Keep repeating to yourself: he is only an actor, he is only an actor, he is only an actor…

The most dangerous actor ever committed to celloluid, David Hess speaks!

Interview by Christer Persson

You think Brad Pitt is a badass in INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS? Or wait! You thought that John Lithgow was scary in RAISING CAINE or you might even have thought that Robert De Niro was really naughty in CAPE FEAR? Let me tell you, there is a guy that are scarier, more bad-ass and more naughty than all of them tied together on a stick… his name is David Hess! And when he´ll tell you to piss you pants, you better do it right away!

Or wait… was that the characters he played? David Hess has been cast as a badass in movies since that infamous LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT got people repeat to themselves that it was only a movie. The sheer presence of Hess in movies since then sort of makes you really dislike the guy. He has played bad guys in AUTOSTOP ROSSO SANGUE, THE HOUSE ON THE EDGE OF THE PARK and SWAMP THING. Of course, there is more to the story. Do you for instance know that he has a couple of Grammy awards at home? Did you know that he wrote the hitsong Speedy Gonzales and even wrote a tune for that guy from Memphis…what´s-his-name… Elvis Presley?
So, what more is there? Mr. David Hess was kind enough to answer a few questions for you to find out!























Christer: You are most famous for your character Krug, from Wes Cravens classic LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT. A film that was influential to many of the violent movies of the seventies. Today there is a new wave of these violent and misogynic movies (and remakes as you most certainly know) what do you think is the main difference between the older movies and the new ones?

David: More Hollywood control, more interest in the all mighty buck and less interest in making a movie. Hard to repeat something that's seminal to begin with!

Christer: AUTOSTOP ROSSO SANGUE, in which you played against Corinne Clery and Franco Nero, is a very special and well made movie. What do you think makes it so special that it even today finds new fans?

David: It's an ensemble work and in order to work trust is the most important element. We all loved each other and because of that were able to dig down into that untapped part of who we all are at root level.






Christer: One of the funniest roles you’ve made is in Ruggero Deodato´s BODYCOUNT, which is a sort of FRIDAY THE 13:TH rip-off. It seems like you had a lot of fun on the set with Mimsy Farmer and Charles Napier. Was Ruggero Deodato a more relaxed director than when you were making HOUSE ON THE EDGE OF THE PARK?

David: Not really! Ruggie is always pretty intense and the consummate perfectionist. He had problems with english early on in his career, so the producers asked me to direct the english ensemble part of the movie, but we worked together and we have remained friends to this day.

Christer: Is it a different spirit in today’s “up and coming” filmmakers, than the spirit filmmakers, for instance Wes Craven, had in the early seventies?

David: I don't know if it's much different, but there are so many more things available. The computer editing systems for one. Better special effects, blue screen techniques etc. We had to work from film and be able to visualize everything right through to the final print. Now with the new equipment, it makes covering mistakes much easier and maybe that's made the new breed of directors a little lazy and somewhat careless. But a good filmmaker will always be a good filmmaker and a good story is just that! As for Wes, I think he got caught in a time warp because of his early success and never really overcame his reputation as a B horror film director. He's better than his films!

Christer: What do you want to be remembered for, when you (god forbid!) pass over to the other side? Your music, your acting or do you have something else up your sleeve that I don´t know of?

David: My essence is music. That's what I've always been about! Everything I do from writing to acting to directing has a musical base. When I act I think in musical terms as do I when I write. I'm at my happiest when I'm composing or performing whether on stage or in a recording studio. Without my songs I'd be a shell of man. My music is what keeps me alive.

Christer: Does people get surprised when they find out that you’re musician and not only that, that you also is a Grammy award winner?

David: A little bit. It's always interesting to see their reactions when they find out I'm more than just KRUG from LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT.

Christer: What movie that you have starred in, are you most proud of?

David: Hard to say? I think that the last film I did...SMASH CUT, is pretty interesting, but I'm not much of a self rater. I let the work do my talking...but I must say that the 'trilogy', ending with AUTOSTOP ROSSO SANGUE was as good as it gets.




Christer: Is there anything (apart from this interview) you really regret doing or not doing in your time in show business?

David: I would like to have done more Broadway. I turned down a lot of musicals, for what ever reasons and then the offers just stopped. Singing and acting on Broadway would have been a high point, but I have a wonderful family and that, too, is a high point. Most importantly is not what we regret not doing, but that we live with the choices we make.

Christer: The final question is the one I ask every prominent interviewee: What is the meaning of life?

David: That answer would take knowing the meaning of not-life. Maybe the Buddist have it right in the end. The striving for Samadhi...cleansing one’s mind of all thought, is the answer. I just don't know, but then that's a good definition of life, also.
















Make sure to check out Davids website: http://www.davidhess.com/



Skin in the Fifties – Uncensored, authentic sexploitation from the 1950´s featuring The Flesh merchant
- Swedish version originally published on http://swegore.wordpress.com/


Genre: Sexploitation
Director: W. Merle Connell
Actors:
Joy Reynolds
Lisa Rack


Production year: 1956
Package: 2 DVD Disc Keep Case
Runtime: 56 min + lot of extra material. 180 minutes worth according to the cover
Subtitles: no
Language: English
Bonus materials:
Disc 1:
Four extended nude scenes from the film
Trailers for Joe Sarno films:
Moonlighting Wives
Inga
Seduction of Inga
Daddy Darling
Swedish wildcats
Confessions of a young American housewife
Vampire ecstasy
Girl meet girl
Preview trailers for:
Skin in the 50´s
Skin in the 60´s
Grindhouse trash

Disc 2:
Loops:
Blonde vs. brunette
African frenzy
Ho-hum
Skin game
Impatient model
Cuties & cocktails
Bedtime hour
Bumper lil
Nudes on a beach
Mirror, mirror
Stacy Farell
Valentine #2
Diamond Lil
Chen
Danse de l´ebandan
Follies bergere
Girl in a cage
Her one desire
Sales girls


Secret key trailer vault:
Sensual incantations
Topless Tapioca Wrestling
Forbidden desires
Taylor Wane´s erotic game
Softcore Divas: Behind the G-strings
The Breastford wives
The house on Hooter hill
The busty stag party
Dracula’s dirty daughter
Skin in the 50´s
Skin in the 60´s
How to get Alternative cinemas DVD catalogue
And a nice Booklet featuring stills and liner notes


Distributor: Secret key Motion Pictures
UPC-code: 878746002493
Writer: Christer Persson


Plot:
The young and innocent Nancy arrives unannounced to her big sister Paula in Los Angeles. Impressed with her sister’s apparent success in tinseltown with nice flat and luxurious clothes, Nancy is certain she will obtain the same things in life! Imagine her confusion and disappointment when her big sister wants her to go right back home again. Secretly she gets an address to an “Art School” from a card she finds back in Paula’s flat. Nancy has no intention to go back home at all. Nancy may be fresh of the bus, but she knows what she wants. So when Paula thinks her darling sister has got on the bus again to a happy and uncomplicated life back home, Nancy manages to get locked up in a luxurious brothel in no time at all. From now on, her only chance to survive is to co-operate with the male guests at the place or get a severe beating from the boss. Poor Nancy has been pulled into a vortex of sex and humiliation... 1950’s style!

AUDIO / VIDEO
When talking about the video, it’s not much to be happy about. 4:3 picture, but who is fooling who here! Since all the materials on the discs are low-budget productions from the fifties, no one can expect any other format than that! It is not Lawrence of Arabia we are talking about. It’s a bit of a surprise though to see so many scratches when it’s supposed to be an restored version, and when naked bodies are onscreen it gets even worse (I wonder why?). The quality of The Flesh Merchant also changes from scene to scene sometimes, but I guess there are perhaps multiply sources of film material they have put together.


The sound is better... slightly. I love the way they talk in these old movies, and you’ll have no problems hearing the dialogue or surrounding sounds. The music is good, but a bit out of context sometimes, a sweeping romantic orchestral tune feels a bit improper when the young Nancy is about to get molested... but what do I know about music? I do know that it is in 2.0 stereo sound anyway. Who needs fancy Dolby or THX sound editing?


Bonus material
The staff at Secret Key really should give themselves nice Christmas bonuses, ´cause they have been really good this year. The bonus material is amazing! If you are a smut peddler (as I am) you will really enjoy everything on these discs, and then I mean EVERYTHING!


Lets see what we got here... no less than 21 (twenty-one) loops of stripping, dancing, tennis playing (?!) girls from the 50´s. Sort of a collection of moving pin-up girls doing stuff that was really arousing at the time. These loops are quite innocent and funny, and even though some of the girls seemed to have taken a hard fall down the ugly tree, you can fully understand that men spend their small change in nickelodium-machines. Thanks to the invention of DVD, you only have to pay once for a whole bunch of them, to watch over and over again in your own house. I know you will! The qualities of the loops are not top-notch all over, but who cares? A hidden treasure that many have talked about but few have seen!


A collection of Joe Sarno trailers is included for good measure. Joe Sarno made one of the most well known porn film from Sweden, Fäbojäntan, which almost everyone knows about. I also appreciated the Secret Key trailer vault. A lot! Voluptuous girls make me a happy guy, and you have to love titles like The Breastford wives and House on Hooter hill! These trailers show that the fascination for the female body (with or without clothes) is still as popular as always.


The preview of Skin in the 60´s really got me waiting to see it. The booklet that is included is well written and interesting with some nice stills to look at when you get tired of reading so much.

Summary
Never has white slave trade and sex seemed so sweet. The acting surprised me a bit, it was better then I expected. Sure, there are no academy award winning performances in sight, but it’s kind of solid anyhow. Joy Reynolds, who looks exactly like a Gil Elvgren pin-up girl come to life and has a similar natural look as Bettie Page, is great in the lead role as the naive Nancy. The surrounding cast is not as good as she is, but no one makes a fool of themselves. On the other hand, what do I know? Most of the cast only starred in this picture.


Anyway, The Flesh Merchant really tries to be a grim reminder that the life for a working girl just ain´t as glamorous as Julia Roberts got thousands of naive American girls in the 80´s with blockbuster Pretty woman, to believe. The only problem is that director Connell did not seem to know if he wanted to make an educational film about the horrors of prostitution or if he wanted to show of light-footed girls naked. So he does both. At the same time. However, I don’t judge him, I liked the film anyhow. And as it’s only 56 minutes, you don’t have time to get bored either. However, the film is only one of the things crammed into the two discs! The loops are hilarious and a real showstopper! I know what I’m going to play on the teve the next time I throw a party at home! The twenty trailers are also obligatory to watch and the above-mentioned Breastford wives and the likes from Secret key trailer vault are more likely to make you blush, since they are newer films.


The Flesh Merchant, the 21 loops and the infinite (almost anyway) selections of trailers on the two discs makes this the kind of DVD something you really should invest in! Not only do you have the chance to experience these old forgotten classics, but you are also contributing to the noble cause of restoring and collecting movies that would be lost forever otherwise. And do you know what? You also get to see many, many naked girls in the process! Stop reading and order a copy right away!


Three things I learned from the movie:
-Never trust a bearded man! The police officers are all clean-shaven, and those you can trust.
-Apartments in the fifties were lit by many bright lamps. Much like a film set!
-What we see as “erotic dance” has changed since then.

Three things to look forward to in the movie:
-Joy Reynolds
-The loops. THE LOOPS!
-Everything... really!



Phenomena review
- Swedish version originally published on http://swegore.wordpress.com/

Title: Phenomena

Genre: Giallo
Director: Dario Argento
Actors:
Jennifer Connelly
Daria Nicolodi
Donald Pleasence


Production year:1985
Package: 1 DVD Disc Keep Case
Runtime: 110 minutes
Subtitles: No
Language: English
Bonus materials:
Audio Commentary with Dario Argento, Sergio Stivaletti, Claudio Simonetti and Loris Curri
A DARK FAIRY TALE
LUIGI COZZI AND THE ART OF MACROPHOTOGRAPHY
Dario Argento on THE JOE FRANKLIN SHOW
Music videos – JENNIFER and VALLEY
Trailer
Dario Argento Biography


Distributor: Anchor Bay
UPC-code: 0131314847-3
Writer: Christer Persson

Plot:
When arriving to a boarding school in Switzerland, young Jennifer (Jennifer Connelly) is quickly drawn into a horrifying series of events involving murders, monkeys, insects and sleepwalking!


Entomologist John McGregor (Donald Pleasance) is able to pinpoint the time of a murder with the aid of “The eight squadrons of death!” which is the lifecycle of the common housefly. By studying a decomposing head of a victim, McGregor helps the police to identify the victim to that of a missing Danish schoolgirl. There have been several cases of missing persons in the area, like McGregors maid Greta. Since he is sitting in a wheelchair, he is dependent of help. Luckily, he has his monkey Inga who can help him with some easier tasks around the house.


After a bad combination of sleepwalking and no thanks to two moronic yuppies, Jennifer finds herself at McGregors house. From here on the things, starts to fall into place and at the same time really get out of hand. Jennifer realises that she has a psychic connection to insects and together with a housefly (!), she is able to find the house where the killer has been lurking. When the net is closing on the killer there is no escape from the terror that will surface.


AUDIO / VIDEO
The dolby surround 5.1 audio is a treat. Although Argento went haywire with some heavy metal tunes in this one, parts of the soundtrack is pure candy for my ears. Simonettis “Jennifer” made me crank up the volume several steps (Italian progressive metal band Rhapsody of Fire actually made a cover of this song a couple of years ago), and Bill Wymans “Valley” is perfect example of a sweeping haunting tune to match the tone of the film.. Oh, yes, a small portion of Goblins “Safari” from the DAWN OF THE DEAD soundtrack can be heard playing on a television set.


The dialogue is well produced, even though some of the voice actors are sub-par, especially the one dubbing Daria Nocolodi.


This was the first time I saw the film in anamorphic widescreen. I wasn’t disappointed at all. PHENOMENA is one of the last great pictures Argento made (OPERA being the last) and his visual style is still burning itself onto the viewers eyes. The expert handling of lightning and the stylish camera movements still impresses, and makes me remember why I saw this film countless times in the mid eighties! For the first time, thanks to the widescreen format, I could spot a scene that is reminiscent of David Hemmings first walk into the murder scene in Argentos classic DEEP RED! In which scene? you might ask. Well, it is for me to know and for you to find out, so just buy the DVD dammit!


The picture is quite clear, but not perfect. With the entry of HD-television and Blu-Ray, we get somewhat spoiled with crisp clear and flawless picture. Anchor Bay has noting to be ashamed of though. This is, to my knowledge, the best version of PHENOMENA available!


Bonus material
First off is the audio Commentary with Dario Argento, Sergio Stivaletti, Claudio Simonetti and Loris Curri. It does not matter how many interesting anecdotes Argento is giving away on the film, it is so difficult at times to hear what he is saying because of his broad Italian accent. Journalist Curri is doing a great job asking questions and he seems to know what he’s talking about. The other two commentaries with Stivalett and Simonetti are easier to make out, and even I who though I knew all about the film learned a thing or two.


A DARK FAIRY TALE is a featurette by David Gregory about PHENOMENA and is brand new! Interviews with: Dario Argento, Daria Nicolodi, Fiore Argento (who also was in Lamberto Bavas DEMONS), Stivaletti, Cozzi makes A DARK FAIRY TALE is 18 minutes of pure entertainment.


LUIGI COZZI AND THE ART OF MACROPHOTOGRAPHY is a short with the late Luigi Cozzi teling about his collaboration with Dario Argento. Albeit the title suggests to explain how Cozzi utilized the macrophotography in PHENOMENA, the footage seems to be cut from some other documentary since he also talks about other effects which definitive has nothing at all to do with macrophotography. A little gem is Dario Argento on THE JOE FRANKLIN SHOW. This segment from a TV-show is from 1985, and Argento is in full Prince Valiant mode, is very jovial and as usual VERY difficult to understand!


We also get no less than two music videos! Jennifer, which is directed by Dario himself, and Valley, directed by Michele Soavi (who also appears in a small role as a cop and was the second unit director of PHENOMENA). A Trailer for PHENOMENA is included as well as a Dario Argento Biography.


All in all, Anchor Bay has once again succeeded to give an Italian classic movie a new chance to meet an new audience as well as the old fans, and fills the DVD with excellent bonus material.


Summary
My initial impression after seeing PHENOMENA again after many years is how well it has aged. Like a good wine, it has matured over the years and its full body has developed. Argento at the time still had a lot of energy and some of the visuals in the film are breathtaking. Of course there’s a lot that can be said about the acting (or the voice acting) and the psychic connection between Jennifer and the insects. But the last time I checked no-one really watches an Argentomovie for its coherent plot, well developed characters or logic. It is all about the visuals, the music, the murders and the stylish package! PHENOMENA never really manages to be compared with the classic Argento like SUSPIRIA, INFERNO, DEEP RED, but is still a hell of a lot better than most movies made in Italy at the same time.


Much of the film credit must go to Jennifer Connelly who makes a solid performance and she really had a stunning look at the time (well, she’s better looking now, but I was 15 when the film was released and I couldn’t see enough of her). But her cool looks, her low key acting and her chemistry with both Nicolodi and Pleasance makes you look the other way when it comes to the insect connection. Pleasance does his best in the role of McGregor, but I can’t really figure out what kind of accent he tries to speak? This was the last time Nicolodi worked for Argento until his latest effort LA TERZA MADRE, where she plays Asia Argentos mother (which should be easy since she is). In the featurette she tells that at the time PHENOMENA was shot, the eyes that had been looking at her so lovingly before, was now looking at her with hate. Maybe that was one reason why the two has not been working together for twenty-two years.


As usual with a classic Argentomovie it´s the murders that are the real motive for the movie, and PHENOMENA delivers some great scenes. The opening sequence with Fiora Argento as the Danish Vera Brant is intense and exiting, especially the final moments with the glass window, as well as the other window scene in the film (a nod to DEEP RED, SUSPIRIA and INFERNO perhaps?). The sleepwalking sequences are as exquisite as the maggot pit in the end is repulsing. PHENOMENA were Sergio (DEMONS, THE CHURCH, THE SECT) Stivalettis first collaboration with Argento and his F/X are good, as are the ones made by old-timers Corridori. It is graphic, violent and very much Argento.


The one main objection I have against PHENOMENA is the use of heavy metal music (and I’m a heavy metal freak!). In a film like, lets say DEMONS for instance, metal music helped heighten the suspense, editing and the action in the movie, but Argentos movies are not made for the popcorn eating audience. Argentos movies works best with instrumental music like in DEEP RED, TENEBRAE, INFERNO and SUSPIRIA (which has one of the best horrormovie soundtracks ever produced). So, the parts with Simonettis music the film feels harmonic, but as soon as Iron Maiden or Motorhead starts playing, you get distanced from the PHENOMENA flow and language. Too bad no one could have talked Argento out of using those songs. Second objection is the cover to the DVD. I thought my cover was covered in dust or something, but is was some graphic decision from whoever made the cover. Not good, and why the hell didn’t Anchor Bay use the beautiful painting by E. Sciotti that is inserted in the sleeve as the cover art?


If you have not seen anything of Dario Argentos movies before, PHENOMENA is a good introduction. It is not as violent as the older movies and has a more linear story, but it is full of the visual stunts and musical brilliance that makes an Argentomovie. See it or the bedbugs might bite!


Three thing I learned from the movie:
- Never trust a chimpanse with a razor
- Wanna find a corpse? Follow the flies!
- It´s easier to buy a lot of sheets to cover up a lot of mirrors, rather than taking the mirrors away?


Three things to look forward to in the movie:
- The murder scenes in Argentocsope!
- The sleepwalking-scenes!
- The opening sequence


TAGLINE: Wanted: Sleepwalking teenager seeks flies to solve murders! Call Jennifer at 555-555 555







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Tied by conventions
by Christer Persson.
Almost everyday some so called 'feminist' group are picking at your very beloved horrorfilm, claiming that women just are sexual objects to our sick infected brains. Is this true? I gave it a thought and found out that that's not really the truth. I also discovered the proudest feminist in the contemporary horror industry, Stuart Gordon.


Whores or Madonnas?
Some critics claim that horror movies are hostile towards women. That they are only in the films in order to give a male audience some candy to look at, that men get a fucked up impression of women in general. Pause for a minute and let the little grey thing inside your head go to work for once, isn't it the males that are portrayed like monsters? The women, with very rare exceptions like the mannish Ilsa, are victims of a patriarchal world. In the real world the governments are dominated by men and has been for a very long time, but that doesn't mean that every man is an asshole. It's a fact, though, that women has a hard time proving to the men in charge that they also are competent of doing the same work. The common view is that women is as good as men, but why is it that the monster role is a male thing? Shouldn't women have a part in this dirty handywork as well, or is the monster role set aside for men?


The movie industry is no exception when it comes to exploiting women. Horror movies are mainly films made by men for men, just like porn movies. The difference between sex and horror is that the men portrayed in horror usually are creeps and the women are incarnations of the madonna, while the men in porno flicks are anonymous cocks who penetrates the female object (whore). In terms of being hostile towards women, it is movies like Pretty Woman who give men a distorted notion of women. I don't carehow much people try to slander horror movies for the way women are portrayed, sometimes horror movies are closer to life than you might think but not for a moment are we to forget '...keep repeating it's only a movie, it's only a movie', to keep in mind that film is a way of explaining the world we're living in and no matter how cruel a film seems to be, reality is always a bit crueler. It's justified to draw a parallel between reality and fiction sometimes. You can cast Saddam Hussein in the role of Torqemada (Lance Hendriksen) in Pit and The Pendelum and suddenly the film is a metaphor for the horrors of Iraq. Think 'Saddam' when Torqemada appears on screen and it's scary to see how close to reality the film is. The executions of innocent people, the mass psychosis of a whole country who hails Torqemada/Saddam as a real cool guy, while he in reality is a psychotic massmurderer. The common view on horror movies at large being hostile towards women is plain bullshit. Of course there are pictures where women are just thrown in to show their tits and the other thing, I'm not being naive here. I watch those films too, but they are never as enjoyable as pictures that have some kind of message, how ever stupid the message may seem to be.


That women are victims of impotent men, may not be the first that struck your mind when you watch a film by Stuart Gordon, but I tell you, a true feminist has reared his bearded face.



Mr. Gordon
Stuart Gordon is at his very best one of the most inventive directors alive and ten years ago his name was the hottest since hell opened it's gates. The theme in his pictures is, on the surface, gore and intestines, but underneath the theme revolves around sick, disturbing sex. Maybe Stuart himself, in the privacy of his home, doesn't like kinky sex, but he likes to stuff his movies with this subject matter. His best work are tales about twisted and sickening sex. It doesn't matter if you're a bad or a good character, sexual experiences in Gordons universe are closely connected with death. In his films there is no thing called love, only sex and desire. Instead of love there is a pathological obsession for an innocent girl who doesn't share the admires' feelings. The old 'Beauty and the Beast' theme, with the exception that the beast underneath his flesh is a... beast.


My ding-a-ling
In Castle Freak, the poor freak (Jonathan Fuller), who has been beaten, tortured and humiliated his whole life by his demented mother, tries to make contact with the opposite sex. With the knowledge that he has been imprisoned in a dungeon since he was five and now is about forty-five, his preferences to the other sex is a bit vague, if you know what I mean. Since he only have been exposed to hatred and oppression his whole life, it hardly comes as a surprise that he's showing love and affection by being an oppressor. After sneaking upon Jeffrey Combs, who also happens to be starving for some sex, and watching him screw the local whore (she's a whore, I'm not being a sexist here), the freak wants his piece of the action. But since his mother so mercifully cut off his dong, the only thing remaining is anger and sexual frustration. First he tries to repeat the scene he has witnessed, like a charade, but when the whore discovers that he has no penis, the monster inside of him awakens and things go nasty, i.e. the whore dies a brutal death. The freak attacks her sexual areas (breasts and vagina) and mutilates her. Maybe the freak should give John Wayne Bobbit a call, since the unfortunate morning he lost his penis and got it sewn back to it's original place, he's become a famous porno-star and meets young, voluptuous, attractive women every single day.




A character close to the castle freak, is the already mentioned mad monk Torqemada in the uneven, but far from bad, Pit and the Pendelum. Maybe because Pit and the Pendelum being shot at the very same castle. Who knows? Torqemada has his lower abdomen intact, but suffers from impotency, one of the worst things that can happen to a man. So his way of expressing emotions gets very violent and solely towards women. It's his incompetence of making love that drives him to hunt and kill women, accusing them of being witches. The fear of women has driven men into strange deeds over the centuries, but the inquisition, which is the scenario in Pit and the Pendelum, is strangely enough one of the best documented era of methodical slaughter of the opposite sex. And it's even stranger that the ones in charge of the practical work were monks, either Franciskans or Dominicans, i.e. men who had sworn an oath to take dissociation from women. If it had been ordinary men I guess, in a short period of time, people had been more critical against the horrible works, but since it was God's men at work everything must have been OK.


Beast #3 is Dr. Edward Pretorious (Ted Sorel), the one who thinks that humans are such easy prey in From Beyond. Edward is a fully fledged sadist who likes to whip his girlfriends and to abuse them sexually, a proud member in The Impotency Club, although a weak limb didn't stop him, so when he reveals his 'real me' he looks like a gigantic erected penis. Not only does he look like a dick, both he and Jeffrey Combs gets dick-like tentacles growing out from their foreheads. The major difference between them is that Combs goes for the brain of the women since he has a normal sexual-life, but Pretorious still wants to have the experience of the flesh. No matter how far beyond you get, impotency is carved into the soul.

The chairman of The Impotence Club, Dr.Hill (David Gale) from Re-Animator is the by far most intense character in Gordon's universe. With his head removed, he still lets the little head do the thinking and he can't forget his crazy love for Megan (Barbara Crampton) Halsey. He gets power over the dead using Herbert West's (Jeffrey Combs once again!) potion. Dr. Hill has cheated death and laughed at it's face, but like the other losers he can't establish a normal relationship, so he when he transforms into his new form, he still wants to do only one thing, fuck. Talk about being narrow-minded. He orders his body to get Megan and ties her onto a autopsy bed in the morgue. Now he tries to charm her with pathetic lines like 'I've always admired your body' and so forth and when he realises that she's not willing to give her flower to him, he takes advantage of her orally. Very sick and very much a Stuart Gordon movie.

The Legacy of De Sade
In Friday The 13th and its never ending stream of followers, sex is innocent. Two people cuddle a bit and are in love, or at least have the hots for the other. In Gordon's movies sex is everything but normal. Instead of the ol' 'in and out' he practices the more speculative 'hit and cry' type of sex. Since the glory days of Marquis De Sade, sado-masochism (s/m) has been a forbidden fruit when it comes to sex. It's the kind of hobby you don't brag about to your friends or to your mother-in-law ( as long as they're not involved of course). As with all other odd interests like collecting movies, kill a lot of people during a longer period of time and/or buying 'zines like this one, s/m have been an underground movement, which everybody knows about but none has experienced! What's for sure is that it has been the upper class who has had the financial possibilities to explore it's domains or the lucky ones who have a puzzle box signed LeMarchand. So it isn't a surprise that Dr. Pretorious with his fat salary, has the nicest s/m collection in Gordon's films. At the beginning of the film we notice that there is something very, very wrong with this guy, and our suspicion is justified. Ken Foree finds Pretorious' VCR stuffed with steamy s/m sex, including the good doctor himself and an unfortunate girl. It struck me that I've read somewhere that there are more of this stuff recorded for the film, but it was cut out of the final print because it became too much. I know I wouldn't complain. Barbara Crampton in a leather outfit is still left in the film. And here's something to think about, Crampton takes advantages of Combs, masturbating his penis while his lying in a coma. For once we get a rape of a man. Shamefully enough with the industry being ruled by men as already said, he doesn't scream since he's not even aware of it. But it was a scene with a girl on top and in control. The machine Pretorious and Combs has invented stimulates the 'pineal gland', which is located in the brain, and those exposed to it's power gets sexually aroused. It's that very sexual feeling that makes the impotent Pretorious carry on the project, and when Cramton as the asexual, professional psychologist gets exposed, she gives in to all the sexual sensations she want. She will no longer wait until a man invites her, now she's in control. Later in the film, no longer under the influence of the machine, she does everything in her power to destroy it. Because the machine woke the woman inside her, the woman she so desperate tries to hide.


The essence of s/m is that you're in command, and maybe it's what the men in Gordons universe needs to be; in control. The two doctors, Hill and Pretorious, and Torqemada functions in the same way. They have to use their advantage over the weak to get the sexual rushes they need, maybe because they're impotent. What kind of sexual rush the castle freak's mother gets from keeping him locked up for forty-five years is a secret to everyone. The only male victim in Gordon's world is the freak, but he was beyond salvation even before the film started to roll before our eyes.

The Shortest Straw
Stuart Gordon's films are excellent examples, if maybe a little extreme, of the world according to the horror industry. Like old traditional folklore - like »Hansel and Gretchen« - the stories are to set an example of what happens if you step outside 'normal' conventions. That women are exposed to most of the violence in pictures are quite simple. Men are, according to old standards, stronger on a physical level and uses their strength to either impress upon or to suppress women. It works at a mental state, like when Henry fonda shoots the little kid in the beginning of Harmonica you know that this is the bad guy and he has to die. Movies work that way, also the threat Candyman gives to Virginia Madsen in Candyman, that if she gives herself to him, a little child will be spared. He knows, as a man, which button to press and he takes advantage of the mother in her. Being audience and witness when she sacrifies herself to Candyman, even though we like her, we think she makes the right decision. It's her obligation to save the child. Even Ripley (Sigorney Weaver) in Aliens gets reduced to a 'mother' when she is jeopardizing her life saving Newt from the evil aliens. A man becomes a monster when he takes control over women or children. It's because of that man becomes the monster he is in horror movies. Management by fear, just like in reality. It doesn't really matter if the female is a whore or a madonna, it's when they are humiliated, physically or on a mental level, men become beasts. The two sexes can be equal both in status and financially, but in the movies someone has to be the weaker one so the film can work. Up to this time it happens to have been women who have drawn the shortest straw. For what reasons? I don't know. But if I may speak as the man I am, I would prefer to be candy for the audience rather than the male beast described in this article.
One hell of a topic!

by Christer Persson

Why does people wanna see real accidents, suicides, murders, mutilations, explotions, war atrocitys and naked flesh? I don´t have the answer, I just know that the subject of death and gruesome images has an impact on a lot of people. In public most people will say that they don´t watch that kind of "sick stuff", but if there wasn´t a demand after it, the films wouldn´t be produced. Just the same as people don´t want to admit in public that they watch porn, listen to Elton John, read poetry or really thinks that George Bush jr is one of the most capable presidents ever! The same is with this kind of movies. Many have seen at least one, but no one admits that they like it.

My reason to watch and write about these kind of movies is honest and simple. I´ve been a horrorbuff since childhood and in the eightees and early nightees I swapped crappy VHS-copies of splattermovies with a lot of people. One thing accured to me after a while. Each and every videolist I read from other swappers had their share of zombies, cannibals, monsters and the notorious Faces of Death. The most intriging thing about horrormovies for me (apart from hopefully being scared) was to admire the workmanship of the cameraman, director and foremost the F/X crew. So I kept clear of the mondomovies for years. Why watch the real thing? Later in life studying film at the local university I wrote an essey about one of my favoritemovies Cannibal Holocaust, in wich ways Ruggero Deodato mastery used different technicues to lure the audience to belive that the "film within the film" was real. After that essey I decided to focus on on mondomovies. The process of making the essay wasn´t easy, and I really challenged myself many times to watch some of the footage that appeared in the films I saw. Of course, a lot of the footage fake, but for every fake scene there is at least two real.

The subject matter of mondofilms may vary, from third world atrocitys, war footage, accidental footage of accidents, strange rites and of course a lot of nudity! From the innocent Mondo Cane via the awsame Mondo Topless to the grim Death Scenes, the mondomovies never ceaes to entertain, frighten and slap the viewer right in the face. From a personal standpoint, I rather be slapped in face by a pair of tits than an axe. But that´s just the kind of guy I am!

It´s been a while since I did stuff like this and the majority of the material of this page consits of old stuff. Being halfway to hell (I´m 35 years old) I still love movies and think that some of the things I´ve learnt thoughout the years very well might interest someone. I attended the university for 3 semesters and did learn much about film that really wasn´t interresting, and I also got to understand that every movie, even (place the worst film you ever saw here!) deserves the time to look at. Even though you might not see it, every film really has a lot of work behind it. Even though the guys behind the Bangbus-series may not spend as much money on F/X as George Lucas did in his "whats-their-name-now-again?" spacemovies, you can bet that they spend a lot of time to chase down girls and to make everything look "real". But both the spacemovies and the Bangbus movies are just real as the alligatorattack in Faces of Death. So, how does a filmmaker make you belive that their vision is something to be belived? That´s one of the things that interesed me back at the university, and though you might not belive it, books really are a god source to knowledge! Or, perhaps, you can take the time and read some of the stuff here! You never know, you might read something you like!



What is a mondofilm? What are the components?

by Christer Persson

Well, the exception confirms the rule, but there are some components that are in, if not all, but most of the films. In this article about the mondogenre, I have chosen to include the following components that a mondofilm can be created from:
Compilation
Education
Exploitation
Narrator
Re-enactments
Snuff
Reality TV

The genre called »mondo« wasn't created out of nothing in the sixties, so this article will start with a short description of the earliest films of sensation, the movies that influenced the mondogenre one way or another. Then we will get into the mondofilms, which will be examined through the different components they can consist of. Towards the end of the text I'll discuss the phenomenon of snuffmovies, the mondofilms way into our television via the reality shows and finally some personal reflections from me. This is by no means a definite article on the subject, but since the section mondo has appeared it can be helpful to you, the reader, to get a short description of the genre and some of the terms since there will, in time, appear reviews of several mondofilms.


Cinema Mondo
Ever since the birth of the motion pictures the issues of accidents and death have been present. Even though mondo pictures are a quite new phenomenon as a genre, the films have baffled audiences for a little more than a century.

The early sensationfilms
What we call mondopictues has their roots in the earliest of the documentary films the Lumiere brothers made in 1895. The first films contained trivial happenings like Baby eats breakfast, A train arrives at the Station and A boat leaving the harbor, and was nothing more than a minute of pure reality. But if the media was going to live into the twentieth century, photographers were sent all over the world to film sequences that would charm, enlighten and thrill the demanding audience. So, captured on film was royalties, celebrities and more obscure stuff like beheadings, hangings and one or two hardcore film was also produced, and the audience was, at least for a while, happy.

One of the earliest examples of mondofilm, in my opinion, is J. Stuart Blackton and Albert E. Smith's film about the battle of Santiago Bay. These gentlemen where among the first to carry a camera into battle and did successfully capture Theodore Roosevelt's attack on San Juan Hill in the Spanish-American war on Cuba in 1898. But safe at home in New York they read in the newspapers that a big battle had been fought in Santiago Bay. Annoyed that they had missed this historical battle, they came up with a brilliant idea. They bought some books about ships, some cigars, and gunpowder and turned an upside-down table filled with water into Santiago Bay! They had cut out ships from the book, and pulled them into the scene with strings. A local boy helped blowing cigarsmoke into the set and gunpowder was fired. This innovative film, together with the not-so-great quality of the film stock, fooled a whole world and this was probably the first re-enactment in cinema history. As time went by, the audience found a new genre to love, the travelogue. The travelogue was documents from, let's say, Africa and Papua New Guinea. Exotic beasts side by side with the wild bushman, and if you where real lucky, the bushman could also practice the noble art of cannibalism. Several of the daring and in some cases foolish, photographers made this into an art. Some of the finest films where made by Osa and Martin Johnsson with films with exiting titles like Head hunters of the South Sea and Among the Cannibal Isles of the South Pacific. The crux of the biscuit for many was that traveling across the world cost an awful lot of money, but that they REALLY wanted to cash in on these kinds of films. And why not? Many big cities have a zoo where you can film some animals and later cut into some exotic tale. Even big events like the Boer war in Africa and riots in China were produced and filmed in Europe and America. And no one seemed to care. The producers certainly got their money back and the audience got the action they craved. And this went on, it really never stopped, but it wasn't really until 1962 it all took a new turn

Mondo Cane
Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi«s unequalled Mondo Cane was released 1962 and new standards for the genre now to be known as mondo were set. Mondo Cane was, and still is, a hip, cool quilt over the bizarre, weird and beautiful things going on on this grave earth. With an Oscarwinning themesong, the beautiful photography and a new thinking in editing, Mondo Cane became a well-deserved success over the world. And with such a success it was only a matter of time before cash-ins was going to be produced. What makes Mondo Cane such a joy to see lies in it's editing. The filmmakers have made a textual flow throughout the film and the audience is guided from one corner of the world to the next in matter of seconds. Like the scene from Pasadena Dog Cemetery, where pathetic celebrities' dead animals lies, and after some heartbreaking material the film swiftly moves to Taiwan and is introduced to the famous dish, roast dog! The whole film works in this fashion and almost unnoticed changes the subjects from the cute to the bizarre. A classic in every sense. It's interesting to see what an impact the name »mondo« instantly made. Mondo is Italian for »world« and Mondo Cane translates something like »a dog's world«. Its cameras sniff in the alleys and gutters of the world, filmed from an animals point-of-view, the media for the underdog so to say. So not only a movietitle, but also the name for a whole genre. The name Mondo quickly became an institution, and still is after the 37 seven years that has passed. This was the swinging sixties and sex was the major subject for many of the films. Even though they all had their share of bizarre shock material. With the commercial success of a certain Deep Throat everything changed again. No longer could the mondofilm lure the audience with topless native women, now it was time to turn up the volume to eleven, if you know what I mean. The last taboo, which had been involved since the birth of cinema, got uglier, grislier and in full color: death. If sex was out of reach at the moment, death always sell tickets. So at the end of the seventies the infamous Faces of Death came and even outgrossed Star Wars at the box-office in Japan according to some sources. And with the VCR becoming a household item in the eighties, the video compilation films like Death Scenes and Traces of Death where produced.

Compilation
A mondofilm is in almost every case, a compilationfilm. It's made of little fragments from here and there. Sometimes it spans over a continent and sometimes over a specific subject. Sometimes the producers / directors has made all the material themselves, and sometimes the films are made out of old news coverage and stuff like that. Nick Bougas eerie Death Scenes are a bit different in the genre. Filled with some of the most violent pictures ever, it never seems to exploit its subject. And containing almost only black and white stills, it's the reminiscent of Kenneth Angers book Hollywood Babylon. One of the more watchable unwatchable movies ever made. The title is in this genre very useful to understand the movie's content, and you don't need much imagination to understand titles like Shocking Africa, The Killing of America, Death Scenes and so forth.

Education
Another aspect of the mondo genre is that it really wants the audience to learn something. With its almost ethnographical documentation about cultural differences, sexual habits and different ways of dying these movies seem to say something. The only real difference between mondo films and the old travelogue is merely that the mondofilms are more explicit and does not chicken out when the going gets tough. Tough in an other way is the Swedish Lucky People Center International, which is something so unusual as a happy, dance provoking mondofilm. Much like Mondo Cane, Lucky People Center International travels around the world, talking to different people about, life, death and the global rhythm that seems to exist. With its pumping soundtrack, beautiful images, slick editing and original individuals interviewed, it's the most original mondo film made since Mondo Cane. Usually though the genre has nothing to do with dance, except maybe, with the dance of death.

When it comes to education films, it's difficult not to mention the old Drivers Ed films that where produced in America from the fifties and forward. Photographer Dick Wyman followed ambulances and shot some real haunting scenes with corpses burned to crisps, humans crushed into a pile of flesh and blood and things difficult to explain in text. He edited the scenes into films with titles like Wheels of Tragedy, Option to Live, The Third Killer and the most famous one, Signal 30. This films where to be used to educate the American youth into being better drivers and understand that speed kills! And when seeing these hard-hitting films, some lives might have been spared, because the images are grim, and unfortunately, real. Several scenes from these films has been seen in mondofilms, sometimes for pure speculation and for its blood and guts quality, and Nick Bougas has included Signal 30 into his Death Scenes 2.

Exploitation
Many of the sequences that are incorporated into these films, especially those produced from the seventies, are of such remorseless character that they never, except in some isolated cases, have been shown on TV. This is an interesting aspect of the genre as a whole, because even though some of the material offend the audience, it's one of the few channels these kinds of atrocities have to be shown. Much of the material are from the third world and these films has more than once been called racist, because of the colonial look of the films. The happy exotic look that was in the early films has changed into a troublesome look, and the best example of this is Jacopetti and Prosperi's Africa Addio. Africa Addio was from the start going to be Mondo Cane 3, but they found themselves trapped in a civil war and were the only western journalists left. They documented executions, riots and horrifying other scenes. They became accused by a fellow Italian journalist for having postponed an execution when the light wasn't right, but the allegation was never confirmed. For the western audiences its also safe to witness actions that take place in an other culture, and of course from the safe sofa at home or in the collective room of the cinema. Certainly is many scenes pure exploitation and outdrawn to extreme, but are nevertheless a reminder that the world is not a happy one.

Narrator
When the films now are made of fragments and bits and pieces, a narrator is needed to guide the audience throughout the different setpieces. I guess we've all watched the macabre appearance of Dr. Francis B. Gröss from the first three Faces of Death films and wondered what the hell the filmmakers thought when hiring weird actor Michael Carr as the good old doctor. Would you like to be examined by this man? Yep, thought so. Anyway, besides that freak, prominent actors like Orson Wells, Glenda Jackson and Cameron Mitchell (?) has made their share with voice-overs. The best choice of narrator must go to Nick Bougas and the first installment of Death Scenes, where the late Dr. Anton Szandor LaVey (or rather voice-of-Satan in this case?) is speaking in a soft voice over the hundred + black and white photographs.

Re-enactments
What seems to be the most bizarre with this genre though, is that how grim and bloody the authentic scenes in the films are, a lot of re-enactments are still being utilized. Why this is the case with numerous scenes in the mondo films is difficult to answer, but I think it lies partly in that many of the authentic material is so swift and fast that the viewer never has the time to really understand what happens. Sometimes the narrator can give the background to what's happening, and sometimes the scene is repeated over and over again so the viewer have time to put himself into the action. So, when making a re-enactment the filmmakers can give you the whole picture so to say. It not only becomes a horrifying part in the film, but the audience also get a beginning, a middle and an end. In the classical Hollywood formula, the film has a clear-cut problem that has to be solved, and it ends with victory or defeat. Of course in the mondo fims it usually never ends with victory. By using this the audience has the time to put themselves into the scene, and gets a chance to themselves figure out how it's going to end. With authentic material, people leaping from burning buildings, being crushed under cars often happens too fast for the human eye to comprehend what's going to happen. When speaking with people, who have seen mondofilms, they often talk about the re-enactment's, because it was those scenes that made sense to them. Like the alligator scene in Faces of Death. If you know just a little bit how a fiction film is made, no way you're fooled by this pathetic re-enactment, but the viewer that's not used to this kind of films, gets carried away, and maybe, just maybe closes their eyes when the horror begins. As Lars Von Trier says in one of his final words in The Kingdom, »Its behind the closed eyelid the horror begins«. The faked material in the mondogenre is a too long list to mention, and remain one of the most fascinating aspects of the genre.

Snuff
Are mondo film snuffmovies? The simple answer to that question is, no! A snuffmovie is a commercial production with actors that are killed for the movie. How grim the material in the films are and that real deaths are in them doesn't automatically make them snuffmovies. According to some sources there are a lot of snuff films produced, especially in Asia, and according to some there has never been one made, that they're only a myth. Feature films like Ruggero Deodatos masterpiece Cannibal Holocaust has always been surrounded with rumors of human killing. The real killing in the film are the ones conducted on animals, but no human was killed. The latest films to have sort of snuff tattooed onto them the Japanese Guinea Pig films, and foremost Flower of Flesh and Blood. An hour of disemboweling and torture it's not for the fainthearted, but is in fact a fiction film were no one got hurt or injured. Not even the chicken! When so-called actor Charlie Sheen saw it some years ago he got scared and gave the film to the F.B.I who instantly started an investigation. With the help of a certain Chas Balun and some f/x guys the film was exposed as fake, and on its release on Laserdisc a »making of« was included for good measure. In 1999 in Sweden the very same film was turned over to the police and a lawyer claimed that he really thought it was for real, and that he »Iâve seen part of it. I couldnât see the whole film. It was too horrible«. It's clear that he was not among the ones the filmmakers made this film for - or?

Reality TV
Thanks to commercial TV, we now get mondo films delivered right into our homes. Not under the title mondo, but disguised as The worlds scariest police shoot-outs, Eyewitness video, Cops and the list goes on. These shows incorporate and utilize the very same material and cinematic psychology as the mondo films, only not as graphic as their cousins at the cinema. But it's all there and for once, it's all real. The very same people that rant about the dangers of violent movies and who fear the potentially snuff film, goes home at night and would most certainly watch these shows because it's real and it's happening out there! It's a bit confusing that a whole genre of films a generally dismissed as being exploative and dangerous, while these shows visit us in our homes on a daily basis and there's almost never any public discussion about them.

Do you see something you like?
Why are these films being produced? There is only one answer to the question and that is that people want to see them. People like to watch dangerous things at a safe place. To stretch their boundaries and a curiosity about the grim nature of human beings. Sometimes it doesn't really matter if the scene is a re-enactment or not, it's more a question how justified it is to see them. The films' priority is to show sensational documents and to shock to audience. This cynical and misanthropically way of filmmmaking has made that many viewers turned their back to these films. And when that happens, some people are drawn to it for that very reason. Since I myself has seen one or two horrormovies, when swapping films I've noticed that almost every list I got, had one, two or more films from the mondogenre, It seems like the horrorfans, who already are at the cultural bottom has adopted these films. And in a society where stupid clowns like Marlilyn Manson can get famous, it shouldn't surprise me if these films will have a new peak in popularity. But what does you feel when watching, let's say, an autopsy? Are you getting aroused? Feeling sick? Do you feel fascination? Is it really justified to film a human body when it is stripped off its last intregity (the skin)? Stan Brakhage's The act of seeing with ones own eyes are a good example of this. He has filmed an pathology at work and with no way to look away the audience must see every detail in his work, and Franju's Blood of the Beasts which show the daily work at a French slaughterhouse, where the butchers sing about the sea, while standing in huge pools of blood, is bizarre to watch. What these two films have in common though, is that even though the filmmaker would have been there or not, the work would had gone on. They merely register what's happening, opposed to the allegations of Jacopetti and Prosperi in the above mentioned Africa Addio.

One thing is sure, these films and its content will always continue to fascinate people. With the spreading of the world wide web (the very place where you're reading this), films and images will be available to anyone who wants to, and you have to ask you self one thing, punk, do you feel interested?

Some Related Films

Act Of Seeing With One's Own Eyes, The Stan Brakhage, USA 1971
Africa Addio, Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi, Italy 1966
... aka Farewell Africa
... aka Africa: Blood and guts
America Exposed: The Motion Picture, Romano Vanderbes, USA 1991
Among the Cannibal Isles of the South Pacific, Martin and Osa Johnson, USA 1918
Baby eats breakfast, Louis Lumiére, France 1895
... aka Le Repas
Battle of Santiago Bay, Albert E. Smith and J. Stuart Blackton, USA 1897
Cannibal Holocaust, Ruggero Deodato, Italy 1979
Death Scenes, Nick Bougas, USA 1989
Death Scenes 2, Nick Bougas, USA 1992
Death Scenes 3, Nick Bougas, USA 1992
Deep Throat, Gerard Damiano, USA 1972
... aka Långt ner i halsen
Faces of Death, Conan Le Cilaire, USA 1979
Faces of Death 2, Conan Le Cilaire, USA 1981
Faces of Death 3, Conan Le Cilaire, USA 1985
Faces of Death 4, Conan Le Cilaire, USA 1990
Killing of America, The, Sheldon Renan 1981
Late Great Planet Earth, The, Robert Amrem, USA 1976
Lucky People Center International, Erik Pauser and Johan Söderberg, Sweden 1998
Mondo Cane, Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi, Italy 1962
... aka A Dog's Life
... aka Mondo Cane No 1
... aka Det grymma livet
Mondo Cane 2, Gualtiero Jacopetti and Franco Prosperi, Italy 1963
... aka Mondo Pazzo
... akka Mondo Cane No 2
Mondo Cane 3, Stevio Massi, Italy 1988
... aka Mondo Cane Oggi: L'Orrore Continua
Mondo Cane 4, Gabrielle Crisanti, Italy 1988
... aka Mondo Cane 2000: L'Incredibile
Mondo Freudo, R.L. Frost, USA 1966
... aka Mondo Sexuality
Mondo Magic, Alfredo and Angelo Castiglioni and Guido Guerrasio, Italy 1975
... aka Magica Nuda
Options to Live, Dick Wyman, USA 1979
Savage Man Savage Beast, Antonio Climati and Mario Morra, Italy 1975
... aka Ultime Grida Dalla Savana: La Grande Caccia
... aka Savage Temtation
... aka The Great Hunting
... aka Zumbalah
Shocking Africa, Angelo and Alfredo Castiglioni, Italy 1982
... aka Africa Dolce E Selvaggia
... aka The Last Savage part 2
... aka Faces of Pain
Signal 30, Dick Wyman, USA 1960
Simba, the King of Beasts, Martin and Osa Johnson, USA 1928
Sweet and savage, Antonio Climati and Mario Morra, Italy 1983
... aka Dolce E Salvaggio
... aka Mundo Dulce Y Cruel
... aka Caramba!
Taboos of the World, Romolo Marcellini, Italy 1963
... aka I Tabœ
... aka Taboos Around the World
... aka Tabu
Third Killer, The, Dick Wyman, USA 1960
This is America, Romano Vanderbees, USA 1976
... aka Jabberwalk
... aka Crazy Ridiculos American People
This Violent World, Antonio Climati and Mario Morra, Italy 1978
... aka Savage World
... aka Monod Diavolo
... aka Savanna Violenta
... aka Savage man, Savage Beast 2
... aka Mondo Violence
Traces of Death, Damon Fox, USA 1993
Traces of Death 2, Damon Fox, USA 1994
Train arrives at the station, Louis Lumiére, France 1895
Wheels of Tragedy, Dick Wyman, USA 1960