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More MONDO DIGITAL: It's time for Sick Picks #51! Wallow in looks at wild releases like Swallowed, The Cult of AGFA Trailer Show, That Guy Dick Miller, The House Where Death Lives, Gut Pile, The Found Footage Phenomenon, In Memorium, Night, Hayride Slaughter, Dial D for Demons, and more!
Wallow in wacko Blu-ray releases like Magic Crystal, Ninja in the Claws of the CIA, The Tortured Soul Trilogy, When I Consume You, Day of the Panther, Midnite Spares, and more! And be sure to read the books!
horror films, DVD reviews, European scores, European film, cult movies, midnight movies, laserdisc reviews, film music information.
In addition to a new transfer from the last film elements known to exist, Mondo Macabro includes a well-made interview segment, a trailer and a few informative text essays, but they're merely the icing on the cake with this newfound gem.
For his first solo theatrical feature, Vicente Aranda came out swinging with Fata Morgana, a pop art-flavored tale of futuristic murder and rampant consumerism a la neighboring Italy's orthodox gialli to come like Death Laid an Egg or the same year's unorthodox The Tenth Victim.
With a prominently toothed, homicidal hunchback handyman named Colin (Borske) on the premises, a mansion becomes the site for bloodshed when sisters Veronica (Hayes), Vicky (Linden), and Liz (Vogel) are summoned to spend three days in their ancestral home as a condition of their father's will.
In 2024, Indicator gave both films their global Blu-ray debuts as El Vampiro: Two Bloodsucking Tales from Mexico, with the first film sporting an astonishing 4K restoration from the original camera negative.
The Complete Confessions 1974-1977. CONFESSIONS OF A WINDOW CLEANER. Color, 1974, 90 mins. 12 secs. Directed by Val Guest. Starring Robin Askwith, Anthony Booth, Linda Hayden, Bill Maynard, Dandy Nichols, Sheila White, Joan Hickson, Melissa Stribling. CONFESSIONS OF A POP PERFORMER.
Silip: Daughters of Eve. Whoa! Just when you thought you'd seen it all, along comes the Philippines-created Silip (shown far too rarely overseas as Daughters of Eve), one of the strangest, sweatiest, sleaziest films you'll ever see.
In "Shock Factor" (11m19s), great-niece Imogen Slaughter and her father Giles (Tod's nephew) deliver new interviews about their legendary relative's life and career including his perception within the family, who weren't exactly approving of a theater career at the time.