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Saturday, July 31, 2010

The Mystery of Big Mike's Girls.

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After the past few weeks' Name that Movie Monday challenges, I thought it was only fair to present a movie that I want more information about!

I recently acquired an original of the one-sheet you see to the right.  (Strangely, reprints seem to be readily available.  I wouldn't have thought this to be a hot-ticket item for college dorms!)  I mainly grabbed it for Jess Franco's bottom-half contribution to the double-bill but was clueless about Big Mike's Girls, so I decided to do a little digging.

Nothing comes up on internet searches for Big Mike's Girls other than the aforementioned reprint sales.  The poster itself contains no copyright or distributor information.  Which leaves us with the listed cast:  Betty Harrison and Art Roberts.  A quick googling points to an easy ID of Pakistani expatriate Amin Chaudhri's Sweet Vengeance (1970), which follows a scorned woman's trail of bloody revenge after the mob offs her boyfriend.  Highlights reportedly include pseudo-prostitute throat slitting and climactic castration.  The syndicate head goes by the moniker Big Mike.  Mystery solved, right?  Not so fast.  This is where it gets interesting.

Feeling the film still had some legs, someone apparently decided to give it another go a few years later, and blaxploitation porn was the route they chose.  Adding new characters, a Shaft-esque score and several lengthy sex scenes, this new mutation ended up on theatre screens from Chancellor Films as Dirty Trick.  Given the 'X' rating on the poster and its release date, I can't imagine this version wouldn't have been hardcore.  

But that's not what turned up on video.  In 1988 the film saw its only domestic VHS release that I'm aware of, from Active Home Video as Deadly Vengeance, of course capitalizing on an early appearance by the one and only Grace Jones.  (Exploitation at its finest!  I can't imagine too many of her followers were thrilled with the movie that unfolded!)  It indeed presents the redux edition, but doesn't contain any penetration shots. 

So now I'm completely fixated on this movie.  Was the Dirty Tricks version actually hardcore?  If so, were they additional inserts, or were they filmed with the cast's participation?  Has the original version been released on home video anywhere?  Why doesn't the director's family want this listed on his official website?

Any help would be much appreciated; surely someone out there has to know something!  Hell, I'd even settle for a DVD-R.  I've probably passed up the tape dozens of times, never knowing what I was missing.  Kind of like when I finally caught Blood Games on cable a few months back.  Best redneck rapists vs. women's softball team movie ever.  Ever.






Poster scans courtesy of Wrong Side of the Art.

© 2010 -- Bruce Holecheck. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, July 26, 2010

It's Name that Movie Monday! Challenge #5!

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Welcome back to Name that Movie Monday!

It's time for Challenge #5 here at the ol' Arcana.  Can you identify this week's mystery photo, scanned direct from The Holecheck Archives?  If you think you recognize it, post a comment below.  As the week goes on, if no one guesses correctly I'll begin adding some pretty useless hints.  Easy, right?

Here ya' go -- good luck!


UPDATE:

Congrats go out to "delicreep" for correctly identifying this week's photo as Stephen Traxler's Slithis (1978), a fun, radioactive mud-monster romp where the titular creature stalks the denizens of Venice, CA.  It's the kind of movie that opens with an extended slow-motion frisbee sequence, and takes time out from its plot to showcase a local bar's turtle race.  I'm not kidding. And yes, I think it's awesome.

Theatrically, Slithis had an oddball distribution history.  After none of the majors wanted to pick it up, executive producer Dick Davis farmed it around to regional sub-distributors.  Director Traxler then adopted a grassroots advertising approach, traveling from town to town with costume in tow, making public appearances and even creating a Slithis Survival Kit and Fan Club!  The effort paid off; the film turned a nice profit and a fair amount of press, not that Traxler really benefitted... (For more information, check out the Slithis chapter in Stephen Thrower's essential Nightmare USA.)

Seeing a VHS release in 1981 from Media Home Entertainment, Slithis was out of print for almost 30 years until Code Red finally rescued it for their recent DVD, featuring a new anamorphic transfer and a handful of trailers. 

For a look at last week's entry, click here. And don't forget, our Upcoming Releases List (the best on the 'net) is constantly updated, so stop by and preorder some cool stuff!




(Additional photos stolen from Quasi-Interesting Paraphernalia Inc.; I'm not sure if they were the original scanners, but it's a cool site nonetheless!)

© 2010 -- Bruce Holecheck. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, July 19, 2010

It's Name that Movie Monday! Challenge #4.

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Welcome back to Name that Movie Monday!

Are you ready for Challenge #4?  The rules are simple:  take a gander at this week's photo, scanned direct from The Holecheck Archives.  If you think you know the film it's promoting, leave a comment below.  As the week goes on, if no one guesses correctly I'll begin adding some pretty useless hints.  Easy, right?  Last week's was identified in under two hours; let's see if we can beat that record!

Here ya' go -- good luck!


UPDATE:

Congrats go out to Bryan Senn for guessing this week's mystery film as Andy Milligan's Jeckyll & Hyde-inspired brain-melter, The Man with Two Heads (1970).  While not as deliriously skewed as the best of Milligan's output, it's still a worthwhile endeavor that fans should cherish; the director's venomous worldview is especially on display as the above-pictured loony verbally berates and mutilates various Soho hookers.

Shot in 1970, producer William Mishkin kept it on the shelf until '72, when his William Mishkin Motion Pictures Inc. released it on a double-bill with Andy's The Rats are Coming! The Werewolves are Here!  The outfit didn't show much confidence in the film, either; the combo pressbook states, "... The Rats are Coming is a better box office title [and] should always be featured first, and preferably be given more space than Man with 2 Heads."  It's an opinion I completely disagree with; Rats is a snore compared to the maniacal Mr. Blood.

A decade later Man saw VHS release through Select-A-Tape's Midnight Video genre arm (not to be confused with the bootleg outfit) as one of only eight titles.  Unfortunately, it has never made the jump to DVD, and at this point I can't imagine it ever will.  For those not wanting to spend collector prices for the old prerecord, exploitation saviours Something Weird Video have kept the film in circulation on VHS and DVD-R.



For a look at our previous entry, click here.  Also keep an eye peeled for additional randomness coming soon, including reviews of Gone with the Pope and Herschell Gordon Lewis: The Godfather of Gore, my Top Ten DVDs of 2008 and more!

And don't forget, our Upcoming Releases List (the best of its type online, if I do say so myself) is constantly updated; swing by and preorder some cool discs!
 
© 2010 -- Bruce Holecheck.  All Rights Reserved.

Monday, July 12, 2010

It's Name that Movie Monday! Challenge #3.

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Welcome back to Name that Movie Monday!

It's time for Challenge #3 in our ongoing series; do you have what it takes to identify this week's mystery film?  If you think you know it, leave a comment below.  As the week goes on, if no one guesses correctly I'll begin adding some pretty useless hints.  Sound fair? 

Here ya' go -- good luck!


UPDATE:

Congrats to Fred Anderson (Ninja Dixon) for identifying this week's photo -- less than two hours after I put it up!  Maybe I should've chosen something more difficult?  The film in question is indeed Pete Walker's Schizo (1976), one of the famed Brit director's more underrated works, starring sexy Lynne Frederick (of Phase IV and Four of the Apocalypse fame, and then there was that whole Peter Sellers thing...) as an ice-skater whose pending marriage coincides with a slew of bodies piling up on her doorstep.  Almost giallo-like in execution, the film repeatedly gets overlooked in favor of other Walker efforts like Frightmare and The Confessional, but it's a fun ride all its own and definitely worthy of reappraisal.

Schizo saw Stateside theatrical release in 1977 courtesy of Niles International (a company I know practically nothing about) with the awesome tagline, "When the left hand doesn't know who the right hand is killing!!"  United Home Video issued it to VHS in 1986, and with the DVD boom Image Entertainment included it as part of their EuroShock Collection (now out-of-print).  Currently, the film is available on DVD from Salvation Films, though its quality is practically the same as the Image release, so it's up to the buyer to decide which they'd rather have.

For a look at last week's entry, click here.  More goodies coming soon!

© 2010 -- Bruce Holecheck. All Rights Reserved.

Monday, July 5, 2010

It's Always Bloody in Philadelphia -- Programmer Travis Crawford on the Danger After Dark Film Festival

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A celebration of the weird, shocking, bizarre and offbeat, Philadelphia's annual Danger After Dark line-up presents a selection of the best the film world has to offer - for ten years and running now!  It's been host to premieres and screenings of hotly-anticipated items like Oldboy, High Tension, Suicide Club, Bad Biology and Lady Vengeance, to less known, but no less worthy, outings like The Uninvited, Strange Circus, Acacia and The Glamorous Life of Sachiko Hanai.  The 2010 edition runs July 9th through the 19th at The Ritz on the Bourse in downtown Philly, and showcases eleven titles sure to please.  Returning Festival Programmer Travis Crawford was kind enough to answer a few questions for us.

Cinema Arcana: In the past, Danger After Dark has been a subcategory of the annual Philadelphia Film Festival; why make it its own entity this year?

Travis Crawford:  Most of that was rooted in the unfortunate cancellation of this year’s installment of CineFest.  When the Philadelphia Cinema Alliance and the Philadelphia Film Society parted ways last year, and CineFest and the Film Festival became two separate events, it created a sudden financial strain on the Cinema Alliance, and they were unable to fully fund a complete film festival as usual in April.  But I had already returned to the fold to program Danger After Dark before the cancellation occurred, and had many films lined up already, so everything was just sort of left in limbo back in the spring. However, the Cinema Alliance had already committed to doing their annual Qfest in July, so Ray Murray, our artistic director, came back and told me that they might have additional theater space available during the same time frame as QFest, and asked if I would be interested in creating a sort of “mini-festival” for Danger After Dark that would operate consecutively with Qfest – using some of their same resources – but as its own separate, distinct event.  I agreed, since by that point, I not only had some of the titles left that I had wanted to program back in April, but I had also discovered some newer films too, like Big Tits Zombie 3-D.

But I think that also, making Danger After Dark its own entity had the additional effect of reviving that particular program and sort of indirectly announcing that I was returning as programmer for the series, after having been gone for two years.  I mean, that wasn’t particularly why it became its own festival this year – the reasons were, like I mentioned, a lot more pragmatic – but, hopefully, that might wind up being a bonus result.

CA:  What can fans look forward with this separate installment?

TC:  It’s strange, because I think the program is both more expansive and far-reaching, and yet simultaneously more focused too.  It’s more challenging and experimental in its selections than it’s probably ever been before, and as a result, there are admittedly fewer straightforward genre movies – I mean, there are still some, like Robogeisha and Vengeance.  But this time, Danger After Dark obviously leans a lot more towards unclassifiable and offbeat movies like Temptation of St. Tony, Enter the Void and Dogtooth.  And even the films that would superficially appear to be more traditional thrillers, movies like Amer and Red White & Blue, are actually very experimental interpretations of the genre.  Then of course, there are just purely off-the-wall oddities like Gone with the Pope.  So, I think fans should be really excited about the line-up this year, because I think Danger After Dark feels really invigorated and revived, and it’s exciting to me again after all these years.  It’s the same strong genre program that it’s been for a decade now, but it also really feels like there’s new blood coursing through its veins – it’s not the same old stuff.  But, having said that, movies like Life and Death of a Porno Gang are definitely going to require that longtime Danger After Dark fans come to the theater feeling a little, uh, open-minded and adventurous.

CA:  How do you decide what plays and what doesn't?

TC:  Well, the easiest answer to that is also the most honest – and that it often comes down to what films I just personally respond to, what films really connect with me.  But I’m not totally that arrogant.  I definitely think of the audience too, and what I think a crowded theater will really appreciate, and I’m always watching films with that consideration in mind.  But I think that comes into play more in terms of how the entire series is assembled, rather than individual selections.  For example, I know that a film like Temptation of St. Tony is only going to appeal to a limited number of people, and as much as I personally love that movie, I have to then take that into consideration, and make sure that – if I program a movie like that – there needs to be a weekend-slotted crowd-pleaser like Robogeisha also programmed to balance it all out.  And I like Robogeisha, don’t get me wrong.  But that’s a case where I might think about how much an audience will enjoy it too.  For example, two of the most popular Danger After Dark films that I ever programmed would probably be The Descent and A Tale of Two Sisters.  And you know what?  I really liked those two movies – but I didn’t necessarily personally love them.  But I knew that a large audience in a theater would really respond to them, so I’m more than happy to program titles like that to balance out those other esoteric films that I love, but I’m also thinking in the back of my mind, “OK, if I can get, like, twenty friends of mine to at least show up to this screening, then I guess I’ll be satisfied.”  So it’s a balance, but a lot of it does come down to personal preference for the films.

CA:  I'm sure you have to turn down quite a few worthy titles due to space restraints.  Is there anything you've skipped booking that you've regretted?

TC:  Actually, if I wound up skipping something purely because of space constraints, then, no, I don’t really wind up regretting it.  I mean, I might have liked a movie, but if I really felt that passionately about it, I would have found the room for it, so if it was just because of space issues, I don’t think about those titles too much once the programming is locked down.  The ones that you remember are the ones that just didn’t work out because the films weren’t available for various other reasons outside of your control as a programmer.  This year, there were films I was really trying to get – Serbian Film, Mutant Girls Squad, We Are What We Are, really worthwhile movies like that – but they just weren’t available for the festival.  And, I should point out, in each of those cases, the distributors were incredibly helpful and were trying to assist in getting us the films, but there were just various factors – scheduling with other festivals, format availability, rights issues, etc. – that interfered and the movies just weren’t able to be programmed.  So those you remember…but you try to not dwell on them.

CA:  Are there any films you've booked from fests past that you feel are still criminally overlooked or underrated?  I'm astonished titles like Survive Style 5+ and A Bittersweet Life haven't received a domestic release.

TC:  It’s funny, because I guess since I attend other film festivals, I buy import DVDs, and I receive screeners from international distributors and sales agencies – frankly, by the time I wind up programming something for the film festival, the movie is sort of “done” for me in my mind, and I don’t really pay attention to what happens to most of them in the American marketplace after that.  I hope that doesn’t sound callous, but I just move on.  I mean, honestly, I didn’t even know that A Bittersweet Life still hadn’t had any sort of release in America until you just said that.  I programmed it, I bought the Korean DVD, and then that was it for me.  Survive Style 5+, on the other hand, is one of the few that definitely did stand out, though, in terms of me being really disappointed that it never received any distribution in America outside of film festivals.  I gather that’s because of the music rights issue involving the Cake cover of “I Will Survive” that’s used in the final sequence, from what I’ve been told.  I thought about American distribution more when I was working on acquisitions for the Danger After Dark DVD line through TLA, when we were releasing titles like Suicide Club, 2LDK and Meatball Machine, but that line isn't exactly active at the moment, so I’m not really currently taking that into consideration.  But sometimes people will ask me about some Danger After Dark film that I programmed nine years ago or something, and where they can see it again, and I’m just kind of clueless that it’s not available here.  Unless I get back into acquisitions again, I suppose I feel like I’ve finished my relationship with a film after I’ve shown it to a theater full of appreciative people.

Thanks, Travis.  For more information on the 2010 Danger After Dark Fest, including its complete schedule, check out its official website
 


© 2010 -- Bruce Holecheck. All Rights Reserved.