Night Gallery Season 3 Episode 10: She’ll Be Company for You (1972)

Henry Auden (Leonard Nimoy) is dealing with the loss of his wife, who died after years of a prolonged illness, a time in which he played caregiver. All he can feel is relief, but it’s a strange place to be in, a man who has been more nurse than a husband to a woman who was once his lover.

Barbara (Lorraine Gary) is Margaret’s best friend and she’s unconvinced that Henry is grieving enough. She leaves her orange tabby Jennet for company, which he claims he doesn’t need. And then he hears the bell that his wife used to use to summon him.

Now sure that a gigantic cat is loose in his house, Henry starts to sleep at the office. At every turn, his dream of a single life does not appear. The secretary he planned on being with, June (Kathryn Hays), seems to savor the idea that now that he can finally have her, she wants nothing to do with him.

Henry goes home and battles two of the big cats that are loose around his house, but finally realizes that he has to die. He walks to his room and when we see him again, he’s covered in blood and Jennet is licking a red pool in the carpet.

Directed by Gerald Perry Finnerman (the director of photography for sixty episodes of the original Star Trek) and written by David Rayfiel (Lipstick) and based on a short story by Andrea Newman, this is a story that really goes nowhere and has a resolution that makes no sense. It feels like someone just threw together some ideas and hoped that it would make more sense than it does.

Papi Gudia (1996)

Zapatlela is not the only movie from India that was inspired by Child’s Play.

Directed by Lawrence D’Souza and written by Talat Rekhi, Papi Gudia starts when a criminal named Charandas (Shakti Kapoor) escapes the police and runs into a toy store. Before he dies, he transfers his soul into a doll named Channi which is sold on the street to a young boy who needs a friend and gets a killing machine that throws his babysitter out the window.

You know, Child’s Play.

Yet it also has some of the weirdest song and dance moments I’ve seen in some time, as Alka Yagnik sings “Music I Love The Beat” at a talent show and it breaks whatever reality — yes, I realize this is a movie where a girl’s doll with a jaunty cap becomes a walking and talking murder puppet — exists and takes over the movie for nearly ten minutes of happy pop bliss. If you have issues with the zooms of Italian cinema, get ready to lose whatever is left of your mind or lunch.

Also, it has the following mission statement, in English no less (thanks to Die, Danger, Die, Die, Kill!):

“The story idea of the film is to create positive feelings in children which will make them careful against similar situations in the future and also to warn them against blind faith or surrender to alien things be it a doll or computer toys, robots, etc.”

I mean, just look at this doll.

Bring on all the remix remake rip-off Chucky clones and allow me to hold them.

You can watch this on YouTube.

GET READY FOR POPCORN FRIGHTS 2023!

The Popcorn Frights Film Festival is here! Established in 2015 by Miami locals Igor Shteyrenberg and Marc Ferman, it has quickly grown into the leading international genre film festival in Southeast United States.

The Festival is hosted at the O Cinema South Beach, located just across the street from the world-famous Ocean Drive boulevard in the heart of Miami Beach, as well as the Savor Cinema in Fort Lauderdale, a historic theater that was originally built as a Methodist Church in the 1940’s after the first building was blown away by the monster hurricane of 1926. To learn more, visit the official site and see the schedule of movies and events to discover all the amazing things playing.

It also has a virtual component. You can get a virtual pass to watch the festival from August 10 to 20.

To keep track of what movies I’ve watched from this Popcorn Frights, check out this Letterboxd list.

Get ready! I’m excited to watch as many films as I can from this fest!

Passionate Killing in the Dream (1992)

Directed by Kuo-Chu Huang and written by Chi-Hua Liu, this stars Michiko Nishiwaki (In the Line of Duty 3) as Sha Sha Lee, a fashion photographer who keeps having visions of Chit Chit (Gordon Liu), a former kickboxer with brain damage who now stalks the streets of Thailand taking photos of women before he kills them.

Yet Sha Sha isn’t some frightening girl who needs saved. In one scene, she and her boss Queen (Cynthia Lam) fight a gang at a food stall while continuing their conversation. The problem is that Chit Chit soon figures out that she’s inside his mind and decides to kill her before she can figure out who he is and tell the police.

I’m used to see Nishiwaki as a villain and Liu as a monk hero, so this is definitely a big change. I also find it amusing that so many reviews call this a giallo — which it totally is! — but don’t remark how much it takes from The Eyes of Laura Mars. Instead of fashion and eroticism, you get fight scenes. And Queen being in love with Sha Sha, but can you blame her?

You can watch this on YouTube.

Intikam Kadini (1979)

Directed by Naki Yurter and written by Recep Filiz, Intikam Kadini (Revenge Woman) is the story of Aysel (Zerrin Dogan), One evening, four men had their car break down and her father generously allowed them to stay at their home. Later that evening, their assaulted her and killed him.

By the end of this movie, Aysel will have cut, chopped, broken and burned four men beyond recognition… but no jury in Turkey would ever convict her! That’s because Intikam Kadini is inspired by the film whose tagline I just quoted: I Spit On Your Grave. Well, by inspired, I mean that Aysel goes to the city and seduces and kills each of the men one at a time. She doesn’t race a boat or castrate a man on camera like Camille Keaton did before her.

This film barely survived the purge of Turkey’s seventies sexploitation films and all that survives is a multiple generations removed videotape that has been uploaded to the web again and again.

Between the Muzak-sounding “Penny Lane” and Vangelis’ “Pulstar,” this has the music thievery that I demand in my movie watching. It’s just that I’ve never really gotten into rape revenge movies. The act itself is a real-life horror and so often, it seems like the movies wallow in the crime more than than they show the retribution. They should be empowering but they come off as shallow; I get that this is all exploitation but I have no interest in seeing women get treated this way unless they’re going to set people ablaze and go even further.

Haunted Trail (2021)

Normally, I would skip right past a movie with the poster and description — “A group of college friends receives the surprise of their lives when they discover there is an actual killer on the scene of a local haunted trail.” — but then I noticed that Haunted Trail was directed by Robin Givens.

Yes, the Robin Givens who pretty much knocked out Mike Tyson.

The first thing you may notice is that the killer looks like the black version of Michael Myers, which is another reason that I watched this. And the direction by Givens is actually fine. But the script by Raven Magwood — who is in the film as Portia — and Paul Lindsay doesn’t give her much to work with. It’s the much-told story of a haunted house — it was filmed at Madworld Haunted Attractions in Piedmont, South Carolina — having a real killer inside it and there aren’t many twists or turns, other than the cast being almost all black and having one token white friend, which is a nice inversion from the traditional slasher.

There was one part that made me laugh and that’s when one character went back for her earring. I’ve seen dumber things in slashers but I don’t know when. Desi Banks and Marquise C. Brown seem to be the biggest names in the cast but were new to me; they’re fine in their roles. The most entertaining thing about this movie? The IMDB reviews that are either 10 out of 10, proclaiming that this is a classic, or 1 out of 10 and taking incredible shots at this movie.

You can watch this on Tubi.

TUBI ORIGINAL: Below Deck Deceit (2023)

The rich and famous are weird. They’re the kind of people who tip you a few thousand dollars all in $2 bills. But when you’re serving them, like the crew of this movie, you do it with a smile and worry about how it all makes you feel after.

Sadie (Mae Wilkerson) is the biggest thing to happen to music since probably Britney. On the day her father died, she strummed a guitar, sang a song and uploaded it to the internet. Ever since, she’s been famous. So famous that she can date two men — Robbie (Paul Toweh) and Christopher (Troy Osterberg) — and go from TV to tour with no time for her to recover. She’s on the verge of burning out, a fact that her bodyguard Bill (Charles Mesure) worries about and her agent Kara (Sarah Jane Morris) is pushing her through.

Maybe a boat vacation will help?

The crew of the luxury yacht — Reaghan (Shellie Sterling), Kyle (Freddie L. Fleming), Dylan (Anthony Starzynski) and Captain Jimmy (Jason Faunt) are here for their every need. Yet the slightest hint of drama or paparazzi sends Sadie off the deep end. And perhaps her team don’t all have her best interests in mind.

After all, the night before the cruise, she was so upset that she handed Sadie her bracelet over a stall in the women’s room, telling her that she no longer wanted it. That’ll be important later, you know. So will all the little innuendo and glares, as well as the fact that Captain Jimmy was once Kara’s first client. And that Sadie’s lawyer Camille (Sara Coates) was beaten into a coma that same night at the club.

Sadie is destined to drown after being tossed overboard. And you’ll probably put it all together long before Reaghan does. But it’s a well-shot and quick enough affair, directed well by Jodi Binstock, who made another decent Tubi original, Prisoner of Love.

You can watch this on Tubi.

Blue Island (1982)

After The Blue Lagoon came out in 1980, the idea of cashing in had to appeal to exploitation filmmakers all over the world. After all, all you needed was a young guy and girl willing to get naked and do some love scenes on an island paradise. In Canada, Stuart Gillard — the man who would one day direct Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III — made Paradise with Phoebe Cates and Willie Aames. In Italy, directors Enzo Doria and Luigi Russo — who would go on to produce the similar yet Biblical Adam and Eve vs. the Cannibals a year later with Mark Gregory and Andrea Goldman — worked with writer Dardano Sacchetti (what movies didn’t he write in the 80s in Italy?) to bring their own version of La Laguna Blu to Italian screens with Fabio Meyer as Billy and Sabrina Siani as Bonnie.

As always, Siani is probably the best reason to watch this. She seems supernatural, like some kind of goddess carved from clay on Themyscira. She does the same in so many of the movies that she appears in, like Conquest, The Throne of Fire, 2020 Texas Gladiators and Ator the Fighting Eagle.

They land on a deserted island after a plane crash and think they’re all alone, but nope. There’s someone else on the island — Shanghai (Mario Pedone) — who at times seems like an enemy and other times a friend but then becomes an enemy again and then he saves them from a poisonous mollusk. Ah, confusion in an Italian movie, I love it so very much.

This was called Due gocce d’acqua salata in Italy, which means Two Drops of Salt WaterBlue Island is a much better name for this movie.

That said, for all the attention that Brooke Shields got for her beauty, I’d definitely say that she’s in Siani’s shadow.

Ananse: Spider-Man (2011)

In most of the world — other than Turkey, as witnessed by 3 Giant Men and Japanese video games, as Spidey fought Joe Musashi in  The Revenge of Shinobi — your friendly neighborhood Spider-Man is, by definition of his heroics and nickname a hero. Not so in the world of Ghana bootleg cinema, as Rockson Film and Music Production created a movie that combined Peter Parker with the African myth of Ananse.

“In the olden days, Ananase the Spider was the wisest among all the beasts. Ananse’s wife was called Akonori Yaa, his four children were called Ntekuma, Afodotwdotwe, Etekelekelen and Naakorohwea. And it came to pass that Anase dies and when he died, his family member buried him in this bowl. Lady Spider and Oracle are currently the caretakers of this bowl,and they have formed a guild called the Anase Guild. They are mischievous and steal from people to fund the Guild. The money is kept by them and their power source is the bowl. Beware! Don’t open this bowl or Ananse’s spirit will escape. When he escapes, he will enter into a human body and transform into Spider-Man. With this power, he will be able to climb walls and jump like the spider.”

With those words, we begin.

Lady Spider and Oracle have been alive for centuries and they like nothing better than stealing money and beating children. After all, they have the power of the bowl to protect them. But what if that bowl ends up in human hands and everyone is confronted by a red and blue superhero who gets some revenge while throwing fireballs?

There’s also a demon and a gang that uses axes to slice open children to harvest their organs, so trust me, you probably won’t be bored. And if you are, just know that a really shiny PS1 Spider-Man will show up to fight people every few minutes.  I mean, the effects are close to Marvel level — they were fixed up in 2020 — at least proportionally when you consider that this was made for the cost of a new issue of Spider-Man (as of August 2023, $4.99).

You can watch both parts on YouTube.