Really Awful Movies: Ep 358 – Absurd

On this week’s episode of the Really Awful Movies Podcast, a bit more Italian horror for ya.

Welcome to a discussion of Absurd, which goes variously by Anthropophagus 2, Zombie 6: Monster Hunter, Horrible and The Grim Reaper 2 in keeping with the title multiplication common to Italian exploitation genre cinema.

It’s a batty 1981 slasher directed by multi-talented director Joe D’Amato and starring the towering figure of George Eastman (all 6’9 of him) who wrote the story and the screenplay – though that’s not exactly anything you’d really want to cop to.

Eastman plays Mikos, the subject of a mysterious Vatican experiment from which he’s on the lam. The monsignor who helped create him, Frankenstein-style, is chasing after him. The madman gets impaled on a high fence, kinda like Hell Night (which we podcasted a while back). But, like Mike Myers, he’s hard to kill (or rather, like Steven Seagal, he’s hard to kill!).

Mikos is revived at the local hospital, which is bad move. They should not have resuscitated him. The priest informs the hospital and authorities that the only way to kill Mikos is to ‘destroy the cerebral mass,’ whatever the hell that is.

Really Awful Movies: Ep 354 – Sorority House Massacre

On today’s episode of the Really Awful Movies Podcast, Sorority House Massacre. Talk about a title steeped in straightforwardness. Truth in marketing, right there. There’s a sorority, a sorority house, and yes, a massacre. And of course, an escaped killer from a lunatic asylum. What more could you ask for, especially in the 80s?

That, and so many more questions answered in this episode.

Lensed by a female director, this one appeared toward the end of the slasher boom, and asks “who will survive the final exam?” And, not to be confused with the other 80s slasher, Final Exam. Between this and Sorority Row, The House on Sorority Row, Splatter University, it’s tough keeping all this straight. But let us put it into context for you!

 

Really Awful Movies: Ep 342 – Wrong Turn 2021

This week on the podcast, the 2021 version of Wrong Turn.

This film is quite the update from the 2003 original (and you can compare our discussion for both). It’s hugely ambitious, though falls flat on numerous occasions. This one should be (and somewhat is) a bit polarizing.

A bunch of hikers are going to spend a few nights in the woods along the Appalachian Trail.

On this episode:

  • The original wrong turn, plus the latest incarnation
  • Camping and its plus and debits
  • The great outdoors
  • The folk horror mystique and exemplary films in the genre