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.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: Dangerous Curves (1988)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Dangerous Curves was on USA Up All Night on May 17 and 18, 1991; January 24 and August 22, 1992 and March 26 and April 17, 1993.

Chuck (Tate Donovan) is the quintessential uptight college student who lands a golden opportunity: deliver a pristine Porsche to a businessman, Louis Faciano’s (Robert Stack) daughter in Lake Tahoe. If he completes the assignment, a great job is his for the taking. Of course, he makes the classic mistake of letting his hormone-driven roommate, Wally (Grant Heslov), talk him into a detour to San Diego.

Naturally, the car gets stolen. Instead of coming clean, the duo decides to play detective to avoid losing the gig. They cross paths with two pageant-bound friends, Blake (Valerie Breiman) and Michelle (Danielle von Zerneck, who is married to the accordion player in The Pogues, James Fearnley).

The car thief happens to be another big business guy, Greg Krevske (Leslie Nielsen, not yet the king of parody), who is using the stolen Porsche as the grand prize for the beauty pageant. After a WetBike chase and a high-stakes infiltration of Krevske’s yacht, the boys and the girls join forces to outsmart the villain, recover the car, fall in love and expose his shady business dealings just in time for the pageant finale.

This is a movie filled with people you will be comfortable seeing again, like Robert Romanus (always Mike Damone) as a cab driver, Robert Klein, Elizabeth Ashley (from Windows!) as a pageant mom, MTV VJ Martha Quinn and Tool Time Girl Debbe Dunning.

It was directed by David Lewis, who was the cinematographer on UHFNight of the Demons and the Olsen Twins’ Our Lips Are Sealed. It was written by Michael Dugan (who created the MTV series Remote Control), Michael Zand (the suicidal terrorist in the beginning of To Live and Die In L.A.) and Paul Brown, who wrote Thrashin’.

You can watch this on Tubi.

Sizzlin’ Summer of Subterranean Psychotronica 2026: Aleta: Vampire Mistress (2012)

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

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

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

If you think you’ve seen every iteration of vampire lore, Aleta: Vampire Mistress—originally known as Empress Vampire—is ready to destroy your brain. The story kicks off at an upscale Halloween party where two bit-part robbers make the mistake of trying to hold up a crowd that includes the Empress Aleta (Ange Maya), who makes short work of them with effortless, superhuman violence.

Word reaches the halls of power in Washington, D.C., where the Secretary of Defense decides the government should probably recruit this ancient bloodsucker as a special operative. Enter FBI Agent Dan Higgins (Beau Nelson), who ends up teaming up with a pair of unlikely allies: Ivor Helsing (Garrett Brawith) and a mystic named Ariana (Laura Cotenescu).

As it turns out, Aleta isn’t just a vampire. She’s the Empress Yang, cursed for 1,000 years and the progenitor of all vampire-kind. Her history is a wild ride of betrayed royal marriages, blood-sucking rabbits, and a multi-generational grudge match against the Helsing bloodline. The film’s mythology is, to put it mildly, unique. Forget Dracula or sparkling heartthrobs; Aleta’s origin story involves two Chinese scientists opening a portal to another dimension, leading to energy worms merging with her to create the ultimate vampire.

She’s not your standard neck-biter, either. She’s got a groinal feed that turns a simple romantic drive into a lethal car crash. Aleta is also not above some Fulci-style violence. Just ask Joerg Von Helsing (Zachary Ryan Block), whose eye she literally plucked out and jammed into a stake hole so he could watch her destroy his family lineage for eternity. 

Then there are the musical numbers.

Yes, musical numbers, including an interpretive dance seduction sequence complete with nudity, and a Bollywood before the final battle, set the stage for the set song that the entire cast sings.

My favorite part? Igor saves a girl from a vampire and tells her that if she wants to live, she has to lose her virginity. She immediately calls her boyfriend and tells her its time to get serious.

This is a vampire movie filled with nearly as many boobs as a Russ Meyer movie, tons of bad CGI, gratuitous use of wall coverings, really good cinematography and the questionHow was Dawna Lee Heising not in this movie?

You can watch this on Tubi.

USA UP ALL NIGHT: Darkman (1990)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Darkman was on USA Up All Night on May 24 and October 3, 1997 and November 5, 1994.

Before he had the chance to make Spider-Man, Sam Raimi had wanted to make a comic book movie. Having failed to get the rights to The Shadow and Batman, he just decided to create his own hero. Drawing inspiration from Universal Monsters like The Phantom of the Opera as well as The Elephant Man, he created Darkman, the tale of a once noble man driven to savagery as well as a tragic love story.

Raimi submitted the treatment to Universal Pictures, which was greenlit for a budget of $8-12 million dollars. Over twelve or more drafts — working alongside writers like Chuck Pfarrer, brothers Daniel and Joshua Goldin, and Raimi’s brother Ivan (a doctor who ensured that the medical and scientific aspects were authentic) — Raimi and his producer Robert Tapert pushed the character and movie further and further until they ended up with a three-part character arc: It starts with a sympathetic hero being destroyed. He becomes filled with hatred before finally hating who he has become as he fades away from humanity.

Despite the movie performing worse than probably any Universal movie ever in test screenings, a great ad campaign — the Who Is Darkman? posters are amazing — and decent reviews allowed this film to gross $49 million on a $ 16 million budget.

Dr. Peyton Westlake (Liam Neeson) is developing a new type of synthetic skin to help burn victims. However, every time the skin is exposed to light for more than 99 minutes, it disintegrates.

Meanwhile, his attorney girlfriend, Julie Hastings (Frances McDormand), has discovered evidence proving that developer Louis Strack Jr. has been bribing zoning commission members to build a brand-new city. When she confronts him, he confesses that it was necessary to create new jobs while warning her of Robert Durant (Larry Drake, who is incredible in this), a mobster who also wants the evidence to use against him.

At Westlake’s lab, our hero and his assistant Yakatito continue to test the skin when Durant and his men — including Ted Raimi as Nicky, Nicholas Worth (The GloveDon’t Answer the Phone) as Pauly, Dan Hicks (Evil Dead II) as Skip and Dan Bell (who you’ll remember from Wayne’s World) as Smiley — break in to take the documents that Julie has found. Yakatito is killed, and Westlake is torn to shreds — his hands are burned, his face is dipped in acid, and an explosion throws him through the building as Julie watches from the street.

Westlake is found and brought to a hospital that experiments on him with a treatment that severs the nerves of the spinothalamic tract. Now, he no longer feels physical pain, and the lack of sensory input overloads his adrenaline, giving him enhanced strength. However, he’s now susceptible to frequent bouts of alienation and madness. Look for Jenny Agutter (Logan’s Run, An American Werewolf In London) in a cameo here as the doctor who treats Westlake.

The rest of the world thinks he’s dead, so Westlake starts creating a mask of his original face to cover his burns. Seriously, Tony Gardner’s makeup is great. As he works away in his skid row lab — an homage to the Tesla coil-filled lairs of Universal movies — he also works on wiping out Durant’s henchmen one at a time.

Darkman balances horror and superheroics in equal measure, along with romance and pathos. The end of the film, as Westlake fully disappears into his new identity as The Darkman and escapes from Julie into a crowd, is the best comic book ending I’ve ever seen in a film. Raimi gets it, even ending the film with dialogue where the hero finally accepts his name: “I am everyone and no one. Everywhere. Nowhere. Call me … Darkman.”

I love that Raimi took a somewhat Hollywood budget and turned in a movie that’s pretty much a modern take on Dr. Phibes, while keeping the spirit of Universal Monsters, filtered through the hyper colors of Bava and the kinetic zooms of Fulci. It’s also a movie that presents a hero who has completely and utterly lost his mind, yet we are still with him every step of the way.

Darkman would return in two direct-to-video sequels without Neeson playing the lead role, Darkman 2: The Return of Durant and Darkman 3: Die, Darkman, Die. There was also a thirty-minute pilot for a TV series made in 1992 that never aired.

Marvel Comics also published an adaptation of the movie and a sequel mini-series. Darkman would return to comics in 2006 in a crossover with the Evil Dead and Ash Williams (Bruce Campbell was the original choice for the lead and shows up at the end). There were also four Darkman paperbacks — The Hangman, The Price of Fear, The Gods of Hell, and In the Face of Death — published in 1994.

PARAMOUNT BLU-RAY RELEASE: Special Ops: Lioness Season 1 (2023)

Taylor Sheridan’s Special Ops: Lioness centers on the CIA’sLionessprogram, a black-ops initiative that is as morally bankrupt as it is effective. The drill is simple: recruit female operatives to get close to the female relatives of high-value terrorist targets, maneuver into their inner circles and take out the bad guys before they can strike. The show may be inspired by a real-life Marine program, but Sheridan blows it up to blockbuster proportions.

Cruz Manuelos (Laysla De Oliveira) is a desperate Marine trying to outrun an abusive past who becomes the perfect asset. She’s paired with Joe McNamara (Zoe Saldaña), a handler who has seen too much, done too much and is currently losing the battle to keep her own domestic life from imploding while she plays God in the Middle East. They work for Kaitlyn Meade (Nicole Kidman), a cold, calculating and cunning CIA supervisor. And Morgan Freeman plays Edwin Mullins, the Secretary of State.

What makes this show work isn’t just the tactical gunplay or the pulse-pounding extraction sequences. It’s the human cost. The series doesn’t shy away from the brutality of the job. You’ve got CIA operatives like Kyle McManus (Thad Luckinbill) causing international incidents just to get to a target, and the constant, ugly reality of the kill mission weighing on everyone involved.

The tension peaks in the final act in Mallorca, where the mission goes sideways in the messiest way possible. It isn’t a clean spy movie resolution. It’s a bloody, kitchen-knife-to-the-throat affair that leaves everyone broken. If you’ve followed Sheridan’s work (like Yellowstone or Sicario), you know he’s obsessed with the idea that the good guys have to become monsters to stop the monsters. This show is his most cynical take on that philosophy yet.

Extras include behind-the-stories features, an embedded extra, tactics and training and inside the series. You can get this from Deep Discount.

UNEARTHED FILMS BLU RAY RELEASE: The Ugly (1996)

Scott Reynolds’ directorial debut, The Ugly, isn’t just any slasher. It’s a grim, stylized and genuinely uncomfortable look at a fractured psyche. The film takes place within the decaying, claustrophobic walls of an Auckland asylum. Simon Cartwright (Paolo Rotondo), a young, soft-spoken serial killer who has already racked up a body count in the double digits, is looking for a way out. He requests a reevaluation specifically from Dr. Karen Schumaker (Rebecca Hobbs), a psychiatrist with a reputation for high-profile forensic cases.

As the two begin their sessions, the film unwinds through a jagged series of flashbacks. We learn about Simon’s traumatic upbringing under a mother (Jennifer Ward-Lealand) who viewed him as a burden to be broken. It’s here that the title reveals its meaning—a sick, twisted take on the Ugly Duckling fable. Simon isn’t just a killer; he’s a vessel for The Ugly, a violent, psychic alternate persona that demands blood. While Dr. Schumaker tries to diagnose him, she realizes too late that she isn’t just treating a patient. She’s playing with a predator.

Beyond the story, The Ugly is all about great visual storytelling on a budget. Director Scott Reynolds made the bold choice to render all the blood in the film as a thick, viscous black. It’s a striking stylistic decision. And let’s talk pedigree: the makeup effects were handled by the legendary Wētā Workshop. Before they were winning Oscars for The Lord of the Rings trilogy, they were busy turning this low-budget New Zealand shocker into a visceral, squirm-inducing experience.

The Unearthed Films Blu-ray of this film features a new 4K scan from the 35mm interpositive, along with extras such as commentary with actors Paolo Rotondo and Rebecca Hobbs, moderated by Nathaniel Thompson; two of Scott Reynolds’ short films; a visual essay; a photo gallery; and trailers. You can get it from MVD.

UNEARTHED FILMS BLU RAY RELEASE: Cradle of Fear (2001)

Do you like and/or know who Cradle of Filth is? Then you may/may not care about this movie, which features nearly everyone from the band’s Midian era lineup, as well as placing leader Dani Filth into a role that connects all of the stories.

It was written and directed by Alex Chandon, who had directed the band’s videos for “No Time to Cry” and “Her Ghost in the Fog.”

Things start with The Man (Filth) being attacked by two muggers before he turns things around and kills both of them. The stories are a mixed bag — that’s putting it lightly — generally involving goth-looking girls dying horribly, like a girl who sleeps with The Man and has a monster rip its way out of her womb and kill one of her friends.

Everything and every story is the fault of Kemper, the son of a Satanist who has been using his occult abilities to abduct and kill children while even now continuing his rampage through his son — The Man — from a mental ward.

There’s an amputee who can’t have sex with his wife until he kills his friend and takes his leg. Then his wife dies in a car crash, and he kills himself. When the police arrive, The Man kills them both. That’s the whole story of that segment, which feels like an excuse to show amputee sex and the gore of a woman who has gone through a car window.

The cop who is trying to get to Kemper keeps hitting dead ends, and even his son is caught up in this, growing obsessed with internet snuff chatrooms and ending up killed in one. He finally makes his way to the sanitarium, but even after he shoots The Man in the head, tentacles emerge from the wounds to end the movie.

You can see the Amicus influence in this, but it’s kinda like a Cradle of Filth song: long, overblown and yet still fun in parts. Your mileage, as they always say, may vary.

The Unearthed Films Blu-ray release has plenty of extras, including a making-of for Cradle of Fear; the special German DVD making-of for Thing Something for Cradle of Fear; a gallery; trailers; Alex Chandon shorts, including Chainsaw Scumf***Bad ManorBad KarmaDrillbit and Night Pastor; and more. You can order it from MVD.