Lucio Fulci was once known as the Godfather of Gore. The maestro behind Zombie, The Beyond, City of the Living Dead— films that drenched Italian cinema in enough blood and entrails to float a gondola. But somewhere along the way, maybe after too many exploding heads and maggot storms, Fulci had a crisis of faith. … Read More “The Devil’s Honey (1986): Fulci Swaps Guts for G-Strings, and Everybody Loses” »
There’s a certain smell to a 1980s exploitation flick done right. You know the kind — hot metal, stale cigarette ash, and bad decisions fermented in neon lighting. Walking the Edge reeks of it in all the best ways. It’s a grubby little revenge thriller that crawls out of the gutter, stares you in the … Read More “Walking the Edge (1985): Taxi Driver With a Shotgun and a Death Wish” »
Let’s get the facts straight before we start scraping this thing with a rusty scalpel: Bay of Blood (also known as Twitch of the Death Nerve, because apparently every Italian horror movie needs at least three titles) is often hailed as the primordial ooze from which the entire slasher genre crawled out. You’ve got teens … Read More “Bay of Blood (1971): The Godfather of Slasher Sleaze… but God, What a Mess” »
Lucio Fulci’s The New York Ripper is what happens when you feed Italian horror a steady diet of sleaze, misogyny, and city smog, then crank the camera until the lens fogs over from sheer bad taste. This isn’t a movie so much as a sadistic fever dream — one where every woman is either naked, … Read More “The New York Ripper (1982): A Duck Walks Into a Murder Scene” »
Let’s get this out of the way: Basket Case is not a good movie. It is, however, a memorable movie — like waking up in a dirty motel next to a used syringe and an open can of warm Tab. You may not be proud of being there, but you’ll never forget it. This sleazy … Read More “Basket Case (1982): One Brain, Two Bodies, and Zero Shame” »
Let’s not kid ourselves — if you’ve seen one masked slasher with a military fetish and a grudge, you’ve seen ‘em all. But The Prowler, bless its blood-soaked heart, wants to stand out. It doesn’t. But it tries. And that’s something, right? Set in the ever-horny post-Friday the 13th slasher boom, The Prowler feels like … Read More “The Prowler (1981): Bayonets, Bathtubs, and Boredom in a Tuxedo” »
There’s a coal mine. There’s a heart-shaped box. There’s a psycho in a gas mask with a pickaxe. And yes, there’s a party that goes about as well as a game of Twister on broken glass. Welcome to My Bloody Valentine, the 1981 Canadian slasher that wants to be gritty, romantic, and bloody all at … Read More “My Bloody Valentine (1981): Pickaxes, Beer, and Blue-Collar Slaughter” »
There are bad movies, and then there are movies like Pieces. The kind of film that makes you feel like you’ve just walked into a basement filled with rusty tools, torn porn mags, and an unlicensed film crew trying to shoot a slasher without adult supervision. It’s sleazy, stupid, borderline incoherent — and yes, it … Read More “Pieces (1982): It’s Exactly What You Think It Is — And That’s the Problem” »
Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Hate the Maggot There’s a certain sect of horror fans—usually guys who wear faded Cannibal Holocaust shirts and talk too much about vinegar syndrome—who will tell you that Lucio Fulci’s Zombie is one of the greatest undead films ever made. A sweaty, squirming, maggot-filled masterpiece. They’ll say … Read More “Zombie (1979) – Lucio Fulci’s Rotting Masterpiece (Of Boredom)” »
Where Summer Camp Fun Meets Garden Shear Carnage Let’s just say this upfront: The Burning is not a great slasher. But it’s not bad either. It’s like the third hot dog at a cookout—kind of unnecessary, but you eat it anyway because you’ve already committed to the calories. Released in 1981 during the post-Friday the … Read More “The Burning (1981) – Cropsy’s Cutlery Clinic” »
