5

L.A.Noir: The Lloyd Hopkins Trilogy – “Blood on the Moon”, “Because the Night”, “Suicide Hill”

Posted by Notcot on Jul 7, 2010 in Noir

Average Rating: 3.5 / 5 (15 Reviews)

Product Description
A single-volume edition of three of the novels featuring Detective Sergeant Lloyd Hopkins of Los Angeles. The first involves the apparently random killings of 20 women, the second a multiple murder committed with a pre-Civil-War revolver, and the third a conspiracy of police corruption.

  • New
  • Mint Condition
  • Dispatch same day for order received before 12 noon
  • Guaranteed packaging
  • No quibbles returns

L.A.Noir: The Lloyd Hopkins Trilogy – “Blood on the Moon”, “Because the Night”, “Suicide Hill”

Buy Now for £7.82

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

 
1

Blood Tea and Red String

Posted by Notcot on Jun 1, 2010 in Cult Film

Average Rating: 5.0 / 5 (1 Reviews)

Blood Tea and Red String

Buy Now for £9.46

Tags: , , , , , , ,

 
5

Little Shop of Horrors

Posted by Notcot on May 10, 2010 in Cult Film

Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (9 Reviews)

Amazon.co.uk Review
Even by Roger Corman’s thrifty standards, The Little Shop of Horrors was a masterpiece of micro-budget movie-making. Scripted in a week and shot, according to Corman, in two days and one night, it made use of a pre-existing store-front set that serves as the florist’s shop where most of the action takes place. Our hero is shambling loser Seymour Krelboined, sad-sack assistant at Mushnick’s skid-row flower shop and who is hopelessly in love with Audrey, his fellow worker. Threatened with the sack by Mushnick, Seymour brings in a strange plant he’s been breeding at home, hoping it’ll attract the customers. It does, and the store starts to prosper, but Seymour is horrified to discover that the only thing the plant will thrive on is blood, fresh, human blood at that.

The sets are pasteboard, the acting is way over the top, and altogether Little Shop is an unabashed high-camp spoof, not to be taken seriously for a second. Even so, Corman notes that this was the movie “that established me as an underground legend”. Charles Griffith, the film’s screenwriter, plays the voice of the insatiable plant (“FEED ME!”), and billed way down the cast list is a very young Jack Nicholson in a bizarre, giggling cameo as Wilbur Force, a masochistic dental patient demanding ever more pain. The film’s cult status got it turned into an off-Broadway hit musical in the 1980s, with a great pastiche doo-wop score by Alan Menken, which was subsequently filmed in 1986. The musical remake is a lot of fun, but it misses the ramshackle charm of the original.

On the DVD: Little Shop of Horrors on disc does not even boast a trailer, just some minimal onscreen background info about the production. The clean transfer, 4:3 ratio, and digitally remastered mono sound faithfully recapture Corman’s bargain-basement production values. –Philip Kemp

Little Shop of Horrors

Buy Now for £51.64

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

 
5

The Little Shop of Horrors

Posted by Notcot on May 8, 2010 in Cult Film

Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (9 Reviews)

Amazon.co.uk Review
Even by Roger Corman’s thrifty standards, The Little Shop of Horrors was a masterpiece of micro-budget movie-making. Scripted in a week and shot, according to Corman, in two days and one night, it made use of a pre-existing store-front set that serves as the florist’s shop where most of the action takes place. Our hero is shambling loser Seymour Krelboined, sad-sack assistant at Mushnick’s skid-row flower shop and who is hopelessly in love with Audrey, his fellow worker. Threatened with the sack by Mushnick, Seymour brings in a strange plant he’s been breeding at home, hoping it’ll attract the customers. It does, and the store starts to prosper, but Seymour is horrified to discover that the only thing the plant will thrive on is blood, fresh, human blood at that.

The sets are pasteboard, the acting is way over the top, and altogether Little Shop is an unabashed high-camp spoof, not to be taken seriously for a second. Even so, Corman notes that this was the movie “that established me as an underground legend”. Charles Griffith, the film’s screenwriter, plays the voice of the insatiable plant (“FEED ME!”), and billed way down the cast list is a very young Jack Nicholson in a bizarre, giggling cameo as Wilbur Force, a masochistic dental patient demanding ever more pain. The film’s cult status got it turned into an off-Broadway hit musical in the 1980s, with a great pastiche doo-wop score by Alan Menken, which was subsequently filmed in 1986. The musical remake is a lot of fun, but it misses the ramshackle charm of the original.

On the DVD: Little Shop of Horrors on disc does not even boast a trailer, just some minimal onscreen background info about the production. The clean transfer, 4:3 ratio, and digitally remastered mono sound faithfully recapture Corman’s bargain-basement production values. –Philip Kemp

The Little Shop of Horrors

Buy Now for £10.15

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

 
1

Blood

Posted by Notcot on Apr 18, 2010 in Cult Film

Average Rating: 5.0 / 5 (1 Reviews)

Blood

Buy Now for £9.98

Tags: , , ,

 
5

Blood Noir: Anita Blake Vampire Hunter 15

Posted by Notcot on Mar 27, 2010 in Noir

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

 
0

Blood Noir

Posted by Notcot on Mar 27, 2010 in Noir

Average Rating: / 5 ( Reviews)

Blood Noir

Buy Now for £5.99

Tags: , , , ,

Copyright © 2024 Notcot All rights reserved. Theme by Laptop Geek. Site by I Want This Website. | Privacy Policy.