Juliana Hatfield
Blood (American Laundromat). Review by Julius C. Lacking.
Blood (American Laundromat). Review by Julius C. Lacking.
Blood (American Laundromat Records). Review by Laura Pontillo.
Blood (Fuzze-Flex Records). Review by Michelle Wilson.
Five erotic films from controversial director Walerian Borowczyk show that eroticism is not equivalent to titillation. Or is it?
A loving restoration of this 1981 elegant horror story retells the story if Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde with more nudity and brutality than you might enjoy.
An arty and eerie horror film fuses western and eastern ideas of vampirism and looks totally cool as well.
Mr. Sasquatch terrorizes a small town – and perhaps Carl F Gauze – after a poacher traps him by mistake.
A washed-up wrestler makes one last trip into the ring, where even Marisa Tomei can’t save him. Referee Carl F Gauze makes it a slow three-count.
Bloody, funny, and LOUD, Gwar returns to the stage with openers Kingdom of Sorrow and Toxic Holocaust. Carl F Gauze dodges a giant Chekhovian penis to come face-to-face with Satan at Orlando’s Club Firestone.
Morrissey,Quarry,Irish,Blood,Smiths,Attack,Morrissey,You Are The Quarry,Attack/Sanctuary,Kiran Aditham
You Are The Quarry (Attack/Sanctuary). Review by Kiran Aditham.
Bitter, sweet. Gothic. Country. These opposites attract and meld in the revolving conundrum that is The Handsome Family. Stein Haukland deciphers meaning from feeling.
Forty-five minutes of motocross jumps crashes, and other mayhem, backed with a metal sound track. Carl F Gauze wipes off the grit and squints into the camera.
Chuck Bantam is betrayed by the fickle mistress nostalgia when he picks up the DVD reissue of Return of the Living Dead Part III.
Chuck Bantam shoots ducks in a barrel, and wishes violent death on you-know-who. Try it, it’s fun.
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.