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Post by WarrenPeace on Oct 24, 2019 8:07:34 GMT
Bubba Ho Tep or After Hours.
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Post by Feologild Oakes on Oct 24, 2019 8:50:53 GMT
Maybe "La belle noiseuse (1991)"
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Post by johnspartan on Oct 24, 2019 17:40:18 GMT
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Post by Ass_E9 on Oct 24, 2019 17:52:25 GMT
Perhaps Funky Forest: The First Contact (2005).
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Post by jonesjxd on Oct 25, 2019 10:46:37 GMT
I've sold off most of my blu-rays and dvds, but have a hard time parting with my horror movie collection. I used to buy all those Anchor Bay and Grindhouse Releasing DVDs back in the nineties, 2000's. I'll never sell off any of my weird italian horror movies or zombie movies. I was just watching Lucio Fulci's House By The Cemetery last night.
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Post by faustus5 on Oct 25, 2019 12:00:57 GMT
Inland Empire
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Post by dirtypillows on Oct 25, 2019 12:58:18 GMT
"Manos: Hands of Fate" is NOT in my collection and never will it be, cause it's the worst movie ever, and not even in a good way. Bleccchhh! "Eegah" dripped charm in comparison.
In my collection, something like "13 Frightened Girls"
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Post by lostinlimbo on Oct 25, 2019 13:43:50 GMT
 The Boxer’s Omen (1983)
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Post by koskiewicz on Oct 25, 2019 15:13:57 GMT
"Surveillance" is certainly strange.
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Post by marianne48 on Oct 25, 2019 16:05:29 GMT
Disco Beaver From Outer Space (1979).
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Post by koskiewicz on Oct 26, 2019 16:08:26 GMT
"Tusk" w/Michael Parks was a nauseating last film from a very good actor.
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Post by mstreepsucks on Oct 26, 2019 16:29:03 GMT
insignificance...weird.
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Post by someguy on Oct 26, 2019 17:56:23 GMT
Jacob's Ladder
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Post by Toasted Cheese on Oct 27, 2019 0:44:40 GMT
I like bizarre as long as the film is told with panache and skill and keeps me interested. I have too many in my collection to name, but off the top of my head this is one of the first films that I saw that out rightly claimed it was bizarre.
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Post by rogerthat on Oct 27, 2019 0:51:30 GMT
Boys in the Band (1970). It is bizarre as far as my collection as most of my films are horror.
It is also bizarre as I have a love/hate relationship with that film. I love it for its history and being one of the first to dedicate a full feature film to gay men. I also love some of the snarky one liners in the first half. I hate though what it does in the second half and the portrait it paints of gay men.
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Post by Toasted Cheese on Oct 27, 2019 0:52:29 GMT
"Society" (1989)www.imdb.com/title/tt0098354/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1Quick Plot:An ordinary teenage boy discovers he is adopted, and his family is part of a gruesome orgy cult for the social elite, where each member can physically join together with other members and share body parts during the orgy. The members of the social elite can also "absorb" people from a lower class.  His father, Mr "Butthead":  Very Strange Film. I came to Society about 12yrs after the fact. It did look strange and odd, but I also thought it looked dull and I gave it a miss when first released on video. I was wrong about the dull part, as I loved the whole thing and was annoyed at myself for dismissing it earlier. It is now one of my favorite horrors from the 80's. Nice satire as well and the lead guy really sells the film.
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Post by Toasted Cheese on Oct 27, 2019 0:57:34 GMT
Maybe House (1977) or Love ExposureI guess maybe CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST (1980) or CANNIBAL FEROX (1981) or ICHI THE KILLER (2001) or DJANGO KILL...IF YOU LIVE, SHOOT! (1967) or Shigehiro Ozawa's Sonny Chiba-starring THE STREET FIGHTER (1974) - the one where a furious Sonny Chiba rips off a bad guy's dick. Then again, I'm a big fan of directors such as Sam Peckinpah, Sergio Leone, Martin Scorsese, Clint Eastwood, Oliver Stone, Paul Thomas Anderson, David Cronenberg, Bud Boetticher, Quentin Tarantino, John Ford, Paul Verhoeven, Anthony Mann, Alexander Payne, Michael Mann, David Lynch, Robert Altman, Anthony Minghella, John Sayles, the Coen brothers, Scott Cooper (CRAZY HEART, BLACK MASS, OUT OF THE FURNACE), Ben Affleck, Ron Shelton and John Ford, so the DVD's and Blu Rays I have tend to be their films and others of that ilk. When I was in my teens, I may have jumped at a chance to see Cannibal Holocaust, but it wasn't screened or available in NZ at the time. After reading so much about it, I don't think I could stomach to watch it now and much of that comes down to what I have read about the production and the real animal cruelty portrayed in the film. If it was fake, ok, I might still venture in, but it has too much notoriety surrounding the making. Sounds like it was just made for shock value anyway, but the shock value aspect would take on a different meaning for me now.
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Post by Sulla on Oct 27, 2019 1:13:29 GMT
Big Man Japan (2007)
From Wiki...
"The film takes the form of a mockumentary that follows Masaru Daisato. Daisato is an otherwise normal Japanese citizen except for an inherited ability to grow to a height of approximately 30 meters in response to the application of high voltage electricity. As both his father and grandfather before him, Daisato has accepted the duty to protect Japan against various giant monsters while working for a sub-division of the defence ministry called the Ministry of Monster Prevention. The Battles with the monster are televised, and the ratings appear to drop or pick up depending on the event..."
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Post by jakesully on Oct 27, 2019 1:21:41 GMT
Lost Highway
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Post by mszanadu on Oct 27, 2019 3:18:58 GMT
For me it's several especially
in my older VHS collection ( and some on DVD too )
that most of my friends or family
would never watch and definitely consider " bizarre "
( and would end up watching these films by myself )  .
Here are the few that come to mind at the moment ( of course I haven't watched these in awhile but may watch soon )  .
Thanks so much brokenbow for this very intriguing subject post here too  .
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