Wednesday, April 01, 2026
Contribute to the 40th (Gasp!) Anniversary Edition of Exploitation Retrospect
Sunday, March 01, 2026
THE DEVIL’S RAIN (1975) starring Ernest Borgnine and William Shatner
We finish out the first ten years of 60-For-60 with yet another William Shatner vehicle (hot on the heels of 1974’s sweat-soaked gigolo shocker IMPULSE), though this baby belongs lock stock and barrel to Oscar winner Ernest Borgnine.
After his father melts in front of his mother (Ida Lupino) and him, Mark Preston (Shatner) heads down to old, abandoned Redstone to make a deal with John Corbis, Satan’s Minister on Earth (Ernie B). Seems the Preston family is in possession of Corbis’ book of possessed souls, and he wants it back, so Mark bets his soul/freedom against the book. Is Mark’s faith stronger than that of Corbis?
It’s not, so it’s up to Dr. Tom Preston (Tom Skerritt!) to return home and figure out what happened to his family. Along for the ride is Tom’s wife Julie, who had visions of covens, upside down crosses and Satanic rituals during her recent ESP experiment and seems to be somewhat of a wax expert.
When Julie gets abducted by Corbis and his minions (including John Travolta!), it’s up to Tom and his pal Dr. Richards (Eddie Albert) to save the day and make it rain. The Devil’s Rain!
I’m not sure how or why this slice of Satanic Seventies Sinema flew under my radar for so long. It’s got the desolate vibe of THE HILLS HAVE EYES (1977) and RACE WITH THE DEVIL (1975), but always had a bit of a crappy reputation. But, as I’ve learned in the past (like in the case of THE SENTINEL and PROPHECY), other people are idiots and their opinions should never be trusted.
Director Robert Fuest (ABOMINABLE DR. PHIBES and its sequel) packs the flick’s 86-minute running time with sacrifices, explosions, flashbacks (Pilgrim Borgnine!), and plenty of melting eyeless minions.
But this is Borgnine’s show—from his aw-shucks toothy grin and extra husky Satan robes to his transformation into a goat-horned demon, he really seems to be having a blast. – Dan Taylor
THE OILY MANIAC (1976) starring Danny Lee
I grew up on a steady diet of Hong Kong cinema focused on the most chop-sockeyest of the genre. Saturday afternoons on Philly UHF were packed with every Bruce Le, Bruce Li, Dragon Lee, Bruce Lai, and Bruce Lo movie you could imagine. But I don’t recall getting a whole lot of the Hong Kong horrors of the era. It wasn’t until the days of video stores and grey market tape trading circles that I saw things like INFRA-MAN (1975), WOLFEN NINJA (1982), or BLACK MAGIC 2 (1976), even in their worst forms.
THE OILY MANIAC (1976) has long been talked about by my friends as one of the wildest flicks of an era where Hong Kong martial arts cinema intersected with the new wave of 70s horror after the success of flicks like THE EXORCIST.
They were not wrong.
Danny Lee (THE KILLER, DR. LAMB, INFRA-MAN) stars as Shen Yuan, a downtrodden, polio-afflicted office worker in a sleazy law firm. His boss makes a fortune working both sides of business deals and pushing clients into pursuing phony cases.
When a coconut oil plantation owner is forced to sell his business AND ends up killing someone, he’s sentenced to death. Yuan visits him before his execution and traces a talisman tattooed on his back. Despite the crippling polio that forces him to walk with crutches, Yuan follows the talisman’s instructions, uses a pickaxe to dig a hole in the middle of his home, chants an incantation, and emerges as The Oily Maniac, a sort of proto-Toxic Avenger who dispenses justice to rapists, would-be rapists, sleazy lawyers and their mistress, kung-fu henchmen, unlicensed plastic surgeons, and more.
It’s as nutty as it sounds, with Yuan hopping into vats of bubbling goo and dousing himself with gasoline to transform into the titular “hero”. Nobody in the flick is all that defensible, the cops are idiots (as usual), and the whole thing is a chaotic mess.
But who cares?! You’ll love the ripped-off JAWS theme, Dollar Tree transformation sequences, Asian Bill Hader, regenerating limbs and head (!), and more T&A than your typical slice of Asian cinema. – Dan Taylor
Saturday, February 21, 2026
IMPULSE (1974) starring William Shatner
William Shatner stars as Matt Stone, a sleazy con artist/gigolo who prowls Florida looking for rich women to seduce and bilk out of their money. When his current mark confronts him after seeing him playing tonsil hockey with a belly dancer, Stone kills her in a fit of rage.
In search of his next payday, Stone gains the confidence of Julia (Ruth Roman), a wealthy older woman who introduces him to Ann (Jennifer Bishop), a lonely widower. Coincidentally, Stone had recently given a ride to Ann’s precocious daughter Tina (Kim Nicholas) after almost running her down—don’t ask. Matt and Ann strike up a relationship, while Tina grows suspicious of the leisure suit-wearing lothario. (The film’s working title was the icky WANT A RIDE, LITTLE GIRL?)
When Stone’s old cellmate Karate Pete (GOLDFINGER’s Harold Sakata!) rolls into town in his RV, it’s not because he misses his buddy. Karate Pete has heard Stone is working a hustle and wants in on the action. The reunion turns deadly, Tina discovers what Stone is capable of, and must convince her mother that he’s up to no good before it’s too late. Also, it’s fun to write “Karate Pete.”
Directed by William GrefĂ© (STANLEY, MAKO: THE JAWS OF DEATH, WHISKEY MOUNTAIN with Christopher George), IMPULSE is a sweaty, grimy sleazer that predates the similar SCREAM FOR HELP (1984) and THE STEPFATHER (1987). Shatner, embarking on the low-budget era that would bring us THE DEVIL’S RAIN (my 1975 selection!) and the creepy KINGDOM OF THE SPIDERS, was still five years away from reviving his flagging career with STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE. Here he looks both bemused and embarrassed by the material, though GrefĂ© makes sure to placate his star by having a bevy of women throw themselves at The Shat.
One wonders what would have become of Shatner without the career rebirth that resulted from the success of STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN (1982) and subsequent TREK flicks as well as the tv series T.J. HOOKER. Is there a multiverse where that Shatner embraced and excelled in the exploitation underbelly, carving out a straight-to-video career to rival that of Wings Hauser?
Up next — more Shatner with 1975’s THE DEVIL’S RAIN! – Dan Taylor
THE CRAZIES (1973) directed by George A. Romero
Though it shares some small-town horror elements with NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (1968), THE CRAZIES is broader in scope and deals with Evans City, a small PA town north of Pittsburgh faced with an unexpected disaster. When a military plane crashes nearby and releases its deadly cargo into the water supply, those exposed either die or, well, go crazy. After the Army moves in to cut off the town and prevent the virus from spreading across the country, a band of locals finds themselves on the run.
Had Romero kept the story focused on their struggle to survive/escape, THE CRAZIES might be more successful. Unfortunately, he tries to juggle a half-dozen storylines, including frustrated military personnel, government brass wrestling with the idea of having to nuke the town, a scientist searching for a cure, and squads of gas-mask-clad soldiers trying to round up the locals who are becoming more and more resistant. The result is a lot of shouting, overacting, and dialogue filtered through radio speakers or muffled gas masks.
Eventually, THE CRAZIES finds its footing and focuses on buddies Dave and Clank, and Dave’s pregnant girlfriend, Judy, a nurse for the local doctor. Can they get past the Army’s tightening perimeter? Will the military seal off Evans City and find a cure? Will the politicians really nuke a small town in order to save their own ass?
THE CRAZIES is as ambitious as hell but may have been better suited to Romero’s “studio” days after the cult success of DAWN OF THE DEAD (1978). (It was remade in 2010 with Timothy Olyphant and Danielle Panabaker.) There are definite seeds of DAWN in the film’s core relationship—the levelheaded hero and his increasingly loose-cannon sidekick—but by the time you care about them it’s a bit too late. — Dan Taylor
HORROR EXPRESS (1972) starring Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing, Telly Savalas
A 1906 expedition led by Professor Saxton (Lee) unearths an ape-like creature frozen in a cave, which is crated up and placed on the Trans-Siberian Express. Scientific rival Doctor Wells (Cushing) is also on board and can’t help but wonder what Saxton has in that giant crate. Faster than you can say “there’s the stink of hell on this train” the thing is turning people’s eyeballs egg white and boiling their brains.
Puzzled by the murders—and those smooth, boiled brains—Saxton and Wells set out to solve the mystery while Not Paul Naschy has a complete breakdown, Kojak shows up with his Cossacks, and that detective won’t take his one hand out of his pocket.
Cushing lost his beloved wife just prior to filming and leaned on his old pal Lee to get him through the shoot, which gives the entire affair a sense of melancholy. The whole endeavor has an endearing turn-of-the-century period sci-fi vibe and this fun, claustrophobic, period take on ‘Who Goes There?’ deserves more love. – Dan Taylor
Saturday, February 14, 2026
The Wizard of Gore (1970) directed by HG Lewis
Next up in my 60-For-60 Horror Watchathon is this surreal, bonkers gorefest from the one and only Godfather of Gore, Herschell Gordon Lewis. For those of you unfamiliar with his work, Lewis—who became a millionaire thanks to his expertise in direct mail advertising—started out making nudie flicks in the 1950s. When the bottom fell out of that market (no pun intended), he turned his attention to films the big budget studios couldn’t or wouldn’t make. His 1963 low-budget shocker BLOOD FEAST pushed the genre into gross-out territory and created the modern gorefest.
THE WIZARD OF GORE focuses on Montag the Magnificent (Ray Sager), a top hat-clad magician who looks to be just another two-bit hack. After shouting at the audience about dreams vs. reality and mankind’s bloodthirst for spectacle, Montag welcomes a volunteer from the audience for the ol’ “saw a woman in half” bit. But this is no hacksaw and fake limbs trickery. Montag fires up an electric chainsaw and paints the screen red with buckets of blood and half the meat section at the local Kroger’s.
But what’s this? Despite all evidence to the contrary, the victim appears fine and heads off to a local restaurant after the show. Where she promptly bleeds out all over the floor, much to the dismay of her fellow diners.
Fascinated by Montag’s “act”, daytime talk show host Sherry (Judy Cler) arranges for tickets for his next show, despite her sportswriter boyfriend’s protests. Not content to repeat the same gag, Montag proceeds to pound a metal spike into another audience member’s skull. And, like the first victim, she walks away unscathed, only to die later from her wounds.
Is there a psycho on the loose who gets turned on by Montag’s stunts? Or is Montag himself killing his victims to satisfy some sick and twisted desire?
While you ponder those questions, Lewis piles on the gore with punch press pulverizing, forced sword swallowing, eyeball violence, teeth knocked out, and more—all while the audience sits there dumbfounded, mesmerized by Montag’s antics.
Is it all in their minds? Is it all in Montag’s mind? Or are we just dreaming, and not really watching a movie at all?
THE WIZARD OF GORE is one of those films you’re either going to love or hate. Sager (who went on to have a successful career as a producer) gives a, um, unique performance, shouting most of his lines in a ham-fisted fashion that makes more sense when you discover he was a crew member who stepped in after the original “star” walked off the set.
Admittedly, Lewis and screenwriter Allen Kahn aren’t really interested in tying the film up in a nice, tight bow. Characters wonder out loud about all the same questions the viewer has, and, as Lewis says in the intro to the flick, THE WIZARD OF GORE defies definition.
THE WIZARD OF GORE remains a completely over-the-top head-scratcher that’s more fun than BLOOD FEAST but not as good a movie as Lewis’s 2000 MANIACS (1964). In 2007, the film was remade with Crispin Glover as Montag. I’ve never watched it, but now that I know it features Jeffrey Combs and Brad Dourif, I may have to. – Dan Taylor










