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Discussed in this episode:
Black Swan (2010): Read the Canonically Weird entry! Black Swan gets a re-release in IMAX (though it was not originally shot in IMAX—not sure how that works). See it Aug 24. Check the Black Swan official IMAX release site for venues.
Drag Me to Hell (2009): Read Gregory J. Smalley’s review. A fun, if not especially weird, occult horror outing by Sam Raimi. Buy Drag Me to Hell.
Lips of Blood (1975): Read Gregory J. Smalley’s review. Perhaps Jean Rollin‘s weakest vampire outing, but Indicator is insistent on releasing everything the auteur did on 4K UHD. Buy Lips of Blood.
Night of the Hunted (1980): Read Gregory J. Smalley’s review. Better than Lips of Blood; already out from Indicator on Blu-ray, but here’s the 4K. Buy Night of the Hunted.
Perpetrator (2023): A surrealistic feminist high school horror from Jennifer Reeder about a girl who harnesses her inner monster to chase down another monster. This Arrow Blu-ray release contains three additional short films and two music videos from Reeder. Buy Perpetrator.
Xanadu (1980): Read Scott Sentinella’s review. Did this movie kill disco? Buy Xanadu.
WHAT’S IN THE PIPELINE:
No guest scheduled for next week’s Pod 366, but we had no guest scheduled for this week, so who knows? In written content, Eugene Vasiliev describes the rare (in the U.S.) The Annunciation (1984) (which, you may recall, is an adaptation of the same source material as in Marcell Jankovics‘s newly available The Tragedy of Man). Also. Shane Wilson revisits Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022), and Gregory J. Smalley will put his head in the Cloud (2024) for a report on latest psychothriller from Kiyoshi Kurosawa check out the synesthesia indie Magnetosphere (2024) (sorry, Cloud was just not that weird). Onward and weirdward!