Ms .45
Abel Ferrara’s rape-revenge classic Ms .45 is unflinchingly grimy grindhouse fare with a range of interpretations.
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Abel Ferrara’s rape-revenge classic Ms .45 is unflinchingly grimy grindhouse fare with a range of interpretations.
The Cat may be humanity’s only hope against an alien terror known as The Star Killer in this wild sci-fi movie that could only have come from early ’90s Hong Kong.
The madman behind House (1977) is back with his live-action manga sci-fi comedy, School in the Crosshairs, on a new Blu-ray from Cult Epics.
Fantastic Magic Baby, the bizarre film adaptation of a Peking Opera favorite, is a highlight of the ten-film box set, Furious Swords And Fantastic Warriors: The Heroic Cinema of Chang Cheh.
Lily and Generoso review Dracula, director Radu Jude’s second feature of 2025, a delightfully controlled explosion of tales connected to everyone’s favorite parasitic impaler.
Phil Bailey reviews another trio of terror tales from Japan, Volume Two of the Daiei Gothic series, in a sweet box set.
Carlos Saura’s 1959 neorealist film, Los Golfos, explores the bonds of friendship and class struggle through the lens of a group of young men desperate for a shot out of the slums.
Hellbender is an exquisite bit of heavy-metal folk horror set in and around a secluded house in the Catskill Mountains of New York.
Although teen witches have long been a staple in pop culture, rarely have they been presented with the blood-soaked gusto of Jennifer Reeder’s Perpetrator.
On the surface it may be difficult to link His Motorbike, Her Island with director Nobuhiko Obayashi, but the film is far more layered than one might expect from a biker romance.
Phil Bailey reviews Creepshow 2, a trio of comedy-laced tales from the ’80s — a time when horror was seen as somehow inherently humorous.
Famed cult director Jack Hill’s first released feature, Mondo Keyhole (1966), is a bizarre trip through mid-1960s sexploitation.
With her most ambitious feature to date, director Sofia Bohdanowicz continues her examination of history and memory through the character of Audrey Benac (Deragh Campbell) as she researches the legacy of acclaimed early 20th-century Canadian violinist Kathleen Parlow.
Teruo Ishii’s influential biker gang film, Detonation! Violent Riders, absolutely crackles with energy.
Cult favorite Jimmy Wang Yu, with two arms this time, takes on a nefarious gambling racket in Golden Harvest’s 1973 kung fu film, The Tattooed Dragon.
Ole Bornedal’s influential thriller, Nightwatch, along with its 30-year followup, Nightwatch: Demons Are Forever, are together at last in The Nightwatch Collection.
Sylvester Stallone’s underrated action gem, Cobra, slithers onto 4K UHD — and it’s an absolute blast.
Alexander Horwath’s stunning debut is a 185-minute video essay that examines the course of American social and political attitudes over multiple eras through the biography of the legendary actor, Henry Fonda.
Although there have been many adaptations, Tai Kato manages to bring his own approach to 1961’s The Tale of Oiwa’s Ghost.
Seldom seen samurai comedy The Invisible Swordsman makes its home video debut in the West.
With the thirty-fifth anniversary of debut album Whirlpool, UK shoegaze outfit Chapterhouse is back together again and touring the US as part of Slide Away Music Festival.
The Englert theater hosted Little Feat as they embark on their Last Farewell Tour.
Meiko Kaji’s katana is sharp and looking for revenge in Wandering Ginza Butterfly and its sequel, She Cat Gambler, a stylish pair of early ’70s action films.