Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Tuesday's Overlooked Films and/or Other A/V: 14 June

Thanks as always to all contributors and readers!

















Bill Crider: Born to Be Bad
Brian Arnold: The Flash (1990-1991)
Chuck Esola: The Love-Ins
Craig Johnson: Rancho Deluxe

Dan Stumpf: Werewolf of London (1935)
Eric Peterson: Kiss or Kill
Evan Lewis: Between Fighting Men
Iba Dawson: A Hatful of Rain
James Reasoner: The Cisco Kid
Jerry House: Mummy-themed episodes of The Casebook of Sherlock Holmes and The Adventures of Superman, The Robot Vs. The Aztec Mummy and The Curse of the Aztec Mummy
Juri Nummelin: At Close Range
Kate Laity: the Terry Gilliam staging of The Damnation of Faust
Patti Abbott: Incendies
Randy Johnson: Fort Massacre
Rod Lott: Seven Deaths in the Cat's Eye
Ron Scheer: Springfield Rifle (1952)
Scott Cupp: Bell, Book and Candle
Steve Lewis: There's Always a Woman
Todd Mason: Dementia (1955); Sons and Daughters; Talent Associates productions
Walter Albert: House of Frankenstein
Yvette Banek: When Worlds Collide

Related Links:
Ed Gorman: The William Conrad Story
George Kelley: Win Win
Jackie Kashian: The Dork Forest interview with Adam Spiegelman and Joey Slamon
Kim Newman suggests: Raymond Chandler and Ian Fleming
Samuel Wilson: Meek's Cutoff
Stan Burns: From Paris with Love (2010)

13 comments:

  1. Thanks for writing it up, and in time for this week's roundelay!

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  2. Todd: I just put one up at:

    http://pulpetti.blogspot.com/2011/06/tuesdays-overlooked-film-at-close-range.html

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  3. some really good stuff this week!

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  4. Always, Rick! Thanks, Juri. Getting it in now...

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  5. Todd, you continue to give me a reason to look forward to Tuesday.

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  6. I'm glad they brighten the week, I hope not they alone...

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  7. I just posted something now, but Gmail won't cooperate for me to email you about it. I wrote about the 1990 TV series The Flash. Thanks!

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  8. Getting it up now, Brian...thanks!

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  9. BTW, thanks especially for the links to MEEK'S CUTOFF and William Conrad's horror films.

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  10. The things around the periphery of the impressive direct contributions here are also often impressive...there's no lack of valuable A/V writing on the web, of course...

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  11. What's the relevance of the Alice in Wonderland photo?

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  12. From a sequence in Chuck Esola's selection, THE LOVE-INS.

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