The dungeon this month look like an episode of Porridge, with all the inmates being very British; with hints of cockney gangsters and bent coppers filling up the cells.
Kim this month has picked a selection of 60s and 70s British cinema from the wrong side of town. With stories of sex scandals, murders and warnings of the decadence of London during the swinging 60s, London and Britain as a whole was one lawless place it seemed. But don’t worry; Kim’s Dungeon Breakout will have the streets cleaned up in no time, with one of the hardest brit cops going.
There are many other films that have been reviewed by Kim, which can be found in the September issue of Empire Magazine (uk).
For you lucky people in London, those great chaps over at Cigarette Burns Cinema have come up with two great screenings this coming September and boy are you in for a treat. Both from the glorious library of B-movie goodness, but both so different in style, story and excitement.
So take a look and find out more.
With the release of Piranha 3D this weekend (August 20th) it seemed only right for us here at ‘Attack from Planet B’ to list our top animal attack movies in recognition to those toothy blighters.
Nature is a harsh beast and will through anything at us to maim, kill or devour us. From giant killer snakes to rampaging bunnies, so here for all you nature lovers and try huggers out there here is our list of what nature really wants to do to you.
So enjoy, discuss, disagree and comment.
As a young boy, there were many things that could occupy a lads time, playing cars, climbing trees, but two things that would have been at the top of many boys list would have to be playing cowboys and indians and playing with dinosaurs. Oh if there was a way of combining two childhood loves together in a cinematic mash-up?
Fear not, back in 1969 such joys existed for the cinema going public, and every young boy’s playground fantasies had been brought to life by the great Ray Harryhausen.
So sit back and enjoy the spectacle of cowboys and dinosaurs fighting it out in the Mexican plains in our review of ‘The Valley of Gwangi’
The walls are bulging and the cells are full in Kim’s Video Dungeon this month. So what horrors await the unfortunate visitors to the depths of Kim’s oubliette? Well, a hoard of Hammer goodies from the vaults of the legendary purveyors of schlock.
Sex changing monsters running amuck in the streets of old London town in Dr. Jekyll & Sister Hyde to Prisoner war films The Camp on Blood Island and Yesterday’s enemy. Not to forget as well, Kim Newman’s Dungeon Breakout release for June.
There are many other films that have been reviewed by Kim, which can be found in the June issue of Empire Magazine (uk).
As the ‘Dollars Trilogy’ continues the man with no name rides into town once again, now as a bounty killer on the hunt for wanted men, dead or alive. Always looking ‘For a Few Dollars More’ he sees his next prize in the form of El Indio, murderer, bank robber and madman. However, he is not alone in his pursuit of this bounty. The Colonel, a fellow bounty killer, is also on the hunt for El Indio, but is money his only objective?
Find out more in Sergio Leone’s second movie with Clint Eastwood in this spaghetti western classic that will have the screen filled with bandits, bullets and blood.