Who wants to win the best of Mythborn?
One grand prize winner receives the below prize pack: A copy of Mythborn I: Rise of the Adepts A copy of Mythborn
One grand prize winner receives the below prize pack: A copy of Mythborn I: Rise of the Adepts A copy of Mythborn
To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar has held up.
It’s weird thinking that there was a time when I would see ads for this flick in the back of Marvel Comics. Specifically, I remember seeing a ton of ads in the back of the X-Men books right when they got out of all that Age of Apocalypse story event stuff. Sometimes, it’s weird how your brain relates certain things to movies.
Given its arrival a year after “The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert”, you can’t help but feel the need to draw a comparison. A bunch of drag queens leave the big metro area and break down in the middle of nowhere. Given that this is an American movie, the effort must be made to make small-town America learn a lesson. It’s the same tired claptrap that permeates all of these films. Urban folk teaching rural folk that all differences are cool and the majority of Rural America just nodding and agreeing.
In fact, the only person remotely upset by the drag queens is Chris Penn. Even then, most of his anger stemmed from being confused by his sexual arousal by one of them. It’s a solid Universal pick-up by Shout Factory and one well worth checking out.
Don’t forget to watch the feature length making-of documentary.
Boom is an underrated masterpiece from director Joseph Losey. For those that don’t know Losey, I’ll keep the explanation simple.
The New York Ripper has this weird legacy among the later Fulci films. While it had a rather unceremonious bow
How to Stuff A Wild Bikini arrived as the sixth film in the AIP Beach Party series. After 20 minutes
Cinderella took two years to finish. As Disney came out of the financial drain of World War II, it seemed
Us has taken America by storm. March is rapidly becoming the month where people remember that theaters still exist. Ready
A Patch of Blue is one of those films I knew by reputation. Sidney Poitier could no wrong coming off