TUBI ORIGINAL: On the Run (2024)

Directed by Traci Hayes (Blood, Sweat and Cheers) and written by Sarah Eisenberg and Becky Wangberg (who have primarily worked in cartoons), On the Run is set up years ago when bikers Vince (William Mark McCullough) and Rick (K.C. Clyde) end their friendship over a drug deal. Vince goes to jail and the moment he gets out, he comes after Rick, who has a new life with his wife Laurie (Kara Luiz) and daughters Kayla (Sofia Masson) and Paige (Taylor Geare). It’s no spoiler to tell you that Paige is Vince’s daughter and wants her back as much as he wants everyone dead.

Rick and the girls are on the run—yes, Mom dies, there’s another spoiler—but there’s also the woman they think is their aunt, Steph (Pamela Rose Rodriguez), who is the witness protection agent who has been protecting them for years.

One daughter is the good girl, the other is kind of bad, their dad used to be a criminal biker, and their mom is dead. There’s everything you want in a young girl on the run movie. It’s not life-changing, but like most Tubi Originals, it’s a competent film other than, you know, cops never acting like cops really act, such as calling for backup, not taking innocent people into dangerous situations and not indiscriminately shooting everyone around them.

You can watch this on Tubi.

TUBI ORIGINAL: Wrong Place, Wrong Time (2025)

Chris Stokes makes a Tubi movie every month, but this time, they’re stretching their wings and going from romantic thrillers to a spy epic. In it, Kasey (Samantha A. Smith) goes from being a bad girl acting out after her dad dies to being part of a home invasion and being pulled into a conspiracy, getting arrested and going on the run from government agents along with her mother Latisha (Apryl Jones).

Luckily, her mother knows Victoria (Lateria Hope), who turns out to be even more connected to this conspiracy. She has a secret device that can start and steal any car, for example, and she just may be able to get this family out of this alive. I can’t tell you how surprised I was by this one, which yes, has a scene where a man makes a big deal out of making hot chocolate, but also is about government conspiracies, secret agent killing machines and a mother and daughter trying to deal with grief.

Shout out to Stokes for switching up how he films things and getting a ton out of his budget, making this look completely different from anything I’ve seen. This also seems to set up a sequel and as always, I’m here for it. I’m also trying to manifest my dream of a Stokes Cinematic Universe crossover between his series. Come on, Footage Films and Tubi.

You can watch this on Tubi.

CLEOPATRA ENTERTAINMENT BLU RAY RELEASE: Cocaine Werewolf (2024)

How do you know this is from Cleoptra Records? The soundtrack has The 69 Cats, Front Line Assembly, Pink Fairies, Switchblade Symphony, Hawkestrel, Synaesthesia, The Brains, Mike Pinera and Hollywood After Dark on it.

Directed by Mark Polonia and written by Ford Austin and Tyger Torrez, this is set in the familiar woods of Pennsylvania where Polonia has made so many movies, but never one where a New York stockbroker named Jack (Brice Kennedy) gets bitten, the moon gets full and he snorts a whole bag of coke. Actually, the moon doesn’t even matter. It just takes cocaine to make this beast go feral.

There’s also a movie getting made in those woods about an evil clown, but mostly, the actresses (Jamie Morgan and Greta Volkova) are making out with each other. This bit of exploitation follows a girl in a Little Red Riding Hood outfit shooting content for her adult site who gets torn up by the original werewolf. This leads to Jack’s Uber driver getting killed, and we have a movie.

I want all Mark Polonia movies to come out on this label from now on, and I want more goth and rockabilly bands to find their songs in microbudget horror movies. I’m used to these films just showing up on Tubi, so seeing them on Blu-ray makes me overjoyed.

You can get this from MVD.

88 FILMS BLU-RAY RELEASE: The Lady Assassin (1983)

Directed and written by Lu Chun-ku (Bastard Swordsman), this is about the power struggle between the Fourth Yung Cheng (Tony Leung) and Fourteenth Princes (Mok Siu-Chung) — as the Kangxi Emperor (Ching Miao) is dying — with the Lady Assassin Lui Si Niang (Leanne Lau) caught between them and bodyguard Teng Tsung (Norman Chui) ready to protect the Fourteenth Prince with his life. He just might, as the Fourth Prince has hired the unstoppable Min Geng-Yiu (Jason Pai Piao) to kill everyone in his path.

Yes, there are some parts about how the rulers treat the Han Chinese, but it also has most of the cast battling a Japanese ninja (the director!) and his army of gold ninjas. After you just read about all that palace intrigue, let me assure you that there are throwing stars, wire fighting, sword battles, a giant throwing star and two people cut in half—all in one scene—one up and down and the other left to right.

The title doesn’t come into play until the movie’s last few minutes, but who cares? Let me reiterate: giant throwing star and gold ninjas.

The 88 Films Blu-ray release of The Lady Assassin comes with a set of 4 collector art cards, an interview with Poon Kin-Kwan, a stills gallery, a trailer and a reversible sleeve featuring original art. You can get it from MVD.

Murder, She Wrote S1 E4: It’s a Dog’s Life (1984)

Jessica can’t even go to a polo match without family in-fighting and murder, as Denton Langley falls off his horse and dies. His dog, Teddy, gets the whole estate. But is the pup a murderer?

Season 1, Episode 4: It’s a Dog’s Life (November 4, 1984)

Tonight on Murder, She Wrote

Rich people, trained animals and, as always, murder.

Who’s in it, outside of Angela Lansbury, and were they in any exploitation movies?

Denton Langley, whose death sets all of this off, is played by Dan O’Herlihy, who has been in everything from Luis Buñuel’s Robinson Crusoe to Imitation of LifeFail Safe and The Tamarind Seed. But for us, he’s best known as “The Old Man” in RoboCop, Grig in The Last Starfighter and Conal Cochran in
Halloween III: Season of the Witch.

Marcus Boswell is played by Dean Jones. Once, I wrote about how much I hated Jones in Disney movies because he’s always in a bad mood. I hate to bring it up now and get more hate mail. He’s also in Antonio Margheriti’s Mr. Superinvisible, which was distributed by K-Tel.

Morgana Cramer is Cathryn Damon, who you may remember from Webster and Soap. She’s also in the 1981 made-for-TV Satanic shocker Midnight Offerings.

Lenore Kasdorf plays Trish Langley. She’s also Rico’s mom in Starship Troopers and appears in Amityville Dollhouse and Missing In Action.

Spencer Langley is Jared Martin, who is in a ton of movies that I love, including Twin SittersAenigmaKarate WarriorThe Sea Serpent and Warriors of the Year 2072. And how could I forget — The Lonely Lady.

The Sheriff is Roger Miller, who sang “Dang Me,” “Do-Wacka-Do,” “Chug-A-Lug,” “Little Green Apples” and, you knew it, “King of the Road.”

Abby Benton Freestone, who is Jessica’s friend in this, is Lynn Redgrave, who was a serious actress and well above most of the movies I like. Except, you know, movies like MidnightThe Happy Hooker and Disco Beaver from Outer Space.

Forrest Tucker is Tom Cassidy, and man, his IMDB is like my heaven: the Klaus Kinski TV movie TimestalkersThe Crawling EyeThe Abominable Snowman, and two guest spots on Flo.

Isiah Potts is Gregory Walcott, who, of course, is Jeff Trent from Plan 9 From Outer Space.

Echo Cramer is actually Cherie Curie! Formerly of The Runaways, she was also in WavelengthParasiteFoxes and Twilight Zone: The Movie.

Small parts include Byron Cherry (who ruined many a child’s 1982-1983 TV season when he was Coy Duke and replaced the Duke boys with his other cousin Vance for 19 episodes), James Hampton (Uncle Howard from the Teen Wolf movies), Sandy Ward (Bette Midler’s dad in The Rose), Robert Cornthwaite (seemingly typecast as a doctor in movies like Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?The Primevals, the original The ThingMant! within MatineeThe War of the Worlds and Time Trackers. This too, because he’s the coroner), Donna Anderson (Count Yorga), Greg Norberg (who produced Hot Shots!) Bernard McDonald and Brian Mozur.

What happens?

Jess’ cousin Abby is the horse trainer for rich guy Denton Langley. He is celebrating his 80th birthday with a fox hunt, which turns into a hunt for something else once he gets a look at Jessica. His family is pretty much the absolute worst, and soon, the fox hunt claims his life when his horse jumps too high and he’s thrown.

“Push, Teddy! Push!” I have screamed this in Lynn Redgrave’s voice so many times. This episode features a trained dog who is the highlight.

Soon, a VHS will reveals that all $3 million of the estate will go to the dog. Jessica wants to leave, but her cousin begs her to stay. Everyone is after Teddy, but all the money goes to an animal charity if he dies. But that night, Trish, the drunken daughter, comes home late and gets out of her car when the gate doesn’t work right. Then, the gate comes crashing down on her head, killing her and Teddy is revealed as the culprit! Could this dog, trained by Abby, be the killer?

Who did it?

Trish killed her father, but when she wouldn’t split the money with Marcus the lawyer, he had her killed and set up Teddy.

Who made it?

Director Seymour Robbie was a busy TV director—he directed 21 episodes of this show, 17 of Remington Steele, 3 of the Father Dowling Mysteries, 3 of Hart to Hart, and the Desi Arnez Jr. movie Marco and C.C. and  Company.

It was written by Mark Giles and Linda Shank, who wrote “Sticks and Stones” in season 2.

A fact…

Forrest Tucker and James Hampton were on F Troop together. This was Tucker’s last role.

Does Jessica get some?

No, but if that guy hadn’t died…

Does Jessica dress up and act stupid?

No. Trust me, you’ll get sick of it soon.

Was it any good?

This is one of my favorite episodes because of Teddy.

Give me a reasonable quote:

Marcus Boswell: Let me tell you something, Spencer. You are talking about a perfectly normal dog as if he’s possessed! You’ve been seeing too many Stephen King movies.

Got a TV Guide ad?

No, but how about a picture of Teddy?

What’s next?

Jessica goes to Seattle for a lecture and, surprise, someone dies.

VISUAL VENGEANCE BLU RAY REVIEW: Dinosaur Valley Girls (1996)

Action star Tony Markham (Jeff Rector) is sick of Hollywood and not getting much sleep, thanks to the same dream every night, one where he meets dinosaurs and sees a cavegirl named Hea-Thor (Denise Ames) that he believes he’s destined to be with.

If you look at the cover of this, you may think you’re getting a sex comedy with dinosaurs. Then you see that it was directed, written and produced by Donald Glut and realize that this is something special. This is the kind of movie that mixes well-done stop-motion dinosaurs with bare breasts and lots of them, sure. But it also has Karen Black make a cameo, as well as Forrest J. Ackerman, William Marshall as a paleontologist and Donna Spangler. And Ed Fury from peplum like Ursus as Ur-So? My cup — and many of the cup sizes in this — runneth over.

Actually, this is both Marshall and Fury’s last film.

Man, Donald Glut. His website just makes me smile, as it’s all somewhat attractive women holding up his books for the bibliography. It feels like he got to puberty and decided that he’d never stop loving seeing women topless or dinosaurs attacking cavemen. And who are we to tell him that he’s wrong? I mean, male gaze and all that, but clearly he loves women as much as a good fart joke. I also think he added the IMDB facts, like this one: “Unlike past Hollywood stereotypes, he didn’t want any of the cavewomen in the film to scream when they see dinosaurs. He wanted the actresses to be sexy and feminine at all times, so they never lose what guys perceive as femininity, but still be tough and handle their own. He felt that would enhance their overall appeal. He said, “I made a conscious effort that they would not, as in many other prehistoric-type movies over the years, come off looking like strippers or hookers.””

A lot of times, you may wonder, “Is this an exploitation movie?” when you watch something. For this, they shot a clothed and unclothed version. There’s your answer. This is an exploitation movie. And one way after anyone couldn’t see half-naked cavewomen, so it was obviously a labor of love. In short, I’m proud to have it in my collection, but maybe my wife would shake her head at me if she knew it was there.

Extras on the Visual Vengeance Blu-ray release — the first Blu-ray ever of this movie — include:

  • Limited Edition slipcase by Rick Melton and Dinosaur Valley Girls logo sticker
  • Remastered SD master from original tape elements
  • New 2023 commentary and an archival commentary with director Don Glut and C. Courtney Joyner
  • Dinosaur Valley Guy: interview with director Don Glut
  • Don Glut: The Collection – A look inside Don’s legendary dinosaur home museum
  • The Making of Dinosaur Valley Girls
  • PG-13 cut
  • Deleted and alternate scenes
  • Actress auditions reel
  • Dinosaur Tracks, Jurassic Punk and Dinosaur Valley Girls music videos
  • Original storyboards
  • Production image galleries
  • Mu Wang in Mu-Seum and Danse Prehistoric
  • Original promotional trailer
  • Visual Vengeance trailers
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original home video art
  • 2-sided insert with alternate art
  • Folded mini-poster
  • “Stick Your Own” VHS sticker set

You can get this from MVD.

VISUAL VENGEANCE BLU RAY RELEASE: Furious (1984)

Simon (Simon Rhee) wants to know why his sister was killed. This brings him into a war of fists and feet with Master Chan (Phillip Rhee), a sorcerer who has been after the ancient amulet shared by Simon and his sibling  (Arlene Montano).

This is a very simple opening paragraph that doesn’t hint at how absolutely insane this movie is. Shot in six days with no script — “Filmed Entirely on Location in Southern California” — this was directed and written by Tim Everitt and Tom Sartori, who made it with exactly thirty grand. It was probably the best money spent ever.

If you saw the cover art for this, you may expect your everyday kung fu movie. You would not be prepared for magic users who shoot chickens out of their hands. Or aliens. Or flying martial arts. Or a band resembling Devo, the clone army that fuels the evil empire. Or Susanna Hoffs (maybe, supposedly).

Simon and Phillip Rhee went on to appear in many fight scenes, but here, they had all the freedom to do whatever they wanted. They also brought their students on to punch and kick one another for less than a week. They’re not just guys off the streets. These are trained professionals ready to elevate the fight scenes in this to art, even if the budget is less than almost any movie you can find.

This is the kind of movie that has talking dogs and chickens and it’s nearly an afterthought because there’s also a fire-breathing dragon. Most movies would be satisfied with one of these things and have all the money to fully realize all of these many moments, but Furious doesn’t care. I wish that more filmmakers today didn’t care this much, that they would use the cameras in their phones and all the technology at their disposal and make something 5% as cool as this, because this is 200% better than any fighting movie you’ll watch in 4 years. Don’t make me do math.

The Visual Vengeance release is perfect, and I’m in awe of the extras Justin Decloux created for it. He’s sent me down a rabbit hole filled with American chop sockery, and for that, I can only say thank you.

This cult martial arts classic is available for the first time ever on Blu-ray with hours of new interviews and bonus features:

  • Limited Edition slipcase by The Dude and a limited edition throwing star key tag
  • New director-approved SD master from original tape elements
  • Archival commentary with co-director Tim Everitt
  • Commentary with Justin Decloux of The Important Cinema Club and Peter Kuplowsky of the Toronto International Film Festival
  • High Kicking In Hollywood: Tom Sartori interview
  • The Kung Fu Kid: Tim Everitt interview
  • North American No-Budget Martial Arts Cinema Primer – video essay by Justin Decloux
  • Rhee Brothers Career Overview – Justin Decloux video essay
  • Archival Scarecrow Video Podcast with Tim Everitt (2013)
  • Furious New Wave Band – behind the scenes Super 8 footage
  • Scorched Earth Policy: full six song EP (1987)
  • Cinema Face: live in concert (1986)
  • Tom Sartori 1980s music video reel
  • Tom Sartori Super 8 short films reel
  • Original trailers
  • Visual Vengeance trailers
  • “Stick Your Own” VHS sticker set
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original VHS art
  • Folded mini-poster reproduction of original Furious one sheet
  • 2-sided insert with alternate art

You can get this from MVD.

Blind Target (2000)

Shout out to Ator Moonbeam. He realized that I was missing this Jess Franco movie and sent me his DVD in the mail. Now, it closes out the second Jess Franctuary.

Maria Beltran (Rachel Sheppard) has become famous for writing Desperate Letters, a book that exposed her corrupt Caribbean homeland of San Hermoso. For some reason, she thinks that it would be a good idea to come home for a book tour despite getting death threats. While there, she meets up with several old lovers, including Beatriz Arenas (Tatiana Cohen), who she has a sapphic encounter with while a hidden camera records things, which the secret police use to blackmail her into doing assassinations for her, in-between Tora (Lina Romay) threatening her with sodomy with a curling iron and showing her the eyeball of her female lover.

Luckily, she has an ex-CIA ex-boyfriend named Leonardo Radek (Roger Pavlovich) who shows up and does capoeira and ninja stuff, killing people primarily by breaking their necks. Was I sad when he breaks Lina’s neck? You know it.

This film also led to Antena Criminal: Making a Jess Franco Movie, which showed what it takes to go to a hotel near the beach and allow Jess Franco to make a political thriller with surf rock, extended travelogue footage, zooms, extraneous lesbian scenes that are essential to the plot because they’re in a Jess Franco movie, dubbing which barely qualifies as the word, more zooms, Lina Romay being deranged and Linnea Quigley showing up just long enough to be top credited on the cover of the DVD yet meaning nothing to the actual film.

This was Franco’s 176th movie and I assume that when the hotel staff was on lunch break, he snuck into a conference room and pushed his zoom lens as far as it would go, filming several women with glitter all over their pubes.

This has some of the wildest—and by that, I mean borderline inept—action scenes in a Franco film, but it is missing things like diamonds, Dr. Orloff and Lina being more featured. In my dreams, this movie was mostly her and Linnea Quigley in a hotel room for three hours, smoking cigarettes while they discuss politics and Jess just goes wild with his camera. I don’t want AI to make movies, but I will accept my computer overlords if it can make that for me.

Tales from the Crypt S6 E9: Staired In Horror (1994)

Directed by Stephen Hopkins (Predator 2Judgement Night) and written by magician Teller and Colman deKay, this stars D.B. Sweeney as Clyde, a killer on the run from the police. He evades them and ends up in the home of the elderly Lillian (Rachel Ticotin, Total Recall), who he soon insults after she saves him from a sheriff (R. Lee Ermey).

“Hey, cats. I call this one “Painted into a Coroner Blues.” When I think of you, my heart goes flopsy. As I contemplate your sweet autopsy. Your skin is green and blue, whatever would I do; without my fine cadaver. The love in which I know I’ll fall starts with the unkindest cut of all. Thank you, thank you. They don’t call me the creative writing corpse for nothing. Thank you. My next poem is a little ex-terror-imental number I’ve been working on. I hope you like it. It’s about a real ghoul dude named Clyde, who’s about to try a little die-ku of his own in a vile verse I call: “Staired in Horror.””

Lillian has been cursed to remain in the house forever, old while downstairs, young while upstairs. When a man climbs the stairs, he will immediately age. Only in the middle of the stairs can they be together. The sheriff makes his way into the home, but they trick him as Clyde has aged by coming upstairs. He stays there too long, turning into an elderly old man, but when Lillian tries to save him, she has aged all the way back into being an infant.

This is based on “Staired… in Horror!” from Vault of Horror #23. It was written by William Gaines and Al Feldstein and drawn by Graham Ingels. This story is nothing like this episode, instead being about a lighthouse, a woman who murders husbands and zombies. Good Lord — choke!