In this Arkoff rebel movie from the late 1950s, a young Charles Bronson stars as Machine-Gun Kelly, the famous bank robber, seldom without his Thompson machine gun.
A Bucket Of Blood: Coffee bar waiter Walter Paisley (Dick Miller) is hailed as an artist for his amazingly lifelike sculptures. Unbeknownst to his customers his art is achieved by murdering his models and covering them in clay. Said by many to be a cult actor Dick Miller's finest hour A Bucket of Blood is a superb semi-spoof of the dead-bodies-in-the-wax-museum genre. The Killer Shrews: Special effects master Ray Kellogg turns director for this 1959 slice of sci-
American crook Sparks Moran sees a chance to make a bundle when a Caribbean island has a revolution. He plans to help loyalists (and the national treasury) escape on his boat, then kill the men and blame their deaths on a mythical sea monster. Trouble ensues when the real monster shows up!
House On Haunted Hill:Vincent Price has one of his juiciest roles in this haunted-house thriller as millionaire playboy Frederick Loren who invites five guests out to a genuine haunted house offering them each $10 000 if they spend the night. Elisha Cook Jr. plays one of the guests a nervous alcoholic who has been in this house before and witnessed some terrible things. Mr. Loren's beautiful but treacherous wife (Carol Ohmart) is also present - and might be out to kill Frederick during the course of the evening; then again he might be out to kill her. Horror Hotel:This hotel is the gateway to hell! Young college student Nan Barlow (Stevenson) uses her winter vacation to research a paper on witchcraft in New England as her professor recommended that she spent her time in a small village called Whitewood. Once she gets to the village she notices some weird happenings but things begin to happen in earnest when she finds herself ""marked"" for sacrifice by the undead coven of witches! The Bat:Mystery writer Cornelia Van Gorder has rented a country house called ""The Oaks"" which not long ago had been the scene of some murders committed by a strange and violent criminal known as ""The Bat"". Meanwhile the house's owner bank president John Fleming has recently embezzled one million dollars in securities and has hidden the proceeds in the house but he is killed before he can retrieve the money. Thus the lonely country house soon becomes the site of many mysterious and dangerous activities. Zombie The Terror:A lieutentant in Napoleon's army (a young Jack Nicholson) traces a mysterious woman to a castle on the Baltic coast and finds himself trapped by a mad baron (Boris Karloff). This highly enjoyable atmopsheric slice of low-budget horror from the great Roger Corman was also reportedly directed at points by future talents Francis Coppola and Peter Bogdanovich.
B-movie legend Roger Corman moved into the mainstream to produce this documentary-esque depiction of the infamous 1929 shooting of seven Chicago mobsters. This gritty gangster docu-drama recounts the events leading to the notorious bloodbath mob maestro Al Capone (Jason Robards) visited on his rivals the Moran gang in 1929; exploring how the event affected the lives of some of the key gangsters involved.
A lieutentant in Napoleon's army (a young Jack Nicholson) traces a mysterious woman to a castle on the Baltic coast and finds himself trapped by a mad baron (Boris Karloff). This highly enjoyable atmopsheric slice of low-budget horror from the great Roger Corman was also reportedly directed at points by future talents Francis Coppola and Peter Bogdanovich.
Walter is a bus-boy overly impressed with the cool cats who hang out at the Yellow Door coffee house and he wonders how he can become ""hip."" When he accidentally kills his landlady's pet cat Walter panics and covers it with clay. His prayers are answered and before he knows it he's the ""cat's meow"" of the art world. His talents develop and - surprise! - he can sculpt humans the same way too.
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