Sinopsis
Gregory Conley interviews figures in the direct-to-video industry about their upcoming films. For more check out www.yourvideostoreshelf.com
Episodios
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YVSS - IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
07/07/2007 Duración: 19sThe Your Video Store Shelf Podcast has been relocated and this page will be deleted soon. DVD Reviews, New Releases, and Podcasts at Your Video Store Shelf.com
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YVSS #38 - J.R. Bookwalter (BAD MOVIE POLICE)
02/06/2007 Duración: 42minJ.R. Bookwalter’s IMDb. J.R. Bookwalter has been around the world of low budget cinema for close to twenty years now. He made his first film, the Romero-influenced The Dead Next Door in 1988 with funding that partially came from EVIL DEAD director Sam Raimi. That film is still seen by many as the best film Bookwalter directed. Unfortunately for Bookwalter, The Dead Next Door would not hit shelves until after his second film did; Robot Ninja. With a title like that, how can you go wrong? According to Bookwalter, making that movie, and several others similar to it, for incredibly low budgets in small amounts of time was a surefire way to not only go wrong, but be on the run from what his friends termed the Bad Movie Police. That is the inspiration for the latest release from Tempe DVD, which is the company that Bookwalter has owned and operated for many years. Five of his earlier films, which he made for David DeCoteau’s Cinema Home Video, are included on the set. That set is, by the way, out in stores now.
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YVSS #37 - Michael Shoel (President - Ariztical Entertainment)
26/05/2007 Duración: 32minHomophobes may not want to listen to the latest edition of the Your Video Store Shelf Podcast. My love for wacky video releases does not stop at those that keep the bare penis out of sight. When I watch Eating Out 2: Sloppy Seconds in a few days I may choose to avert my eyes for a few brief moments, but during all other moments I will be giving it my full attention. Joining us on the show today is the man behind Eating Out 2. He’s not just a producer though. Michael J. Shoel is the President / CEO of Ariztical Entertainment, a long-running company that now distributes over 20 gay-themed movies a year. He’s been in the distribution business since the video boom of the mid-80s, and a few years ago a mid-life crisis led to him taking a chance and fronting the money for the sexy, campy, gay comedy Eating Out. It was such a success for the company that we are now just a few days away from the DVD release of Eating Out 2, which should be available in many Blockbusters and Hollywood Videos come Tuesday the 29th. T
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YVSS #36 - Johnny Kalangis (THE MAD)
22/05/2007 Duración: 27minOut today on video from Genius Entertainment is Johnny Kalangis’ The Mad, a zombie comedy starring a ’throwback 80s guy’ Billy Zane as a father forced to battle what are essentially zombies at a truck stop after some tainted meat triggers a deadly epidemic. This is the third feature film from Kalangis, although it’s the first where he’s actually crossing into the b-territory that we all love. The film has been garnering some real buzz lately, including quite a few positive reviews, so you should definitely both listen to this show and rent/buy the movie. Among the topics discussed are the pronunciation of Kalangis’ last name, getting the chance to work with Peace Arch Entertainment, rewriting the film’s script, box art woes, the intricacies of Billy Zane’s acting method, what he believes to be important in the creation of a horror movie, what Zane brought to the role, going shopping with him, acting in My Big Fat Greek Wedding, why actors don’t usually appear on the Your Video Store Shelf Podcast, details o
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YVSS #35 - Art Camacho (HALF PAST DEAD 2)
18/05/2007 Duración: 50minArt Camacho's gritty story of redemption Half Past Dead 2, which stars professional wrestler Bill Goldberg and rapper Kurupt, hit stores last Tuesday. He joins us on this edition of the Your Video Store Shelf Podcast to talk about an assortment of topics. Like so many guests on this show, Camacho's journey into the world of filmmaking was not a typical one. Camacho began to learn martial arts as a teenager as a way of defending himself against the gangs of South East Los Angeles. He continued training into his adult years. Like so many accomplished martial artists in 1990's Los Angeles, Camacho was eventually asked to get the crap kicked out of him on film. He quickly learned the tricks of the trade of stunt work, and his workload increased. Soon enough he found himself being asked by PM Entertainment to not just do stunts, but choreograph the fight scenes in many of their movies. He has choreographed well over a hundred action scenes since then, and it was thanks to his success in that field that he found
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YVSS #34 - Steve Latshaw
16/05/2007 Duración: 44minWhen Steve Latshaw moved out to Los Angeles in the mid-90s at the age of 35 it was at a time when the ultra low budget market was virtually dead. Being able to make a movie in twelve days for $50,000 is a talent that men like Steve have, but unfortunately for him, no one was interested. He was told by those close to him that if he didn't make it in the business within two years, it may be time to head back to Florida. Luckily for Steve, his friendships with men like Fred Olen Ray paid off, and as a result he was hired to write the low budget family flick Invisible Dad for Andrew Stevens' Royal Oaks Entertainment. Steve didn't realize it at the time, but that wacky little film would lead him down a path that saw him become one of Andrew Stevens' go-to-guys for low budget scripts. Invisible Dad was made in 1997, and ten years later he has twenty-six writing credits to his name. The last time Steve was on the show, which you can check out in the podcast archives under show six, we covered his career directi
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YVSS #33 - Brian Trenchard-Smith
12/05/2007 Duración: 54min"The whole reason genres exist is because people want to see certain cinematic forms over and over again, with new wrinkles, surprises, developments, bigger, better, etc. The western, the war movie, the spy thriller, the monster movie. They are the meat and potatoes of the broad cinema audience’s diet." Brian Trenchard-Smith has been around the block in this industry. Getting his start in the business cutting trailers in the 1960s, Smith soon found his way into directing. His first feature, the Australian kung fu flic The Man From Hong Kong, was made in the mid-70s. Since then Smith has never stopped chasing his love. Now in Hawaii prepping his 37th film, the Valley of Gwangi-inspired Tyrannosaurus Azteca, Smith has no qualms about his position in the industry as a director of genre films. With many of his films he strives to both satirize and celebrate particular genres, and this is exactly what I love to see filmmakers do. He has an admirably upbeat attitude about his career, and this show is a testament t
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YVSS #32 - Richard W. Munchkin (City Lights / PM Entertainment)
10/05/2007 Duración: 49minRichard W. Munchkin has taught me a lot since I first talked to him in January of this year. During that time I was beginning my quest to learn all that I possibly could about City Lights and PM Entertainment, who brought the world over 100 wacky action movies between 1985 and 2000. The story of City Lights and PM is an incredibly interesting one that I have only just begun to write about. The majority of this podcast is focused on the City Lights days, during which Joe Merhi and Rick Pepin produced a plethora of bloody action films with miniscule budgets, short scripts, and shooting schedules that only went above a week because the company was able to lie their way into more time with the needed equipment. City Lights made 8 or 9 films in its first year of existence, and Munch was an integral part of them all. He describes his role in the City Lights days as that of production manager / art department / wardrobe department / caterer. During those days he saw many spectacular stunts, gun shots, and low
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YVSS #31 - David Sterling (BLOOD MASK)
07/05/2007 Duración: 01h03minIndependent producers in the low budget realm are rare nowadays. Independent producers in the low budget realm with over fifty movies on their resume are even rarer. The man behind this incredible feat is my guest on this edition of the Your Video Store Shelf Podcast; David Sterling of Sterling Entertainment. Upon graduating Columbia College in the mid-80s David Sterling had the goal of becoming an A&R man in the music industry. Filmmaking, however, caught his eye upon his move to Los Angeles in 1988. Soon enough he hooked up with other individuals interested in the independent filmmaking scene, such as Dennis Devine, Jay Woelfel, Steve Jarvis, and Jeff Bur to produce the horror anthology Things in the early 90s. Since then David has formed himself a niche that he is proud to fill, producing many notable genre flicks like Camp Blood, Unseen Evil, Alien 3000, Hell’s Highway, Death Factory, and the reason for this edition of the YVSS Podcast, Blood Mask: The Possession of Nicole Lameroux. This interview
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YVSS #30 - Ulli Lommel (DIARY OF A CANNIBAL)
04/05/2007 Duración: 56minUlli Lommel, director of the original BOOGEYMAN and more recently about 85 million horror films put out through Lionsgate, is here to talk about a little bit of everything in the world of Ulli Lommel.