Showing posts with label Ohio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ohio. Show all posts

Monday, June 1, 2015

Trailer of the Week: The Dead Next Door (1989)


Ohio producer/director J.R. Bookwalter has launched an Indiegogo pre-ordering campaign for an upcoming "25th Anniversary Ultimate Edition" bluray of his first feature, the shot-on-Super 8 zombie epic (and namesake of this blog) The Dead Next Door.

The 3-disc set will launch whether or not he reaches his campaign goal, but if you're willing to pledge you can get early access to the limited edition release. The set will include four (!) unrated versions of the film, two of them created from a brand-new 2K restoration using original film elements. The remastered version will be offered in both the original 4:3 aspect ration and in a new 16:9 cropped widescreen option. the two previous VHS and DVD versions will also be included (along with all of the original extras).

The set will also include some a new commentary track, a new trailer, and a CD that includes the original soundtrack and some previously unreleased tracks from the film.

Check out the Indiegogo trailer below:

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Regional Horrors Invade Country Living Magazine


I try to spread the regional horror gospel wherever I can, and earlier this month Country Living magazine (which is published by a local power co-op here in Columbus, Ohio) asked me to write an article covering some of the best/weirdest Ohio-made horrors.

You can see the article here, topped by a very large photo from Thankskilling. Other titles covered in the piece include Jay Woelfel's Beyond Dream's Door (1989), Homebodies (1974), The Wednesday Children (1973), Killer Nerd (1991), The Rage (2007), Axe Giant: The Wrath of Paul Bunyan ... and The Dead Next Door (1989).

Monday, September 22, 2014

Trailer of the Week: The Wednesday Children (1973)



Straight out of Wadsworth, Ohio, The Wednesday Children languished in obscurity after a few screenings in 1973 until it was rescued by the folks over at Slow Mutants.

Monday, September 15, 2014

Trailer of the Week: Blood Church/Heartland of Darkness (1990/1992)


Here's the 2007 trailer for Heartland of Darkness, a lost Ohio horror film originally titled Blood Church/Fallen Angels.

Thursday, September 11, 2014

I Once Was Lost: Blood Church (1992)

While interviewing Beyond Dream's Door director Jay Woelfel a few weeks ago, I learned about yet another "lost" Ohio horror film that I'd never heard of -- director Eric Swelstad's 1990 production Blood Church (a.k.a. Fallen Angels, a.k.a. Heartland of Darkness).

Swelstad worked on Woelfel's film, which was produced in part as a project for a graduate-level film class at Ohio State University. That class is no longer part of OSU's curriculum, and in fact, the only other film made through the program was Swelstad's debut feature, which is about a small town taken over by a Satanic cult.


A number of Beyond Dream's Door veterans worked on what was then called Fallen Angels, including Scott Spears and actor Nick Baldasare. Also in the cast were local actor/DJ Dino Tripodis (who had a hand in the revival of Columbus-based horror movie host Fritz the Nite Owl in recent years), and scream queen Linnea Quigley, who was brought in from California for the production.

According to Woelfel, the production ran out of funds before a final edit could be compiled. There were also technical snafus in post-production that held up completion. That is likely why, although the film was shot in 1990, it is typically listed as a 1992 production.


"It was completely shot," Woelfel told me. "Eventually, about five years ago, the director got an edit done and was working on the sound. I did a score for the move at the point they finished the recut. The director and I were roommates, and we'd worked together at a movie theater in Columbus."

That was likely the version now known as Heartland of Darkness that was announced as an impending release way back in 2007. You can see a trailer on the website here, along with some production stills.


Swelstad is now the department chair for Media Arts at LA Valley College. He directed Frankenstein Rising in 2010.

The film still hasn't received an official release, although Swelstad's faculty page claims it played on cable. With Linnea Quigley's name attached, it seems like somebody could do something with it, but for now it remains unavailable, outside of a half-hour cut that turned up online.


Monday, September 8, 2014

Trailer of the Week: Homebodies (1974)

I recently completed a feature for Country Living magazine on Ohio-based horror films, including details on this odd black comedy from Cincinnati. The article will appear in the upcoming October issue.

Monday, August 11, 2014

Trailer of the Week: Beyond Dream's Door (1989)



I'll be interviewing director Jay Woelfel for an upcoming article on Ohio horror films (scheduled to appear in the October issue of Country Living magazine), so this week's selection is the trailer for his Columbus-lensed mini-classic Beyond Dream's Door.

Although he's lived in California for decades now, he periodically returns to his home state to shoot new movies, including Closed for the Season (2010) and Season of Darkness (2012).

Monday, April 7, 2014

Trailer of the Week: Girls Nite Out (The Scaremaker, 1984)

Filmed in New Jersey but set in Ohio, this goofy but entertaining slasher film was made by two well-known Buckeye State attorneys, and features Ohio's own Hal Holbrook.

Friday, October 4, 2013

Cinema Wasteland is This Weekend


Just a reminder that the Cinema Wasteland event is this weekend in Cleveland, and this fall's show features a number of important regional horror filmmakers on the guest list.

Daniel Boyd, the West Virginia director/writer of Chillers (1987) and Invasion of the Space Preachers (1990) will be on hand to promote the 25th anniversary of Chillers (a great little anthology film), as well as the upcoming graphic novel version of the film. He'll be at the Troma booth.

Chester Novell Turner, the warped mind behind the notorious SOV flick Black Devil Doll From Hell (1987) and its obscure follow-up, Tales From the Quadead Zone (1987) will also be on hand, despite rumors surfacing a few years ago that he was actually dead. Turner will host a screening of Devil Doll, and Massacre Video will have a double-feature DVD of his films available at the show.

There's also going to be a screening of the VHS collector documentary, Adjust Your Tracking (2013). Trailer below:

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Nothing So Appalling in Toledo


 As part of our ongoing coverage of Blood Feast's 50th anniversary, here's an item from the summer of 1964.


From The Toledo Blade
Wednesday, July 1, 1964

Grisly 'Trailer' Brings Protests, Policy Change

Ray Oviatt, Blade Entertainment Editor

The movie exhibitor's problems, created by the wide suitability range of current films, extends to the previews of coming attractions. This was emphasized by the experience of the Telegraph Drive-In this past week.

While showing a bill, generally acceptable to general audiences, a trailer promoting a grisly item called "The Blood Feast" was run, much to the outrage of numerous patrons who had come in family groups. As a result the Armstrong Circuit, operator of the theater, has canceled the scheduled showing of this reportedly distasteful picture altogether.

Also, according to Fred Lentz of the Armstrong home office in Bowling Green, managers around the circuit have been authorized to delete from their schedules any trailers which might not be in keeping with the current program.

The reasonable complaints which were registered with me were based on the fact that movie-goers had gotten something they had not bargained for. Having purchased tickets for inocuous films such as "Spencer's Mountain" and "The Wheeler Dealers," they had not expected to see gore and sadism.

Callers were not necessarily demanding that the film not be shown at all, only that they be given the opportunity to avoid it and any excerpts from it.


Friday, February 8, 2013

Revenge of the Creeping Unknowns


By far, the most popular post I've ever written for this blog was the Creeping Unknowns list of rare and lost regional horror films. Since those original posts (here and here), a handful of the films have turned up for either legit DVD releases or at least a screening or two.

In the meantime, tips from readers and my own research have led me to a few more obscure treasures. A couple of these are fairly easy to see, although most people have never heard of them, and a few are truly MIA.

As always, if you have any additional information or images related to these films, feel free to pass them along!

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Southern Shockers (1985): I've written extensively about this Mississippi shot-on-video anthology, which was only released on tape in Spain. It's since gotten some press in Tape Mold, and there is still hope that producer David Hopper can pull together the English-language elements so someone other than this writer can watch it. 


The Black River Monster (1986): We discussed The Hackers (1988) in the last "Creeping Unknowns" post, even though the film had, by that point, been released onDVD by original production company Camelot Studios. We were so excited about that DVD that we completely overlooked the company's other horror DVD, The Black River Monster. This one was made at the Black River Farm and Ranch (a local summer camp), and features a bigfoot-style creature. It's part kiddie flick, part promotional film, and all weird. 



Satan Place: A Soap Opera From Hell (1990): Directed by comic book artist Alfred Ramirez (who also published a comic of the same name), this cheapo, Florida-lensed anthology hasn't completely slipped through the cracks. As I noted in previous posts, Joe Bob Briggs reviewed it, and it has turned up on some torrent sites. Still, this one remains unknown to most fans. 
Blood of the Wolf Girl (1989): When director Harry Preston (Harry Pimm) passed away in 2009, his only horror credit as far as most regional horror fans were concerned was the goofy Texas slasher film Honeymoon Horror (1982). But he made one other fright flick, the unreleased Blood of the Wolf Girl (1989) about a stripper who transforms into a werewolf, which he would occasionally screen for friends and visitors. 

Road Meat (1987): Shot in Ohio by Bill Bragg, this features an early credit by director Jay Woelfel (Beyond Dream's Door) as director of photography. And that's about all I know of it. Copies of the apparently unfinished film do allegedly exist. (Thanks to Adam Jeffers at Trashnite.com for bringing this one to our attention.)

The Men in Black (1990): Another lost Ohio film, this one shot in Columbus and Sandusky. OSU grad Bradley Lee directed the 16mm film (Walt Burbach produced), which is about MIBs trying to intimidate a UFO witness. It had a single screening in Mansfield in 1992. Excerpts from it wound up in a comedy called Films That Suck: The Movies of Read Ridley, in 1999. There was a VHS release at some point, and that tape is listed in the holdings of some local libraries here in Columbus, although so far the actual tape has yet to turn up. I found some information on the film here. (Thanks to Timothy L. Mayer for pointing this one out.)









 

 



Monday, February 4, 2013

Trailer of the Week: The Wednesday Children (1973)





Way back in 2010, we first wrote about The Wednesday Children, an Ohio-made religious horror film that, as it turned out, was directed by one of my old Kent State University professors, Bob West. If we'd been paying closer attention, we could have alerted to an October 2011 screening of the film (from the only existing 16mm print), with West and some cast members in attendance, at Cleveland's Cinematheque. Fan Jorge Delarosa cut together a trailer, and a DVD was in the works via some of the folks at Slow Mutants, but we're not sure what happened with that.



Monday, September 10, 2012

Trailer of the Week: The Dead Next Door (1989)


If you ever wondered where I got the title for this blog, this is it: J.R. Bookwalter's lavish Super 8 zombie opus.

Monday, June 18, 2012

Trailer of the Week: Skinned Alive (1990)





Here's another one from Ohio producer J.R. Bookwalter. This 16mm production was directed by Jon Kilough, and features director/screenwriter Scott Spiegel in a lead role.


Monday, June 11, 2012

Trailer of the Week: The Dead Next Door (1989)


If you wondered where this blog picked up its catchy title, you can thank this shot-in-Akron film (and the Billy Idol song, too, I guess...)

Friday, June 8, 2012

The Director Next Door: My First Film Article


While digging through some files a while back, I stumbled across a lengthy feature story about Ohio-based director/producer J.R. Bookwalter I originally wrote for the The Daily Kent Stater, the Kent State University student newspaper, back in 1994. Since my regional horror films book is finally in the production stage over at McFarland, I thought it would be appropriate to post my first stab at writing about low-budget horror film production.

I would have been 20 when this article originally appeared, but if memory serves I actually conducted the interviews when I was 19 and was first introduced to actor/writer/producer/lunatic James L. Edwards, who in turn took me to the dinky house in Mogadore, Ohio, where Bookwalter was then operating. I spent a lot of hours loafing in those cluttered offices over the next couple of years, and eventually wound up writing for J.R.'s magazine, Alternative Cinema -- my first paying gig as a writer.

I'm a little embarrassed by some of the writing in the article below, and had to resist the temptation to re-edit it. Bookwalter may be embarrassed by a few of the quotes. Remember, though, that when this was published we were still a year or so away from the explosion of affordable digital video equipment, and two years ahead of Wes Craven's Scream. So when J.R. says "horror is dead," he was mostly correct at least in economic terms.

(By the way, you can see some neat behind-the-scenes Dead Next Door photos over at Dr. Gore's Funhouse.)

The Daily Kent Stater
Feb. 17, 1994


Bring in the Zombies
Mogadore man makes horror his living

By Brian Albright
Staff Writer

J.R. Bookwalter has killed more than 100 people. He has tortured them, dismembered them, and blown them up. He has shot them, stabbed, them, and run them over with trucks. He has skinned innocents alive, and unleashed hungry zombies on Washington, D.C.

Bookwalter makes movies. And he may well be one of the last of a dying breed of independent filmmakers. He makes small, shot-on-video productions, whose budgets have gone as low as $2,500. He operates out of a crackerbox house in Mogadore. Bookwalter isn't wealthy, but he makes a living, something that most maverick movie makers only dream about.

Bookwalter grew up in Akron. He loved science fiction and horror films, and by the time he was in seventh grade, he was making movies on his mother's Super 8 movie camera. After high school he spent some time at the Art Institute of Pittsburgh, but he returned to Ohio in 1985 after his camera equipment was stolen.

Undeterred, he set about making his first film that same year. Under the banner of his production company, The Suburban Tempe Co., Bookwalter has directed or produced more than a dozen feature films, as well as about a half-dozen special interest videos. He distributes his own films, as well as others, on his Tempe Video and Video Outlaw labels. He was written two books. He operates a mail-order video service. He is getting ready to publish a 60-page quarterly magazine. He is only 27 years old.

Bookwalter's house is crammed full of video tapes, camera equipment, and computer software, but there's little in the way of furniture. Bookwalter himself, a little overweight and usually in need of a shave, works in a closet-sized office. The last 10 years have not been easy, but Bookwalter says they have been worth it.

"I've never really gone for the artsy-fartsy stuff, and I haven't made any classics," Bookwalter said. "But if someone can sit down for 80 minutes and enjoy one of my films, then I'm satisfied.

"I'm not rich, and nobody that does this with me is getting rich, but we all make enough to continue to survive another day."

It all started with a phone call to Detroit.

Zombies Take D.C.

Bookwalter called director Sam Raimi ("Army of Darkness"), who had just captured the attention of horror fans worldwide with his first independently produced feature, "The Evil Dead." Bookwalter drove to Detroit, showed Raimi some of his short films, and not long afterward was holding the seed money for his first film -- a zombie movie called "The Dead Next Door."

Bookwalter assembled his cast and crew from the Akron area, accepting anyone who wanted to help. Many of these people stayed with him on his subsequent films.


"Initially we would take anybody," Bookwalter said. "I mean, anyone that walked through the door and said, 'I want to be involved,' they were in."

One of those people was a 13-year-old kid named James L. Edwards, who wanted to be a special effects artist. Bookwalter had placed an ad in the Akron Beacon Journal looking for zombie extras. Edwards called him and told him he could do make-up.

"He showed me some pictures of him and his friends covered in fake blood," Bookwalter said. "I just said, 'Well, I guess we'll give it a try.'"

"About two weeks into it they realized that I didn't know what I was doing," Edwards said. "J.R. apparently was impressed by my eagerness, and he let me be a production assistant." Edwards also appeared on screen as a corpse, and he's acted in almost all of Bookwalter's movies since.

"The Dead Next Door" wound up costing Raimi $125,000, and Bookwalter often brags that it is the most expensive Super 8 movie ever made. With hundreds of extras, aerial shots and bloody special effects, the movie looks much bigger than it actually was. Bookwalter's most impressive scenes, though, are of hungry zombies shambling through the streets of Washington, D.C.

"A film permit in D.C. is pretty expensive, and we just couldn't afford one," Bookwalter said. "So I, in my infinite wisdom, said, 'Why don't we go down there and just shoot the scenes?'"

Bookwalter did, and would have gotten away with it if it hadn't been for the zombies clawing at the White House fence.

"I guess they had some threats from some terrorists who were trying to get Reagan," Bookwalter said. "And they don't want you to touch the fence anyway, because it's electric or something." Within minutes, Bookwalter and his crew were surrounded by the Secret Service.

"Fortunately," he said, "one of my producers was going to Akron U. at the time and he had his student I.D. Because the camera was really small, we passed it off as a student film."

Bookwalter made the Washington papers that day. "The Dead Next Door," unfortunately, got lost in the flood of zombie movies that came out in the mid-1980s. The movie wasn't released on video until 1989.

The Video Revolution

Bookwalter made nine films, all financed by an independent California producer, between 1989 and 1992. The first three were 16mm films, but the remaining six were part of Bookwalter's plan to join the shot-on-video market.

Bookwalter shot all six movies in seven months on Super VHS video (which has more lines of resolution than regular video). He could shoot the films on super low budgets (no more than $2,500), have the video treated to look like film stock, and then release them o home video. With such low production costs, it would be easy for the filmmakers to make their money back.

By this time, Bookwalter was also distributing his own films, something that most independents are hesitant to do. Video distributors often buy the rights to a film but don't market it effectively. The filmmaker usually takes a financial loss and can even lose the rights to his own film.

"What I'm doing is very weird and non-standard," Bookwalter said. "You're supposed to make a movie, sell it to some faceless distributor and let them rip you off."

The shot-on-video industry is slowly growing, and Bookwalter is one of its major proponents. He has distributed films for other independents in Missouri, Kansas, Pennsylvania, and Michigan.

But Edwards said the availability of the equipment has encouraged plenty of untalented entrepreneurs.

"It's sad, really," Edwards say. "It's gotten to the point where if you have a camcorder, you're a director. And nobody cares about the actors. People only look at the shot-on-video stuff if it's got decent effects."

Partly because of this, Bookwalter has been choosier about whose films he distributes, although he certainly empathizes with the ones he turns down.

"When I turn 'em away, there really isn't anywhere else for them to go," he said. "The problem is there are no middle people between me and the larger distributors.

"In the days of the drive-in, and even when video first started, there were plenty of steps you could go through before you hit rock-bottom at Tempe Video."

Horror is Dead

Bookwalter's latest film, "Ozone," hit video store shelves in January and has already beaten the sales records of "The Dead Next Door." At $50,000, "Ozone is the biggest project that Bookwalter has worked on since his first film. According to Edwards (who plays the film's lead villain, the mutant Drug Lord), it's also the best film that Bookwalter's done.'

"It's certainly the best thing I've been in so far," Edwards said. "Unfortunately, I spend most of my screen time buried under mounds of prosthetics."


"Ozone" has more elaborate effects and more stylish camera work than any of Bookwalter's previous shot-on-video projects. It is also a step back from his more blood-drenched films.

"I had always intended to have a lot of eye-candy in this one," Bookwalter said. "The gorehounds don't like it as much, but it's closer to the type of movie that I like to make."

There are plenty of gruesome moments in the film, though, including a sticky mutant love scene between actress Lori Scarlett and the film's hero (and former Cleveland Browns running back), James Black.

"That was slimy when they poured that gunk me," Black said. "It was cold! And I didn't want to do it. That is my least favorite thing to do."


Bookwalter has written a 40-page film treatment for a "Dead Next Door" sequel, and he's pitching another film called "The Sandman" to low-budget veteran Roger Corman.

"He's real intrigued by this whole video thing, and what you can do with it," Bookwalter said. Bookwalter is also trying to move to more action-oriented films, because he says the horror market is drying up.

"Horror is definitely out, and horror is definitely dead," he said. "Everybody I talk to that reps stuff either domestically or overseas tells me that they don't want horror product. It's just not selling.

"It used to be you could go out and make a horror movie, get your foot in the door and then go on to bigger and better things. That's not he case anymore.

"I've been considering jumping ship and going another direction. To a degree, I'm getting lucky with 'Ozone,' but then again 'Ozone' isn't' strictly a horror movie."

Bookwalter's most immediate project is called "Seven Body Parts, Six Feet Under," which looks to be an even bigger film than "Ozone."

"It's going to be the weirdest, goriest thing we've done," Bookwalter said. "There'll be tons of blood, no way around that."

And the plot?

"Well, it's about he devil trying to take over the world. But he's going to use the body of this insane man..." Bookwalter stopped there and hook his head, laughing.

"I can't really explain it to you," he said. "You'll just have to wait and see it."

Friday, March 30, 2012

The Director Next Door Speaks to a Local News Crew


Here's a kind of funny video: a local news report about Mogadore, Ohio-based filmmaker J.R. Bookwalter from 1990. J.R. posted it on his blog a while back.

I lifted my blog name/book title from J.R.'s first film (the Akron-lensed The Dead Next Door), and back in the 1990s I spent a LOT of time sitting around his "corporate offices," where I always felt I was in imminent danger of being crushed by a teetering stack of Tempe Video's latest releases.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

High on Horror High -- Plus, a Cinema Wasteland Update!


Have we mentioned lately that Code Red is rapidly becoming one of our favorite DVD labels? In addition to unleashing Slithis last month, the company has finally announced the specs for its upcoming Horror High DVD: a brand new widescreen transfer, an interview with actor Austin Stoker, bonus TV footage shot for the Twisted Brain version of the film, and an uncut theatrical trailer.

On top of that, the company plans to unleash the obscure swan song of actor Joe Spinell, The Undertaker (a.k.a. Death Merchant, 1988) in October. Although videos of this otherwise unreleased film have been circulating for years, this will mark the first legit DVD release of the title. Our friend Steven Puchalski over at Shock Cinema wrote a nice article on the film for Fangoria a few years back (issue #229).


Joe Spinell in The Undertaker

Getting back to Austin Stoker, we mentioned here that he would be at the October Cinema Wasteland show in Cleveland.

Since then, the folks at Wasteland have updated the guest list to include Ohio filmmaker Jim Van Bebber (who made the jaw-dropping Deadbeat at Dawn in 1988), along with frequent collaborators Mike King and Marc Pitman (who also appeared in Van Bebber's The Manson Family).



And that's not all -- Texas filmmaker Matt Devlen, co-producer and director of Tabloid (1985), will also be on hand to discuss his work with Bret McCormick on Ozone! Attack of the Redneck Mutants (1986) and The Abomination (1986). Joining Devlen will be actress Barbara Dow and fellow Texas director Glen Coburn, who also worked on Tabloid, but who is better known for directing the inventive Bloodsuckers from Outer Space (1984).



All and all, the next Wasteland is shaping up to be a cornucopia of regional horror, and we plan to make the trek north to drink it all in.

Book Update: We finally wrapped up the intro to the book, and a gaggle of horror historians is currently reading through it to check for errors and, later, mock me mercilessly for making them. I've also begun the laborious task of writing captions for the photos. Next up: copy editing the whole thing. Again.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Lawyers, Gore and Money


The tax shelter laws that existed in the U.S. prior to 1986 encouraged a lot of professionals to invest in low-budget film projects, in hopes that they could shelter potentially significant amounts of their income from the IRS. Attorneys frequently pumped cash into these productions; however, these legal eagles occasionally took a more active role, producing and even directing low-budget horror films of their own.

Exhibits A, B, and C:

Toxic Zombies (a.k.a. Bloodeaters, 1980)
After the success of Night of the Living Dead, Pennsylvanians produced a lot of zombie movies, but for viewers of a certain age, writer/director/star and Yale Law School graduate Charles McCrann's Toxic Zombies/Bloodeaters is held in particularly high regard --- and not just because the film opens, incongruously, with a scene of a woman giving herself a sponge bath in the middle of the forest. Toss in some zombified hippie pot farmers, shady government agents (including real-life Romero vet John Amplas), and some corny jokes, and you've got yourself a kooky kilo of stoner zombie comedy.

This was the only film for McCrann, an exec at financial services company Marsh & McLennan. Decades later, he was killed on Sept. 11, 2001, in the World Trade Center attacks. If you check out the preceding link to his tribute page, you'll note that he was not shy about sharing his singular zombie opus with his law school buds or co-workers.






Girls Nite Out (The Scaremaker, 1984)
We meant to cover this peppy slasher flick when we were doing our tribute to Ohio, but we ran out of time. Plus, although it was set in Ohio, and produced by two Ohio attorneys, and starred former Ohioan Hal Holbrooke, Girls Nite Out was actually made in ... New Jersey.

Set on the campus of a fictional Ohio college during an annual scavenger hunt, Girls Nite Out features a crazy killer decked out in a bear suit (the school's mascot) outfitted with steak-knife claws who picks off co-eds while an obnoxious DJ spins a surprisingly good selecton of oldies (how much of the budget went to music licensing?).

Producers Anthony Gurvis and Kevin Kurgis are both well-known attorneys in central Ohio, but Kurgis has definitely made the bigger name for himself with a series of ominous commercials in which he emerges from behind a door and charges the camera like a brahma bull while touting the value of hiring a good personal injury lawyer. These commercials are so infamous around Columbus, that they have inspired several YouTube parodies, and this Facebook page.






The Mutilator (1985)
Finally, we have this North Carolina classic written and directed by Atlantic Beach attorney Buddy Cooper, which positively drips with blood and confusing Freudian subtext as a deranged killer stalks his own son and junior's college buddies in order to exact revenge for his wife's accidental death years earlier. With cast members from Two Thousand Maniacs! and Deadtime Stories, early work from special effects artist Mark Shostrom, and an extremely nasty death-by-gaffe-hook-in-an-especially-uncomfortable-place.

Here's Cooper himself talking to some dude in sunglasses about his one and only film credit:




We rest our case.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Lima Girl Does ... Good?

I present to you actress and Lima, Ohio, native Lucy Grant (nee Winegardner), intrepid co-star of both Invasion of the Blood Farmers (1972) and Shriek of the Mutilated (1974). In Blood, she played the woman who gets killed by Egon in the motel room (her husband in that scene, coincidentally, was producer Ed Adlum); in Shriek, she wisely used a pseudonym ("Luci Brandt") while portraying the unfortunate woman who has her throat cut with an electric carving knife just before she murders her husband by dropping a toaster into his bath water.

From: The Lima News, May 21, 1972


From The Lima News, June 23, 1974