APRIL MOVIE THON DAY 27: Powerbomb (2020)

April 27: Kayfabe Cinema — A movie with a pro wrestler in it.

This hits a bit close to home, as I did indies for more than twenty years, so when I saw Matt Cross, formely M-Dogg,Super CopDick Justice andThe Handicap HeroGregory Iron show up in the first few minutes of a movie, it kind of felt like how I spent most of my weekends over the last few decades: sitting in a high school locker room, waiting for my match. 

Matt’s wife Amy (Roni Jonah) used to wrestle, but left once she got pregnant with their son Cash (Cash K. Allen), who is being babysat by her ex-tag partner Kelsi (Britt Baker, whose boyfriend at the time, Adam Cole, shows up for a few seconds), who lost the ability to wrestle after an accident. A lot of this movie is about the pain of not being in the ring anymore and wishing you had it back, which I connected with very strongly. It doesn’t explore it anywhere near where it should, and really, things just happen in this, rather than feeling like we have any stirrings toward a point of view or a plot.

Paul (Wes Allen), a superfan or smart mark, kidnaps Matt and chains him up in his basement, explaining that he wants to give him his killer instinct back. Powerbomb never gets around to explaining that, instead focusing on Paul taking care of his sick mother or beating up a puppet. It wants to be the indy wrestling version of Misery, yet never quite gets there. 

B.J. Colangelo and R. Zachary Shildwachter have something here, even if they never find it. Instead of going all in on its premise, we have promoter Solomon (Aaron Sechrist) getting beaten up by Adam Cole’s thugs, trying to get Amy to wrestle again, while Paul tases Matt Cross and makes him eat pizza. Then we get a monologue where Kelsi cuts a promo in a mirror, then realizes the extent of her knee pain, turning to the bottle. We never see her again.

If you like indy wrestling, you at least get to see Derek Dillinger and Rickey Shane Page show up. Otherwise, this feels like they had a bunch of footage and no idea how to edit it into a collective whole. An IMDbs trivia says,Film was funded by wrestling fans and made by wrestling fans (Hence its lack of creativity or professionalism), has several real wrestlers in it.Man, people will say anything online.

I really wanted to like this movie, but it never gets to where it needs to go, as if it stayed in chain wrestling when it was time for the double down.

Ignore the poster, as that never happens. If this movie were a match on a show, it would really have them going, as Lord Zoltan once said. Going to the bathroom, the concession stand, to their cars to leave…

You can watch this on Tubi.

Murder, She Wrote S3 E20: The Cemetery Vote (1987)

The reform mayor dies in a so-called “accident,” and the mayor’s father is murdered after he demands an investigation into it.

Season 3, Episode 20: The Cemetery Vote (April 5, 1987)

Jessica investigates when her nephew, a junior executive for a large accounting firm, is charged with tax fraud and the murder of his boss.

Who’s in it, outside of Angela Lansbury?

Bruce Davison plays David Carroll, and the man is a legend, appearing in Willard, The Lords of Salem, and so many more movies.

Ed Lauter is the law here; Sheriff Orville Yates and no one played the menacing authority figure better. He was the creepy attendant in Cujo, the cop dealing with Bronson in Death Wish 3 and fought off The Car.

Marie Windsor is Kate Gunnerson, and she was in The Day Mars Invaded Earth.

Jeff Yagher plays Deputy Wayne Beeler. He was in V.

Joseph Campanella is George McDaniels.

Charlene Tilton plays Cyndy March and is best known for Dallas.

Mitchell Ryan is Captain Ernest Lenko, and I will always know him for his role in Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers as Dr. Terence Wynn, the man behind the Cult of Thorn.

Ellen Bry plays Linda Stevens, John McLiam is Harry Stevens, Dick Balduzzi plays Gil Stokes, Katherine De Hetre is Rita, Zale Kessler plays the coroner, Neal Penso is a paramedic and Hank Robinson and Ilona Wilson are casino players.

What happens?

Look, we all know J.B. Fletcher has more dear old friends than a politician has skeletons in the closet, like the Angel of Death. This time, she’s trekking out to Comstock, Idaho. It’s another one of those fictional map-dots that seem to exist only so someone can get murdered in it.

Our girl Jess is living her best life in Rome when she rings up Seth Hazlitt and gets the skinny: Linda Stevens (who we assume is a Cabot Cove expat because they once shared a picnic on the beach) is now a widow. Her husband, the Mayor, took a permanent detour in a car crash. Jess does what Jess does. She cuts the pasta tour short and flies into the eye of the storm to comfort the grieving friend. But Linda’s father-in-law, Harry, isn’t buying the accident narrative. He thinks the town’s political machine is running on high-octane foul play.

So he dies too. Turns out, being the only guy in town asking the right questions is a great way to get a one-way ticket to the morgue.

Who did it?

Deputy Mayor David Carroll! Bruce Davison goes from clean-up candidate to clean the blood off the carpet real fast. Carroll was playing both sides of the fence, tipping off an illegal gambling ring about police raids. Why? Because he wanted their political support (read: dirty money and influence) to slide into the Mayor’s chair.

Who made it?

This was directed by Seymour Robbie and written by Robert Van Scoyk.

Does Jessica dress up and act stupid? Does she get some?

No. A serious and non-sexy J.B. Boo.

Was it any good?

It’s decent.

Any trivia?

The sound of the truck that runs Jessica and David off the road was taken from the made-for-TV movie Duel.

Give me a reasonable quote:

Jessica Fletcher: Well, I really have to get home. Amos Tupper may uphold the law, but I can’t trust him to water my plants.

What’s next?

Jessica investigates the possibility that a man spent 30 years in prison for a murder he did not commit. Art Hindle is in this episode!

Talking The Beyond on the Making Tarantino podcast

On this episode Phillip was joined once again by Sam Panico, the host of B and S about Movies Podcast and the co-host of Drive In Asylum on YouTube and Facebook. Phillip starts the show by giving the general information about the movie. After that Phillip and Sam talk about The Beyond as well as several other things. It always gets this way when Phillip and Sam get together. In between all this Phillip reads Listener’ Opinions from Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. Later on they talk about whether they noticed anything from The Beyond that Tarantino might have liked or used in a film. They individually rate the movie. Then they answer whether they would buy this movie, rent it, or find for free. Phillip then gives his Phil’s Film Favorite of the Week, and then Sam gives his recommendation; The Libertine (1968). It’s then time for Phillip to promote next week’s show when he will be by himself to talk about 1986’s Dead End Drive-In.

APRIL MOVIE THON DAY 26: The Fall of the House of Usher (1979)

April 26: Sunn Classics — Four wall your TV set and watch a Sunn Classics movie. List here.

There is a specific kind of comfort found in the Sunn Classic Pictures catalog. These are the folks who gave us In Search of Historic Jesus and The Bermuda Triangle, specializing in that 1970s brand of investigative docudrama and Grizzly Adams. In 1979, they decided to take a swing at Edgar Allan Poe as part of their Classics Illustrated made-for-TV movies, and the result is a flick that feels like a gothic fever dream filtered through the lens of a Saturday afternoon matinee.

Conway told me, “We also bought Classics Illustrated, the comic book of all the classic novels. So I got to do a series of 12 movies of the week, making Last of the Mohicans, Legend of the Wild, Fall of the House of Usher, The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, and The Adventures of Nellie Bly, and we were just a bunch of kids. We were all in our mid-20s and didn’t know what we were doing.”

It’s 1839, and Jonathan Criswell (Robert Hays, just a year away from earning his wings in Airplane!) is an architect who really should have ignored his mail. He receives a plea from his old pal Roderick Usher (the eternally intense Martin Landau) to visit the family estate. Jonathan brings along his new bride, Jennifer (Charlene Tilton, taking a break from the Ewings on Dallas), and they quickly realize the Usher house is not exactly a Home Sweet Home situation.

James said, “Once we sold Greatest Heroes of the Bible and the Classics Illustrated movies, we were flooded with all of these great actors. We had big network budgets and the money to get these casts. The more I worked with these actors, the better I got at anticipating what they want and learning that each has their own wrong way of working. And it was fantastic.  I got to work with a lot of dream people that I’d always loved and admired. For example, in Fall of the House of Usher, I got to work with Ray Walston, Martin Landau, Charlene Tilton and Robert Hayes.

Bobby Hayes and I would drive down to where the sound stages were, about a 20-minute drive. Every day, we would all ride together, and he had just been sent a script for a movie called Airplane! So he would read from the script to us as we were driving. It was such a hysterical script. And then, of course, the movie became such a big hit.”

Roderick is a mess of hypersensitive nerves, and his sister, Madeline, is drifting in and out of a catatonic stupor. The big family secret? A curse fueled by generations of devil worship and general nastiness that ensures no Usher makes it past the age of 37. As the walls literally and figuratively start to crumble, Jonathan realizes that being a good friend might just get him buried alive or worse.

If you’re coming into this expecting the psychedelic, saturated colors of the Roger Corman/Vincent Price era, you might need to adjust your tracking. This is a very TV-movie version of Poe, but that’s where its charm lies. Martin Landau is the MVP here. He doesn’t just play Roderick Usher; he vibrates with the kind of high-strung energy that suggests he’s been drinking forty cups of coffee a day in a dark basement. On the flip side, you have Robert Hays, who feels a bit like he wandered in from a different movie set, but his earnestness actually works as a foil to the Usher family’s gloomy theatrics.

Director James L. Conway—who also gave us the cult slasher The Boogens—knows how to squeeze atmosphere out of a limited budget. He leans heavily into the Schlocky Gothic aesthetic: dry ice fog, cobwebs that look like they were bought in bulk and a mansion that seems to be held together by pure spite. This was shot in Utah, which isn’t exactly the first place you think of for 19th-century New England gothic, but the landscape’s isolation actually adds to the end-of-the-world feel of the Usher estate. This isn’t the definitive version of the story, but it’s a delightful time capsule of late-70s television horror. It’s spooky, slightly campy, and features Landau acting like his life depends on it. Crack a beer, turn down the lights, and enjoy the decay.

This played theaters, by the way! When I asked, “I never realized that some of the Classics Illustrated TV shows – Fall of the House of Usher – played in theaters,” he replied, “I vaguely remember our distribution company needing product that year, so we tried screening Usher.”

You can watch this on YouTube.

APRIL MOVIE THON DAY 25: The House of Exorcism (1975)

April 25: Bava Forever — Bava died on this day 43 years ago. Let’s watch his movies.

Mario Bava — or John Old — was the man who could make a studio backlot look like the gates of Gehenna. And while Lisa and the Devil was his heart and soul, it didn’t exactly set the box office on fire. But then The Exorcist happened, and suddenly every producer in Italy wanted their own pea-soup-spewing cash cow.

Producer Alfredo Leone had a masterpiece on his hands that nobody wanted to see, so he did the most exploitation producer thing imaginable: He asked Bava to chop it up, add some possession flavor and then he retitled it House of Exorcism. Now it was less of an art film and more, well, Exorcisty.

This flick is a Frankenstein’s monster of cinema. You’ve got the ethereal, dreamlike footage of Bava’s original cut smashed together with new scenes directed by Leone (and a helping hand from Lamberto Bava, aka John Old Jr.). To slap a name on this identity crisis, they credited Mickey Lion as the director.

Mario said, “Even though it bears my signature. It is the same situation, too long to explain, of a cuckolded father who finds himself with a child that is not his own, and with his name, and cannot do anything about it.”

So what is new? A lot. Enough to make you think that this is two movies joined together, which it totally is.

There’s a new framing device in which Father Michael (Robert Alda, father of Alan) is an exorcist trying to exorcise a demon from Lisa (Elke Sommer). She’s swearing more than Regan MacNeil, showing way more skin and also throwing up frogs. She’s also Elena, and all of Bava’s superior cut becomes a series of flashbacks to how she lost her mind, her life and her soul, eventually possessing Lisa.

Elena was stuck in an incestuous four-way relationship between her husband Max (Alessio Orano), a guy so impotent and tied to his mother’s (Alida Valli) apron strings it’s no wonder Elena looked elsewhere and found love — and some deep dicking — from her husband’s stepfather (Espartaco Santoni). It all ends in blood and with every in hell.

Somewhere in all of this, we have the priest get tempted by the ghost of his dead wife — she burned up in a car wreck — Anna (Carmen Silva), who is one of those Eurohorror women who seems like an android with a perfect body and fake eyelashes. Magic in its purest form. “Darling, don’t be embarrassed. You’re still a man. Take me.” You know, the devil works hard to convert those who have faith, but have you seen Carmen Silva? I get it. Man, I sure get it.

This feels like a weird U.S.-made exploitation rip-off of Lisa with bloodier deaths and a near-inserts level edit of Sylvia Koscina and Gabriele Tinti (and body doubles) getting it on. You know, I’m sure Gabriele Tinti was a good guy, but between this and him being married to Laura Gemser, I kind of despise the dude.

Spare a thought for poor Elke Sommer, who had to come back two years later just to contort on a hospital bed and projectile vomit neon green slime. It’s a far cry from the gothic beauty of the original, but there’s a greasy charm to it that you just can’t find in modern horror. I can’t help but kind of love the balls on this concoction of a movie.

Also: In Annie Hall, Alvy Singer (Woodie Allen) walks past a marquee playing Lisa and the Devil and Messiah of Evil, and he kind of scoffs. For this and so many more reasons, I hope Tisa kicked him right in the dick at Passover, and it was no accident.

You can watch this on YouTube.

Tales from the Darkside S2 E17: The Shrine (1986)

Hey, remember when you went to college and your parents turned your bedroom into a sewing room? Well, Cecilia Matthews did one better. She turned it into a psychic freakout where a spectral brat who never grows up and never talks back finally makes her happy as a mother, unlike her real-life child. In this slice of 80s psychological weirdness (based on a Pamela Sargent short story), we meet Christine (Lorna Luft), who comes home for a warm hug only to get the cold shoulder from her mother, Cecilia (Coleen Gray), who is too busy listening to a ghostly child sing “Three Blind Mice” upstairs to hear her own flesh-and-blood daughter pounding on the door.

It’s been six years. Six years since Christine had a nervous breakdown, likely caused by the very woman now offering her tea while treating her like a trespasser. Cecilia has storage in Christine’s old room, a code word for a pink-hued time capsule filled with pom-poms, horse trophies and a literal ghost of Christine’s childhood.

Enter Chrissie (Virginia Keehne). She’s the girl Christine used to be, or at least, the girl Cecilia wanted her to stay. While Christine is trying to process her trauma and navigate a broken life, Cecilia is upstairs, tucked in with a poltergeist version of her daughter, feeding the thing pure nostalgia.

The second act turns into a battle for maternal territory. We get a visit from Toni (Janet Wood), the Avon lady, who drops the bomb that Cecilia spends an unhealthy amount of time talking to the walls. Then there’s brother Chuck (Lary Gilman), who tries to play peacemaker but mostly just serves as a reminder that Christine is the only one in this family actually living in the real world.

Christine confronts Chrissie, who is basically a sentient World’s Best Daughter trophy with a mean streak. There’s shouting, a shattered mirror, and a tug-of-war for Cecilia’s soul. In the end, the power of a grown-up’s grief beats out a phantom’s playground rhymes, as you’d imagine it would. Chrissie goes poof in a flash of light, Cecilia wakes up from her nostalgic trance, and we’re left with two women holding each other in the wreckage of a childhood bedroom.

Most of Christopher T. Welch’s directing work was on TV, while he has also done ADR and production work. This was written by Julie Selbo, who wrote for this series and Monsters, as well as animation.

B & S About Movies podcast Episode 134: Beastmaster

Man, how did you grow up in the 80s and 90s and not watch this movie? Let’s get deep into some beastmastering as we talk all three movies and the TV series. Bring your raccoon and other animal friends.

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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APRIL MOVIE THON DAY 24: Curse of the Vampires (1966)

April 24: Puke! — Pick a movie that had a barf bag given away during its theatrical run! Here’s a list.

Gerardo de Leon made The Mad Doctor of Blood Island and Brides of Blood, so we should watch any movie he ever chose to direct. This time, he tells us about Eduardo (Eddie Garcia) and his sister Leonore (Amalia Fuentes), a twosome who have made the worst of all horror-movie mistakes. They’ve come back home to see their father on his deathbed.

The old man has one simple request:Burn this house to the ground the second I’m gone.Does Eduardo listen? Of course not. Instead, he decides to poke around the basement.

Eduardo discovers his mother chained up in the dark. She’s a vampire, she’s hungry and she gives him a hickey that turns him into a cape-wearing, blood-chugging menace. While Eduardo is busy transforming into a monster, Leonore is pining for her lover, Daniel (Romeo Vasquez), hoping for a deathbed blessing that—spoiler alert—is not coming.

What follows is a chaotic descent into madness. Eduardo ruins a wedding with the kind of social grace only a vampire can muster (by biting the bride), murders his father in a fit of vampiric rage, and develops a deeply uncomfortable lust for his own sister. He tops it all off by getting into a sword fight with a ghost.

The film was picked up for U.S. distribution by Hemisphere Pictures, the same outfit that brought the Blood Island films to American drive-ins, often as part of legendary double features.

April Ghouls Drive-In Monster-Rama 2026 Primer

April Ghouls Drive-In Monster-Rama is back at The Riverside Drive-In Theatre in Vandergrift, PA on April 24 and 25, 2026. Admission is still only $15 per person each night (children 12 and under free with adult) and overnight camping is available (breakfast included). You can buy tickets at the show, but get there early and learn more here.

The features for Friday, April 24 are Prince of DarknessPopcornFade to Black and Evilspeak.

Saturday, April 25 has Halloween 4Halloween 5A Bay of Blood and Funeral Home.

Here are the drinks for the first night:

Anti-God

  • 1.5 oz green apple vodka
  • .5 oz. Midori
  • .5 oz. Sour Apple Pucker
  • 4 oz. lemonade
  • .25 oz. lemon juice
  • .25 oz. lime juice
  1. Pour it all in a shaker with ice.
  2. Pour and enjoy. You will not be saved by the holy ghost. You will not be saved by the god Plutonium. In fact, YOU WILL NOT BE SAVED!

Possessor

  • 2 oz popcorn-infused rum
  • .75 oz. fresh lemon juice
  • .5 oz. simple syrup
  • 1 egg white
  • Pinch of salt
  1. In a clean glass jar with a lid, combine the 1 cup buttered popcorn and 1 cup rum. Seal the jar and leave at room temperature for 2 hours. Strain, then throw away the popcorn.
  2. Put the rum, lemon juice, simple syrup and egg white in a shaker with no ice and shake for 30 seconds; shake again with ice. Sprinkle with salt.

For night two:

Tipsy Tina

  • 8 oz. orange juice
  • 12 oz. orange soda
  • 4 oz. rum
  1. Pour rum over ice.
  2. Follow with soda and juice.

Bay of Breeze (AKA Thirst of the Death Nerve)

  • 2 oz. cranberry juice
  • 2 oz. pineapple juice
  • 1 1/2 oz. vodka
  • 1/2 oz. lime juice
  1. Combine ingredients over ice.
  2. Stir and serve, then die.

See you at the drive-in.

MUBI 4K UHD and BLU-RAY RELEASE: Die My Love (2025)

Lynne Ramsay doesn’t make movies; she makes scars on film. From the sensory overload of Ratcatcher to the stone-cold dread of You Were Never Really Here, she’s a filmmaker who understands that the loudest screams are usually the ones kept inside.

With Die My Love, she takes Ariana Harwicz’s accidental trilogy of domestic horror and turns it into a neon-soaked, dirt-stained Montana nightmare that feels like a spiritual successor to Possession by way of a Sam Shepard play.

Jennifer Lawrence is Grace, a woman who hasn’t just lost the plot; she’s actively burning the book, the encylocpedia and an entire library. She’s moved from New York to a dead uncle’s house in rural Montana with Jackson (Robert Pattinson). If you think this is a finding yourself in the country flick, you haven’t been paying attention. This is a house haunted not by ghosts, but by the suicide of the previous owner and the crushing weight of a newborn baby that Grace can’t seem to connect with.

Jackson is rying his best but failing miserably. He brings home a stray dog to fix a broken heart, but Grace isn’t looking for a pet. In a scene that’ll make your skin crawl, she handles the dog’s injury with a shotgun because Jackson won’t. If this makes you hate her, I doubt she cares.

Despite having a fling with a biker (LaKeith Stanfield) and throwing herself through a glass door, they still get married. What a ceremony: Grace headbutts a mirror in a bridal suite while a concierge sings to her.

The supporting cast is legendary. Nick Nolte and Sissy Spacek show up to remind us that generational trauma is the gift that keeps on giving. When Grace is finally cured and released from the asylum, she returns to a house that’s been scrubbed clean of her personality and a baby that’s been renamed after a dead man. It’s the ultimate gaslight, so why not just set the whole house ablaze and, well, run right into it?

This isn’t a fun watch, but if you love melodrama, this is for you.