The Korda version Vegas tweeked iPOD version Sabu
Fellini
Astroboy episode 40 Vegas tweeked
With Azziza from the DVD
Temple of Dagon
WW2 action with the Marine raiders! Randolph Scott
PUBLIC DOMAIN Monte Hellman, who would later go on to create the cult classics TWO-LANE BLACKTOP and THE SHOOTING, directs this Roger Corman b-picture about a giant creature that attacks a group of unsuspecting victims in the South Dakota mountains.
GI stuff
Lurid tale of Underaged girls being forced to marry older men!!! Hillbilly's running wild!
Ghost in the shell series 1 opening
Kung Fu classic Calling all spies
The Demille version Italiano
PUBLIC DOMAIN The Pilgrimage Play (1949) Director: Frank R. Strayer A dramatic re-telling of the life of Jesus, The Christ. In this filmed stage-play, Nelson Leigh takes on the persona of Jesus of Nazareth, giving a powerful performance about the most influential person who ever lived. Leigh would later go on to play Jesus again, in 1952's TV mini-series The Living Bible. Nelson Leigh - Jesus of Nazareth Alden 'Stephen' Chase - Simon called Peter Leonard Penn - Judas Iscariot Richard Hale - Pontius Pilate Tudor Owen - Nicodemus John Doucette - Lord Zadok Gene Cates - John, the Beloved
Cecil B. Demille 1927
Hopalong Cassidy western the stuff we were weaned on. Vegas tweeked
based on DeMilles "King of Kings" 1927 ITALIANO Improv on Oasys and Virus T synths
Fairbanks version. Silent film with Eng and Spanish subs Color enhanced Vegas tweeked.
An experimental clip Based on Demille's "King of Kings" Italiano
Alfred Hitchcock directed this film looking at Nazi atrocities. Kept secret.
Sci Fi classic A Boy and His Dog is a 1975 post-apocalyptic science fiction film directed by L. Q. Jones and based on the Harlan Ellison short story of the same title, which originally appeared in 1969. A revised and expanded version was printed in Ellison's 1976 story collection The Beast that Shouted Love at the Heart of the World, and Ellison continued the story in the graphic novel Vic and Blood. The film version is often cited as an inspiration for George Miller's Mad Max though Miller has said he didn't view Jones' film until after he had completed his own[citation needed]. The movie was also distributed after the initial run under the name, "Psycho Boy and His Killer Dog" among other titles.
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