Roger Corman is one of the most-important filmmakers of his generation, and I assure you that’s not a joke, no matter what you might think after looking at his credits. Corman has had a rather tenuous relationship with respectability, at least by Hollywood standards, having built his career first on directing low-budget movies destined for drive-ins and grind houses in the 1950s and ‘60s, and then producing similar fare from the 1970s up to the present. His films often dealt with bug-eyed monsters, delinquent teenagers, motorcycle gangs, drug-addled maniacs, crazed gangsters, and dangerously haunted houses, all committed to film on shoestring budgets. But anyone can ...
Released:
2011
Rated:
R
Length:
101 mins