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    Cinema Death Cult

    A movie podcast hosted by Adam Bulger, a journalist slowly going insane in New Jersey. You can reach me at cinemadeathcult@gmail.com (adam.bulger@gmail.com for a faster response since I neglect the CDC inbox often), read my stories at misterbulger.com or follow me on twitter at @adamrbulger.
    en-us47 Episodes

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    Episodes (47)

    A Book Review of Quentin Tarantino's "Cinema Speculation"

    A Book Review of Quentin Tarantino's "Cinema Speculation"
    Quentin Tarantino wrote a book! I read it and talked about it for a half an hour. Mostly off the dome but I had some notes and stuff. Remind me to write more but I just recorded the podcast. It's a half hour of me talking by myself. Give me a break! Hahaha update I consistently get the title wrong. It's cinema speculation not speculations. There's only one speculation. It's singular. My bad. So the book is Cinema Speculation and here's.a link to buy it (https://bookshop.org/p/books/cinema-speculation-quentin-tarantino/18273113?ean=9780063112582) in case that's something that appeals to you. Also, I say book a couple times when I mean movie and vice versa. A little embarassing but I'm not going to re-record the whole thing because of that. I think I set myself up for a fall by critiquing someone else for sloppiness. So let this be a lesson about pointing fingers. Or don't. Who cares. Also, the factual error I allude to but forget to flesh out is that he calls Brian De Palma's Obsession a flop but it actually made $4 million, which was healthy box office for the time. But after my blunder with the pluralization of the title, who am I to judge? Glass-house living motherfucker. LOL.

    HELLRAISER 2022 Review

    HELLRAISER 2022 Review
    I forgot to mention that Motorhead has a pretty good song (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1M4FG1UXH5w)called "Hellraiser." RIP Lemmy. This is my first solo episode in a while and also my first review in a while. I watched the new Hellraiser, which is now streaming on Hulu, and decided I was an expert on all things Hellraiser because I read the novella the first movie was based on, Clive Barker's Hellbound Heart. It's a really good little page-turner that you can blow through in an afternoon. Check it out! The new Hellraiser is the 11th Hellraiser movie. There are only nine Nighmare on Elm Street movies, including the Jason Vs Freddy crossover and the remake and I'd imagine that it's a much better known film series. At 11 films, it nearly ties the Friday the 13th series, which has 12 movies when you include Freddy Vs Jason and the 2000s remake. That's pretty wild considering it's a horror franchise that likely has much more of a niche appeal than its horror franchise competition. And how they should have never made a sequel to the first one. You can watch the trailer for the new Hellraiser here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oUlgwJNdu2I). This (https://twitter.com/HellraiserIM/status/1581253442550390784) is one of the horny images of lady Pinhead I mentioned. NSFW, probably. Image info: Jamie Clayton as Pinhead in Spyglass Media Group’s HELLRAISER, exclusively on Hulu. Photo courtesy of Spyglass Media Group. © 2022 Spyglass Media Group. All Rights Reserved.

    HALLOWEEN SPOOKTACULAR DOUBLE BILL With Jim Knipfel

    HALLOWEEN SPOOKTACULAR DOUBLE BILL With Jim Knipfel
    It's October. So naturally, or should I say supernaturally? No, naturally's probably right. The point is that naturally, because it's October, I invited Jim Knipfel on the pod to talk scary movies. Jim has long been a champion of_ Halloween III: Season of the Witch, the misfit outcast entry in the Halloween film series that's about druids, killer masks and Irish robots instead of Michael Myers. And he's right to champion it. _Halloween III is a great, fun, weird movie despite its reputation. And Phantasm is weird and odd and terrific too. Jim blew my mind clean off a couple times with background info about these two cult masterpieces, particularly with respect to Angus Scrimm's non Phantasm career. Also, I blunder into a wild moment of amateurish ignorance by revealing I didn't know Michael Oldfield's "Tubular Bells" was the theme from The Exorcist. I only watched The Exorcist once and I forgot the soundtrack. "Tubular Bells" is a sample in a DJ Shadow song and I never connected it to The Exorcist. Let me know if I have to turn in my gun and badge. Jim's defense of Halloween III is here (https://www.denofgeek.com/movies/halloween-iii-season-of-the-witch-deserves-another-look/). Subscribe to Jim’s Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/jimknipfel/posts). it’s terrific.

    WES CRAVEN With Will Dodson

    WES CRAVEN With Will Dodson
    Horror scholar Will Dodson (https://twitter.com/wdodson52) returns to the CDC pod, discussing another icon of horror cinema. Dodson, Co-editor of the book American Twilight: The Cinema of Tobe Hooper, (https://utpress.utexas.edu/9781477322833/american-twilight/) was a guest in April, sharing his expertise on Texas Chainsaw Massacre auteur Tobe Hooper. He returns to talk about his latest archival horror project, the lesser known film and television work of Nightmare on Elm Street creator Wes Craven. Dodson guides us through Craven projects like Stranger in the House, Invitation to Hell, Chiller and more. Because we tie all these forgotten projects to Craven's more famous work, including Last House on the Left, Nightmare on Elm Street and Scream, what started as a deep dive into obscure but noteworthy Craven projects wound up as a servicable overview of Craven's career.

    THE KILLING With Jim Knipfel and Alexander Zaitchik

    THE KILLING With Jim Knipfel and Alexander Zaitchik
    In 1956 Stanley Kubrick released his third feature-length movie, The Killing and earlier this sentence I gave serious thought to paying someone on taskrabbit to write this intro. This is a great episode. Jim Knipfel and Alex Zaitchik return. They are both great. I say some dumb bullshit but hopefully don’t ruin it. Sorry, I’m just out of gas right now but wanted to get the podcast up. Subscribe to Jim’s Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/jimknipfel/posts). it’s terrific. Alex's books (https://www.amazon.com/s?k=Alexander+Zaitchik) are also terrific and are on sale at an amazon.com near you. The Sterling Hayden documentary is called Pharoahs of Chaos (https://www.facebook.com/mubi/videos/pharos-of-chaos-now-showing/581776812424549/)for some reason.

    ZZ TOP With Marc Stone

    ZZ TOP With Marc Stone
    ZZ Top is one of my favorite bands and I'm trying to write this description quickly. I'm joined by Marc Stone (https://marcstonenola.wixsite.com/mysite). Marc is a terrific guitar player and roots music historian who has been a standout presence in New Orleans since the 1990s, playing alongside legends of Funk, Zydeco, RnB and Blues on stages across the globe. Right now, Marc is touring with funk guitar icon Leo Nocentelli (https://leonocentelli.com/)of The Meters behind Leo's historic rediscovered 1971 acoustic masterpiece "Another Side.” As we mention in the interview, they’re playing in my former hometown of Hartford Connecticut at Infinity Hall tonight. Leo and Marc play at New York’s Sony Hall on Sept. 24, at Philly’s Ardmore Concert hall on Sept. 25 at the Hamilton in Washington DC on the 27th. Stone has been called a band-leading force in the Crescent City known for his fusion of modern and traditional blues, soul and funk —a sound he calls ‘roots in the present tense’" by repeat CDC podcast guest Alexander Zaitchik. He must like being called that because it's on his website, along with the following two paragraphs: When he’s not on stage or in the studio, Marc can be found behind the mic at New Orleans’ iconic radio sender, WWOZ 90.7-fm, celebrating 20 years hosting of his weekly “Soul Serenade” or spinning fine and funky vinyl at clubs and events. Stone is equally at home fronting his own band, leading intricate all star projects, and tearing it up for packed houses with just a guitar and a mic. Making the best of the pandemic shut down, Stone went to work on a new album to follow up 2019’s solo outing “Live at Tipitina’s”, which garnered him nominations from New Orleans top cultural publications for both Best Blues Album and Best Blues Performer. The result is “Shining Like A Diamond”, his first full length studio release since 2015. The album features an incredible line up and showcases Stone’s soulful vocals, masterful touch on guitar, 8 string Dobro and lap steel, finely tuned songwriting skills, and a slew of incredible performers. Never one to lean on well worn forms and contrived chops showcases, Stone draws inspiration from every corner. He also taps a well-spring of legends to bring his songs to life, including Papa Mali, Alvin “Youngblood” Hart, Marilyn Barbarin, Leo Nocentelli, Reggie Scanlan, the late Alfred “Uganda” Roberts, Meschiya Lake, James Singleton, Mike Dillon, and George Porter, Jr.

    ZACH SNYDER'S JUSTICE LEAGUE Commentary Part One

    ZACH SNYDER'S JUSTICE LEAGUE Commentary Part One
    Jesus, OK, why did I do this and what the hell is my point? The Snyder cut took me by complete surprise when the hashtag #releasethesnydercut became reality. It was something to do during quarantine. I put it on while running on an elliptical machine, expecting a mild diversion at best. But despite my cynicism, "Zach Snyder's Justice League" won me over with its ambition, confidence, lack of irony, visual inventiveness, epic spectacle and I'm going to stop there. I didn't mean to write a list when I started that sentence. My intention was.a tight statement of purpose. Sorry. This should be the last superhero movie. It tells its story with utmost earnestness and believes that it can use its superheroes to connect emotionally with audiences in a genuine way. The goal is to be an epic that communicates something fundamental and imporant about the human race. And, because superhero stories are incapable of supporting such lofty ambitions, it falls short of that goal. in doing so, it clearly defines the limits of superhero stories. This is exactly how good they can get. Experiment done. We can stop now. Maybe consider going back to Westerns or hey! What about vampires? Or comedies. Remember comedies? Let's make some comedies. It's fun to be in a room full of strangers laughing at stuff. Anyway, I haven't recorded the follow up (follow ups?) yet. If everybody hates this idea, maybe I never will.

    PRINCESS BRIDE with James Griffith

    PRINCESS BRIDE with James Griffith
    Once upon a time, I watched "The Princess Bride" with my daughter. She liked it but wanted more of the romance stuff in the beginning. Then my Princess Bride journey began. I read the movie's source material, William Goldman's playful, metatextual novel and thought maybe the playfulness and metatextualness is unneeded, considering the jewel of the story at the heart of the book. James and I have been talking about doing a swashbuckling/Erroll Flynn CDC episode for a while. So we talk about "Captain Blood" and "The Sea Hawk." Both are streaming on HBO Max but also elsewhere if you google their titles and the words "streaming" and "free." The Princess Bride, meanwhile, is on Disney Plus. I'll write more here later. Gotta movie on with my life right now (ha! I meant move on with my life but it's a podcast about movies so fun typo!) Show notes: The book I couldn't think of is "The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman," by Laurence Sterne. I sort of mangle the description of Nabokov's "Pale Fire." I 100 percent stand by my endorsement of The War Nerd Iliad. Buy it here (https://www.amazon.com/War-Nerd-Iliad-John-Dolan/dp/1627310509)! Today! James was right, Goldman did write the screenplay for "All the Presidents Men." Also, I regret not mentioning my observation that Wallace Shawn stars in the biggest "Andre" movie (My Dinner With Andre) and stars with the biggest Andre ever in a movie (Andre the Giant).

    EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE Review

    EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE Review
    There I was, a guy excited to go to the movies, viewing myself as a sophisticated consumer of movies with discerning taste. I scoffed, yes scoffed, at the rubes lining up to watch the latest generic blockbuster superhero entertainment product as I entered the theater screening the A24 arthouse action science fiction movie Everything, Everywhere, All at One. After two long hours and 20 long minutes, the movie ends and the end titles were on screen. Produced by Joe and Anthony Russo, it read. The Russo brothers. Veteran Marvel contentmakers. The directors behind the Avengers movies and so forth. I had been fooled into a Marvel movie.
    Cinema Death Cult
    en-usJune 13, 2022

    BRAIN CANDY with Alexander Zaitchik

    BRAIN CANDY with Alexander Zaitchik
    As returning guest and investigative journalist Alexander Zaitchik researched the twisted history of the pharmaceutical industry and big pharma's approach to patenting medicine for his book OWNING THE SUN:A People's History of Monopoly Medicine from Aspirin to COVID-19 Vaccines, a movie kept coming into his mind: Brain Candy, the Kids in the Hall's 1994 cult comedy about the devastating life cycle of a fictional cure-all psych med. He discovered that while the Kids in the Hall had set out to make a comedy broadly satirizing the widely prescribed '90s mood boosting drug Prozac, they'd accidentally created a comedy nightmare with surprising bearing on the real life practices of drug manufacturers. Brain Candy is an unheralded, rare example of perfect comedy. It's as dense with jokes as Airplane that ties together those hundreds of jokes into a tight, original story with a coherent argument. It was made at a time when the Kids in the Hall were estranged from each other and suffering from a range of crippling personal losses. It was critically lambasted, ignored by audiences and quickly dumped by its studio. I'd include a link for where you can stream it legally but, hey! Guess what? There's no such link. You can buy it on Blu Ray or DVD (and maybe find it and watch it, hint hint) but you can't legally stream it. This episode is a long time coming. Alex and I are both longtime Kids in the Hall fans and have been talking about doing a CDC episode about Brain Candy for years. Our dawdling worked out well. Our plan was to devote an episode to a largely forgotten cult movie. Little did we know that the Kids in the Hall would release a new sketch show on Amazon Prime that opens with a sketch about Brain Candy and features characters from the movie in several sketches.

    PHANTOM OF THE PARADISE with Jim Knipfel

    PHANTOM OF THE PARADISE with Jim Knipfel
    Guys, this one's huge. Gotta break out the bullet point machine for this one. Jim Knipfel returns! It's the first-ever Brian De Palma movie discussed on CDC! The sound is terrible! So it's a terrific episode, despite some less than perfect audio. Jim's the best. I probably talk too much. Remind me to rewrite this description. Join Jim's patreon here (https://www.patreon.com/jimknipfel/posts). Watch Paul Williams on the Brady Bunch Variety Hour here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DKZ2p5tB6y4). The trailer from Suspiria is here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hPs2ExUL_bc). And here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ncnBz6A14i0)'s Paul Williams giving Daft Punk's Grammy acceptance speech. This is "Touch, (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Gkhol2Q1og)" the song Paul Williams sings for Daft Punk. Maybe not for everybody but I love it. Paul Williams wrote we've only just begun. Here's the Carpenters doing it (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=__VQX2Xn7tI) and here's Grant Green (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wEXdNZjkE_s) doing a nice mellow jazz guitar instrumental.

    BARB AND STAR GO TO VISTA DEL MAR Review

    BARB AND STAR GO TO VISTA DEL MAR Review
    On this episode of Cinema Death Cult I talk about the terrific 2021 comedy Barb and Star go to Vista Del Mar, written by and starring Kristin Wiig and Annie Mumolo, the writers of _Bridesmaids. _ I don't want to give any details away about _Barb and Star go to Vista Del Mar _.This movie took me completely by surprise. From its trailer, I expected a mediocre comedy with awkward characters acting out some thin premise padded by direction-less improvisational riffing and awkward, cringe-inducing set pieces. But the movie threw curveball after curveball at me. It’s an absurd masterpiece. Barb and Star go to Vista Del Mar is the best comedy I’ve seen in a long time. But I think it’s getting ignored. I think the trailer is to blame. The trailer withholds a lot of the tone, plot and characters from the movie which is great because it lets the actual movie sneak up on you. But it undersells how good the movie is. In a world of streaming content with a billion other options it makes this diamond in the rough comedic triumph easy to skip. And that sucks because it’s really good! I want to hype it up. But at the same time I don’t want to say too much about it because almost from the start it does things I didn’t expect. Here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3EBwBGTlGFQ)’s the trailer, which does an OK riff on the Netflix show Stranger Things and does a poor job of representing how great this movie really is. If the actor Jamie Dornan is reading this, I’m sorry I misstated your name as Jamie Dorner. But I call you “the handsome fella” several times, so your feelings shouldn’t be too hurt. Also, I’m sorry I forgot which actress played Star and which played Barb and resorted to saying Annie Mumolo’s name over and over. If Annie Mumolo is reading this, great work!

    FURY ROAD with Jeff Koyen

    FURY ROAD with Jeff Koyen
    This week, Jeff Koyen joins me to dissect George Miller’s 2015 apocalyptic action Mad Max: Fury Road, the fourth film in the Mad Max film series, following Mad Max, Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior (often simply called The Road Warrior) and Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome. Unlike its predecessors, Fury Road was made in a modern, computerized film production landscape. The three original films were scruffy independent productions made in the ‘70s and ‘80s featuring visceral actions with real people doing incredible—and seemingly real—stunts. The decades-later sequel Fury Road miraculously retains the scruffy and kinetic feel and spirit of the original films while taking full advantage of the tools and possibilities of modern movie-making, overlaying a bold sense of color, speed and scale. Fury Road was a singular masterpiece of pure cinema. However, it fizzled at the box office, coming in second to Pitch Perfect 2 on its opening weekend. While Fury Road was embraced by an enthusiastic cult of fans, its impact on filmmaking was sadly negligible. It showed the grand possibilities of CGI filmmaking and the general public said “no thanks” and bought a gazillion tickets for gray Marvel movie sludge instead. Mad Max super-fan Jeff Koyen joins me to celebrate_ Fury Road. Jeff is a brilliant editor and journalist whose career spans the legendary '90s ‘zine _Crank, the iconoclastic alt-weekly_ New York Press _(where he was my boss), the NFT artwork site the Boggz Project (https://boggz.org/)and numerous other publications and projects. It’s a great conversation and I don’t want to give too much away. But the scene from the original Mad Max with the rumored stunt death is here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MBCpa_CiWsI) (don’t worry–the guy didn’t die; he was just walloped by a motorcycle tire real good). Also, someday I'm going to do a full-throated defense of Beyond Thunderdome but I don't really get into it here.

    VHS MASSACRE with Thomas Edward Seymour

    VHS MASSACRE with Thomas Edward Seymour
    I'm joined by Thomas Edward Seymour, film professor in CUNY system working at Laguardia College and director of 2016's VHS Massacre (https://vhsmassacre.com/) and 2019's VHS Massacre, Too, a pair of documentary about the last stand of the American exploitation film. The first VHS Massacre installment explores the immediate fall-out of the post video store era, arguing that media consolidation led to the censorship and near death of the independent and exploitation film industry. The follow-up documentay movie follows the trajectory into the streaming age and takes viewers on an adventure leading from the last Blockbuster video store in Bend Oregon to Troma Entertainment in New York. Tom's a friend back from my days as an alt-weekly reporter in Connecticut where I covered several of his independent film projects for my paper The Hartford Advocate. In our conversation for the podcast, Tom catches me up on what's been going on with independent filmmakers, exploitation films and physical media in a post pandemic, post movie theater, streaming world and gives a full throated defense of the need for exploitation films in a world of corporate entertainment. VHS Massacre, too is available for sale as a Blu Ray here (https://www.amazon.com/VHS-Massacre-Too-Various/dp/B09G72PRMM/ref=asc_df_B09G72PRMM/?tag=hyprod-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=533457185749&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=2227944913918362546&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=&hvdev=c&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=9004394&hvtargid=pla-1435345422690&psc=1). Troma's streaming service is here (https://watch.troma.com/).

    ON THE SILVER GLOBE with Daniel Bird

    ON THE SILVER GLOBE with Daniel Bird
    Tonight I’m examining the film “On the Silver Globe.” Where to start? Oh: special thanks to my guest host Agatha Bulger who handles the intro this week. But on to “On the Silver Globe.” The Polish science fiction film is a stunning, mind-bending and unique work of pure cinema. But its backstory is almost as intriguing as the film itself "On the Silver Globe" began multiple locations in the Soviet bloc in the mid 1970s, with the film crew traveling from Mongolia to the shores of the Baltic Sea and plumbing the depths of a disused salt mine which stood in for an alien underground temple. An adaptation of the landmark Polish science fiction series The Lunar Trilogy by Jerzy Żuławski, the grand uncle of “On the Silver Globe” director Andrzej Żuławski, was funded by the communist Polish government and planned to be a showcase for the possibilities of Polish cinema. However, officials shut down production about 70 percent through the shooting citing budget issues. Years after filming ended, when the sets were destroyed and the costumes had rotted away, Żuławski edited the footage together, filming unrelated street scenes with narration describing the parts of the story that went unfilmed and premiered the film at the 1988 Canne film festival. Since a 2016 restoration, appreciation for the film has grown, illustrated by the recent release of the European behind-the-scenes documentary “Escape to the Silver Globe.” Vice magazine called "On the Silver Globe" the greatest science fiction movie never made. While the final result is not the film Żuławski set out to make, the film is a visually striking and elusive work of art. It's a one of a kind movie that defies not just categorization but description. East European film scholar Daniel Bird joins me to explore "On the Silver Globe," "The Lunar Trilogy" and Zurawski’s unique and expressive approach to filmmaking. Daniel Bird is co-founder of the post-production and production company Acid Pictures, through which he has co-produced restorations of Jane Campion’s "Peel (https://www.festival-lumiere.org/manifestations/peel-exercice-de-discipline.html)," Stephen Sayadian’s "Dr. Caligari (https://fantasiafestival.com/en/film/dr-caligari)" and Peter Weir’s "Picnic at Hanging Rock (https://2020.festival-lumiere.org/en/lecture-zen/horror.html)." He directs the Hamo Bek-Nazarov Project (http://hamobeknazarov.com/), through which he has produced Temple of Cinema, an installation featuring outtakes from Sergei Parajanov’s "The Colour of Pomegranates," Parajanov Triptych (a programme of restored shorts from Armenia, Ukraine and Georgia), and a restoration of Maria Saakyan’s "Mayak." He is also the co-founder of Friends of Walerian Borowczyk, which recently worked with MUBI to distribute a restoration of "Brief von Paris."

    FRESH Movie Review

    FRESH Movie Review
    "Fresh" is a new original horror film streaming on Hulu starring Sebastian Stan. He goes on a date with a lady, then drugs and imprisons her to sell her body for meat. But he keeps her alive because the people who buy the body parts want their body parts fresh. That's why the movie is called "Fresh." It would have been cool if it was called "Fresh for Frankenstein." But I guess it would have to be a Frankenstein movie for that to work. Alas. This is a short review of a movie I didn't really like. Sebastian Stan also stars in "Pam & Tommy," another Hulu original. With so many Sebastian Stan products they should have a section called tomb of the winter soldier. That probably wasn't a good joke. I'm trying to type as much as I can as fast as I can. They play the '80s synth pop song "Obsession" by Animotion. Great tune, in my opinion. Fun video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hIs5StN8J-0) if you've never seen it. It's like they got a bunch of free costumes and decided to just "make it work." Also, they do the "white people dance" Eddie Murphy made fun of in "Delirious." image courtesy searchlight pictures (https://press.searchlightpictures.com/fresh/).

    DEEP WATER Commentary

    DEEP WATER Commentary
    The movie Deep Water _was released last week on the streaming platform Hulu. Starring Ben Affleck and Ana De Armas, the movie is based on a 1957 psychological thriller by the same name penned by _Talented Mr. Ripley Author Patrica Highsmith. The plot follows a married couple locked in a loveless marriage characterized by jealousy, suspected infidelity and possibly… …murder? (imagine the camera just zoomed into my face and I have my finger to my bottom lip, Dr. Evil style) Another thing about this movie that’s important to know is that it sucks. It sucks through and through. It looks washed out, the camera work is pedestrian at best, the acting alternates between flatness and unconvincing hysteria. I was pretty miserable watching it and only made it through 43 minutes before giving up. Deep Water was directed by an Englishman named Adrian Lyne who once upon a time was a veritable hit movie making factory, helming box office smashes like Flashdance, 9½ Weeks, Fatal Attraction, Jacob's Ladder _and _Indecent Proposal (I copy/pasted that list from wikipedia. It’s a good website. Lots of facts). And he was not only a maker of popular films but also a celebrated craftsman, earning an Oscar nomination for Fatal Attraction, which was the second top grossing film of 1987 after _Three Men and a Baby. _ And yet, despite the box office success and film industry accolades, there’s a 20-year gap on his resume. After directing Unfaithful in 2002, he didn’t yell “cut” or “action” even once, presumably, until _Deep Water. _Hope he was having fun during his long holiday from Hollywood. Perhaps he spent some time with his brother, a classics scholar who died in 2005 (again, Wikipedia comes through with facts).

    TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE with Kristopher Woofter & Will Dodson (Fixed Audio)

    TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE with Kristopher Woofter & Will Dodson (Fixed Audio)
    Will Dodson and Kristopher Woofter, co-editors of American Twilight: The Cinema of Tobe Hooper join me to talk about Texas, chainsaws, massacres and the career of TCM director Tobe Hooper. The far-reaching conversation touches on politics, film techniques, history and the disputed authorship of the Hooper directed/Steven Spielberg produced blockbuster Poltergeist. Learn more about their excellent book at its University of Texas Press page (https://utpress.utexas.edu/books/woofter-dodson-american-twilight) and check out Woofter's horror research hub The Hauntologist (https://www.thehauntologist.com/). The original TCM is streaming on Shudder here (https://www.shudder.com/movies/watch/the-texas-chain-saw-massacre/425866499d2b1164). The Tobe Hooper-directed Peter, Paul & Mary Doc is here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xDa2718k15o). Hooper's early short film The Heisters is here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S3qpHOwAb2I) I believe that this (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PmyaT8OSXh4) is the Hooper/Funhouse interview Kris mentioned. Evidentally Hooper's name is pronounced "Toby" and I look like a total idiot in front of these two eminent horror movie scholars.