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Results for "Category" search:
| Image | Title | Director | Description | Year | Order |
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3 BY SCORSESE (DVD) |
Scorsese, Martin |
This is a collection of three early works by Martin Scorsese and a must for the collection of any fan. The 1st is Italianamerican (1974) which features Scorsese’s parents in their apartment. His parents are fascinating storytellers and interweave their own experiences as Italian Americans with a history of New York itself. The 2nd is The Big Shave (1967) which he made as a metaphor for the Vietnam War and was produced as his final project in film class at N.Y.U. A man walks into a sterile bathroom then proceeds to shave until he pierces through his skin. The 3rd film American Boy (1978) is a profile of Steven Prince. Scorsese gives the viewer an in depth view into the man's life and due to Prince's wonderful role as a story teller, the tales he tells are fascinating, some silly, and some so outlandish you have to doubt their sincerity. |
1967 |

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ADDICTION, THE (DVD) |
Ferrara, Abel |
A philosophy student with a sensitive view of human behavior is writing her essay to show the evil in men. She soon gets deeper involved in the dark side of humanity when pulled into an alley and bitten by a seductive female vampire. Now her hunger for knowledge has become a hunger for blood, and no one is safe. The city has become one enormous dining room and with the help of a master vampire, she becomes uncontrollably drawn into a world of violence with her insatiable cravings for human blood. Abel Ferrara's moody vampire tale makes fascinating statements on sin and redemption, spirituality and the nature of good and evil. Great acting, an intriguing philosophical screenplay, and amazing black and white photography help create one of the most accomplished vampire films ever filmed. WIDESCREEN and B&W. |
1995 |

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CRIMES OF THE FUTURE (DVD) |
Cronenberg, David |
The future. Millions of post-pubertal females have died from Rouge's Malady - a disease caused by cosmetics and discovered by mad dermatologist Antoine Rouge. Although Rouge has disappeared (possibly a victim of the disease), his clinic The House of Skin is managed by loyal disciple Adrian Tripod, lost without his master's guidance. Tripod meets an old colleague at the Institute of Neo-Venereal Disease, whose body is producing mysterious, functionless new organs. With the remaining male population in psychic relapse, Tripod joins the Oceanic Podiatry Group's therapy program, but is approached by a man who leads a conspiracy of heterosexual paedophiles. Their sole purpose is to impregnate a little girl brought prematurely to puberty to avoid Rouge's Malady. The girl is kidnapped, but no one in the group will impregnate her. Tripod is chosen but hesitates in front of her, sensing the presence of Antoine Rouge..... Uncut and Widescreen. |
1970 |

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CRIMEWAVE (DVD) |
Raimi, Sam |
Shot in between Evil Dead and Evil Dead 2, this is the very rare and often over-looked 2nd feature directed by Sam Raimi. What also makes this crazy comedy farce really interesting is that it was written with long time friends of Raimi, Joel and Ethan Coen, right after their 1st feature Blood Simple. The film is about a pair of nutty exterminators who are hired to kill someone but make a mess of the job and have to do away with any possible witnesses. Starring Brion James (The Horror Show) as one of the exterminators along with the almighty Bruce Campbell as Renaldo ‘The Heel’. |
1985 |

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DARIO ARGENTO'S MUSEUM OF HORROR (DVD) |
Cozzi, Luigi |
This is the third instalment in the Dario Argento World of Horror documentary series. The film starts with a tour of Dario Argento’s Profondo Rosso store in Rome and the Horror Museum in its basement that is filled with many props from his films and other classic monster movies. There are clips of Argento and his dog hosting his Italian television showcase “Giallo”. As well, there is also a Phenomena music video with Claudio Simonetti and a different trippy one with Bill Wyman. The film finishes off with a look at the making of The Stendhal Syndrome. In Italian with Japanese subtitles. |
1997 |

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DARIO ARGENTO: MASTER OF HORROR (DVD) |
Cozzi, Luigi |
Dario Argento is one of the most influential directors Italy has ever produced. During his long career he has continued to make some of the most stylish, shocking and creepy features and has shown no signs of slowing down. Long time friend Luigi Cozzi (who also runs Dario’s store Profondo Rosso in Rome) directs this amazing documentary that spans Argento’s career up until his American filmed feature TRAUMA. Filled with many insightful and informative interviews, this is a very personal look at the legend that is Dario Argento and a must have for any horror film enthusiast. |
1991 |

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DAVID LYNCH'S HOTEL ROOM (DVD) |
Lynch, David |
In this rare collection, David Lynch presents a trilogy of stories that take place in the curiously timeless space of room 603 at the Railroad Hotel. The 1st episode is directed by David Lynch and stars Harry Dean Stanton and Glenne Headly as two cantankerous old friends who share room 603 with a hooker-turned-cheerleader and find themselves haunted by a mysterious and dangerous past. The 2nd episode is directed by James Signorelli and has three uptown women gather in the hotel room to lament about men, relationships and sex with unexpectedly violent results. David Lynch book ends the trilogy by directing the last episode with the amazing Crispin Glover as a simple, midwestern husband who's brought his mentally disoriented wife to New York for treatment. Stranded in their room after a storm blacks out the city, the young couple embark on a profoundly unsettling odyssey of personal discovery. |
1993 |

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DUNE (DVD) |
Lynch, David |
This is the three hour plus film version of Frank Herbert's celebrated science-fiction classic. More scenes have been added throughout to fill the viewer in on what some people didn't think was clear enough with David Lynch's original cut. The credits read "Directed by Alan Smithee" after Lynch's petition to the Director's Guild. Uncut 3 hr. Version. 2 DVD set. |
1984 |

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ELVIS (DVD) |
Carpenter, John |
This is the rare television movie that started the collaboration between master horror director John Carpenter (Escape From New York, The Thing, Big Trouble in Little China) and leading man Kurt Russell. Russell realistically portrays Elvis from his beginnings as a 35-dollar-a-week truck driver to one of the most popular music and film stars the world has ever seen. The film has the King about to return to the stage in his heroic Las Vegas comeback show, but he gets a death threat on opening night! Alone in his hotel room, Elvis flashes back to his past, now a million miles away. He remembers his rebellious youth in Mississippi, his early days in Memphis, then his meteoric rise to fame and fortune and the one true love of his life, Priscilla. |
1979 |

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FIVE DAYS OF MILAN, THE (DVD) |
Argento, Dario |
This super rare film is Dario Argento’s only deviation from the giallo genre. Argento wanted to do something different after completing his Animal trilogy so he made this period piece that takes place during the Italian Revolution of 1848. The production shares many traits with Sergio Leone’s A Fistful of Dynamite and Argento’s work on the excellent Once Upon a Time in the West played a big part in the making this movie. It is a very unique film and a must have for all Argento fanatics. In Italian with Japanese subtitles. Letterboxed. In Italian with Japanese subtitles. |
1973 |

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