Wednesday, March 25, 2026

ASTRAL LADY (2007) ***

Here’s another GIGA movie.  Like Red Lady, it is an obvious Ultraman clone, except… you know… with bondage and shit.  This one wears its inspiration on its sleeve as it even has an Ultraman-style theme song.  Astral Lady also has a couple of Ultraman’s powers and makes several Ultraman-inspired sound effects.  The red suit looks the same as the one worn in Red Lady too, except this time with a different (and cooler) mask. 

A giant one-eyed monster is attacking the city and Astral Lady shows up to go Mano y Mano with the scaly beast.  Little does she know that aliens are actually studying their fight to learn her weaknesses.  Eventually, the alien leader comes down to Earth and crucifies our heroine in a giant glass cage. 

There’s a little something for everyone in Astral Lady.  Fans of Tokusatsu will love the monster suits and kaiju battles.  Perverts will enjoy the long lingering close-ups of the heroine’s ass as she struggles with the monster.  If the sight of a woman in a latex suit being spanked with a paddle just doesn’t do it for you anymore, maybe you’ll enjoy the scene where a woman in latex is whipped with the tail of a giant monster.  As in Red Lady, there is a scene where the monster salivates all over our heroine, which I’m guessing is the equivalent of a money shot in these kinds of things. 

All in all, Astral Lady is fast moving and fun.  Sprinkled in with all the fetish shit, there’s some legitimately cool stuff here like the scene where Astral Lady detaches her ponytail, turns it into a boomerang, and uses it to decapitate the monster.  You could argue that some of the kaiju wrestling scenes go on a bit long, but if that’s the sole reason that you’re watching it, you’ll probably have zero complaints. 

RED LADY (2007) ** ½

Red Lady is a superheroine in an Ultraman-inspired red skintight latex outfit (although it looked more pink than red on my screen, but that’s just nitpicking) who defends her city from giant monsters.  After making short work of a kaiju (who looks like a mass of melted tires) with her “Red Beam”, another monster (this one a not-bad Godzilla clone) battles Red Lady.  It eventually wears her down enough so that its master can tie her up and give her electroshock torture.  She is finally able to escape, but it soon becomes clear it has all been an elaborate trap to catch Red Lady and violate her. 

Ah yes, it’s been a while since I watched a GIGA movie.  Like W.A.V.E. Productions, these films are more or less bondage movies, but most of the appeal comes less from the act of women in the cast being tied and bound but from seeing them struggling against their (mostly male) aggressors (or in this case, men in monster suits).  What makes GIGA special is their knack for combining BDSM with Saturday morning Tokusatsu style action and monsters. 

Red Lady isn’t nearly as wild and crazy as some of the other GIGA movies I have seen.  It’s not up to the wacky levels of WTF lunacy of the Gigantic Hermaphrodite series, but it still offers a modicum of fun for B-movie fans who think they’ve seen it all.  In fact, it might be a nice starter film for the uninitiated to see if this sort of thing is your cup of tea. 

The model city and the costumes during the giant monster battles are better than you might expect, even if some of the fights tend to get repetitive and/or go on far too long (like the scene with the monster’s tentacle dick).  Also, some of the BDSM stuff kind of fails to titillate, but that may be a matter of personal preference, honestly.  That said, there still is enough here to raise an eyebrow or two.  I’m thinking specifically of the scene where the giant monster uses a telephone pole to shock Red Lady in the ass.  I mean, when’s the last time you saw THAT?  Plus, it’s only about an hour long, so that’s a plus.  I also respect any movie as silly as this one is that has the balls to end on such a downbeat note. 

Oh, and the version I saw actually had subtitles.  Not that we really needed them as the dialogue is quite minimal.  I just thought it was worth mentioning. 

Monday, March 23, 2026

WITCHFINDER (1989) *** ½

Witchfinder is one of the best W.A.V.E. movies I’ve seen so far.  It’s in films like these where you can tell that had he been given a bigger budget, director Gary Whitson could’ve had a decent career working for “The Man”.  Luckily for us, Gary remained fiercely independent and kept making stuff like this in his backyard. 

Pamela Sutch asks Laura Giglio, “Are you aware of the cult murders that occurred over the last decade and a half?”, which prompts a flashback.  Clancey McCauley presides over a Satanic ritual.  One of her frightened followers says, “She’s gonna kill a man!  It was different when it was a chicken or a goat, but this is a real human being!”

Soon after, a killer goes around offing cult members (who proudly wear their “Satan Lives” T-shirts) in the manner befitting a witch.  Women are drowned in a swimming pool, burned at the stake, hung in a barn, and … uh… electrocuted.  Well, I know electricity hadn’t been invented during the time of the Salem Witch Trials, but if it was, you can bet your ass they would’ve used it on witches. 

An interesting wrinkle is that it is the cult members who are the ones being killed.  Usually in these types of things, they are the ones perpetrating the violence.  In Witchfinder, it's the Satanists who are the victims, which I thought was kind of inspired.  The film also has a good twist or two up its sleeve. 

All this adds up to one of W.A.V.E.’s best both in terms of WTF entertainment and as a solid slice of low budget filmmaking.  If you’ve ever been skittish to watch a W.A.V.E. movie because of their reputation, I’d say start with this one.  It’s only an hour long and it zips along at a steady pace.  It also shows that Whitson, who also has a sizable role (and gloriously overacts) had a bit more craftsmanship in him than most people give him credit for.  Don’t worry, there’s still all the chloroforming and bondage scenes you’d expect and/or hope for in a W.A.V.E. movie.  It’s just nice to see him delivering a flick that checks all the boxes. 

HOUSEBOAT HORROR (1989) **

A film crew descends on a small Australian resort town to shoot a rock video at a lake.  They rent a couple of houseboats, dock them at the shore, and begin rocking out.  Little do they know there’s a hideously burned killer lurking in the woods who’s just itching to hack them up. 

Houseboat Horror is a no-budget Australian shot on video slasher flick.  Aussies has been cranking out Ozploitation movies for years, so it’s no surprise they would wet their beak in this sort of thing.  It’s uneven as hell, but it’s really no better or worse than countless similar slashers found on stateside video store shelves at the time.  At least the shot-on-video cinematography is a lot better than most of the stuff you’d see in America. 

The thick accents and poor sound make it hard to hear/understand some of the dialogue and the scenes of the crew members and bandmates dicking around on the boat are kind of hard to sit through.  Also, the shots of the various houseboats out on the water feel like padding.  A lot of screen time is devoted to shots of the killer’s boots as he traipses around the woods too.  All this makes for an awfully sluggish start. 

On the plus side, the skin quotient is decent, and the body count is relatively high, which makes up for some of the film’s more irritating aspects.  Although there are a lot of offscreen kills, the gore still manages to be kind of fun.  We get a stake through the neck, an axe to the head, throat slashing, a horseshoe to the face, a speargun to the stomach, and a pipe through the chest, along with some other assorted stabbings and hackings.  The highlight is a cool scene where a head is split down the middle with a machete. 

The centerpiece music video is appropriately cheesy.   It just falls short of being one of those “so bad it’s good” deals.  The same can be said for the movie.  It is pretty random though.  I mean nothing quite captures the excess of the rock n’ roll lifestyle like… (checks notes) a houseboat. 

Thursday, March 19, 2026

AMITYVILLE TURKEY DAY (2024) *

The world needs more Thanksgiving-themed horror movies.  It doesn’t necessarily need more fake Amityville movies.  So, I guess it’s like a monkey’s paw kind of thing to find something like Amityville Turkey Day wallowing in the depths of Tubi.   

A group of filmmakers arrive at a house in Amityville to shoot a movie about a cannibal therapist who lived in the actual home.  During filming, a killer turkey with a foul mouth (see what I did there?) arrives on the scene and begins bumping off members of the cast and crew. 

Amityville Turkey Day starts off with a shit load of backstory and testimonials filmed by people on their phones.  It took me a while to realize this was actually a sequel to something.  I did some digging and learned it follows a film called Amityville Thanksgiving.  I haven’t seen that one but judging from Amityville Turkey Day I’m surprised anyone was asking for seconds.

You know, it’s funny.  At the start of this review I thought there was only one Thanksgiving related Amityville movie.  Now I know there are two.  I’m sure they will probably have another one in production by the time I finish writing this. 

Anyway, those opening scenes are tedious and get the movie off to a rough start.  The only moments where it threatens to come to life is during the scenes with the turkey.  Of course, it’s a blatant rip-off of Thankskilling, but it’s like I always say, if you’ve got to steal from somewhere, steal from the best.  I guess it was just too much to ask that the turkey’s kills be memorable or that its wisecracks be funny.  (Sometimes they don’t even make sense.) 

The film-within-a-film scenes are pretty painful, but not as painful as the shit with the crew members bitching and arguing with each other.  The unintentional humor isn’t funny, and the intentional shit is even worse (there’s a Harvey Weinstein joke).  All in all, Amityville Turkey Day is truly a turkey, and that’s no jive.   

AKA:  Amityville Thanksgiving 2.

PLAY DIRTY (2025) ***

When I heard Kiss Kiss Bang Bang’s Shane Black and Robert Downey, Jr. were reuniting to make a Parker movie, I was overjoyed.  Black’s The Nice Guys is one of the best movies of the last decade, and the Parker books is one of my all-time favorite crime series.  Then, I didn’t hear anything about the project for a while.  When I heard RDJ was replaced by Mark Wahlberg, I was a bit dismayed.  (Downey still hung around and served as producer.)  Not that he’s terrible or anything.   I just couldn’t really see him as Parker.  (To be fair, Downey wasn’t exactly perfect casting either, but I think he could’ve made it work if he dialed down his schtick.)  The good news is Wahlberg fares well enough in the role.  If you go in hoping for a better than average Marky Mark movie, I’d say you’d get your money’s worth. 

The opening robbery scene is a perfect amalgamation of author Donald E. Westlake’s hardboiled style and Black’s brand of humorous violence.  The heist goes off the rails in record time and sometimes in jaw-dropping manner.  This sequence was so much fun that I was pretty much with it from then on.  Heck, I could even admit Marky Mark was OK in the lead. 

In true Parker fashion, our antihero gets ripped off after the score and goes out for revenge.  He hesitates to pull the trigger when the thief who betrayed him (Rosa Salazar from Alita:  Battle Angel) offers to cut him in on an even bigger caper:  Stealing a billion in gold from a small South American country. 

Black surrounds Wahlberg with a top-notch crew of supporting characters.  He gives them the majority of the comic dialogue so Wahlberg can still (more or less) be the stoic leading man.  Lakeith Stanfield is funny as his partner in crime who only steals to support his independent theater productions.  Black’s co-stars from The Predator, Keegan-Michael Key and Thomas Jane are also fun as members of the crew, and Tony Shaloub is amusingly cranky as the head of “The Outfit”. 

Oh, and if you’re a dyed-in-the-wool fan of Black like me, you may or may not fist-pump just at the sight of Christmas decorations.  

Do I wish Play Dirty was more faithful to the character?  Sure.  Did I absolutely enjoy myself? Yup.  Ultimately, Play Dirty is breezy, funny, and violent fun.  It’s rough when it needs to be.  It’s funny when it wants to be.  

I mean, it’s not perfect.  The CGI during the big train derailment scene is a bit wonky.  That said, I enjoyed myself.  Overall, I liked it about as much as Wahlberg’s underrated Spenser reboot. 

I think most fans of the literary Parker have come to terms with the fact we may never get a film adaptation that accurately captures the character’s ruthlessness.  (Mel Gibson probably came the closest in Payback.)  We just hope they are good enough on their own merits until someone else gets a chance to do it right. 

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MIRROR (1973) *** ½

Ana (Emma Cohen) is devastated when she finds her overprotective father (Howard Vernon) has committed suicide.  She immediately calls off her wedding and begins playing piano in jazz clubs.  Soon, the voice of her father calls to her from an antique mirror urging her to kill any man who shows interest in her. 

Slow, moody, and sometimes beautiful, The Other Side of the Mirror is a reminder what Jess Franco could do with a little time on his side, a little money in his pocket, and a sturdy script to work with (or at least an intriguing idea).  It’s much more arty than it is exploitative.  (There is some nudity, but nothing approaching the sleaziness the man is known for.)  Like the music the heroine plays, the plot moves like jazz.  It’s loose, freeform, and takes some unexpected detours here and there.  Nevertheless, it has a groovy rhythm, and it’s quite rewarding if you’re patient.  It contains some dreamlike passages and a few haunting moments, which is indicative of what Franco was capable of when he was firing on all cylinders. 

Cohen is quite good as the heroine who seems to spiral whenever a man begins making advances toward her.  Vernon also makes a memorable impression in a small amount of screen time.  The weight of his few scenes in the early going cast a shadow over Cohen’s character.  He remains a striking presence throughout the film long after he's kicked the bucket. 

Sure, The Other Side of the Mirror has some pacing problems.  I mean, we didn’t need to see Cohen’s jazz numbers in their entirety.  That’s a small quibble because when the movie cooks, it’s some gourmet shit.  This is one of Jess Franco’s best.  It’s one that film scholars and Franco aficionados alike can probably agree on. 

Franco also has a cameo as a musician in the jazz club. 

AKA:  The Obscene Mirror.  AKA:  Inside a Dark Mirror.