Fred L. Taulbee Jr. is the author of the novel Ana and House Are One on Amazon, director of the web series Bartenders Rule the Universe and the short film “Dead Inside” both on YouTube, and he shoots people for fun—with a camera, and posts the pictures at Phantasmagoria Productions on Facebook. He’s been an English teacher, bartender, photographer, a poet, a pawn and a king—wait, half of that is Frank Sinatra. He’s been a film and book lover all his life, and horror enthralls him the most.
In the 1990s, I used to run to a song that sampled the “Hello Lover” dialogue from Evil Dead 2 (1987), but I didn’t realize the line was from the movie until sometime later.
The late, great John Zacherle, sometimes spelled Zacherley, remains in a dead heat with a number of others as the best television horror movie host of all time with his show Shock Theater.
Also, as of this writing we are experiencing the 2020 Pandemic, and Porno is streaming for half price on some sites, but good luck finding it by typing Porno into the search bar.
A woman walks into the coffee house she walks into every morning for a coffee and pastry, but the people she knows are all acting weird, quiet, avoiding her, and there are two musicians standing by.
Death Race 2050 is a unique film in its own right, a remake of a film from a short story adaptation, during a similar political cycle, though generations apart, and put together with modern low budget effects.
Saying Duane and Belial are conjoined twins isn’t quite accurate and their true twin nature is even more scientifically disturbing with a side of psychology unique only to these brothers.
On a scale of Karloff/Boyle to DeNiro, Mullen is definitely closer to the Karloff/Boyle side, and she has a scream queen presence second only to Cassandra Elvira Petersen.