Last Of The Mississippi Jukes
Take one last look at the Subway Lounge, home of the last juke joint in Clarksville, Mississippi.
Take one last look at the Subway Lounge, home of the last juke joint in Clarksville, Mississippi.
A series of murders revolve around 1968 photographs, and the victims all have coins on their eyes. Francesca does homage to Giallo.
A rather thin and uninformative quickie documentary on the unlikely political campaign of Donald Trump as he seeks the Presidency.
Dillinger is a stylish view of the biggest gangster of the Depression era, told in a lurid, tabloid manner.
The world is ending in Australia, and all the punk kids are locked up in a drive in and given free food, sex and drugs. What more could you want?
Moody Blues frontman Justin Hayward is alive and kicking in the 21st century, and we get a good view on how his progressive rock roots have bloomed over the years.
Mutant ice cream terrorizes America as evil corporations make money off the resultant exploding brains.
Follow the rise and fall of Tower Records, one of the most important retailers for the entire rock and roll generation.
Borscht belt favorite Jackie Vernon tries his hand at low budget horror and is upstaged by a microwave oven.
Writer and radio host Garrison Keillor enchants the Rollins crowd on a rainy evening.
The tomatoes return and boy, has the pizza business changed without them. It’s silly, sci-fi and almost as fun as the original.
A teenage sex comedy turns into a dark look at crooked sports betting in high school.
Fashion models die one by one in a remote chateau as the police miss clues and the body count climbs.
Phil Hall takes us down the musty path of missing films and lets us know what the world is missing.
Molly lives and works in Venice, CA back in the days when it was sleazy AND scary. She has daddy issues and loves kinky sex. Well, “Kinky” is a nice way of saying it; she tends to leave bodies behind.
Japanese female revenge women-in-prison movies have never been so graphic.
Righteous Bloom (The Church Within Records, Restricted Release). Review by Carl F Gauze.
An early documentary by Robert Mugge explores the world of Avant Garde composer George Crumb.
A Down East idyll of fire watching, light houses and Japanese industrialists in search of enlightenment.
Middle-aged teens end up in a cabin, and killed one at a time by a creepy guy. Then it rains. A lot.
Midge Ure brings his Band In A Box tour to historic Mount Dora, Florida, where Michelle Wilson revels in ’80s nostalgia.
Lily and Generoso review director Kazik Radwanski’s poignant comedic drama Matt and Mara, which explores the emotionally nuanced relationship between two longtime friends.
Sejin Suzuki’s unorthodox Yakuza film, Tattooed Life (1965) makes its Blu-ray debut from Radiance Films.
Hang out with some cool musicians as they make a record in a mountain cabin in Appalachia.
A classic children’s show is set to a Hip Hop beat. Carl F. Gauze reviews P.Nokio: A Hip-Hop Musical at Orlando Family Stage.
Cascades, Cascading, Cascadingly (Missing Piece Group). Review by Judy Craddock.
Uncollected Noise New York ‘88-‘90 (Silver Current Records / 20-20-20). Review by Steven Cruse.
With her latest book, I Used to Like You Until…, staunch (small l) libertarian and free speech poster girl, Kat Timpf proves that she just might be the much-needed cooling agent required to extinguish today’s super-charged sociopolitical dumpster fire.