Category: Movies

RIP: Ted Kotcheff

Ted Kotcheff died on April 11, 2025, just three days after his 94th birthday.

Ted Kotcheff graduated from University College, University of Toronto, with a degree in English Literature.  When he was just 24, he joined the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.  He was the youngest director there.  Mr. Kotcheff directed Tiara Tahiti, his first feature film in 1962.  Although best known as a director, Ted Kotcheff branched out and did occasional writing, acting and producing.

Some of the television projects that feature Ted Kotcheff’s direction include: On Camera; Hour of Mystery; I’ll Have You to Remember; BBC Sunday Night Play (2 episodes); ITV Television Playhouse; Espionage; First Night (2 episodes); Drama 61-67; Armchair Theater (28 episodes); The Human Voice; ABC Stage 67 (2 episodes); The Desperate Hours; ITV Playhouse; Lights Out; Play for Today (2 episodes); Performance; Red Shoe Diaries (2 episodes); Borrowed Hearts; Buddy Faro; Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (7 episodes).

Some of Ted Kotcheff’s feature films include: Tiara Tahiti; Life at the Top; Of Mice and Men; Wake in Fright; The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz; Fun with Dick and Jane; Who is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe?; North Dallas Forty; First Blood; Uncommon Valor; Weekend at Bernie’s and Folks!.

My favorite Ted Kotcheff film is First Blood.  I had been a fan of David Morrell’s novel since it came out in paperback.  Sylvester Stallone was (and is) my favorite actor.  Ted Kotcheff at the helm made one of my all-time favorite films.

Out thoughts and prayers go out to Ted Kotcheff’s family, friends and fans.

“Dawn of the Dead” (2002) directed by Zack Snyder / Z-View

Dawn of the Dead (2002)

Director:  Zack Snyder

Screenplay:  James Gunn; based on Dawn of the Dead by George A. Romero

Stars: Sarah Polley, Ving Rhames, Mekhi Phifer, Jake Weber, Ty Burrell, Michael Kelly, Kevin Zegers, Lindy Booth, Jayne Eastwood, Boyd Banks, Inna Korobkina, Louis Ferreira, Bruce Bohne, Scott H. Reiniger, Tom Savini, Ken Foree and Matt Frewer.

Tagline: When there’s no more room in hell, the dead will walk the earth.

The Plot…

At the onset of a zombie apocalypse a group of diverse strangers take refuge in a mall.  In the group is a nurse, a cop, a married couple with a baby on the way, a tv salesman, a rich jerk and three mall security guards.  As the zombie horde outside the mall tensions rise.

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

This is Zack Snyder’s feature film debut.  He hit a homerun with his first at bat.

The introduction of the zombie apocalypse from Anna’s viewpoint is genius.  Escaping from the zombie in her house in the early morning to seeing helicopters, neighbors getting attacked, and then driving away from the madness into more chaos is perfect.

When Ana is driving down a highway there is a nod/Easter egg to Night of the Living Dead.  A truck crashes into a gas station/diner causing a big explosion.  In Night of the Living Dead Ben says he was in diner parking lot when a truck crashed into the gas pumps.

Ken Foree, Scott H. Reiniger and Tom Savini appeared in the original Dawn of the Dead and have cameos in this one.  One of the stores in the mall is named “Gaylen Ross”. Gaylen Ross was one of the stars of the original film.

Zack Snyder plays the last zombie seen at the end of the opening credits.

Scott Frank (Get Shorty) and Michael Tolkin (The Player) did uncredited work on the screenplay.

Be sure to watch through the credits!

Dawn of the Dead (2002) rates 5 of 5 stars

“Sisu” (2022) written & directed by Jalmari Helander, starring Jorma Tommila / Z-View

Sisu (2022)

Director:  Jalmari Helander

Screenplay:  Jalmari Helander

Stars: Jorma Tommila, Aksel Hennie, Jack Doolan, Mimosa Willamo.

Tagline: Vengeance is golden.

The Plot…

World War II is in its last days.  Aatami Korpi lives a solitary life panning for gold in the wilderness.  Although a decorated vet who earned the nickname “the Immortal” because of suicide missions where he took out scores of enemy soldiers, Aatami is done with war.  Aatami’s entire family was killed while he was on an assignment.  Now he just wants to be left alone.

Aatami’s luck changes when he hits a vein of gold.  He fills two saddlebags full and heads for the nearest town.  Still in the wilderness, he encounters a platoon of Nazis.  They are heading back to the fatherland with scorched-earth orders.  When the Nazis discover Aatami has gold they decide to steal it.

Big mistake.

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

Sisu is a lean mean action film that would be at home in the 80s.

Sisu (2022) rates 4 of 5 stars

“Unit 234” starring Don Johnson, Isabelle Fuhrman and Jack Huston – The Poster and Trailer are Here!

Here’s a new trailer for Unit 234 starring Don Johnson, Isabelle Fuhrman and Jack Huston.  It looks like fun.

Deal me in.

US Release Date: May 9, 2025
Starring: Don Johnson, Isabelle Fuhrman, Jack Huston
Director: Andy Tennant
Synopsis: After the discovery of an unconscious man in a locked unit, the lone employee of a remote storage facility must fight to survive the night.

“Chicago Confidential” (1957) starring Brian Keith / Z-View

Chicago Confidential (1957)

Director:  Sidney Salkow

Screenplay:  Bernard Gordon, based on CHICAGO: CONFIDENTIAL! by Raymond T. Marcus

Stars: Brian Keith, Beverly Garland, Dick Foran, Douglas Kennedy, Paul Langton, Gavin Gordon, Buddy Lewis, Anthony George and Elisha Cook Jr..

Tagline: Rough, Real…and RAW!

The Plot…

When Artie Blaine, a union official, can’t be bribed, mobsters set him up as a patsy for murder.  District Attorney Jim Fremont knows a conviction will help him in his quest to become Governor.  The evidence is there and Fremont gets the murder conviction.

After the trial Fremont begins to have doubts.  His search for evidence to clear Blaine makes him a target for the mob.

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

A low budget crime tale with Brian Keith (an underrated actor) and Elisha Cook, Jr.!

Chicago Confidential (1957) rates 3 of 5 stars

“5 Minutes to Live” aka “Door-to-Door Maniac” (1961) starring Johnny Cash & Vic Tayback / Z-View

5 Minutes to Live aka Door-to-Door Maniac (1961)

Director:  Bill Karn

Screenplay:  Cay Forrester

Stars: Johnny Cash, Donald Woods, Cay Forester, Midge Ware, Merle Travis, Vic Tayback, Norma Varden, Hanna Landy, Howard Wright and Ron Howard.

Tagline: Introducing JOHNNY CASH, America’s top-recording star, as a lusty, romantic, guitar singing powerhouse

The Plot…

Fred Dorella and cold-blooded killer Johnny Cabot have a fool-proof way to rob a bank.  Johnny will take the bank Vice-president’s wife, Nancy hostage.  If the bank’s VP gives Fred $70k, Fred will call Johnny who will release Nancy.  If the bank’s VP doesn’t turn over the cash, Fred will call Johnny who will kill Nancy.

What Fred and Johnny didn’t count on, is the bank’s VP having an affair.  If the crooks kill his wife, he’ll be free!

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

5 Minutes to Live was rereleased in 1966 as Door-to-Door Maniac.

Cay Forester, the female lead, wrote the screenplay.

Johnny Cash (in his film debut) teamed with Vic Tayback (of the television comedy Alice fame) as the bank robbers.  Ronnie Howard who played Opie on The Andy Griffith Show plays the son of bank vice president.

If you enjoy low budget crime thrillers, then give 5 Minutes to Live a shot.

5 Minutes to Live aka Door-to-Door Maniac (1961) rates 3 of 5 stars

“Havok” directed by Gareth Evans, starring Tom Hardy, Jesse Mei Li, Timothy Olyphant & Forest Whitaker – The Poster and Trailer are Here!

We have the poster and trailer for Havok directed by Gareth Evans, starring Tom Hardy, Jesse Mei Li, Timothy Olyphant, Forest Whitaker.  Man, oh man, does this thing kick ass?

Deal me in.

No law, only disorder.

When a drug heist swerves lethally out of control, a jaded cop fights his way through a corrupt city’s criminal underworld to save a politician’s son.

Watch HAVOC, coming to Netflix on April 25.

“The Devil and the Daylong Brothers” (2025) starring Brendan Bradley, Nican Robinson & Jordon Bolden / Z-View

The Devil and the Daylong Brothers (2025)

Director: Brandon McCormick

Screenplay:  Nicholas Kirk, Brandon McCormick

Stars: Brendan Bradley, Nican Robinson, Jordon Bolden, Mark Ashworth, Brad Carter, Adam Boyer, Eugene H. Russell IV, Kate Kovach, Matt Mangum and Keith Carradine.

Tagline: None.

The Plot…

Ish (Bradley), Enoch (Robinson) and Abe (Bolden) are the Daylong brothers.  They had the same father but different mothers.  Before they were born, their daddy sold their souls to the devil.  Now grown, the Daylong brothers are on a mission to win their souls back.  The boys have a list of people they have to kill then the devil will return their souls.

We all know how deals with the devil turn out… right?   Right?

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

I knew that The Devil and the Daylong Brothers would be a stylish crime drama with memorable characters and outrageous action.  I didn’t know that it was a musical.  Think O Brother, Where Art Thou? meets Quentin Tarantino.  It took me a second to get in the grove, but once I did I enjoyed the ride.

The Devil and the Daylong Brothers (2025) rates 3 of 5 stars

“It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World” (1963) directed by Stanley Kramer / Z-View

It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963)

Director: Stanley Kramer

Screenplay: William Rose, Tania Rose

Stars: Spencer Tracy, Milton Berle, Sid Caesar, Buddy Hackett, Ethel Merman, Mickey Rooney, Dick Shawn, Phil Silvers, Terry-Thomas, Jonathan Winters, Edie Adams, Dorothy Provine, Eddie “Rochester” Anderson, Jim Backus, Ben Blue, Joe E. Brown, Alan Carney, Chick Chandler, Barrie Chase, Lloyd Corrigan, William Demarest, Andy Devine, Selma Diamond, Peter Falk, Norman Fell, Paul Ford, Stan Freberg, Leo Gorcey, Sterling Holloway, Edward Everett Horton, Marvin Kaplan, Buster Keaton, Don Knotts, Charles Lane, Mike Mazurki, Charles McGraw, ZaSu Pitts, Carl Reiner, Madlyn Rhue, Roy Roberts, Arnold Stang, Nick Stewart, Sammee Tong, Jesse White, Jimmy Durante, Jack Benny, Paul Birch, Paul Clarke, Stanley Clements, Minta Durfee, Roy Engel, Nicholas Georgiade, Stacy Harris, Don C. Harvey, Allen Jenkins, Robert Karnes, Tom Kennedy, Harry Lauter, Ben Lessey, Bobo Lewis, Jerry Lewis, Tyler McVey, Eddie Ryder, Doodles Weaver, Lennie Weinrib and The Three Stooges (Moe Howard, Larry Fine, Joe DiRita).

Tagline: It’s the biggest entertainment ever to hit the Cinerama screen!

The Plot…

A car is racing down a remote California desert highway.  When the driver misses a turn and his car goes careening down a steep incline, drivers of four vehicles pull over to see if they can assist.  In the vehicles are five men and four women.  The men make their way down to find the driver of the crashed car barely alive.  With his dying breath, the man tells the group that he buried $350,000 of stolen money in Santa Rosita park under a big “W”.  The man then literally kicks the bucket.

The men and women discuss the dying man’s claim.  They then decide he wouldn’t waste his final minutes lying.  The group then begins to argue about how to split the money.  When they cannot come up with a way agreeable to all, they rush to their cars.  Each plans to get to the park, find the bury cash and keep it all!

Let the good times roll!

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World was nominated for six 1964 Academy Awards, winning one.

  • Nominee for Best Music, Score – Substantially Original: Ernest Gold
  • Nominee for Best Music, Original Song: Ernest Gold (music), Mack David (lyrics) For the song “It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World”
  • Nominee for Best Film Editing: Frederic Knudtson, Robert C. Jones, Gene Fowler Jr.
  • Nominee for Best Sound: Gordon Sawyer (Samuel Goldwyn SSD)
  • Nominee for Best Cinematography, Color: Ernest Laszlo
  • Winner for Best Effects, Sound Effects: Walter Elliott

It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World features the film debut of Jonathan Winters.  It also contains Jimmy Durante’s final feature film appearance.  It also has ZaSu Pitts final feature film appearance.  She died just four months before the film’s premiere. The movie contains Eddie ‘Rochester’ Anderson’s final feature film appearance.

Harold Lloyd, Bud Abbott, Edward Brophy, Wally Brown, and George Burns were all offered roles, but declined.

Bob Hope was to be in the film, but his studio refused to allow it.

Don Rickles wanted to be in the movie, but was never asked.  Rickles would tease Stanley Kramer about this “snub” from then on.

Stanley Kramer didn’t ask Charlie Chaplin to appear since Chaplin was living in exile in Sweden.

Red Skelton was to film a cameo but salary demands led to it not happening.

Ernie Kovaks was to play Melville Crump, but Kovaks was killed in an auto crash before filming began.

Joe Besser (best known as one of The Three Stooges) was asked to play one of the garage mechanics, but as co-star of The Danny Thomas Show, he couldn’t get the time off.

The Three Stooges have a cameo as firemen which is a callback to their 1930 short, Soup to Nuts, where they played firemen.

If you’re of the right age, or a dedicated film fan, spotting all of the cameos is fun!

It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World is a classic.

It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) rates 5 of 5 stars

RIP: Robert McGinnis

It has been announced the Robert McGinnis died on March 10, 2025.  Mr. McGinnis was 99.

As a teenager, Robert McGinnis worked as an apprentice at Walt Disney Studios.  During World War II, Mr. McGinnis served in the Merchant Marines.

Robert McGinnis was an artist whose work appeared on over 1200 book covers, over 40 film posters as well as magazine and record album covers.

Mr. McGinnis is perhaps best known for the posters and art that he created for James Bond movies.  Robert McGinnis created the art for Thunderball; You Only Live Twice; On Her Majesty’s Secret Service; Diamonds Are Forever; Live and Let Die and The Man with the Golden Gun.  Others films Mr. McGinnis created posters for include Breakfast at Tiffany’s; How to Steal a Million; The Odd Couple; Barbarella; Duck You Sucker!; Sleeper and Gator.

In 1958, Robert McGinnis began creating covers for Dell Publishing.  Although probably best known for his work on Gold Medal paperback crime/noir novels, Mr. McGinnis’ art could be found on covers for books in genres such as Detective, Mystery, Gothic, Historical Fiction as well as Romance and Fantasy.  In 2004, Robert McGinnis began doing covers for Hard Case Crime. Mr. McGinnis’ art could also be found in magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post, National Geographic, Reader’s Digest, Good Housekeeping, McCall’s and Guideposts.

Some of the album covers featuring Robert McGinnis art include Casino Royale (Soundtrack); Barbarella (Soundtrack); Tommy Steele – Half A Sixpence (Soundtrack); On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (Soundtrack); Sweet Charity (Soundtrack); Cotton Comes to Harlem (Soundtrack); Diamonds are Forever (Soundtrack); Come Back Charleston Blue (Soundtrack); Ennio Morricone – Giù La Testa; The Optimists Orchestra (Soundtrack); Live and Let Die (Soundtrack); The Man with the Golden Gun (Soundtrack); Bingo Long and Traveling All Stars and Motor Kings (Soundtrack); Gator (Soundtrack); Semi-Tough (Soundtrack); The Jigsaw Seen – Songs Mama Used To Sing; The Day of the Dolphin (Soundtrack) and Scorpio (Soundtrack).

In 1985, Robert McGinnis was named Romantic Artist of the Year by the Romantic Times magazine.  In 1993, Mr. McGinnis was inducted into the Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame.

Robert McGinnis was one of my favorite artists.  His pulp covers are classics.  Of course the same could be said for his movie posters, magazine illustrations and well, just about anything he created.  I think it’s time to revisit my Art of Robert McGinnis book and search out Robert McGinnis: Painting the Last Rose of Summer the documentary of his life and art by Paul Jilbert.

Our thoughts and prayers go out to the family, friends and fans of Robert McGinnis.

“Catlow” (1971) starring Yul Brynner, Richard Crenna and Leonard Nimoy / Z-View

Catlow (1971)

Director: Sam Wanamaker

Screenplay: Scott Finch, J.J. Griffith based on CATLOW by Louis L’Amour

Stars: Yul Brynner, Richard Crenna, Leonard Nimoy, Daliah Lavi, Jo Ann Pflug, Jeff Corey, Michael DeLano, David Ladd, Bessie Love, Robert Logan and Dan van Husen.

Tagline: Everyone Wants Catlow Dead and Buried

The Plot…

Catlow (Brynner) is a cattle rustler, a thief and the leader of a band of outlaws.  Now Catlow is heading to Mexico where he plans to steal $2 million in gold.  Marshall Ben Cowan (Crenna) a war buddy of Catlow has been hired by a group of ranchers to bring Catlow back to stand trial.  A bounty hunter named Miller (Nimoy) is also after Catlow.

Who will get Catlow before he gets the gold.

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

I was in the mood for a good western.  Stars Yul Brynner, Richard Crenna and Leonard Nimoy were the reasons I settled on Catlow.  Sadly even their presence couldn’t save Catlow.  I tapped out after 39 minutes.  Quentin Tarantino called it one of the worst westerns made in the 70s.  I wouldn’t argue with QT.

Catlow (1971) rates 1 of 5 stars