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Accademia Giallo returns with a viewer-requested review of a film that almost none of the faculty have seen!William Rose and Dick Randall's The Girl in Room 2A turns 50 this year, and your fearsome faculty is ready to see what they've been missing for a half-century!A young girl, just paroled from prison, moves into a strange house and appears to be the next victim of a cult that kidnaps and sacrifices beautiful women!Will the film prove to be a hidden gem--or the catalyst for our never again taking your recommendations? And is it even really Giallo?Join us as we initiate the latest candidate for the Accademia Giallo pantheon--and take your questions, comments, and Super Chats!Subscribe, like, and comment to the Kicking the Seat YouTube channel, and check out kickseat.com for multiple movie podcasts each week!Show LinksWatch the Girl in Room 2A trailer.Bonus! Check out this short about AC's recent trip to the Stephen King library collection in Maine!Support all of our terrifying teachers' axe-tracurricular activities!Stay studious with Aaron Christensen at Horror101 with Dr. AC!If you dare, venture down into Kitley's Krypt with Jon Kitley! And listen to Jon's scary-good podcast, Discover the Horror!Get devious with Bryan Martinez's Film Deviant podcast!And check out his YouTube show, The Giallo Room!Buy J. Blake Fichera's "Scored to Death" Volume I and II on Amazon (mentioned in the show).And catch up with classic episodes of his Saturday Night Movie Sleepovers podcast!Continue your education with our "Accademia Giallo" Playlist!
The 1980s were a haven for horror cinema and that's what led to exploitation and hardcore pornography filmmaker Dick Randall and Italian producer Roberto Loyola to get together and write a script for a movie under the pen name “John Shadow.” The end result was a project called “Jigsaw” that eventually landed in the hands of director Juan Piquer Simon, who had just recently been approached to helm “The Last House on the Left” sequel but he passed because he felt the script was too boring. That's when he read the treatment for “Jigsaw,” which was somehow supposed to be made as a TV movie. Simon was so blown away by the script that he decided to help mold this into a feature length film. What resulted was a gruesome, blood soaked film that was far more concerned with jaw dropping kills than anything that could pass as a coherent story. Four decades later, this is a film that Eli Roth called a “glowing work of art.” In the latest edition of Rewind of the Living Dead, we're going to rev up our chainsaws and put together a puzzle as we talk about the 1982 film “Pieces”…
A sadistic killer cult kidnaps and sacrifices beautiful women. A young girl, just paroled from prison, moves into a strange house and appears to be the cult's next victim. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/censoredmenotpodcast/support
In this episode we try to survive a campus killer with 1982's Pieces. This film was directed by J. Piquer Simon, written by Dick Randall and Stephen Minasian, and stars Christopher George, Edmund Purdom, Linda Day and Ian Sera. If you enjoy the show, give us a subscribe/rating/review and of course, tell your friends! We have some sweet merch for sale over at : www.teepublic.com/user/we-are-horr…or-movie-podcast Visit us at wearehorrifiedpodcast.com
Spy season continues with Weng Weng, international little person of mystery. A parody of the Bond franchise, For Y’ur Height Only brings us quick and dirty filmmaking and a script that just gives up at some point. “Hey, it’s a parody, do we need to explain this or that? Nah.” This week we’re joined by friend and regular Arden to talk about this Filipino martial artist, his film, bad edits, repetitive music, awful stunts, worse dialogue, and nipples. Show notes usually contain references to characters, people, films, or jokes we make about the movie we’re reviewing. There’s not a lot of notes for this film because it is just BONKERS. Arden, Paul, and Chris are lost in the script by Cora Caballas or the dubbing possibly done by Dick Randall. We learn that Verne Troyer was actually shorter than Weng Weng. Arden continues to drop history on us as we discuss Weng Weng’s ties to his karaoke buddy Imelda Marcos. The John Woo slide. We have to apologize for the all the talk about peperoni nipples this season. This film and Masters of the Universe had lengthy scenes of men without their shirts on. There’s no shame in nipples or shirtless men or podcasts, right? Sadly, Arden that is not Cesar Romero in this Filipino film. Hey, my dialogue needs something extra. What can I do? How about a nursery rhyme? So there’s actual dialogue in the film from Rub-a-dub-dub in a gangster scene about drugs? Weng Weng will Have a Coke and a Smile. Is it a Manila Coke or the evil New Coke? Look at me, I’m Mary Frickin’ Poppins, y’all! The best James Bond film, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, starring George Lazenby is referenced in Erma’s death. So, it’s bad. Can we watch another one though? D’Wild Wild Weng? Paul wants to know if the thumb-high-five is a cultural thing we don’t understand or a Tim Cook and Bono awkward moment. Chris shares the story of why Jesus Christ Vampire Hunter has never been on the podcast. What about Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter? A film that was successful as parody of a cult classic and has become a cult classic itself is Black Dynamite. Michael Jai White’s next cult send up that is coming out is called The Outlaw Johnny Black. Random Lou Diamond Phillips reference. Paul’s favorite movie of the season is still Masters of the Universe. Thanks for listening to our mouth sound effects and we send you all virtual thumb touches. Until next time. Support Film Frown on Patreon
Brazzi plays mad Dr. Frankenstein, Dunn is an evil dwarf and Lugosi (no relation to Bela) is a Neanderthal man. Add a monster named Hulk, and some nude women for sexploitation value.Director: Dick Randall (as Robert H. Oliver)Writers: Mario Francini, William Rose, 2 more credits »Stars: Rossano Brazzi, Michael Dunn, Edmund Purdom - via IMDB https://archive.org/details/Frankenstein1974-BorisLugosi
How does Derek celebrate Halloween? By watching monster movies all day at Monster Kid Radio Headquarters. To help cope with his post-Halloween blues, Derek looks back at the movies he watched that day - The Brain Eaters (dir. Bruno VeSota), Goke, Body Snatcher from Hell (dir. Hajime Satô), Blood of the Vampire (dir. Henry Cass), and Carnival of Souls (dir. Herk Harvey). That evening, he joined 's Chris McMillan at the for a screening of House of Wax (dir. André De Toth) in 3D! We hope everyone had a Happy Halloween! (And if you're in the Portland/Tigard, OR, area, don't forget to check out Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks (dir. Dick Randall) on Weird Wednesday, 11/5/14, at the Joy!) Be sure to visit our complete website at . Voicemail: 503-479-5MKR (503-479-5657)Email: monsterkidradio@gmail.com (.mp3s of every episode of Monster Kid Radio is available for download at our barebones behind-the-scenes website at ) The Joy Cinema and Pub - 6'+ - Monster Kid Radio Awarded "One of a Kind Blend" - Support Monster Kid Radio on Patreon - The opening and closing song "Exploration in Terror" appears by permission of Gung Ho - All original content of Monster Kid Radio by is licensed under a . Monster Kid Radio is a registered service mark of Monster Kid Radio LLC. Happy Birthday, Godzilla. Skreeonk.
87) The Strange Vice of Mrs Wardh (1970) and The French Sex Murders (1972)