STARCRASH.
STARCRASH.
Alain Goraguer. He collaborated with Gainsbourg. It is a gorgeous album, and I can't imagine why anyone would ban it.
I first saw it as a VHS bootleg in the early 90's as well, but it was from a japanese laserdisc so the genitalia was all fuzzed-out for the frontal nudity shots.
I've been scanning these comments to see if anyone had seen "Tusk" or "The Rainbow Thief". Both were available as bootlegs at my local video store, but I never got a recommendation for them. I know they're far outside his usual ouvre, but I'm still curious.
Lacquering up a little with alcohol for a comedy or exploitation film is something I understand, and do quite often, but I don't get the benefits of watching movies while under hallucinogens or opiates. I've seen Santa Sangre three times: twice in a movie theater and once on home video with a couple friends while…
Trivia tidbit: The Tingler was the first freakout as well as the first mention of LSD in any movie; the screenwriter had recently dropped acid with Aldous Huxley himself. But although it shows Vincent tripping balls, the movie doesn't actually have a hallucination scene.
That is unfortunate. No Videodrome or Naked Lunch either.
But I was about to go to bed…
Pretty sure that's real. Life is cheap in Mexico.
Best watched with a clear mind; the movie is potent enough on its own.
Few would disagree that it's seminal. Levine and Wobble had unique styles that were hugely influential. But Metal Box doesn't sound like an album that required much work. If you hear five seconds from any track on the record you've heard the whole song; it;s all riffs. I still like it, but I think "Flowers of Romance"…
Regardless of wether it's punk or not, post "Flowers of Romance" PiL is another sort of music entirely.
Funny, Floyd, I would go 3, then 4, then 2. Phantasm 2 seems so uninspired to me, a bad mid-80's big studio horror sequel like Nightmare on Elm Street 2 or Hellraiser 2. Parts 3 and 4 are way more quirky and entertaining for me. And of course the first Phantasm is one of the greatest movies ever made by anyone.
He also knows how to take apart shotgun shells, and likes to spy on his older brother having sex.
Clara Peller, a.k.a. the "Where's the Beef" lady, makes an appearance in one of the Stuff commercials as well. I'm guessing it's her only movie role. The 80's were so consumer-centric that a person with one line in a fast food commercial could become a star.
The Incredible Melting Man: Meltdown 2013
Different people have their favorite singers (Keith Morris), but Ginn is Black Flag. He defined their sound.
I think I saw "Audition" first, which made me a fan. Then "Ichi" and "Visitor Q" just made me sick, and I didn't get much out of "Katakuris" so I quit there.
My guess is that it'll be "Evil Dead 2".
Mr. Rourke : "Shut up, you lousy excuse for exposition!"
(pulls a fistful of hair from Tattoo's scalp)