Tarzan Escapes (1936)



Tarzan Escapes (1936)

White hunter Captain Fry tries to take Tarzan back to civilization,
caged for public display. He arrives in the jungle with Jane's cousins,
Eric and Rita who want Jane's help in claiming a fortune left her.








Skinhead Attitude (2003)





Skinhead Attitude (2003)

A skinhead-girl travels Europe and the states to search out the truth about the skinhead cult.
It tells you about the good and bad sides that engulf the skinhead way including the
Nazi and sharp skins.










At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul (1964 Brazil)



At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul (1964 Brazil)

In a small town, the creepy and violent gravedigger Zé do Caixão is feared by the locals.
Zé do Caixão lives with Lenita, who can not deliver a son to him. Obsessed to have a son,
Zé do Caixão harasses Terezinha de Oliveira, who is the fiancée of his friend Antônio de
 Andrade, and kills Lenita with a spider simulating an accident. Then he drowns Antônio
and rapes Terezinha expecting to have a baby with her. Terezinha commits suicide but does
not accuse Zé do Caixão in his letter. When Dr. Rodolfo decides to request another autopsy
of Antônio, Zé do Caixão burns him to death. The inspector Barretos can not prove that Zé
do Caixão is the killer, but on the Day of the Dead, the local gypsy warns him that the
dead will take his soul to hell. Claudio Carvalho










Mad Love (1935)


Mad Love (1935)

In Paris, the great surgeon Dr. Gogol falls madly in love with stage actress
Yvonne Orlac, and his ardor disturbs her quite a bit when he discovers to his
horror that she is married to concert pianist Stephen Orlac. Shortly thereafter,
Stephen's hands are badly crushed in a train accident- beyond the power of
standard medicine. Knowing that his hands are his life, Yvonne overcomes her
fear and goes to Dr. Gogol, to beg him to help. Gogol decides to surgically graft
the hands of executed murderer Rollo onto Stephen Orlac, the surgery is successful
but has terrible side-effects...

    Peter Lorre as Dr. Gogol.
    Frances Drake as Yvonne Orlac.
    Colin Clive as Stephen Orlac.
    Ted Healy as Reagan, an American reporter
    Sara Haden as Marie, Yvonne's maid
    Edward Brophy as Rollo the Knife Thrower
    Henry Kolker as Prefect Rosset
    Keye Luke as Dr. Wong
    May Beatty as Françoise, Gogol's housekeeper







Blood from the Mummy's Tomb (1971)




Blood from the Mummy's Tomb (1971)

An archaelogical expedition brings back the coffin of an Egyptian queen
known for her magic powers to London. Her spirit takes on the shape of a
young girl and strange things starts to happen.

This is by a long way the best of the three adaptations so far of Bram Stoker's
complex and disturbing novel of an Egyptologist's obsessive desire to revive an
evil ancient Egyptian queen. (The novel was so worrying in 1903 that the ending
was changed for the second edition: this movie keeps mainly to the original ending.)
The cast ranges from competent to quite good, with the Queen/daughter suitably
seductive but unreadable. The appearance is handsomely and oppressively Edwardian -
the ancient Egyptian is rather silly - and the direction firm. Try this as a better
taste of Stoker's obsessive psychological horror than any of the versions of "Dracula" except the long British TV adaptation.



Vampire Circus (1972)



Vampire Circus (1972)

A village in Nineteenth Century Europe is at first relieved when a circus
breaks through the quarantine to take the local's minds off the plague. But
their troubles are only beginning as children begin to disappear and the
legacy of a long-ago massacre is brought to light.