Gravedigger by Rick Burchett

I absolutely love the use of negative space in this beautiful drawing by Rick Burchett.
Previews and Reviews that are Z's Views

I absolutely love the use of negative space in this beautiful drawing by Rick Burchett.
S.A. Cosby’s next novel KING OF ASHES has been announced. It sounds like another winner…
Award-winning, New York Times bestselling author S. A. Cosby returns with KING OF ASHES, a Godfather-inspired Southern crime epic and dazzling family drama.
When eldest son Roman Carruthers is summoned home after his father’s car accident, he finds his younger brother, Dante, in debt to dangerous criminals and his sister, Neveah, exhausted from holding the family―and the family business―together. Neveah and their father, who run the Carruthers Crematorium in the run-down central Virginia town of Jefferson Run, see death up close every day. But mortality draws even closer when it becomes clear that the crash that landed their father in a coma was no accident and Dante’s recklessness has placed them all in real danger.
Roman, a financial whiz with a head for numbers and a talent for making his clients rich, has some money to help buy his brother out of trouble. But in his work with wannabe tough guys, he’s forgotten that there are real gangsters out there. As his bargaining chips go up in smoke, Roman realizes that he has only one thing left to offer to save his brother: himself, and his own particular set of skills.
Roman begins his work for the criminals while Neveah tries to uncover the long-ago mystery of what happened to their mother, who disappeared when they were teenagers. But Roman is far less of a pushover than the gangsters realize. He is willing to do anything to save his family. Anything.
Because everything burns.
KING OF ASHES drops on June 10, 2025. This is a must-get for me. Pre-orders are available now.

Salem’s Lot (1979)
Director: Tobe Hooper
Screenplay: Paul Monash based on ‘SALEM’S LOT by Stephen King
Stars: David Soul, James Mason, Lance Kerwin, Bonnie Bedelia, Lew Ayres, Julie Cobb, Elisha Cook Jr., George Dzundza, Ed Flanders, Kenneth McMillan, Fred Willard, Marie Windsor, Barbara Babcock, Bonnie Bartlett, Joshua Bryant, Reggie Nalder and Geoffrey Lewis.
Tagline: Salem’s Lot… where no one rests in peace…
The Plot…
A vampire has come to the small remote town of Salem’s Lot, Maine.
One vampire bites a human and you have two blood suckers. Two turn others and now there are four. As the number of vampires grow, only a few people realize (believe) what is happening. Ben Mears (Soul), his new girlfriend Susan (Bedelia), aging school teacher Jason Bruke (Ayers) and young Mark Petrie (Kerwin).
What chance do they have against the living dead?
Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…
Salem’s Lot was nominated for three 1980 Primetime Emmy Awards…
Salem’s Lot was originally developed as a feature film with George “Night of the Living Dead” Romero set to direct. When Dracula (1979) and Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979) were announced, Warner Bros. decided to make Salem’s Lot as a two episode mini-series. Romero then dropped out.
Tobe Hooper came on board as a director. He realized as a tv project, he would be severely limited to the amount of blood/gore. He therefore focused on creating atmosphere and tension. Salem’s Lot is better for it. (As it turned out Salem’s Lot was released theatrically in Europe with a slightly different cut.)
On of the eeriest scenes is Ralphie Glick floating outside a second story window. Ralphie scratches the glass to awaken his sleeping brother. Part of the scene was filmed in reverse making it even more surreal.
Reggie Nalder played the main vampire Barlow. It’s hard to believe that he has less than 90 seconds of screen time! Believe it or not, this works as it makes each appearance more frightening. Nalder expressed disappointment that additional filmed scenes didn’t make the final cut. He also said that the contact lenses and heavy make-up he had to wear was very uncomfortable.
Bonnie Bedelia and Julie Cobb really shine.
I remember the anticipation leading up to the original television showing. It was an event. This was in the days when you had to be in front of the tv to see the show. My date (and later my wife) and I made a point to be home both nights. We weren’t disappointed.
Salem’s Lot (1979) rates 4 of 5 stars.



It was announced that Earl Holliman died today, at the age of 96.
When Earl Holliman was a teenager he saved his money from his jobs as a theater usher, paperboy and magician’s assistant. He then went to Hollywood. He lasted a week before his money ran out and he returned to his home in Louisiana.
His adoptive mother had remarried after her first husband died. Earl didn’t get along with his new stepfather. World War II was underway. Earl lied about his age and went into the Navy. A year into his enlistment, the Navy discovered Earl’s true age and he was sent home. Earl finished his high school education, graduated with honors and was his senior class president.
Now old enough to enlist, Earl reupped with the Navy. While in the Navy, Mr. Holliman was cast in the lead of several Norfolk Navy productions. After leaving the navy, Mr. Holliman moved to California. He studied acting and graduated from UCLA.
Mr. Holliman bluffed his way onto the Paramount lot. Over time he made some connections and got his first part. After that Earl Holliman continued to work in feature films, television and stage roles until he retired.
Television projects that feature Earl Holliman include: Matinee Theater; Kraft Theater (2 episodes); Studio One; Playhouse 90 (2 episodes); Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse; The Twilight Zone (1st episode); Hotel de Paree (32 episodes); The Dick Powell Theater; Westinghouse Presents: The Dispossessed; Bus Stop; Alcoa Premiere; General Electric Theater; Checkmate; Wide Country (28 episodes); The Great Adventure; Bonanza; 12 O’Clock High; Dr. Kildare; The Virginian; Slattery’s People; The Fugitive; Custer; Judd for the Defense; Insight; Marcus Welby MD; Smoke; The Tribe; Ironside; Cannon; Alias Smith & Jones (2 episodes); The Rookies; Gunsmoke (3 episodes); Medical Center (2 episodes); The Magical World of Disney (4 episodes); The FBI (4 episodes); The Streets of San Francisco; The Six Million Dollar Man: Wine, Women and War; Doberman Patrol; Cry Panic; Police Story; Police Woman (90 episodes); The Solitary Man; CHiPs (2 episodes); Country Gold; The Thorn Birds (3 episodes); Hotel; American Harvest; Gunsmoke: Return to Dodge; Empty Nest; PSI Luv U (13 episodes); The Larry Sanders Show; In the Heat of the Night; Delta (17 episodes); Murder, She Wrote (2 episodes); Captain Planet and the Planeteers; Caroline in the City (3 episodes); Nightman (24 episodes) and Chicken Soup for the Soul.
Feature films that Earl Holliman appeared in include: Destination Gobi; Scared Stiff; East of Sumatra; Broken Lance; The Bridges at Toko-Ri; The Big Combo; I Died A Thousand Times; Forbidden Planet; Giant; The Rainmaker; The Gunfight at the O.K. Corral; Trooper Hook; Don’t Go Near the Water; Hot Spell; The Trap; The Last Train from Gun Hill; Visit to a Small Planet; Summer and Smoke; The Sons of Katie Elder; Anzio; Sharky’s Machine and The Perfect Tenant.
Earl Holliman starred in the first episode of the first season of The Twilight Zone. Talk about an impressive first credit. When I think of Earl Holliman the first role that comes to mind is Sgt. (and later Lt.) Bill Crowley on Police Woman. Then his part in Forbidden Planet. As an adult I’ve loved seeing Earl Holliman in noirs such as The Big Combo and I Died a Thousand Times. Whatever he was in, Mr. Holliman made it better.
Out thoughts and prayers go out to Earl Holliman’s family, friends and fans.

Marv from Frank Miller’s Sin City is one of my all-time favorite characters. I love seeing artists do their “take” on the big lug. Today we have Marv by Jordi Bernet.
Source: Phil Hester.
THE AMATEURS by Robert Crais
First sentence…
LATER JENN LACIE WOULD SPEND a lot of time trying to pinpoint the exact moment.
The Overview: Beware of Spoilers…
Every Thursday night for the last decade Alex, Ian, Jenn and Mitch have met for drinks. A decade ago they were young and had dreams. Now none are where they thought they’d be.
Ian is day trader stuck in a job going nowhere. Mitch isn’t doing any better working as a doorman at the Continental Hotel. Jenn is a travel agent who longs for adventure. Alex is bartending for a jerk named Johnny Loverin aka Johnny Love. He dresses fancy and flaunts his money. Everyone is sure Johnny Love is into some illegal stuff.
So when Alex overhears about one of Johnny Love’s drug deals, he tells his friends. Alex’s idea is to get to the meet before the thugs with the drugs show up. They’ll rip off Johnny Love for his cash. Then a clean getaway and a four way split with no one being the wiser. If all four work together, they’ll provide each other with an alibi. Alex says no one will suspect them. Easy money and no one gets hurt.
The friends reluctantly agree.
Of course the ripoff goes sideways. People are killed. It wasn’t drugs that were being dealt. Something much worse.
Now the cops are closing in. So are the gangsters. Friendship only goes so far when survival is at stake.
+++++
Marcus Sakey has created another winner.
Rating:


Trap (2024)
Director: M. Night Shyamalan
Screenplay: M. Night Shyamalan
Stars: Josh Hartnett, Ariel Donoghue, Saleka Shyamalan, Alison Pill, Marcia Bennett, M. Night Shyamalan, Lochlan Miller and Hayley Mills.
Tagline: 30,000 fans. 300 cops. 1 serial killer. No escape.
The Plot…
From all appearances Cooper (Harnett) is a great guy. He’s a firefighter, outgoing and friendly. Cooper is married with two kids. A real family man.
Because his daughter, Riley (Donoghue) earned great grades on her last report card, Cooper takes her to a Lady Raven (S, Shyamalan) concert. As they enter the arena, Cooper notices a huge police presence. When they get inside, there are even more cops. They seem to be everywhere. Well, safety should be a priority for events this well attended.
Once the concert starts, Cooper notices men are being escorted out by the police. Now curious and concerned, Cooper tells his daughter he’s going to the restroom. Then using his charm, Cooper learns a secret. The police are there because they got a lead that the serial killer known as The Butcher is in attendance. Every exit is covered. Police and FBI are there in force. They have a description of The Butcher and anyone fitting it, will be questioned before he is allowed out.
Cooper is concerned. Not because a serial killer is at the concert. No. Cooper is concerned because he is The Butcher.
Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…
Saleka Shyamalan makes her film debut. She is M. Night Shyamalan’s daughter and a singer/songwriter. Saleka wrote and performed all of the songs in the movie. The official Trap movie soundtrack is titled Lady Raven and features all of the songs from the movie.
The concert feels real. Kudos to M. Night, Saleka and all involved.
Some aspects come off as very contrived, but M. Night Shyamalan is adept at keeping things moving. This way viewers go with the flow. I was expecting Cooper to get caught or escape then fade to credits. M. Night Shyamalan had a different idea. There’s no big twist (as in some of his films) but there are some unexpected turns. I enjoyed the ride.
Trap (2024) rates 3 of 5 stars.



Mike Zeck gives us a widescreen Punisher!

JFK (1991)
Director: Oliver Stone
Screenplay: Oliver Stone, Zachary Sklar based on ON THE TRAIL OF ASSASSINS by Jim Garrison and CROSSFIRE: THE PLOT THAT KILLED KENNEDY by Jim Marrs
Stars: Kevin Costner, Gary Oldman, Jack Lemmon, Walter Matthau, Sally Kirkland, Jay O. Sanders, Kevin Bacon, Tommy Lee Jones, Michael Rooker, Sissy Spacek, Joe Pesci, Donald Sutherland, Ed Asner, Brian Doyle-Murray, John Candy, Wayne Knight, Pruitt Taylor Vince, Vincent D’Onofrio, Dale Dye, Lolita Davidovich, John Larroquette, Ron Rifkin and Martin Sheen (narration).
Tagline: He’s a District Attorney. He will risk his life, the lives of his family, everything he holds dear for the one thing he holds sacred… the truth.
The Plot…
New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison (Costner) has doubts about the Warren Commission’s findings that Lee Harvey Oswald (Oldman) acted alone in the assassination of President Kennedy. Garrison puts together a team to investigate. The team discovers new evidence, witnesses that were ignored, and more.
Garrison will ultimately indict a New Orleans business man, Clay Shaw (Jones) for his role in the assassination of President Kennedy. Was Garrison a hero or a conspiracy nut?
Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…
JFK was nominated for eight 1992 Academy Awards and won two…
JFK is riveting cinema. The story is compelling. The direction, editing, use of various film stocks, vintage real footage mixed with recreations is movie-making at it’s best. Director Oliver Stone was at the top of his game. He was supported by an amazing cast.
The scene where Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested in the theater was filmed in the actual theater where the real arrest took place. Money from the film was used to restore the theater.
The scene of Jack Ruby killing Lee Harvey Oswald was shot in the Dallas City Hall basement where the actual murder took place.
The scenes of Lee Harvey Oswald shooting from the sixth floor window of the Texas School Book Depository were filmed in the real building, but from the fifth floor window. The sixth floor is now a museum. Views as seen from the sixth floor window were actually taken from that window. Only the cameraman, Stone and a couple of others were allowed at the window.
Woody Harrelson’s father, Charles Harrelson, was convicted of killing federal judge John H. Wood Jr. (and two others). Charles Harrelson claimed that he took part in the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Harrelson claimed he was one of the three “tramps” questioned the day of the murder. Harrelson drew diagrams and claims he can be seen in photos taken that day. The FBI has discounted his claims.
JFK is Oliver Stone’s favorite of all the films he directed.
In response to criticism that he made up much of the “facts” presented, Oliver Stone published an annotated version of his screenplay, in which he proved attribution for every claim made in the film.
JFK (1991) rates 5 of 5 stars.



Laura (1944)
Director: Otto Preminger
Screenplay: Jay Dratler, Samuel Hoffenstein, Elizabeth Reinhardt, Ring Lardner Jr. (uncredited) based on LAURA by Vera Caspary
Stars: Gene Tierney, Dana Andrews, Clifton Webb, Vincent Price, Judith Anderson and Dorothy Adams.
Tagline: No picture was ever so irresistible as Laura. No picture was ever so breath-taking!
The Plot…
Laura Hunt (Tierney), an attractive successful young woman, was brutally murdered at the entrance to her apartment. The shotgun blast to the face destroyed her beauty as it took her life. Detective Mark McPherson (Andrews) is put in charge of the investigation.
Detective McPherson interviews Laura’s closest friends…
As McPherson learns more about Laura, her beauty and exceptional personality, he becomes infatuated with her.
Then something totally unexpected happens.
Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…
Laura was nominated for five Academy Awards and won one…
Vincent Price considered Laura the best film he was ever in.
Clifton Webb had a career in silent films. He then became a theater actor and hadn’t appeared on screen in 15 years. Otto Preminger wanted him for the role of Waldo. Studio head Darryl F. Zanuck was against the casting because Webb was a homosexual. Preminger persisted. Zanuck said to give Webb a screen test. Webb said, “If Zanuck wants to see me act, he can come to the theater.” Preminger filmed Webb in a stage performance. When Zanuck saw this “screen test” he was upset with how Preminger got the footage, but agreed to the casting.
Otto Preminger put together Laura as a project for him to produce and direct. However when Darryl Zanuck returned from the service to head the studio, he nixed this. Zanuck had problems with Preminger in the past. Zanuck said Preminger could serve as a producer, but not director of the film. Rouben Mamoulian was given the job. Nobody liked the dailes Mamoulian shot. Zanuck replaced Mamoulian with Preminger.
Laura provided inspiration for Burt Reynold’s Sharky’s Machine.
Laura (1944) rates 4 of 5 stars.



I love the creepiness of this Nosferatu poster!

Werewolf headshot by Bernie Wrightson. Now THAT is a werewolf!

Jungle Gents (1954)
Director: Edward Bernds
Screenplay: Edward Bernds, Elwood Ullman
Stars: Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Bernard Gorcey, Laurette Luez, Harry Cording, David Gorcey, Benny Bartlett, Murray Alper, Pat Flaherty, Joel Fluellen, Roy Glenn, Emory Parnell, Emil Sitka, Woody Strode and Clint Walker.
Tagline: You’ll Go WILD with LAFFS!
The Plot…
Sach’s new medicine gives him the power to smell diamonds. Slip (L. Gorcey), Satch (Hall), Louie (B. Gorcey), and others are headed to the jungles of Africa to find a diamond mine. Little do the boys know that a group of crooks are following. Soon the guys are fighting the gangsters and natives.
Where is Anatta (Luez), the Jungle Girl when you need her?
Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…
Clint “Cheyenne” Walker makes his film debut.
Woody Stode appears uncredited as a native.
Jungle Gents (1954) rates 3 of 5 stars.


THE ACTOR by Donald Westlake sounds like a winner…
NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE
Donald E. Westlake’s lost masterpiece MEMORY, adapted for the screen as THE ACTOR.
“An unsparing look at a man adrift, it’s a fitting final dispatch from a master.” — Time
“Terse and bleak and low-key emotional… indelible.” — Entertainment Weekly
THE CRIME WAS OVER IN A MINUTE –
THE CONSQUENCES LASTED A LIFETIMEHospitalized after a liaison with another man’s wife ends in violence, Paul Cole has just one goal: to rebuild his shattered life. But with his memory damaged, the police hounding him, and no way even to get home, Paul’s facing steep odds – and a bleak fate if he fails…
This final, never-before-published novel by three-time Edgar Award winner Donald E. Westlake is a noir masterpiece, a dark and painful portrait of a man’s struggle against merciless forces that threaten to strip him of his very identity.
THE ACTOR drops on January 14, 2025. Preorders are available now.