Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘roger corman’

By far the most fun movie I’ve seen this summer is Sharktopus.

Granted, I really haven’t seen many movies this summer. I’ve mostly just been hanging out with friends, going out to lunch, and fighting with this young-adult paranormal romance I’ve been writing since January (the book is winning the fight, by the way).

As you know, I have to see EVERY horror movie known to man, so I did see an interesting one a few months ago: Cannibal Holocaust. Made in 1980, I think it was the first “found footage” film and an obvious influence on Blair Witch Project, which didn’t come along until 20 years later.

The premise is that a documentary crew goes into the jungle to film cannibals and, well, their footage is found a year later. The movie is notorious for not only its stark brutality, but also for the fact that several animals were actually killed on camera.

I am not necessarily recommending this film, because if it’s something you’d like, you’ve probably already seen it and I don’t want to be responsible for traumatizing any of you.

Also, the acting by the people who find the footage and watch it to see what happened to the crew is laughably bad. They give “who farted” looks while watching reel after reel of acts that are absolutely horrifying.

Read Full Post »

Aw, Dino De Laurentiis died today. It seems like he had a really amazing life. RIP.

Even though I lived in L.A. for years (on the Westside where a lot of film types live, even), I often don’t realize which producers and directors did what films. Unless it’s someone obvious like Woody Allen.

Like I wouldn’t have guessed that not only did De Laurentiis produce La Strada and Serpico, but he did Dune and that remake of King Kong where the ape pulls Jessica Lange’s dress down with his finger.

I was telling some people the other day that I was going to watch my first Roger Corman film, Piranha (which I did. It was just okay.) But then I looked him up and realized he’s done a ton of movies I’ve seen. Not sure if anyone has been as prolific, as there are too many to name, but Rock and Roll High School, Little Shop of Horrors, Caged Heat, Death Race 2000, Avalanche, the underrated Dementia 13.

He also produced those Edgar Allen Poe adaptations that anyone who was a kid in the 70s would remember from TV. I loved the thoroughly creepy Masque of the Red Death and Pit and the Pendulum.

I guess I must have sensed that some day I would become a writer of fine literature.

Read Full Post »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.