Sunday, January 29, 2023
The Bloody Pit #165 - Email-O-Rama!
Wednesday, January 25, 2023
Monday, January 23, 2023
Motion Comic - Agent 21 Episode 1: S.O.F.R.A.M Strikes!
Secret Agent 21 was the longest running comic strip to
appear in the pages of TV Century 21. The star of the strip was a Universal
Secret Service agent code-named 21 - the James Bond of the future.
Now Agent 21 is brought to life in a new motion comic digital
series - in this episode, Agent 21 goes up against the Solar Organization for
Murder and Revenge!
Friday, January 20, 2023
Tuesday, January 17, 2023
Wild, Wild Podcast: Luigi Cozzi Season: Episode 4 - The Black Cat (1989) & Blood on Méliès' Moon (2016)
As our Luigi Cozzi season comes to an end, Adrian and I
revisit The Black Cat (1989) and struggle to give a coherent plot summary. The
film has been difficult to see for decades and we’re both happy that the recent
Severin Blu-Ray makes it possible to evaluate the film on its very strange
merits. We also take a quick look at Blood on Méliès' Moon (2016), Cozzi's
long-awaited return to directing, and enjoy discussing his bowtie and his
pyjamas.
Sunday, January 15, 2023
The Bloody Pit #164 - FLESH AND FANTASY (1943)
FLESH AND FANTASY (1943) is a
film that should be much better known both in Horror fan circles and among fans
of classic cinema in general. Directed by one of the giants of French cinema
transplanted to America Julien Duvivier, this film shows the care and
craftsmanship of a fine storyteller working with the full resources of a major
studio. Following the template he had used in his earlier film TALES OF
MANHATTAN (1942), this is an anthology with three vignettes linked by a framing
device with humorist Robert Benchley. But that wasn’t exactly the original vision
of this movie, as we will discuss.
Troy and I return to the Universal horror films with a true outlier this time. FLESH AND FANTASY is easily the most expensive production on our list of these 1940’s films with its large budget and cast of major movie stars being just the most obvious differences from the monster sequels surrounding it. The movie uses all its resources wonderfully to present a dazzling series of visuals and at least one of the best (possibly) supernatural stories the studio would ever make. The cast is fantastic and filmmaking a delight! It is a shock how underseen and underappreciated this excellent movie has been but with a Blu-Ray release just around the corner we hope that is about to change. Join us a for an interesting conversation about the production, structure and underlying themes of this hidden gem.
The show’s email address is thebloodypit@gmail.com and we’d love to hear your thoughts on FLESH AND FANTASY or any of the movies we’ve covered. Thank you for listening and we’ll be back with an email episode very soon.
Friday, January 13, 2023
What I Watched in December 2022
In December I was alerted by my friend Jeff about the hidden gem ADULT SWIM YULE LOG (a.k.a. THE FIREPLACE) being streamable on HBOMax. I gave it a try and discovered one of the funniest and most wildly inventive slices of cinema joy I have seen in a long time. Starting out as if it is one of those simple videos of a pleasant fireplace crackling away in a cabin (in the woods) it slowly expands outward to tell a darkly comedic tale that zigs and zags in ways that are wholly unpredictable. I’m not exaggerating. This movie changes things up in bizarre ways every few minutes with each twist adding to the entire affair. In its structure it reminds me of Monty Python at their maddest with a few moments from LIFE OF BRIAN (1979) that might have been directly inspirational. I refuse to ruin the experience of this delight and will just recommend it to the curious. It is amazing!
The List
THE YOUNG RACERS (1963) – 6 (Corman drama)
THE GODFATHER CODA (1990) – 8 (Coppola’s changes improve
this finale)
THE MONSTER MAKER (1944) – 6 (rewatch)
THE SPREE (1998) – 7 (sharp cat burglar crime film)
BULLET TRAIN (2022) – 8
TROLL (2022) 9 (Norwegian kaiju film)
THE CHILDREN (2008) – 8 (rewatch)
CHARLIE CHAN IN LONDON (1934) – 7 (rewatch)
CONAN THE BARBARIAN (1982) – 8 (rewatch on the big screen)
CHARLIE CHAN IN SHANGHAI (1935) – 7 (rewatch)
A CHRISTMAS STORY CHRISTMAS (2022) – 7
GRIEVOUS BODILY HARM (1988) – 6 (Australian thriller)
DON’T OPEN TILL CHRISTMAS (1984) – 5 (an enjoyable, sleazy
mess)
SAMSON AND THE 7 MIRACLES OF THE WORLD (1961) – 6
VENOM: LET THERE BE CARNAGE (2021) – 6 (better than the
first one at least)
DEAD END (2003) – 6 (travelling family lost on Christmas Eve
– the mystery is an easy one)
ROCKY MOUNTAIN (1950) – 7 (rewatch)
STAR TREK: NEMESIS (2002) – 5 (rewatch) (not as awful as I
remembered but a mess of things that never gel)
DOUBLE TARGET (1987) – 4 (Miles O’Keefe as Rambo - awesomely
bad and fun because of it!)
BATMAN RETURNS (1992) – 9 (rewatch on Blu) (gets even better
with age)
ADULT SWIM YULE LOG (a.k.a. THE FIREPLACE) (2022) – 8
(amazing horror/comedy)
BLOOD DELIRIUM (1988) – 6 (Euro-madness with John Philip
Law)
THE AMAZING TRANSPARENT MAN (1960) – 5 (rewatch on Blu)
EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE (2022) – 8 (wonderful,
heartfelt SF adventure)
GLASS ONION (2022) – 8 (not as good as the first but a very
worthy Knives Out sequel)
THE LAW IN HER HANDS (1936) – 6 (Glenda Farrell)
AFRICA SCREAMS (1949) – 6 (Abbot & Costello romp on Blu)
THE BANDIT TRAIL (1941) – 6 (Tim Holt B-western)
KICKBOXER: VENGEANCE (2016) – 5
REMAINS (2011) – 5 (standard low budget zombie tale set in
Reno)
ANGELS WITH DIRTY FACES (1938) – 8
Wednesday, January 11, 2023
Sunday, January 08, 2023
Dollar Bin Distress - THE HOST (2013)
Friday, January 06, 2023
Trailers From Hell - SMOKEY IS THE BANDIT (1983)
Much like screenwriter Larry Karaszewski I have never seen
this film but would like the opportunity to judge just how bad it really was.
This might have been the first film I was aware of that was radically changed with
reshoots before it was finally released. When I saw the resulting theatrical
presentation SMOKEY & THE BANDIT 3, with Jerry Reed called in to replace
half of Gleason’s work, I just thought it was a terrible movie and moved on. But,
decades later, I would gladly pay to see the original version preview audiences
ripped apart. I might even enjoy it as a cringe comedy classic. Who knows if I’ll
ever get the chance? Are there even bootlegs of this out there?
Wednesday, January 04, 2023
Brief Thoughts - DEAD SOULS (2012)
I started off my 2023 viewing by cleaning up my ‘bought for
a $1’ pile. These are Blu-Rays and DVDs that I couldn’t resist picking up
because they were so damned cheap. Most of the time I get burned and end up
sitting through crappy movies that are not worth the time investment so I’m not
sure why I continue to do this to myself. One was a low budget horror film
based on a Michael Laimo novel called DEAD SOULS (2012). Although the story
begins in an interesting place with a good premise and some standard
complications, the illogic of the setup
begins to weigh things down by the end of the first act. Questions start to creep in that the script
leaves unanswered such as why would a house and barn abandoned for 17 years still
have power and water? Why would all the furniture and possessions of the long
dead owners still be where they were the night of their deaths? And why is
there no dust over anything? Why would a kid the age of 18 be carrying a
massive grudge about events he had no knowledge of or involvement with? If
there had been a supernatural reason offered up at some point maybe I wouldn’t
have been irritated but that is not what we get. I suspect that the book was a
much more satisfying horror experience and one day I may find out.