Sizzlin’ Summer of Subterranean Psychotronica 2026: Templar Nation (2013)

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.

If you’re watching Templar Nation expecting a National Treasure-style romp, don’t be mad when it’s over. After all, the first hour of this movie is essentially a series of fireside chats. Our hero is an unlikable archaeology professor—played by the film’s own executive producer, Richard Dutcher—who has a massive chip on his shoulder and a preoccupation with daddy issues. His character introduction is a masterclass in unintentional comedy, featuring him schooling video game nerds on the art of swordsmanship before heading out to mishandle a 700-year-old blade.

For a long stretch, the film is just people sitting down and discussing Templar myths. I want nothing more than for people to be awake in the middle of the night and willing to discuss the Templars and Bernie Mac being cloned, but I get that this isn’t for everyone. But don’t worry. The movie eventually gets rolling as we get wild exposition from amysterious nativecharacter—a Native American magic man who loves the white man, a movie staple since we stopped killing Injuns on screen—who explains that the Templars teamed up with the Anasazi, followed by some Indiana Jones cosplay.

Our heroes end up in the Cave of CGI, solving puzzles in front of a green screen, and it all ends in a fight scene where the good-guy Templar declares the Catholic Church a whore. The real reason to watch Templar Nation is the absolutely unhinged final twist. It turns out that the Templars have been running America from a bunker in the Southwest all along—and according to this film, this is good news. 

The next few moments are an illustration of what it’s like to sit with me and hear me speak for real: We learn that Christopher Columbus was actually a Templar agent bringing freedom from the Pope’s oppression to the New World. The entire movie, it turns out, was just an initiation test for our heroes. The closing shot? A Templar-controlled puppet running for political office while everyone smiles at the television news. 

Also: Erik Estrada is in this movie.

You can watch this on Tubi.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: Assault of the Killer Bimbos (1988)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Assault of the Killer Bimbos was on USA Up All Night on May 27 (twice!) and October 14, 1989; March 9 and 10 and November 2, 1990; February 23, August 8 and December 7, 1991 and January 31 and February 8, 1992.

Two go-go dancers, Lulu (Elizabeth Kaitan) and Peaches (Christina Whitaker), find themselves in the wrong place at the wrong time. After being framed for the murder of their employer by the genuinely sleazy gangster Vinnie (Mike Muscat), the duo goes on the run. They pick up a waitress named Darlene (Tammara Souza) along the way, and as the trio heads toward the border to clear their names, they end up in high-stakes car chases and a final, fateful encounter with Vinnie.

The film is the result of a massive pivot. Originally, Gorman Bechard was set to direct an alien-killer version, but Charles Band hated the script, turning that project into Cemetery High instead. They’d already had issues when Bechard was making Galactic Gigolo.

Anita Rosenberg, hot off working on Modern Girls, managed to secure the director’s chair after telling Empire she would write the script for cheap if she could direct. It remains her only feature film.

According to The Schlock Pit, Band’s father, Albert, watched the dailies and hated Rosenberg’s direction. He wanted writer Ted Nicolaou to take over, but he refused. And producer David DeCoteau wanted Linnea Quigley, Michelle Bauer and Brinke Stevens to be the leads! At least Eddie Deezen is in it.

Elizabeth Kaitan told Femme Fatales magazine that when Thelma and Louise was released, DeCoteau and Band) considered suing MGM but changed their minds when they realized how much it would cost in legal fees. DeCoteau added, “The creator (of Thelma and Louise) must have seen Bimbos and was inspired in some way, whether consciously or not. There are just too many similarities. I mean, right down to the car they drive, the characters’ names, and certain plot points. It’s amazing.”

This was the last film released under Charles Band’s original Empire Pictures.

You can watch this on Tubi.

WEIRD WEDNESDAY: Rolling Thunder (1977)

Directed by John Flynn from a screenplay by Paul Schrader and Heywood Gould, based on a story by Schrader, Rolling Thunder is the story of a man who should by all rights be dead. He might be, when you get down to it. U.S. Air Force Major Charles Rane (William Devane) has spent seven years as a POW in Vietnam. They throw a parade for him, but there’s no real joy for him back home in San Antonio. His wife, Janet (Lisa Blake Richards), has moved on, and who can blame her for needing a man? You can’t blame his son, Mark, for not seeing him as anything but a stranger. And you can’t fault the town itself for the strange way that they view him as some ghost or as an object, like Linda Forchet (Linda Haynes), the girl who wore his ID bracelet every day, sees him. There’s nothing in him to return affection or even emotion. All they can do is give him a piece of the American dream. A brand new Cadillac and 2,555 silver dollars, one for every day he was captured.

That’s when The Texan (James Best), Automatic Slim (Luke Askew), T-Bird (Charles Escamilla) and Melio (Pete Ortega) — the Acuña Boys — bust in, take those silver dollars and try to torture a man who has been tortured by the best. They mangle his hand in a garbage disposal, and when his son tries to save his dad by bringing out those silver dollars, they just shoot him. Kill his wife, too.

Only one person may know how he feels. Master Sergeant Johnny Vohden (Tommy Lee Jones). They were in Hanoi together all that time. He’s so disconnected from this world that he’s signed up for another ten years in Airborne. So when Rane uses Linda to get intel, when he finds those boys, he doesn’t even need to be asked to be in on the revenge. It’s just what has to be done.

After a disastrous test screening — Devane said, “The Mexicans set the theater on fire! They were really, really, really down on it,” Twentieth-Century Fox pretty much gave the film to American-International Pictures, who made a lot of money off it.

Part of the reason why that test screening went so badly was that the hand in the garbage disposal was much worse in the original cut of the film. It was filmed with a lamb shank for the hand, and when the scene played, writer Heywood Gould said, “One woman fainted, another person ran into the lobby and demanded his money back, and another guy was so freaked out that he entered his car in the parking lot, and crashed into another car.”

Rolling Thunder shows up in the work of Quentin Tarantino quite a bit. Beyond the company that he assembled to re-release movies — Rolling Thunder Pictures — the seven-year reference in the Christopher Walken speech in Pulp Fiction is a direct reference to how long Rane was a prisoner. There’s an Acuña Boys cup in Jackie Brown, an actual Acuña Boys gang in the second Kill Bill and an ad for a fake restaurant in Grindhouse. Is it any accident that his acting teacher was James Best?

As you can imagine, Paul Schrader didn’t like the movie. He doesn’t like it much. But I kind of love that about him, you know? In Schrader On Schrader, he says that he wrote the movie to criticize U.S. involvement in Vietnam as well as fascist and racist attitudes in America. Rane was originally written as a white trash racist, with many similarities to Schrader’s more famous character Travis Bickle from Taxi Driver. In fact, Bickle was in the script in a cameo. Schrader claims that he wrote a film about fascism, and the studio made a fascist film. There is a newspaper clipping about Rane — spelled incorrectly — at the end of Taxi Driver, so these movies are in the same cinematic universe, a term I know Schrader would attack me for using in connection with his art.

WEIRD WEDNESDAY: Riot On Sunset Strip (1967)

Filmed and released within four months of the late-1966 Sunset Strip curfew riots, this American-International Pictures film was directed by Arthur Dreifuss and written by Orville H. Hampton. It even has its own song, “Riot on Sunset Strip”, written by Tony Valentino and John Fleck of the Standells.

It has some of the same cast from another AIP movie, Hot Rods to Hell. In that film, Mimsy Farmer was the bad girl and Laurie Mock was the virgin. Here, they switch roles, as Farmer is Andrea Dollier, a young girl seduced by LSD and evil hippies. Aldo Ray plays Sgt. Walt Lorimer, a cop who has been trying to get along with the kids on Sunset, but when he finds his daughter sexually assaulted, he goes wild on a bunch of flower children. If only she hadn’t taken that drink laced by Herbie (Schuyler Hayden), she wouldn’t have been attacked by five boys that same night.

Beyond the music of The Standells, The Enemies and The Chocolate Watchband, we also get a long sequence of Farmer tripping out. Perhaps in my cinematic universe, her character Andrea goes on to become Estelle from More, which was made just two years later and is much franker about drug use. Maybe if her parents had stayed together, maybe if her mother, Margie (Hortense Petra), hadn’t been a drunk, maybe if her dad hadn’t been so driven to clean up the streets, all of this would never have happened.

I realize I love Mimsy Farmer on film because she’s always in trouble. Or causing it, freaking out about slashing her father, a man who always wanted a boy and got her instead or dealing with a conspiracy that wants to eat her or sunspots and autopsies. Her movie life is a nightmare, and she’s a dream, what can I say?

This movie is ridiculous, made by out-of-touch people for kids who are probably far away from Los Angeles and want a piece of the action. Therefore, I love every minute.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: Wired (1989)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Wired was on USA Up All Night on March 9, 1991.

Judith Belushi, the widow of comedian John, and his manager Bernie Brillstein asked Robert Woodward — the writer of All the President’s Men and the man who joined Carl Bernstein to break the story of Watergate — to write a book about Belushi to counter the many rumors that had started after the comedian’s death on March 5, 1982.

I can remember that day. I was ten years old, came home from school, and we heard the story on the radio on the way to dinner. I’d been a fan of Saturday Night Live since it started, even though in Pittsburgh we watched it on a different channel than the NBC affiliate, since Chiller Theater was such a big deal.

Woodward and Belushi were from the same town in Illinois and had friends in common. Belushi was even a fan. But after the writer interviewed numerous people and wrote his book, he never showed it to John’s widow. What followed was Wired. a sensationalist book that painted exactly the picture that Judith and Brillstein wanted to never be known.

Tanner Colby, who had co-authored the 2005 book Belushi: A Biography with Judith, said of Woodward’s book: “It’s like someone wrote a biography of Michael Jordan in which all the stats and scores are correct, but you come away with the impression that Michael Jordan wasn’t very good at playing basketball.”

A major example critics cite is that, in the book, John Landis has to guide Belushi by the hand through how to perform the cafeteria scene in Animal House. There is content that Belushi did the scene in one improvised take all on his own.

Belushi’s best friend and fellow Blues Brother, Dan Aykroyd, hated the book and said that Woodward “spoke with me about an hour and a half, and you know there’s things in the book I don’t remember saying to him…”

He went on to say, “He certainly has avoided the issue of what a funbag John was, what a great guy he was, what a warm, humorous, really, you know…concerned, and bright, educated, well-read individual this guy was. How did he become so successful? He was smart, you know, he wasn’t just given his break, and he had to work for what he had, and Woodward completely skirts that, and it’s a depressing, sordid, tragic book…and for my part I just think that it’s really depressing reading.”

Woodward wanted to sell the movie rights as soon as the book was published, but found no buyers. He said, “A large portion of Hollywood didn’t want this movie made because there’s too much truth in it.”

Producers Edward S. Feldman (the man who got both Hot Dog…the Movie and Hamburger the Motion Picture made; he also produced The HitcherThe Truman Show and Witness) and Charles R. Meeker were the folks brave enough to fund the film. It was written by Earl Mac Rauch — yes, the same writer of The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension — and directed by Larry Peece, who also made AIP’s The Big T.N.T. Show, The Other Side of the Mountain and A Woman Named Jackie.

The movie makes a wild departure from the book by having Belushi followed by a guardian angel (Ray Sharkey!) who leads him to either Heaven or Hell. They had to do something, as they were given no rights to anything connected to Saturday Night Live. If that something was a The Seventh Seal pastiche with pinball instead of chess, that was what they did.

Wired had trouble finding a distributor, as many major studios refused to distribute it. Now, was that because of the conspiracy that people didn’t want the public to know how bad drugs were, or because the movie is so insufferably bad? The jury is out but leaning toward the latter.

Brillstein believed that the filmmakers made up the controversy to sell this movie like William Castle would, saying, “The only thing that the producers have to hang on to is the image of Wired as “the movie that Hollywood tried to stop.” When it played at Cannes, the reception was hostile, with reporters attacking Woodward with questions about why he was a character in the movie.

John Landis threatened to sue, and he’s not even named in the movie, but suggested. Then again, helicopter noises play when he appears to hammer home that this is the same person who killed Vic Morrow and two children on the set of The Twilight Zone: The Movie. And Aykroyd pulled no punches, saying, “I have witches working now to jinx the thing. I hope it never gets seen, and I am going to hurl all the negative energy I can muster, all my hell energies. My thunderbolts are out on this one, quite truthfully.” A year later, he got J.T. Walsh, who plays Woodward in this movie, fired from the movie Loose Cannons.

You know who got the worst out of this? Michael Chiklis, in one of his first roles, isn’t horrible as Belushi. He was chosen from among tons of actors for the role, and it took years for his acting career to recover. That said, he personally apologized to Jim Belushi when they met, and the two embraced, as Belushi had always been under the impression that Chiklis was deceived by the producers as well. For his part, Jim visited Feldman’s office and trashed his desk.

As for the film itself, it moves through Belushi’s life in a non-linear fashion, with made up sketches like “Samurai Baseball,” the Blues Brothers singing Wilson Pickett’s “634-5789” and Belushi as a bee singing Slim Harpo’s “I’m a King Bee” invented for the film — again due to Lorne Michaels refusing to allow the movie to use any of Saturday Night Live‘s IP — and then a close where Belushi sings Joe Cocker’s “You Are So Beautiful to Me” alongside the real Billy Preston, the only person from that era to be involved with this film.

It also totally borrows a few pages from Sid and Nancy, with a cab ride symbolizing the boat across the River Styx and Joe Strummer’s song “Love Kills” playing.

There’s a great story about the life and death of John Belushi, one of triumph and tragedy, intelligence and sadly, stupidity. But this? This will never be it.

WEIRD WEDNESDAY: Ricco the Mean Machine (1973)

I get it. This movie isn’t a giallo. But what is it, really? It was sold under so many titles, from the more horror-centric Cauldron of Death (complete with a completely insane poster) to the more crime-oriented Gangland, the great Italian title Un Tipo Con una Faccia Strana ti Cerca per Ucciderti (A Guy With a Strange Face Is Looking for You to Kill You), The Dirty MobMean Machine and even O Exolothreftis (The Terminator) in Greece.

It was written by Jose Gutierrez Maesso, who wrote Django and was an uncredited writer for the magical Pensione Paura. He’s joined by Santiago Moncada, who wrote A Bell from HellHatchet for the Honeymoon and The Corruption of Chris Miller, along with Mario di Nardo (The Fifth CordFive Dolls for an August Moon). Directing all of this mayhem is Tulio Demichelli, who made the utterly insane Assignment Terror, as well as The Two Faces of Fear Espionage in Lisbon and the well-named There Is Someone Behind the Door.

Make no mistake — this is a movie awash with exploitation, gore, aberrant behavior and no real heroes. In short, it’s exactly the kind of movie you come to this site to read about.

Rico Aversi (Chris Mitchum) has just got out of jail, two years after Don Vito (Arthur Kennedy, the inspector from The Living Dead at Manchester Morgue) killed his father. Everyone wants Rico — notice that his name is spelled completely unlike the title of the movie — to kill the boss off, but Rico just wants to enjoy life outside of prison.

Malisa Longo (Cat in the Brain) plays his girlfriend — and who used to love Rico’s woman — and she enjoys sleeping with the hired help, which gets one unlucky member of the workstaff castrated in shocking detail. Then his John Thomas gets shoved into his mouth, and he’s dipped in acid and turned into soap. This movie is not interested in being unoffensive. Plus, you get Paola Senatore (Eaten Alive!) as Rico’s sister, whose death finally sets him on the path to revenge.

Robert Mitchum is one of my favorite actors ever, so it kind of pains me to admit this, but his son kind of slumbers through this leading role. But then again, everyone else in this movie is going to seem boring next to Barbara Bouchet, who pretty much sets the screen on fire, dances on the flames and sets it ablaze all over again in this movie. Anyone could show some leg to get the attention of some criminals. Bouchet goes all in, dancing nude on the roof of a car, covered in fog, giving her all no matter how grimy this scumfest gets. Without her, this movie would be passable. With her, it’s transcendent.

So yeah. It’s not a giallo. But man, if you’re coming in looking for bad behavior, gorgeous women and great clothes, it’s all covered.

WEIRD WEDNESDAY: Revenge of the Cheerleaders (1976)

After The Cheerleaders and The Swinging Cheerleaders, where else was there to go?

This feels like porn without the penetration and by that, I mean it feels like amateur porn and somehow, David Hasselhoff is in it as a character named Boner. There’s a moment where the cafeteria spaghetti is dosed with LSD and the entire school freaks out, ending up in the gym showers as class is cancelled and the orgy begins. There’s also a moment where one of the cheerleaders gives one of the boys a rim job while he works in an ice cream stand, which feels way ahead of its time, seeing as how it was made in 1976.

Yes, there’s a story where the adults want to combine Aloha and Lincoln High to sell the school land and make money. Everyone dances whenever they feel it. Sex solves everything.

Speaking of sex, Cheryl “Rainbeaux” Smith is in this and was actually pregnant while it was being made. This is even worked into the plot, as much as the dinosaur theme park is. She’s holding her real son, Justin Sterling, at the end. His father, John, composed the music for this film.

Directed by Richard Lerner, who was involved in all of the cheerleaders series one way or another, this was written by Ted Greenwald, Nathaniel Dorsky and Ace Baandige, which, as I’ve said before, has to be their real name.

Beyond Rainbeaux, there’s also Penthouse July 1976 Pet Helen Lang, who was also in Tarz and Jane and Cheetah and Hot Nasties, which stars Susan Kiger, the first Playboy Playmate to do porn before she became a Playmate in January 1977; Jerri Woods (Toby from Switchblade Sisters); Patrice Rohmer (Harrad Summer) and Susie Elene.

You can watch this on Tubi.

Sizzlin’ Summer of Subterranean Psychotronica 2026: The Foreign Exchange Student (2018)

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.

Every Stepfather, Stepmother and Adopted movie is the same story: a normal family has a new person move in and blow the family the fuck up. I love this. I don’t know why, I don’t know what deep-seated hatred I have for the American nuclear family, but there’s nothing I love more than when a weird person puts everyone against one another and starts using sex and violence to get their way.

I also hate foreign exchange students. When I was a big, dumb teenage nerd, instead of an old white man nerd, I felt like no one wanted to have anything to do with me. Now, I realize who would want to hang out with a kid on the spectrum who only wants to talk about obscure bands and gore movies. But back then, I was enraged, wondering why these kids could move here and instantly leapfrog everyone in popularity. Yes, I was a jerk. But the only foreign exchange student I ever liked slept with the dad and was quietly kicked out of town.

Did I just have a breakthrough?

Anyway, Jonathan Milton made this movie, and I loved every single second of it.

Sinclair (Bianca Tonsall) killed her old boyfriend when he cheated on her back in Dominica, and she moves to Houston as an exchange student. The Reams are her host family — lawyer Monica (Natasha Jolivette), her barber husband (Roc Living), their daughter Jackie (Jaye Alexander) and son Bishop (Reggie Choyce) — and they all accept her, except for Jackie. Sinclair has already taken her room, and she just doesn’t trust her.

She totally shouldn’t.

Before it’s over, Sinclair has slept with her brother, prepping him for his first date, but not before asking if he’s gay. Then, she continually hits on Dad, even giving him a massage with a near happy ending. When Mr. Adams (Donny Boaz) catches her plagiarizing a paper, she tells Bishop’s best friend that he told her he wanted her to suck his cock. They put together a scheme where the kid bashes the team’s head with a baseball bat, then Sinclair stabs him with a knife that would make any slasher villain feel penis envy.

After all this killing, what causes the family to give up on their exchange student?

When she steals Jackie’s boyfriend.

Sinclair is sent to live with a social worker, whom she murders in seconds, then comes back to kill the whole family. Leave it to Jackie to end up slashing her throat, and as she dies, we get a POV shot of Jackie saying, “Don’t mess with Texas, bitch.”

It’s almost as good as “Adios, creep!” from Don’t Answer the Phone.

You might watch this and hate every single minute, but if you’ve been on this site for any length of time, you already know I have no taste.

You can watch this on Tubi.

NIGHTMARE USA PODCAST episode 2: The Crazies

In our second episode, Sam wanted to discuss a film literally near and dear to him–George Romero’s The Crazies. Do we talk about Creepshow 2 more than the actual film we are covering? Maybe.

Listen to the show on Spreaker.

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

WEIRD WEDNESDAY: Revenge Is My Destiny (1971)

When you think of the post-Vietnam psyche in 1970s cinema, you usually picture the polished desperation of Taxi Driver or the raw, vengeful fury of Rolling Thunder. But if you dig into the humid, low-budget underbelly of South Florida, you find this movie, which is a weirder, rougher beast. 

This isn’t a high-gloss production; it’s a gritty, sprawling piece of pulp fiction that feels like it was ripped straight out of a discarded men’s adventure magazine. The film opens with a brutal, visceral sequence in the jungles of Vietnam—filmed in the Florida Everglades, naturally—where our protagonist, Ross Archer (Chris Robinson, The Intruder, Stanley), loses his eye to mortar fire after a grim encounter with the Viet Cong.

Ross returns home a year later, sporting an eye patch and carrying a metric fuckton of unresolved trauma. He finds his wife, Angela (Elisa Ingram), missing and his houseboat occupied by a go-go dancer named Ellie (Patricia Rainier). What follows is a circuitous, convolution-heavy investigation into the Florida criminal underworld as Ross tries to uncover what happened to his wife. It’s a quest to wash away the sins of the war and a downward spiral into a life he was already ill-suited for before he ever set foot in a jungle.

This is the last role of Sidney Blackmer, a legend of the silver screen and Roman Castevet in Rosemary’s Baby. He delivers a gravitas that the film perhaps doesn’t always deserve, but certainly benefits from. It also features Joe E. Ross from Car 54, Where Are You?, playing alcoholic comedian Maxie Marks, who delivers a nightclub routine that will leave you absolutely bewildered.

Hey! There’s Bill Kerwin as a cop. And Zorita, born Katherin Boyd in Youngstown, Ohio, who became a burlesque artist who danced with boa constructors Elmer and Oscar. She’s also in Judy’s Little No-NoNaughty New York and I Married a Savage. And MiltonButterballSmith, one of Miami’s best-known radio DJs, who is also in The Wild RebelsThe Hooked GenerationStanley and Mako: The Jaws of Death. AndTeacher to the StarsJay W. Jensen, who was once Carroll Baker’s dance partner and ended up teaching Andy Garcia, Mickey Rourke and LutherUncle LukeCampbell while finding time to be in She-ManWerewolves On Wheels and Bob Fosse’s Lenny, a movie that is chock full of burlesque stars like Zorita, Rita Turner and Kim St. Leon. 

Director Joseph Adler (responsible for other curiosities like Scream Baby Scream and Convention Girls) keeps things moving with a scrappy aesthetic. While the pacing is occasionally hampered by budget constraints, the film captures the dying embers of early 70s Miami Beach. Somehow, this had a script by Mardik Martin (Raging BullMean Streets) and a score by Stu Phillips (whose songThe Name of the Game is Kill!shows up in Jess Franco’s Venus In Furs and who did music for Simon King of the Witches and the theme songs for Knight Rider, Quincy M.D. and Battlestar Galactica) and Richard Markowitz, who composed the stock music in Kingdom of the Spiders and therefore, also the music in the U.S. Grim Reaper cut of Antropophagus.

Revenge Is My Destiny is a film of contradictions. It’s titled like a non-stop action flick. Yet it plays more like a moody, character-driven pulp noir with spy and Nazi-hunter elements. It looks like a TV movie — no complaints — and yet there’s an undeniable, grimy charm at work here.