Bruce Lee vs. Gay Power [Kung Fu Contra as Bonecas] (1975)
Starring Adriano Stuart, Dionísio Azevedo, Maurício do Valle, Nadir Fernandes, Edgard Franco, Célia Froes, David Neto, Armando Paschoallin, Helena Ramos
Directed by Adriano Stuart
Wow. So it’s really come to this? Going into Bruce Lee vs. Gay Power I knew two things. One… it is infeasible that this film could possibly live up to its legendary title, and two, there is no way a lack of subtitles would keep me from reviewing a film titled Bruce Lee vs. Gay Power. Talk of this extremely rare and elusive movie had been kicked around for years in cult film circles, gaining an almost mythic status along the way. Every now and then, some rabid fan would dish out a sketchy eyewitness account about spotting it in some dingy Brazilian flea market or something, while others doubted its existence altogether. Indeed, Bruce Lee vs. Gay Power became chalked up as a product of obscure lore, much like a Bigfoot or Loch Ness Monster, a mystery that perhaps would never be solved.
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December 16, 2010
Posted by Uncle Jasper |
1970s, Comedy, Foreign, Martial Arts, Movie Reviews, Uncle Jasper Reviews | 1975, Adriano Stuart, Armando Paschoallin, Bruceploitation, Célia Froes, Comedy, David Neto, Dionísio Azevedo, Edgard Franco, Foreign, Helena Ramos, Martial Arts, Maurício do Valle, Nadir Fernandes |
2 Comments
The Gingerdead Man 2: The Passion of the Crust (2008)
Starring K-von Moezzi, Kelsey Sanders, Joseph Porter, Frank Nicotero, Jon Southwell, Jacob Witkin, Michelle Bauer, John Carl Buechler, David DeCoteau, Greg Nicotero, John Vulich, Adam Green
Directed by Silvia St. Croix
Expectations: Low. The first one was abysmal.

The Gingerdead Man 2, despite featuring a storybook opening detailing the events of the first film, disregards everything from its predecessor except the titular character and chooses to forge ahead into unknown territory. Well, maybe unknown is a bit extreme, but you get the point. The Gingerdead Man 2 instead goes for the Full Moon jugular, aiming itself squarely at Charles Band and the Full Moon filmmaking mentality, as well as the overarching genre of low-budget horror pictures. Surprisingly, it actually succeeds a lot more than it fails at this and winds up being an okay movie.
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December 14, 2010
Posted by Will Kouf |
2000s, Comedy, Horror, Movie Reviews, Rating: 1 & 1/2 Stars | 2008, Adam Green, Comedy, David DeCoteau, Frank Nicotero, Full Moon, Greg Nicotero, Horror, Jacob Witkin, John Carl Buechler, John Vulich, Jon Southwell, Joseph Porter, K-von Moezzi, Kelsey Sanders, Michelle Bauer, Silvia St. Croix |
5 Comments
ThanksKilling (2009)
Starring Lindsey Anderson, General Bastard, Natasha Cordova, Ryan Francis, Chuck Lamb, Lance Predmore, Aaron Ringhiser-Carlson
Directed By Jordan Downey
WOO HOO!! LOOK AT ME, I’M A KILLER TURKEY WITH A ‘TUDE!!!!! AW FUCK BITCH!! NICE TITS BITCH!! YOU JUST GOT STUFFED BITCH!!! GOBBLE GOBBLE MOTHERFUCKER!!!
Watching a film like Thankskilling is about as subtle as being mercilessly kicked in the balls by a screaming dwarf amped up on amphetamines with laserbeam eyes and rusty carpenter nails for teeth. We get it, we get it!! It’s a fucking killer turkey… and he curses!! I’m no dunce, and I know what this film is trying to be, but it fails… over and over and over again. This is the cinematic equivalent to watching a screaming lobster boiled alive, what should be a quick and painless process seems to drag on for an eternity until the sheer agony of it all becomes unbearable.
After opening on an almost Troma-worthy high note, this movie goes to pieces faster than a thanksgiving turkey stuffed with napalm. When you hear the same joke uttered three times within 30 minutes you can’t help but feel like these guys are just desperately grabbing for straws here. It’s embarrassing. From top to bottom this unfunny pile of shit literally had me cringing at moments. You can’t help but feel physical discomfort at the sheer awkwardness of it all. At one point a college student is fooled by the killer turkey wearing her dad’s skin as a mask, ala Leatherface. Not only is it stupid but the scene drags on about three minutes longer than is necessary. That awkward and uncouth spirit runs itself through the course of the entire film. What you essentially have is a silly joke run into the ground until it’s almost begging you to put it out of its misery. It’s almost as if the “Jeez you got a big pussy, Jeez you got a big pussy” guy from Predator made his own feature-length film.
Anybody can come up with an amusing concept, but not just anybody should take said concept and turn it into a 70 minute long motion picture. I can say that a kung fu priest would be funny (and it is, in the right hands), but that doesn’t mean that I’m gonna go out and make a feature-length film about it. Save that shtick for those who are capable, the Lloyd Kaufmans or Peter Jacksons of the world.
Maybe this shit would be funny if I was sparking a massive doobie or suffering from catatonic schizophrenia or something. I just don’t know. Whatever you do this Thanksgiving, enjoy yourself and be thankful that you didn’t have the heinous task of sitting through Thankskilling for review.
November 25, 2010
Posted by Uncle Jasper |
2000s, Comedy, Horror, Mini-Reviews, Movie Reviews, Trash, Uncle Jasper Reviews | 2009, Aaron Ringhiser-Carlson, Chuck Lamb, Comedy, General Bastard, Horror, Jordan Downey, Lance Predmore, Lindsey Anderson, Natasha Cordova, Ryan Francis, Thanksgiving, Trash |
4 Comments
Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1987)
Starring Steve Martin, John Candy, Laila Robins, Dylan Baker, Olivia Burnette, Larry Hankin, Richard Herd, Matthew Lawrence, Edie McClurg, Ben Stein, Michael McKean, Kevin Bacon
Directed by John Hughes
Expectations: One of my favorite films. I relish the chance to watch it again.

John Candy is Del Griffith. Traveling shower curtain ring salesman.
Steve Martin is Neal Page. Uptight advertising executive.
Two guys who never would have given a passing thought to each other are thrown together by chance amidst the holiday rush to get home for Thanksgiving. Without a doubt, Planes, Trains and Automobiles is one of my favorite comedies of all time. It hits all the right notes and even in adulthood it remains funny and solid throughout, perhaps even moreso. It has been my go-to Thanksgiving movie for a number of years and I don’t see that changing anytime soon. What makes it so endearing and memorable, in addition to its clever situations and jokes, are the rewarding, heartfelt characters played by two wonderful actors.
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November 24, 2010
Posted by Will Kouf |
1980s, Comedy, Movie Reviews, Rating: 3 & 1/2 Stars | 1987, Ben Stein, Comedy, Dylan Baker, Edie McClurg, John Candy, John Hughes, Kevin Bacon, Laila Robins, Larry Hankin, Matthew Lawrence, Michael McKean, Olivia Burnette, Richard Herd, Steve Martin |
7 Comments
Hideous! (1997)
Starring Michael Citriniti, Rhonda Griffin, Mel Johnson Jr., Jacqueline Lovell, Tracie May, Jerry O’Donnell, Andrew Johnston, Mircea Constantinescu, Alexandru Agarici
Directed by Charles Band
Expectations: High, the trailer on Video Zone was pretty awesome looking.

Hideous! falls into that strange category of films that succeed in being entertaining, despite an overwhelming amount of stupid moves that would otherwise equal a film abomination. I suppose one could argue that Charles Band is a master of such feats. Apparently, it didn’t do as well as they would have liked though, as there was never a sequel when it’s obvious they could have gone on a tirade of these kinds of movies if the market supported it. It’s kind of a shame because I’d love to see what other types of fucked up, half-grown human fetuses the team at Full moon could have conjured up.
The plot of Hideous! is played completely for laughs. Right from the get-go the light tone is established with three hard-working dudes working at a sewage treatment plant, fishing out random things from the sludge. With all this talk of sewage I almost thought I was watching a Troma movie for a second! The guys pull out a grotesque blob of flesh and one of the men recognizes it as something special. He quickly whisks it away and puts it in the hands of Belinda Yost (Tracie May), a dealer in all things deformed. This begins a struggle between two of the biggest collectors of rare mutations that eventually lands everyone involved stuck inside a castle, hunted down by the little nasties. Yeah, pretty much the Full Moon go-to plot, but the film is designed strictly to entertain and it does just that, as long as you have your expectations set properly.
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November 16, 2010
Posted by Will Kouf |
1990s, Comedy, Good Trash, Horror, Movie Reviews, Rating: 2 Stars | 1997, Alexandru Agarici, Andrew Johnston, Charles Band, Comedy, Full Moon, Good Trash, Horror, Jacqueline Lovell, Jerry O'Donnell, Mel Johnson Jr., Michael Citriniti, Mircea Constantinescu, Rhonda Griffin, Tracie May |
4 Comments
Vamp (1986)
Starring Chris Makepeace, Sandy Baron, Robert Rusler, Dedee Pfeiffer, Gedde Watanabe, Grace Jones, Billy Drago
Directed By Richard Wenk
Let me get this out of the way. Vamp is a fucking hoot. It’s a genuinely superb horror comedy in the same vein as Fright Night and Night of the Creeps, but it oozes enough style and a quirky tongue-in-cheek swagger to really set itself apart from the pack. There are a lot of vampire films out there, and a lot of those were made in the 80s, but only one of them features the 9 foot tall, Manute Bol lookalike Grace Jones as a freaky vampire stripper who partakes in jugular snacks from young frat boys and rips the hearts out from insolent servants.
Indeed, Vamp strikes its campy tone right off the bat and runs with it. From the clever first scene you know exactly what you’re getting into. The action follows Keith and AJ, a couple of college dregs doing what they can to enter some freaky, high-brow fraternity. With their hope almost lost, they pledge to bring in booze and strippers in a last ditch attempt to gain acceptance. With the help of uber-prep Duncan (played by Gedde Watanabe of Sixteen Candles fame) the trio embark on a trip to the big city in search of the alluring “After Hours Club”. Yeah yeah, I know what you’re thinking… this is no different from the goofy college boy antics I’ve seen before in Animal House and Revenge of the Nerds. Can’t argue with that, but it’s during Vamp’s second act that things take a turn for the better.
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November 15, 2010
Posted by Uncle Jasper |
1980s, Comedy, Horror, Movie Reviews, Uncle Jasper Reviews | 1986, Billy Drago, Chris Makepeace, Comedy, Dedee Pfeiffer, Gedde Watanabe, Grace Jones, Horror, Richard Wenk, Robert Rusler, Sandy Baron, Vampires |
5 Comments
Blind Fury (1989)
Starring Rutger Hauer, Terry O’Quinn, Brandon Call, Noble Willingham, Lisa Blount, Nick Cassavetes, Rick Overton, Randall “Tex” Cobb, Meg Foster, Sho Kosugi
Directed By Phillip Noyce
Sometimes you just have to roll with your intuition. No matter how silly and bizarre your idea initially looks on paper you just gotta go on with that gut feeling, confident that there is something about it that just feels “right”. I would imagine that’s how director Phillip Noyce and writer Charles Robert Carner felt as they sat down gingerly, committing this unique slice of 80s action to celluloid.
Blind Fury is a film that once again proves just how versatile and universal the Japanese samurai film was. After the Italians made Yojimbo into a western, and George Lucas threw a little bit of The Hidden Fortress into Star Wars, I guess it was only a matter of time before we had Rutger Hauer combing American highways as a Vietnam veteran incarnation of Zatoichi, taking on the mob almost single-handedly with his walking cane which housed a razor-sharp samurai sword.
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November 11, 2010
Posted by Uncle Jasper |
1980s, Action, Comedy, Martial Arts, Movie Reviews, Uncle Jasper Reviews | 1989, Action, Brandon Call, Comedy, Lisa Blount, Martial Arts, Meg Foster, Nick Cassavetes, Noble Willingham, Phillip Noyce, Randall “Tex” Cobb, Rick Overton, Rutger Hauer, Samurai, Sho Kosugi, Terry O’Quinn |
3 Comments
TerrorVision (1986)
Starring Chad Allen, Diane Franklin, Mary Woronov, Gerrit Graham, Bert Remsen, Jon Gries, Jennifer Richards, Alejandro Rey, Randi Brooks, Frank Welker
Directed by Ted Nicolaou
Expectations: Moderate.

If you’re looking for a serious injection of the 1980s into your life, then look no further than this morally questionable little film, Terrorvision. Everything in this movie is dripping with the kind of Velveeta that only the 1980s could produce. The thing is, this only goes so far and unfortunately it ends up working against itself. After the initial laughs have passed, it all gets really tiring because at the heart of the matter, this really would have worked a lot better as a short.
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October 15, 2010
Posted by Will Kouf |
1980s, Comedy, Horror, Movie Reviews, Rating: 1 & 1/2 Stars, Science Fiction | 1986, Alejandro Rey, Bert Remsen, Chad Allen, Comedy, Diane Franklin, Empire International, Frank Welker, Gerrit Graham, Horror, Jennifer Richards, John Carl Buechler, Jon Gries, Mary Woronov, Randi Brooks, Science Fiction, Ted Nicolaou |
2 Comments
Troll 2 (1990)
Starring Michael Stephenson, George Hardy, Margo Prey, Connie McFarland, Deborah Reed, Jason F. Wright, Darren Ewing, Jason Steadman
Directed by Claudio Fragasso (under the name Drake Floyd)
Expectations: Low.
Film Rating
B-Movie Fun
Troll 2. Troll 2. Troll 2. Where do I start? It’s probably best if I do a bit of ‘splainin’ first, so that the immense carnal mainline of filth can hit you for all it’s worth. For those that enjoyed Troll and were hoping for a sequel, this isn’t it. Troll 2 was originally titled Goblins (not to be confused with Gobliiins, the 1992 PC Adventure game by Sierra) before it was retitled to take advantage of the previous Troll film’s fan base. The title Goblins fits the film much better, seeing as the whole thing revolves around goblins and the town of Nilbog (Hint: look at it backwards!) Many reviews seem to have a nerdgasm at this fact and belabor the point that the film is titled Troll 2 while featuring no actual trolls. Personally, I don’t give a shit. You can call a little dude in a burlap sack and a shitty mask whatever you want and it won’t stop my fun. Speaking of shitty masks, this film takes the cake with one mask being so incongruous and awful looking that every time it came on-screen I burst into laughter at it.
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October 8, 2010
Posted by Will Kouf |
1990s, Comedy, Good Trash, Horror, Movie Reviews, Rating: 1 & 1/2 Stars | 1990, Claudio Fragasso, Comedy, Connie McFarland, Darren Ewing, Deborah Reed, George Hardy, Good Trash, Horror, Jason F. Wright, Jason Steadman, Margo Prey, Michael Stephenson |
18 Comments
Tai Chi Master [太極張三豐] (1993)
Starring Jet Li, Michelle Yeoh, Chin Siu Ho, Fennie Yuen, Yuen Cheung Yan, Lau Shun, Yu Hai, Sun Jian Kui
Directed by Yuen Woo Ping
Expectations: High. Haven’t seen this one in years and remember really liking it.

We’re doing something different with this review. I won JP’s DVD comment contest and he let me pick any DVD or Blu-Ray I wanted. Oh, the possibilities! I ended up deciding on this film and I’m glad I did. In honor of this awesome gesture, my review will be featured exclusively on JP’s website, complete with neato video clips from the film selected by yours truly. So what are you waiting for?
Head over there now and check out the review!
September 11, 2010
Posted by Will Kouf |
1990s, Action, Comedy, Fantasy, Martial Arts, Movie Reviews, Rating: 2 & 1/2 Stars | 1993, Action, Chin Siu Ho, Comedy, Eunuchs, Fantasy, Fennie Yuen, Jet Li, Lau Shun, Martial Arts, Michelle Yeoh, Sun Jian Kui, Yu Hai, Yuen Cheung Yan, Yuen Woo Ping |
4 Comments