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This is a list of all films produced by Full Moon Features. Note that this does not include any films that were produced by Charles Band prior to the creation of Full Moon, even though Full Moon now distributes some of them, such as Trancers. For a list of these pre-Full Moon productions, see Empire Pictures filmography.
The doll Ooga Booga has appeared multiple times in the Evil Bong film series, another Full Moon franchise. In the first film, masturbating to strippers in the Bong World. In Evil Bong 420, attacking a redneck, And in The Gingerweed Man, as a secondary protagonist.
Later that night, Bachman's soul is pulled into The Bong World, which takes the form of a hellish strip club, inside Evil Bong, where he meets Ooga Booga and Ivan Burroughs, who warns him to watch himself around the Evil Bong. He is introduced to one of the strippers (Kristen Cladwell) who has skulls on her bra that start biting his neck ...
Sana wants to form a karate club for Akito's sake. They need at least five members and a faculty advisor, though. Nakao (a kid in the same room as Akito) joins the club and Akito helps him with the Karate training. When they finish training, Sana, Ishida, and Akito go out to eat and they celebrate Sana's birthday. While at home Nakao collapses.
Walter Stacy Keach Jr. (born June 2, 1941) is an American actor, active in theatre, film and television since the 1960s. Keach first distinguished himself in Off-Broadway productions and remains a prominent figure in American theatre across his career, particularly as a noted Shakespearean.
The storyline is that Ooga Booga is a volcano goddess that creates islands, and has leaders of tribes, the Kahunas, that battle for her favour. [3] It has a distinct Polynesian style and tone, and has many multiplayer islands and characters which can be unlocked. It was one of the last online games for the Dreamcast.
Although each episode was nominally structured around the basic narrative premise of Count Frightenstein's efforts to revive Brucie J. Monster, a Frankenstein-like monster, [2] only some sketches (including the first sketch of each episode) directly addressed the premise itself, while most sketches depicted unrelated goings-on around the castle ...
Dissatisfied with distributors' handling of his movies, he formed Empire Pictures in 1983. At its height, Empire would release an average of two films a month, one theatrically and one on home video. Movies released by Empire included Ghoulies and Ghoulies II, and the cult classic Re-Animator. Empire folded in 1988, due to financial difficulties.