JUNESPLOITATION: A Pubic Cemetery Under the Moon (1967)

DAY 6: South Korea!

Wol-ha: The Ghost of the Moon is part of the gwi-sin (ghost) subgenre. The story hits all the classic beats of Joseon-era gothic melodrama: we’ve got Wol-ha, a kisaeng (that’s a Korean geisha) who thinks she’s found a way out of the grind. She didn’t intend to go into this life anyway; she just wanted to get her student activist brother out of jail.

Wol-ha does escape by marrying a wealthy businessman, also caught up in the political upheavals, Han-sul, but here’s the problem: her mother-in-law is a total piece of work. Through a web of lies and orchestrated scandal, along with the machinations of servant Nan-ju — who wants to get into the pants of Han-sul as well as his bank account, Wol-ha and her child are discarded, destroyed and left dead in the dirt. But she isn’t staying there.

What really sets this apart from your standard ghost story, though, is the visual flair. You’re going to notice the Bava vibe almost immediately. The lighting in this thing is gorgeous. We’re talking deep shadows, high-contrast blues and purples and a psychedelic feel. It’s got that lush, saturated Technicolor-style look that makes every frame feel like a painting hanging in a haunted house.

Is the pacing a little sluggish? Sure. If you’re looking for a non-stop slasher, this isn’t it. It takes its time to let the misery soak in, allowing the weight of the betrayal to settle into your bones before the inevitable, satisfying pay-off. But when the haunting finally kicks into high gear, the film leans into its low-budget aesthetic with absolute abandon. It’s graphic, it’s theatrical and it’s got a mean streak a mile wide. We’re talking eye-gouging, acid-throwing, and a scene where the tombstone literally splits open.

There’s a reason this film became a monster hit back in the day and maintains a fervent cult following now. It’s a gut-wrenching look at the horrors inflicted upon women in a rigid society, told through the medium of a vengeful spirit who refuses to play by the rules. It’s sleazy, yet it’s high art. It’s an exercise in 1960s Asian Gothic cinema. It’s rough around the edges, occasionally melodramatic to a fault, but it’s got a heart—well, a spectral, beating heart—full of genuine malice. Sure, it takes time to get there, but when it does…

Cheol-hwi Kwon is one of those directors who built the foundation for the kind of dark, stylish, and deeply atmospheric horror that I love. He also directed the comedy musical Obuja and the historical movie  Nam.

You can watch this on YouTube.

Fathers (2026)

Natalie (Kaiti Wallen) is a young woman who finally resurfaces after being missing for 15 years. She’s shell-shocked, struggling with PTSD and caught in the middle of a nightmare with two men claiming to be her father.

On one side, there’s Calvin (Jerry Hayes), the man she’s returned to. He’s an influential entrepreneur with a big house and a cold, detached aura. On the other side, there’s the man who held her captive for all those years, Bobby Nash (played by the director, Harley Wallen). Bobby is the one who fed her the story that Calvin is a monster and her true protector.

The movie isn’t about the kidnapping. It’s about the mental prison that lingers long after the chains are removed. Is Natalie finally safe, or has she just traded one cage for another?

Watching Fathers is like taking a ride down a back road at midnight. It’s dark, it’s twisty, and you aren’t entirely sure where you’re going to end up. Wallen doesn’t hold your hand; he throws you into the confusion alongside Natalie, using quick, jarring cuts that make you question the reliability of every single memory she has.

Kaiti Wallen does a heavy lift here. Portraying a character whose identity has been systematically dismantled is no easy task, and she captures that fragile, wide-eyed terror perfectly. Harley Wallen playing the kidnapper? It’s a bold move, and he makes Bobby disturbingly charismatic and relatable, which honestly makes the whole thing even harder to watch.

The only downside I have to share is that the ending feels somewhat abrupt, and some of the color balance seems to lean toward the blue side of the color wheel, making things look needlessly washed out. But other than that, for the budget, this movie makes a big swing toward telling a dark tale. It feels real, like something you’d watch on Dateline.

Tales from the Darkside S2 E23: Fear of Floating (1986)

If you were a kid glued to the UHF channels late at night, the Tales from the Darkside intro, with that ominous, synthesized Donald Rubinstein theme and those bleak, sepia-toned shots of the Pennsylvania countryside, was enough to give you chills before the episode even started. But Darkside wasn’t always trying to terrify you. Sometimes, it just wanted to tell a bizarre, EC Comics-style morality tale with a pitch-black punchline. EnterThe Floating Man.

Corporal Marcia Smith (a pre-Simpsons Yeardley Smith, sporting her unmistakable voice and effortless comedic timing) and Sergeant Buzz Caldwell (the great Sherman Howard, whom you know as Bub the Zombie from Day of the Dead) are rotting away in a dusty, middle-of-nowhere Army recruiting office. It’s hot, it’s boring, and they haven’t seen a fresh piece of cannon fodder in three weeks.

Then walks in Arnold Barker (John Kasir, who would later become the iconic voice of the Crypt Keeper in Tales from the Crypttalk about a small horror world!). He’s wearing lead-soled shoes and claims he’s being hunted by a circus troupe. Buzz wants to kick him out, but then Arnold takes off his shoes and literally floats to the ceiling. Buzz immediately smells a promotion. An infantryman who can defy gravity? Take that, Air Force!

Of course, because this is the Darkside, nothing is what it seems. Soon enough, a car pulls up outside, and Arnold claims his pursuers are Hugo the Fat Man and Olga the Killer Dwarf Lady. Instead, it’s just a shotgun-toting dad (Bill Nunn) and his very pregnant, very normal-sized daughter, Betty Ann. Turns out Arnold isn’t a circus performer at all. He’s a sleazy, smooth-talking pharmacist who knocked Betty Ann up and left her at the altar. Whenever he tells a massive, reality-bending lie, his guilt makes him lighter than air. When he gives a passionate, tear-filled apology and promises to marry Betty Ann, his weight returns, and he crashes to the floor. The crisis is solved, right?

Not quite. The second the family walks out to the car, the utterly slimy Arnold instantly turns on Marcia, hitting on her and ripping her shirt. He admits his whole speech was a total sham. The second the lie leaves his mouth, gravity loses its grip. Arnold starts floating upward again. Marcia, totally disgusted, tells him to float straight to hell and walks out. Buzz walks back in just in time to see his star recruit drifting toward the ceiling. Unfortunately for Arnold, they never turned off that heavy-duty, metal-bladed industrial ceiling fan.

What starts as a goofy, dialogue-heavy sitcom episode suddenly pivots into splatter, ending with Howard being absolutely drenched in gore. 

This episode was directed by John Lewis, who did three episodes of the show. It was written by Donald Wollner and based on a story by Scott Edelman. You have to love that the IMDb goofs page has military trivia:The uniforms of the two Army recruiters are completely out of regulation. They are wearing no name tags or insignia of any kind other than their rank, one of which isn’t even an Army rank. Also, the Corporal has her sleeves rolled up.

Thank you for your service.

B & S About Movies podcast Episode 140: The Sons of Hercules

Embassy Pictures, who created Sons of Hercules, was founded in 1942 by Joseph E. Levine as a distributor of foreign films. He knew that these movies had been popular in theaters and that while that initial success may be waning, local UHF channels had a desperate need for content. They answered with Sons of Hercules, which gave these stations fourteen movies unified with a memorable name, a catchy theme song and a voiceover that starts each movie placing them into the same cinematic universe, even if there was no such connection.

This episode gives an overview of the movies in that package:

  • Ursus, Son of Hercules
  • Mole Men vs the Son of Hercules
  • Triumph of the Son of Hercules
  • Fire Monsters Against the Son of Hercules
  • Venus Against the Son of Hercules
  • Ulysses Against the Son of Hercules
  • Medusa Against the Son of Hercules
  • Son of Hercules in the Land of Fire
  • Tyrant of Lydia Against The Son of Hercules
  • Messalina Against the Son of Hercules
  • The Beast of Babylon Against the Son of Hercules
  • Terror of Rome Against the Son of Hercules
  • Son of Hercules in the Land of Darkness
  • Devil of the Desert Against the Son of Hercules

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: Sons of Hercules theme

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JUNESPLOITATION: After School (1988)

DAY 5. Teenagers!

Is this a teen movie? It’s in Teen Movie Hell, so good enough.

Father Michael McClaren (Sam Bottoms) is what we call a cool priest. Sure, he teaches college in Florida, but he plays basketball, rides a motorcycle and is popular with the kids. The church wants him to debate former priest C.A. Thomas (Robert Lansing, 4D Man, Island Claws, Scalpel), who has written a novel claiming that man created God, on the Dick Cavett Show. Yes, this is a teen sex comedy — well, it’s closer to a relationship drama, but the poster wants you to think it’s a sex comedy — in which Dick Cavett shows up. 

This would all be normal except for two things.

One, it’s not that crazy that a girl named September Lane (Renee Coleman) falls in love with Father Michael. You may know her as left fielder Alice Gaspers from A League of Their Own and the evil leaper Alia on Quantum Leap. Or perhaps as the kidnap victim John Candy is trying to save in Who’s Harry Crumb? Man, her IMDb is awesome, because it contains this: “In 1995, Coleman left the film business and returned to school, where she earned her Mythological Studies doctorate (with an emphasis on Depth Psychology) at Pacifica Graduate Institute in 2002. She currently lives with her husband and their four children in Santa Clarita, California, where she works in a private practice as a certified DreamTender.”

The second thing that makes this strange is that, every once in a while, this movie goes back to caveman times, complete with naked women. That’s why this was originally titled Return to Eden. However, those parts really have next to nothing to do with the rest of the movie.

When Thomas and Father Michael do finally debate with Dick Cavett, Thomas wins, saying that every man has to find his own God. So Michael goes off to look up September, and they turn into naked cave people. The end. Really, that’s how it ends.

Things happen in this movie that make no sense, even more than you’d expect, like a priest randomly being into aerobics, September falling for the holy man, and him saying he loves her. Why? She’s moody and constantly argues with him. I mean, that’s almost every woman I’ve dated, so I think I answered my own question.

This was the first role for Sherrie Rose, who would go on to be in movies like Killer Crocodile, Cy WarriorAmerican Rickshaw and Guns & Lipstick (which has a totally amazing cast of Sally Kellerman, Jorge Rivero, Wings Hauser, James Hong, Sonny Landham, Joe Estvez, Robert Forster, Cassie Yates and girls-only adult star Felicia). Plus, Page Hannah appears, and she’d go on to be a victim of the oil slick in Creepshow 2.

After School was directed by William Olsen, who also made Rockin’ Road TripGetting It OnSouthern Belles and Mastering the Theremin. This had four writers: Hugh Parks (the director of Shakma!), Joe Tankersley, John Lind and Rod McBrien, who wrote the music for the movie Club Fed, which I must have cast, as it stars Burt Young, Judy Landers, Sherman Hemsley, Karen Black, Mary Woronov, Lyle Alzado, Wally George, Dee “Queen Kong/Matilda the Hun” Booher, Lance “Proctor” Kinsey and Debbie Lee Carrington. 

I was not ready for this movie.

You can watch this on Tubi.

JUNESPLOITATION: Def by Temptation (1990)

DAY 4. Blaxploitation!

Forget the logo that starts this. Sure, Troma distributed this, but it’s alien to their usual dreck, and it has an actual Screen Actors Guild cast, a gorgeous, smoky, neo-noir aesthetic, a contemporary R&B soundtrack and a mostly Black cast and crew.

Directed, written, produced and starring James Bond III, Def by Temptation is the story of Joel (Bond) and his best friend K (Kadeem Hardison), who will face the temptations — right there in the title! — of the flesh. Joel is a wholesome, clean-cut minister-in-training from North Carolina who is having a crisis of faith. Seeking clarity, he heads to the big, bad streets of New York City to visit his childhood best friend, K, who has become an actor.

K’s favorite place to chill is a local bar where a mysterious, stunningly beautiful woman known only as the Temptress (Cynthia Bond) hangs out. The problem? She’s a literal, soul-sucking succubus. She picks up womanizers, unfaithful husbands and anyone succumbing to the sins of the flesh, takes them home and violently obliterates them. When Joel arrives in town, his pure, virginal, holy aura becomes the ultimate prize for her. What follows is a wild, supernatural clash featuring possessed fortune tellers, holy water cocktails, killer television sets and Bill Nunn as a cop who specializes in supernatural cases. Oh, and Samuel L. Jackson shows up in flashbacks as Joel’s minister father, plus R&B royalty Melba Moore shows up as the doomed Madam Sonya, along with cameos from jazz saxophonist Najee and singer Freddie Jackson.

Def by Temptation operates on its own wavelength. It’s a horror movie, but it’s deeply rooted in the traditions of Black religious melodrama. It treats the power of faith and the threat of damnation with absolute seriousness, even when the special effects get wonderfully absurd. So you get stuff like K being violently sucked into his own television set, followed by an explosion of blood and guts from the screen; demon bartenders driving limousines and a climactic bedroom showdown involving a crucifix and some delightfully gooey practical effects.

Cynthia Bond is absolutely hypnotic as the Temptress. She balances an elegant, icy allure with moments of pure, feral malice. The chemistry between James Bond III and Kadeem Hardison feels incredibly genuine, giving the movie an emotional anchor before the supernatural craziness takes over. And the house it was shot in? It was owned by producer Hanna Moss and her husband, Laurence Fishburne.

Made for just $5 million over four weeks, Def by Temptation is a time capsule of a very specific era of independent filmmaking. It’s got style, a killer soundtrack, a great cast before they hit the stratosphere, and enough weird horror imagery to keep me happy. Why did I take so long to watch it?

You can watch this on Tubi.

WEIRD WEDNESDAY: The Erotic Adventures of Pinocchio (1971)

If you’re looking for a fairy tale that trades in moral lessons for, well, other kinds of lessons, The Erotic Adventures of Pinocchio is exactly the kind of sleazy, weird and profoundly goofy artifact you seek. Directed by Corey Allen — who, in a bizarre twist of fate, went on to direct episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation and Murder, She Wrote as well as the Rock Hudson and Mia Farrow movie Avalanche and who appeared in Rebel Without a Cause — this is a softcore sex comedy that makes you wonder what exactly was in the water in 1971. Maybe we should ask writer Chris Warfield, who also played an adult as Billy Thornberg.

Our story begins with Gepetta (Monica Gayle, my beloved Patch from Switchblade Sisters, as well as the titular Nashville Girl), a lonely hippie woodcarver who just wants a companion. Thanks to a visit from a fairy godmother played by the legendary sexploitation icon Dyanne Thorne (who would go on to be the Ilsa of Nazi exploitation fame), her life-sized wooden puppet (Alex Roman, who died after scuba diving into a kelp bed) becomes a real man.

The twist? It’s not his nose that grows when he tells a lie. It’s his other equipment that grows whenever he engages in loveless sex. Naturally, the film turns into a surreal picaresque journey where our wooden protagonist wanders into a life of male prostitution and live sex shows, serving as a biological facsimile of a man who is essentially a puppet for everyone else’s desires.

The cinematography was handled by none other than drive-in hero Ray Dennis Steckler (under his pseudonym, Sven Christian), and his wife, Carolyn Brandt, can even be spotted in the audience of one of the film’s performances. It’s a true family affair if your family happened to be the bedrock of the 70s grindhouse circuit.

This is very softcore, meaning there is very little actual nudity compared to what modern viewers might expect. Instead, you get a lot of strange faces, loud orgasm sounds that resemble a roller coaster malfunction and a narrative that manages to be both deeply cynical and aggressively stupid at the same time.

You also get appearances by Karen Smith (Candi from H.O.T.S.), Debbie Osborne (The Toy Box), Neola Graef (Cries of Ecstasy, Blows of Death), Sandy Dempsey (A Clock Work Blue), Uschi Digard (my dreams, really the whole movie is worth watching for her to show up; she was also in Beneath the Valley of the Ultra-VixensFantasm and Ilsa Harem Keeper of the Oil Sheiks), Casey Larrain (Nympho Cycler), Barbara Mills (Sinthia: The Devil’s Doll), Ruthann Lott (Zero In and Scream) and Lynn Harris (The Erotic Adventures of Zorro).

WEIRD WEDNESDAY: Piranha, Piranha (1972)

Piranha, Piranha isn’t the Joe Dante creature-feature you’re likely thinking of, but rather a sweaty, low-budget Venezuelan adventure. Wildlife photographers Art (Tom Simcox) and his sister Terry (Ahna Capri, Enter the Dragon) head into the Amazon, presumably to capture some stunning shots of nature. They hire Jim Pendrake (Peter Brown), an American guide who presumably knows his way around the bush. However, the travel itinerary goes to hell once they cross paths with Caribe (William Smith), a local hunter who has decided that humans are just as fun to track and kill as the local wildlife.

It’s essentially The Most Dangerous Game set against the backdrop of the rainforest, where the characters have to worry about both the guy with the rifle and the titular flesh-eating fish waiting in the murk.

The film is a curiosity, directed by William Gibson (no, not that techomancer; this is the director’s only movie) and written by Richard Finder (also his only work on IMDb). While these names aren’t exactly household staples in the pantheon of cinema greats, they delivered a flick that serves as a perfect time capsule of 70s grindhouse adventure. The production is a scrappy international affair, filmed on location in Venezuela, Nicaragua and Colombia, giving it an authentic, rough-around-the-edges grit that you just can’t replicate on a soundstage.

You’ve got William Smith, a legendary tough guy of B-movie cinema, chewing the scenery as the villain. He makes every movie better. Pairing him with Peter Brown is a treat for fans of the 1960s show Laredo, where the two played Texas Rangers.

The setup is classic grindhouse comfort food: an expedition gone wrong, deep in the South American jungle. You’ve got the requisite crew of researchers, some high-stakes tension, and, of course, the ever-present threat of being reduced to a skeleton in mere seconds by a swarm of hyper-aggressive, aquatic pests. What makes Piranha, Piranha truly special in that specific, battered-print-from-a-drive-in kind of way is the commitment to the danger of the jungle.

You can watch this on YouTube.

WEIRD WEDNESDAY: Pracherman (1971)

Shot entirely on location in Monroe, North Carolina, and produced by the local Preacherman Corp, the film is a product of the early 70s Southern Dixie filmmaking boom. Of the seventeen actors on screen, eleven were local Carolinians, lending it a certain authentic regional grit. The whole operation was the brainchild of Albert T. Viola, a Brooklyn-born transplant who decided to write, produce, direct and star as the titular con man, Amos T. Huxley. He clearly had a blast, though he and co-star Ilene Kristen (the future Ryan’s Hope soap star who plays the target, Mary Lou) are essentially the only ones who saw a career beyond these woods.

Huxley is a roving grifter whose primary hobbies are shaking down congregations and seducing farm girls. After getting booted from White Oak County for sleeping with the Sheriff’s daughter, he’s left for dead, only to be scooped up by the dim-witted but well-meaning farmer Judd Crabtree. Huxley immediately sets his sights on Judd’s daughter, Mary Lou, a girl so pathologically eager to please that she’s already juggling four local boyfriends.

Huxley manages to convince the entire family that he is a divine emissary. To keep the father distracted, he sends him on errands to hunt for the angel Leroy, a celestial cover story for when Huxley wants to sneak into the barn or bedroom. The film reaches peak absurdity when Huxley realizes the family’s true business isn’t farming but moonshining. He pivots from a bogus preacher to a bootlegger, convincing the locals, including the corrupt Sheriff Zero Bull, that they should launder their illicit corn whiskey profits through a new, tax-free church operation.

The insanity didn’t stop there, either. Bill Simpson, who played the villainous Sheriff Zero Bull, actually reprised his role in a 1973 sequel, Preacherman Meets Widderwoman. That follow-up, which saw our hero tangling with a five-time widow, never received a national release, languishing instead in the regional Southern drive-in circuit.

WEIRD WEDNESDAY: Pinball Summer (1980)

Released at the dawn of the 1980s, Pinball Summer (also known as Pick-Up Summer or Flipper Girls in Germany) follows the Crown International beach movies and precedes Porky’s. Most of the action revolves around a place called Pete’s, an arcade hosting a pinball competition and a Miss Pinball pageant, which I really hope was a thing at some point.

As the competition heats up, our group of heroes finds itself in an escalating rivalry with a local biker gang. The conflict, which involves everything from burger joint antics to high-speed amusement park chases, revolves around winning the coveted pinball trophy. While the premise sounds like classic exploitation fare, the film is surprisingly lighthearted, focusing on the harmless hijinks, budding romances and the neon-soaked culture of the era.

Despite being filmed in Quebec, the movie successfully masqueraded as a California-based production, fooling many American audiences at the time. Film Ventures International acquired the film for the U.S. market but was initially nervous about the subject matter. They believed the pinball craze was dying and attempted to rebrand the film to distance it from the arcade theme, unaware that the film would perform quite well regardless of the title change.

Speaking of movies leading to something more, director George Mihalka and cinematographer Rodney Gibbons would make My Bloody Valentine after this, a movie much better remembered than this teen summer comedy revolving around disco, burger joints, amusement parks and hijinks between a biker gang and our heroes over the pinball trophy.

The film acts as a bizarre rehearsal for that horror classic. You’ll see several faces that migrated from the arcade to the coal mines, such as Helene Udy (Sylvia in My Bloody Valentine), Thomas Kovacs (Mike) and Carl Malotte (Dave) all appear in Pinball Summer, providing a strange continuity between this sunny teen comedy and the brutal slasher that followed.