Slasher Month: The Red Right Hand (2001)

As I write this, Boston’s iconic, trendsetting alternative rock station, WFNX 101.7 FM, is no more.

When the station went on the air in 1947 as WLYN, it broadcast a programming palate of simulcasting its sister AM station with the same callsign on AM 1360, then originated its own programming at night after the AM went off the air at sundown (an AM-FM combo broadcast standard until the mid-70s). Upon the convergence-birth of Los Angeles’ alternative rock station KROQ (the home of Rodney Bingenheimer; his career chronicled in The Mayor of the Sunset Strip) and MTV in the early ’80s, the station came to drop its variety-ethnic programming in 1981 and began experimenting with new wave music in the evenings.

By 1982, WLYN became known as “Y-102,” one of the first full-time new-wave rock stations in the country; a station sale in 1983 resulted in the format remaining, but birthing a new set of call letters — WFNX — until another station sale in 2012 to Clear Channel Communications (now iHeartMedia) resulted in an automated format flip to an “Adult Hits” and a new set of call letters: WBWL (a common practice — live to automation — in these digital times).

The first song WFNX played under its new, full-time alt-rock format was the Cure’s “Let’s Go to Bed.” In August of 1991, with buzz on the group in full effect, DJ Kurt St. Thomas gave the then commercially unknown Nirvana their world broadcast premiere of their new album, Nevermind, from start to finish — and we all know how that album turned out.

At that point, WFNX became a trendsetter of the alt-rock community, giving the first national airplay to the top-selling bands The Darkness, Franz Ferdinand, Florence and the Machine, Hawthorne Heights, and Jet, just to name a few. When the station when off the air in 2012, they went off with the song that started it all: the Cure’s “Let’s Go to Bed.” Nirvana’s first major, mainstream concert appearance beyond the college-rock club scene was for WFNX’s annual anniversary party in August 28, 1991.

To call St. Thomas — as do Beatles historians with New York DJ Murray the K as “The Fifth Beatle” — the “fourth Nirvana member” (or fifth, if you count the late addition of Pat Smear of the Germs as a second guitarist during the In Utero years), is no understatement.

VHS image courtesy of sweesus-smasher/Paul Zamerelli of VHS Collector.com

By 1996 Kurt St. Thomas transitioned into filmmaking. Along with fellow WFNX DJ Mike Gioscia, they made the 1999 black and white film noir Captive Audience. The film dealt with the odd, symbiotic relationship between an overnight DJ and a gun-toting intruder at the station. Winning several international and domestic film awards, St. Thomas and Gioscia were encouraged to shoot a more adventurous feature production.

Recruiting John Doe of X (Border Radio) as their star, The Red Right Hand is a horror film that begins in 1963 as it follows five high school friends forced to relive a terrifying secret at their 15th high school reunion in 1978. Also released to video under the titles Above and Below and Jon’s Good Wife, the original title was taken from a Nick Cave song. 

As with most of the Troma Entertainment catalog, don’t let the logos from The Asylum deter you from spinning the DVD, as the studio only distributed the film; they were not involved in its production.

Is it “The Creepiest movie since Rosemary Baby!” as the DVD box claims? No. And The Asylum marketing department has a lot of balls making us thing we’re getting a film that matches the majesty of Roman Polanski. However, St. Thomas and Mike Gioscia have crafted a solid mystery drama rife with blackmail, murder, private demons, and rattling bones: all the plot points you expect in a noir.

St. Thomas would later work at the KROQ, the L.A. rock station responsible for birthing WFNX; while there, he came to produce the long-running specialty show “Jonesy Jukebox” for Steve Jones of the Sex Pistols (The Great Rock ‘n’ Roll Swindle). He and John Doe are currently in post-production stages on their latest effort — and St. Thomas third feature film overall — D.O.A: The Movie, with co-star Lucinda Jenney, who we last saw in Rob Zombie’s 3 from Hell. A noir homage, it concerns Frank Bigelow (John Doe), a Florida private detective hired to follow the ne’er-do-well husband of a St. Augustine socialite. The spiraling double-crosses ensue.

Even though The Asylum made the VHS and DVD widely available in the marketplace — I’ve seen it numerous times on rental and retail shelves, cut-out bins and second hand stores — they’ve opted not to offer it as an online stream. There’s not even an online trailer or clips to share. But if you Google it, you’ll readily find VHS and DVD copies in the online marketplace.

About the Author: You can learn more about the writings of R.D Francis on Facebook. He also writes for B&S About Movies.


We’ve since done a “John Doe Week” tribute in December! You can visit this recap/round up for those film reviews.

SLASHER MONTH: Berserker (1987)

We’ve had every holiday and nearly every kind of killer by 1987, so why not bring a Norseman in to wipe out campers? It can happen, right? They say it’s a wild bear, but we all know it’s the Berserker, right? The kind of killer that can never rest, that can only subsist on human flesh and will never die. Yeah. Berserker!

Just like all the finest slashers, a wizened elder — in this case, Pappy Nyquist (George “Buck’”Flowers) — tries to warn these kids. Yet before you can say Ragnarok, they’re all ransacking one another in the woods and that can never go well.

You have to love the gumption of the film’s producers to just outright steal the art from Pink Floyd’s The Wall to sell this.

This is a movie that really demands more Vikings and doesn’t deliver. It’s close — so close — to giving you the unholy face painted body destroying epic that you want it to be. It’s oh-so-close and fun at times, but what it could be overshadows what it is.

You can get this from Vinegar Syndrome or watch it on Tubi.

SLASHER MONTH: To All a Goodnight (1980)

What is it about Christmas that engenders just as many slashers as Halloween? Is it the ennui? The dread? The hatred of being forced to be nice and needing the release that only violence can deliver?

While this film borrows liberally from Black Christmas, it does have David Hess as a director, which was my primary reason for tracking it down. If you’re used to seeing him in films like Last House on the Left and the Italian remix House on the End of the Park, this is your opportunity to see what he would do on the other side of the lens.

Two years ago at the Calvin Finishing School For Girls, a student was killed when she was accidentally pushed over a balcony. Now, as the school empties for the holiday break, five of the girls decide to not go home and have a weekend alone with their boyfriends. But by the end of the first night, one of their classmates is dead.

The girls convince Nancy (Jennifer Runyon, who ended up in another seasonal slasher, Silent Night, Bloody Night 2: Revival) to drug their house mother so that they can all go to an airstrip and party with the guys outside their private plane. How rich are these dudes? This leads to, of course, more murder. And oh yeah — Deep Throat star Harry Reems as their pilot.

Unlike the aforementioned Black Christmas, the killer is revealed in this movie and it’s very Mrs. Vorhees. There’s a second twist as well to liven things up, as if things need any more color after the airplane itself is used to kill two of the teenagers.

This was written by Alex Rebar, who B&S About Movies’ eagle-eyed readers will spot as Steve West, The Incredible Melting Man. Kiva Laurence, who plays the housemother Mrs. Jensen, would go on to appear in the Americanized giallo Schizoid the same year.

This film is incredibly dark and the VHS format did not help that at all. Today’s blu ray transfers have helped, but that fact has kept it from being included in the discussion of best slashers. It doesn’t belong there, but that doesn’t mean that it’s not worth watching.

You can watch this on Amazon Prime.

2020 Scarecrow Psychotronic Challenge is here!

I’ve been waiting all year to get to the 2020 Scarecrow Psychotronic Challenge.

Want to see what we watched in 2018 and 2019? Just click on the links.

Starting tomorrow, we’re ready, willing and able to attack 31 movies. We’re ready to learn. We’re ready to teach. We’re ready to escape the hell that is this country with some weird movies and no small amount of substances!

Here are this year’s rules:

We’re also doing an entire month of slashers when we’re not doing the challenge. Last year, we hit 60 slashers. This year? Who can say! Check out our slashtastic Letterboxd list to see where we’ve been and stay tuned all month to see where we’re going.

100 Best Kills: Decapattack! (2020)

This year’s Fantastic Fest at the Alamo Drafthouse is quite different than any before, as folks are virtually watching it. But for a dedicated homebody like me, this has been a great experience, getting to see so many of the movies I usually only read about and find later at the same time as others.

All of this fun should be shared. You can get a free Alamo On-Demand account to watch Fantastic Fest 2020 from home.

Kicking things off was this live event, which is still streaming, in which you can watch a hundred of the best on-screen deaths of all time, mainly concentrating on — if the title didn’t clue you in — heads being ripping clean off bodies.

A glorious assault on the sense, this Zack Carlson-hosted clip fest is filled with both big budget and small ticket films. Here’s a quick burst of the ones I was able to figure out, as well as some blank spots that you might help me fill in.

  1. Deadly Friend
  2. Riki-Oh: The Story of Ricky: If you’re looking for the all-time head-smashing champion, this is it. More people have seen the clips of this film than the full movie, which is a shame. Just seeing a few moments of its gore-soaked excess was enough to lift my mind out of the post-debate doldrums.
  3. There was an astounding clip of a man begging a woman to kill him, with his head being cut off and then her stabbing him through the head until his brain crawled out and began walking by itself…
  4. The Greasy Strangler
  5. Hereditary: A big-budget head-ripper.
  6. Body parts of kids being dropped into a swimming pool.
  7. Dawn of the Dead
  8. Day of the Dead
  9. The Omen: If you’re going to show a head getting chopped off, you can’t skip this one.
  10. Deep Red: One of my favorite deaths in a film, the death by elevator in this scene stands, um, heads and shoulders above many of the other lift kills that were shown.
  11. A Bay of Blood: Bava forever!
  12. Bad Taste: To be followed by…
  13. Braindead: Man, Peter Jackson made some bonkers movies, huh?
  14. Evil Dead 2: Always perfect.
  15. Total Recall: Probably the most kills I’ve ever seen in a big budget film.
  16. Alien: Oh, Bishop.
  17. Raiders of the Lost Ark
  18. Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
  19. The Thing
  20. Aguirre, The Wrath of God
  21. The Godfather: An appearance by an animal — instead of human — cranium being torn off.
  22. Silent Night, Deadly Night: To be fair, the sledding head lopping could also come from Silent Night, Deadly Night Part 2, where it was recycled.
  23. Pieces: Again, all it takes is ten seconds of this movie to put a smile on my face.
  24. Nightmare
  25. Intruder
  26. A scene here shows a cop get a piece of wood through the face before he gets decapitated and I have no idea what it’s from, but it’s awesome.
  27. Chopping Mall: Pure joy as always.
  28. Street Trash
  29. Maniac
  30. Return of the Living Dead
  31. Reanimator
  32. An American Werewolf In London
  33. Final Destination 2
  34. The Prowler
  35. Wild at Heart
  36. Several Friday the 13th kills, starting with Betsey Palmer losing her head,  Jason taking out paintball camo kids in Jason Lives: Friday the 13th Part VI and the boxing scene from Jason Takes Manhattan and finally the astounding frozen face scene in Jason X
  37. A shot on video kill I can’t place
  38. A second shot on video kill I can’t figure out
  39. A mutant tearing off a man’s head in the woods.
  40. A guy in an Aztec outfit killing a woman with a snake and a knife
  41. Killing Spree: A man kills a mohawked woman and throws her head at an old man
  42. Multiple scenes from Highlander
  43. As well as Highlander 2: The Quickening
  44. Speed
  45. Tales from the Hood
  46. The Mummy
  47. Resident Evil
  48. Sye Raa Narasimha Reddy (thanks Cinema Strikes!)
  49. Rambo 4
  50. Predator
  51. Robotrix
  52. Raiders of Atlantis
  53. A man with a cyborg hand killing people
  54. Dead Heat: I am so happy that this movie is finally getting some notice!
  55. A post-apocalyptic swordfight.
  56. The Running Man
  57. Conan the Barbarian
  58. She: Another movie I’m so excited to have more people get down with!
  59. Four movies in a row where motorcycle riders get their heads cut off, starting with a guy on a green bike losing his head…
  60. An entire gang losing their heads all at once…
  61. A motorcycle hitting a bus, which causes a massive crash
  62. An Indian man on a bicycle whose loose head lands on the hood of a fancy car.
  63. Death Race 2000
  64. Two fancy men in a car with a giant knife that emerges from the door and drops two kids’ heads in a basket.
  65. Warriors of the Wasteland
  66. Caligula
  67. The Lift
  68. Tammy and the T-Rex
  69. A Rambo ripoff in a POW camp with a decapitation
  70. A guy on a raft getting chopped in half by a plane
  71. Bone Tomahawk
  72. An Aztec sacrifice with a head tumbling down the steps…is this Apocalypto?
  73. The Patriot
  74. A guy’s head getting cut off by a pane of glass and then hitting a car window while kids watch.
  75. A white sports car hits a kid on a bike and backs up over him, then two girls take polaroids of the bloody accident.
  76. Multiple men are lifted into a ceiling fan and beheaded.
  77. Hobo with a Shotgun
  78. Punks killing an old man with a bumper car
  79. The Sender
  80. Someone cleaning out a tractor when an evil goat mentally shoves him into it. UPDATE: This is from Deadline.
  81. Empire of the Dark
  82. An Asian film with lots of smoke and a man puking as a flying head attacks.
  83. Master of the Flying Guillotine
  84. Boxer’s Omen
  85. Devil Fetus
  86. Infra-Man: Yes!
  87. A ninja slicing off the head of a security guard.
  88. A white ninja slicing the head off of a black one.
  89. An Asian man with a mullet and mustache flipping out on some henchmen before one of them emerges to kill a bandaged man with a katana.
  90. Raw Force: I think!
  91. Audition
  92. Battle Royale
  93. Tag
  94. An Indian man, a popcorn machine and a carnival ride that kills people.
  95. A guy’s head going back and falling off.
  96. Bones
  97. The Fury: John Cassavetes getting blown up for money.
  98. Killer Klowns from Outer Space
  99. A monster throwing a man’s head into a bowl of soup.
  100. A baseball player’s head getting chopped off.
  101. The Hangover 3
  102. Monty Python and the Holy Grail
  103. UHF
  104. Scanners
  105. If Footmen Tire You, What Will Horses Do?

That’s all I can figure out. This was a blast and I’m basically posting this in the hopes that others will help me fill in the blanks and let me know where I was wrong!

Ivansxtc (2000)

Shot at 60i fps on the Sony HDW-700A HD video format digital camera, which proved problematic for theatrical distribution, this film was originally intended to be a Dogma 95 movie.

It’s a rough satire on Hollywood, filled with booze and excess, and comes from director Bernard Rose, who you may know from Candyman and Paperhouse. It’s also based on Leo Tolstoy’s novella The Death of Ivan Ilyich, so if you have a low tolerance for art films, you may not enjoy this. We sure did.

Danny Huston (half-brother of Anjelica Huston) plays Ivan Beckman, a doped up and driven agent who starts the film by dying. We go back to see just how he got to the grave — thanks to an early cancer diagnosis — and the lives he’s touched along the way, including Peter Weller as his sleazy client, SLC Punk director James Merendino as a director (typecasting?) and numerous hangers-on. Writer and producer Lisa Enos acted is in this as well and look for an appearance by Tiffani Amber-Thiessen.

Huston is the main reason to show up for this, as he makes you care despite the grainy looking footage and grabs you directly by the collar and forces you to watch.

Like most Arrow releases, this is packed with extras, like extended party sequence outtakes, a new documentary on the movie called Charlotte’s Story,  interviews, trailers, and two cuts — the preferred director’s version and the producer’s version — with brand new commentary for the Extended Cut with co-writer/producer/ actor Lisa Enos and filmmaker Richard Wolstencroft.

You can get this from Arrow, who were kind enough to send us a copy.

Jesus Shows You the Way to the Highway (2019)

Made with talent from Spain, Estonia, Ethiopia, Latvia and Romania — yet shot in English — Jesus Shows You the Way to the Highway is honestly unlike any movie you’ve ever seen before.

It’s a cross between exploitation cinema, surrealism, web videos, strange animation and no small amount of Phillip K. Dick all in one more, as hunchbacked CIA special agent Gagano (Daniel Tadesse, Crumbs) ust enter the cyber world of Psychobook to stop a computer virus and a gang of maniacs who have the faces of Stalin, Peter Graves, Richard Pryor and more. Oh yeah — Jesus with a boombox and an African-American Batman that fights like Dolemite but has his logo blurred out shows up spoiling for a fight.

Somehow, this movie crosses Bond films with kung fu, 16-bit era video games, Turkish ripoff cinema, lucha films and so many more genres that you know that everyone from our site knows and loves. It’s like a mashup of everything we love all in one frenetic and astounding package. I don’t know what kind of drugs Miguel Llansó has, but he’s high on his own supply as only the best of all creatives should be.

If you think you’ve seen everything, wait until you see this.

This Arrow Video release is — as always — packed with extas. Beyond the high definition 1080p presentation, there’s a new audio commentary by critics Alexandra Heller-Nicholas and Anton Bitel; From Talinn with Love, a new visual essay by critic Will Webb concerning the influence of exploitation films on this movie;  an audio interview with the director and three of his other films, CrumbsChigger Ale and Night In the Wild Garden; a proof-of-concept trailer, theatrical trailer, image gallery and more.

You can grab this now from Arrow Video, who were kind enough to send us a copy. That has no bearing on our review, however. You can also learn more on the official Facebook page for the film.

Crumbs (2015)

Candy (Daniel Tadesse, who has worked with director Miguel Llansó on four different projects) is a small man under a large sky that is filled with a hovering spacecraft that surely must be dead as it hovers above. Yet since he was young, he dreamed of being on that ship.

Candy knows that the ship is alive again and he’s sick of being a collector of discarded ephemera, like all the late 20th century pop memorabilia he keeps finding. This is a world where a Ninja Turtle toy can be seen as a god, where Michael Jordan is worshipped as a deity.

Ethopian science fiction, set inside a pre-apocalypse country that looks like the end times already came, capped with a religious experience while watching the Turkish remake/remix/ripoff film Süpermen Dönüyor. Trust me — that’s all it took to make me adore this.

If you think this one is strange, well, get ready. Tadesse and Llansó followed it with Jesus Shows You the Way to the Highway, which was recently released by Arrow Video. This movie is on the second disk of that release.

Man — who knew that on the other side of the world such astounding movies were being made? I’m excited to see what happens next.

La Noche del Ejecutor (1992)

Dr. Hugo Arranz (Paul Naschy!) celebrates his fiftieth anniversary with his wife and daughter before he finds himself cosplaying as Paul Kersey from Death Wish after they are both assaulted and killed while his tongue is cut from his mouth.

He survives. And he learns to work out. No, really.

Within minutes of running time, Hugo has emerged as a force of death, ready to wipe out everyone in his path. Despite this being shot in 1989, it didn’t get released until some time between 1992 and 1999. And to tell the truth, it may as well have been made in 1974.

This is one of the few times you’ll hear Naschy’s real voice in a film and the only time you’ll see him battle a final boss in an S&M mask. So there’s that, right? Right!

Beast from Haunted Cave (1959)

Filmed at the same time as Ski Troop Attack and released on a double bill with The Wasp Woman, this Monte Hellman movie would mark the first of his many projects with Roger Corman.

Hellman would say, “What interested me about it was that it really wasn’t a monster movie. Roger liked Key Largo very much. I think that was one of his favorite movies. He kept making Key Largo just different versions of it. In this case he added a monster to it.

As for the titular beast, Hellman would say, “They literally spent two dollars at the dime store. It was mostly angel hair and paper mache monster.” The crew nicknamed the beast Humphrass. It was created and operated by Chris Robinson, who would go on to play the lead in William Grefé’s Stanley.

Basically, a gang gets together and tries to steal some gold, but ends up waking this monster and, well, bad things happen.

Linné Ahlstrand, who plays the doomed barmaid Natalie, was Playboy’s Playmate of the Month for July 1958 and Richard Sinatra, who plays Marty, was a cousin of Ol’ Blue Eyes. It’s things like that that sell a movie, you know.

There was a sequel planned — that’s why this ends like it does — but it never happened. However, Corman would pretty much make the movie all over again in 1961 and call it Creature from Haunted Sea.

You can watch this on Amazon Prime and Tubi.