At the Jeffty Five Cineplex in Painesville, Ohio starting Friday...and simultaneously on Painseville's Channel 81 on your obsolete UHF dial (WAQZ, formerly an affiliate of no fewer than seven dead networks!):
Cartoon: "Jackie Kashian: Los Angeles Pet Owners"
Cartoon: "April Richardson and Jimmy Pardo: Go Bayside!: The California Bandsaw Massacre"
Newsreel: The Onion Review for 12 May (despite preview image, still linked)
Serial: The Maria Bamford Show
Short Western Film: The Tonto Woman (based on an Elmore Leonard short story)
Daniel Barber - Short Film - The Tonto Woman from Knucklehead on Vimeo.
Feature: Night of the Eagle (aka Burn, Witch, Burn!)--based on Fritz Leiber's first novel.
Cartoon: "Jackie Kashian: Los Angeles Pet Owners"
Cartoon: "April Richardson and Jimmy Pardo: Go Bayside!: The California Bandsaw Massacre"
Newsreel: The Onion Review for 12 May (despite preview image, still linked)
Serial: The Maria Bamford Show
Short Western Film: The Tonto Woman (based on an Elmore Leonard short story)
Daniel Barber - Short Film - The Tonto Woman from Knucklehead on Vimeo.
Feature: Night of the Eagle (aka Burn, Witch, Burn!)--based on Fritz Leiber's first novel.
Second Feature: The City of the Dead (aka Horror Hotel)
Anthology film: Three Cases of Murder (1st segment the most impressive, and no bones about it horror)
Very alternate feature: Siesta (now a dead link, an interesting though not completely successful variation on Carnival of Souls; a UCLA forum on it featuring director Mary Lambert, editor Glenn Morgan, and cast-members Ellen Barkin and Jodie Foster)...or Castaway (looking a bit soft in image, but difficult to pick up on the market otherwise of late...also not a perfect film, but an interesting one). Original choice here, Testament of Orpheus, didn't have any English subtitles option when I first posted this, but the current link does...for now!
Cartoon: "The Tell-Tale Heart"
And my first film seen by myself in a cinema...a 1970 re-release of Kiss of the Vampire (1963)--rediscovered with indirect help from Jeff Segal, who guessed closely:
Thanks for these links, Todd. The black-and-white movies/clips look interesting, particularly Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart."
ReplyDeleteIt is an interesting interpretation...and you'll soon find that the cartoon is in color...
ReplyDelete