The Best Stephen King Novels

Steve Foxe at Paste posted his list for The 10 Best Stephen King Novels and it is a good one. The only novel on the list that I haven’t read is Lisey’s Story, so I’ll have to check it out.
Foxe’s top three are: 1) The Stand 2) It and 3) The Shinning
My top three is pretty close to his: 1) The Stand 2) The Shinning and 3) Salem’s Lot.
The “Dr. Sleep” Poster and Trailer are Here!

The Dr. Sleep poster and trailer make it look an interesting sequel to The Shining.
Criminal Macabre: The Big Bleed Out – A Noir Tale of Mysteries, Vampires, Love, and Betrayal

Criminal Macabre: The Big Bleed Out – A Noir Tale of Mysteries, Vampires, Love, and Betrayal… If that doesn’t get your interest then you can stop reading right here. If it sounds like something you’d enjoy, then read on…
Criminal Macabre is back and bloodier than ever! Series creator Steve Niles (City of Others, 30 Days of Night) and newcomer artist Gyula Németh are teaming up to bring you the next chapter in the Cal McDonald saga: Criminal Macabre: The Big Bleed Out.
Criminal Macabre: The Big Bleed Out starts when supernatural detective Cal McDonald, found wandering the streets as a disheveled vagrant, is ripped from his self-imposed retirement to resume his monster-killing career.
But Cal is reluctant to return to the fray. What has the hard-bitten investigator so shaken? It’s a long story that begins with a beautiful woman who happens to be a vampire … and ends with a bang.
“I’ve been writing Cal McDonald since I was in my 20’s and to this day he is the most fun to write. I couldn’t be happier to see him come back with Gyula Nemeth doing the art. I think fans of Cal will be pleasantly surprised and hopefully a little horrified.”—Steve Niles
Criminal Macabre: The Big Bleed Out #1 (of four) goes on sale December 11, 2019, and is available for pre-order at your local comic shop.
I’m a big fan of Steve Niles and his Cal McDonald stories. I’m on board. If you’ve read this far, you probably are as well.
The Secret Door by Tom Lovell

Does it get any better than Tom Lovell’s The Secret Door?
Lovell was an American artist whose early work appeared in pulp magazines and then when the pulps faded out, he transitioned to slick magazines and advertising art. Lovell was inducted into the Society of Illustrators’ Hall of Fame in 1974.
Lovell said he considered himself a storyteller with a brush. The painting above is an excellent example of that. If this was a movie poster, I’d want to see it and if it was an illustration for a story, I’d want to read it.
If you’d like to see a larger version (and you should) click over to I Can’t Stop Thinking About Comics!
The Trailer for “Fritz Lang’s Indian Epic” is Here!

Today we have a trailer for Fritz Lang’s Indian Epic. Interestingly enough, Lang’s Indian Epic is actually two films, The Tiger of Eschnapur and The Indian Tomb that Lang directed at the end of his career. He was given a bigger budget and freedom long denied him in Hollywood. You can learn more about Lang’s Indian Epic here, here, and here.
I’d never seen these movies, but being a Lang fan and having seen the trailer below, I want to.
“Ad Astra”: Moon Rover Clip features Space Pirates!

While I like the poster above for Ad Astra, the trailers that I’ve seen before today’s clip have left me thinking: Great cast, cool looking effects, but nothing that makes me want to head out to a theater.
That all changed today with the clip below. Save me a seat on September 20th!
The “Jack Ryan: Season 2” Poster and Trailer are Here!

Above is the poster and below is the trailer for Jack Ryan: Season 2 premiering on November 1st on Prime. The first season was not just good, but surprisingly good. Can’t wait for November 1st.
Do No Harm (A Nate Heller Thriller) by Max Allan Collins is Coming!

Max Allan Collins returns with a new Nate Heller novel, Do No Harm, in March!
Heller is Collins’ fictional detective who finds himself involved with famous murder cases. Heller has been in the mix on everything from the Lindbergh baby kidnapping/murder to the suspicious death of Marilyn Monroe and so much more. Along the way, Heller meets, fights and sometimes gets involved with famous and infamous celebrities. As the years go by Heller ages, creating a unique reading experience. Here’s an impressive timeline of Heller’s life and cases thus far.
Ah, but I digress; back to Do No Harm. Here’s the synopsis…
Do No Harm is the latest mystery in the Nathan Heller series by New York Times bestselling author Max Allan Collins.
It’s 1954 and Heller takes on the Sam Sheppard case―a young doctor is startled from sleep and discovers his wife brutally murdered. He claims that a mysterious intruder killed his wife. But all the evidence points to a disturbed husband who has grown tired of married life and yearned to be free at all costs. Sheppard is swiftly convicted and sent to rot in prison.
Just how firm was the evidence…and was it tampered with to fit a convenient narrative to settle scores and push political agendas? Nathan’s old friend Elliot Ness calls in a favor and as Nathan digs into the case he becomes convinced of Sheppard’s innocence. But Nate can’t prove it and has to let the case drop.
The road to justice is sometimes a long one. Heller’s given another chance years later and this time he’s determined to free the man…even if it brings his own death a bit closer.
Each new Nate Heller is like a visit with an old friend who takes me behind the scenes on real life murder mysteries. At the end of each Heller tale, Collins provides a detailed bibliography and explains where his novel deviated from the facts (if at all). I can’t wait for our next visit.
“RAMBO: LAST BLOOD” International Trailer (2019) New Footage

RAMBO: LAST BLOOD International Trailer (2019) New Footage
The All Time Best Movie Cameos

Coming Soon posted their choices for The 10 Best Movie Cameos. Using just their choices, here are my top three plus four movie cameos that would have made my list!
A Whole Slew of Alfred Hitchcock Films
Before Stan Lee was appearing in every Marvel movie, Alfred Hitchcock was inserting himself into the background of almost all his films. An older man with an instantly recognizable look, it’s clear to see why Marvel hopped on the opportunity to steal one of Hitchcock’s signature moves.
Pulp Fiction
Christopher Walken is one of the most beloved and praised actors of the back half of the 20th century, so his appearance in Pulp Fiction deserves some recognition for combining one of the most-respected actors and one of the most-revered films. He’s only on-screen for one scene, but it’s a scene that continues to be pored over.
Tropic Thunder
Tom Cruise wearing extensive prosthetics and wearing an unrecognizable getup makes for (easily) one of the best cameos ever. It’s unclear why or how this role came to be, but we welcome it wholeheartedly (and long for the once-rumored spinoff film about his character).
Now for my favorite cameos that didn’t make their list…
Staying Alive: Director Sly Stallone appears just for seconds as he and Tony Manero (John Travolta) bump into each other while walking down a busy sidewalk.
Young Frankenstein: Gene Hackman goes uncredited in one of the funniest scenes in one of the funniest movies of all time.
Glengarry Glen Ross: Alec Baldwin shows up for a memorable scene that sets up everything to follow. ABC – Always Be Closing.
Zombieland: Bill Murray. Need I say more?
John Carpenter’s “They Live” Trivia

Matthew Jackson and Mental Floss present 10 Killer Facts About They Live. Here are three of my favorites…
1. THEY LIVE WAS INSPIRED BY A COMIC BOOK ADAPTATION OF A SHORT STORY.
They Live is an adaptation of Ray Nelson’s science fiction short story “Eight O’Clock in the Morning,” which was originally published in the 1960s. But John Carpenter’s more direct inspiration was an Eclipse Comics adaptation of Nelson’s story, which he stumbled across in the mid-1980s. Intrigued by the idea of aliens enslaving humanity, Carpenter then sought out the original prose work.“‘Eight O’Clock in the Morning is’ a D.O.A.-type of story, in which a man is put in a trance by a stage hypnotist,” Carpenter told Starlog in 1988. “When he awakens, he realizes that the entire human race has been hypnotized, and that alien creatures are controlling humanity. He has only until eight o’clock in the morning to solve the problem.”
Though Carpenter liked the idea of the entire populace being controlled subliminally by an alien menace, he wasn’t too keen on the hypnotism idea. He bought the rights to the story and began adapting it, changing hypnotism to the very 1980s notion of Americans being controlled via subliminal messaging.
3. JOHN CARPENTER WROTE THEY LIVE UNDER AN ALIAS.
Carpenter has always been a multi-hyphenate kind of filmmaker, directing, writing, producing and scoring his movies. But by the time They Live came around, he’d grown a little disillusioned with the idea of continuing to have his name plastered absolutely everywhere. With that in mind, he decided that he’d use a pseudonym for They Live’s screenplay credit.“It was a reaction to seeing my name all over these movies,” Carpenter explained to Entertainment Weekly in 2012. “I think the height of it was Christine. It was like, John Carpenter’s Christine, directed by John Carpenter, music by John Carpenter … what an egotist!”
Carpenter chose the pseudonym Frank Armitage, which is a character from H.P. Lovecraft’s story “The Dunwich Horror,” which he picked “just because I love Lovecraft.”
5. THEY LIVE’S MOST FAMOUS LINE CAME FROM RODDY PIPER.
Even if you’ve never seen They Live, you’ve probably heard someone at some point in your life say: “I have come here to chew bubble gum and kick ass, and I’m all out of bubble gum.” Ever since Nada delivered that line in the film, it’s maintained a life even beyond They Live, becoming one of the most popular and frequently quoted lines in all of pop culture. According to Carpenter, the line came straight from Piper, who kept a notebook full of quips like that to use in his wrestling promos.
“Traveling all around the country wrestling different people, those guys come up with a lot of stuff to hype matches in interviews. They have to come up with one-liners. Roddy had a book full of them that he carried with him,” Carpenter explained. “He’d sit on a plane and come up with these things. He gave me the book when I was writing the script and that was the best one in there. I think he was wrestling Playboy Buddy Rose and he may have said the line then.”
According to Piper, the line actually didn’t enter the picture until the day they shot the scene, but either way both men agree that he wrote it.
“The Friends of Eddie Foyle” Gets the Cinephilia and Beyond Treatment

If you’re a crime film fan, you’ve probably seen The Friends of Eddie Coyle. If you haven’t seen it, you should.
The Friends of Eddie Coyle was based on George V. Higgins’ crime novel of the same name. The movie was directed by Peter Yates and starred Robert Mitchum and thankfully, gets the Cinephilia and Beyond Treatment in The Friends of Eddie Coyle: Peter Yates’ Crime Masterpiece. Click over and enjoy!
Sly Stallone Retrospective by Chris Bumbray of JoBlo.com!

Chris Bumbray, over at JoBlo.com has a new series where he takes a look at the careers of famous movie stars. As you’ve probably already figured out, this week he turns the spotlight on Sly Stallone.
Bumbray does an excellent job with his retrospective and analysis. No nits to pick except I’d rate Stop of My Mom Will Shoot! as Sly’s worst (not Rhinestone) and of course, everyone knows how much I enjoy Sly’s Get Carter.
“Cop Land” Gets the Best Movie You Never Saw Treatment!

This week Joblo.com gave Cop Land The Best Movie You Never Saw treatment. If you click over you’ll get the story, the players, the history, why it’s great, movie photos and clips, the trailer and more.























































