John’s Horror Corner: Deadstream (2022), a very worthy found footage-ish, horror-comedy, haunted house movie with an extra helping of Sam Raimi.
MY CALL: If you want a funny, feisty, popcorn horror night loaded with the kind of jump-scares that both feel earned and make you laugh, then this is the funhouse horror movie for you. I really enjoyed this one. MORE MOVIES LIKE Deadstream: DashCam (2021) and Unfriended (2015) both provide good “live-streaming” horror experiences, whereas As Above, So Below (2014), Grave Encounters (2011) and Paranormal Activity 1-2 (2007, 2010) are more documentary-gone-wrong and found footage.
Wacky, over-the-top internet personality Shawn (Joseph Winter) has made his career by hilariously facing his fears on his YouTube show. Recovering from a long-term ban from his monetized social media, Shawn plans his big comeback by facing his fear of ghosts while livestreaming a full night in a haunted house by himself and he must follow one rule: if he sees or hears anything unusual, he must check it out or he doesn’t get paid! Sounds like a fun gimmick.
Shawn is rather enjoyably kind of annoying. Right away I’m really digging the comedic tone as he explains how he’s spending the night in the most haunted house in the country… “that’s not so famous he can’t record in it.” He methodically explains his plan, the history of the house, and sets up his cameras. While much more hokey, it reminds me of the opening of a one-man-show iteration of Grave Encounters (2011).
Nearly half of this movie could transpire in the absence of anything supernatural, but it’s by no means less entertaining for it. After an amusing series of jump-scare-rich feisty false alarms, weird sounds, frantic responses to live subscriber comments ( a la DashCam), and possible paranormal goings-on, Shawn is unexpectedly joined by his fan Chrissy (Melanie Stone; several Mythica movies), who figured out where he was during his livestream.
Eventually things do take a wild swing into the supernatural. We enjoy many fun jump-scares and a lot of antics that strongly smack of Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead movies. We also see a monster that reminds me of Digging Up the Marrow (2014), a variety of groaty nasty gangly slimy zombie-ish things, and a really janky mutant kid. But most prevalent is the Sam Raimi influence. So if you choose to interpret this as anything other than homage, it may bother you. Other may love this about the film.
Co-writers and co-directors Vanessa and Joseph Winter (V/H/S segment “To Hell and Back”) have made a horror comedy that is delightfully loaded with jump-scares, and that tends to divide the camp. Many consider jump-scares cheap, employed in lieu of actual atmosphere or earned sense of horror. However, this feels more like the fun, self-aware nervousness of being in a haunted house. Watching this movie, I felt all a giggle, ready to laugh at loud at the next hard turn of this funhouse ride. A lot of the jumpiness is cultivated by Shawn’s own scared yelps, which adds more levity to the nervous laughs. So for me, this felt like a movie that wisely implemented jump-scares as a device to manifest an atmosphere (a la Lights Out), rather than a ploy to mask the lack thereof. Moreover, found footage or docu-style horror can divide interests as well—in this, the common critical case to facilitate lower budgets and weak effects. I felt the livestream documentary-style was done very thoughtfully, and complemented Shawn’s manic nature with a grounding sense of order as we shift back-and-forth from Shawn’s fearful screaming fleeing to his assessment of the cameras to form his next plan of action. Additionally, we could see everything very clearly, including any gross zombie effects/make-up.
I really enjoyed this film. Well done, Winters. Oh, and more like this please.
The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 454: Tenet (2020), Christopher Nolan, and Protagonists
You can download or stream the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker (or wherever you listen to podcasts…..we’re almost everywhere).
If you get a chance please make sure to review, rate and share. You are awesome.
Mark and Niall discuss the 2020 action blockbuster Tenet. Directed by Christopher Nolan, and starring John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, Elizabeth Debicki and many inverted objects, the movie is what happens when Nolan is given $200 million to make whatever he wants (and it’s wonderful). In this episode, they also talk about kitchen fights, protagonists and Nolan’s fascination with time. Enjoy!
If you are a fan of the podcast, make sure to send in some random listener questions (we love random questions). We thank you for listening, and hope you enjoy the episode!
You can download the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker.

MY CALL: Sorry. But there’s not enough gore, bad movie antics or weirdness to make this worth your time for all its long boring sections. Not when there are so many other great, weird, shocking, provocative Asian horror films out there. Still, it wasn’t regrettably bad, and might make for a solid Bad Movie Tuesday. MORE MOVIES LIKE Japanese Hell: You want crazy bonkers Asian horror? Let’s try Mystics in Bali (1981; aka Leák), The Boxer’s Omen (1983; aka Mo, Black Magic 4), Seeding of a Ghost (1983; aka Zhong gui) or Lady Terminator (1989). ASIAN HORROR REMAKES: For more horror remakes, I strongly favor The Ring (2002), Mirrors (2008), The Grudge (2004), The Uninvited (2009) and Pulse (2006).
To save her soul, the mysterious Miss Enma (Michiko Maeda) offers Rika (Kinako Satô; Exte: Hair Extensions, Strange Circus) the opportunity to see Hell so she may avoid the sins that may lead her to such a fate. Guided by Enma’s young ‘non-human’ associate Mako (Yôko Satomi; Maid-Droid), Rika is forcibly disrobed, guided on a walking tour of Hell, and shown Hellbound sinners along with their sins and punishment. The visions of Hell largely amount to a fever dream of semi-nude denizens with disfigured faces twitching among grub-infested corpses.
Almost like an anthology movie, we see sinners’ sins as standalone vignette short films. Afterwards, we witness the infernal sentencing, which (in the case of the first sinner) included having his arm, then his feet, legs and head sawed off by some Yokai Monsters in rubber suits. The budget is humble. But at least everything boldly happens on-screen. This movie is doing its darnedest with the few dollars they scraped together to produce it.
At times, this is deliciously bad. Another sinner’s vignette shows assailants abducting a man and his wife “in slow motion.” But the actors are literally trying to move and even speak “slowly” in real time and are doing so inconsistently and out of sync with each other. Keeping in line with the “slo-mo” acting are the stop motion plastic roaches. We grin at the bad movie antics. But it’s just not doing it for me.
Fair warning, one vignetter features a cult leader who is rather rapey—so there’s that. The cult leader’s sinful story leads into Rika’s sinful inclusion in the cult. It’s a long stretch of very boring scenes that felt like a cult drama with several sexual assault scenes. This was a rough chunk of the film. The vignettes are generally long and soporific. Still, it’s not without its occasional merits. A truly cartoonishly stretchy tongue-removal was the absolute highlight of this movie.
In this remake of the 1960 film Jigoku (aka, Hell), writer and director Teruo Ishii (Evil Brain from Outer Space, Female Yakuza Tale) has cobbled together something which seems to mix very low budget theatrical over-the-top Hell scenes with grounded, normal, boring scenes in reality. The inconsistent result is like the proverbial worst meatloaf ever whose outside is burned while the inside is somehow undercooked—yet we still get to laugh at the mere fact it was served in the first place. Overall, this film featured not nearly as much gore, bad movie antics or weirdness as I had hoped. So it’s probably not worth your time when there are so many other great, weird, shocking, provocative Asian horror films out there. Still, it wasn’t regrettably bad.
John’s Horror Corner: Grave Robbers (1989; aka Ladrones de tumbas), an obscure Mexican horror film that isn’t awful.
MY CALL: I’m not recommending this, but it’s not terrible either. I simply had to see it because I had never heard of it until today. MORE MOVIES LIKE Grave Robbers: For more Mexican horror (or moreso movies taking place in Mexico), consider Demonoid (1980), Dolly Dearest (1991), Cronos (1993), The Ruins (2008), and Hellraiser: Revelations (2011).
This obscure Mexican movie comes from co-writer and director Rubén Galindo Jr. (Don’t Panic, Cemetery of Terror). The themes are all too familiar. Satanic rituals, impregnating women with the Antichrist, Armageddon espoused by the birth of that Antichrist… that old story.
Centuries ago, during his torture-coerced confession for his crimes of attempting to forcibly impregnate and ritual sacrifice a young woman in the name of Satan, a surprisingly muscular cultist (Agustín Bernal; El Ninja Mexicano) curses his Archbishop accuser that he will one day rise again and enact his Antichrist-fathering ambitions upon the daughter of one of his descendants.
Skip to present day, and the lucky girl is the daughter Olivia (Edna Bolkan; Cemetery of Terror) of Police Captain Lopez (Fernando Almada), and she is going camping with her friends on the same weekend that some grave robbers roll into town. Guess whose long-hidden grave they’ll find?
Hoping to find gold, the group of young grave robbers (including Erika Buenfil; Cemetery of Terror) stumble into the underground torture chamber of the cultist’s demise and accidently resurrect him. Now risen as an undead executioner armed with the axe that killed him long ago, the cultist begins murdering everyone he encounters. Not really sure why. Maybe he’s just cranky from being dead for a couple hundred years.
The deaths are hokey for sure, but they are bloody, flesh-rending and occur on-screen. So I guess I can’t complain. This isn’t really that bad, even if it’s not very good either. Overall this undead killer feels a lot like generic brand zombie Jason Voorhees (or even Evil Ash from Army of Darkness) with an axe and a humbler budget as he mows through a handful of grave robbers, campers and locals. There’s frequent axe-cleaving-face shots. Even with little follow-through, that’s fun to see. I chuckle every time.
There is one particularly memorable death scene in a prison cell when the killer somehow “magically” tears through a grave robber’s stomach as if from inside him. The aftermath leaves a gory gaping hole in his stomach with guts strewn about—a very Lucio Fulci visual.
The ending is more like the finale fight scene in a dark action fantasy movie (e.g., Conan the Destroyer), but with yet clumsier execution. And then the movie is just over. And that’s fine for a breezy 90 minute obscurity that I had never heard of until today.
The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 453: Alligator (1980), Creature Features, and Robert Forster
You can download or stream the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker (or wherever you listen to podcasts…..we’re almost everywhere).
If you get a chance please make sure to review, rate and share. You are awesome.
Mark and David (@ItsMeDavidCross on Twitter) discuss the 1980 cult classic Alligator. Directed by Lewis Teague, and starring Robert Forster, Robin Riker, and a mutated alligator, the movie focuses on what happens when likable people hunt a genetically modified monster. In this episode, they talk about fighting alligators, swimming pools, and the movies that looked to capitalize on the success of Jaws. Enjoy!
If you are a fan of the podcast, make sure to send in some random listener questions (we love random questions). We thank you for listening, and hope you enjoy the episode!
You can download the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker.

John’s Horror Corner: Cyst (2020), a gooey-spewy slapstick horror comedy about a mutant cyst monster.
MY CALL: Tapping into the hokey atomic horror of the 1960s, this low budget spectacle should delight fans of deliciously bad cinema. Because it affects many viewers’ enjoyment of even deliberately “bad” movies, I feel the need to disclaim that this movie’s budget is notably low. However, you also get a lot of [discounted] glorious blood and pus and we see a lot of the monster. So adjust your expectations accordingly. MORE MOVIES LIKE Cyst: For more bizarrely, funny and really gross horror, check out Society (1989), Ticks (1993), Planet Terror (2007), BioSlime (2010), Chillerama (2011), Greasy Strangler (2016) or The Seed (2021).
Enjoying the recent fetishization of pimple popping, we meet Nurse Patty (Eva Habermann; Troll’s World, Sky Sharks) and Dr. Guy (George Hardy; Troll 2, Troll’s World) as they squeeze, juice, and prod at a giant infected lump on a patient’s shoulder. The scene includes dousing the nurse in the face with a stream of projectile milky pus. Yeeeeuck!
This movie has plenty of blood, and even more ridiculous humor. The tone is goes from mildly disconnected from reality, to eventually cartoonish complete with mad scientist cackling during uncackleable situations. As much as silliness, this film thrives on shocking squirty grossness—and it gets juicy! If you wince at pimple popping videos, then maybe you shouldn’t even try to watch this.
In order to test a cyst removal machine for a patent committee, Dr. Guy “augments” a pimple on his assistant’s back into a giant festering growth. The demonstration goes horrible wrong, a recently disembodied skull grows limbs and leaps at someone like in Ticks (1993), and before you know it we have a giant cyst monster like the alien beast from TerrorVision (1986) or Invaders from Mars (1986). And while the cyst monster wanders Dr. Guy’s hallways, Guy and Patty have a wild throwdown fistfight. I didn’t expect such a non-horror highlight. Gene Jones (The Sacrament) also delivers some awkward pleasantry as a cyst-afflicted patient.
Tapping into the hokey atomic horror of the 1960s, director and co-writer Tyler Russell’s first horror film is a low budget spectacle for those who delight in the deliciously bad. Because it affects many viewers’ enjoyment of even deliberately “bad” movies, I feel the need to disclaim that this movie’s budget is notably low. There’s a lot of glorious blood and pus, yes, and you even see a lot of the monster. But the more you see the monster, the more you also see the textures and fibers and the like of its fabricated, foam and rubber body. Honestly, I think the effects team and director handled their budgeted monstrosity well. But I also love me some deliciously bad movies!
The Movies, Films and Flix Podcast – Episode 452: Scream 4, Lemon Squares, and Horror Remakes
You can download or stream the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker (or wherever you listen to podcasts…..we’re almost everywhere).
If you get a chance please make sure to review, rate and share. You are awesome.
Mark and Zanandi (@ZaNandi on Twitter) discuss the 2011 horror sequel Scream 4. Directed by Wes Craven, and starring Neve Campbell, Emma Roberts, Courtney Cox, Hayden Panettiere (Kirby is the best), and some terrible tasting lemon squares, the movie focuses on what happens when the legacy characters return to Woodsboro and meet a new crew of horror movie fanatics. In this episode, they also talk about horror remakes, hospital intercoms, and the excellence of Kirby. Enjoy!
If you are a fan of the podcast, make sure to send in some random listener questions (we love random questions). We thank you for listening, and hope you enjoy the episode!
You can download the pod on Apple Podcasts, Tune In, Podbean, or Spreaker.
John’s Horror Corner: Hatching (2022; aka Pahanhautoja), an emotionally rough Finnish horror that feels as much like a dark contemporary fantasy.
MY CALL: A lovely, twisted fairy tale for lovers of dark fantasy, emotionally challenging content, and gross transformation. MORE MOVIES LIKE Hatching: Another likewise bizarre film comes to mind as a perfect double-feature option… Vivarium (2019). Maybe even Men (2022) as well. For more “family therapy” horror, go for The Twin (2022), Relic (2020), The Dark and the Wicked (2020), The Lodge (2019), Hereditary (2018), Pyewacket (2017), The Witch (2016), Goodnight Mommy (2014), The Babadook (2014), The Uninvited (2009), The Good Son (1993), Pet Sematary (1989) and The Stepfather (1987).
Tinja (Siiri Solalinna) is overly concerned with pleasing her mother (Sophia Heikkilä; Dual), and her mother seems overly concerned with Tinja’s gymnastics competition, her lifestyle video blog, and appearances. Montages from her mother’s blog are suggestive of a very image-concerned way of life. And more than just being a bit superficial, her mother is also having an affair and manipulating her children, placing some of her own moral burden on Tinja.
After putting an injured bird out of its misery, Tinja recovers an orphaned egg in its nest and brings it home to care for it. Tinja’s egg unexpectedly is growing. As her relationship with her mother becomes more strained, the egg grows larger and becomes her source of comfort.
When the egg hatches it’s somewhat gruesome as a glazed demonic claw frees a gangly bird-like humanoid from its massive shell. Like an evil mutant Muppet, the creature looks great! The monstrosity is asymmetrically disfigured, oddly a bit cute, and has glimmers of human-like mutations (e.g., molar teeth embedded in stacks in the rear beak). It clearly needs, even desires, to be mothered and loved.
There’s something fantastical about the egg’s existence, and how we the audience are to submit that the parents manage not to notice an eventually 3-foot egg on Tinja’s bed. Even with clueless parents, one would expect the plumage or the obvious smell or animal feeding evidence to eventually spark a conversation—but no such threat of discovery seems to exist. All the while, the creature is transforming ever more human—like Jeff Goldblum in The Fly (1986), but in reverse. The process is macabre, but oddly soulful, even if viewed through a twisted looking glass.
Tinja bathes the beast, and even feeds it in the very manner as a mother bird would feed a hatchling. The creature receives the kind of care Tinja likely wishes she received, and the creature acts violently in Tinja’s best interest. It’s a sick love, but it’s one we can instantly understand. Essentially, all of the relationships in this movie are strained. And the most kind relationships are those that shouldn’t be. The film paints kindness as something that never seems to hit its most deserving target.
Very cool visual effects, by the way. Gross, oozy depictions of drool, bodily functions and flaps of flesh are just frequent enough to remind you this is as much horror as dark contemporary fantasy. Most horror attacks you with violence and gore and cruelty, whereas this movie is an assault on your emotions and sense of kindness. The whole experience is weirdly satisfying, yet generally uncomfortable. I realize that may not make sense to you readers… but when you watch it, you’ll get it. It may not pack the emotional gut punch of many A24 releases (e.g., Midsommar, The Lodge, Hereditary, Men), but this is emotional brutality in the neatly folded visage of a Stepford Wives fantasy Youtube Channel.
Can I just say, for her first feature film director and story writer Hanna Bergholm has done an outstanding job! This is a gorgeously made film in all dimensions both behind and before the camera, and both by cast and crew. Strongly recommended, especially to those enjoy truly bizarre dark fantasy with elements of science fiction or horror.
John’s Horror Corner: Black Magic 2 (1976; aka Gou hun jiang tou), an Indonesian Shaw Brothers movie black magic and sultry lady zombies.
MY CALL: If you love Asian shock cinema, then this movie is like an art history lecture—it’s not exciting, but you can appreciate it anyway. The content itself is more illustrative of lines drawn in the sand that would later be honed, bested and perfected by more provocatively gory successors. This movie likely won’t shock you. But you’ll see where those that did found some of their inspiration. MORE MOVIES LIKE Black Magic 2: For yet more bonkers Asian horror, consider Mystics in Bali (1981; aka Leák), The Boxer’s Omen (1983; aka Mo, Black Magic 4), Seeding of a Ghost (1983; aka Zhong gui), The Devil’s Sword (1984), Evil Dead Trap (1988; aka Shiryô no wana), Lady Terminator (1989) and, perhaps, Black Magic (1975).
So, is this your first Shaw Brothers cult classic? Not 60 seconds deep into this Shaw Brothers release and we are treated to a skinny-dipping crocodile attack scene leading into a crocodile hunting and gory gutting scene. Yup, boobs, blood and guts for all. Especially boobs, there’s a lot of that.
Drs. Chi Chung Peng (Lung Ti; The Warrior’s Way, Black Magic, The Legend of Drunken Master) and Shi Chen-Sheng (Wei-Tu Lin; Black Magic, Corpse Mania, The Flying Guillotine) have discovered a pulsating incurable infection which, after much doubt, they can only attribute to black magic.
The malady is the work of the evil magician Kang Cong (Lieh Lo; Black Magic, Super Cop), who raises the dead to serve as his zombie slaves. Kang is a classic cat-stroking villain, literally. Unaware of his evil intentions, our doctor protagonists seek his help and, in turn, Kang sends beautiful zombie ladies to do his bidding. Yeah, it’s as shallow as it sounds… hence the abundant boobs. Did I mention that this ancient black magician remains ever youthful by consuming breast milk? Yeah, it’s like that.
Other than seeing Kang revivify corpses by nailing spikes into their heads, there is some brief disturbing imagery of a monstrous childbirth, a lot of voodoo doll-based death, festering wounds, time lapse decaying corpse shots, and infections with wriggling worms. Needless to say, director Meng-Hua Ho (The Oily Maniac, Black Magic, The Flying Guillotine) was doing his very best to entertain fans of bizarre horror.
Despite all the supernatural jazz, the scoring, tone, direction and style give this movie more the feel of a 70s cop movie, like a crime investigation thriller… but with lots of nudity, bewitched women, some horror gore, and some sultry lady zombies.
I’m not sure what I expected here. I guess I was hoping to find the inspiration for The Boxer’s Omen (1983), or something in that vein. I’ll bet this movie felt a lot more wild in the 70s. But… not today, it doesn’t. So for me this was just okay. I guess it was kind of a fun ride to see an early influencer for Asian black magic cult cinema. But oh so tame compared to shock cinema spawned from the 80s.


































