Monday, January 9, 2012

THE hot new ITims thay have at the big bad toy store check out these awsome toys

Hot Toys Captain America
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/product.aspx?product=HOT10354&mode=retail
 
Hot Toys Jack Sparrow
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/product.aspx?product=HOT10339&mode=retail
 
Sideshow Premium Format Stormtrooper
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/product.aspx?product=SSC11030&mode=retail
 
Enterbay Scarface War Version
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/product.aspx?product=ENB10048&mode=retail

More cool stuff from the big bad toy store everyone check it out

Square Enix - Play Arts Kai - God of War III Kratos
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/product.aspx?product=SEP10308&mode=retail
 
Play Arts Kai - Vanquish
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/search.aspx?search=vanquish+play
 
note that the price will unlikely drop quite a bit on all three of these play arts figures, we are just waiting for the domestic supplier to get info to us
 
Bandai / Tamashii January announcements - cool items from:
Tiger & Bunny
Gundam
Saint Seiya
Kamen Rider
One Piece,  more
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/list.aspx?list=8490

The Legend of boggy creek (1972)

The Legend of Boggy Creek-1972
Director:Sean Taylor
Get it at cheezyflicks.com



An early 1970's docudrama about a Sasquatch-type creature that terrorized the small town of Fouke, Arkansas for several years. Many of the persons who claim to have experienced these events actually played themselves in this movie version. The film had a big premiere in Fouke and went on to become a minor drive-in hit, grossing over $20 million domestically and appearing repeatedly on many late-night horror TV slots throughout the rest of the 70s, and spawning two sequels and a remake. In addition, the film's visual style is cited as the inspiration for the look and pacing of 'The Blair Witch Project'



Picture the scene: the sleepy town of Fouke, Arkansas, population 350. Nestled deep in swamp country near the Louisiana border, Fouke is an insular but essentially clean-living southern American community of hunters and fishermen. This lonely, ramshackle cluster, flanked on all sides by the sodden rot of thickly wooded Boggy Creek, is the perfect setting for a standard hillbilly scare fest. But this is a different proposition entirely; an at times baffling blur of lo-fi horror and narrator-led documentary.
The boggy backdrops are mostly real locations where sightings of the mysterious creature have occurred. The on-screen faces reenacting reported close encounters with the Monster of Boggy Creek are often the very witnesses themselves. What is lost in finesse is made up for in humble authenticity. Amateur director and ad man Charles Pierce intersperses reconstructions of numerous Sasquatch-like encounters in the bottom land of Fouke with his occasionally comical, grandfatherly voice over, chronicling years of alleged sightings of the foul-smelling, six-foot beast.
Pierce made this film for next to nothing, and it shows. That it has since generated millions of dollars as an underground classic is more likely testament to the original concept than its final execution. Like American Splendor, The Legend of Boggy Creek is for the most part drama, with genre-bending forays into the realm of the documentary. There’s no escaping the lack of refinement, but at times this works in the film’s favour, with mistimed cuts and awkward acting producing a truly unnerving spectacle. Like Mark Borchardt’s Coven, a raw eye for film making and bags of originality compensate for the self-funded indie production values.
From the opening line of, ‘I was seven years old when I first heard him scream,’ Pierce is using his limited resources and experience to good effect. He employs witness accounts to fashion the legend of a monster spotted and heard regularly by Fouke locals for over twenty years. The content of these accounts? Farm animals butchered, huge footprints discovered, and lonesome wails late at night, deep in the stagnant mist of the woods.


It’s easy to see why The Legend of Boggy Creek has become such a cult hit. It’s creative, endearingly rough around the edges and great fun, whether intended or not. Here we have a marvelous concept that struggles to fill the mould it’s carved for itself. It’ll appeal to a certain niche this Halloween, but despite its honesty and quirky creativity, The Legend of Boggy Creek is, like the mythical creature at its heart, destined to fade into obscure folklore.




After thoughts:
Thia movie scared the crap out of me when i was younger.the first time i seen it i was in Florida vising some family that lived down there that night it was raining and really windy so it didn't help watching this movie lo
but yea everyone that belives in bigfoot would love this movie 22 million people at the theater did in 1972 lol l

Sunday, January 1, 2012

The Fly-1958

Kirk Neumann
James clavall




Wealthy Helene Delambre (Patricia Owens) is discovered late at night in the factory owned by her husband Andre (David Hedison). Helene stands beside a huge metal press, which has crushed the head and arm of her husband. Held for murder, the near-catatonic Helene refuses to tell anyone--not even Andre's brother Francois (Vincent Price)--why she did it. Francois cannot help but notice that Helene reacts in mortal terror when a tiny flies zips through the room. Nor can he disregard the statement ...
 


Helene relaxes enough to tell her story. It seems that Andre, a scientist, had been working on a matter transmitter, which he claimed could disintegrate matter, then reintegrate it elsewhere. After a few experiments, Andre tried the transmitter himself. Just as he stepped into the disintegration chamber, a fly also flew into the chamber. We aren't immediately shown the results of this, save for the fact that Andre afterward insists upon keeping his head and arm covered. Alone with her husband, Helene abruptly removes the covering, revealing that Andre now bears the head of a fly! His atoms have become mixed up with the fly, and now he is unable to reverse the procedure. Deciding that his transmitter will be a bogy rather than a blessing to mankind, Andre smashes the apparatus and burns his notes. He then instructs Helene, via body language, to crush his fly-like head and arm in the press. Neither Francois nor inspector Charas (Herbert Marshall) believe the story...until, while staring intently at a spider's web in the garden, they see a tiny entrapped fly with Andre's head and arm, tinnily screaming "Help me! Help me!" as the slavering spider approaches (If you're wondering why Vincent Price and Herbert Marshall do not look one another in the eye during this scene, it is because they couldn't deliver their dialogue without dissolving into laughter).
 I give this movie a (C+)

Check out the new arrivals at big bad toy store

New Arrivals:
 
DC vs MOTU - Waves 01 and 02
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/search.aspx?search=dc+motu
 
Green Lantern 05
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/product.aspx?product=DCC11406&mode=retail
 
Arkham City 01
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/search.aspx?search=arkham+city+01
 
Marvel vs Capcom Minimates
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/product.aspx?product=DMC11597&mode=retail
 
Young Justice 03
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/search.aspx?search=young+justice+03
 
Starcraft Premium
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/product.aspx?product=DCC11364&mode=retail
 
Fantasy Figure Gallery - Luna
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/product.aspx?product=YAM10558&mode=retail
 

COOL!!!! itams from the big bad toy store

Hot Toys 1/6 Black Spider-Man
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/product.aspx?product=hot10375&mode=retail
 
FansProject - Defender Restock
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/product.aspx?product=FPJ10013&mode=retail
 
Dark Knight Rises - Mez-Itz
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/menu.aspx?menu=2820&category=8237
 
South Park Classics 04
http://www.bigbadtoystore.com/bbts/product.aspx?product=MEZ10735&mode=retail
 
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