This is what we’re, what we’re, what we’re stuck with is what we’re going to talk about. Who’s grown up to be now a murderer, a psychopath.
PLAYGIRL MAGAZINE HUNG MOVIE
So, um, we jumped to present day 1982, where obviously the question hangs over the entire movie who was that kid? And one of the other closets and this being 1942, uh, they don’t think that the kid actually did it. Mom’s head is in one of the closets and the kid is cowering crying. The police come.Īnd find blood all over the room and all over this jigsaw puzzle. Once I have to say I was more embarrassed than motivated to pick up an ax and murder her, but that’s what the kid in this film does. And, uh, I don’t know, you know, if my mom, well, my mom found me with a Playboy magazine. She’s really upset, kicks the puzzle over. He’s putting together a racy jigsaw puzzle in his bedroom of a naked woman.Īnd his mother comes in. I believe it’s supposed to be a very unconvincing 1942, but anyway, yeah. Uh, and then the premise of the whole film is a bit like psycho, this kid, uh, it starts out early in Boston, 1942. Misogynistic, lots of boobs, lots of Gore, uh, lots of girls being murdered. If you search us online and look up reviews, the word misogynistic shows up a ton and it’s absolutely shamelessly. Having kind of understood what I was getting into and how the end result would be. So I’m going to have to come back to this in the morning, finished it off for the last half hour and then was like, you know, I feel like I want to go back and rewatch at least some highlights from earlier in the movie.Īnd I have to say that when I went back and rewatch some of the earlier scenes. Despite it, I started it a little too late at night and I stopped it after about an hour. People in generally it looks like he’s in control. For most of it chews up a lot of scenery, has a very furrowed brow, uh, barks orders around. Todd: and he plays the lieutenant police detective, whatever, in this movie who who’s charged with solving the crime and does a really shitty job of it. I love watching this guy perform his name, And, and honestly he made it the movie for me. I was really happy to see that our favorite, uh, track coach. The fact that they had no money, this is a cheapo exploitation. It says it was filmed in Madrid and Boston, or at least some exteriors were filmed in Boston, but then there’s some conflicting information that says actually almost none of it was filmed in Boston because they really had no money.Īnd they just pulled in some exterior shots from somewhere else. Um, and, uh, this movie is listed on IMDB as a Spanish, uh, Italian production, because it was primarily filmed in Madrid. He only made like about 20 films, which is more than I’ve made. This was one of, one of the movies he made. One of which, again, I think we’re going to come back to at some point called slug. And he has also done a fair number of, uh, exploitation films. It’s a killer with a chainsaw, runs around a university campus and murders people, and then enlisted the help of a Spanish director named John P CAIR Simone. I think he wrote the story for this, or came up with a concept which is not highbrow concept. Sometime in the future, he did a movie in 1984 called Don’t Open ‘Till Christmas, a 1986 movie called Slaughter High. The Erotic Adventures of Robinson Crusoe… Anyway, and probably some movies that we’re going to be doing. I’m, I’m looking at some of these titles and they’re fantastic. Transition a little bit into horror with movies, like a Frankenstein’s Castle of Freaks, Crocodile, which sounds like a takeoff of Alligator when we watched it, uh, that was produced in 79. So a lot of these sort of sexy sex exploitation films, and then seem to. I don’t, I don’t think it’s horror, but it sounds interesting. Let it All Hang Out, Playgirl 70, Mondo Inferno, the Cotton Picking Chicken Pickers, which maybe we should put that on a list for the future. Uh, this guy started out in the early sixties, uh, making movies like King of Kong Island. This movie was produced by a pretty notorious producer of exploitation films. You’d never saw this on the shelves.Ĭraig: I don’t think so. I will take the blame and, uh, we watched it. It was one of these early eighties, late seventies, slasher movies that, uh, I was just in the mood for this week. It has a chainsaw and a bunch of body parts on it. It’s exactly what you think it is and, uh, box art for it. And the title of this movie is called Pieces from 1982. This is one of those movies that I pass by on the shelf in the horror section of the video store, a lot was entranced by the title. I was, I wanted something a little grindhouse that we could make fun of, but something that I had been wanting to see for a long time. Today, we were looking for something a little more old school, a little sillier. Todd: Hello, and welcome to another episode of two guys and a Chainsaw.