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In honor of the 7th anniversary of the special "CultCore" episode series, Andrew speaks to Kate Owens just moments after she finished watching the 1974 Pam Grier classic "Foxy Brown," co-starring Antonio Fargas and Bob Minor, and directed by Decatur, Ga. resident Jack Hill. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In honor of the 7th anniversary of the special "CultCore" episode series, Andrew speaks to Kate Owens just moments after she finished watching the 1974 Pam Grier classic "Foxy Brown," co-starring Antonio Fargas and Bob Minor, and directed by Decatur, Ga. resident Jack Hill. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In honor of the 7th anniversary of the special "CultCore" episode series, Andrew speaks to Kate Owens just moments after she finished watching the 1974 Pam Grier classic "Foxy Brown," co-starring Antonio Fargas and Bob Minor, and directed by Decatur, Ga. resident Jack Hill. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In the Cinema File's ongoing CultCore podcast series created by Kate Owens, the 2003 Shadow Entertainment release starring Julie Strain and Brinke Stevens is discussed as an under-appreciated team-up of sorts between two of the hardest-working icons in B-movie history.
In the Cinema File's ongoing CultCore podcast series created by Kate Owens, the 2003 Shadow Entertainment release starring Julie Strain and Brinke Stevens is discussed as an under-appreciated team-up of sorts between two of the hardest-working icons in B-movie history.
With the trailers for the upcoming "Suspiria" remake getting creepier and more mysterious, CultCore podcast hosts Kate Owens and Andrew Shearer take a look back at the 1977 Dario Argento original as well as Darren Aronofsky's 2010 spiritual sister film, "Black Swan."
With the trailers for the upcoming "Suspiria" remake getting creepier and more mysterious, CultCore podcast hosts Kate Owens and Andrew Shearer take a look back at the 1977 Dario Argento original as well as Darren Aronofsky's 2010 spiritual sister film, "Black Swan."
A staple of sleepy weekend afternoon television, 1972's mutant bunny flick "Night of the Lepus" might seem like something out of a childhood nightmare instead of a film that actually exists. Except it does, and it's out on blu ray now from Scream Factory. Feast your ears on Andrew and Kate's hare-raising discussion.
The creepy girl subgenre is probably one of the least often explored in all of horror cinema any yet almost always yields a classic whenever someone makes one. In this episode originally published in July of 2014, Andrew and Kate take a look at Lucky McKee's 2002 sleeper "May" and Richard Bates Jr's 2012 body horror comedy "Excision." Follow @cinemandrew on IG/Twitter for more stuffs.