Recently, CBS released the new,official synopsis/spoilers for their upcoming "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" episode 16 of season 15. The episode is entitled, "The Last Ride," and it turns out that we're going to see the team get involved with a murder case that features fancy rides and a chrome-covered victim, and more. In the new, 16th episode press release: The CSI team will investigate a death involving a vintage Rolls Royce and a Chrome-Covered victim. Press release number 2: The CSI team is going to investigate a death involving a vintage Rolls Royce and a chrome-covered victim. Guest stars features: Alimi Ballard (Detective Kevin Crawford), James Aldridge (Coroner Asst. Jimmy), Blair Bomar (Ava Montrose), Wil Traval (Carlo Derosa), Travis Schuldt (Aron Derosa), Matthew Glave (Ken Bixler), Karen Sillas (Ruth Montrose), Tracy Fraim (Duncan Reidel), Vito D'Ambrosio (Alfonz Derosa) and Benjamin Plessala (Young Aron Derosa). The episode was written by Gavin Harris,...
- 1/25/2015
- by Andre Braddox
- OnTheFlix
Throughout the month of December, we will be highlighting a film a day that has some tie into the holiday somehow. Some titles will be obvious, others won’t be. Some films will be good and, again, others won’t be. However, we think all titles are worth your time whether to give you chills inside your home or to make you drink more eggnog until you puke laughing.
Late one night young Derek (William Thorne) awakes to someone knocking at the front door. A present left on the porch ends up strangling his dad. Derek has gone into shock and won’t speak. His mom Sarah (Jane Higginson) hopes maybe a toy will cheer him up. They go to the toy store owned by Joe Petto (Mickey Rooney) and his son Pino (Brian Bremer). Old Joe has got some weird toys, like Larry the Larvae. Noah (Tracy Fraim) has...
Late one night young Derek (William Thorne) awakes to someone knocking at the front door. A present left on the porch ends up strangling his dad. Derek has gone into shock and won’t speak. His mom Sarah (Jane Higginson) hopes maybe a toy will cheer him up. They go to the toy store owned by Joe Petto (Mickey Rooney) and his son Pino (Brian Bremer). Old Joe has got some weird toys, like Larry the Larvae. Noah (Tracy Fraim) has...
- 12/24/2014
- by Jeremy Jones
- Destroy the Brain
It’s officially Christmas Eve. That means that it’s officially the scariest damn night of the year. You should be afraid, but I suppose if the apocalypse didn’t get you what’s an obese man trying to fit down a chimney with a child labor law violation or two gonna do to you? Welcome to It Came From 1980x. We’ve been following the “evolution” of the Silent Night Deadly Night series starting with a review of the first two movies re-released as a double feature by Anchor Bay and then moving on to the later three sequels that really have jack and shit to do with the rest of the series. That doesn’t mean that we dislike them although my personal preference on the third installment have been documented interwebz wide. This is the final entry in the franchise prior to the reboot/reimaging/remake that...
- 12/24/2012
- by Jimmy Terror
- The Liberal Dead
by Chris Wright, MoreHorror.com
A day before Christmas and all through the house, not a creature was stirring except Larry the Larvae! “Silent Night Deadly Night 5: The Toy Maker” was a pretty good small budget straight to video sequel. One cannot be too surprised that the forth and fifth sequel went with a different premise per movie. Trust me, if you watch the second and third sequel, you’ll beg them to change the subject!
I know many who do not like this movie for any number of reasons, but I consider this the second best made sequel of this five movie franchise. It’s generally well done plot with pretty solid acting. Brian Yuzna co-wrote as he did the forth (director of “The Dentist” and writer of “Honey, I Shrunk the Kids”). It’s slow in some spots but I find it fun. Fun fact? Rooney protested...
A day before Christmas and all through the house, not a creature was stirring except Larry the Larvae! “Silent Night Deadly Night 5: The Toy Maker” was a pretty good small budget straight to video sequel. One cannot be too surprised that the forth and fifth sequel went with a different premise per movie. Trust me, if you watch the second and third sequel, you’ll beg them to change the subject!
I know many who do not like this movie for any number of reasons, but I consider this the second best made sequel of this five movie franchise. It’s generally well done plot with pretty solid acting. Brian Yuzna co-wrote as he did the forth (director of “The Dentist” and writer of “Honey, I Shrunk the Kids”). It’s slow in some spots but I find it fun. Fun fact? Rooney protested...
- 12/24/2011
- by admin
- MoreHorror
After dressing up as a clown, the clown then shoots a man at a bakery store. Note the emphasis on the gun throughout the clown's make-up scene, cos all clowns are evil! (Joke.) I don't have any hang ups about clowns but I know some people will suffer nightmares after the abundance in this episode. It was a bit too obvious that other clowns would arrive on the scene just so as the real killer could make his escape and throw them off the track, for a while. Including leaving a gun behind which had nothing to do with the shooting. Was it used by the hitman who was sent after Bobby Renton (Jd Pardo). OOh me jumping the gun here again - groan.) Or as Mac (Gary Sinise) said later, was that just a red herring to throw them off the scent. Flack (Eddie Cahill) questions the clown, who...
- 4/1/2011
- by mhasan@corp.popstar.com (Mila Hasan)
- PopStar
Aside from the lead being a young woman with a questing soul and loose agenda, the upbeat "Love Always" is only fitfully involving as it reworks the road-movie genre along gender lines but is short on engaging humor or compelling drama.
Lead Marisa Ryan ("Slaves to the Underground") has plenty of energy and presence, but debut filmmaker Jude Pauline Eberhard only partly succeeds with the episodic scenario based on co-writer Sharlene Baker's novel "Finding Signs". Released by Legacy, "Love Always" needs strong word-of-mouth and good reviews to make an impact, but the forecast is not promising.
Julia Bradshaw (Ryan) has a serious boyfriend in Spokane, Wash., but she's not ready to settle down. On the loose in San Diego, she goes on acting auditions with best friend Mary Ellen Moon Zappa) and the latter's boyfriend (James Victor). Into taking chances and seeking adventure, Julia hits the trail again with the goal of seeing her lonely beau Michael Reilly Burke), who sends her a postcard and proposes.
She hitches a ride with a speed freak (Doug Hutchison) who abandons her at a rest stop, where she's helped out by a middle-aged woman (Beth Grant) who is transporting life-size ceramic cows to a farm near Spokane. Impish but guileless, Julia accidentally breaks one of the cows and reluctantly agrees to fetch a replacement in Las Vegas.
So near to her potential future, Julia is now far away when she's stranded in Vegas. She makes a few calls and learns she's to be maid of honor at Mary Ellen's wedding in Boston. As luck would have it, she makes the next leg of her journey in a van with members of an all-woman rock band, the Virgin Sluts.
After the wedding, Julia once again sets out for Spokane, but her first ride is a friend's older brother (Jerry O'Donnell), who makes a lunge for her. Julia's woes are short-lived. She's rescued by an AWOL Marine (Aaron Kuhr) and they soon get in an accident, but through this calamity she meets David (Tracy Fraim), a genuine catch who soothes her and makes love to her.
Faced with a lifetime of such adventures or the love of a good guy, Julia is a free spirit and touches the lives of those she meets, but her own transformation is barely noticeable. Ryan is equal to the overall buoyant mood of the work, although there are several overlong sequences cut to music in which she's merely along for the ride.
LOVE ALWAYS
Legacy Releasing
Persistence of Vision Films
An Isaac Artenstein Production
A Jude Pauline Eberhard Film
Director Jude Pauline Eberhard
Producer Isaac Artenstein
Screenwriters Jude Pauline Eberhard,
Sharlene Baker
Based on a novel by Sharlene Baker
Executive producers Ken Branson,
Coop Cooprider
Director of photography Xavier Perez Grobet
Production designer Mauricio de Aguinaco
Music Jaime Valle, Anton Sanko
Editor Joel Goodman
Color/stereo
Cast:
Julia Bradshaw Marisa Ryan
Mary Ellen Moon Zappa
Mark Righetti Michael Reilly Burke
Sean James Victor
James Doug Hutchison
Stephanie Beth Grant
David Tracy Fraim
Running time -- 91 minutes
MPAA rating: R...
Lead Marisa Ryan ("Slaves to the Underground") has plenty of energy and presence, but debut filmmaker Jude Pauline Eberhard only partly succeeds with the episodic scenario based on co-writer Sharlene Baker's novel "Finding Signs". Released by Legacy, "Love Always" needs strong word-of-mouth and good reviews to make an impact, but the forecast is not promising.
Julia Bradshaw (Ryan) has a serious boyfriend in Spokane, Wash., but she's not ready to settle down. On the loose in San Diego, she goes on acting auditions with best friend Mary Ellen Moon Zappa) and the latter's boyfriend (James Victor). Into taking chances and seeking adventure, Julia hits the trail again with the goal of seeing her lonely beau Michael Reilly Burke), who sends her a postcard and proposes.
She hitches a ride with a speed freak (Doug Hutchison) who abandons her at a rest stop, where she's helped out by a middle-aged woman (Beth Grant) who is transporting life-size ceramic cows to a farm near Spokane. Impish but guileless, Julia accidentally breaks one of the cows and reluctantly agrees to fetch a replacement in Las Vegas.
So near to her potential future, Julia is now far away when she's stranded in Vegas. She makes a few calls and learns she's to be maid of honor at Mary Ellen's wedding in Boston. As luck would have it, she makes the next leg of her journey in a van with members of an all-woman rock band, the Virgin Sluts.
After the wedding, Julia once again sets out for Spokane, but her first ride is a friend's older brother (Jerry O'Donnell), who makes a lunge for her. Julia's woes are short-lived. She's rescued by an AWOL Marine (Aaron Kuhr) and they soon get in an accident, but through this calamity she meets David (Tracy Fraim), a genuine catch who soothes her and makes love to her.
Faced with a lifetime of such adventures or the love of a good guy, Julia is a free spirit and touches the lives of those she meets, but her own transformation is barely noticeable. Ryan is equal to the overall buoyant mood of the work, although there are several overlong sequences cut to music in which she's merely along for the ride.
LOVE ALWAYS
Legacy Releasing
Persistence of Vision Films
An Isaac Artenstein Production
A Jude Pauline Eberhard Film
Director Jude Pauline Eberhard
Producer Isaac Artenstein
Screenwriters Jude Pauline Eberhard,
Sharlene Baker
Based on a novel by Sharlene Baker
Executive producers Ken Branson,
Coop Cooprider
Director of photography Xavier Perez Grobet
Production designer Mauricio de Aguinaco
Music Jaime Valle, Anton Sanko
Editor Joel Goodman
Color/stereo
Cast:
Julia Bradshaw Marisa Ryan
Mary Ellen Moon Zappa
Mark Righetti Michael Reilly Burke
Sean James Victor
James Doug Hutchison
Stephanie Beth Grant
David Tracy Fraim
Running time -- 91 minutes
MPAA rating: R...
- 10/13/1997
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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