Really Awful Movies: Ep 62b – H.G. Lewis

Herschell Gordon Lewis is a maverick. He’s the man behind the splatter genre, directing what is arguably the first of its kind, Blood Feast.

The “Godfather of Gore,” spoke to Jeff from Florida.

His movies were groundbreaking. Without his low budget shlock, we wouldn’t have Friday the 13th or The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

Lewis and partner David Friedman ventured into uncharted territory with 1963’s very bloody Blood Feast, considered by many to be the first “gore” film (if you’d like to hear our take on that film, check out Episode 61 of the podcast).

The duo was doing juvenile delinquent films, and nudie-cuties and then was able to cater to the the drive-in theater market with Two Thousand Maniacs! (1964) and Color Me Blood Red (1965).

The self-effacing Lewis discussed how he got into exploitation films. Blood Feast, had “a lack of any talent, from acting to production…and zero budget.” And yet people “clamored to see it!”

Lewis weighed in on the 80s splatter boom, which he reluctantly helped usher in.

He also talked about the movie, The Wizard of Gore and star Ray Sager. They shot the film in 1969 in Chicago, for a pittance. It’s about the mad, Montag the Magnificent, a magician who performs mutilation tricks.

Lewis has recently made a film titled Herschell Gordon Lewis’s Bloodmania,  a horror anthology film involving him and Canadian filmmakers. It was filmed in Alberta.

Lewis is an interesting fellow. He took a lengthy hiatus from movies and wrote business/marketing books! He’s something of a pioneer in the field of direct marketing; something you would not expect. But he speaks to us directly, through his quirky, bloody movies.

Really Awful Movies: Ep 60b – Christian Burgess: Programmer, Toronto After Dark Film Festival

toronto_after_dark_film_festivalToronto After Dark is one of the world’s leading showcases of new Horror, Sci-Fi, Action & Cult Movies.

Each October, in the run-up to Halloween, the critically acclaimed event, screens about 50 new feature films and shorts over nine nights in front of over 11,000 attendees, including over 200 members of Press and Industry in Toronto.

Programming manager Christian Burgess chatted to Jeff about how the festival came about and the film selection process. Last year, they set a record with 600 submissions (that’s including short films). They got about 350 features.

“It’s amazing to see all the amazing stuff being produced.” There are lots of creative people out there.

This year’s festival is discussed as well as fave films programmed in festivals’ past.

See you After Dark!

 

Really Awful Movies: Ep 56c – Jack Davis and Crypt TV

crypt_tvIn this special edition of the Really Awful Movies Podcast, we chat with Jack Davis of Crypt TV. Davis and Eli Roth’s Crypt TV specializes in free short-form, horror, genre, paranormal and other oddity-based content across social media. They “create something with specific people in mind, for people who feel a bit different.”

Their ethos and associated hashtag is “Weird is good,” and full disclosure – we’re pretty weird ourselves.

We at the Really Awful Movies Podcast…well, we’re proud members of the Crypt TV family and we were eager to find out how it got started and what drives content there.

We chat with Jack about the April 15th launch, fans of genre/horror, finding community among fellow oddballs, Eli Roth, tattoos, our favorite serial killers (!) and what surprises the channel has in store for this fall.