Loose Cannons Episode #25 – The Yum Yum Girls
On this week’s episode of Loose Cannons, Mathew and Justin watch 1976’s The Yum Yum Girls.
On this week’s episode of Loose Cannons, Mathew and Justin watch 1976’s The Yum Yum Girls.
This week on Loose Cannons, Mathew and Justin watch 1972’s The Love Pill!
This week the Loose Cannons watch The Happy Hooker, an erotic “comedy” starring Lynn Redgrave as New York call girl Xaviera Hollander.
On this week’s very spoooooky edition of Loose Cannons, Mathew and Justin watch 1972’s The Lady in Red Kills Seven Times!
This week the Loose Cannons watch the 1973 Euro Crime drama I Kiss the Hand, also known as Family Killer!
This week Mathew and Justin watch Jean Herman’s 1971 film The Butterfly Affair, starring Claudia Cardinale and real-life criminal Henri “Papillon” Charrière.
Recorded live at Fantastic Fest, Mathew Kumar and special guest Peter Kuplowsky take on Joe Sarno’s 1967 sexploitation film My Body Hungers.
In this week’s very special episode, the Loose Cannons watch the 1975 horror movie Psychic Killer.
Loose Cannons returns! In our season two premiere we take on director Clive Rees’ 1973 film The Blockhouse.
This week the Loose Cannons watch 1973’s Survival of the Dragon, a bizarre kung fu flick about a guy out to avenge the death of the man who gave him a house. Is it worthy of the Cannon canon? Listen to find out!
On this episode of Loose Cannons, Mathew and Justin take on Fists of the Double K, a super punchy kung fu flick partly directed by John Woo and featuring an early appearance by Jackie Chan.
This week’s Cannon film is 1972’s Au Pair Girls, a British sex comedy from Hammer director Val Guest and starring a cavalcade of UK television actors.
This week the Loose Cannons and special guest Jay Clarke from thehorrorsection.com watch the 1971’s I, Monster, starring the late great Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing.
This week the Loose Cannons watch The No Mercy Man, a 1973 revenge movie about a man who has absolutely no mercy for the bikers and carnies who’ve taken over his town.
This week the Loose Cannons watch Goodbye Uncle Tom, the ultra offensive 1971 film that critic Pauline Kael called “the most specific and rabid incitement to race war.”