Tales from the Crypt S5 E5: People Who Live in Brass Hearses (1993)

Billy DeLuca (Bill Paxton) has just finished two years in jail. He goes right back to crime, getting his brother Virgil (Brad Dourif) to help him get revenge on the ice cream company that caught him stealing from the company funds. If he gets to kill the guy who caught him, Earl Byrd (Michael Lerner), and manager Ms. Grafungar (Lainie Kazan) even better.

“Chop ’em to the left! Chop ’em to the right! Chop ’em every chance you get! Fright, fright, fright! All right, creeps. It’s fourth and ghoul. They’re probably expecting us to run a ghost pattern, so let’s run a scream pass instead. Of course, I could pull out a few other surprises from my playbook, like tonight’s tale. It’s about a couple of brothers who are planning a little high scaring of their own, in a nasty bit of offense I call: “People Who Live in Brass Hearses.””

Billy loves his brother, but he has such a limited intelligence that he can’t stop yelling at him. Imagine how tense things get when — spoilers! — it turns out that Earl also has a brother, a much evil and conniving person than anyone else, and he’s fused to the ice cream man for life and has been stealing even more than Billy.

Directed by Russell Mulcahy (Highlander) and written by Crypt vet Scott Nimerfro, this has a great cast and a gruesome bad guy. Well, nearly everyone is the bad guy. You know what I’m trying to write.

It’s based on “People Who Live in Brass Hearses” from Vault of Horror #27. Written by Al Feldstein and William Gaines and drawn by Jack Davis, this tale is about Mr. Byrd, a strange old undertaker who has a twin brother. That’s the only thing the story has in common with the TV show.

88 FILMS 4K RELEASE: The Project A Collection

88 Films has been releasing some incredible things this year, but The Project A Collection is the best set yet. It features both Jackie Chan films in a 4K UHD presentation with both the Hong Kong and Taiwan versions, as well as English and Cantonese-language options. There are so many extras, including a perfect-bound book, six lobby cards, a double-sided poster, a slipcase with brand-new artwork from Kung Fu Bob and interviews with Jackie Chan, Lee Hoi San, Mars, Yuen Biao, Dick Wei, Michael Chan Wai-Man, Michael Lai and Edward Tang. There’s even more, such as new audio commentaries by Frank Djeng and FJ DeSanto, making-of videos, outtakes, trailers, still galleries, the Japanese ending and more!

You can order this from MVD.

Project A (1983): Project A has a clock tower stunt in it, but Jackie Chan had not seen the films of Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd when he made this movie, as they were not available on home video. He saw this as the evolution of comedy, action and martial arts that he’d been working on since The Young Master.

This movie and Dragon Lord were the first films since Jackie came back from his initial failed time in America and he had something to prove.

Sergeant Dragon Ma (Chan) is part of the Hong Kong Marine Police, which is battling both pirates and their Hong Kong Police rivals. After one fight too many, the Marine and regular police have to join forces.

Beyond Dragon Ma, Project A also has Sammo Hung as Zhuo “Fei” Yifei and Yuen Baio as Inspector Hong Tin-Tzu. In time, they all join together to face pirate lord Sam Pau (Dick Wei), who is smuggling guns directly from the cops.

Up until Project A came out, Hong Kong movies didn’t have the large sets and attention to period detail that other movies did. It’s also a film that isn’t all fighting, but instead a mix of action and combat.

Project A Part II (1987):Sergeant Dragon Ma (Jackie Chan) is back and has been sent on a new mission, far from the pirates who have pledged to kill him at the end of the first film. He soon learns that his new assignment, Sai Wan Police Station, is full of corrupt police like Superintendent Chun (Lam Wai), all except for one officer. He takes that man, Ho (Kenny Ho) and three of his friends to try to arrest gangster Tiger “Awesome Wolf” Au (Chan Wai-man) and is nearly killed. He’s saved at the last moment by his friends in the Marine Police.

Once he gets through that challenge, Dragon gets set up for a jewel robbery and must work with revolutionaries to clear his name. If that’s not enough, he also has three incredibly attractive women to deal with in Yesan (Maggie Cheung), Miss Pak (Rosamund Kwan) and Carina (Carina Lau), who gets kidnapped by the same criminals who have tried to ruin Dragon Ma’s reputation.

Yuen Biao and Sammo Hung only have cameos in this, allowing Chan to take center stage. Who knew that a martial arts movie could pay tribute to the Marx Brothers and Buster Keaton while changing the way fights would be filmed? Instead of lining the bad guys up one at a time, Chan battles numerous opponents at once.

By the end, even the pirates love Jackie. This movie is worth watching so many times as the sets, costumes and action has to be savored.

The Scarecrow Video Psychotronic Challenge for 2024 is done!

Scarecrow Video isn’t just a video store. It’s a landmark for all we love about movies.

Each year, they do a month-long challenge to get people to stretch out and watch some movies they’ve never seen before.

You can also check out the Letterboxd list as well as our lists for 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023.

Here are this year’s movies!

1. JUMP-OFF POINT: Kick off the Challenge festivities by watching a movie that inspired a TV series.: Moonrunners

2. DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS: Mad scientists never seem to follow the rules…: The Alligator People

3. BLURRING THE LINES: Magical realism is the key for today’s witnessing.: Rainbow

4. FAMILY MATTERS: It takes a family to raise this village.: The Brood

5. BROKEN BONES: Snap, crackle, “stop… is it sticking out?”: From Beyond

6. MAN’S BEST FRIEND?: This canine is no pal of mine.: A Dog Called…Vengeance

7. LITTLE DEVILS, BIG SHRIEKS: How much terror can a child really wreak?: 666 The Child

8. POOL PARTY: Is there a swimming pool in your plot? Take a dip, mind the drip.: Swimfan

9. BUT AFTER THE GIG: Just because the party has ended, that doesn’t mean the activities have.: Green Room

10. NEW YORK NEW YORK: A slice and dice set in the city so nice they named it New York.: Frankenhooker

11. BREAKING THE MOLD: More than make up, this one is when practical effects masters employ their crafting skills directly to making the whole damn movie.: A Gnome Named Gnorm

12. THE LIVING IMPAIRED: Insert zombie joke here.: Bio-Zombie

13. ALL THINGS BEING SEQUEL: …As long as it isn’t a Part 1.: The Mummy’s Hand

14. HALLOWED GROUND: Made by an indigenous filmmaker or has featured indigenous cast members.: Blood Quantum

15. YOU TOO, SHALL PASS: …If the gatekeeper permits.: Monty Python and the Holy Grail

16. INCREMENTAL BREAKDOWN: Stop-motion films are hard to make. Appreciate that mania today.: Chuck Steel: Night of the Trampires

17. DON’T BLAME THE NAME: Many great films have been poo-pooed because of dumb titles. It’s time to let go of your judgement and enjoy one of those.: They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?

18. THE EYES HAVE IT: Elect to watch one with an eye specific scene. See what I did there?: Un Chien Andalou

19. VIDEO STORE DAY: This is the big one. Watch something physically rented or bought from an actual video store. If you live in a place that is unfortunate enough not to have one of these archival treasures then watch a movie with a video store scene in it at least. #vivaphysicalmedia: Air Doll

20. WITCH, PLEASE!: Watch a saucy spell caster do her damnedest. Be sure to check the Witch, Please! book for spelling errors…: Girl Slaves of Morgana Le Fay

21. STAGEFRIGHTS: Musicals are hell to endure. Can I get a hell yeah!?: Disco Dancer

22. CTHULHU’S COHORT: Wrap your tentacles around a “weird fiction” tale.: The Whisper In Darkness

23. FOR PEAT’S SAKE: Log one that takes place in a swamp or a bog.: The Legend of Gator Face

24. SHLOCK & AWE: Can you believe how “good” this is?: Rat Pfink A Boo Boo

25. ICONOCLADS: Features a character that you have dressed up as for Halloween.: G.I. Joe: Rise of Cobra

26. DANZA MACABRA: Boogie down with some soundtrack heavy Giallo.: Two Males for Alexa

27. MAN & MACHINE: When one interacts with the other, both are forever changed.: Annihilator

28. COUNTDOWN TO OBLIVION: Watch a race-against-timer. Oh, the tension…: Timer

29. RIGHT TOOL FOR THE JOB: An antagonist is only as good as his implements.: Johnny Dangerously

30. EXHUMATION POINT: Digging up the past one coffin at a tomb time.: Exhuma

31. “I’LL BE BACK”: We hope you had a good time with our little Challenge. Conclude your journey by watching one with a catchphrase you find yourself repeating in the real world.: The Toxic Avenger

2024 Scarecrow Psychotronic Challenge Day 31: The Toxic Avenger (1984)

31. “I’LL BE BACK”: We hope you had a good time with our little Challenge. Conclude your journey by watching one with a catchphrase you find yourself repeating in the real world.

I say some dumb lines from movies all the time, movies that no one remembers, like when I go in a store I say, “I’ll be in and out like a duck mating,” which comes from Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins, a movie that no one cares about but me.

Unlike “I’ll be back” or “I’m getting too old for this shit,” the catchphrase that I always say is from this movie, as Julie tries to get janitor Melvin Ferd Junko III  into the hot tub, she purrs, “It’s time to do it.” Melvin replies, “Do what?” And she stares at him and says, “Do it, Melvin. Do it!” It made me laugh so hard when I was a kid — much like the other line I often say from this, “I’ve never done me no blind bitch before!” — but when do you use these catchphrases in polite conversation?

I love The Toxic Avenger in the same way that I hate Troma, because I championed this film and rented it so many times and told so many people about it and Troma never did anything this good ever again. Not even close. The sequel is fine and yeah, I bought the toys and watched the cartoon, but I’m still angry and let down almost forty years later by how bad everything was after this and what an annoying person that Lloyd Kaufman has become.

Side note: A lot of people call him Uncle Lloyd and I am here to tell you that I hate anyone who gets a fake uncle name because generally they are horrible people. To wit:

Uncle Stan Lee: A man who made his fortune on the backs of hard working men like Steve Ditko and Jack Kirby, who never got royalties or a job for life or got to be in Marvel movies, having to have their families — in Kirby’s case — fight for credit or be like Ditko and just do advertising work and hide in the middle of New York City. Kaufman is a similar loud braggart who had one major success and we’ve had him hanging around like the turd that won’t flush ever since.

Uncle Forry Forest J, Ackerman: I grew up late to the monster kid world, but there are people who worship this man and sorry to tell you, he’s been accused of sexual harassment and outright abuse by so many women that you have to believe it. And even if you don’t, explain An Illustrated History of Heidi Saha, a Warren special that has photos of a prepubescent girl dressed as a jungle girl and Vampirella, as well as the poster Warren sold, that had notorious sexual predator Isaac Asimov say, “An absolute delight! I love her!” This girl does not look like a woman at all. In this book, Forrest said of this at the time 13-year-old girl, “In the so-called real world, among the beasts of science fiction and Comicdom…there now walks a great beauty.  The young Goddess known as Heidi: supple, blonde reed of womanhood, bending in the wind of the sighs of her would-be wooers, her stricken swains.  Heidi the delightful, the full-of-life dweller on the pink cloud of fantasy and wonder.  Heidi — unbelievably refreshing, soft and shy, wildly exciting — Heidi — a poetic blend of fantasy and wondrous reality.”

I refuse to call Jess Franco Uncle Jess, but he never took that name himself as far as I know.

But regardless, people that want to be called Uncle are all creeps. It’s even worse that they preyed on geek culture fans, which all generally people like Melvin in this movie, lost and looking for acceptance. Instead, they get treated as objects.

As for Lloyd Kaufman, he has written in his book Make Your Own Damn Movie! not to audition women alone or else you’ll get accused of sexual harassment, then also talks about making women disrobe during auditions.

Man, did I digress.

Anyways, this movie is great, has ridiculous gore and great dialogue, all while not being all that different from a comic book origin of a man going from geek to superhero. It moves quick, makes you giggle and seems like it’s the first of many big ideas but the well was sadly dry. And yet people are convinced that Troma films are amazing.

This goes for it, like having a dog get shot, a kid getting his head crushed and lines like, “No tickee, no washy,” which seems edgy, but after years of Troma movies aren’t shocking for the sake of shock but instead feel like casual racism. There’s no message behind it all, just more outrage. Which is fine, I guess, but then I read about Troma being iconic.

That said, I will defend Filmirage and much more reprehensible studios. I guess I’m a jerk.

I wish I could be fourteen year old me again, obsessed over this film and showing it to anyone who would watch it. I wish I wasn’t so cynical. But the world will sometimes open your eyes, you know?

Anyway.

Do it. Do it Melvin.

You can watch this on Tubi.

B&S About Movies podcast special episode 9: Unsung Horrors Horror Gives Back Part 2

Each October, the Unsung Horrors podcast does a month of themed movies. This year they will once again be setting up a fundraiser to benefit Best Friends, which is working to save the lives of cats and dogs all across America, giving pets second chances and happy homes.

To be part of this, just donate $1 or more per horror movie you watch in October. You can follow their prompts or your own path, then share picks with #horrorgivesback

Here are the categories I get to in this installment.

  • Series Episode
  • Pick a Lance
  • Bleeding Skull!
  • Animal Attacks
  • 1980s
  • Karen Black
  • Mexico
  • Hail Satan
  • Black & White
  • Made for Tv Movie
  • 1970s
  • The Sweetest Taboo
  • Gothic Horror
  • Slasher
  • Hammer Time
  • Viewers Choice

You can listen to the show on Spotify.

The show is also available on Apple Podcasts, I Heart Radio, Amazon Podcasts and Google Podcasts.

Unsung Horrors Horror Gives Back 2024 recap

Each October, the Unsung Horrors podcast does a month of themed movies. This year, this event benefits Best Friends, which is working to save the lives of cats and dogs all across America, giving pets second chances and happy homes.

If you enjoyed reading anything I posted, please consider donating and letting me know.

Here are the movies that I watched. You can also check out the Letterboxd list.

  1. Universal Horror: The Mummy’s Curse
  2. Sequel: The Wicker Tree
  3. Philippines: Maligno
  4. Birth Year: Curse of the Headless Horseman
  5. 1990s: Hell Spa
  6. Vampires: Darkness
  7. 1950s: The Pharaoh’s Curse
  8. Spain: El Enigma del Ataud
  9. Unsung Horrors Rule: Purana Mandir
  10. Michael Ironside: Black Ice
  11. Ghosts: The Ghosting
  12. Physical Media: Kung Fu Rascals
  13. 1960s: Bloody Pit of Horror
  14. Australia: Night of Fear
  15. In Memoriam: Blood Frenzy
  16. Series Episode: Stryx
  17. Pick a Lance: Billy Club
  18. Bleeding Skull!: Death Dancers
  19. Animal Attacks: The Giant Spider Invasion
  20. 1980s: Nightmare In Venice
  21. Karen Black: Legend of the Rollerblade Seven
  22. Mexico: La Muerte Enamorada
  23. Hail Satan: The Devil’s Exorcist
  24. Black & White: Voyage to the End of the Universe
  25. Made for Tv Movie: The Devil’s Daughter
  26. 1970s: Snapshot
  27. The Sweetest Taboo: The Seventh Curse
  28. Gothic Horror: House of the Black Death
  29. Slasher: Srigala
  30. Hammer Time: Blood from the Mummy’s Tomb
  31. Viewers Choice: The Mummy’s Dungeon

You can also listen to the podcast about these episodes: Part 1 and Part 2.

I can’t wait for next year.

UNSUNG HORRORS HORROR GIVES BACK 2024: The Mummy’s Dungeon (1993)

Each October, the Unsung Horrors podcast does a month of themed movies. This year they will once again be setting up a fundraiser to benefit Best Friends, which is working to save the lives of cats and dogs all across America, giving pets second chances and happy homes.

Today’s theme: Viewers Choice

Has my love for bootleg mummy movies gone too far?

Rameses Karis (Sal Longo) is definitely one of those guys who would be in a camera club in the 1950s, paying gorgeous women to take photos while he’s surrounded by other socially awkward men. Yet it’s 1993, so he is able to invite all manner of models to his house where he takes perverted snaps of them and then uses their bodies and blood to fuel the mummy (Dave Castiglione) that is sleeping the sleep of death in his basement. Or, in his words, “I need virgin’s blood to revive the ancient warriors and put Egypt back on the map.” That’s why he’s paying girls of loose morals to come over and strip down for him and his camera.

There’s no nudity, which makes this feel even pervier — the True Detective magazine effect that I have mentioned before — and it’s the same thing over and over (and over), as the cameraman takes photos, spies on the women undressed, sends in the mummy, they faint and then they kill the woman and drain her blood. Repetition is a major part of comedy but it is even more a major element of a fetish, even one where someone wants to see women faint and get their blood drank by a bandage-wrapped undead Egyptian.

This was released by I.D.S. Productions/WAVE Productions, and yes that last company should let you know that this is totally non-porn porn. I both want to meet and don’t wish to ever know the person who jerks off to this and there’s no way I’m shaking their hand or even fist bumping them to say hello.

The women include Marlene (Michelle Caporaletti, Hung Jury), Marilyn (Cristie Clark, Curse of the Swamp Creature 2), Susan (Terri Lewandowski, Wayne’s mother in Santa Claws) and Dawn (Dawn Lewis).

Rameses made the mistake of killing Kris (Amanda Madison, Red Lips), so her twin sister Jean (also played by Amanda Madison) hunts him down. She’s nearly killed by a mummy before a policewoman (Clancy McCauley, The Kind of Meat That You Can’t Buy at the Store) and Jay (Aven Warren, who did makeup for many movies like this) shoot the shutterbug sadist and pours Egyptian water on the mummy. Roll the rasterized credits.

I’m not going to say that this was good but it’s definitely a movie that I can watch and get a vibe out of. It’s just drone, the same thing over and over, a mummy looking like he got all his makeup at Spencer’s at best and lots of bad photo sessions and alright blood drinking. It’s calming, as I’m anxious now trying to get a job and I’m not telling anyone in my interviews that to find my zen I sit and watch films where dime store wrapped cadavers munch down on vacant eyed women and yes, some dudes jerk off to it, but I use it to get high.

I mean, I want a job.

You can watch this on YouTube.

I HOPE YOU SUFFER OCTOBER FILM CHALLENGE: The Last Amityville Movie (2023)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The I Hope You Suffer podcast said that “Since everybody is doing these movie challenges now, we made the only one worth doing.” Bring the pain.

Amityville Zoo, Planet Amityville, Amityville DoorknobAmityville Lockdown, Amityville Isolation, The Amityville Amityville and Amityville Fridge aren’t real but I would totally watch them if they did make them. After all, this is the 53rd Amityville movie I’ve watched and I don’t see stopping any time soon.

Movie Timelines host Josh Spiegel directed, wrote and stars in this as himself. In the middle of a new pandemic, separated from his wife Christie and daughter Stella (played by his real-life wife and daughter), he keeps trying to update his YouTube channel and have online meetings with horror fans in the midst of losing his job and being mailed a cursed doorknob from Amityville that puts him into his own horror movie.

Then everyone he meets has their heads explode and he learns from multiple Amityville director Lars Van Floof that every Amityville movie is cursed by an item sold from the original house. I believe this, as much as I believe that a demon has cursed me to watch every one of these films.

Made on a low budget and a found footage film, this feels made for people like, well, me. People who keep watching Amityville movies and get mad at themselves but then feel a sense of joy when a new one comes out. Josh is from Pittsburgh as well, even though we’ve never met, and therefore I feel some kinship for the terror he endures as he goes deep into the heart of 112 Ocean Avenue.

You can get this from SRS or watch it on Tubi.

I HOPE YOU SUFFER OCTOBER FILM CHALLENGE EXTRA: Amityville Elevator (2023)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The I Hope You Suffer podcast said that “Since everybody is doing these movie challenges now, we made the only one worth doing.” Bring the pain.

Nick Box claims that this is a re-imagining of his earlier film Elevator to Insanity, which itself was a spoof of elevated horror, and that this makes fun of both that genre and Amityville movies.

A photographer (Gus Capucci) gets on an elevator that he rides for the entire movie.

That’s it.

Sure, sometimes a woman (Bryonny) gets on and gets off, but they never interact. There’s also a ballet dancer who he sees when the doors open and also a lady that screams at him for six minutes. That’s right. Six entire minutes of one scream.

Sometimes, he escapes for a moment, then hears a whole bunch of phrases like “Believe in yourself” before he’s back on the elevator, the woman gets on and off, and we watch him stand there for around forty minutes.

Finally, he gets to the floor he should be on and takes photos of corpses, just in time for a jump scare. Someone else gets in the elevator as the movie comes to a close.

This has a $3000 budget and I have no idea where it went. It’s like with each movie, Nick Box is trying to make the worst Amityville sequel, which is impossible because you can’t go lower than zero, right?

I’m waiting for a good Amityville and this supposedly makes fun of movies that just put that name before another movie and yet, it does the same thing. When I’m dying, I’ll remember this movie and hate that I wasted moments of my life watching it.

You can watch this on YouTube but please don’t.

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: Weird Woman (1944)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Weird Woman was on Chiller Theater on Saturday, December 22, 1973 at 11:30 p.m.

The second of The Inner Sanctum Mysteries series of movies, these Universal B movies took two weeks and $150,000 to make. Director Reginald LeBorg was given the script on a Friday and had until the following Monday to start making this. It was only his third film but I think he did quite well, despite having to use the prefab sets and day players.

While he’s on vacation in the South Seas, Professor of Ethnology Norman Reed (Lon Chaney Jr.)  meets a jungle white goddess named Paula (Anne Gwynne, one of the first scream queens and the grandmother of Chris Pine) who he first encountered when she was just a child and her father was a professor of archaeology who worked with Reed. Going by the actual ages, she’s 26 and Chaney is 38, so it doesn’t seem all that far apart (I mean, the same age difference between my wife and me) but physically, she seems like a child compared to Chaney. It’s also strange that he knew her when he was just a little girl and now he’s in love with her, taking her out of the jungle and back to Monroe College as his wife.

This upsets Ilona Carr (Evelyn Ankers, who was often cast opposite of Chaney), who always saw Reed as hers. Professor Reed is one of those absent minded men who surrounds himself with younger women, like his new secretary Margaret (lovely Lois Collier), who fall in love with him and are decimated when he actually does show attention to another woman. It’s not like he’s using his status and authority to take advantage of them, but in today’s world, it still seems weird.

When Prof. Millard Sawtelle (Ralph Morgan) is discovered using a student’s essay as the major part of his most famous work, he shoots himself. This angers his wife Evelyn (Elizabeth Russell), who thinks that Paula is pushing her husband to take over the department. As for the couple, he’s forced her to give up all of her voodoo, so she feels like she can no longer protect the man she loves.

This is quite important as Melissa’s jealous boyfriend David (Phil Brown, who would many years later be Uncle Owen Lars) comes to kill him and ends up shooting himself, which makes it look like Reed has killed the boy who has come to punish him for touching his pure lady.

Ankers and Gwynne were best friends, so when the normally kind Ankers had to act mean, the entire cast and crew would start to laugh.

Written by Brenda Weisberg and Scott Daring, this is based on the Fritz Leiber story Conjure Witch, which was remade as Burn, Witch, Burn!

This is also part of the Universal Shock Theater package of 52 films. These movies made up much of the library of channels that had horror host programs, much like Pittsburgh’s Chiller Theater.