Kasey Anderson and the Honkies
Let The Bloody Moon Rise (Nervous Kid Records). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Let The Bloody Moon Rise (Nervous Kid Records). Review by Andrew Ellis.
The Day Deserved (Drop Autumn Records). Review by James Mann.
Young and rising rapper loses his big break when he contracts a debilitating disease.
The early Nico Mastorakis giallo/sci-fi/comedy hybrid cult classic Death Has Blue Eyes looks great on Blu-ray.
A hippy-dippy view of the life and death of Jesus Christ.
Moonlight Gram. Review by Phil Bailey.
Blood Lemon. Review by Scott Adams.
The Florida Film Festival is a hotbed of documentaries. Let’s visit three of them!
Miniatures (Jet Fighter Records). Review by Christopher Long.
Musical theater hits sung in alphabetical order.
Jack Hill’s girl-gang classic Switchblade Sisters gets an overdue deluxe Blu-ray release.
Dreaming of Ghosts (Trees & Cyborgs). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
Live theater returns to Seminole College on a rainy night outside.
Songs for the General Public (4AD). Review by Julius C. Lacking.
1975 (Smithsonian Folkways). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
_Under the Spell of Joy _ (Suicide Squeeze Records). Review by James Mann.
A young Polish woman working in Switzerland becomes romantically involved with her employer.
Muck and mud stand in the way of medicinal yoghurt profits in Pat Grant’s graphic novel.
A black family in 1950’s Chicago struggles to find stability and the American Dream.
It’s the “Mutt and Jeff” Caberet!
The Howler: An English Breakfast (Overdrive/Invisible Records). Review by Peter Lindblad.
Ink 19 talks with Idiot Grins about the making of Golf Cart Life, their evolution from Oakland soul-rock lifers to one of indie music’s most unpredictable acts.
Eight bands from Colorado and as far away as New Zealand knocked the socks off the West Slope music scene on the last day of this year’s Deathslope Music Festival in Grand Junction, Colorado.
John Badham’s 1983 future-tech helicopter thriller, Blue Thunder, with its cautionary tale of militarized police and a surveillance state, still resonates decades later.
What if the miracle of sight came with a curse? The Eye builds its horror from that chilling premise.
With the thirty-fifth anniversary of debut album Whirlpool, UK shoegaze outfit Chapterhouse is back together again and touring the US as part of Slide Away Music Festival.