It's Lon Chaney Jr's birthday today -- a great excuse to watch Spider Bay. It's my favorite of his films. I love him in sympathetic roles. This is an excellent print of the film for free from Archive.
@tirebiter73 I suspected as much! And to be clear: I think I would have loved it at the time. But watching it now, it seems like it's mostly about a love triangle. At my age, I'm more into The Andromeda Strain and Phase IV. I think it provided the same kind of experience for viewers at the time. But no art works forever!
I finally watched Asteroid City (2023). If you like Wes Anderson, I don't see how you can go wrong with this one. I'm no longer in that group and found it painful to sit through.
I only just say Westworld (1973). I remember people being crazy for the film then. My expectations were high so it isn't surprising I didn't especially like it. But it's well produced. I suspect people revisiting it will enjoy it.
I just watched When Worlds Collide (1951) for the first time since I was a kid. The model work is impressive but mostly, it's kind of dull -- not nearly as fun as It Came From Outer Space. But definitely well-made!
https://psychotronicreview.com/short-takes/w/#when-worlds-collide
The Star Wars Holiday Special (1978). I just discovered this. It is as bizarre as the legend has it. Here is a great (free) print!
@tgraph52 Yeah. The only thing that's really impressive here is the stunt work. I admire the people who do it but it definitely stresses me out!
I'm watching City on Fire (1979). It's not as bad as I'd been led to think. But the main thing about it is that Shelley Winters had so much charisma. She puts everyone else to shame!
Here's a good and free copy:
https://ia800508.us.archive.org/6/items/01-leslie-nielsen/City%20on%20Fire%20%281979%29.ia.mp4
I watched X (2022). More heartbreaking than horror. But a very well-crafted film.
Frightmare (1974) starts off great but loses it at the end. Still, there's easily a half hour here very much worth watching!
Horrors of the Black Museum (1959) is a nice combination of 1950s style and a dark and grizzly inside. Features Alfred from the 1980s Batman movies.
https://psychotronicreview.com/short-takes/h/#horrors-of-the-black-museum
Dark Night of the Scarecrow (1981) is one of the greatest horror films ever made. It's just shockingly good -- and made for TV!
https://psychotronicreview.com/short-takes/d/#dark-night-of-the-scarecrow
Cheeky little kill-fest Jack Frost (1997) is hated by professional film critics!
https://psychotronicreview.com/short-takes/j/#jack-frost-1997
Capsule review Resurrection (2022). I spent about an hour discussing just what's going on in this film with my writing partner. We can up with way too many ideas. The film is good and worth a look.
I watched the two filmed versions of Blithe Spirit. My thoughts here:
https://psychotronicreview.com/short-takes/b/#blithe-spirit-1945
The best thing is that I discovered a TV version starring Noel Coward, Claudette Colbert, and Lauren Bacall! Copy here:
Spectre (1977) was another horror TV pilot that kind of sucked. But you'd think it would be a bigger deal given it was created by Gene Roddenberry. Again: the show might have been good but the pilot wasn't.
My constant efforts to find unusual films have recently led me to failed TV pilots. Good Against Evil (1977) is the worst so far. Too bad! Although the pilot was hard to get through, I think the series would have been good. Kind of "Have Exorcist, Will Travel"!
https://psychotronicreview.com/short-takes/g/#good-against-evil
Ghost Stories (2017) presents a strong reveal but the denouement is disappointing. Still worth watching.
I Trapped the Devil (2019) is one of these modest-budget single-location films that feature great script, production, and acting. If you have AMC+ you should definitely check it out!
https://psychotronicreview.com/short-takes/i/#i-trapped-the-devil
@th3j35t3r OMG!
Content Editor at HotDog.com. Fan of weird (psychotronic) films but especially horror. Runs PsychotronicReview.com.