Tal frit for leveren om alt fra din syge moster, din forkærlighed for Britney Spears eller om hvor mange øl du kan drikke på en time. Kort sagt alt, hvad der er off-topic.
Glemte lige. Her er Haunted George's favorit film (Savage interview):
Night of the Living Dead (1968) George Romero captured lightening in a jar here. He spent the rest of his life trying to do it again and it never really happened. I still watch this movie at least once a year. I own the soundtrack, which is mostly a bunch of old 1950's American International stock music, but this one kills.
Don't Go in the House (1980) I saw this in a drive-in theater as a kid. My older brother got his driver's license and had a 70's van! I think I'm the only person I know that likes this movie. A creepy guy lives alone in a huge house with his dead mother just like in Psycho. He catches women, puts them in a metal lined room, strips them naked, lights them on fire, and then dresses the charred corpses up like they having a tea party and talks to them.
Mesa of Lost Women (1953) An amazing "bad-good" movie that many people still think was done by Ed Wood Jr. It's got a great cast with Jackie Coogan, Chris-Pin Martin and Dolores Fuller. There's a great guitar soundtrack that runs through the whole movie. Watching this movie is like being on drugs.
The Searchers (1956) John Ford and John Wayne made a bunch of great westerns together and they're all good but this one is my favorite. It's one of those big budget Hollywood movies that really works.
The Brainiac (1962) A Mexican Barron turns into a crazy looking monster and then sucks the brains out of his victims. My favorite Mexican horror film is this one, but like with John Ford, they're all really good. A company called CasaNegra just started putting these out on DVD and they look great. You can get the original Mexican versions or the U.S. (K. Gordon Murray) versions.
Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974) This is like Night of the Living Dead in that Tobe Hopper never did anything quite as good after this one. This is the quintessential, cannibalistic, family hillbilly movie.
Mystery Ranch (1933) Charles Middleton (Ming the Merciless in the old Flash Gordon serials) is the bad guy in this 1930's B-Western that feels a lot like a horror movie. Middleton lives in a big, dark, Spanish Hacienda. He has two hulking, mute killers that work for him. One is a Mexican and the other is an Indian. They're almost like zombie/monsters that have been hypnotized by him but they never say that. Middleton sits at his organ and plays just like the Phantom of the Opera.
House of Frankenstein (1944) I love all the Universal Monster movies of the 30's and 40's and this one has all the monsters in one film; Frankenstein, Dracula, and The Wolf-Man. It cast includes Boris Karloff, Lon Chaney Jr., John Carradine, and Glenn Strange! The only thing missing is Bela Lugosi.
For a Few Dollars More (1965) This is my favorite Sergio Leone film of the "Man with no name" Trilogy.
Santa Sangre (1989) Alejandro Jordorowsky's film that feels at times like a Todd Browning movie.
Glæder mig til at snakke med ham igen, han spillede et kort teaser show efter Demon's Claws i søndags på Elværket. Übercool dude.