JESS FRANCO MONTH: Bragueta Historia (1986)

Nobody — well, me — is looking for this movie, but when you’re trying to watch every Jess Franco movie, you hunt down so many films, and then you get to them and wonder, what have you really learned? Is, as Lemmy taught me, the chase better than the catch? This film has no story, just coupling after coupling in

The cast includes Lina Romay (you knew that), Antonio Mayans (probably figured that) and Mabel Escaño. It all takes place in the beds of a hospital, which was simple to film as it could be any room. The hospital dirty movie makes so much sense, as it’s a place close to death and where we often turn to what keeps us alive when confronted by the void.

According to the I’m In a Jess Franco State of Mind site, “problems with producer Emilio Larraga (Golden Films) ruined many projects such as El Rinoceronte BlancoTeleporno…” and this movie. That, along with the movie Franco produced, iBiba La Banda!, and losses on Phollastia and Phalo Crest, caused Jess to make Dark Mission with Daniel Lesoeur.

Fly Story, as this is called, is one of the hardest Jess movies to find. I got this cover art from Trash Palace, which has it, but there’s not much info on it. But somehow, I found it, I watched it, and it is one of the many movies that brings me closer to watching every one of his films, which is, as they say, the only way to know Franco and appreciate him. From here on, the pickings become slim, and the hunt starts for movies that may not exist.

If you see me on the corner with a handwritten sign looking like an addict, it’s because I can’t find that copy of Blind Target and have resorted to sex work to get even a VHS of it. Please help.

TUBI ORIGINAL: Spread (2024)

Ruby (Elizabeth Gillies) has had her life subsidized by her mom and dad (Diedrich Bader, as always great), as well as her roommate Whitney (Dia Frampton) telling her that she can’t afford her rent any longer. But now, the cash is running out, and she has to find a job quickly. And that brings her to Spread magazine, which is run by Frank (Harvey Keitel), who is a combination of Hugh Hefner and Larry Flynt. The magazine is dying, as print is on the way out, so even if she hates this job, it won’t last long. And if all that isn’t the worst, she’s just been dumped by her boyfriend, Orson (Jonah Platt).

While the idea of revolutionizing porn for women isn’t new — Candida Royalle did it decades before — Spread is the kind of movie I like, as it’s very much a “hijinks ensue” film. Easy subject — bright but undriven girl finds herself working for a porn magazine. And hijinksensuee.

Directed by Ellie Kanner and written by Buffy Charlet, this has a good cast, which makes these movies work. Keitel is, as always, better than the movie he’s in. Teri Polo is excellent as Prudence, the secretary who keeps Spread in advertising money. Tim Rozon, Doc Holiday from Wynonna Earp, is the money man who wants to close it all down. Diora Baird is Xtasy, the ex-porn star and now agent who becomes Ruby’s new mom. And for a movie about the porn industry, this is very chaste, other than having a dildo closet.

That said, its lead learns essential lessons, and despite that much-hated downer third act, it all comes together. I miss silly sex comedies, so I probably liked this more than if it came out in the genre’s glory days. But hey, I’ll take what I can get. That said, I still wonder. Who is buying print porn today?

You can watch this on Tubi.

TUBI ORIGINAL: Wynonna Earp: Vengeance (2024)

Based on the comic book series by Beau Smith, Wynonna Earp was a four-season SyFy series in which Melanie Scrofano played Wynonna, the great-great-granddaughter of Wyatt Earp, who came back home to fight the demonic ghosts of the outlaws her ancestor killed all those years ago. A few years later, Earp and her Peacemaker are back, as are several of the characters, in a movie from Tubi that finishes off some of the show’s storylines.

This starts with Wynonna’s sister, Waverly (Dominique Provost-Chalkley), enjoying married life with her wife, Deputy Nicole Haught (Katherine Barrell) and Wynonna and Doc Holliday (Tim Rozon,) trying to figure out their relationship as they run scams at casinos, just in time for Mina (Karen Knox), a girl from the group home where Wynonna grew up and who has spent twenty years in Hell and wants revenge, to show up and start killing people.

I never watched the series that this is based on, but I liked the characters enough here that I both want td see why fans were upset by some of the decisions made in this film. Directed by Paolo Barzman (the son of blacklisted writer Ben Barzman, who wrote ), who directed 21 episodes of the series, and written by Emily Andras, the showrunner of the original show, this made me want to make up for the fact that I skipped watching its inspiration. Hopefully, Tubi can make more than just this one film and return to Purgatory.

You can watch this on Tubi.

JESS FRANCO MONTH: Bangkok, cita con la muerte (1985)

In the 80s, Jess Franco seemed to go between adult films and adventure movies that looked back to cinema’s past. Bangkok, City of the Dead — directed by Franco as Clarence Brown and soundtracked by him as Pancho Villa –finds rich girl Marta (Helena Garret) kidnapped by Akuto and Aminia (Lina Romay), who decide that since they’re not getting a cut of the 20 million dollar ransom from their boss Malko (Antonio Mayans), they should just keep her for themselves and make sure her boyfriend Riao (José Llamas) can save her. Except that Malko kills Akuto, Aminia tries to make him give the girl back, Riao tries to save her, and her father Flanagan (Eduardo Fajardo) hires Panama Joe (Bork Gordon), a private detective who is not Al Pereira, to also save her.

There’s no hardcore sex — but Lina dancing in a leopard bikini, which I can appreciate — and no diamond theft, either. If you’re a frequent guest in the Jess Franco Cinematic Universe, you’re used to seeing Lina eat bananas, amongst other things, and the camera being pulled into the tractor beam it seemed to have between her thighs.

Shot at the same time as Trip to Bangkok, this has Lina as a pirate queen and a talking parrot, as well as Jess making an Oriental adventure movie — again — and that’s fine because sometimes I like to sit back and watch his films as if they are waves cresting over me as my feet are buried in the sand.

TUBI ORIGINAL: Don’t Mess With Grandma (2024)

Michael Jai White has been a dependable action hero for years. He’s never reached the JCVD or Dolph level, but he’s always there when we needed him.

Originally known as Sunset Superman—yes, named for a Dio song, which is in the movie—it was directed and written by Jason Krawczyk, who also made He Never Died.

White plays JT, who just wants to get drunk and spend his military retirement hanging out with his grandmother (Jackie Richardson). To pass the time, he works for Trusted Trays, delivering meals to other older people and stopping men in pig masks from breaking into his Grandma’s house. These home invaders are almost all idiots, led by scrap owner Stan (Billy Zane, wearing a goofy mustache), who wants the copper pipes in the house, not anything important. JT keeps drinking and uses this time to bond with Rufus, her grandmother’s dog, who hates him for most of the movie. But after all they go through, they end up becoming pals.

As for Grandma, she doesn’t see or hear any of it. Maybe she should move closer to JT, whose life is so quiet these days that he’s trying to pick up the female henchpeople who are breaking into the house. I enjoyed this because it never takes itself seriously while giving opportunities for character development. It seems like everyone in it was having a great time making it.

You can watch this on Tubi.

TUBI ORIGINAL: Happy Anniversary (2025)

As always, Chris Stokes remains the undisputed king of the Tubi Original. 

When Faith Parker (La’Myia Good in the present, Kalani Jules in the past) was young, three boys were out to scare her, tying her up and making it seem like they were going to kill her. To each of these men, as they grow up, she becomes the perfect woman, whether her name is Diana, Summer or Samantha. Then, she kills them.

I don’t know if Chris Stokes has ever seen a Giallo, but darn it if he doesn’t keep making them. Nearly every month, he has a new movie that shows up on Tubi, filled with love, lust, twists, turns and murder. I get beyond excited when I see his name in the credits, as if he’s a modern-day Umberto Lenzi. 

The crux of the matter is whether Faith’s revenge is justified. Has she gone too far in her elaborate schemes? Is she sacrificing her own happiness in her quest to destroy these men? These moral questions keep us engaged, making us ponder over the complexities of her actions. But then again, without these dilemmas, we wouldn’t have this movie. 

You can watch this on Tubi.

JESS FRANCO MONTH: Para las nenas, leche calentita (1986)

Already made by Jess Franco as Elles font tout in 1979 and El Hotel de los Ligues in 1983, Para las Nenas, leche calentita (Warm cream… for the babes) is like a commedia sexy all’Italiana except because Jess and Lina Romay is involved, we see the sex.

On the Spanish coast, we have three couples looking for something. For Lulu (Lina Romay) and Apollo (Antonio Mayans), it’s a good time, even if he can’t perform because his sister is with them everywhere they go. A lesbian couple is being watched by Pepito and several of his friends. And then there’s Jean and Rossy (Mari Carmen G. Alonso), who can’t stop getting it on.

That’s it. 67 minutes of sex action in the Hotel Venus. Probably made in the hotel where Jess and crew were making something else because, in 1986, he made 12 more movies using names like Clifford Brown for his own adult and Lulu Laverne and Candy Coster for the film he made with Lina.

In these three movies, people who have issues with sex resolve them through sex. How often did Jess feel he had to make something until it was right? Was it ever right? What was he trying to accomplish by going back again? Just adding insertions? Or was there a more significant message at work here?

TUBI ORIGINAL: Fatal Exposure (2025)

Directed by Sam Coyle (The Marriage Pass, Meet the Killer Parents) and written by Mary Risk (Killer Nurses), this is everything that a Tubi Original movie should be.

Ariel (Sofia Masson, who was in another fun Tubi film, Castaways) is a photographer who has only sold one of her photos, the only one her agent feels shows her edge. It has her on a chain and is called “Daddy Issues.” She soon meets Derek (Stephen Huszar), and their first date becomes a relationship. She lives in his summer house, where he sets up a state-of-the-art photo study to explore her creativity when she isn’t horizontally dancing with him in every room and fulfilling his need to be called daddy.

However, she soon learns that Derek really is Daddy—stepdad—to Chloe (Jasmine Vega), who surprisingly shows up for breakfast one morning.

 

If you’ve seen enough Giallo, you may wonder, “How long until we learn that Derek and Chloe are a couple?” Fatal Exposure ups the odds by having the girls take Molly together and end up in bed with each other, which is filmed by all of the security cameras in the house, as well as Derek joining them, which is at once hot and very gross. Still, like Italian psychosexual movies, boundaries are only there to be stomped on like grapes.

I’ve often bemoaned the lack of erotic thrillers, having grown up on them in the 90s, and here we are with one that would totally fit in and actually be better than most of them. This is the third of Coyle’s movies I’ve noticed and found to be way better than expectations. This has an ending that is made for our era, instead of the Giallo of the 70s or erotic films of the 90s, and leads with no real sense of morality, which is what I demand from movies like this. If only this had Bruno Nicolai, Nora Orlandi or Morricone doing the soundtrack!

You can watch this on Tubi.

TUBI ORIGINAL: VICE News Presents: Cult of Elon (2023)

I use movies to escape reality, and here I am, watching something that I don’t want to because my OCD demands that I watch every Tubi Original and fuck me; if I don’t cross this one off my list, I won’t sleep well and feel like something terrible is about to happen.

“From Tesla to Twitter, Elon Musk has become the most influential businessman ever, but it required the masses to support his seemingly unreachable visions — the cult behind the man.”

This is about the people that worship Elon Musk more than who he is. It also immediately feels dated because as of February 2025, every day is ten years, like we’re living in the Catholic idea of Hell, where each second is 10,000 years. We are in shock and awe, a world where someone can seig heil a crowd twice. Everyone has an excuse and tells us not to look too much into it, but everything is being dismantled. An efficiency group named after a dog meme and Bitcoin have ruined the careers of numerous people, but yeah, an overwhelming part of the country — 50% is pretty close, right? What are you, a mathematician? — voted for this.

It’s hard for me to write about this without revealing what an utter cynic and unbeliever I am. I hate when people make articles about movies about them instead of the film they watched, so I should probably close out here.

This is a documentary about people gushing over the fact that they’ve had a minute-long chat with Musk or that he retweeted them. Parasocial relationships lead to an oligarchy. Watch it at 11 or whenever you choose to watch the news.

You can watch this on Tubi.

JESS FRANCO MONTH: El fontanero, su mujer, y otras cosas de meter… (1981)

El fontanero, su mujer, y otras cosas de meter… (The plumber, his wife, and other things to mess with…) is not a Jess Franco-directed movie, but it does feature his muse, Lina Romay and was directed and written by Carlos Aured, the director of Horror Rises from the Tomb, The Mummy’s Revenge and Blue Eyes of the Broken Doll. If you watch Euro horror, sooner or later, the same actors and filmmakers that you enjoy will inevitably do adult films. You should not be offended and be happy they could keep making films and money from them).

Mario (Ricardo Díaz) is a plumber continually offered favors by every woman he works for. He loves his wife (Montserrat Prous, Un silencio de tumbaDemon Witch Child), so he turns them all down. Then, he catches her in bed with his best friend and decides to start taking what is offered. And when one of the ladies is his best friend’s wife (Lina), this seems like the best way to get back at those who did him wrong.

Imagine an Italian sex comedy, only with Lina wearing a man out so completely that she has to use a toilet plunger to get off.

Aured also made Apocalipsis sexual with Sergio Bergonzelli (Blood Delirium), which was shot in both explicit and R-rated versions. Aured discovered that the Spanish porn industry had not yet learned the secrets of staying performer ready and rigid; these days, Viagra solves this.