Daphne
B.J. Clinton reveals how he became the person he is today though interpretive dance and lip syncing.
B.J. Clinton reveals how he became the person he is today though interpretive dance and lip syncing.
Stories and anecdotes survey punk’s “Straight Edge” movement as the youth of America swear off drugs and booze to achieve Nirvana in the mosh pit.
A ship full of whiskey collides with a rock in the Outer Hebrides during WW2 saving the local population from almost certain sobriety.
A woman’s death forces a family to deal with its own misplaced priorities. That make this a comedy.
Concrescence (Biotop). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Bob Geldof shares his love of W.B. Yeats on A Fanatic Heart.
Everyone holds an ideal in their heart, but sometimes it must get out and find its own way through life.
Drag nuns rock the house in this silly musical comedy!
Monica Titus sings the romantic blues in this intimate caberet.
The spirit of a 1940’s black black marketer infects his modern day doppleganger in this solid Blaxploitaion horror cult film.
Impossible Star (Virtual Label). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Large foam tomatoes terrorize San Diego in this camp spoof of bad movies first released in 1978.
A woman struggles with mental illness and gaining acceptance as a theoretical mathematician.
A Russian woman grows a tail. Amazingly, men find this attractive and she falls in love with a doctor and out of favor in her job.
Can impending death re-orient your political compass?
A casual date turns into a hellish nightmare when journalist Theresa refuses a second date with creepy Tony who then stalks her through New York City.
Country Roots (Rock Ridge Music). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Shipwrecked twins provoke Elizabethan hijinks in this all male cross-dressing comedy.
Young Ben Braddock just graduated college and a career in “plastics” hold no appeal. Instead, he has an affair with the wife of his father’s business partner and until he falls in love with her daughter. Then things get weird.
A young executive climbs the company ladder by loaning out his apartment to his bosses for sexual escapades in 1950 in this Billy Wilder classic.
John Badham’s 1983 future-tech helicopter thriller, Blue Thunder, with its cautionary tale of militarized police and a surveillance state, still resonates decades later.
What if the miracle of sight came with a curse? The Eye builds its horror from that chilling premise.
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.