This time I wanted to cut away from the usual “hard to find” movies that I like to review for a cult classic: Office Space.
This is not your usual B movie but was surely not destined to the fame it gained over the recent years.
It can be summarised in this quote: “Work Sucks”, I know it, you know it, basically we all do.
It’s been a while since we here at Attack From Planet B has had a look into the murky world of Shameless Screen Entertainment, so we thought we better had to. So we’re going to a look at a few of the latest offerings that have come our way.
So for a world of S&M, hardened cops, serial killers and innocence destroyed, what better place is there to be then in the world of of Shameless Screen Entertainment. Head right on in, if you dare.
The Good Bad Movie Club season continues at The Prince Charles Cinema on the Tuesday 6th December with their next screening, the camp sci-fi classic Flash Gordon. With Brain “GORDON’S ALIVE” Blessed in toe, Sam J. Jones as Flash, has to save earth from the evil Ming and along the way save the lady in distress.
So for further information on the films being shown in the season and for details of how to get tickets read on.
Thanks to The Prince Charles Cinema’s new “REintroducing…” scheme, The Monster Squad will be showing this coming friday (18th November 2011). So head on down to old London town for some 35mm goodies and horror comedy teen action with this forgotten gem The Monster Squad
Head on inside of all the details on times and prices.
Thanks to the great folks at Cult Labs we have a great interview with the the star of the Hobo with a Shotgun, Rutger Hauer. A homeless vigilante, who blows away crooked cops, pedophile Santas, and other scumbags with his trusty pump-action shotgun.
Released this weekend, Hobo with a Shotgun has been doing the rounds of all the festivals this year and it has been creating great buzz amoungst the critics.
So head on inside to find out what it’s all about from the hobo himself, Rutger Hauer.
Domesticated zombies acting as docile pets? Is that even possible?
Yes it is, in this strange Zombedy called Fido where a boy is offered a zombie as company around the house… or is it really?
Welcome to the small town stuck in the 1950′s called Willard. When Earth went through a nasty dusts’ cloud the dead came back to life and decided to eat the living (as in any good zombies movies). And they did until a collar was invented that made them as good as any doggy out there.
Here at Attack from Planet B we would like to give a warm welcome to our newest writer, Dominic O’Brien. For he first contribution, he has supplied us with a wonderfull article on the works of director Frank Henenlotter. So please set back, read and enjoy this latest addition to the world of attack From Planet B.
Although he only has six directorial features under his belt (in little under 30 years), Frank Henenlotter is still considered a B-Movie pioneer. The king of modern day exploitation film, if you will. All of which got me thinking, there really isn’t that much in the way of articles or written info on Mr Henenlotter, particularly since he went into semi-retired after Basket Case 3. So I thought I would show my appreciation for this crazed eccentric and un-pc film maker with his gloriously distasteful sense of humor.
Genuinely forgotten, not even well enough known to be ignored, passed around from one VHS collector to another through hand written notes, photocopied 100 times over. Now, dug up, revisited and adored, Who Can Kill a Child? is an unnerving tale of an English couple on a lovely Spanish holiday who happen upon the wrong island. An island devoid of adults and over run with children with one game in mind.
Presented for the first time in the UK fully uncut and the official screening for the upcoming DVD release on Eureka out on 23 May, this 1976 thriller won’t disappoint.
So head on in to find out more…

