Showing posts with label Review Index. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Review Index. Show all posts

Sunday, July 17, 2011

The Completed Collections

I tend to pick through the many DVD multi-packs I own the way others go through boxes of fancy chocolates: I watch a movie here, watch a movie there... but the end result is that sometimes it takes me forever to finish a given set. Sometimes I never do, because one or more discs go missing in the pit that is my office.

This new series of posts will be a catalog of the DVD multi-packs I've actually managed to watch every movie in. It may not be much of an achievement, but I take my ego-boosts where I can find them! (Plus, it may save someone from buying a dog of a collection.)

Eventually, this post will be an index the posts indexes the reviews in the completed set. Each link here will provide a rating for the set generated by averaging the films in it.

The Completed Collections Index
Icons of Adventure (Adventure Period Films from Hammer in the 1960s): 7/10 Stars

Psychotic Connections (Horror Films from the 1980s and 1930s): 4/10 Stars

Monday, May 2, 2011

Blogging A to Z: The Afterword

The originator of the Blogging A to Z April Challenge has asked that participant make posts about what they've learned this month.


Well, I learned that I CAN post nonsense every day on the Cinema Steve blog, but it comes at the expense of the other blogs. Usually, this blog sees two or three posts a week (at most) with two or three of my other blogs seeing a similar amount. While what went on here was merely a concentrated version of what usually happens here--with a post every day instead of every two-three days--the time spent here meant less posting happened elsewhere. Not good overall, I think. I also discovered a number of new and interesting blogs and greatly expanded the list ones I subscribe to but rarely have time to actually read. :)

By the time "S" approached, I had figured out to research posts for several blogs at once, hence the emergence of a Cab Calloway mini-postfest, with material appearing both here and at Shades of Gray. It's something that's happened on my blogs before, usually by accident more than design (unless it was a planned blogathon) but maybe it's something I'll try to do more often.

I've also confirmed that, despite an ever-growing number of hits, not many people make comments. The poll and direct appeal for them proved that. Oh well... I suppose I can be happy with the fact that they drop by!

If you missed any of the A to Z posts, here's a convenient list of them all.

A: April Fools Advice
B: Blues for Allah (music video)
C: Catwoman: The Catfiles (graphic novel review)
D: Doctor Who and the Pyramids of Mars (movie review)
E: Enemy Ace Archives (graphic novel reviews)
F: Fatboy Slim and Christopher Walken in Reverse! (music video)


G: Graphic Novels and Comic Book Reviews
H: Health Care AND Heroes
I: Infidelity Always Leads to Disaster (movie review)
J: John Carter's Eternal Love
K: Krazy Kat and the Heppy Land, Furfur Away
L: Late
M: Mike Oldfield (music videos)
N: Nobody
O: Office Staff AND Oatmeal at McDonald's (Food review)
P: The Pause that Refreshes


Q: Question of the Day
R: Relationship Advice AND Repent! (ya only gots 30 days left!)
S: Sesame Street: Then and Now (music videos)
T: Terrorist Twits
U: Unbelievable Stupidity (Jailbird Parade post)
V: 'Vampirella: The Dracula War' (graphic novel review)
W: W is for... Waresh, Wind, and Wave
X: Xtro: The Complete 'Trilogy' (movie reviews)
Y: You... yes, YOU!
Z: Zombie movies you may not have seen (but should)!

My thanks to everyone who dropped by in April. I hope you found something interesting or amusing during your stay! (And thanks to my regular readers. Please take the poll on the sidebar, so I know what emphasize as things settle back into the regular routine around here.)

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Zombie movies you may not have seen (but should)!

Since the only "Z" words that came to mind when I tried to think of a good finish for the Blogging A to Z Challenge were Zyrtek, Z-Man, Zebra, and Zombies, the choice of subject matter was easy.


Zombies have been a mainstay of horror movies since before term "horror movies" had been coined. From the 1920s though today, shambling undead men doing the bidding of voodoo priests or just roaming around looking to eat the flesh of the living, have been scaring movie-watchers with greater regularity than even vampires--because even when they're not the focal point of a given movie, zomibes often make appearances anyway!

Here are ten suggestions for zombie movies you should check out before they get you! They are arranged in chronological order, and they are among some of the best films in the sub-genre. (Which is really TWO genres, because movie zombies completely changed in 1968, following the release of George Romero's original "Night of the Living Dead".

Click on the links to read full reviews at my various blogs.


1. White Zombie, starring Bela Lugosi and Madge Bellamy (1932): A plantation owner hires a zombie master to turn a woman he is obsessed with into the perfect bride. This classic chiller is often referenced as the first true zombie movie. It is one of Bela Lugosi's best performances.

2. I Walked With a Zombie, starring Frances Dee and Tom Conway (1943): A nurse comes to believe her charge is actually suffering under a voodoo curse and takes the logical steps to help her. A classic (and classy) movie that helped establish much of the visual vocabulary still being used in horror movies today. Oh, and it still is pretty spooky even sixty-eight years later, with some of the most effective use of the voodoo schtick in any Hollywood film made.

3. Night of the Living Dead, starring Judith O'Dea and Duane Jones (1968). A group of strangers barricade themselves in a house for protection against a ravenous zombie hoard. This is the film that changed zombies for. Here, the voodoo rituals were left behind and the modern, flesh hungry zombie was born. I remain astonished by the number of movie fans who haven't seen this genre-transforming picture, especially given how accessible its been for the past decade.

4. Dead Alive, starring Timothy Balme and Diana Penalver (1993): A nebbish man in search of romance becomes ground zero for the goriest, most insane zombie outbreak in cinematic history. One of the funniest zombie comedies to ever be made, this is not a movie for viewers with weak stomachs.

5 - 9. The Resident Evil Series, starring Milla Jovovich (2002 - Present): A bio plague unleashed by an evil mega-corp has turned most of the world's living creatures into murderous zombies. While this series has its ups and downs, you won't find more concentrated doses and zombie ass-kicking anywhere else.

10. Zombies Anonymous, starring Gina Ramsden (2008): The dead are rising, but they are not mindless killing machines. Instead, they are normal people who are unchanged, except their minds are now trapped in steadily decaying bodies. Follow the progress of a domestic abuse victim as she becomes an unlikely leader in a zombie civil rights movement.

(Oh... and if you want to READ about zombies, I recommend the following graphic novels: "The Essential Tales of the Zombie" and "Zombies Calling".

Friday, April 8, 2011

Graphic Novels and Comics Reviews Index

I've loved comic books since I was a little tyke and read my first issue of "Amazing Spider-Man" (which coincidentally was the 2nd appearance of the Punisher), an issue of "Planet of the Apes Magazine" and an issue of "Secrets of Sinister House".

I was never a big fan of superhero comics, gravitating mostly to horror and sci-fi stuff--except I suppose for "The Phantom" which kinda-sorta qualifies as a superhero title even though I think it's mostly an adventure strip. Growing up, a few of my favorite comics were "Bernard Prince", "Tomb of Dracula", "Howard the Duck", "Kamandi", "Alix", "Diabolik", "Tarzan", "Korak", and a couple of anthology titles I've forgotten the names of. I was mostly a DC Comics fan, with "Superman", "Action Comics", "World Finest", "Batman", "Detective Comics," "The Flash", and "The Brave and the Bold" being the superhero titles I would most frequently seek out... and which I still have a large number of today. The only Marvel titles I followed were the various horror comics and "Fantastic Four" and later "Power Pack".


During the 1980s, I was a big fan of Barry Blair and the various Aircel titles, and a whole host of other black-and-white comics. The Martin Powell-scripted Sherlock Holmes titles stick in my mind in particular.

My love of comics is reflected on a couple of my blogs--here and at the Shades of Gray blog--where reviews of graphic novels and collected editions of comics appear regularly.

This post lists the many graphic novels and comics I've review, organized by publisher and title. The numeric notation is how the title falls on my usual 0 to 10 scale, where 0 is absolute garbage and 10 is the best of the best. Click on the titles to read the reviews.

Various Small Publishers
Dark Wolf (4/10)
The Desert Peach: Beginnings (7/10)
The Desert Peach: Politics, Pilots, and Puppies (10/10)
Electric Girl, Vols. 1-3 (10/10)
Jesus Hates Zombies (8/10)
John Law: Dead Man Walking (8/10)
Line (6/10)
Little White Mouse Omnibus Edition (8/10)
Tyranny Rex (8/10)

Amaze Ink/SLG Publishing
Agnes Quill: An Anthology of Mystery (8/10)
Halo and Sprocket, Vols. 1 & 2 (9/10)
Marlene (9/10)
Street Angel (9/10)
Zombies Calling (8/10)

Dark Horse Comics
Empowered Vols. 1 & 2 (10/10)
Empowered Vols. 3 & 4 (10/10)
GoGirl!, Vol. 1 (8/10)
Predator: Hell and Hot Water (8/10)
Tarzan Library, Vol 1: Tarzan of the Apes (8/10)

DC Comics
Batman: Haunted Knight (10/10)
Batman/Spirit (9/10)
Catwoman: The Cat Files (8/10)
Catwoman: Guardian of Gotham (7/10)
Catwoman: Selina's Big Score (9/10)
Catwoman & Vampirella: The Furies (8/10)
Clubbing (7/10)
Enemy Ace Archive Edition, Vols. 1 & 2 (10/10 and 9/10)
Golden Age Sandman Archive Edition, Vol. 1 (6/10)
Manhunter: The Special Edition (10/10)
The Shazam Family Archive Edition, Vol. 1 (9/10)
Showcase Presents: Adam Strange, Vol. 1 (9/10)
Showcase Presents: Eclipso, Vol. 1 (4/10)
Showcase Presents: The Elongated Man, Vol. 1 (7/10)
Showcase Presents: The Flash, Vol. 1 (8/10)
Showcase Presents: The Haunted Tank, Vol. 1 (8/10)
Showcase Presents: Hawkman, Vol. 1 (9/10)
Showcase Presents: Jonah Hex (10/10)
Showcase Presents: The Secrets of Sinister House (6/10)
Showcase Presents: Sgt. Rock, Vol. 1 (10/10)
Showcase Presents: The War That Time Forgot, Vol. 1 (6/10)
Silverblade (9/10)
Wrath of the Spectre (9/10)

Eclipse
Destroyer Duck/The Star Child (8/10)

Harris Publishing
Four collections of classic Vampirella comics from the Warren Era (click for ratings)
Vampirella: The Dracula War (4/10)


Marvel Comics
Blade: Black and White (7/10)
Daughters of the Dragon (4/10)
Essential Ghost Rider, Vol. 1 (5/10)
Essential Ghost Rider, Vol. 2 (7/10)
Essential Godzilla. King of Monsters (6/10)
Essential Luke Cage, Vol. 1 (7/10)
Essential Man-Thing, Vols. 1 & 2 (9/10 and 7/10)
Essential Monster of Frankenstein (7/10)
Essential Nova, Vol. 1 (5/10)
Essential Spider-Woman, Vol. 1 (9/10)
Essential Tales of the zombie (8/10)
Essential Werewolf By Night, Vol. 1 (8/10)
Essential Werewolf By Night, Vol. 2 (7/10)

Oni Press
The Complete Geisha (9/10)
The Tomb (7/10)

Viper Comics
Black Harvest (7/10)
The Lost Books of Eve, Vol. 1 (9/10)

Viz Publishing
Maison Ikokku, Vols. 1-14 (9/10)
Rumik Theater & One or Double (10/10 & 8/10)
Uzumaki, Vols. 1-3 (10/10)

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Christmas Movie Round-up 2010

Over the past few years, I've reviewed numerous Christmas movies on my blogs. Here's a list of them, so, if the Spirit of Chirstmas moves you, you can check Amazon.com or some other instant online rental outfit for the films.

Each film is rated on my usual 0-10 scale. Click on the titles to read the actual reviews.



Christmas Comedies and Action Flicks

Deck the Halls (1/10 Stars)
Starring: Matthew Broderick and Danny DeVito

Die Hard (9/10 Stars)
Starring: Bruce Willis, Alan Rickman and Bonnie Bedelia

Home Alone (7/10)
Starring: Macaulay Culkin, Joe Pesci, and Daniel Stern

How the Grinch Stole Christmas (3/10 Stars)
Starring: Jim Carrey and Taylor Momson

The Ice Harvest (8/10 Stars)
Starring: John Cusack, Oliver Platt, and Billy Bob Thornton

Jingle All the Way (6/10 Stars)
Starring: Arnold Schwartzenegger

Kiss Kiss, Bang, Band (9/10 Stars)
Starring: Robert Downey, Jr., Val Kilmer, and Michelle Monaghan



Christmas Horror Flicks

Jack Frost & Jack Frost 2 (5/10, 2/10)
Starring: Christopher Allport

Santa's Slay (6/10)
Starring: Bill Goldberg

Silent Night, Deadly Night (6/10)
Starring: Mary Woronov and John Carradine

Merry Christmas!

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Nine Days of the Ninja: After Action Report


"Nine Day of the Ninja" for 2010 has come and gone, and those mysterious masked assassins have faded back into the shadows. But you never know when they'll show up again at Watching the Detectives, or, more likely, at Movies You Should (Die Before You) See.

I will be doing this again next year. I tried to put my focus in a different place than what is usual for me, which meant staying away from the craptacular ninja movies from Hong Kong. As a result, I learned a few new things about the genre. Visitors and emailers helped broaden my horizons as well. Next year, I'll probably learn a few more Ancient Ninja Secrets, and perhaps this blogathon will even be more than just a one-man show!

But here's an overview of the Great Ninja Onslaught of 2010. Each review is listed on my usual 0-10 Star scale, with 5 and 6 representing films of average quality. A total of 15 films and 3 graphic novels were covered, with two funny YouTube music videos thrown in for good measure.

Day O: Posts Heralding the Coming of "Nine Days of the Ninja"
(Noteworthy mostly for the pictures)
N is for Ninja; that's good enough for me (August 25)
Coming Soon: Nine Days of the Ninja (September 27)
Rushing Toward "Nine Days of the Ninja" (October 29)
Starting Monday: Nine Days of the Ninja (October 29)
Be a Ninja in 30 Seconds of Less! (October 31)

Day One: Enter the Ninja!
The Nine Days of the Ninja are Upon Us!
Ninja the Protector, 1986 (Film Review: 3/10 Stars)
Street Angel, 2006 (Graphic Novel Review: 10/10 Stars)

Day Two: When Ninja Attack!
Cyber Ninja, 1988 (Film Review: 5/10 Stars)

Day Three: Where Ninja Dare!
The Ninja Rap (Music Video Spoof)
Ninjitsu, 1957 (Film Review: 5/10 Stars)

Day Four: Death of a Ninja!
Empowered, Vols 3 & 4, 2008 (Graphic Novel Review, 10/10 Stars)
Ninja Champion, 1980 (Film Review: 1/10 Stars)
Red Shadow, 2004 (Film Review: 7/10 Stars)


Day Five: The Ninja Strikes Back!
The Ninja Glare (Music Video Spoof)
The Pacifier, 2005 (Film Review: 6/10 Stars)

Day Six: Saturday Night Ninja!
The Legend of Bigfoot, 1976 (Film Review: 1/10 Stars)
Ninja Hunt, 1964 (Film Review: 8/10 Stars)

Day Seven: The Passion of the Ninja!
The Machine Girl, 2007 (Film Review: 7/10 Stars)

Day Eight: The Ninja in Winter
Seventeen Ninja, 1962 (Film Review: 7/10 Stars)

Day Nine: The Ninja's Last Stand!
The Complete Street Fighter: Street Fighter, Return of the Street Fighter, and The Street Fighter's Last Revenge, 1974-1979 (Film Reviews: 8/10, 6/10, 5/10)
Golden Ninja Invasion, 1987 (Film Review 3/10 Stars)
Ninja Wars, 1982 (Film Review: 7/10 Stars)

And here are some Ninja Statistics to consider as we wait for the 2011 Nine Days of the Ninja:

Saturday, October 23, 2010

31 Nights of Halloween: Week Three

Here's this week's retrospective of Cinema Steve's month-long run-up to Halloween. More chilling images and reviews of fright films to get you in the Halloween spirit...



Movie Reviews
1408
Alien
The Craving
The Ghost Breakers
Horror Rises from the Tomb
Moon Over Tao
The Mummy (1959)
Night of the Living Dead (1968)

Fear-filled Phantasms
The Art of Steven Kenny
The Catty Paulette Goddard
Marcos and the Monsters
Saturday Scream Queen: Yvonne Furneaux
Vampirella: The Queen of Halloween

Horror at Home
Japanese Kids Will Stop the Zombie Apocalypse!



For more October monsters and horror,
visit Terror Titans and Shades of Gray!

Sunday, October 17, 2010

31 Nights of Halloween: Week Two

Saturday, October 9, 2010

31 Nights of Halloween: Week One

Here's a handy-dandy index of all the spooky posts that have appeared on my blogs as part of the month-long run-up to the grand night of Halloween!



Each movie or graphic novel is rated on my usual scale of 0 to 10, with 5 and 6 behind low and high average respectively.
Movie Reviews
Arsenic and Old Lace (9/10)
Case 39 (6/10)
Despiser (5/10)
Dracula, 1931 (7/10)
The Fall of the House of Usher, 1960 (8/10)
Fanatic (4/10)
Frostbiter: The Wrath of the Wendigo (3/10)
Insaniac (1/10)
The Mummy Lives (3/10)
The Seventh Victim (6/10)
Something Wicked This Way Comes (9/10)
White Zombie (9/10)

Graphic Novel Reviews
Batman: Haunted Knight (10/10)
Werewolf By Night, Volume One (8/10)
Wrath of the Spectre (9/10)
Zombies Calling (8/10)

Fear-filled Phantasms
Nan Grey & the Great Pumpkin
Saturday Scream Queens: Renee Zellweger & Jodelle Ferland


Menacing Music Videos
Jan Terri's "Get Down Goblin"





For more October monsters and horror,
visit Terror Titans and Shades of Gray!

Monday, August 16, 2010

Hits and Misses from 'The Expendables'

With Sylvester Stallone's "The Expendables" emerging from the weekend as a certified hit, my Watching the Detectives blog will focus entirely on past movies of the film's featured players between August 16 and August 20.

This post indexes those reviews, as well as any others that have already appeared on the review blogs of Cinema Steve. Although focused around a group of actors, the selection follows the random grab-bag approach that is the standard around here. If you have any reviews you'd like me to link to, please email me here.

The Expendables: A Retrospective of Mayhem and Violence



Sylvester Stallone (Expendables Character: Ross)
Over the Top, 1987 (Cinema Steve, 3/10)
Cliffhanger, 1993 (Watching the Detectives, 8/10)
Demolition Man, 1993 (Watching the Detectives, 7/10)
Eye See You, 2002 (Watching the Detectives, 4/10)

Jason Statham (Expendables Character: Christmas)
The Transporter, 2002 (Watching the Detectives, 6/10)
Transporter 2, 2005 (Watching the Detectives, 8/10)
Crank, 2006 (Watching the Detectives, 5/10)
War, 2007 (Watching the Detectives, 4/10)
The Bank Job, 2008 (Watching the Detectives, 7/10)
Death Race, 2008 (The Universal Horror Archive, 5/10)
Transporter 3, 2008 (Watching the Detectives, 5/10)
Crank 2: High Voltage, 2009 (Movies You Should [Die Before You] See, 1/10)

Jet Li (Expendables Character: Yang)
The Bodyguard from Beijing, 1994 (Watching the Detectives, 4/10)
War, 2007 (Watching the Detectives, 4/10)

Dolph Lundgren (Expendables Character: Gunner)
The Russian Specialist, 2005 (Watching the Detectives, 7/10)
Command Performance, 2009 (Watching the Detectives, 7/10)

Arnold Schwarzenegger (Expendables Character: Trench)
The Villain, 1979 (Cinema Steve, 8/10)
Predator, 1987 (Terror Titans, 10/10)
Red Heat, 1988 (Watching the Detectives, 9/10)
Last Action Hero, 1996 (Watching the Detectives, 8/10)
Jingle All the Way, 1996 (Cinema Steve, 6/10)
End of Days, 1999 (Terror Titans, 6/10)

Bruce Willis (Expendables Character: Church)
Moonlighting: The Pilot Episode, 1985 (Watching the Detectives, 7/10)
Die Hard, 1988 (Watching the Detectives, 9/10)
The Last Boy Scout, 1991 (Watching the Detectives, 6/10)
The Whole Nine Yards, 2000 (Watching the Detectives, 8/10)
The Whole Ten Yards, 2004 (Watching the Detectives, 4/10)
Hostage, 2005 (Watching the Detectives, 8/10)
16 Blocks, 2006 (Watching the Detectives, 6/10)
Lucky Number Slevin, 2006 (Watching the Detectives, 8/10)
Perfect Stranger, 2007 (Watching the Detectives, 3/10)

Friday, April 23, 2010

Nazis Quit Mini-Blogathon: Week Three


Continuing the observation of the end of Nazi Germany 65 years ago with a third week of movies and graphic novels that give Hitler and his psychotic followers (and those who enabled them) exactly the level of respect they deserve.

Graphic Novel Reviews
The Haunted Tank, Vol. 1: 500+ Pages of Quirky Batttle Action

Movie Reviews
Cataclysm: Immortal Nazis Add to Confusion

The Great Dictator: Charlie Chaplin Mocks Fascism and Bucks the Hollywood Mainstream

Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS: The Most Feared Nazi of Them All

Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror: The Great Detective vs. the Master Race

For lots more (and year-round) respect for Hitler and the Third Reich, check out the Hitler Getting Punched blog by clicking here.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Nazis Quit Mini-Blogathon: Week Two



The observance of the Nazi defeat 65 years ago continues across my review blogs. Here's what was offered during the week just gone by.

Graphic Novel Reviews, Week Two
Desert Peach Beginnings: War Can be a Queer Thing


Movie Reviews, Week Two
Ghosts on the Loose: East Side Kids vs Fifth Column Propagandists

Kelly's Heroes: Going for the Gold

Miss V From Moscow: The Fairer Sex Plays the Dirtiest Game

To Be Or Not To Be: Polish Hams vs. German Ubermenchen

In the week to come, Sherlock Holmes takes on the Nazis, and big-breasted Nazis take on torturing prisoners.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Nazis Quit Mini Blogathon: Week One



Sixty-five years ago this week, the Allied forces gave Nazi Germany the pounding that nation led by rabid beasts so richly deserved. Sixty-five years ago this week, Soviet troops broke the Nazi hold on Vienna and the U.S. 89th Infantry Division Liberates Ohrdruf, the First Sub-Camp of Buchenwald Concentration Camp Complex. It had become a priority of the Americans after General Patton's command received a message that the SS was rushing to exterminate the prisoners before Allied troops could liberate them. Sixty-five years ago this week, Hitler and the rest of the scum from the diseased part of the gene pool in Berlin kidded themselves that their insane fantasies of empire could still become reality.

I am celebrating the destruction of their Nazi Germany with reviews of movies and graphic novels, some dating from when the Nazis were still on the loose, some more recent. Here's a round-up of the reviews for this week, reviews of books and movies that give the Nazis the level of respect and recognition they are due.




Nazis Quit Blogathon Movie Reviews, Week One


Hard Rock Zombies: Even Death and Hitler Can't Stop Rock 'n' Roll

Oasis of the Zombies: Even Zombies are Ashamed of This One

Outpost: As Seen by Carl at I Like Horror Movies

Puppet Master III: Watch Nazis Get Creamed by Tiny Puppets

Where Eagles Dare: A Great Thriller

Zombie Lake: Beware Nazi Zombies When Skinny Dipping


Nazis Quit Mini-Blogathon Graphic Novel Reviews, Week One

The Shazam Family Archives, Vol. 1: Great WW2 Comics in a High-Quality Format

Showcase Presents Sgt. Rock, Vol 1: Kicking Nazi Butt, One Nazi at a Time


Come back for Week Two for the queerest Nazi on record, a sexy Russian spy in German occupied France, and Bela Lugosi at the head of the most incompetent gang of Fifth Columnists you're ever likely to encounter. And much, much more!

Blog Archive