R.I.P. Richard Moll, who of course will always be lovable "Bull" Shannon to millions of people and one of the best screen versions of Two Face to many more but gotta give him a personal shout out for playing the title villain in Albert Pyun's The Sword and The Sorcerer, one of the those weird 80's movie monsters that absolutely traumatized childhood me. For real...he's introduced climbing out of a sarcophagus that's covered in living, screaming faces and then rips somebody's heart out with his mind....I was five when I saw this.
Deep Red (1975)
Teaser poster for The Return of the Living Dead back when it was going to be a 3D movie directed by Tobe Hooper
You know, I maybe spend too much on movies these days. I think it's time to reign it is and save some money for a rain d--
ARROW VIDEO YOU SONS OF BITCHES...
JULIE ADAMS as Kay Lawrence in CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON (1954) dir. Jack Arnold
The funniest thing in this movie is the sheer number of outfit changes she goes through over the course of what's only supposed to be a couple days.
Xenomorph illustration by q hayashida! from “赤い牙 5”, 2004
Ultramega #1 (third printing variant) (2021)
Art by: James Harren and Dave Stewart
today i have learned about Mary Shelley's Frankenstein for the Sega CD, based on the movie, which is not only inexplicable half adventure game and half fighting game, but also you fight elizabeth in it and ALSO they give elizabeth blanka's roll attack
I'm glad more people are learning about this absurd-ass game.
A Wooden Bridge 1872 Art by Claude Monet
Chainsaw Man Art by Tatsuki Fujimoto
Spawn - Japanese Laserdisc Art Art by Kazuma Kaneko Yes, you read that right. They got Kaneko (a big Spawn fan) to do art for the home release of Spawn (1997). Coolest Spawn's ever looked, honestly. Courtesy of Vesk on Twitter.
Planet Stories, March 1953 Art by Allen Anderson
(via Pinterest)
R.I.P.
Frankenstein Created Woman, 1967
Evil Dead II (1987)
Horst Von Harbou - Metropolis (1927)
Searching for a dungeon, or a dragon (John Blanche, White Dwarf 7, Games Workshop, June/July 1978 -- The first full-color cover for the magazine)
Tullio Crali
Incuneandosi nell'abitato
1934





