Alex Cox on Why He’s Directing a ‘Repo Man’ Sequel: ‘Everything Has Changed and Nothing Has Changed’
Alex Cox’s 1984 “Repo Man” was a Reagan-era satire about consumerism and the Atomic Age. Its punk rock soundtrack transformed it into a cult hit, but its funny and strange combination of sci-fi, workplace comedy, and the fear of nuclear annihilation made it an enduring classic.
Forty years later, Cox will revisit the repo man and the world of bland, generic grocery store clerks stocking and selling “Food” and “Beer” day in and day out. He has written and will direct a sequel, “Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer,” and he told IndieWire why this film will embody “the repo world of 2024.”
Cox said “The Wages of Beer” will take place in a world of self-driving cars and an even more pressing threat of global destruction. “The advent of incredible technology means, for the repo man, that everything has changed — and nothing has changed,” he said via email.
Forty years later, Cox will revisit the repo man and the world of bland, generic grocery store clerks stocking and selling “Food” and “Beer” day in and day out. He has written and will direct a sequel, “Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer,” and he told IndieWire why this film will embody “the repo world of 2024.”
Cox said “The Wages of Beer” will take place in a world of self-driving cars and an even more pressing threat of global destruction. “The advent of incredible technology means, for the repo man, that everything has changed — and nothing has changed,” he said via email.
- 2/15/2024
- by Brian Welk
- Indiewire
Marking an incredible escape from director jail, Alex Cox is ramping up his first feature in seven years (and perhaps the first well-financed project in 20-plus). At this year’s Berlinale and European Film Market he’ll shop Repo Man 2: The Wages of Beer, which continues directly from his 1984 cult classic as Otto, having aged a total of 90 minutes, boards “his trusty 1967 Chevy Malibu to journey across the infinities of time and space.” [Variety]
Cox has mostly laid low in recent years, directing the odd microbudget project here and there––among them a spiritual sequel, Repo Chick, that looks more like a Tim and Eric sketch than studio production––making this return to feature filmmaking quite notable. Though primarily known for Repo Man or Sid and Nancy, his filmography’s studded with treasures: Walker, Straight to Hell, and (personal favorite) Three Businessmen boast a punk-with-classicism sensibility that is simply non pareil.
Cox has mostly laid low in recent years, directing the odd microbudget project here and there––among them a spiritual sequel, Repo Chick, that looks more like a Tim and Eric sketch than studio production––making this return to feature filmmaking quite notable. Though primarily known for Repo Man or Sid and Nancy, his filmography’s studded with treasures: Walker, Straight to Hell, and (personal favorite) Three Businessmen boast a punk-with-classicism sensibility that is simply non pareil.
- 2/15/2024
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage
Courtney Love said she was offered the role of Janis Joplin in a movie about the classic rock musician’s life. Here’s what Love said about Joplin and some of the Hole singer’s acting highlights.
(L-r) Courtney Love and Janis Joplin | Darren Gerrish/WireImage; Paul Ryan/Michael Ochs Archives Courtney Love said she was chosen to play Janis Joplin in a movie
Singer Courtney Love revealed she was once offered to play Janis Joplin in a movie while discussing the possibility of a biopic about her late husband, Kurt Cobain.
“There was talk of a biopic a few years back,” she told HuffPost in July 2013. “I think I changed my mind about it, but I did do a deal with Universal.” Love named some of the actors considered to portray her in the film. “Scarlett Johansson was into it; I was also into Michelle Williams. These were the...
(L-r) Courtney Love and Janis Joplin | Darren Gerrish/WireImage; Paul Ryan/Michael Ochs Archives Courtney Love said she was chosen to play Janis Joplin in a movie
Singer Courtney Love revealed she was once offered to play Janis Joplin in a movie while discussing the possibility of a biopic about her late husband, Kurt Cobain.
“There was talk of a biopic a few years back,” she told HuffPost in July 2013. “I think I changed my mind about it, but I did do a deal with Universal.” Love named some of the actors considered to portray her in the film. “Scarlett Johansson was into it; I was also into Michelle Williams. These were the...
- 2/12/2023
- by Grace Turney
- Showbiz Cheat Sheet
Click here to read the full article.
Cinematographer Tom Richmond, whose résumé included work on such films as Stand and Deliver, Killing Zoe, Little Odessa, Slums of Beverly Hills and Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist, has died. He was 72.
Richmond died Friday in New York City, Anthony Jannelli, head of cinematography at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, told The Hollywood Reporter (Richmond also taught at NYU). The cause of death was not immediately available.
Richmond, who was the director of photography on nearly four dozen features, also shot Keenan Ivory Wayans’ I’m Gonna Git You Sucka (1988), Scott Silver’s Johns (1996), Rob Zombie’s House of 1,000 Corpses (2003) and Todd Solondz’s Palindromes (2004).
He won the best cinematography prize at Sundance in 2006 for his work on Right at Your Door, a drama about a terrorist attack involving chemical bombs.
He received Spirit Award nominations for Stand & Deliver...
Cinematographer Tom Richmond, whose résumé included work on such films as Stand and Deliver, Killing Zoe, Little Odessa, Slums of Beverly Hills and Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist, has died. He was 72.
Richmond died Friday in New York City, Anthony Jannelli, head of cinematography at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, told The Hollywood Reporter (Richmond also taught at NYU). The cause of death was not immediately available.
Richmond, who was the director of photography on nearly four dozen features, also shot Keenan Ivory Wayans’ I’m Gonna Git You Sucka (1988), Scott Silver’s Johns (1996), Rob Zombie’s House of 1,000 Corpses (2003) and Todd Solondz’s Palindromes (2004).
He won the best cinematography prize at Sundance in 2006 for his work on Right at Your Door, a drama about a terrorist attack involving chemical bombs.
He received Spirit Award nominations for Stand & Deliver...
- 8/3/2022
- by Mike Barnes
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
This piece has been updated after publication with comments from Keith Gordon. — Editor Director of photography Tom Richmond, who shot numerous seminal features that launched many directorial careers, died yesterday in New York City. He was 72. Tom’s career began in the early ’80s. After graduating Harvard with an undergraduate photography degree and then going on to study at AFI, he worked second camera on Alex Cox’s Repo Man and was camera operator on Oliver Stone’s Salvador, among other credits. After several low-budget comedy and horror films, Tom was director of photography on two higher-profile films: Cox’s Straight to Hell […]
The post Remembering Director of Photography Tom Richmond, 1950-2022 first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
The post Remembering Director of Photography Tom Richmond, 1950-2022 first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
- 7/30/2022
- by Scott Macaulay
- Filmmaker Magazine-Director Interviews
This piece has been updated after publication with comments from Keith Gordon. — Editor Director of photography Tom Richmond, who shot numerous seminal features that launched many directorial careers, died yesterday in New York City. He was 72. Tom’s career began in the early ’80s. After graduating Harvard with an undergraduate photography degree and then going on to study at AFI, he worked second camera on Alex Cox’s Repo Man and was camera operator on Oliver Stone’s Salvador, among other credits. After several low-budget comedy and horror films, Tom was director of photography on two higher-profile films: Cox’s Straight to Hell […]
The post Remembering Director of Photography Tom Richmond, 1950-2022 first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
The post Remembering Director of Photography Tom Richmond, 1950-2022 first appeared on Filmmaker Magazine.
- 7/30/2022
- by Scott Macaulay
- Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
Ozzy Osbourne unveiled a new behind-the-scenes video that delves into the making of his new video for “Under the Graveyard.”
The semi-autobiographical clip stars Jack Kilmer as a young Ozzy, who, in 1979, goes on a brutal bender in a West Hollywood hotel and is dragged back from the abyss by Sharon Osbourne, played by Jessica Barden. “He was strung out after Black Sabbath — I think the band fired him — and then I think he was just ready to give up on life,” Kilmer says in the new behind-the-scenes clip. “That...
The semi-autobiographical clip stars Jack Kilmer as a young Ozzy, who, in 1979, goes on a brutal bender in a West Hollywood hotel and is dragged back from the abyss by Sharon Osbourne, played by Jessica Barden. “He was strung out after Black Sabbath — I think the band fired him — and then I think he was just ready to give up on life,” Kilmer says in the new behind-the-scenes clip. “That...
- 12/24/2019
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Ozzy Osbourne recreates his fight for sobriety in the new video for “Under the Graveyard,” the first single from the rocker’s forthcoming album, Ordinary Man, out next year.
Directed by Jonas Akerlund, the semi-autobiographical clip stars Jack Kilmer as a young Ozzy, who, in 1979, sneaks away to a West Hollywood hotel where he spirals into an abyss of drugs, booze and sex. At rock bottom, though, Sharon Osbourne (played by Jessica Barden) shows up and guides Ozzy back to himself even as the experience of going cold turkey proves...
Directed by Jonas Akerlund, the semi-autobiographical clip stars Jack Kilmer as a young Ozzy, who, in 1979, sneaks away to a West Hollywood hotel where he spirals into an abyss of drugs, booze and sex. At rock bottom, though, Sharon Osbourne (played by Jessica Barden) shows up and guides Ozzy back to himself even as the experience of going cold turkey proves...
- 12/19/2019
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Kathy Griffin and Andy Cohen are embroiled in feud that has left longtime fans of both stars shocked.
The drama erupted at the end of last week, when Cohen quipped that he didn’t know who Griffin was, which led the comedian to fire back, alleging Cohen asked her to do cocaine before appearing on his talk show, Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen. (Cohen denied the accusation.)
Now, a source tells People that Griffin didn’t always see eye-to-eye with Cohen during their time working together at Bravo.
“Over the years, she disliked him but they weren’t in any ‘feud,...
The drama erupted at the end of last week, when Cohen quipped that he didn’t know who Griffin was, which led the comedian to fire back, alleging Cohen asked her to do cocaine before appearing on his talk show, Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen. (Cohen denied the accusation.)
Now, a source tells People that Griffin didn’t always see eye-to-eye with Cohen during their time working together at Bravo.
“Over the years, she disliked him but they weren’t in any ‘feud,...
- 10/30/2017
- by Aurelie Corinthios
- PEOPLE.com
Let’s just agree that last year’s presidential candidates are handling this Puerto Rico crisis pretty differently. Here’s what (2016 loser) Hillary Clinton just tweeted in support of capital city San Juan’s mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz, who has said she’s received very little federal aid since Hurricane Maria devastated the region: Don’t let anyone make you feel alone. We are with you and Puerto Rico. https://t.co/CxI1eRXJ8L — Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) September 30, 2017 Also Read: Lin-Manuel Miranda Tells Trump He's 'Going Straight to Hell' Over Puerto Rico Tweets And then there is the big victor’s latest,...
- 9/30/2017
- by Tony Maglio
- The Wrap
The podcast returns with Joakim being joined by Ian Schultz to discuss Alex Cox’s Repo Man.
From Masters of Cinema:
Arguably the defining cult film of the Reagan era, the feature debut of Alex Cox (Sid & Nancy, Walker, Straight to Hell) is a genre-busting mash-up of atomic-age science fiction, post-punk anarchism, and conspiracy paranoia, all shot through with heavy doses of deadpan humour and offbeat philosophy.
After quitting his dead-end supermarket job, young punk Otto (Emilio Estevez) is initiated as a “repo man” after a chance encounter with automobile repossessor Bud (Harry Dean Stanton). An illicit, high-voltage life follows, including an adrenalised search for a mysterious ‘64 Chevy Malibu loaded with radioactive – and extragalactic – cargo… With an iconic soundtrack (Iggy Pop, Black Flag, Suicidal Tendencies), stunning Robby Müller cinematography, and iconoclastic direction, Repo Man remains one of the great debuts of the 1980s.
Subscription options:
Subscribe to the main CriterionCast...
From Masters of Cinema:
Arguably the defining cult film of the Reagan era, the feature debut of Alex Cox (Sid & Nancy, Walker, Straight to Hell) is a genre-busting mash-up of atomic-age science fiction, post-punk anarchism, and conspiracy paranoia, all shot through with heavy doses of deadpan humour and offbeat philosophy.
After quitting his dead-end supermarket job, young punk Otto (Emilio Estevez) is initiated as a “repo man” after a chance encounter with automobile repossessor Bud (Harry Dean Stanton). An illicit, high-voltage life follows, including an adrenalised search for a mysterious ‘64 Chevy Malibu loaded with radioactive – and extragalactic – cargo… With an iconic soundtrack (Iggy Pop, Black Flag, Suicidal Tendencies), stunning Robby Müller cinematography, and iconoclastic direction, Repo Man remains one of the great debuts of the 1980s.
Subscription options:
Subscribe to the main CriterionCast...
- 10/6/2015
- by Tom Jennings
- CriterionCast
Dear Monday mornings: You go straight to hell. No stops. No detours. Straight to hell! And we will see you there, you punctual a--hole. Love, Everyone The first morning of the work week after two days of sleeping in, doing what you want and probably not wearing pants is a giant sack of terrible. If Monday were a human being in our office, we would be sending it passive aggressive emails and stealing its lunch. Yeah, we're cold stone bitches when it comes to Monday. Sometimes it's hard to describe the despair, the pain, the utter exhaustion that greets you when your alarm goes off on Monday (more like mon-die, right?!). We have just the thing for you. And since your friends are...
- 10/5/2015
- E! Online
Iconic indie filmmaker Alex Cox, best known for his cult hits "Repo Man," "Sid and Nancy" and "Straight to Hell," has turned to Indiegogo to raise money for his latest project, "Tombstone Rashomon," a re-telling of the Gunfight at the Ok Corral in "Rashomon"- style. Veteran special effects supervisor Phil Tippett ("The Twilight Saga") and screenwriter Rudy Wurlitzer ("Two-Lane Blacktop") have also signed onboard for the project. Read More: Attention, Filmmakers: 4 Tips to Help you Connect with Your Audience and Build Your Brand Cox is aiming to raise $200,000 to produce the project, which will be released as a five episode-long web series which will form a complete film. "I was thinking it would be a conventional western, but Rudy [Wurlitzer] wants to give it a science fiction angle -- from the perspective of time-traveling women historians from the future. They'll time-travel back in time to film at...
- 8/31/2015
- by Paula Bernstein
- Indiewire
Enough with the talking about Adam's drinking. Is America's Next Top Model grabbing at straws for any kind of drama they can eek out of this group? And here we go again about Chantelle not fitting in. I admit these are real American issues -- alcoholism and isolation -- but I prefer a focus on the modeling, the clothing, the makeovers, the real life sacrifices for the craft, and the photo shoots which turn semi-regular looking faces into gods and goddesses. Perhaps I'm in the minority, but I have reason to believe I'm not.
So, this installment is called "Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire: You're Going Straight to Hell." Or, wait a minute, that's just my own title for it. The CW calls Antm's 12th episode, "The Girl Who Gets Caught in a Lie." During panel last week, Miss J. Alexander said he'd heard that Chantelle was...
So, this installment is called "Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire: You're Going Straight to Hell." Or, wait a minute, that's just my own title for it. The CW calls Antm's 12th episode, "The Girl Who Gets Caught in a Lie." During panel last week, Miss J. Alexander said he'd heard that Chantelle was...
- 11/14/2014
- by editor@buddytv.com
- buddytv.com
America's best horror-punk band, Grave Robber, has been asked by Canada's "Feed the Children" campaign to compose the theme song for the new "Hunger Haunts" program. Getting a jump on the Halloween season, the song and a lyric video have been released!
The Hunger Haunts program is a series of sponsored commercial haunted attractions during this year's Halloween season to raise money and awareness for hungry kids.
The "Hunger Haunts" track will be used for radio and TV commercials as well as online to promote the program. While there's not much at the official link right now, the site will be updated soon with tons of info about what houses support the program.
In the meantime, Grave Robber is putting the finishing touches on its next full-length album, Straight to Hell, due to be released via iTunes and most other online download sites on October 7th. "Hunger Haunts" will also...
The Hunger Haunts program is a series of sponsored commercial haunted attractions during this year's Halloween season to raise money and awareness for hungry kids.
The "Hunger Haunts" track will be used for radio and TV commercials as well as online to promote the program. While there's not much at the official link right now, the site will be updated soon with tons of info about what houses support the program.
In the meantime, Grave Robber is putting the finishing touches on its next full-length album, Straight to Hell, due to be released via iTunes and most other online download sites on October 7th. "Hunger Haunts" will also...
- 9/2/2014
- by Mr. Dark
- DreadCentral.com
R&B singer Frank Ocean, producer Diplo and the Clash’s guitarist Mick Jones and bassist Paul Simonon have combined their various talents into a new track for Converse's "Three Artists, One Song" series. Listen to and download "Hero" and watch a behind the scenes video below. According to Rolling Stone, Diplo led the charge, recruiting the musicians and managing production. Diplo famously sampled the Clash’s song "Straight to Hell" for M.I.A.’s 2007 hit "Paper Planes." "For me, the Clash represented really unexpected things with a garage attitude, so that’s where I was going with 'Hero,'" Diplo said. Ocean’s first new song in two years, "Hero" gains a heavy dose of soul from his vocals, which seamlessly blend with Diplo’s dub and electronic samples and the Clash’s dirty guitar riffs. The West Los Angeles Children’s Choir adds a gospel touch. Geoff Cottrill,...
- 3/10/2014
- by Whitney Phaneuf
- Hitfix
Publisher Touchstone has canceled the book based on the Twitter feed @GSElevator following revelations that the author did not work at Goldman Sachs. The account was said to be tweeting out things overheard in the Goldman Sachs elevator. It sprang up in 2011 and has about 645,000 followers. Straight to Hell, a book proposal based on the feed -- think a raunchy The Wolf of Wall Street-like tale of partying, excess and immorality -- was vague on the writer's identity and his work with Goldman. The proposal nabbed what was described as a "mid-six-figure" advance. It was
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- 3/6/2014
- by Andy Lewis
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Did that really just happen? We’re coming to the end of our time with Fiona Goode and her ragtag Coven, and it’s a good thing too — three main characters bit it tonight; one of them so major that their death will impact the ladies of our beloved Coven forever. Don’t read on if you don’t want to know who died on ‘Ahs’!
American Horror Story has never been shy about killing (or reviving) its lead characters, but “Go To Hell” featured three fates that were so cruel we almost forgot that these are all terrible people who kind of deserve it.
‘Ahs: Coven’: Fiona Gets Murdered; Becomes Gator Poop
Ding-dong, the (main) witch is dead.
It’s a good thing Cordelia (Sarah Paulson) “Scabby Eyes” Foxx already added the Seven Wonders test to her iPhone calendar, because the Coven’s Supreme is no more.
American Horror Story has never been shy about killing (or reviving) its lead characters, but “Go To Hell” featured three fates that were so cruel we almost forgot that these are all terrible people who kind of deserve it.
‘Ahs: Coven’: Fiona Gets Murdered; Becomes Gator Poop
Ding-dong, the (main) witch is dead.
It’s a good thing Cordelia (Sarah Paulson) “Scabby Eyes” Foxx already added the Seven Wonders test to her iPhone calendar, because the Coven’s Supreme is no more.
- 1/23/2014
- by Shaunna Murphy
- HollywoodLife
Some exciting news for "Archer" fans out of the 2014 TCA press tour panel -- Kenny Loggins is guest-starring as himself and will record a duet with "Cherlene," Cheryl/Carol's new country music persona.
The duet is Loggins' 1986 hit "Danger Zone" (!), with the video for it premiering during episode 6 on Monday, Feb. 17. The song will also anchor the "Archer" soundtrack, titled "Cherlene," which will feature three original "Archer" songs -- "It's All About Me," "I'll Burn it Down" and "Gypsy Woman."
Other songs on the soundtrack include "Chattahoochie Coochie Man," "Midnight Blues," "Straight to Hell," "40 Miles of Mountain Road," "Swing Shift" (formerly titled Coming Round Again), "Cherlene's Broken Hearts & Auto Parts" (formerly titled Broken Hearts & Auto Parts), "East Bound & Down," "Baby Please Don't Go" and "Danger Zone." All are produced by Kevin Kinney and feature vocals by Jessy Lynn Martens, with Loggins joining on "Danger Zone."
Executive producer Matt Thompson teases...
The duet is Loggins' 1986 hit "Danger Zone" (!), with the video for it premiering during episode 6 on Monday, Feb. 17. The song will also anchor the "Archer" soundtrack, titled "Cherlene," which will feature three original "Archer" songs -- "It's All About Me," "I'll Burn it Down" and "Gypsy Woman."
Other songs on the soundtrack include "Chattahoochie Coochie Man," "Midnight Blues," "Straight to Hell," "40 Miles of Mountain Road," "Swing Shift" (formerly titled Coming Round Again), "Cherlene's Broken Hearts & Auto Parts" (formerly titled Broken Hearts & Auto Parts), "East Bound & Down," "Baby Please Don't Go" and "Danger Zone." All are produced by Kevin Kinney and feature vocals by Jessy Lynn Martens, with Loggins joining on "Danger Zone."
Executive producer Matt Thompson teases...
- 1/14/2014
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
Crowdfunding was made for guys like Alex Cox. Similar to Ralph Bakshi, whose successfully Kickstarter-ed project we profiled recently, The Sid and Nancy and Repo Man director is a cult filmmaker who doesn’t fit in Hollywood and who therefore has had a hard time getting his movies off the ground. Even when working with his old titles, as he did with the sorta-sequel Repo Chick and the re-cut release of Straight to Hell (called Straight to Hell Returns), he’s had trouble getting notice. Hopefully he’s able to turn things around with Bill, the Galactic Hero, a low-budget sci-fi comedy adapted from the same-titled novel by Harry Harrison (who wrote the basis of Soylent Green – the novel “Make Room! Make Room!” — and co-wrote the script for Bill with Cox before his death last August). Cox has launched a Kickstarter campaign to help fund the movie at $100,000, and after a week he’s already halfway there...
- 3/30/2013
- by Christopher Campbell
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
What I’m about to tell you may seem shocking, given that you all must think my entire week is taken up by laboring over each of my beautiful, wonderful, perfectly polished and amazingly insightful columns (really, they’re good enough for framing, every one), and that’s 100% true. But I’m an excellent multi-tasker (it’s one of my secret superheroine powers, along with the Gift of Ocd), and so at the same time as I am cogitating about, compiling, and composing said columns, I’m also magically working a regular 9-5 – or sometimes 10-6, Odin and all his Asgardians bless flex-time.
So, like some of you other folks out there who are concerned with paying the bills and all that nonsense and thus have desk jobs, I sometimes spend my lunch time stuck in front of my office computer with just a few free minutes to obtain sustenance...
So, like some of you other folks out there who are concerned with paying the bills and all that nonsense and thus have desk jobs, I sometimes spend my lunch time stuck in front of my office computer with just a few free minutes to obtain sustenance...
- 7/3/2012
- by Emily S. Whitten
- Comicmix.com
Arguably the defining cult film of the Reagan era, Repo Man, the feature debut of Alex Cox (Sid & Nancy, Walker, Straight to Hell) is a genre-busting mash-up of atomic-age science fiction, post-punk anarchism, and conspiracy paranoia, all shot through with heavy doses of deadpan humour and offbeat philosophy.
After quitting his dead-end supermarket job, young punk Otto (Emilio Estevez) is initiated as a “repo man” after a chance encounter with automobile repossessor Bud (Harry Dean Stanton). An illicit, high-voltage life follows, including an adrenalised search for a mysterious ’64 Chevy Malibu loaded with radioactive – and extragalactic – cargo…
With an iconic soundtrack (Iggy Pop, Black Flag, Suicidal Tendencies), stunning Robby Müller cinematography, and iconoclastic direction, Repo Man remains one of the great debuts of the 1980s.
Special Director-approved Blu-ray Features:
New high-definition master in the original aspect ratio – 1.85:1 Original mono soundtrack and 5.1 remix, both in DTS-hd Master Audio English Sdh subtitles...
After quitting his dead-end supermarket job, young punk Otto (Emilio Estevez) is initiated as a “repo man” after a chance encounter with automobile repossessor Bud (Harry Dean Stanton). An illicit, high-voltage life follows, including an adrenalised search for a mysterious ’64 Chevy Malibu loaded with radioactive – and extragalactic – cargo…
With an iconic soundtrack (Iggy Pop, Black Flag, Suicidal Tendencies), stunning Robby Müller cinematography, and iconoclastic direction, Repo Man remains one of the great debuts of the 1980s.
Special Director-approved Blu-ray Features:
New high-definition master in the original aspect ratio – 1.85:1 Original mono soundtrack and 5.1 remix, both in DTS-hd Master Audio English Sdh subtitles...
- 12/28/2011
- by Phil
- Nerdly
Reviewer: Philip Tatler IV
Rating (out of five): **** 1/2
For whatever reason, Alex Cox – the iconoclast behind Repo Man, Sid & Nancy, and Straight to Hell – has never quite enjoyed the indie godfather reputation of Jim Jarmusch or David Lynch. Having created several of the best American films of the 1980s, Cox dropped off the cultural radar after the commercial failure of the fitfully brilliant Walker – his single stab at a studio-backed, comparatively large-budgeted film. During the two decades since, while Cox has languished due to a self-proclaimed “blacklist”, he’s directed seven little-seen films.
Rating (out of five): **** 1/2
For whatever reason, Alex Cox – the iconoclast behind Repo Man, Sid & Nancy, and Straight to Hell – has never quite enjoyed the indie godfather reputation of Jim Jarmusch or David Lynch. Having created several of the best American films of the 1980s, Cox dropped off the cultural radar after the commercial failure of the fitfully brilliant Walker – his single stab at a studio-backed, comparatively large-budgeted film. During the two decades since, while Cox has languished due to a self-proclaimed “blacklist”, he’s directed seven little-seen films.
- 12/7/2011
- by weezy
- GreenCine
Release Date: Nov. 15, 2011
Price: DVD $24.95
Studio: Microcinema
Life and death unfolds on Mexico's sweltering roads in Highway Patrolman.
The 1991 crime drama Highway Patrolman is one of cult filmmaker Alex Cox’s (Sid & Nancy) most acclaimed films.
Microcinema’s release of the movie on DVD marks the first time it has been issued on disc in the U.S.
Presented in Spanish with English subtitles, Highway Patrolman takes an episodic look at the life of Mexico’s young Pedro (Robert Sosa) after he joins his country’s Federal Highway Patrol. The film begins with Pedro’s cadet training and his rookie assignment in a northern border area and follows him through his taking of bribes and his slow exposure to drug smuggling. In other words, the story eyes its protagonist as his idealism and youthful naivete gives way to adult life and all its complicated choices.
Highway Patrolman (or El Patrullero...
Price: DVD $24.95
Studio: Microcinema
Life and death unfolds on Mexico's sweltering roads in Highway Patrolman.
The 1991 crime drama Highway Patrolman is one of cult filmmaker Alex Cox’s (Sid & Nancy) most acclaimed films.
Microcinema’s release of the movie on DVD marks the first time it has been issued on disc in the U.S.
Presented in Spanish with English subtitles, Highway Patrolman takes an episodic look at the life of Mexico’s young Pedro (Robert Sosa) after he joins his country’s Federal Highway Patrol. The film begins with Pedro’s cadet training and his rookie assignment in a northern border area and follows him through his taking of bribes and his slow exposure to drug smuggling. In other words, the story eyes its protagonist as his idealism and youthful naivete gives way to adult life and all its complicated choices.
Highway Patrolman (or El Patrullero...
- 10/31/2011
- by Laurence
- Disc Dish
Directed by: Alex Cox
Written by: Alex Cox
Cast: Jaclyn Jonet, Miguel Sandoval, Karen Black, Del Zamora, Rosanna Arquette
In Repo Chick, '80s punk provocateur Alex Cox turns his attention to the state of contemporary society. Needless to say, he doesn't like what he sees. And who can blame him. Even on the best of days, you have to admit it's pretty grim out there.
Told through the eyes of a Paris Hilton analogue, Repo Chick is the story of Pixxi de la Chasse (Jaclyn Jonet), a spoiled celebutante who's disinherited by her family for bad behavior. This forces her and her self-serving entourage out into the cold, cruel world. Luckily, Pixxi lands a job as a repo chick, which brings her into contact with some very bad people doing very weird things.
With his latest flick, Cox takes on the world in which we live, and everything is fair game.
Written by: Alex Cox
Cast: Jaclyn Jonet, Miguel Sandoval, Karen Black, Del Zamora, Rosanna Arquette
In Repo Chick, '80s punk provocateur Alex Cox turns his attention to the state of contemporary society. Needless to say, he doesn't like what he sees. And who can blame him. Even on the best of days, you have to admit it's pretty grim out there.
Told through the eyes of a Paris Hilton analogue, Repo Chick is the story of Pixxi de la Chasse (Jaclyn Jonet), a spoiled celebutante who's disinherited by her family for bad behavior. This forces her and her self-serving entourage out into the cold, cruel world. Luckily, Pixxi lands a job as a repo chick, which brings her into contact with some very bad people doing very weird things.
With his latest flick, Cox takes on the world in which we live, and everything is fair game.
- 3/22/2011
- by Theron
- Planet Fury
On her Bravo special Thursday night, Kathy Griffin revealed that her pokes at poltiico Sarah Palin have resulted in death threats. The tart-tongued comedienne did an extended riff on the "Palin Army" during her laff fest "Kathy Griffin: 50 and Not Pregnant." And on Tuesday's episode of "Glee," Griffin had guested as a judge at regionals whose behavior was eerily similar to that of the one-time national candidate. Two years ago, Tina Fey won the Guest Comedy Actress Emmy for her Palin parodies on "SNL." While Kathy Griffin has yet to be an Emmy acting nominee, she has contended twice for Best Variety Comedy Music Special. In 2008, her stand-up special "Straight to Hell" lost to "Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project" while in 2009 her concert gig "She'll Cut a Bitch" was bested by the Kennedy Center Honors, which won the fifth of its six Emmys. As Griffin noted in her piece on Palin Thursday: "Sh.
- 3/18/2011
- Gold Derby
Back in 1987, director Alex Cox followed up cult classic "Repo Man" (1984) and the rebellious biopic "Sid and Nancy" (1986) with "Straight To Hell," a film he co-wrote with Dick Rude in just three days. His gore-filled take on the spaghetti Western features blood, sex and over-the-top performances by musicians such as Joe Strummer, Courtney Love, Elvis Costello and the Pogues. It received less-than-stellar reviews upon initial release but ...
- 3/4/2011
- indieWIRE - People
Back in 1987, director Alex Cox followed up cult classic "Repo Man" (1984) and the rebellious biopic "Sid and Nancy" (1986) with "Straight To Hell," a film he co-wrote with Dick Rude in just three days. His gore-filled take on the spaghetti Western features blood, sex and over-the-top performances by musicians such as Joe Strummer, Courtney Love, Elvis Costello and the Pogues. It received less-than-stellar reviews upon initial release but ...
- 3/4/2011
- Indiewire
Reviewer: Jeffrey M. Anderson
Rating (out of 5): ***½
Alex Cox's Straight to Hell Returns, which showed in some theaters in 2010, is along the same lines as Apocalypse Now Redux, but on a different scale. It's the same as Straight to Hell (1987), but Cox did a little editing and added some more blood. When the movie opened in 1987, viewers may have expected something along the lines of Cox's previous original but more straightforward features, Repo Man (1984) and Sid and Nancy (1986). Instead they were treated with a deliberately weird, nonsensical modern-day Western; most people turned up their noses, or ignored it altogether.
Rating (out of 5): ***½
Alex Cox's Straight to Hell Returns, which showed in some theaters in 2010, is along the same lines as Apocalypse Now Redux, but on a different scale. It's the same as Straight to Hell (1987), but Cox did a little editing and added some more blood. When the movie opened in 1987, viewers may have expected something along the lines of Cox's previous original but more straightforward features, Repo Man (1984) and Sid and Nancy (1986). Instead they were treated with a deliberately weird, nonsensical modern-day Western; most people turned up their noses, or ignored it altogether.
- 1/17/2011
- by underdog
- GreenCine
DVD Playhouse December 2010
By
Allen Gardner
America Lost And Found: The Bbs Story (Criterion) Perhaps the best DVD box set released this year, this ultimate cinefile stocking stuffer offered up by Criterion, the Rolls-Royce of home video labels, features seven seminal works from the late ‘60s-early ‘70s that were brought to life by cutting edge producers Bert Schneider, Steve Blauner and director/producer Bob Rafelson, the principals of Bbs Productions. In chronological order: Head (1968) star the Monkees, the manufactured (by Rafelson, et al), American answer to the Beatles who, like it or not, did make an impact on popular culture, particularly in this utterly surreal piece of cinematic anarchy (co-written by Jack Nicholson, who has a cameo), which was largely dismissed upon its initial release, but is now regarded as a counterculture classic. Easy Rider (1969) is arguably regarded as the seminal ‘60s picture, about two hippie drug dealers (director Dennis Hopper...
By
Allen Gardner
America Lost And Found: The Bbs Story (Criterion) Perhaps the best DVD box set released this year, this ultimate cinefile stocking stuffer offered up by Criterion, the Rolls-Royce of home video labels, features seven seminal works from the late ‘60s-early ‘70s that were brought to life by cutting edge producers Bert Schneider, Steve Blauner and director/producer Bob Rafelson, the principals of Bbs Productions. In chronological order: Head (1968) star the Monkees, the manufactured (by Rafelson, et al), American answer to the Beatles who, like it or not, did make an impact on popular culture, particularly in this utterly surreal piece of cinematic anarchy (co-written by Jack Nicholson, who has a cameo), which was largely dismissed upon its initial release, but is now regarded as a counterculture classic. Easy Rider (1969) is arguably regarded as the seminal ‘60s picture, about two hippie drug dealers (director Dennis Hopper...
- 12/20/2010
- by The Hollywood Interview.com
- The Hollywood Interview
That was the week in which we waved goodbye to Leslie Nielsen, Irvin Kerchner and Mario Monicelli and said hello to the British Film institute taking over the duties of the UK Film Council
The big story
Monday at 10am and Ed Vaizey made the announcement many had been expecting: the BFI is to take over the bulk of the funding duties of the now-defunct UK Film Council. The reaction from film agencies (and the BFI's Greg Dyke) was pretty warm, but on the blog, Adam Dawtrey questioned the logistics and the politics behind the move, Andrew Pulver sighed at the merry-go-round of lottery funding, Dan Sabbagh suggested the ring-fencing of cash for cinema might not be wholly fair, and James Russell questioned whether the BFI would be equipped to cope with the difficult decisions that lie ahead.
Unstoppable Harry Potter
Meanwhile, the latest instalment in the franchise David Cameron...
The big story
Monday at 10am and Ed Vaizey made the announcement many had been expecting: the BFI is to take over the bulk of the funding duties of the now-defunct UK Film Council. The reaction from film agencies (and the BFI's Greg Dyke) was pretty warm, but on the blog, Adam Dawtrey questioned the logistics and the politics behind the move, Andrew Pulver sighed at the merry-go-round of lottery funding, Dan Sabbagh suggested the ring-fencing of cash for cinema might not be wholly fair, and James Russell questioned whether the BFI would be equipped to cope with the difficult decisions that lie ahead.
Unstoppable Harry Potter
Meanwhile, the latest instalment in the franchise David Cameron...
- 12/2/2010
- The Guardian - Film News
Alex Cox's 1987 spaghetti western homage was loathed on release, but its reissue is a reminder of a bygone counterculture
Nostalgia is a feeling I try to avoid. Even so, I couldn't help a pang while re-acquainting myself with Straight to Hell – director Alex Cox's berserk homage to Sergio Leone made back in distant 1987, a tribute to the spaghetti western so grubby it had blood and pasta sauce down its shirt, which is now the recipient of a polished-up DVD reissue complete with once-deleted scenes restored. It's no one's idea of a lost masterpiece; it's far from its creator's best work; and yet it's still in some small, strange way a landmark.
That said, I think we can be confident there will have been little thought while the film was being made that it would be the subject of critical pondering 23 years later. While occasionally hugely enjoyable, the whole...
Nostalgia is a feeling I try to avoid. Even so, I couldn't help a pang while re-acquainting myself with Straight to Hell – director Alex Cox's berserk homage to Sergio Leone made back in distant 1987, a tribute to the spaghetti western so grubby it had blood and pasta sauce down its shirt, which is now the recipient of a polished-up DVD reissue complete with once-deleted scenes restored. It's no one's idea of a lost masterpiece; it's far from its creator's best work; and yet it's still in some small, strange way a landmark.
That said, I think we can be confident there will have been little thought while the film was being made that it would be the subject of critical pondering 23 years later. While occasionally hugely enjoyable, the whole...
- 11/26/2010
- by Danny Leigh
- The Guardian - Film News
In the week in which Harry Potter broke five UK box office records, we bring you all the stats, and any other film-related news we can, as relief from wall-to-wall wizardry
The big story
The trouble with Harry is that he's just everywhere. The seventh instalment in the boy wizard's adventures, the Deathly Hallows: Part 1, finally hit cinemas last Friday. By Monday it was clear writers the world over were going to have to dust off that "audiences have fallen under his spell" cliche yet again. So, let's keep this brief: it broke five records this side of the pond, another couple in the States. For more details, try Charles Gant's UK box office analysis and Jeremy Kay's Hollywood report. And if you want to discuss whether or not it revives the sequel as a format, check out David Cox's blog. Last Friday, too, James Russell wrote a...
The big story
The trouble with Harry is that he's just everywhere. The seventh instalment in the boy wizard's adventures, the Deathly Hallows: Part 1, finally hit cinemas last Friday. By Monday it was clear writers the world over were going to have to dust off that "audiences have fallen under his spell" cliche yet again. So, let's keep this brief: it broke five records this side of the pond, another couple in the States. For more details, try Charles Gant's UK box office analysis and Jeremy Kay's Hollywood report. And if you want to discuss whether or not it revives the sequel as a format, check out David Cox's blog. Last Friday, too, James Russell wrote a...
- 11/26/2010
- The Guardian - Film News
When it was announced that Justin Timberlake would be taking on a role in David Fincher‘s The Social Network, many bloggers and filmgoers were probably skeptical if the former boy-bander was ready for such a top-tier project. Timberlake has always been hilarious on SNL (even winning an Emmy for his participation on the sketch comedy show) but his filmography has always left much to be desired (The Love Guru, Southland Tales). With The Social Network becoming a smash hit and receiving near universal acclaim it is clear that the pop star has finally managed to deliver a performance worthy of a legitimate actor.
Casting pop stars is always a gamble as many have very little or no acting experience and often come with larger-than-life personas that don’t mix well with the films they are placed in. Stars such as Barbara Streisand and Diana Ross paved the way for...
Casting pop stars is always a gamble as many have very little or no acting experience and often come with larger-than-life personas that don’t mix well with the films they are placed in. Stars such as Barbara Streisand and Diana Ross paved the way for...
- 10/7/2010
- by John Luchetti
- The Film Stage
Craig here. It's Take Three time.
Today: Ladies and gentlemen - heeeeere's Grace (Jones)
Singer, icon, original fashionista fantastica, bat-mental celebrity hurricane force. We might not think of Grace Jones as first and foremost an actress, but she energised a handful of films with enough strong supporting style and amazing gracefulness to cement a sporadically unique celluloid reputation second to none. All in her own inestimable way, of course.
She was a woman with a moustache in Siesta, and half-man/half-woman in daft horror Wolf Girl, a spear-carrying warrior alongside Arnie in Conan the Destroyer, a desert dame in cult oddity Straight to Hell, and recently she checked into Abel Ferrerra’s hotel doc. Chelsea on the Rocks. She’s never one to ever be dull and has enlivened and sauced up many a movie role the only way she can: fabulously. So this week I’ve been slaving to...
Today: Ladies and gentlemen - heeeeere's Grace (Jones)
Singer, icon, original fashionista fantastica, bat-mental celebrity hurricane force. We might not think of Grace Jones as first and foremost an actress, but she energised a handful of films with enough strong supporting style and amazing gracefulness to cement a sporadically unique celluloid reputation second to none. All in her own inestimable way, of course.
She was a woman with a moustache in Siesta, and half-man/half-woman in daft horror Wolf Girl, a spear-carrying warrior alongside Arnie in Conan the Destroyer, a desert dame in cult oddity Straight to Hell, and recently she checked into Abel Ferrerra’s hotel doc. Chelsea on the Rocks. She’s never one to ever be dull and has enlivened and sauced up many a movie role the only way she can: fabulously. So this week I’ve been slaving to...
- 9/5/2010
- by Craig Bloomfield
- FilmExperience
Dennis Hopper’s long film career began with the 1955 teen angst classic Rebel Without a Cause with James Dean, and he helped usher in Hollywood’s New Wave as director and star of the counterculture anthem Easy Rider in 1969. He later became a respected character actor, specializing in such off-beat villains as the drug-addicted, obscenity-spouting Frank Black in David Lynch’s Blue Velvet (1986), crazed bomber Howard Payne in the 1994 action-thriller Speed with Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock, and Deacon in Kevin Costner’s soggy post-apocalyptic saga Waterworld (1995).
Hopper was born in Dodge City, Kansas on May 17, 1936. He moved to San Diego, California with his family in the late 1940s, and began studying at the local Old Globe Theater while attending high school. He soon signed with Warner Brothers and was featured in a small role in 1955’s Rebel Without a Cause. He was later featured as Jordan Benedict III, the...
Hopper was born in Dodge City, Kansas on May 17, 1936. He moved to San Diego, California with his family in the late 1940s, and began studying at the local Old Globe Theater while attending high school. He soon signed with Warner Brothers and was featured in a small role in 1955’s Rebel Without a Cause. He was later featured as Jordan Benedict III, the...
- 6/22/2010
- by Harris Lentz
- FamousMonsters of Filmland
It looks like Criterion isn’t the only name in town when it comes to director centric runs of DVD releases.
According to Cinematical (via The Playlist), San Francisco based DVD distributor Microcinema International has announced that they are set to not only round up a collection of films from cult filmmaker Alex Cox, but are set to release them on DVD.
Best known as the man behind cult hits like the film Repo Man and the fantastic former Criterion release, Sid and Nancy, the series of releases are set to delve deeper into this filmmakers rather interesting canon. The series includes Cox’s sort of but not really sequel to John Ford’s legendary film, The Searchers, called Searchers 2.0, as well as Cox’s Highway Patrolman, Death and the Compass, Three Businessmen, Revenger’s Tragedy, and Straight To Hell Returns, an update to Cox’s film, Straight To Hell.
According to Cinematical (via The Playlist), San Francisco based DVD distributor Microcinema International has announced that they are set to not only round up a collection of films from cult filmmaker Alex Cox, but are set to release them on DVD.
Best known as the man behind cult hits like the film Repo Man and the fantastic former Criterion release, Sid and Nancy, the series of releases are set to delve deeper into this filmmakers rather interesting canon. The series includes Cox’s sort of but not really sequel to John Ford’s legendary film, The Searchers, called Searchers 2.0, as well as Cox’s Highway Patrolman, Death and the Compass, Three Businessmen, Revenger’s Tragedy, and Straight To Hell Returns, an update to Cox’s film, Straight To Hell.
- 6/4/2010
- by Joshua Brunsting
- CriterionCast
For a time in California, Alex Cox was Dennis Hopper's No 4 henchman. He recalls the director's brilliance and breakdowns – and how John Wayne once tried to kill him
Two nights ago, I had a wake for Dennis Hopper with my wife, Tod, and watched Giant. I also asked Cecilia Montiel, a production designer who lives on the same street as Dennis, to put some flowers on his gate. When I heard he was dying, I phoned a couple of times, spoke to the people in the office, and asked them to give Dennis my best regards. The last time I called, I talked to a lady who was either a nurse or the maid. She told me he was sleeping.
I'd like to have seen the old man before he went. In the late 1980s, I was Dennis Hopper's henchman, for a while. Dennis had several henchmen; I...
Two nights ago, I had a wake for Dennis Hopper with my wife, Tod, and watched Giant. I also asked Cecilia Montiel, a production designer who lives on the same street as Dennis, to put some flowers on his gate. When I heard he was dying, I phoned a couple of times, spoke to the people in the office, and asked them to give Dennis my best regards. The last time I called, I talked to a lady who was either a nurse or the maid. She told me he was sleeping.
I'd like to have seen the old man before he went. In the late 1980s, I was Dennis Hopper's henchman, for a while. Dennis had several henchmen; I...
- 6/3/2010
- by Alex Cox
- The Guardian - Film News
Microcinema International DVD has acquired six films from that bizarre and elusive British cult director Alex Cox, some of which have never before been available in the United States. First up is Straight to Hell Returns, which is a kind of remix of Cox's Straight to Hell (1987), "featuring enhanced violence and cruelty, and additional shots by cinematographer Tom Richmond." Straight to Hell was an attempt at a cult comedy Western, about a bunch of killers hiding out in a weird town, starring Joe Strummer, Courtney Love, Dennis Hopper, Elvis Costello,Sy Richardson, Shane McGowan, Dick Rude, Jim Jarmusch, and Grace Jones. It never really caught on, but perhaps it will now.
Next is Searchers 2.0 (2007), another comedy with Western overtones. Two former child actors, and veterans of many movie Westerns, take a road trip to get revenge on a sadistic screenwriter who tormented them on an early film. Roger Corman produced.
Next is Searchers 2.0 (2007), another comedy with Western overtones. Two former child actors, and veterans of many movie Westerns, take a road trip to get revenge on a sadistic screenwriter who tormented them on an early film. Roger Corman produced.
- 6/2/2010
- by Jeffrey M. Anderson
- Cinematical
Dennis Hopper. One of the greats in cinema history. A consistent rebel in Hollywood, he pushed envelopes as often as he ripped them up and pissed on the scraps. And even when you could tell he was doing a film just for a paycheck, he did the most with that role and made us as film fans all the happier. I’m looking at you, “Waterworld”. So here at the Criterion Cast, I’ve decided to do a top 10 of my favorite Dennis Hopper roles in film. It also doesn’t hurt that he is in the Criterion Collection, in the TV series “Fishing With John”. Check it out if you haven’t already.
10. “Speed” (1994) – As villainous bomb expert Howard Payne, he more or less steals the movie from Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock. But that’s like stealing candy from two rocks. I enjoy this film though, considering the...
10. “Speed” (1994) – As villainous bomb expert Howard Payne, he more or less steals the movie from Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock. But that’s like stealing candy from two rocks. I enjoy this film though, considering the...
- 5/31/2010
- by James McCormick
- CriterionCast
One remake we're looking forward to that has a really good chance of being good is Alex Winter's redux of The Gate in 3D. If Winter can capture just a fraction of the original film's charm then we're pretty damned golden. Some concept art snuck online today along with a boat load of details about the film.
Winter will be working from a script penned by himself and Kerric Macdonald. Charlotte Huggins (Journey to the Center of the Earth) and Andras Hamori are producing. The legendary H.R. Giger will be designing the creatures
Synopsis
When best friends Miles and Terry discover a mysterious crystalline rock in Miles's back yard, they quickly dig up the lawn in search of more. Instead, they unearth the Gate—the opening to an underground chamber containing terrifying evil.
The teenagers soon realize the horror they have unleashed, as one dire event follows another. With supernatural fiends invading suburbia,...
Winter will be working from a script penned by himself and Kerric Macdonald. Charlotte Huggins (Journey to the Center of the Earth) and Andras Hamori are producing. The legendary H.R. Giger will be designing the creatures
Synopsis
When best friends Miles and Terry discover a mysterious crystalline rock in Miles's back yard, they quickly dig up the lawn in search of more. Instead, they unearth the Gate—the opening to an underground chamber containing terrifying evil.
The teenagers soon realize the horror they have unleashed, as one dire event follows another. With supernatural fiends invading suburbia,...
- 12/8/2009
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
We just received a bunch of interesting info regarding the currently in-development 3D reimagining of The Gate (the classic PG-13 kiddie horror from the 80s). The most interesting tidbit for Qe readers is probably that H.R. Giger is on board to design new creatures for the film. However I wouldn't expect anything quite as sinister as the Alien. The re-make is aiming to retain the PG-13 sensibilities of the original and keep the film light-hearted.
Included in the package is the film's entire story outline, which besides the odd modern tweak (Glen is now called Miles, his older sister Al is Emo, and they're being raised by a single dad) it's pretty much the same story. Dad goes out of town and the kids fight to stay alive and close the gates of hell throughout the night.
The monsters will be given more variety and screen time in the new...
Included in the package is the film's entire story outline, which besides the odd modern tweak (Glen is now called Miles, his older sister Al is Emo, and they're being raised by a single dad) it's pretty much the same story. Dad goes out of town and the kids fight to stay alive and close the gates of hell throughout the night.
The monsters will be given more variety and screen time in the new...
- 12/7/2009
- QuietEarth.us
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