
by Raymond Johnson

by Raymond Johnson
Now seems like as good a time as any to take a trip back to the 60s or the 70s and here to help us do just that is today’s music video of the day!
Myself, I always love these retro videos. My personal theory is that it’s because I was born a few decades too late. I love to dance and I love to have a good time and I used to love a few other things that were popular back in the 70s but I won’t go too much into too much of that here. It’s hard for me not to feel that I should have been born earlier so that I could have hit the discos or the go-go clubs or whatever else there was to hit back then. Hell, I probably would have even tried the whole punk thing. Sure, why not?
For the record, if I had been born like in the 50s or the 40s (or even the 30s, who knows), I probably would have voted for Kennedy in 1960 because he was Catholic and then I would have had to vote for LBJ in ’64 because he was a Texan. And I probably would have voted for Nixon twice and Ford once because why not? After the election of 1976, I probably would have said, “Forget voting, let’s dance!”
(Of course, if I had been born back then, I’d be like really old and bitter today so I guess I should just be happy that I was born when I was.)
Anyway, I like this video and I like this song. Good work all around!
Enjoy!
Somehow, a nuclear bomb falls out of an American airplane that happens to flying over the border between Israel and Jordan. Luckily, the bomb doesn’t explode but now it’s just sitting out in the desert where anyone can stumble upon it. CIA operative Tony Stevens (David Janssen) just happens to be on vacation in the Middle East so he’s recruited and sent off to find the bomb before anyone else finds out about it.
At the same time, a group of Israeli soldiers, led by Captain Ben-David (Christopher Stone) and Lt. Liora (Karin Dor), are searching for a group of Palestinian terrorists, led by Malouf (Tuvia Tavi). As soon as Tony finds the bomb, he is captured by Malouf. He is then rescued by Ben-David but now Tony has to deal with two interested parties who want the bomb for themselves.
Warhead is a confusing movie that seems like it is trying to say something about the Middle East and America’s role as an international policeman. Captain Ben-David feels that the Americans are being selfish with their refusal to allow other countries to develop their own nuclear missiles while Tony argues that the world would be plunged into war if everyone had the bomb. (Remember, this film is from the 70s and was made at a time when the U.S. and the Russians were pretty much the only nuclear super powers.) The film ends on a nihilistic note, with almost everyone either dead or disillusioned but why? The acting is so bad and the production is so shoddy that it’s hard to figure out what this movie is trying to say. Is Ben-David right about American arrogance or is Tony right to argue that deterrence is the only way to keep the world safe? The movie doesn’t seem to know. David Janssen was usually the ideal actor to play grizzled tough guys but, in this movie, he was clearly just collecting a paycheck and hopefully enjoying the chance to do some sight-seeing in the Holy Land. The most intriguing character in the movie is a beautiful Israeli sniper played by Joan Freeman but she is killed off early and forgotten.
Warhead premiered on TV but was obviously originally intended for a theatrical release. There’s a very gratuitous rape scene that is so awkwardly edited that it’s easy to see that it was cut down once it became apparent the movie was never going to play in theaters. (The scene could have just as easily been removed from the film without effecting the narrative but I guess the networks wanted to give all of the dads and teenage boys a reason to not change the channel.) According to the information I’ve found online, Warhead was filmed in 1973 but sat on the shelf for four years. Watching the movie, it’s easy to see why.
4 Shots From 4 Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!
Today would have been George Romero’s 80th birthday.
Now, those of you who have been reading us since the beginning know how important the work of George Romero has been to this site. A mutual appreciation of Night of the Living Dead is one of the things that first brought many of us together. It’s a film that we watch ever Halloween and Arleigh’s review of the original remains one of our most popular posts. If this site had a patron saint, it would probably be George Romero.
And yet, Romero wasn’t just a director of zombie films. He made many films, dealing with everything from hippie lovers (There’s Always Vanilla) to wannabe vampires (Martin) to government conspiracies (The Crazies) and eccentric bikers (Knightriders). George Romero was one of the pioneers of independent films and today, on his birthday, we should all take a minute to consider and appreciate the man’s cinematic legacy. It’s not just horror fans who owe George Romero a debt of gratitude. It’s lovers of cinema everywhere.
With that in mind, here are….
4 Shots From 4 George Romero Films

by Modest Stein
So this video starts out with a good beat and two people getting close and really, that’s what we need in the world. There’s so many angry and bitter and angst-filled people out there that sometimes, we need a video to remind us that love is the best thing that there is and that there’s nothing wrong with getting close to one another and that….
OH MY GOD, DID SHE JUST RIP OUT HIS HEART!?
Well, maybe. She definitely removed something from his chest but he doesn’t look like he minds. I kind of think of this video gives us an opportunity to see what Grease would have been like it had been directed by David Cronenberg.
Enjoy!
Let’s say that you are the governor of Arkansas and, once again, your state is running out of money and will soon not be able to afford to pay its bills. What do you do?
That was the problem facing Governor Bill Clinton in 1986. His solution was to allow a big Hollywood production to come down to Little Rock and film someone throwing explosive devices at the state capitol. The capitol building at Little Rock looks like a smaller version of the capitol building in Washington D.C. The producers of Under Siege needed to shoot a scene where terrorists attempt to blow up Congress. Even though the state capitol wasn’t actually blown up in the film, the dome did end up with extensive burn marks that were visible for years afterwards. Many people in Arkansas were not amused that they had to allow a film crew to set their capitol on fire just to pay the bills. Still, if Bill Clinton hadn’t agreed to blow up the state capitol building, Arkansas could have gone bankrupt and then he probably would have lost his reelection bid in 1986. If Bill Clinton wasn’t reelected, he never would have been elected to the presidency in 1992, Hillary Clinton would never have been elected to the Senate in 2000 and, in 2016, the Democrats wouldn’t have been stuck with the only possible nominee who could have actually lost to Donald Trump. When you look at it that way, Under Siege is one of the most significant films ever made.
As for the film, it’s a 3-hour, made-for-TV movie about what happens when Islamic extremism hits home. Notorious terrorist Abu Ladeen (Thaao Penghlis) has managed to sneak into the United States and is hiding out in Detroit. He directs a series of attacks on beloved American institutions. Not only is the Capitol Building bombed but a mall is also attacked. While President Maxwell Monroe (Hal Holbrook, who was born to play presidents) tries to keep America from falling apart, his hawkish advisers tell him that now is the time to launch a strike against Iran, despite Iran claiming to have nothing to do with the attacks. Only the director of the FBI, John Garry (Peter Strauss), and the Secretary of Defense, Andrew Simon (Paul Winfield), argue that the president should exercise caution. Garry is convinced that the attacks are the result of homegrown, domestic extremism and not an international conspiracy. Garry is a very hands-on FBI director. He’s the type of FBI director who will chase a terrorist down a street in Washington D.C. Let’s see James Comey do that shit.
Under Siege probably seemed outlandish in 1986 but it seems prophetic today. The film’s depiction of both terrorism and the government’s shady response to it turned out to be accurate. That doesn’t mean that it’s a very good movie. It was co-written by Bob Woodward of Watergate and Washington Post fame, so of course John Garry is righteous beyond belief and the solution to all of America’s problem begin with contacting a newspaper editor and blowing the whistle. America may be under siege but a strongly-worded editorial is here to save the day.
Under Siege used to regularly show up on late night television and the DVD was popular overseas. (In France, it was called Au Revoir, America.) Not surprisingly, after 9-11, it vanished from circulation. If you can find a copy, watch it and ask yourself, “Would I blow up my state capitol just to pay the bills?”
4 Shots From 4 Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!
In life, Michael Cimino was often controversial.
Cimino hit box office gold with his first film as a director, Thunderbolt and Lightfoot. With his second film, The Deer Hunter, he won the Academy Award for Best Director. With his third film, Heaven’s Gate, he nearly bankrupted United Artists.
Heaven’s Gate was Cimino’s passion project, an epic western that was based on the historical Johnson County War. Considering that Cimino had just won an Oscar, expectation were high when production began in 1979. Soon, however, ominous reports started to come back from the set. It was said that Cimino was a perfectionist and a megalomaniac who was demanding so many takes and retakes that the filming was quickly falling behind schedule. The modestly budgeted production soon went overbudget and overschedule. After nearly a year of shooting, Cimino finally allowed the studio executives to view his first cut. It was over five hours long.
Though the film was eventually edited down to a more manageable length, the damage had been done. By the time Heaven’s Gate was finally released, the title was already being used a byword for fiasco. The film lost a ton of money and, at the time, it was savaged by critics. Cimino would only direct four more films after Heaven’s Gate and none of them were a success at the box office or with critics.
However, once the initial hype died down, some critics started to take another look at Cimino’s films. Heaven’s Gate has been reevaluated and is now considered by many to be a minor classic. Cimino’s Year of the Dragon has also developed a strong cult following. Though Cimino himself died in 2016, he is a director who is currently in the process of being rediscovered.
Today would have been Michael Cimino’s birthday. Because he told so many conflicting stories about his past, there is some controversy about the year of Cimino’s birth. Most people agree that it was probably 1939. Today, on his birthday, let’s take a moment to honor this unfairly dismissed talent.
4 Shots From 4 Films

Artist Unknown
Once upon a time, there was a televangelist named Oral Roberts. Oral was very successful and he even had his own university in Oklahoma. One day, Oral said that he had a vision of someone telling him that he needed to build a hospital on the campus of his university and that, of course, he would need people to send him money to help him do that. That someone was Jesus and, according to Oral, Jesus was 900 feet tall.
Mark Griffin, a classically trained musician who had recently graduated from the University of North Texas, happened to hear what Oral said. Griffin, who had played in several local Dallas bands, was on the verge of launching a new career as a rapper. Griffin took the name MC 900 ft Jesus and the rest is history.
As MC 900 ft Jesus, Mark Griffin developed a strong cult following. He still has one, even though he retired from the business in 2001. (He had performed a few times post-retirement and there are annual rumors that he’s on the verge of making a comeback.) If I Only Had A Brain was one of his more popular songs, thanks to this music video from Spike Jonze.
Enjoy!