2012 was an excellent year for fantasy, science fiction, and horror films…at the top…but it didn’t have a lot of depth. I’ll ignore mediocrity for now and focus on the winners. #5 Upside Down I’m starting with a cheat. I can’t say that Upside Down is the 5th best genre film of the year, even
Ranked: Every James Bond Title Sequence
Ah, the Bond title sequence. It is as iconic as Bond himself, or at least has been since the playbook was completed with Thunderball: Beautiful female silhouettes undulating about with weapons pointed at them or in their hands against surreal backdrops. Good ones can set the film up. Bad ones pull the audience down. I’m
Ranking the X-Men Movies (updated)
Once a metaphor for Blacks in America, and now often seen as a commentary of how the LGBT community is treated, the X-Men have always meant a bit more than other comic book characters. The X-Men film franchise has, at times, been more successful with its political statements than the comics, but at other times
The Best Films of Vincent Price
The 4th of the Big Three horror icons (of sound films), like Karloff before him, Vincent Price had a liquid-jeweled voice and range. Price’s early work was more often in Film Noirs, comedies, and a few adventure films. Except for brief sojourns, he didn’t switch to horror until 1953’s House of Wax, but once there,
Best Films of 2017
Ranking The Best Superhero Films
The Best Films of Chuck Jones
This is different from my normal Director’s Lists as Jones is not known for features, but for animated shorts. But then he’s also the greatest director of shorts, and arguably of animations of any length, so definitely a man who needs to be included. A majority of his career was spent at Warner Bros., working
Top Five Overrated Genre Films of 2012
Ranking the James Bond Villains
Best/Most Important SF Films of the ’50s
The Best Films of Boris Karloff
The second of the Big Three horror icons (Bela Lugosi, Boris Karloff, Lon Chaney Jr.), Boris Karloff found stardom with Frankenstein after struggling in silent films. He was grateful for his success and never minded being typecast, and typecast he was. If he wasn’t a monster, a monstrous servant, or a crazed killer, he was a mad doctor.