As you guys are well aware I am huge fans of the Simpsons! I have watched them since I was eight years old. The show has always been one of my staple go to when I am bored or need a laugh. So here are five characters from the show you may not know as well.
Jeremy Freedman or better known as the teenager with the squeaky voice. He has always been one of those staple background characters on the show. You usually see him working at Krusty burger or some kind of fast food restaurant:
He is well known for his mishaps at work or his acne. He is a huge fan of Futurama and even jumped off a cliff when he heard it was cancelled. He is not much of a talker but when he does talk it always seems to be disappointed in his own actions. The only family member he has on the show is the next person we will discuss.
Doris Freedman:
Doris Freedman or better known as “Lunch Lady Doris.” Is the face of the Springfield Elementary School Cafeteria. She always uses the best lowest grade meats or leftovers supplies she is able to find for the children to eat lunch. Due to the almost non existent school budget for food also she has two other jobs. She is also the school nurse and she is also the mail lady in town. Her son is Jeremy Freedman and she has dated Springfield most elite bachelors such as Hans Moleman and Groundskeeper Willie.
Lucille Botzcowski:
Sometimes she goes by Miss Botz but she is better known as “The Babysitter Bandit.” She babysat the Simpsons kids once and the kids found out her true identity. They hogtied her in hopes they were able to get free t-shirts from the show they called in that feature her.
However they were not able to get those t-shirts because Homer untied her and let her go on her way without knowing that she stole a bunch of stuff from their house and that she was wanted in a couple of states.
Shelby’s Father:
I only remember him in the one episode where the residents of Springfield try to get back their Lemon tree from the town of Shelbyville. And they have to go to the Shelbyville Car Impound lot to get it back which it was own by Shelby’s Father. His character is based of a Homer just the Shelbyville version of him. They say that that inspiration Shelby’s Father is actor Walter Matthau.
Spirit Guide:
When Homer starts to hallucinate from eating a very hot pepper a spirit guide shows up in his hallucination. He is one of my favorite not so well known characters from the show because he was voiced by Johnny Cash. The spirit guide encourages Homer to seek out his true soul mate and makes him think a little deeper.
Hello and welcome to Welcome to the Insta-hood! This week I interviewed: @mandy.morgue
1) Tell me a little about yourself:
“My name is Mandy Morse and I’ve lived in the Pacific Northwest for my entire existence! I couldn’t imagine living anywhere else and I don’t think I’d want to! As for traveling I’d like to go to Ireland and Vietnam. I love New Orleans and Boston, those are some of my favorite cities I’ve been to in the US. (Never been out of the country sadly) I’m a Virgo and I like movies, music, sewing, cooking, astrology, gardening, cleaning, and animals are my favorite hobbies and things. I’m married and have been for about 3 and a half years now, but we’ve been together for 9 years. His name is Andy… I always had a feeling i’d marry someone who’s named similar to mine. At the beginning I tried to call him “Andrew” but he’s just not an Andrew, he’s an Andy. so now we’re Mandy and Andy :). He’s a gemini and we go really well together. Some important things about me: I have three cats and a dog. No kids and I don’t plan on having them. I’ve lived with my best friend, Ashley for about 10 years now. My favorite animal is a pig. My top 5 favorite bands (in no particular order) are: 1. REM 2. Billy Joel 3. Rolling Stones 4. Green Day 5. Fleetwood Mac.”
2) Can you talk a little about working at Starbucks? What is your favorite drink to make? What is your favorite drink to drink?
“I’ve worked at Starbucks for 9 years and some people wonder how I’ve lasted this long. I think I just found a place im happy to come to 5 days a week. I feel loved ad supported by my bosses and my customers. Some people I’ve known for almost a decade now. I met Andy at Starbucks, too. I love learning about coffee and sharing and gaining any knowledge I can about food, beverages, and anything culinary. I enjoy making mochas and caramel macchiatos but I have to admit I do get a real satisfaction from making very high maintenance drinks. I’m talking all boxes checked; half decaf this, light ice but not too light, decorating the walls of the cup with caramel, substitute this for that.. I would never drink anything like that but I don’t mind making them. I prefer a small cup of blonde roast with some heavy cream. I LOVE Dunkin Donuts brewed coffee but there are none in Washington or Oregon :(.”
“As for my instagram name, it’s just a play on my real name, Mandy Morse. My maiden name was Clewett, and I was really excited to change my instagram name to something new to reflect my new last name. (Used to be mandy.clew) One of my friends suggested mandy.morgue and I thought it was PERECT! Simple and to the point, just how I like. Also, I’m into all the good stuff like horror and cemeteries and funeral ephemera so it really felt right. Before I decided to go to Culinary school, I wanted to be a funeral director for a long time. I volunteered in a couple funeral homes, did my Senior Project on Cremation and have quite a bit of hands on experience. It’s an industry I still plan to work in, just not now. “
4) What is your favorite food to make?
“My favorite food to make is various types of sauces. Bechamel is my favorite of the mother sauces which is milk-based, AKA Mac n cheese sauce! You can do as much or as little as you want with it! One of my goals was to walk away from culinary school knowing how to make a good sauce. Also, I like cooking New York strip steaks with lots of butter and some fresh rosemary straight from my backyard on a nice seasoned cast iron as well, nothin’ better. I also make very good fried chicken. One of my secrets is to use a cornstarch/flour mixture and season the SHIT out of it. Extra Paprika!”
5)What have been some go to activities you have been doing while you are staying indoors?
“I sewed a couple cute aprons for myself, planted some peppers, tomatoes, herbs, and some fresh catnip. Drank lots of chardonnay with my roommates/family. Dove into some Disney Channel original movies I haven’t seen in YEARS. “Six Feet Under” is on Hulu for some awesome reason so I picked back up on season 3 where I left off. GREAT show. I love Claire and David because they’re scared and fearless at the same time, and they are true to themselves. Andy and I have been playing lots of Mario Kart on the Switch. Cooked a lot of yummy dishes for my work and home family. So far one trip and one concert has gotten cancelled.
But on the night of when our concert was supposed to be, we got a 6-pack of beer, a pint of whiskey, dressed our best, and played a concert on youtube over the big screen. We acted like we were at the venue and I made bar food and it was really cool. Almost like it was the real thing.”
Happy Mother’s Day everyone! I decided to talk about some of my favorite TV and Movie Moms. There are SO many I can choose from. However I decided on five that instantly came to mind.
Serial Mom (1994 directed by John Waters):
Beverly Sutphin is Serial Mom! She is the perfect housewife and mother to her family but she has a dark side: she kills! While she is cleaning her house or baking a pie she finds the time to prank call her neighbors who wrong her. The personality of Beverly Sutphin reminds me of an apple. On the outside you see this perfect apple but when you bite into it there is a chance that it might be rotten to it’s core!
Marge Simpson:
One of my all time favorite cartoon moms. She is recognizable by her blue hair and pearls. She tries to be the perfect mom but she also have her flaws like everyone else. She tries hard to relate to Bart, Lisa, and Maggie but sometimes she is out of touch. She always refers back to the way her mom acted back to her and sometimes Marge realizes her mom always had human flaws as well.
Morticia Addams:
Mother to Wednesday, Pugsley and Pubert Addams she is the best Gothic mother ever! She always seems supportive of her children whether it is playing on the roof of their house. Trying to stab each other or bombing each other’s rooms. Morticia Addams has always encourages her children to play and learn at their own beat of their drum.
Peggy Bundy:
She is the ultimate anti-work domestic mom. She is the kind of mom that truly goes to the tune of her own song. Her favorite shows included Oprah, Donahue and the home shopping network. She truly knows how to pamper herself and truly values her self care.
Mother to Dorothy Zbornak. This quick witty Mom is always the first one to have a remark or opinion when it comes to her daughter or anyone else that she lives with. She is sassy and funny and never apologizes for who she is. She loves her daughter more than anything in the world even if she says something brutally honest about what Dorothy is wearing!
Who is your favor tv/movies moms? Comment below!!!
1. Can you talk a little bit about your art for those who are not familiar with it?
“I am a stop motion artist, which means I spend hours and hours and hours (and hours) taking thousands of pictures and stitching them together in order to create the illusion of objects moving on their own. My specific style is based on nostalgia, both in form (I like old film grain, vinyl crackle, light leaks) and content (childhood toys, dinosaurs, Godzilla, etc.). I also utilize lofi hip hop beats pretty exclusively, and most of the actions involved are innocuous or cute – mostly, I just like imagining what big scary monsters do in their off time, like Godzilla having tea and reading on a Sunday afternoon.
My intention is to invoke warm, cozy, safe feelings — something like a half-remembered dream, or a sleepy childhood memory. I want people to experience my art like they would if they were receiving a comforting hug.”
2. What is your process in choosing you main subjects for your stop motion art?
“I don’t really have a process, I just never grew up. I’m 33, but still am in my 4-year-old dinosaur phase. I want to craft the world I liked as a kid, full of cute monsters and loving, comfy experiences. Godzilla specifically has been an important fixture in my life, as silly as that may sound, so when I received an articulated figure a few years ago as part of an old job, it just sort of felt like a coincidence I couldn’t ignore.”
3. What inspired your to do stop motion art vs another art medium?
“I’m honestly not sure, it always had a hold on me. When I was little I was obsessed with Ray Harryhausen films, specifically Clash of the Titans – that Medusa scene is still a favorite. I once had a teacher describe stop motion as the greatest magic trick, because it’s completely real. I have a soft spot for good CGI (even cheesy bad CGI), but it’s hardly profound for me to say that practical effects in video can’t be topped – there’s no surpassing something that’s actually physically there. Stop motion allows you to create actual magic without leaving the bounds of reality.”
4. What is your favorite art piece you have done and why?
“Last Summer I did a preshow bumper for Cinepocalypse Film Festival that was a spoof of a spaghetti western film starring Baby Godzilla riding a T-Rex.
It’s my favorite because it was essentially a tribute to my dad and the way we used to play when I was little. I’m proud of it because I was able to have really great sets thanks to my fabricator Phoebe Jane Hart, so the world I built for these characters felt full. Also, I just personally like any story that has a ‘switch-up’ moment.”
Hello I thought I would share some feel good movies I have been watching the last couple of weeks:
The Incredible Shrinking Woman (1981) Directed by Joel Schumacher:
Starring Lily Tomlin, Charles Grodin and Ned Beatty. Based on the book by Richard Matheson who wrote “The incredible Shrinking Man.” Lily Tomlin plays a women named Pat Kramer and through some weird unknown product that her husband brings home. It makes her start to shrink in size! This was director’s Joel Schumacher first movie (that wasn’t a made for TV movie) and what impressed me most was the pop of pastels used for the background and the use of the multiple product placement throughout the movie. This movie had a couple of laughs and worth a watch!
Random fact about the movie: Make-up artist Rick Baker plays Sidney the gorilla in the movie.
Starring Melanie Griffith, Joan Cusack, Harrison Ford, Sigourney Weaver and lots and lots of hair! Melanie Griffith is Tess McGill a secretary who comes from a working class background. She wants to better herself and work through the levels of her job to have a better life. She comes up with amazing ideas only to have her boss take them from her and uses them as her own ideas.
Random fact about this movie: This was the only time so far that Melanie Griffith has been nominated for an Oscar for her role in this movie.
Bachelor in Paradise (1961) directed by Jack Arnold:
Starring Bob Hope and Lana Turner. Bob Hope plays an book author who writes a bunch of provocative books and is single due to job. He travels a lot for his job and gets a quick wake up call from the IRS about some taxes he did not file for. So he is forced to stay in California until everything is figure out. He moves into a gated community under an assume name and shakes up the whole neighborhood while he is there!
Random movie fact:
Agnes Moorehead does a cameo in this movie as a judge.
Starring Michael Keaton, and Terri Garr. When Jack Butler gets fired from his job his wife (played by Terri Garr) goes back to work, and the roles in their household are reserved.
Random movie fact:
Michael Keaton turned down a role in the movie Splash to be in this movie.
Starring Diane Keaton, Better Midler and Goldie Hawn. These three ladies reunited after many years since college at a mutual friend’s funeral. They then admit about the downturn that their lives have become at that point, including all getting and have been divorce. They all decide to unite and turned their lives around for the better!
Random movie fact: This movie was nominated for an oscar for best original score.
“My name is Miranda, I’m 38 years old, and I live in Kansas City, Missouri. I have always been artistic, but I really didn’t start getting serious about it until I was in middle school. My art teacher saw potential and encouraged me to start honing my skills. Since I was already into comic books and video games, I practiced nonstop by drawing what I saw in issues of Jim Lee-era X-Men and Electronic Gaming Monthly. Psylocke, Rogue, and the ladies of Fatal Fury were my favorites to draw. As I got older and my taste in comics changed, I fell in love with the works of Todd McFarlane, Greg Capullo, Joseph Michael Linsner, and Terry Moore. High school was really rough for me, because the way I drew was not tolerated by my art teacher. She didn’t consider comics as art. My assignments were continuously made examples of what NOT to do. I didn’t get the encouragement I needed at that formulative stage, so I was talked out of applying to the Kansas City Art Institute. I ended up going to a different college and got my BFA in studio art. I fell out of habit after college because life happened, and other things required all my attention. It wasn’t until I met my best friend Marc a couple of years ago that I was reintroduced to comics, and eventually drawing again.”
2. What is your favorite piece of work you made and why?
“Over the years I’ve made a lot of really cool pieces. If I had to choose one from recently, I’d say the Empress.
It got a huge reaction from people when I shared it. A friend from high school messaged me, saying his daughter saw it and was inspired to start drawing. She asked him to send me pictures of everything she drew, and it was amazing! It blew me away that my work actually inspired someone. I also shared it with Baldemar Rivas, a local comic artist who is currently working on Image Comics’ Unearth. He liked it a lot too, and even complimented on the linework. A family member is also turning it into a quilt! I realized that with work I could get back into something I really loved, and perhaps even go places with it. It was the boost of self-esteem I desperately needed–encouragement I had been missing for years. It made me realize that I am talented, and it’s not too late to try to make a name for myself.”
3. How did you get interested in doing tarot card pulling?
“Most people would call it a happy accident or mere coincidence, but I don’t really believe in those anymore. I was meant to become interested in Tarot! I met Jessica (AKA Palm Tree Priestess) through Instagram, and we hit it off. She did a few readings for me, which was exciting because I had always been interested in that kind of stuff…just never had access to it before. As we got to know each other better, she began to encourage me to give it a try. She saw the potential in me, and knew I could blossom if I just listened to my intuition. So I got my first deck, started learning, and here I am now! Collecting decks has become a somewhat mild obsession– 10 decks and counting! I just recently bought a Golden Girls Tarot deck that I am obsessed with. It’s been a lot of fun to do because I’ve learned more about myself, and I’ve helped several friends through issues of their own. They’ve told me that my readings were spot on and really creepy which I take as a huge compliment! Wouldn’t mind making it a business someday.”
4. You did a series of tarot card theme drawings. Can you talk a little bit about that and your inspiration as to why you did it?
“You know those ideas you get that just click? As an artist, those can be really hard for me to come by. But when Jessica came to me with the idea of drawing up some coloring pages, I really wanted to make it work. The first 2 I did where the Sun and the Moon.
Pretty simplistic compared to more recent drawings, but I loved them and so did she. My gut told me to run with this idea and do other cards. The Empress was next, followed by the Magician. As I moved from card to card, it was awesome to see the progress I was making. I liked each new card a tiny bit more than the one before! It’s fun to push myself to draw things that I’m not usually comfortable drawing. I found that I love the composition and design aspect of it, as well as spinning my own interpretation of each card. Every new piece is an opportunity to revisit art basics and get familiar with everything again. It’s amazing practice. I love making things that people really seem to enjoy. “
5. Are you working on anything in particular in terms of your art?
“Right now I’m actually debating where I want to go next. I plan to keep doing Tarot drawings (working on the High Priestess at the moment), but I’m not sure if I’ll end up doing all 78 cards. I’m toying with the idea of starting an Etsy shop, making the drawings available as coloring pages, prints,or even t-shirts. I feel like doors are opening all around me! But until then it’s practice, practice, practice. I have to get comfortable with myself again, and eventually take those risks I couldn’t before. I’m ready to have fun, and I’m always open to suggestions!”
The first time I went to eat breakfast at Bob’s Big Boy I was six. While my family and I were waiting to be seated I saw a statue of a cartoon boy:
I thought he was the cutest cartoon evert! But had no idea why he was wearing a bright red and white checker overall. Here is the small history of Bob’s Big Boy Mascot:
The restaurant started in California 1936 by a guy named Bob Wigan. He originally named his restaurant Bob’s Pantry but patrons of the restaurant at the time was referring the eatery as Bob’s or Bob’s Drive In’s, and then Bob’s Big Boy. The phrase was more commonly used due to the menu item the Big Boy Hamburger:
Two pieces of meat with cheese on a sesame seed bun
This burger is where the mascot came alive. At the time a little boy named Richard Woodruff (1932-1986):
Richard Woodruff as a young man
Was entering the main Bob’s Big boy Restaurant while Bob Wian was struggling to name his new burger he made. He saw Richard and greeted him with “Hello Big Boy.” And Bob liked the phrase so much that he decided to use it. He then went to an artist called Ben Washam. Who worked on the Warner Bro’s animation. He animated a lot of Bugs Bunny:
And made the cartoon version of Richard Woodruff and this was the end result:
Ben Washam version Bob’s Big Boy (source: animation resources.org)
In 1951 Bob Wain decided that that mascot needed a refreshed look so he hired Manfred Bernhard. Manfred did not like Ben Washam depiction of Bob’s Big Boy. Saying that this version looked dump and unkept. So Manfred Bernhard came up with the “West Coast Big Boy”:
In 1951 one of the east coast’s franchisee Dave Frisch made some alterations to the West coast version. He made the mascot trimmer, wear a hat, had a mixture of brown and red hair and wear saddle shoes. Also he made the permanent stance of the mascot be in a running position. Dave Frisch then copyrighted his version of the Bob’s big Boy mascot so he can made items from the image. Such as statues, and comic books:
Although the west coast and east coast versions have both been used through the legacy of the restaurant. It really depends on the location of the restaurant which mascot is used. For example maybe the west coast location won’t have the mascot holding the burger. And so on and so on.
Personally I like all of the versions of the Bob’s Big Boy mascot. Do you have a favorite version? Comment below to share:
In this installment of welcome to the Insta-hood I interviewed :@video_macabro
Some of the crap in my collection.
Tell me a little about yourself:
“My name is Eduardo Garza (but everyone calls me Eddie) and I was born in Monterrey, Mexico in 1989. I’m the oldest of three with two younger sisters—no brothers. At the age of four my family immigrated to the United States. I became a naturalized citizen and have been living in Texas ever since. I cherish my citizenship and the choices my parents made to give their children a better life. I don’t think that they would ever have guessed their baby boy would grow up to be a seeker of trash films and an obsessive collector of fake food (yeah… that’s a thing I do). I grew up in the 90s. I loved my childhood, but I was always wanted to be an adult. I loved the idea of being able to stay up late watching horror movies and driving to wherever I wanted whenever I wanted. Now that’s a reality and you know what, it’s pretty cool. I’m currently a single dog father (any singles out there, hit me up) and I have a house full of weird stuff.
A framed still from the film Dr. Caligari (1989)
I’m a collector of a lot of different things… Universal Monsters, old Halloween toys, true-crime books, alien stuff, movies, fake food, fake poop, et cetera… I don’t remember the year or how old I was, but I remember a couple of movies that got me interested in the genre.
One of my rarer books. The World of The Neverending Story
First, The Neverending Story (1984). I remember this movie being really weird and those moments where the child empress seems to break the fourth wall to talk to Bastian always creeped me out. Now obviously, it doesn’t have the same effect, but I am fond of those memories. I collect anything I can that’s NES related. The second film, I’m thinking of is a roughly cut version of The McPherson Tape (1989) I saw when I was really young. It’s a found-footage movie that came out years before The Blair Witch Project and centers around a family’s tragic night fighting off a bunch of grey aliens. I legitimately believed it was real. Growing up in a Hispanic home, we would watch a lot of Spanish TV and there was a TV personality named Jaime Maussan who was a ufoligist and hosted a UFO/Alien footage show where he would show clips of different supposed video evidence of extraterrestrial beings and their round disc-shaped ships. He would analyze the hazy images and pause and rewind and talk about magnetohydrodynamics or echelon formations or alien flares and, to me, it wasn’t only otherworldy, it was absolutely terrifying. How could beings like this exist?
A still from The McPherson Tape (1989)
Many nights I would stay up praying nothing remotely like what I was seeing on this guy’s show would ever manifest itself to me. And then, The McPherson Tape… this movie was presented to me as seriously as evidence is presented in a court room. It was the closest I’ve ever felt to watching a snuff film. It is the one movie that truly terrified me, but it had everything to do with my age, my limited understanding of the world, and my, apparently, innermost fear of aliens. Now when people ask me (and the often do) what the scariest movie I’ve ever seen is, I’m not sure how to answer. I’m obviously thinking “The Mcpherson Tape!!”, but I never say that. I simply tell people that no movie has ever scared me and that’s a lie. ”
2. Why compeled you to start a cult?
“I grew up in the Mormon church. It’s the only way of life I knew until 2008 when I left the church and even moved out of Texas. I started to really investigate religion and fell in love with finding out as much as I possibly could about other people’s faith. I became obsessed with scripture and spirituality and spiritism. Believe it or not I decided to return to the Mormon church. It, for me, had the most interesting history. It’s a history and a foundation full of magick, seer stones, revelation, extra-terrestrial visitors, polygamous scandals, new scripture, spirits, rituals, et cetera. Of course, for me, there was also a familiarity with the religion that existed, but now it was totally different, because I truly felt converted. I had researched enough and was compelled to share the message. That’s right- I became a Mormon missionary. Yes, the kind that knocks on your door and asks if you have to time to hear about the church. I did that for two awesome years. The difference between me and other regular missionaries is I started to go really deep into the scripture. I went deep into really old conferences of the church. Old meetings. As soon as I returned home in 2013, I started collecting everything I could get my hands on that had to do with doctrine and modern revelation. I learned absolutely everything about the church. I became so well-grounded in the doctrine of the restoration of the church of God that I started to see how the modern Mormon faith had changed from when it was founded in 1830. It has changed so much! It is virtually nothing like the church that it’s founder Joseph Smith had helped form. So I felt I had to do something about it. I started to truly believe that I had been placed on Earth to fix the church… the church I loved so very much. I felt impressed to start a record of personal revelation. Here is where things get crazy. I started to feel the presence of something in my life, a real presence. This presence communed with me through thoughts and feelings and called himself Abrac. I only physically saw Abrac once. He instructed me to write. I wrote everything he dictated to me until I finished the book. This is a book that no one has read, except for me. It tells of a land called Gok that exists within the same dimension of space as Earth, but is a lot farther away, in a “government” or realm called Goriax. It contains bible-like stories from that planet and expands on Mormon doctrine of deification and blood-relations of the Gods. I was really close to printing the book and starting to spread the message about another testament of Jesus Christ (the book also contains conversations that Jesus Christ had in the Garden of Gethsemane with Satan in a period that is much longer than the Bible says). But for one reason or another, I started to question everything. Had I gone to deep? Had I simply imagined these feelings? Seven years later, here I am and I’m glad I didn’t publish. A lot of good has happened and I’m very happy with where I am in life. I feel like a positive influence for the most part and I hope to keep it that way.”
3. How did you come up with your Instagram name?
Some of the books in the collection.
“My Instagram name used to be video_trash. Some of my oldest followers might remember that. I decided that I wanted to create something that is more inviting to other sub-genres so I decided to switch to the Spanish word for “Macabre” which is “Macabro” and is pronounced muh-caw-bro. In Spanish it doesn’t necessarily only have to deal with death or injury, but can be translated to “ghoulish” or “weird.”
4. What are the top 3 weirdest movies you have ever watched and why?
“That’s a good question, but one that may not have the desired response for your readers. I’ve seen plenty of classically labeled “weird” movies… things like Funky Forest (2005), Cat Soup (2001), Eraserhead (1977), Naked Lunch (1991), et cetera… and obviously a lot of “weird” art films like what The Holy Mountain (1973) was trying to do. But a lot of those movies were trying to be weird for shock value or provocative artistic expression. Sure, they may relate to the times and may even contain deep philosophical drama within the subtext, but are they really weird? Since they are deliberately trying to be weird, it’s almost as if they aren’t weird at all. They are just art to me in the same way as when you walk into an art gallery. The weirdness about a movie doesn’t come so much from aesthetic for me as it does from the plot. I’m reminded about The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975). Richard O’Brien’s musical is absolutely wonderful, but I only ever saw the movie version. I was barely in High School when I saw it for the first time and thought it was hilarious, and as the years went by the plot seemed to sound weirder. Fluid-sexual transvestite aliens come to Earth to impart their sexual wisdom upon us lowly humans. Now you can probably take any mainstream movie, dumb down the plot, and then it sounds really weird, which is probably what I’m doing. Some strange movies I recommend that I think are more than just weird, but actually really good are:
Panna a Netvor
Panna a Netvor (1979) – A beautiful gothic retelling of the Beauty and the Beast where the Beast looks like a giant bird.
The Cat (1992) – a Hong Kong sci-fi movie about a cat from space teaming up with an alien girl to battle another alien… all here on Earth!
Hiruko the Goblin (1991) – a movie about a space goblin that is sent here for the sole purpose of beheading people and turning them into spider demons.
Devi aka Goddess (1999) – basically this movie is ET The Extra-Terrestrial, but instead of ET you have an Indian Snake Goddess and instead of Elliott you have an Indian woman who is tormented by a Snake Demon. Also, there’s lots of musical numbers and psychotronic special effects.
5. What is one thing that people don’t know about you that you would like to share?
“People don’t know that about a month ago I started a YouTube channel where I share some of my toys and things. It’s nothing like what I do on Instagram where I edit videos with music. This is a pretty boring thing where I just talk about things that I have. It’s called “Cryptic Cauldron”… I currently have zero subscribers. ”
If you like to know more information or have questions for Eduardo. His social media outlets are below: