"I think of horror films as art, as films of confrontation."

- David Cronenberg

Actors     Actresses     Flicks     Models     Twilight Zone Guide

Flicks: Snake People (1971)

Boris Karloff in Jack Hill's Snake People (1971)
Ol' Doc van Molder 'splains the science angle about s-s-s-snakes.

Finally, the green-blooded herpetologists are getting some. No, no, not the greasy hair metal guys who dated your rather dull-witted sister long enough to give her the permanent variety of "love strawberries". I mean, a movie for the hardcore reptile fans.

This snake film is actually more of a cult of zombies movie. It follows the traditional voodoo formula containing specific elements that make it work: a remote location, a hapless heroine and an evil voodoo deity named Damballah. It's not long until a slew of zombified minions are taking part in primitive rituals.

These rituals involve the physical, if not the spiritual, union of two cultures - modern and prehistoric. Along the way, Snake People (1971) also prominently features, that's right! You guessed it! Snakes.

Snake People, aka Isle of the Snake People, Cult Of The Dead or La Muerte Viviente in the Spanish language version, works as a horror movie in spite of the fact that production was shut down midway and then finished in Mexico because of Jack Hill - he of Spider Baby (1968) and Coffy (1973) fame.

Hill's steady co-direction mostly keeps together Snake People's unusual story and troubled production. The casting of an ailing Boris Karloff, in one of his final roles as the duplicitous Doctor Carl van Molder, and some very enjoyable (yet also, wacky) experimental sequences make this a mostly watchable film.

Snake People
Tongolele (Yolanda Montes) supervises Dr. van Molder's daughter's transformation from bookish brat to death cult snake charmer.

Did I mention the evil midget? Yes, there is a very evil midget in this movie. How does the Sleaze-A-Saurus knows that he's evil? Because this little guy likes snakes. In fact, he likes snakes a whole lot.

The film's psychedelic and psychological derived editing sequences feature the heroine, Anabella Vandenberg, taking the audience along for a ride in her out of body experience in a Freudian nightmare. Add some offhand references to necrophilia (which ol' Doc Damballah doesn't approve of?), identity crises and lesbianism and you officially have a movie that bites back: S-s-snake People!


References:
IMDB, La Muerte Viviente
1000 Misspent Hours, S-s-s-snake Persons!
Everyman, Limbless Reptile Enthusiasts!
Monster Movie Muzak, La Muerte Vivente

Collections: RE/Search Publications


RE/Search #10: Incredibly Strange Films

You scaleless manlings think the Sleaze-A-Saur has bad taste? Check RE/Search #10: Incredibly Strange Films out! Wow.

RE/Search publications is a small publishing company started by V. Vale in San Francisco in the early eighties. Vale's RE/Search was responsible for putting together a series of anthologies that attempt to document movements in underground culture. The books they've spent two decades releasing are well written, originally researched, and extremely well published. The RE/Search volumes contain a great deal of visual and graphic content about the authors, movies and phenomena that make the books highly accessible.

RE/Search publications began in 1977, while V. Vale was working at a Bay area bookstore, with $100 donated by Allen Ginsberg and Lawrence Ferlinghetti, he began publication of Search and Destroy, a San Francisco-based zine documenting the current punk subculture starting with the Ramones and Iggy Pop.

RE/Search #4/5: William S. Burroughs

RE/Search #10: Incredibly Strange Films featured interviews with William Burroughs and Throbbing Gristle.

In 1980, he began publication of RE/Search, a tabloid format zine focusing on various counterculture and underground topics, with financial help from Geoff Travis of Rough Trade Records and actress/film director Betty Thomas. At the same time, he also started his own typesetting business, allowing for a day job to fund his publishing exploits and guaranteeing high quality typography and design for his magazines and books at night.

RE/Search has published books on various underground topics. Titles include Pranks, Incredibly Strange Films, and Modern Primitives, and subject matter that includes profiles of authors William S. Burroughs, J. G. Ballard, and others.

Selected Bibliography:
RE/Search #1,2 and 3: Tabloid format zine. RE/Search Publications, 1980-1981.
RE/Search #4/5: William S. Burroughs/Brion Gysin/Throbbing Gristle. RE/Search Publications, 1982.
RE/Search #6/7: Industrial Culture Handbook. RE/Search Publications, 1983.
RE/Search #8/9: J. G. Ballard. RE/Search Publications, 1984.
RE/Search #10: Incredibly Strange Films RE/Search Publications, 1986.
RE/Search #11: Pranks!. RE/Search Publications, 1986.
RE/Search #12: Modern Primitives. RE/Search Publications, 1989.
RE/Search #13: Angry Women. RE/Search Publications, 1992.
RE/Search #14: Incredibly Strange Music Vol. I. RE/Search Publications, 1993.
RE/Search #15: Incredibly Strange Music Vol. II. RE/Search Publications, 1994.
RE/Search #16: Modern Pagans - An Investigation of Contemporary Ritual, 2001


References:
RE/Search Publications, Blog
Wikipedia, RE/Search
John Held's Mail Art, V. Vale Interview


RE/Search Publications are available at:
RE/Search Publications on Amazon

Actresses: Nikki Fritz, The Queen of Softcore


Nikki Fritz
This manling device called "television" came into wide spread usage in the Earth year of 1948. A small, strange device that transmitted photographs at high speed directly into the weak, manling brain.

Thirty-two years later, with the advent of CNN in 1980, the boob tube eventually decimated the theatrical box office and the stag film market as an unintended consequence. Along with new "A" film production being cut back the old beaver reels and the smoky theaters full of fat and suspicious looking men in rumpled raincoats were most thankfully phased out.

The era of softcore on cable television gradually eclipsed hardcore in the form of late night cable programming starting in the early 1980's arena of home theater.

Now, jizz-soaked theaters that featured back to back 11 am to 3 AM Swedish beaver reels and black-and-white jackfilms were censored, edited and then condensed into blocks of television programming or boxed into home videos.

The late 1980's and early 1990's fast became the era of Skin-a-max and a plastic woman that called herself Shannon Tweed. This dubious genre was known as the "Erotic Thriller". And to it's dubious credit, the genre had it's own stable of mostly forgettable softcore stars starring in titles ripped off of noir detective novels in films that simulated sex without filming the actual act.

Nikki Fritz, born in April 7th 1964 in Pittsburgh, PA, was an B-movie actress symbolic of direct-to-cable "softcore" film. Nikki has bikini models curves, sweet brown eyes and the unique ability in her chosen genre to remember and deliver her lines. She proved to be one of the most memorable actresses of her genre who regularly gives thoughtful interviews that are filled with an insight into her industry.

Starting out in pictures was tough for her. Regardless of her acting abilities and education, Nikki only found bit roles in A films such as Smokey and The Bandit 3 (1983) where she played a role credited as "S+M Hooker".

Sometimes she worked as a body double, as in New Kids (1985), but mostly in the eighties Nikki worked as dancer in Hollywood both on and off screen. It wasn't until the mid-nineties that she really broke into movies with a Roger Corman produced stinker called Where Evil Lies (1995). After which, Nikki began to find steady lead or supporting roles in another 50 films that were mostly made-for-cable or direct-to-video movies.

In 2002, Nikki gave this interview to the now defunct Video Quarterly:

Video Quarterly: You have worked with a man people consider a low-budget genius of sorts: Roger Corman. What do you think is the most valuable thing you learned while working on a Corman film?

Nikki Fritz: Roger gave me my first starring role on Where Evil Lies. It was the turning point in my career. He was the first one to take a chance on me. I think the most important thing I learned working for him is that he is very loved and highly respected! Roger is the most amazing person you'll ever meet. He has a way of seeing things that is different from the average person. I guess that's why he's king of the "B's" - I don't think anyone could appreciate this genre like Roger has. He's pushed the boundaries of this kind of filming making and made it the wonderful world that I'm proud to be a part of. Look at his track record. Roger started some of the top directors and movie stars , such as -- Martin Scorsese, Francis Ford Coppola, Ron Howard, Jack Nicholson, Robert De Niro, ...and of course...me!

VQ: This is one of my typical questions but I always love the varying answers I get. In the B-Movie realm nothing is normal. What is the most bizarre thing you have had to do on film?

Nikki Fritz in The Bare Wench Project (1999): No Map, No Food, No Clothes.
Nikki Fritz in The Bare Wench Project (1999) perplexingly subtitled: No Map, No Food, No Clothes.

Nikki: Well, the most bizarre...ummm...let me see...climbing out of an ice cold lake after a horrendous plane crash (Strip for Action) or getting my whole body painted blue and sacrificing a virgin to a Dinosaur god (Dinosaur Island)....no, how about, doing a strip tease for the cast of Beverly Hills 90210 or, dancing around topless for Keenan Ivory Wayans (Low Down Dirty Shame) or, maybe having a kissing scene with Robert Hedgyes (Epstein from Welcome Back Kotter) Pandora Project or, shooting several different endings to the same love scene (Fast Lane to Malibu High) or, Running terrified through the Los Angeles National Forest in the middle of the night (Bare Wench Project) or maybe playing a stripper who's breasts are covered in blood after the bouncer who's standing next to me gets shot (Go) ...boy.....there are so many, I can't make up my mind.

VQ: Going through your filmography, more than 50 movies to your credit, can you spotlight a favorite?

Nikki: It's really hard to pick a favorite. I suppose the Bare Wench Project was the most fun to shoot, but my series Night Cap was my favorite as far as acting goes. I was able to play such a wide range of emotions on that show. I think it really showcased my abilities. Working on a film is great, but doing a series and being able to do several episodes as the same character is very rewarding. It gives you a chance bond with the other actors and the crew and that shows in the final cut.

VQ: With those 50 movies, you have worked on both a B-movie set and an A-list....any noticeable differences in attitiude, etc?

Nikki: I think the only difference that I notice jumping in and out of the two worlds is the conveniences. It's really great to take time developing a scene, which is a luxury low budget films don't have. As far as the cast...people are people. You can't change the way a person is by their surroundings. If they are high maintenance and hard to work with, it won't matter if it's a $10 movie or a $10,000,000 movie -- and the same is true for the professional. I've seen $10,000/ day actors stop to pick up trash from the set so it wouldn't ruin the shot, and I've seen big actors giving small actors a much needed hug of encouragement in a difficult scene. It is the person. Not what they are working on or getting paid. The love of the craft runs deep to actors with a heart.

VQ: Now you also run a website which seems to be a growing trend in the industry. What got you so involved with the format?

Nikki: Wow, computers....my second love! I've always had a knack for electronics. I was a terrible tom boy growing up, so getting a computer and learning what makes it tick seemed natural for me. It's come in handy now that owning a web site is a fact of life. I developed nikkifritz.com back in 1996, and it's been a labor of love. I do everything on it - from answering email to coding the javascript. I'm to much of a control freak to have anyone touch it......so I've acquired all the skills I need to run it......Photoshop, HTML, JavaScript, Linux, Premiere, etc......and it sure keeps me busy. With the new video download rage, I now have an editing system in my house...right next to my live web cam!

In 2005, Nikki retired from acting to focus on web ventures.

References:
Nikki Fritz.com, Film Credits
Wikipedia, Nikki Fritz
IMDB, Nikki Fritz
Video Quarterly, Nikki Fritz Interview



The Sleaze-A-Saurus Rates It:This Flick Is Available At:

Models: Vikki Blows

Vikki Blows

Vikki Blows, born December 30th 1987, is a model and actress who has really just exploded onto the scene. The 22-year-old Romford, England based model features a mixture of punk rock ethos, 50's retro pin-up style and glamour fetish charm.

After embarking on a career in fashion modeling she's done voice over for the newest House of the Dead installment entitled Overkill FPS videogame released in 2009. Miss Blows is currently looking for film and tv work as her career begins to gain momentum.

Gallery I. | Gallery II. | Gallery III.


References:
Twitter, Vikki Blows @blowofficial
Instagram, Vikki Blows

Flicks: The Stuff (1985)


The Sleaze-A-Saurus knew that evil yogurt would, one day, conquer Humanity. Just a matter of time, really.

What do you get when the subversive directing and writing talents of Larry Cohen (It's Alive!, God Told Me To) are combined with "A-picture" actors Garret Morris, Danny Aiello, Micheal Moriarty and Paul Sorvino slumming it up on the set of a B-movie production?

You get one of your old pal the Sleaze-A-Saurus's all-time favorite bad movie: The Stuff (1985) which went on to become an inspired staple of late night television unleashed by Roger Corman's New World Pictures.

The Stuff (1985)In the Stuff, an intelligent virus is unleashed on America in the form of a popular desert that people just can't seem to get enough of...The picture's tag-line: "Are You Eating It Or Is It Eating You?" sets the viewer up to unwittingly examine the paradigm of consumer culture while watching some very respectable special effects that include men and women regurgitating what appears to be vast oceans of intelligent marshmallows as the product they love to consume consumes them.

A former FBI agent turned industrial saboteur(!), David "Mo" Rutherford (Micheal Moriarty of Troll), is hired by the leaders of the suffering ice cream industry, as well as junk food mogul Charles W. "Chocolate Chip Charlie" Hobbs (Garrett Morris), to find out exactly what the Stuff is and destroy it.

His efforts reveal that the craze for the dessert is far deadlier and much more evil than anyone had believed – the Stuff is actually a living, parasitic, and possibly sentient organism, and it gradually takes over the brain, mutating those who eat it into bizarre zombie-like creatures before consuming them from the inside and leaving them empty shells of their former selves.

A young boy named Jason (Scott Bloom) discovers the Stuff is alive and sees how it affects his family. He gets arrested for vandalizing a supermarket in trying to smash displays of the Stuff, attracting the attention of Rutherford, who comes to his aid. Rutherford also manages to charm Nicole, an advertising executive who becomes his partner and lover when she sees the effect of the Stuff.

The trio infiltrates the distribution operation, which is actually an organized corporate effort to spread the Stuff on the basis of eliminating world hunger, and destroy the lake of Stuff with explosives. Paul Sorvino co-stars as Colonel Malcolm Grommett Spears, a retired right-wing soldier who leads a militia in battling the zombies and transmitting a civil defense message for Americans to break their addiction to the Stuff by destroying it with fire. The Stuff addiction is ended and Rutherford, Nicole, Jason, and Col. Spears are hailed as national heroes!


References:
IMDB, The Stuff
80's Rewind, The Stuff
Bad Movies.org, The Stuff


The Stuff is available at:
The Stuff on Amazon

Flicks: They Eat Scum (1979)

They Eat Scum (1979)
Re-printed from the original article by Jose Angeles at his blog: Goreshitdeath.

GUEST HU-MON BLOGGER Jose Angeles presents They Eat Scum (1979)!

Sleaze-inspired B movies from Reefer Madness (1936) and Highschool Caesar (1960) to The Incredible Melting Man (1977) and The Driller Killer (1979) all belong in a category of their own. And now that list includes...They Eat Scum (1979).

A weird Super-8 movie that was responsible for a whole "Transgressive Art" movement. The director, Nick Zedd, even coined the term "cinema of transgression". From my understanding "Transgressive Art" is art that's shocking, taboo-breaking, and anti-conformist. Pretty much it's the kinda shit that fascinates me!

There sure are a lot of wild things in this flick that would be sure to piss off conservative yuppie tastes. The movie is about this Swastika-wearin' punk chick (Suzi Putrid) in a "deathrock" band ("deathrock", another term the director invented). She has a transvestite dog-fucking brother and a mean bible-thumping father that thinks Jesus is the best thing ever. The family's crazy antics make up the first couple of minutes and doesn't resemble a linear plot to follow. I don't even know if it was intentional but parts of the movie were sped-up, making the actors sound like chipmunks. Things get a bit more coherent (although still messy!) when at CBGB's (an infamous venue) Suzi's band billed as Suzie Putrid and The Mental Deficients play their pissed-off music (the movie inserts live shows as if you were watching actual concert footage) and then orders the crowd to go out and kill people. She preached about hatred and cannibalism because they were the main goals in life. The funniest part in speech is when she says guys should cut off their dicks and girls sew their cunts (later we do see a sewn cunt!) so they could concentrate more on random acts of violence instead of sex ("fucking is for animals" she contends).

Some absurd stuff from then on happens like a chick getting her boob skin sawed off, the chick's whole body getting eaten in gory detail, a guy who for some reason lays down in the road to get run over, and a flashback of a sick-incest rapist uncle in a dress. The movie operates on messy ridiculous b-movie logic with "Suzi" (or is it?) becoming the queen of Necropolis after starting a Nuclear holocaust.

This nuclear holocaust and her being a ruler of the land later leads to a mutant revolt...a DISCO mutant revolt. It involved guys in cheap monster costumes fighting bar room brawl style to the music of the Village People! One monster is a gigantic cock roach and we later see some Roach-Gore when he's smashed in an elevator! Cannibalism, incest, bestiality (a dog whorehouse?!), rape, nazi flags, blasphemy, castration, and violence....this movie clearly wanted to push the limits of bad taste. I would say this movie is what would happen if a sleazy bohemian set out to combine the "Fuck You and your society" scumbag punk mentality with a campy b-movie, complete with overacting, zany dialogue, and ridiculous special f/x (there's even some toy animation and a "turntable of death"!). I kept thinking to myself that this was like Pink Flamingos meets GG Allin.

References:
IMDB, They Eat Scum (1979)
Goreshitdeath, The Eat Scum (1979)

Actresses: Reiko Ike

The Sexy and Righteous Reiko Ike.
The mysterious Reiko Ike walked away from acting forever in 1979.

Reiko Ike, born in 1953 in Toyko, became an international sensation every bit as big as Angela Jolie for her film roles as Ocho a female Yakuza with unparalleled fighting skills. Reiko, a very beautiful woman even among the high standards set by Japanese film actresses, was known for her amazing choreography in elaborate fight scenes and her stunt work in films such as The Sex and The Fury (1973), Female Yakuza Tale (1973) and in Sonny Chiba's The Street Fighter's Last Revenge (1974).

After drug and gambling arrests in the late 1970's she quit acting. Reiko made her last film at age 26. Little else is known about her private life, or her life in general, since she walked away from Toei Studios in 1979.


References:
Wikipedia, Reiko Ike
IMDB, Reiko Ike
Pinky Violence, Reiko Ike

Flicks: The Geek (1971)

Look out Ron Jeremy, here comes The Geek!
Bigfoot, that frisky old free spirit, makes a rare appearance in 1971.

This 70's Bigfoot movie was so inspired and so badly made that it's required viewing for all camp fans and maybe also Guantanamo prison camp detainees. The movie single-handedly establishes the Bigfoot Porn market in 60 minutes. But, even for camp comedy, it is not for the squeamish. In fact, it was so badly conceived that when it was released this film contained absolutely no official acting, writing or directing credits.

Sensational movies, like this one, are so terribly made that no square audience would spend five consecutive minutes watching without praying that it was a trailer for pseudo-horror films like the insipid Twilight or the even more pathetic Vampire's Apprentice.

The dreaded, time-honored tradition of mainstream culture gutting underground work and re-making it as meaningless drivel (see Twilight, Avatar, any D&D movie or tv series) will never, ever be able to formalize The Geek. It's too far out to be gentrified and too hilarious to ignore.

It goes like this, a bawdy and frisky Bigfoot meets two luckless bimbos in a one long classic of schlock camp meets supernatural softcore roughie. The Geek will never be updated to star former male models, perfect ab-bearing teenagers or Barbie look-a-likes boo-hooing over dead cell phone batteries with chipped nails. Movies like this scream "Fuck you, Hollywood!"

I defer to senior moderator Jack Smith, of Cult Movie Forum, for his learned opinion of the film:

Jaw-dropping yet pretty damned funny...
The "plot" of The Geek (1971) follows a group of six would be monster hunters (three male, three female) who trek off into the wilderness of the North-West in order to search for the elusive monster known as Sasquatch. Despite spending most of their time wandering off in two's to have sex the group eventually succeed in locating the Sasquatch. Terror soon ensues as Sasquatch subsequently turns out to be a savage sexual predator with his sights set on two of the women (including porno actress turned backwoods scream queen Lynn Holmes as "Girl in White Shorts").

Following the obligatory solemn, cautionary yet cheesy opening narration which warns about a dangerous man beast known as Sasquatch or "the geek" roaming the wild, untamed regions of the American north-west we are introduced to our cast of six slightly hippified would be Sasquatch hunters.

Although the opening text claims that The Geek was shot on location in Canada, Oregon and Washington it soon becomes clear this curio looks as if it was really filmed on a small patch of scrub land in Socal and resembles a grainy shot home video.

The Geek and his new mate contemplate the splendor of Mother Nature together.
The Geek and his new mate contemplate the splendor of Mother Nature together.

In its opening moments, The Geek looks as if its liable to rival Andy Warhol's infamous anti-film Sleep in terms of soul-crushing pointlessness as nearly ten minutes is wasted on pointless padding footage of the cast trudging silently across a field for what feels like an eternity. After that, however, The Geek eventually reveals its true colors and turns into a borderline hardcore porn film as two of the couples start feeling a little amorous and pair off together leading to two separate back to back sex scenes which take up most of the next twenty minutes...

References:
IMDB, The Geek (1971)
Cult Films, The Geek (Unknown Director, 1971)