Category Archives: Movies
Pacific Rim (2013)
Traumatic Cinematic Show: Ep. 74: Cabin Fever
You can hate it or you can love it but you can’t deny that Eli Roth discovered his calling when creating Cabin Fever. On this road to Days of the Dead the Traumatic Trio are joined again by horrotica author Sara Brooke to discuss the goods and bads of this film along with how it has influenced her writing. Have a listen and find out what turns Sara on and some secretes on what to expect in the future from her.
It was a real pleasure having Sara on the show and I think her fans and our Trauma Fans alike will enjoy this episode. Remember there are several ways you can listen to this show. You can subscribe to the show via iTunes using this link or you can just search Traumatic Cinematic on iTunes. Also you can use the player at the top of this post to stream it or download the mp3. Lastly you can subscribe to our RSS Feed or listen via Spreaker (which is a really great site!)
The Phantom of the Opera (1925)
Yes, musical theater fans, it’s time for me to be That Guy: the one who reminds you your favorite play began life as a silent horror movie that continues to define its genre. Which was itself an adaption of a 1909 novel, originally serialized in the French daily newspaper Le Gaulois. Its author, Gaston Leroux, was one of those law students who said, “Fuck the law, I want Meat,” and became a journalist, with a side racket reviewing operas. Inspired by this, and Edgar Allen Poe (like so many French writers of his time) Leroux eventually gave up his journalist gig for the looked-profitable-at-the-time job of writing detective fiction (starring his own Author-Insert Fantasy detective, Joseph Rouletabille) and stories that combined “the fantastic with the real,” as one of the first title cards of this film puts it.
The Phantom of the Opera is the most famous thing to escape Leroux’s head and if you ask a film buff why they’ll point to Lon Chaney Sr. and say, “Feast your eyes and soul on his exquisite make-up job! It’s so damn ugly even the cameraman lost focus for a second.” Together with the high praise he’d already earned for The Hunchback of Notre Dame, this film pushed Chaney’s star into the upper firmament because here, as there, he did his own make-up, like a man. A “Man of a Thousand Faces,” in fact – the moniker by which most fans know him today, whether they’ve seen this film or not. Continue reading The Phantom of the Opera (1925)
Traumatic Cinematic Show: Ep. 73: Phantasm
Something is wrong in Mike Pearson’s small town of Anywhere, USA: the death rate is climbing and the dead are coming back to life as angry Jawas. The local mortician, the Tall Man, has superhuman strength and a squadron of flying cybernetic death balls to do his bidding. He may be an alien. He may be a Highlander. He may already know Mike is on to him. He certainly knows more than the Traumatic Cinematic crew. Join us as we examine Don Coscarelli’s nightmare opus of psychedelic late-70s horror madness: Phantasm. Will it be the classic fright fest everything says it is, or is the game now finished and do we all die?
You can (and should) find Chris (@Suicidal812) Blair at his Facebook page and on Twitter @Suicidal812. Also check out Monsters Among You group! Don’t forget that you can MEET Chris and US at Days of the Dead Indianapolis July 5-7 2013. Also check out the THIS WEEK on Traumatic Cinematic show Chris did with us a few weeks ago. Act 1 – The Traumatic Trio shoots the shit and explores the interesting hobby Mr. Blair has (cos-play.) They also start to explore the film too! Act 2 Intermission- Some music from the movie… you should know it. Act 3- The levels of hell called back our demonic interview so the Traumatic Trio delve deep into this classic.
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There is nothing we want more than to hear your opinion (good or bad) on our show and reviews. There is multiple ways to interact with the Traumatic Cinematic trio. The Shows Twitter- @TCPodcastCrew We have a Facebook Group- http://www.facebook.com/groups/TraumaticCinematic/ Our Facebook Page- http://facebook.com/TraumaticCinematic Email us- TraumaticCinematic@gmail.com MuGumBo (Lewis R. Cougill) Twitter @GenXnerd Website- http://GenXnerd.com, http://Twitflix.net, http://TraumaticCinematic.com, and MANY MANY MORE. Mike Wickliff Twitter @Greymattersplat David DeMoss Twitter @AYTIWS Website- you’re there right now.
Superman/Doomsday (2007)
This Week on Traumatic Cinematic (6-24-13) w/ Heroine Diandra Lazor
On this road to Days of the Dead we picked up a beautiful hitchhiker who hasn’t slept in days. The insomniac heroine Diandra Lazor sits in with the Traumatic Trio and shares a bright light of goodness into the stiff mustiness that hangs within the Traumatic Cinematic studio. As the leader of Heroes Within Us Diandra has put together a good guy food drive (Heroes vs. Hunger) taking place at their table at the Indy DOTD event. Bring a can of corn or bucket of brains, I am sure they will some someone interested.
Also on This Week hear about the newest additions to Days of the Dead like Danny Trejo, Thing Fest has gotten bigger, and a very special alien that I imagine will rub his wang all over everything. Also you will hear witty banter and silly shenanigans being planned as the Traumatic Trio gets wound up in anticipation of the event.
Check out this page and you will have a slew of choices to explore Diandra.
Don’t forget to check out the many looks of Diandra Lazor on Facebook and on Twitter@DiandraonElmSt
And check out and support their cause Heroes Within Us and their awesome Heroes Vs. Hunger campain.
Man of Steel (2013)
Superman IV: The Quest for Peace (1987)
20 Million Miles to Earth (1957)
Plenty of sci-fi properties obsess over the planet Mars but there was a time, throughout the early part of the twentieth century, when the planet Venus commanded similar attention. Obviously, this was before robotic observation revealed the 900 °(F) desert under those miles-thick clouds of carbon dioxide and sulfuric acid. Damn place is hotter than Mercury once you get right down to it. But if you ever are magically transported to the surface, don’t panic: atmospheric pressure will crush you long before you have time to fry or choke on your own melting innards.
Nobody knew this in June, 1957, obviously. Sputnik was four months away from launch. Mariner-2 was five years away and scientists spent the rest of the 60s arguing about its data…i.e., doing their damn jobs. We can forgive 20 Million Miles to Earth its interplanetary ignorance. Especially since that ignorance doubles as the source of some truly batshit excuses for Science. And this is me talking: the from a man who thinks nothing of movies about dinosaurs spontaneously reanimated by atomic explosions. Unfortunately, this film signals a trend toward the same kinds of awful unthinking that kills genre movies to this day. It had all the elements of past successes, but the essential creative sparks that powered, say, Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, or even Earth vs. The Flying Saucers, obviously faded as the decade that spawned them wore on.
I name drop those last two because 20 Million Miles to Earth is another collaboration between Columbia pictures and stop-motion animator Ray Harryhausen, flowing directly from 1955’s It Came from Beneath the Sea. Which also happened to be Harryhausen’s first collaboration with producer Charles H. Schneer, who would go on to produce Earth vs. the Flying Saucers and every other memorable movie with Harryhausen’s name on it until 1981’s Clash of the Titans. Continue reading 20 Million Miles to Earth (1957)