Five Guys Named Moe
Five guys, all Moes, try to whip their philandering buddy into domestic shape.
Five guys, all Moes, try to whip their philandering buddy into domestic shape.
The Gods travel to Setzuan province looking for one good person.
Life in a North Florida trailer park, but with better singing.
A midlife crisis attacks the otherwise idyllic marriage of Annie and Steve.
Bestiality should be kept down on the farm.
Jazz and liquor look mighty fine in this rough and ready romance.
Before Hamlet had his run in with a bad fencing experience, there was some high level hanky panky. Here are the juicy details…
A complex tale of sex and morality plays out in a small southern college
After 15 years of separation, Nora returns to her husband to beg for the legal divorces that will allow her to survive.
Two drifters run into serious trouble in the Central Valley during depression era California.
A lonely house wife finds liberation in a brief fling with a passing photographer.
A modern update of a classic Bible story.
Young Ben Braddock just graduated college and a career in “plastics” hold no appeal. Instead, he has an affair with the wife of his father’s business partner and until he falls in love with her daughter. Then things get weird.
A young executive climbs the company ladder by loaning out his apartment to his bosses for sexual escapades in 1950 in this Billy Wilder classic.
New Orleans oddballs wander through life, bars and bad romances.
Twenty-three years after his Sonic Recipe for Love, Steve Stav writes a playlist for the brokenhearted victims of another corporate holiday: the first Valentine’s Day of the second Trump era.
Phil Bailey reviews Rampo Noir, a four part, surreal horror anthology film based on the works of Japan’s horror legend, Edogawa Rampo.
In this latest installment of his popular weekly series, Christopher Long finds himself dumpster diving at a groovy music joint in Oklahoma City, where he scores a bagful of treasure for UNDER $20 — including a well-cared-for $3 vinyl copy of Life for the Taking, the platinum-selling 1978 sophomore set from Eddie Money.
Ink 19’s Liz Weiss spends an intimate evening with Gregory Alan Isakov.
Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory (Jagjaguwar). Review by Peter Lindblad.
This week, Christopher Long goes “gaga” over discovering an ’80s treasure: an OG vinyl copy of Spring Session M, the timeless 1982 classic from Missing Persons — for just six bucks!
Both bold experiment and colossal failure in the 1960s, Esperanto language art house horror film Incubus returns with pre-_Star Trek_ William Shatner to claim a perhaps more serious audience.
You Can’t Tell Me I’m Not What I Used To Be (North & Left Records). Review by Randy Radic.