Horror on the Lens: Baffled! (dir by Philip Leacock)


Leonard Nimoy is a race car driver who can see into the future and who uses his powers to solve crimes!

Seriously, if that’s not enough to get you to watch the 1973 made-for-TV movie Baffled!, then I don’t know what is.  In the film, Nimoy takes a break from racing so that he and a parapsychologist (played by Susan Hampshire) can solve the mystery of the visions that Nimoy is having of a woman in a mansion.  This movie was meant to serve as a pilot and I guess if the series had been picked up, Nimoy would have had weekly visions.  Of course, the movie didn’t lead to a series but Baffled! is still fun in a 70s television sort of way.  Thanks to use of what I like to call “slow mo of doom,” a few of Nimoy’s visions are creepy and the whole thing ends with the promise of future adventures that were sadly never to be.  And it’s a shame because I’ve always wondered what was going on with that couple at the airport!

(I should mention that this is a personal favorite of mine and, as our longtime readers have probably noticed, I share it every Horrorthon.  I’m sharing it earlier than usual this month because, today, I’m having to take my car in to get the driver’s side window repaired.  I have no idea how long I’ll be at the shop but I look forward to watching Baffled when I get back!)

Enjoy Baffled!  Can you solve the mystery before Leonard?

Music Video of the Day: In The Shade of The Shadows by Rosalie Cunningham (2024, directed by Rosalie Cunningham and Rosco Wilson)


In The Shade Of The Shadows is the first single off of Rosalie Cunningham’s upcoming album, To Shoot Another Day.  (The album is due to be released on November 1st.)

According to the video’s description on YouTube, this video is a 100% DIY creation, made with a phone and a good deal of creativity by Cunningham and Rosco Wilson.  To quote Cunningham (again, from the video’s description on YouTube): It’s amazing what you can do with a phone, a torch, some free child labour, a tree surgeon and some SASS. 

Enjoy!

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 9/30/24 — 10/6/24


Welcome to Horrorthon!

We are off to a big start, this October!  In fact, it took only four days of Horrorthon for me to get sick, congested, and feverish.  From Friday to …. well, now, I have been watching and reviewing movies while sick and in bed.  I am now starting to feel a little bit better but still, I take this as a reminder to myself, my collaborators and our readers that the scary season should always be fun.  Be sure to watch a lot of horror movies this month but also be sure to take care of yourself as well!  (My friend Mark has often warned me about pushing myself too hard and this week proved him right!)

On another note, my friend Lauren lives in North Carolina and she reports that the situation there is a hundred times worse than what is being portrayed in the news.  So, keep her and everyone else who was in the path of the hurricane in your thoughts, at the very least.

Here’s what I watched, read, and listened to this week!

Crimes of Passion (1984, dir by Ken Russell, DP: Dick Bush)

Films I Watched:

  1. Baron Blood (1970)
  2. Because They’re Young (1960)
  3. Behave (2024)
  4. Beverly Hills Cop (1984)
  5. The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920)
  6. The Climb (2002)
  7. The Creation of the Humanoids (1962)
  8. Crimes of Passion (1984)
  9. Dante’s Peak (1997)
  10. The Day The World Ended (1955)
  11. Dementia 13 (1963)
  12. Die In One Day (2017)
  13. Do Not Reply (2019)
  14. Gacy: The Serial Killer Next Door (2024)
  15. Godzilla vs. Biolante (1989)
  16. The Grim Sleeper (2014)
  17. In The Shadow of Guilt (2022)
  18. It Conquered The World (1956)
  19. Jack’s Back (1989)
  20. Killing For Extra Credit (2024)
  21. Last Flight Out (2004)
  22. Little Shop of Horrors (1960)
  23. Nightmare Beach (1989)
  24. Party Line (1985)
  25. Party Night (2017)
  26. Pieces (1982)
  27. The Pit and the Pendulum (1961)
  28. Plan 9 From Outer Space (1959)
  29. Playing With Fire (1985)
  30. The Premature Burial (1962)
  31. Salem’s Lot (2024)
  32. Satan’s Children (1974)
  33. The Shining (1980)
  34. Simon, King of the Witches (1971)
  35. Splatter University (1984)
  36. The Strange Case of the End of Civilization As We Know It (1977)
  37. The Terror (1963)
  38. Thy Neighbor (2018)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. American Sports Story: Aaron Hernandez
  2. Hell’s Kitchen
  3. Homicide: Life on the Street
  4. Law & Order
  5. One Step Beyond
  6. Square Pegs

Books I Read:

  1. The Spear (1978) by James Herbert

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. The Beatles
  2. Britney Spears
  3. The Chemical Brothers
  4. Emerson Lake & Palmer
  5. Gary Jules
  6. Goblin
  7. Hans Zimmer
  8. Jakalope
  9. John Carpenter
  10. Kid Rock
  11. Luna
  12. Lynard Skynard
  13. Nine Inch Nails
  14. Ramones
  15. Rolling Stones
  16. Saint Motel
  17. Souixsie and the Banshees
  18. The Who
  19. X

Baron Blood (1972, dir by Mario Bava)

Live Tweets:

  1. Beverly Hills Cop
  2. Dante’s Peak
  3. Jack’s Back
  4. Baron Blood

Trailers:

  1. 6 Trailers In Memory of Roger Corman

4 Shots From 4 Films Tributes

  1. Roger Corman
  2. Lucio Fulci
  3. Luigi Cozzi
  4. Ken Russell
  5. Terence Fisher
  6. James Whale

Horror Scenes:

  1. Little Shop of Horrors
  2. The Beyond
  3. Hercules
  4. Psycho
  5. Dracula Prince of Darkness
  6. Halloween

Horror on the Lens:

  1. Little Shop of Horrors
  2. The Terror
  3. Dementia 13
  4. Creation of the Humanoids
  5. Plan 9 From Outer Space
  6. The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari

Horror on Television:

  1. One Step Beyond 1.1 “The Bride Possessed”
  2. One Step Beyond 1.2 “Night of April 14th”
  3. One Step Beyond 1.3 “Emergency Only”
  4. One Step Beyond 1.4 “The Dark Room”
  5. One Step Beyond 1.6 “Epilogue”
  6. One Step Beyond 1.8 “Premonition” 

News From Last Week:

  1. Frank Fritz of American Pickers Dies
  2. Actor Ken Page Dies At 70
  3. Stuntman Bob Yerkes Dies At 92
  4. Madonna’s brother, Christopher Ciccone, passes away at 63
  5. Box Office: ‘Joker 2’ Stumbles With Lackluster $40 Million Debut

Links From Last Week:

  1. Tater’s Week in Review 10/4/24
  2. Happy Caturday! (10.5.2024)
  3. The Three C’s Of Horror: “Candyman”! “Carrie” And”The Changeling” For “Shocktober 2024!”

Links From The Site:

  1. Leonard reviewed The Hunger!
  2. Case reviewed Whisperer, Fortunes of Doom, Cookies, The Video Store Commercial, We Forgot About The Zombies, and Purr-Normal!
  3. Jeff reviewed Playing With Fire, Storm Warning, In The Shadow of Guilt, The Strange Case Of The End of Civilization As We Know It, Night Explorers: The Asylum, and Do Not Disturb!
  4. Jeff shared music videos from Kerry King, Rob Zombie, Three Dog Night, LaTour, Maddy Ellwanger, and David Bowie!
  5. Erin shared The Covers of Imagination!
  6. Erin reviewed Virgin Pockets!
  7. Erin shared Giant-Sized Chillers, The Vault of Horrors, Boris Karloff’s Tales of Mystery, Tales From The Crypt, Adventures Into The Unknown, Little Shop of Horrors, and Thrilling Detective!
  8. Erin welcomed you to October!
  9. I reviewed Degrassi Junior High, Miami Vice, CHiPs, Fantasy Island, Baywatch Nights, The Love Boat, Monsters, Malibu CA, Highway to Heaven, T and T, Friday the 13th, Welcome Back Kotter, Check it Out, and Homicide: Life on the Street!
  10. I shared a music video from Ramones!
  11. I shared my week in television!
  12. I shared an AMV!
  13. I shared my September Oscar Predictions!
  14. I shared 6 things that I’m looking forward to in October!
  15. I reviewed the novels Gila!, Bats Out Of Hell, and The Spear!
  16. I reviewed Eric Roberts’s memoir!

Lisa’s Horrorthon Film Reviews:

  1. Let It Be
  2. It Conquered The World
  3. The Survivor
  4. Godzilla Raids Again
  5. Chapter 27
  6. Wolves of Wall Street
  7. Without Warning
  8. Death Rink
  9. Submerged
  10. Paul McCartney Really Is Dead: The Last Testament of George Harrison?
  11. The Wager
  12. X: The Man With X-Ray Eyes
  13. You’re Not Alone
  14. Terror of Mechagodzilla
  15. Ripper’s Revenge
  16. Spookies
  17. Murder-Rock
  18. Mindreader
  19. The Fall of the House of Usher
  20. The Asphyx
  21. Godzilla (1977)
  22. An Officer and A Murderer
  23. Saved by The Belding
  24. Boogeyman II
  25. Behave
  26. The Apocalypse
  27. The Pit and the Pendulum
  28. Crimes of Passion
  29. Godzilla 1985
  30. Gacy: Serial Killer Next Door
  31. Satan’s Children
  32. Splatter University
  33. Thy Neighbor
  34. Salem’s Lot
  35. Do Not Reply
  36. Last Flight Out
  37. Premature Burial
  38. Simon, King of the Witches
  39. Brothers

More From Us:

  1. At her photography site, Eric shared Jolson the Explorer, Up, The Sun, Blue Sky, Skeleton, Dracula’s Pub, and Third House.
  2. At Pop Politics, Jeff shared When The Government Fails, The Debate?  No Way, I Watched The Debate, This Is Why People Hate The Government, Is Joe Biden Trying To Sink Kamala, How Sick Was He?, and I Guess I’m Back!
  3. For Horror Critic, I reviewed Inheritance, Nightmare Beach, There’s Something Wrong With The Children, and Die In One Day!
  4. At my online dream journal, I shared Last Night’s Party Dream, A Good Sleep Last Night, I Didn’t Sleep Much Last Night, October 3rd’s Searching Dream, No Dreams October 4th, No Fever Dreams, and Finally, A Dream!
  5. At my music site, I shared songs from Luna, Gary Jules, Nine Inch Nails, Keith Emerson, Goblin Rebirth, The Chordettes, and Juliette Lewis!

Check out last week by clicking here!

Horror on TV: One Step Beyond 1.8 “Premonition” (dir by John Newland)


In this episode of One Step Beyond, which takes place over the course of several years, Lisa Garrick lives in fear of a chandelier in her family’s  home.  For her entire life, she has had a premonition that she is going to die when the chandelier comes crashing down.  She refuses to stop into the room but eventually, both her father and her fiancé, insist that she conquer her fear and enter the room.

Seriously, if she doesn’t want to enter the room …. don’t make her enter the room!  I love chandeliers but they do make me nervous.  They always look like there about to come crashing down to me.

I like this episode because the main character is named Lisa.

This episode originally aired on March 10th, 1959.

The TSL Horror Grindhouse: Simon, King of the Witches (dir by Bruce Kessler)


Simon (Andrew Prine) is a bearded man who lives in a storm drain and who says that he is on a quest to become a god.  He also says that he’s a warlock and he wants to make sure that everyone understands that there’s a huge difference between being a wizard and being a warlock.  Don’t call Simon a wizard!

Simon’s quest for godhood hasn’t led to much success so he makes his living selling trinkets and charms to gullible people.  One night, the police arrest him for vagrancy.  While sitting in jail, Simon meets Turk (George Paulsin), a gay male prostitute who quickly becomes Simon’s first disciple.  With the help of Turk, Simon is introduced to upper class society.  It turns out that Turk’s clients include several very wealthy people.  Simon is a hit on the party circuit.  Slumming hippies view him as a potential guru.  Wealthy people view him as a humorous oddity.  Simon meets other occultists and starts to engage in bizarre rituals.  He finds time to date Linda (Brenda Scott), the daughter of the totally square district attorney.  Some people insist that Simon is a fake and some people say he is the real thing.  For his part, Simon is soon getting revenge on all of his enemies and taking part in all sorts of freaky ceremonies as he continues his quest for supreme power.

Don’t let the supergroovy name fool you.  Like a lot of films about the 60s and 70s counterculture, Simon, King of the Witches is remarkably dull.  The action moves slowly.  The plot never really makes that much sense.  Andrew Prine gives a wonderfully over-the-top performance as Simon but the rest of the cast never really seems to wake up.  The film’s most interesting moments are the ones where Simon effortlessly switches from upper class society to “street” society.  Undoubtedly, this film’s portrait of jaded people looking for the new thing and getting taken advantage of by a sociopathic grifter felt very familiar in the 70s.  And, actually, I guess it still does.  There’s still a lot of wannabe gurus out there and a lot of people who have neither the willpower nor the intelligence to see through them.  But the film itself just too boring to really be effective.  Probably the most interesting thing about the film is that Simon seems to be a mix of Charles Manson and Rasputin.  Like Manson, Simon knows how to take advantage of those who are lost and seeking a place where they can belong.  And, like Rasputin, Simon turns his sordid lifestyle into an asset when he’s trying to thrill the stuffy old folks.

As I mentioned earlier, the film’s saving grace is Andrew Prine’s intense performance as Simon.  Prine himself was an up-and-coming actor with a bright future ahead of him until his girlfriend, Kathryn Kupcinet, was murdered in 1963.  As the boyfriend, Prine was immediately a suspect.  Though the police quickly cleared him, the scandal still derailed his career and he ended up spending the rest of his career in films like The Town That Dreaded Sundown, Amityville II, and Simon, King of the Witches.

Playing With Fire (1985, directed by Ivan Nagy)


David Phillips (Gary Coleman) is a teenager who sets fires when he gets upset.  He has many reasons to be upset.  His parents (Ron O’Neal and Cicely Tyson) are getting divorced and are constantly fighting.  His teachers at school are always getting on his back.  He has to take care of his younger siblings and his dog.  He can’t even get the bigger kids in school to let him play basketball with them.  At first, David just plays with his lighter but, after he accidentally sets his mother’s coat on fire, David discovers that he likes to watch things burn.  David and his mother both claim it’s just coincidence that David is always nearby whenever a fire breaks out but Fire Chief Walker (Yaphet Kotto) knows what’s really going on.  After David nearly burns down his house, Walker tries to reach him before it’s too late.

This isn’t really meant to be a horror film  but it’s shot like one, with plenty of scenes of Gary Coleman staring at a burning fire with a possessed-look in his eyes.  The movie tries to make David sympathetic but the scene where he threatens his own dog with a lighter suggests that David has more problems than just his parents splitting up.  This was Gary Coleman’s first dramatic role.  I think it may have also been his only dramatic role.  It’s not that he’s not convincing as a really angry kid.  It’s just that he’s Gary Coleman so, no matter how much the movie tries, it still comes across as being a special episode of Diff’rent Strokes where Arnold becomes a pyromaniac.  Coleman tries to play up the drama of the situation but it’s hard not to laugh whenever he looks shocked at one of the fires that he has just started.  Every scene seems like it should end with Conrad Bain showing up with the cops.

For years, this movie was next to impossible to find but finally, someone found an old VHS tape in their garage and uploaded the movie to both YouTube and the Internet Archive, ensuring the world will never forget the time that Gary Coleman played with fire.

One final note: the director is better known for eventually becoming business partners with notorious Hollywood madam, Heidi Fleiss.

Horror Scenes I Love: Donald Pleasence in Halloween


Yesterday was the 105th anniversary of the birth of the great actor Donald Pleasence.

(I know that may sound like a wordy way to say “birthday” but I always find it awkward to refer to those who are no longer with us as having a birthday.)

We can’t let October pass without paying tribute to Pleasence.  Here is in 1978’s Halloween, playing the role for which he was best-known amongst horror fans.

“Whisperer”, Short Film Review, By Case Wright


Hi Horror and Case Lovers! So, I could not find a title card image for this short, but clowns scare the $#!% out of me so here we are. Just remember, that’s their real skin, not makeup. The oversized shoes and red nose are just to get you to let your guard down before they kill you! Now, you are able to face the world once again!

The short begins with a college student doing some cleaning at home. He checks the hallways and he sees…. yes a clown! Damn it! WHY?! WHY?!

Clowns, between you and me – why are you even a thing? I know what motivates you to make people mess their pants regardless of the season- you must feed, but why?! Can’t you just be anything else and still feast upon the living?

The Clown confronts the young man and…. he tries to kill him with a crowbar, but the would-be victim fights back with GUNS!!!
Yes, GUNS ARE THE ANSWER! GUNS! They are Clown Repellent! They are Clown-Be-Gone!
The Crowbar vs Clown is pretty effective too.

Now, is this short the result of two bored frat guys? Probably, but I’m ok because clowns are a menace!
Yes, it ends with a gun solving the Clown Menace! This short worked for me!

4 Shots From 4 Horror Films: Special James Whale Edition


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 is all about letting the visuals do the talking.

Today’s director: James Whale!

4 Shots From 4 James Whale Films

Frankenstein (1931, dir by James Whale, DP: Arthur Edeson)

The Old Dark House (1932, dir by James Whale, DP: Arthur Edeson)

The Invisible Man (1933, dir by James Whale, DP: Arthur Edeson)

Bride of Frankenstein (1935, dir James Whale, DP: John J. Mescall)