May 10, 2026

DELUGE and the Horndog Heavies


DELUGE (1933)
Starring Peggy Shannon, Sidney Blackmer, Lois Wilson, Matt Moore, Fred Kohler, Ralf Harolde. Directed by Felix E. Feist. (70 min)
Essay by D.M. ANDERSON💀

Ever since seeing 1974’s The Towering Inferno as an impressionable 11-year-old, disaster has been my favorite genre, and it’s been an ongoing quest ever since to see every damn one of them. The journey has taken me to some interesting places over the years - other countries, other eras - and I’ve experienced more than my share of the good, the bad and the ugly (an example of the latter being a 1943 German film, Titanic, yet another depiction of the sinking, along with a heaping helping of Nazi propaganda).

But the most unusual one might be 1933’s Deluge, a low budget, pre-code apocalyptic disaster movie released by RKO Pictures. For those of you who spent most of your formative years at Waffle House instead of the classroom, ‘deluge’ is fancy French-speak for ‘lotsa water.’ There’s certainly lotsa destruction, especially during the first act. Dispensing with the narrative foreplay typical of most films of the genre, Deluge wastes no time getting to the disaster at-hand…cataclysmic weather, earthquakes and tidal waves, all apparently triggered by an eclipse (and you thought the science in Armageddon was wonky). 


Ocean views ain't all they're cracked up to be.
Those pesky eclipses…always ominously foreshadowing a variety of things, and none of them good (in movies, anyway). I personally had a similarly horrific experience a few years back, when I lived within driving distance of an approaching eclipse’s path of totality. Packing the family into the car, we drove 20 miles south with viewing glasses I just purchased from 7-Eleven (is there anything they don’t have right when you need it?). 

We managed to make it to our destination with time to spare, and that’s when one of my daughters’ IBS started flaring up. The impending celestial event may or may not have the catalyst for her sudden and urgent need to defecate, but with no restroom in the vicinity, we had no choice but to speed back home and pray her bowels didn’t explode along the way. I missed my last opportunity to view an eclipse in my lifetime, but hey, at least I didn’t end up spending the rest of that Sunday cleaning shit out of the backseat. Fair trade, I guess.


The poor bastards in Deluge aren’t so lucky (and more than a few probably shit their own pants). Skyscrapers topple, cities are submerged and millions die. Though it's established that this is happening all over the world, most of the onscreen mayhem occurs in New York. On a related note, Deluge holds the distinction of being the first film to visually depict the total destruction of a major American city.


And I do mean total. Nearly every building crumbles and falls apart spectacularly, interspersed with scenes of people fleeing in panic, only to be crushed by falling debris. And this is all before a massive tsunami comes rolling into Manhattan to finish the job. The special effects are a bit quaint compared to what Hollywood is capable of these days, but still pretty damn good for a film that’s almost 100 years old. So good, in fact, that Republic Pictures later bought the rights to reuse them in other movies (most notably, 1939’s ultra-daffy SOS Tidal Wave). 


All this happens during the first 20 minutes. The remainder of Deluge largely focuses on three survivors, Martin (Sidney Blackmer), who lost his wife and kids, shapely swimmer Claire (Peggy Shannon), and horndog thug Jephson (Fred Kohler), who quickly establishes his rapey intentions when he finds Claire washed ashore. Keeping her captive in his cabin, Jephson fights with equally rapey roommate Norwood over who gets to have her, resulting in the latter’s death. 


Fred Kohler...the Marjoe Gortner of his day.
Rapey guys are no strangers to movies about earthquakes. 2012’s Aftershock is a recent example, with gang rape o’ plenty. But the most famous and disturbing seismically stimulated rapey guy is Marjoe Gortner as an unhinged National Guardsman in 1974’s Earthquake. After making a dubious living as a child evangelist, Gortner turned to acting, where he excelled at playing psychotic villains. Even in rare cases where he played good guys, the man and his awesome afro were inherently intimidating. If you were a director in the ‘70s and your movie needed a rapey guy, you gave Marjoe a call.

Deluge has both of those movies beat, though. Made and released before the Hayes Code, not only does it feature a rapey guy as one of the main characters, a whole gaggle of more rapey guys show up later. Before that though, Martin rescues Claire from Jephson and they eventually fall in love, setting-up house in a cozy cabin. However, two things complicate their relationship. First, Jephson hooks up with a whole gang of thieves and rapey guys...and he's hellbent on revenge. Second, they meet a community of other survivors trying to restart civilization again, including the wife he assumed was dead, Helen (Lois Wilson), and their two kids. So not only does Martin have to contend with an angry mob of Marjoe Gortners, he finds himself in a soapy love triangle.


From a narrative standpoint, Deluge kind of runs contrary to other films of this type. All the spectacle occurs during the first act. Afterwards, the film struggles to maintain interest, no matter how many rapey guys the story throws at us. The whole thing slowly winds down into a mess of preachy melodrama with a Debbie Downer of an ending. That’s no way to end a disaster movie. What would’ve been really great is to cap things off with a bang by throwing in another round of nature getting nasty. Still, the opening of Deluge delivers the disaster goods and is worth catching just for the massive onscreen destruction, a creative combination of miniatures and matte paintings. Seeing New York drowned and gobbled up by the Earth (without the aid of CGI) is a hell of a lot of fun.

May 8, 2026

THE POOP SCOOP: Under the Radar Edition


UPCOMING KIBBLES THAT MAKE US PURR!

READY OR NOT 2: HERE I COME on Digital Now and Blu-ray & DVD June 16 from Searchlight Pictures. This action‑packed, darkly comedic horror sequel expands the Ready or Not mythology with another lethal game of hide‑and‑seek. Still reeling from her brutal escape from the Le Domas family, Grace is thrust into an even more unhinged bloodbath when she becomes prey once again – this time hunted alongside her estranged sister by four rival families, each ruthlessly vying for absolute power and control of the High Seat of the Council. In Ready or Not 2: Here I Come, Samara Weaving returns as "Grace" alongside an all‑star cast including Kathryn Newton, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Shawn Hatosy, Nestor Carbonell, with David Cronenberg, and Elijah Wood. 


THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD on 4K + Blu-ray July 7 from Sony. The legendary Sinbad (Kerwin Mathews) sets off on a dangerous journey to the mysterious Island of Colossus to break the spell cast over his beloved princess (Kathryn Grant) by a diabolical magician (Torin Thatcher). Before he can save her, Sinbad must battle an awesome collection of mythical monsters: the man-eating Cyclops, a saber-wielding skeleton, a ferocious two-headed bird called the Roc and a fire-breathing dragon, all animated by the stunning visual effects mastery of Ray Harryhausen. This release also includes a large selection of bonus material.


A MAN CALLED ROCCA on Blu-ray July 14 from Kino Lorber. We here at Free Kittens have just recently discovered the wonderful world of classic French thrillers, so when another great one comes along on Blu-ray, we gotta meow it out loud! In this cold-blooded crime tale, a man named Roberto La Rocca (Jean-Paul Belmondo) goes to Marseille to help his friend Xavier (Pierre Vaneck), who has been imprisoned after a frame-up by his associate. Unflappably cool, Rocca sets out for some good old-fashioned revenge—and his own piece of the action. Teaming the newly-minted superstar Belmondo (Breathless), debuting director Jean Becker (One Deadly Summer) and a source novel by José Giovanni (Le trou, Classe tous risques), 1961's A Man Named Rocca is a noir gem riding the crest of the radical French New Wave. A decade later, Giovanni would go on to direct his own adaptation, La scoumoune a.k.a Hit Man, starring Belmondo in the same role. This release includes an all new audio commentary. 


DEEP WATER Coming to Blu-ray July 14 from Magenta Light Studios. Of course you’re ready for another shark movie directed by Renny Harlin (Deep Blue Sea). Well, so are we. In this one, a group of international passengers en route from Los Angeles to Shanghai are forced to make an emergency landing in shark-infested waters. Now they must work together in hopes to overcome the frenzy of sharks drawn to the wreckage. Starring Aaron Eckhart, Ben Kingsley, Angus Sampson, Lucy Barrett, and Molly Belle Wright. 


Arnold Schwarzenegger’s ERASER Coming to 4K & Digital June 16 from Warner Bros. As exciting as it is entertaining, Eraser is unstoppable. This release also includes a selection of all new bonus features.


HOPPERS on Digital NOW and Blu-ray, 4K & DVD June 2 from Disney/Pixar. This release also includes numerous bonus featurettes, deleted scenes and a blooper reel.

 

CRIME 101 on Blu-ray, 4K and DVD June 30 from Alliance Entertainment. Set against the sun-bleached grit of Los Angeles, Crime 101 weaves the tale of an elusive jewel thief (Chris Hemsworth) whose heists have mystified police.


NIRVANA, THE BAND, THE SHOW, THE MOVIE on Blu-ray May 26 from NEON/Decal. In this indie sci-fi comedy, Lifelong friends Matt and Jay once again try to book a gig at a legendary venue when they accidentally travel back in time to 2008. 


THEY WILL KILL YOU on Digital April 28 and Blu-ray, 4K & DVD June 30 from Warner Bros. Director Kirill Sokolov unleashes a blood-soaked, high-octane horror-action-comedy in which a young woman must survive the night at the Virgil, a demonic cult’s mysterious and twisted death-trap of a lair.

 

GINGER SNAPS on 4K + Blu-ray + Digital May 19 from Lionsgate. Ginger Snaps is the story of death-fixated teenage sisters Ginger and Brigitte, who are attacked one night by a creature drawn to Ginger’s first menstrual period. 


George A. Romero’s DAY OF THE DEAD on 4K + Blu-ray June 16 from Shout Factory. In This highly anticipated four-disc release features new 4K restoration, as well as hours of new and vintage bonus material.


The Original 28 DAYS LATER Coming to 4K UHD September 1 from Sony. Is there still a glimmer of hope for humanity — or has the deadly "rage" virus found its way to foreign shores and infected the entire planet?


THE BRIDE! On Digital Now and Blu-ray, 4K & DVD May 19 from Warner Bros. This is a bold, iconoclastic take on one of the world’s most compelling stories. 


SPEED RACER on 4K UHD May 19 from Warner Bros. Based on the classic series created by anime pioneer Tatsuo Yoshida, the live action Speed Racer is newly remastered and includes new bonus content. 


FALLOUT SEASON 2 on Blu-ray, 4K & DVD May 19 from Amazon MGM Studios. While Fallout Season 1 took us through the dangerous remains of Los Angeles, Season 2 picks up after the epic finale and takes us on a journey through the “Mojave Wasteland.”.


ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER 4K Collector SteelBook Coming June 2 from Warner Bros. The collectible steelbook will include a Blu-ray bonus disc with special features created by Paul Thomas Anderson along with a 24-page booklet with behind-the-scenes photos. 


STRANGER THINGS: THE COMPLETE SERIES Coming to 4K and Blu-ray July 26 from Arrow Video. PRE-ORDER HERE!

May 6, 2026

BLUE THUNDER (4K): One of the Best Action Movies No One Ever Talks About


BLUE THUNDER (4K UHD)
1983 / 109 min
Review by Mr. Paws😸

The government has developed a new, state-of-the-art, super-spy helicopter. It can see through walls, fly silently, look down dresses and blow the bejeezus out of everything in its path. What better person to test fly it over one of the biggest cities in the world than a psychologically unstable Vietnam vet?

I had no problem with the implausibility of that scenario back in ‘83, and I still don’t. In fact, the only real problem I had with the Blue Thunder at the time was an early scene where chopper pilot Frank Murphy (Roy Scheider) breaks-in his new partner by flying out to Encino so they can spy on a young beauty who does nude yoga in her living room every night. The two hover outside her spacious epic-windowed mansion, gawking as she contorts in ways most guys can only dream of their wives doing.


The problem wasn’t that the scene was totally gratuitous, to say nothing of far-fetched (who isn't gonna hear a goddamn helicopter right outside their window?). But I went to go see this film with a girlfriend who had an unbelievably ugly jealous streak. She got so pissed off at me that she damn near walked out of the theater. What did she think…that I was gonna look up Anna Forrest (the yoga gal) after the credits rolled?


Other than that, I still think Blue Thunder remains one of the best ‘80s action flicks no one ever talks about these days. Murphy is an L.A. cop who patrols the skies at night, thwarting robberies and peeping into naked women’s windows. In his spare time, he checks his sanity with his wristwatch. He’s entrusted to fly a new copter, nicknamed Blue Thunder, to see what it can do, during which time he discovers the government has nefarious plans for the bird. It’s never made too clear exactly what the evil powers-that-be wants to accomplish with a helicopter, but that doesn’t stop them from trying to kill Murphy. Leading the charge for Frank’s demise is Colonel Cochrane, played by a perpetually bug-eyed Malcolm McDowell.


"When do I get my cool shades?"
Blue Thunder has a very high “oh, come on!” quotient, rife with absurdities. However, most of that is negated by great dialogue, engaging characters and a truly spectacular climactic air battle over L.A. between Murphy and Cochrane, where buildings explode, planes are shot down, and a copter is taken out by a freight train (though no one, including our hero, seems concerned about all the massive collateral damage). Director John Badham handles these action scenes with considerable skill and they still hold up well 40 years later, as do the special effects. 

The film’s got a great cast. Scheider is terrific, and though he’s played so many cops in his career that he could’ve phoned this one in, he makes Murphy gruffly endearing. McDowell lays it on a little thick, but certainly attacks his role with zeal. Elsewhere, Candy Clark and Daniel Stern are amusing in key supporting roles, while the great Warren Oates (in his last role) makes the most out of his cliched angry police captain character. He also has some of the film’s funniest lines. As for the lovely Ms. Forrest…I still wonder why she never returned any of my calls.


At the time, I loved Blue Thunder and all its fiery mayhem (the coolest action movie I'd seen since Raiders of the Lost Ark), and never scrutinized the plot until long afterwards. Even revisiting it today for this review, I didn’t stop to cynically ponder its plausibility. There’s too much earnestness on both sides of the camera for that to happen. 


And speaking of revisiting…this 4K UHD release comes courtesy of Arrow Video, who have that knack for reviving and restoring films you forgot you needed. In this case, the video transfer is generally excellent, as are both audio options…a restored 2.0 stereo track and a DTS-HD MA 5.1 remix. While I wish Arrow would’ve gone all-out with a Limited Edition boxed set like they’ve done with some other films (such as the recent, less-deserving Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves), this one does boast a great selection of new and archival bonus features. 


EXTRA KIBBLES

NEW INTERVIEWS - Flight Risk features director John Badham; A Rollercoaster Ride features actor Candy Clark; Catching Up features actor Malcolm McDowell.

FEATURETTES - Ride with the Angels is a 45-minute, three-part documentary from 2006; The Special: Building Blue Thunder, also from 2006, focuses on the titular helicopter; promotional featurette from 1983.

AUDIO COMMENTARY - By director John Badham, editor Frank Morris, motion control supervisor Hoyt Yeatman.

EXTENDED SCENE - The car chase with Candy Clark…and I can see why they cut out a certain sequence.

TRAILER

IMAGE GALLERY

SUPPLEMENTAL BOOKLET - Includes a detailed essay by Dennis Capicik, photos, cast & crew credits.

REVERSIBLE COVER - Featuring original and new artwork, the latter of which is one of Arrow’s better recent ones.

May 4, 2026

I LOVE LUCY and So Do You


I LOVE LUCY: THE COMPLETE SERIES (DVD)
75th Anniversary Edition
1951-1960 / 5398 min
Review by Carl, the Couch Potato😽

Like Elvis Presley and rock & roll, I Love Lucy didn’t invent the sitcom, but sure as hell defined it in the early days of American television. Its popularity and cultural impact was huge, its influence immeasurable. Just think of the sheer number of similarly-structured shows that probably would never have existed without it.

Not only that, it turned Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz into two of TV’s biggest power couple. Without Desilu productions, we would never have gotten The Untouchables, Mission: Impossible or Star Trek. Can you imagine life without Star Trek? Thanks to I Love Lucy, we never have to. So even if their own groundbreaking show might seem archaic and silly to some, everyone’s gotta love Lucy at least a little bit.


I Love Lucy first aired long before my time, but has been in syndication forever. I can’t say I grew up on the show, nor did I ever go out of my way to watch it, so it holds no real nostalgic value. But whenever it happened to pop up on TV, I  always found it pretty funny and a lot of the humor holds up even today, especially the classic episodes that have since become iconic (I dare anyone not to laugh their ass off during Season 1’s Lucy Does a TV Commercial).  


Is it the greatest sitcom ever made? That’s obviously subjective, so I won’t go there, but in addition to still regularly airing on TV, I Love Lucy has been repeatedly released on physical media in every format over the years, including the entire series on Blu-ray just a few years ago. So for those who do consider it the greatest, the show’s always been readily available…


"That's no moon. It's a space station!"
…which makes this 75th Anniversary DVD set kind of perplexing. Content-wise, it’s priceless. The initial I Love Lucy TV show actually ran for six seasons, but this set also includes three seasons (13 episodes) of the retooled hour-long version, The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour, which ran from 1957 to 1960. It’s all here, spread out over 33 discs. Then again, so did the DVD set released in 2020, which is still widely available at a cheaper price. And as far as I can ascertain, this new set might actually include less bonus material (there is still a ton, but none of it is new). And with a set this massive, some kind of episode guide would’ve been nice.

I also gotta say that it’s terribly packaged. Granted, any set consisting of 33 discs is always gonna be a challenge, but Paramount did a pretty decent job with Mission: Impossible a few years ago. But here, the discs are stacked atop each other and tend to slide around inside the box. That might be a minor quip for some, but I personally don’t know a single physical media collector not put-off by inconveniently housed discs that are likely to get scratched up. 


Still, the overall video transfer is fairly decent, as is the mono Dolby Digital track for all nine seasons. And it goes without saying that those who love the show will like having every episode immediately on-hand. As a 75th Anniversary commemoration, I Love Lucy: The Complete Series is a good set, but there are better ones out there.


EXTRA KIBBLES (Spread out over several discs)

ORIGINAL OPENINGS & CLOSINGS - These changed a bit from season to season.

FLUBS - Various mistakes made during live tapings.

LOST SCENES

RESTORED MUSIC

BEHIND THE SCENES - Most are excerpts from a book about the show.

LUCY ON THE RADIO - Some episodes were also done as radio broadcasts.

SLIDE SHOW GALLERY

COLOR MONTAGE VIDEOS, FOOTAGE AND HOME MOVIES

CAST LIST MENUS

GUEST CAST LIST MENUS

PRODUCTION NOTES 

AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION

SPONSOR SPOTS - Vintage ads from the show’s sponsors.

May 3, 2026

THE AI DOC: The Movie Equivalent of Doomscrolling


THE AI DOC: OR HOW I BECAME AN APOCALOPTIMIST (Blu-ray)
2026 / 104 min
Universal
Available at MovieZyng
Review by Princess Pepper🙀

For me personally, AI began rearing its ugly head during my final years as a middle school teacher. Some students who’d previously demonstrated almost no ability (or desire) to put together a single grammatically correct sentence were suddenly turning in essays that displayed a level of “thinking” and vocabulary well beyond their grade level. Worse yet, those who bothered to proofread whatever ChatGPT belched out for them freely admitted they had no idea what certain words and passages even meant. But they didn’t consider it cheating because, to them, chatbots were simply another writing tool like spell-checkers. 

That, among other things, was a sure sign it was time to retire. This tired old teacher (who still considers writing to be an essential skill) did not want to be around to experience AI’s growing impact on the classroom. But damn, if AI didn’t soon become unavoidable, turning social media into a junkyard and embraced by countless boobs who don’t know (or care) if what they see, read or hear is real or the product of a data center. 


That being said, I found The AI Doc to be a depressing experience, a film I regret having seen because it alarmingly lays out just how far-reaching this capitalism-driven technology has insinuated itself into nearly every aspect of culture, politics, finance, business and the economy (to say nothing of its immediate negative impact on the environment itself). Not only that, AI is becoming exponentially smarter and more powerful every day. Even its own creators (some interviewed here) admit they aren’t fully certain how it works and what it’ll eventually be capable of…for better or worse.


"I just wanted to reassure you that, even though you're now obsolete, I'll be fine."
To be honest, I would have preferred to keep my head buried in the sand, kind of like some of those same creators who repeatedly gush over the wonders of AI and how it’ll turn the world into a work-free utopia, while completely ignoring that it’s already eliminated jobs by the millions and consumes an ungodly amount of natural resources to function. It’s like listening to a tag-team of Mayor Vaughns. But hey, who needs a job or drinkable water when you can make videos of a high-diving horse?

The most alarming aspect of the film is that directors Daniel Roher and Charlie Tyrell make it abundantly (and repeatedly) clear that we have no say in the matter. At this point, AI is a Pandora’s box that cannot be closed. Roher presents himself as an artist with growing anxiety over AI’s increasing omnipresence, interviewing various experts for assurance that there’s nothing to be afraid of. Such assurance isn’t forthcoming, though. On the extreme end of the spectrum, some interviewees take the Chicken Little approach by suggesting AI will be capable of killing people through manipulation. While I’m not quite ready to follow them down that particular rabbit hole, these claims certainly exacerbate the notion that nothing good can stem from AI continuing to grow without being regulated. Unfortunately, not even those who declare AI to be the greatest thing since the industrial revolution have any idea how to do that.


The AI Doc ends with a call to action, but even then, we don’t walk away very optimistic that anything will change, not with financial gain being the driving force behind its use. In fact, what I mostly felt afterwards was resentment that AI is essentially inescapable. While the film itself is admittedly fascinating, maybe even Oscar worthy, watching it is kind of like doomscrolling without a computer mouse.