella), seeking a mysterious Cosmic Key to turn him all-powerful. Led by the heroic He-Man (Dolph Lundgren), a small group of freedom fighters joins forces with two teenagers on Earth to fight back.

Marshmallow: Released on Blu-ray on September 15

Question everything. At a secluded summer camp, a shy and introverted 12-year-old boy is thrust into a living nightmare when a campfire tale about a psychotic doctor becomes real, in this smart and stylish slasher treat featuring Corbin Bernsen (The Dentist) that debuted to acclaim at 2025’s Panic Fest in Kansas City.

Ninja Wars: Released on Blu-ray on September 29

With stylized violence and imaginative supernatural elements, Ninja Wars is a standout entry in early 1980s Japanese genre cinema.

You can order all of these at MVD.

About Arrow Films: Established in 1991, Arrow Films is a leading independent entertainment distribution company, operating in the UK, the Republic of Ireland, the U.S.A. and Canada. Initially known for championing cult, horror, and exploitation films, Arrow has continued to evolve while preserving the spirit that defines its identity. Through its Arrow Video label, the company releases everything from genre-defining classics and international gems to studio cult favorites and beloved box-office hits, all treated with the same meticulous care and attention to detail.

About Toy Robot Video: Launching in September 2026, Toy Robot Video is a new subsidiary home entertainment label from Arrow Films, aiming to incorporate more mainstream film content and genres into its slate. Maintaining the company’s commitment to premium curation and presentation, Toy Robot Video’s fun and accessible approach will celebrate film and entertainment in all its forms for both new and nostalgic audiences. Follow them on Facebook and Instagram.

Sizzlin’ Summer of Subterranean Psychotronica 2026: Prom Night III: The Last Kiss (1989)

Week 1 (June 21 – 27) – Welcome to HELL

The summer’s here, so get ready to broil!

Prom Night may be just alright, but Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II is amazing and Prom Night IV: Deliver Us From Evil is actually OK. Notably, none of those movies relate to one another. So go figure: the one film in the series I never watched turned out to be the only actual sequel.

That said, the film’s opening completely ignores everything we’ve learned before. Mary Lou, now played by Courtney Taylor instead of Lisa Schrage (boo!), has been in Hell since she died at a school dance in 1957. But she has a nail file and has been chipping away at the chains that bind her for decades, finally escaping back into our world. As she returns to Hamilton High School — totally in Canada, but overly American thanks to “Yankee Doodle Dandy” and flags a plenty and non-Canadian football — she starts off on the right foot by killing a janitor and using a jukebox to blast the pacemaker out of an old lover’s chest.

Speaking of those American flags, one night, a totally average high school student, Alexander Grey (Tom Conlin), leaves his girlfriend, Sarah Monroe (Cynthia Preston, who is in another beyond wild Canadian film, Pin), behind as he soul-searches about his total average-ness. He’s discovered by Mary Lou, and after some two-person push-ups on the stars and bars, he’s under her spell.

It works. His grades go up. He becomes a football hero. And he’s never had better sex ever.

So what’s wrong? Well, Mary Lou is killing everyone in his way.

Like the guidance counselor who doesn’t believe in our protagonist? She gets her face burned off with battery acid. His football rival gets a ball thrown through his stomach. And soon, even Alexander’s slacker best friend Shane gets his heart ripped out.

Alexander is conflicted. He loves his average girlfriend, but she’s already dumped him for a nerd. Well, a nerd who gets killed by AV equipment. And as we’ve already learned about Mary Lou, she will not be stopped when she wants something, even if her female rival has learned how to use a flamethrower.

Ron Oliver wrote the screenplays for the second and third films in this series (and directed this one). The original title was The Haunting of Hamilton High, as there was no plan to connect these to the Prom Night series. The money for this came from Live Entertainment. A few days before filming started, Oliver ended up going to dinner with the family that owned that company, only to learn on Monday that production had been delayed because the sons had killed their mom and dad. You know them as Erik and Lyle Menendez. Another Oliver fact: he and his partner were married by Udo Kier. One more? He wrote and directed several installments of the Nickelodeon show Are You Afraid of the Dark?

This can’t live up to the preceding version, but that doesn’t mean that it won’t try. I’ve always loved that Mary Lou is the lone slasher who embraces sex and forces men to become the final survivor — but never lets them live.

You can watch this on YouTube.

Chattanooga Film Festival 2026: La cosa en la niebla (The Thing in the Fog) (2025)

The plot is lean and mean: Ismael (Martín Garabal), a veteran pilot with a world-weary edge, and his atypical, rookie co-pilot Daniela (Elena de Lara) are mid-flight when the sky decides to break. They aren’t just dealing with turbulence. They’ve stumbled into the front lines of an invasion by the Audryes, an interdimensional alien species looking to wipe out humanity. It’s up to our mismatched duo—trapped inside the cockpit—to keep the plane in the air and the universe from imploding.

Garabal brings a fantastic, grounded comedic timing to the role. He’s the anchor of this madness, delivering lines with the weary precision of a man who has seen it all and is now being asked to deal with things he wasn’t trained for in flight school. And as the trainee co-pilot, de Lara starts off shaky, perfectly capturing that thrown into the deep end energy. As the film progresses and the layers of her character peel back, she becomes the wild card that the movie desperately needs.

Despite being set almost entirely within the confines of a cockpit, the production team skipped the cheap, flat look of standard chroma key. Instead, they used LED technology to project interdimensional backgrounds in real time. This isn’t just window dressing; it bathes the actors in the actual, vibrant light of the horrors they are facing.

And for the true heads out there, pay attention to the alien evidence: the proof of the Audryes’ arrival is a mutant, man-eating peanut. It’s a hilarious, direct nod to the short film Gritos en el pasillo, directed by writer Juanjo Ramírez Mascaró, proving that this guy has a very specific, very welcome obsession with killer legumes.

La cosa en la niebla is a fast, punchy ride. While it’s a shame we don’t get more time with the secondary characters—especially the insufferable Borja—the central chemistry between Garabal and de Lara keeps the engine running. It’s a respectful, slightly absurd love letter to sixties sci-fi comics that treats the genre with both humor and heart. I love the neon.

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