This year we are going to 11! PK’s pick for 2005

Something I would like to mention before I start this post. If you are at an event in the coming weeks where folks are watching the NFL, please don’t complain about people watching football, ok? You don’t even have to pretend to like the game. Just tolerate the maniacs that live vicariously through genetically engineered, drug enhanced armored psychopaths let loose on a concrete field covered in industrial outdoor carpet and enjoy the food and booze. Thank you.
2005 was a really outstanding year in films that were both lauded with praise by critics and films that were cheered by fanboys.
  • SIN CITY: I actually had a nightmare the night after seeing this film about the creepy Hobbit in the glasses. Oh, yeah, Frank Miller, blah, blah, blah….
  • SERENITY: A Sci Fi Western that actually makes some sense! Wow! Well-thought out characters and a thorough mythology (better be considering it was a TV show) are usually a Whedon trademark and the film manages to be a great capping to the show and a great stand alone adventure. The Master of the Macabre himself, Bernie Wrightson, did character designs for the Reapers, so that is a huge thumb’s up in PK’s human skin bound grimoire of opinions.
  • 40 YEAR OLD VIRGIN: Steve Carrell really is America’s sweetheart in this wonderfully executed comedy and Catherine Keener is quite charming as his love interest. ProbablyApatow’s best movie.
  • BATMAN BEGINS: Before last year, I would have said, “Best Bat-Movie EVER!”
  • THE DEVIL’S REJECTS: Okay, maybe Sherri Moon-Zombies voice just doesn’t bother me as much as some folks. I really have to give it to her husband on this film, though. It’s a really well-done turn on 70’s revenge thrillers with an amazing ensemble cast! Let’s give credit where credit is due, character acting legend Geoffrey Lewis is great in everything that he’s done and Priscilla Barnes performance is in my opinion, honestly, Oscar worthy. I was really rooting for WilliamForsythe, too!
  • GRIZZLY MAN: Well, if anybody knows crazy it’s Werner Herzog.
  • THE DESCENT: My good friend Damian Maffei said, “When I was sitting in the theater  watching that film, I felt what I think audiences did seeing JAWS in the theater for the first time.” That is a bold statement, but I do agree that Neil Marshall’s foray into what I like to call the “C.H.U.D.” genre is an instant classic! A Horror film where 4 ridiculously hot, and I mean amazingly fine, fine prime young ladies don’t take off their tops and I didn’t notice until Damian mentioned it afterwards?! That is impressive film-making people!
  • CAPOTE: I have mentioned certain actors that have taken on roles of historical figures as if they were their doppelgangers, Philip Seymour Hoffman makes you feel as if Truman Capote is in the room with you. Catherine Keener is wonderful as Harper Lee, author of TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD*, as is Chris Cooper, who portrays Alvin Dewey, the investigator of the murders Capote made famous with his seminal work IN COLD BLOOD.
  • WALLACE & GROMIT: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit: I was a scared!
  • THE ARISTOCRATS: “Then the dad wraps the guinea pig in duct-tape so it doesn’t explode when he…”
  • A HISTORY OF VIOLENCE: Did you really need make-up to give Ed Harris an air of menace? Oh, William Hurt should have won Best Supporting Actor, too.
Boy, is this a GUILTY pleasure!
  • SANTA’S SLAY: For BellMojo’s CHRISTMAS AFTERMATH Burlesque & Music Fest Damian Maffei was asked to provide content for over 100 TV screens at the Pool House Billiards Hall & Pub. This little gem ended up in the pile and nether of us had seen it. In the middle of a RIDICULOUS set of Death Metal byKOROTORY, Damian taps me on the shoulder and points like the Ghost of Christmas Future to a TV screen showing James Caan, Fran Drescher, Rebecca Gayheart and Chris Kattan portraying a good Christian family at the Holiday table who are then brutally slaughtered by pro-wrestler Bill Goldberg in a Santa suit. It also has RobertCulp and he was Trent in DEMON WITH A GLASS HAND**
*If you have never seen this B&W classic for shame.
**Ditto!

Stewie Speaks! The heart of BellMojo sounds off on his Halloween hits! Dig it, baby!

Stewie Speaks!

Hello all, Stew Goldstein here. For all those that don’t know me, I am the silent partner in Bellmojo, and by silent, I mean I don’t talk very much. Well, Patrick Kennedy, who I’m sure you’re all very familiar with, had asked me to put together a Halloween horror movie column and so here it is.

I’ve decided to focus on three choice films from before 1970.
Ready?
Good, then let’s begin.

For the first choice I’ve decided to go with one of my favorite films of all time

There are three kinds of people in this world: you either favor the Marx Brothers, the Three Stooges or Abbott & Costello. In my world your choice has a lot to say about you. I’m certain in your world this means absolutely nothing.

I’ve always been a huge fan of Abbott & Costello. Anyone that  grew up in the New York Metro area in the 1970s remembers every Sunday morning at 11:30, WPIX would air an Abbott & Costello film.It didn’t matter which one it was to me, as long as I got to see my A&C movie.

THE WISTFUL WIDOW OF WAGON GAP: You bet!
PARDON MY SARONG: I was there!

But the one I always wanted; was the one with the funniest moments; the one with the most daring escapes; the one with the monsters!

ABBOTT & COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN
Dracula!
Frankenstein!
And the Wolf Man!!!

The holy trinity of monsters. Sure, say what you will about the Mummy, or the Gill-Man, or the Phantom of the Opera, but they’re all second-stringers when compared to these guys.

And the casting! C’mon Lugosi as Dracula! Lon Chaney Jr as Lawrence Talbot, the Wolf Man! Oh man, I really used to love the Wolf Man as a kid; I used to snarl my upper lip, growl and bound from the couch, all stalky-like after watching this movie. And, Glenn Strange as Frankenstein’s monster! While nowhere near as good as Karloff, Mr Strange, having played the monster before, was the next best choice.

And then, of course, there are the boys and they have never been better! In this one, they play a pair of bumbling baggage handlers — I know what you’re thinking, they’re really showing their range as actors here, but let me ask you something, if they played buttoned-down physicists, would you be laughing?

Well, to make a long story short, the boys are supposed to deliver crates containing the Frankenstein Monster and Dracula’s coffin to MacDougal’s House of Horrors and, of course, the monsters rise and escape! With the intention of furthering Dracula’s nefarious plan of providing Frankenstein with a new brain, Costello’s.

From there we have some of the greatest gags the boys have ever done or re-done as may be the case, especially the bit with the moving candle. But who cares? It’s still funny.

The main reason this film is considered one of the best comedy-horror films ever made is due to the fact that monsters play it straight; they’re not used for comedic effect, that’s what Abbott & Costello are for.

In my opinion every moment of this film is a gem, from the animated opening credits to the final surprise guest.

So, if you’ve never seen it do yourself, a favor and rent it and if you have seen it, see it again — you won’t be disappointed.

As I’m sitting here writing this I’m feeling a bit under the weather. Sick, fever, chills, hallucinating the Dalai Lama and the Pope each want me for their rugby teams ( I can only play for one, which will it be, which will it be?) and it had gotten me thinking about another film, or rather a particular segment of another film that will also give you the chills.

BLACK SABBATH

What we have here is a 3 part horror film by the late great Italian horror director  Mario Bava. I’m gonna tell you right now, you don’t have to watch the whole thing.

Skip the segment THE TELEPHONE — it’s basically just a standard crime piece with no real great payoff.

You should watch THE WURDULAK  if only for the presence of Boris Karloff as the title character. The Wurdulak is a vampire that feeds only on those that they love — so family members beware! Apart from Karloff’s great performance as the eponymous monster the main things to look for in this piece are the same things you want to pay attention to in most of Bava’s later films and that is the fantastical color schemes and the eerie sets. Nobody filmed like Bava (on a side note — check out the Japanese film KWAIDAN for another great example of remarkable use of color in film, and, of course, Argento’s SUSPIRIA & INFERNO but we’ll get to those another time)

The real reason to watch BLACK SABBATH is for the one short segment called THE DROP OF WATER. Without a doubt one of the most chilling horror films ever made. To break the story down, a nurse steals a dead medium’s ring but the medium is not going to go quietly unto her grave without it.. This is one of the few films that scared the living heck out of me as a child and still makes me shudder every time I think about it. You might want to consider leaving the lights on when watching this.

Word of warning about the DVD — it is from the original Italian version which means  that, crime of crimes, Boris Karloff is actually dubbed into Italian — which was very disappointing not being able to hear the legend’s iconic voice.

Watch THE DROP OF WATER anyway!

This next film has always been a favorite of mine ever since I first saw it one Saturday afternoon on channel 5…

THE FLESH EATERS
This film has it all! A tough-as-nails takes-no-guff charter pilot, a drunken washed-up actress, a sexy young love interest, a German scientist with a shadowy past (played perfectly by Martin Kosleck , if you close your eyes while the movie is on you could swear you could smell the alcohol on his breath), deadly microbes in the water (the title creatures) that will pick your bones clean until you sound like a wind chime, and even a beatnik named Omar! Can you dig it, daddy-o?

There’s much more, but to tell would be giving away the great surprises this movie has in store for the uninitiated. It’s a treat of pure pulpy horror that never fails to impress with each viewing.

An interesting side note to this film, the editor was Radley Metzger who later moved on to direct some of the more memorable porn films of the 70’s such as THE LICKERISH QUARTET, CAMILLE 2000, and THE OPENING OF MISTY BEETHOVEN.

With a pedigree like that behind this film how, can you not want to watch it now?

And remember, “The only people who will not be sterilized with fear are those among you who are already DEAD!”

Well that draws this article to a close but I would like to leave you with some other choices for consideration:

FRANKENSTEIN

THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN

DRACULA (1931) — not as good as the Frankenstein films, it plays more like a filmed stage play but it does have Lugosi.

THE WOLF MAN

THE MUMMY — both the Universal and Hammer versions.

THE CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON — one of the coolest looking monsters ever.

KWAIDAN — Japanese ghost stories of extreme beauty.

THEM — Giant ants, what more could you want?

PLANET OF THE VAMPIRES — more creepiness from Mario Bava.

CURSE OF THE DEMON — Dana Andrews haunted/hunted by what may or may not be a real demon. Fantastic direction by Jacques Tourneur that will keep you guessing until the end.

HORROR OF DRACULA — Christopher Lee playing the count for the first time! Peter Cushing as Van Helsing! Classic Hammer.

CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN — Still Lee and Cushing, still great.

THE BLOB — fun, fun, fun.

THE HAUNTING — forget the crappy remake and go back to Robert Wise’s original.

FREAKS — take a step into the world of the crazy Tod Browning for this lurid tale.

THE FEARLESS VAMPIRE KILLERS — despite what you may think of the man, Roman Polanski has made one heck of an entertaining vampire film that will leave you laughing.

HOUSE OF WAX — Vincent Price, do you need more?

FRANKENSTEIN’S BLOODY TERROR — insane Paul Naschy horror vehicle with werewolves & vampires. Strangely though, no Frankenstein.

SPIDER BABY — horror, comedy, whatever you want to call it but worth a look. And Lon Chaney Jr sings the theme song!

BLACK SUNDAY — another Mario Bava classic starring the eerily beautiful Barbara Steele.

TARANTULA — more giant insect mayhem. Look for a young Clint Eastwood at the end as a fighter pilot.

THE LAST MAN ON EARTH — not a great film but the closest adaptation to Richard Matheson’s classic I AM LEGEND that we’re likely to get. Oh, and Vincent Price is in this, too!

PSYCHO & THE BIRDS — Two horror classics by a master at the peak of his powers.

THE NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD — The original shocker; the granddaddy of modern horror. See it again, its still great.

BelMojo Founder Provides His Opinion On Something? Shocking!

Patrick J. Kennedy (Hey, that’s me!) is going to providing reviews for the site She Never Slept. It’s a horror, sci-fi, strange fiction site for discerning fans, particularly those that like the works of H.P. Lovecraft! The first review is for a great liitle kid’s comic called Howard Lovecraft and the Frozen Kingdom!

Our pal Dave Parker’s new film, The Hills Run Red, has hit the streets!

If you want bloodcurdling horror, look no further, our pal Dave Parker has directed a chilling new slasher flick called THE HILLS RUN RED! Don’t ask me about it, check out the trailer here!


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