Books received 6/18/12

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Glimmering
by Elizabeth Hand
Introduction by Kim Stanley Robinson
Cover by Heidi Whitcomb

Promo copy:

It’s 1999 and the world is falling apart at the seams. The sky is afire, the oceans are rising—and mankind is to blame. While the spoils of the 20th Century dwindle, Jack Finnegan lives on the fringes in his decaying mansion, struggling to keep his life afloat and his loved ones safe while battling that most modern of diseases—AIDS.

As the New Millennium approaches, Jack’s former lover, a famous photographer reveling in the world’s decay, gifts him with a mysterious elixir called Fusax, a medicine rumored to cure the incurable AIDS. But soon, the "side effects" of Fusax become more apparent, and Jack gets mixed up with a bizarre entourage of rock stars, Japanese scientists, corporate executives, AIDS victims, and religious terrorists. While these larger players compete to control mankind’s fate in the 21st Century, Jack is forced to choose his own role in the World’s End, and how to live with it.

Originally published in 1997, Glimmering is a visionary mix of fantasy and science fiction about a world in which humanity struggles to cope with the ever-approaching "End of the End."

Year Zero
by Rob Reid

Promo copy:

In the hilarious tradition of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Rob Reid takes you on a headlong journey through the outer reaches of the universe—and the inner workings of our absurdly dysfunctional music industry.

Low-level entertainment lawyer Nick Carter thinks it’s a prank, not an alien encounter, when a redheaded mullah and a curvaceous nun show up at his office. But Frampton and Carly are highly advanced (if bumbling) extraterrestrials. And boy, do they have news.

The entire cosmos, they tell him, has been hopelessly hooked on humanity’s music ever since “Year Zero” (1977 to us), when American pop songs first reached alien ears. This addiction has driven a vast intergalactic society to commit the biggest copyright violation since the Big Bang. The resulting fines and penalties have bankrupted the whole universe. We humans suddenly own everything—and the aliens are not amused.

Nick Carter has just been tapped to clean up this mess before things get ugly, and he’s an unlikely galaxy-hopping hero: He’s scared of heights. He’s also about to be fired. And he happens to have the same name as a Backstreet Boy. But he does know a thing or two about copyright law. And he’s packing a couple of other pencil-pushing superpowers that could come in handy.

Soon he’s on the run from a sinister parrot and a highly combustible vacuum cleaner. With Carly and Frampton as his guides, Nick now has forty-eight hours to save humanity, while hopefully wowing the hot girl who lives down the hall from him.

The McSweeney’s Book of Politics and Musicals
Edited by Christopher Monks
Cover by Brian McMullen and Jason Fulford

Promo copy:

Ever since John Hancock broke into song after signing the Declaration of Independence, American politics and musicals have been inextricably linked. From Alexander Hamilton’s jazz hands, to Chester A. Arthur’s oboe operas, to Newt Gingrich’s off-Broadway sexscapade, You, Me, and My Moon Colony Mistress Makes Three, government and musical theater have joined forces to document our nation’s long history of freedom, partisanship, and dancers on roller skates pretending to be choo choo trains.

To celebrate this grand union of entrenched bureaucracy and song, the patriots at McSweeney’s Internet Tendency (“The Iowa Caucus of humor websites”) offer this riotous collection (peacefully assembled!) of monologues, charts, scripts, lists, diatribes, AND musicals written by the noted fake-musical lyricist, Ben Greenman. On the agenda are . . .

Fragments from PALIN! THE MUSICAL

Barack Obama’s Undersold 2012 Campaign Slogans

Atlas Shrugged Updated for the Financial Crisis

Your Attempts to Legislate Hunting Man for Sport Reek of Class Warfare

A 1980s Teen Sex Comedy Becomes Politically Uncomfortable

Donald Rumsfeld Memoir Chapter Title Or German Heavy Metal Song?

Noises Political Pundits Would Make If They Were Wild Animals and Not Political Pundits

Ron Paul Gives a Guided Tour of His Navajo Art Collection

Classic Nursery Rhymes, Updated and Revamped for the Recession, As Told to Me By My Father

And much more!

Supergods
by Grant Morrison

Promo copy:

What Masked Vigilantes, Miraculous Mutants, and a Sun God from Smallville Can Teach Us About Being Human

Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Iron Man, and the X-Men—the list of names as familiar as our own. They are on our movie and television screens, in our videogames and in our dreams. But what are they trying to tell us? For Grant Morrison, one of the most acclaimed writers in the world of comics, these heroes are powerful archetypes who reflect and predict the course of human existence: Through them we tell the story of ourselves. In this exhilarating work of a lifetime, Morrison draws on art, archetypes, and his own astonishing journeys through this shadow universe to provide the first true history of our great modern myth: the superhero.

Now with a new Afterword

Books received 6/18/12 Pyr edition Part I

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

A Guile of Dragons
by James Enge
Cover by Steve Stone

Promo copy:

It’s dwarves versus dragons in this origin story for Enge’s signature character, Morlock Ambrosius!

Before history began, the dwarves of Thrymhaiam fought against the dragons as the Longest War raged in the deep roads beneath the Northhold. Now the dragons have returned, allied with the dead kings of Cor and backed by the masked gods of Fate and Chaos.

The dwarves are cut off from the Graith of Guardians in the south. Their defenders are taken prisoner or corrupted by dragonspells. The weight of guarding the Northhold now rests on the crooked shoulders of a traitor’s son, Morlock syr Theorn (also called Ambrosius).

But his wounded mind has learned a dark secret in the hidden ways under the mountains. Regin and Fafnir were brothers, and the Longest War can never be over…

The Skybound Sea (The Aeons’ Gate Book Three)
by Sam Sykes
Cover by Paul Young

Promo copy:

After the misadventures of the first two books Lenk and his companions must finally turn away from fighting each other and for their own survival and look to saving the entire human race. A terrible demon has risen from beneath the sea and where it came from thousands could follow. And all the while an alien race is planning the extinction of humanity. The third volume in the Aeon’s Gate trilogy widens the action out dramatically. TOME OF THE UNDERGATES was based mainly on a ship, BLACK HALO moved the action to an island of bones, THE SKYBOUND SEA takes us out into a world threatened with a uniquely imagined and terrifying apocalypse.

Reaper
by K. D. McEntire
Cover by Sam Weber

Promo copy:

Reaper is set in a world a breath away from our own. After the death of her mother, Wendy is attempting to fill her mother’s shoes and discovering that the prospect is far more difficult than she ever imagined. Learning that she is part of a powerful and ancient family of Reapers that her mother had forsaken is just the first surprise—Wendy soon discovers that the San Francisco Bay Never is filled with political powers and factions both previously unknown and completely mysterious to Wendy. Since both her mother and Piotr are gone, Wendy must struggle to maneuver between the machinations of the dead and the dark intentions of her living Reaper family.

Eventually betrayed and made sick unto death, the clock is ticking before Wendy will fall—she has only a matter of days to unravel the mysteries her mother left behind and to convince her wary family to accept her as one of their own.

Part II

Books received 6/18/12 Pyr edition Part II

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

False Covenant
by Ari Marmell
Cover by Jason Chan

Promo copy:

A creature of the other world, an unnatural entity bent on chaos and carnage, has come to stalk the nighttime streets of the Galicien city of Davillon. There’s never a good time for murder and panic, but for a community already in the midst of its own inner turmoil, this couldn’t possibly have come at a worse one.

Not for Davillon, and not for a young thief who calls herself Widdershins.

It’s been over half a year since the brutal murder of Archbishop William de Laurent during his pilgrimage to Davillon. And in all that time, Widdershins has truly tried her best. She’s tried to take care of Genevieve’s tavern and tried to make a semihonest living in a city slowly stagnating under the weight of an angry and disapproving Church. She’s tried to keep out of trouble, away from the attentions of the Davillon Guard and above the secrets and schemes of the city’s new bishop.

But she’s in way over her head, with no idea which way to turn. The Guard doesn’t trust her. The Church doesn’t trust her. Her own Thieves’ Guild doesn’t trust her.

Too bad for everyone, then, that she and her personal god, Olgun, may be their only real weapon against a new evil like nothing the city has ever seen.

Hunter and Fox
by Philippa Ballantine
Cover by Cynthia Sheppard

Promo copy:

In a world that is in constant shifting, where mountains can change to plainsand then to lakes, Talyn is the Hunter for the Caisah, and a wreck of a once-proud person. She has lost her people, the Vaerli, and her soul working for the man who destroyed her people. All unknowing, she carries within her a Kindred, a chaos creature from the center of the earth that wants to help bring the Vaerli back to power. However, she has lost the ability to communicate with it.

She must also deal with the machinations of Kelanim, the mistress of Caisah, who out of fear will do anything to bring Talyn down.

Little does the Hunter know that salvation is looking for her, and it wears the face of gentleness and strength. Finn is a teller of tales who carries his own dreadful secret. He sets out to find answers to his path but ends up in the city of Perilous and Fair where he meets Talyn. He knows the danger and yet is drawn to her. Their fates are bound together.

Meanwhile, the Hunter’s lost brother Byre is searching for his own solution to the terrible curse placed on the Vaerli. He sets forth on a treacherous journey of his own, which will intersect in the most unlikely place with that of Talyn and Finn.

The ramifications of this encounter will be felt by all the people in Conhaero, from the lost Vaerli to the Caisah on his throne.

Destroyer of Worlds (Kingdom of the Serpent, Book 3)
by Mark Chadbourn
Cover by John Picacio

Promo copy:

A quest of epic reach spans the globe under the mythologies of five great cultures

It is the beginning of the end… the end of the axe-age, the sword-age, leading to the passing of gods and men from the universe. As all the ancient prophecies fall into place, the final battle rages, on Earth, across Faerie, and into the Land of the Dead. Jack Churchill, Champion of Existence, must lead the Brothers and Sisters of Dragons in a last, desperate assault on the Fortress of the Enemy to confront the ultimate incarnation of destruction: the Burning Man. It is humanity’s only chance to avert the coming extinction. At his back is an army of gods culled from the world’s great mythologies—Greek, Norse, Chinese, Aztec, and more. But will even that be enough? Driven to the brink by betrayal, sacrifice, and death, his allies fear Jack may instead bring about the very devastation he is trying to prevent.

Part I

The Apes of Wrath Table of Contents

Here is the table of contents for The Apes of Wrath as it will appear in the book.

    Foreword by Rupert Wyatt

    Editor’s Introduction

    "The Ape-Box Affair" by James P. Blaylock

    "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" by Edgar Allan Poe

    "Evil Robot Monkey" by Mary Robinette Kowal

    "Apes in Literature" by Jess Nevins

    "Tarzan’s First Love" by Edgar Rice Burroughs

    "Rachel in Love" by Pat Murphy

    "Dr. Hudson’s Secret Gorilla" by Howard Waldrop

    "The Four-Color Ape" by Scott A. Cupp

    "Red Shadows" by Robert E. Howard

    "The Cult of the White Ape" by Hugh B. Cave

    "The Maze of Maâl Dweb" by Clark Ashton Smith

    "Quidquid volueris" by Gustave Flaubert

    "Gorilla of Your Dreams: A Brief History of Simian Cinema" by Rick Klaw

    "After King Kong Fell" by Philip Jose Farmer

    "Deviation from a Theme" by Stephen Utley

    "Godzilla’s Twelve-Step Program" by Joe R. Lansdale

    "The Men in the Monkey Suit" by Mark Finn

    "The Apes and the Two Travelers" by Aesop

    "Her Furry Face" by Leigh Kennedy

    "A Report to an Academy" by Franz Kafka

    "Faded Roses" by Karen Joy Fowler


Cover by Alex Solis

The Wyatt foreword and the essays by Nevins, Cupp, and Finn were prepared especially for this book. My essay is a substantially revised and expanded version of the article that originally appeared in Moving Pictures Magazine, December/January 2005/2006.

The Flaubert and Kafka were newly translated by Gio Clairval.

Everything else is a reprint.

Watch for The Apes of Wrath in March 2013 from Tachyon Publications.

Books received 6/10/12 Part I

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Superman: The High-Flying History of America’s Most Enduring Hero
by Larry Tyne

Promo copy:

Seventy-five years after he came to life, Superman remains one of America’s most adored and enduring heroes. Now Larry Tye, the prize-winning journalist and New York Times bestselling author of Satchel, has written the first full-fledged history not just of the Man of Steel but of the creators, designers, owners, and performers who made him the icon he is today.

Legions of fans from Boston to Buenos Aires can recite the story of the child born Kal-El, scion of the doomed planet Krypton, who was rocketed to Earth as an infant, raised by humble Kansas farmers, and rechristened Clark Kent. Known to law-abiders and evildoers alike as Superman, he was destined to become the invincible champion of all that is good and just—and a star in every medium from comic books and comic strips to radio, TV, and film.

But behind the high-flying legend lies a true-to-life saga every bit as compelling, one that begins not in the far reaches of outer space but in the middle of America’s heartland. During the depths of the Great Depression, Jerry Siegel was a shy, awkward teenager in Cleveland. Raised on adventure tales and robbed of his father at a young age, Jerry dreamed of a hero for a boy and a world that desperately needed one. Together with neighborhood chum and kindred spirit Joe Shuster, young Siegel conjured a human-sized god who was everything his creators yearned to be: handsome, stalwart, and brave, able to protect the innocent, punish the wicked, save the day, and win the girl. It was on Superman’s muscle-bound back that the comic book and the very idea of the superhero took flight.

Tye chronicles the adventures of the men and women who kept Siegel and Shuster’s “Man of Tomorrow” aloft and vitally alive through seven decades and counting. Here are the savvy publishers and visionary writers and artists of comics’ Golden Age who ushered the red-and-blue-clad titan through changing eras and evolving incarnations; and the actors—including George Reeves and Christopher Reeve—who brought the Man of Steel to life on screen, only to succumb themselves to all-too-human tragedy in the mortal world. Here too is the poignant and compelling history of Siegel and Shuster’s lifelong struggle for the recognition and rewards rightly due to the architects of a genuine cultural phenomenon.

From two-fisted crimebuster to über-patriot, social crusader to spiritual savior, Superman—perhaps like no other mythical character before or since—has evolved in a way that offers a Rorschach test of his times and our aspirations. In this deftly realized appreciation, Larry Tye reveals a portrait of America over seventy years through the lens of that otherworldly hero who continues to embody our best selves.

What a great concept. Wish I had thought of it.

Pathfinder Tales: City of the Fallen Sky
by Tim Pratt
Cover by J. P. Targate

Promo copy:

Once an alchemical researcher with the dark scholars of the Technic League, Alaeron fled their arcane order when his conscience got the better of him, taking with him a few strange devices of unknown function. Now in hiding in a distant city, he’s happy to use his skills creating minor potions and wonders—at least until the back-alley rescue of an adventurer named Jaya lands him in trouble with a powerful crime lord. In order to keep their heads, Alaeron and Jaya must travel across wide seas and steaming jungles in search of a wrecked flying city and the magical artifacts that can buy their freedom. Yet the Technic League hasn’t forgotten Alaeron’s betrayal, and an assassin armed with alien weaponry is hot on their trail…

Smithereens
by Steve Aylett

Promo copy:

Steve Aylett has been described as "utterly original" (SFX), "the most original voice in the literary scene" (Michael Moorcock), "an unstoppable master of space and time" (Asimov’s) and "the coolest writer alive today" (Starburst). SMITHEREENS collects 19 stories including ‘The Man Whose Head Expanded’, the prophetic ‘Download Syndrome’, ‘The Burnished Adventures of Injury Mouse’, the full text of ‘Voyage of the Iguana’, the last ever Beerlight story ‘Specter’s Way’, ‘Horoscope’, and the closest thing Aylett has ever written to a traditional SF story, ‘Bossanova’ (featuring a robot and two spaceships!) There are also animal-attack-while-writing reminiscences in ‘Evernemesi’ and top-of-the-line declarative bitterness in ‘On Reading New Books’. Snails, whales and cortical drills. Aylett’s last collection.

"clearly a phenomenal talent." – Trashotron

"Aylett has made a career out of redefining the boundaries of science fiction – and sanity." – Barnes & Noble Spotlight Feature

I’ve long been an Aylett fan. I was lucky enough to interview him back 2005.

Quote:
The book turns up as an entire pre-formed thing in my head, a sort of visual object with a feeling to it, then it’s a case of writing the book which will make that shape. It’s usually like a glob of multicolored chiming vibrational bubble gum with structures pushed through it, and it feels like heart sherbet. There’s about ten of those book shapes floating in a holding formation at the moment. It’s up to me whether to take the dictation or not, after all, and at the moment I’m just letting a lot of them hang.

Part II

Books received 6/10/12 Part II

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

Fain the Sorcerer
by Steve Aylett
Introduction by Alan Moore

Promo copy:

A Cabellian fantasy. After strangling a mime in the King’s court, Fain encounters a crazy old man who offers to grant him three wishes. What will Fain ask for?

Looping through his own past and offending kings and leaders throughout the world, Fain searches for the means to wisely direct his new powers. His quest becomes progressively more vivid as he encounters monsters, mermaids, warlocks and autarchs, gathering richer understanding with each new magic gift.

With an introduction by ALAN MOORE and cover artwork by AYLETT, Fain the Sorcerer is a dense and mischievous work of shamanic satire.

From Moore’s introduction:

Quote:
If we loved Steve Aylett, really loved him in the way that he deserves, a selfless love that genuinely wanted nothing save his happiness and comfort, we’d lobotomise him.

Sky Dragons
by Anne & Todd McCaffrey
Cover by Les Edwards

Promo copy:

From the New York Times bestselling mother-and-son team of Anne McCaffrey and Todd McCaffrey comes the final installment in the riveting Pern saga that began with Todd’s solo novel, Dragonsblood. Now, with all of Pern imperiled by the aftereffects of a plague that killed scores of dragons and left the planet helpless against the fall of deadly Thread, the only hope for the future lies in the past.

There, on an unexplored island, a group of dragonriders led by Xhinna, a brave young woman who rides the blue dragon Tazith, must battle lethal Merows and voracious tunnel-snakes to build a safe home for themselves and the dragons, whose offspring will one day—if they survive—replenish Pern’s decimated dragon population. But as the first female rider of a blue dragon, and the first female Weyrleader in the history of Pern, Xhinna faces an uphill battle in winning the respect and loyalty of her peers . . . especially after an unforeseen tragedy leaves the struggling colony reeling from a shattering loss.

Amid the grieving, one girl, Jirana, blessed—or cursed—with the ability to foresee potential futures, will help Xhinna find a way forward. The answer lies in time . . . or, rather, in timing it: the awesome ability of the dragons to travel through time itself. But that power comes with risks, and by venturing further into the past, Xhinna may be jeopardizing the very future she has sworn to save.

Pathfinder Tales: Nightglass
by Liane Merciel
Cover by Tyler Walpole

Promo copy:

In the grim nation of Nidal, carefully chosen children are trained to practice dark magic, summoning forth creatures of horror and shadow for the greater glory of the Midnight Lord. Isiem is one such student, a promising young shadowcaller whose budding powers are the envy of his peers. Upon coming of age, he’s dispatched on a diplomatic mission to the mountains of Devil’s Perch, where he’s meant to assist the armies of devil-worshiping Cheliax in clearing out a tribe of monstrous winged humanoids. Yet as the body count rises and Isiem comes face to face with the people he’s exterminating, lines begin to blur, and the shadowcaller must ask himself who the real monsters are…

Part I

Stuff received 6/10/12

Let’s take a quick look to see what’s arrived at the Geek Compound.

John Carter

Promo copy:

Transplanted to Mars, a Civil War vet discovers a lush planet inhabited by 12-foot tall barbarians. Finding himself a prisoner of these creatures, he escapes, only to encounter a princess who is in desperate need of a savior.

Special Features
• Blu-ray Feature Film + Bonus
• DVD Feature Film+ Bonus
• Disney Second Screen
• 360 Degrees of John Carter
• Deleted Scene with Option Commentary by Director Andrew Stanton
• Barsoom Bloopers
• 100 Years in the Making
• Audio Commentary with Film Makers

I reviewed John Carter for RevSF, calling it "a lush, yet uneven film."

Building Stories
by Chris Ware

Promo copy:

After years of sporadic work on other books and projects and following the almost complete loss of his virility, it’s here: a new graphic novel by Chris Ware.

Building Stories imagines the inhabitants of a three-story Chicago apartment building: a 30-something woman who has yet to find someone with whom to spend the rest of her life; a couple, possibly married, who wonder if they can bear each other’s company another minute; and the building’s landlady, an elderly woman who has lived alone for decades. Taking advantage of the absolute latest advances in wood pulp technology, Building Stories is a book with no deliberate beginning nor end, the scope, ambition, artistry and emotional prevarication beyond anything yet seen from this artist or in this medium, probably for good reason.

I received just a teaser, but as expected it’s gorgeous.

The Land Without Stars: Valerian Vol. 3
by J. C. Mézières & P. Christin

Promo copy:

When a rogue planet threatens a new Human colony, Valerian and Laureline are sent to investigate and discover a barren, rocky surface… and a whole world beneath it! The people who live inside Zahir have never seen the stars. Divided along gender lines, torn by a senseless and bloody war, they are unaware that their planet is hurtling towards disaster. To stop it, the two agents of Galaxity will have to infiltrate both sides and force a reconciliation.

The Hive
by Charles Burns

Promo copy:

Much has happened since we last saw Doug, the Tintin-like hero from X’ed Out. Confessing his past to an unidentified woman, Doug struggles to recall the mysterious incident that left his life shattered, an incident that may have involved his disturbed and now-absent girlfriend, Sarah, and her menacing ex-boyfriend.

Doug warily seeks answers in a nightmarish alternate world that is a distorted mirror of our own, where he is a lowly employee that carts supplies around the Hive. The second part of Charles Burns’s riveting trilogy, this graphic narrative will delight and surpass the expectations of his fans.

I named the previous volume X’ed Out as my favorite graphic novel of 2010.

Quote:
Burns, the creator of Black Hole and famed contributor to the legendary anthology series Raw, returns to graphic storytelling with the first chapter of the surreal X’ed Out. Doug awakens one night to find a huge hole torn out of the bricks in his room. Within his beloved dead cat Icky beckons. Doug journeys into a bizarre apocalyptic world of alien creatures, dwarves, and princesses. Equal parts Hergé and William Burroughs, Burns’ beautifully disturbing, non-linear tale leaps effortlessly from the real and unreal of the troubled Doug’s disquieting existence. X’ed Out succeeds as both a beginning and a satisfactory event unto itself. Like a good meal, the book leaves the reader contented yet longing for more.

BBC live streaming on Roku

Since almost the premiere of the device, the private channel Nowhere TV has been an important host of curated content for Roku users. The app linked to PBS, sports (tons of blogs and ESPN), news (local US plus Al Jazeera English, BBC News, BBC World News), spiritual matters, science/tech, NPR, APR, and tons more.

This week, one of the Holy Grails for American streaming on TV appeared with little or no fanfare on Nowhere TV. Feeds for BBC One, BBC Two, ITV 1, and Dave are all now available, uncut and live through the Roku.

Check out The Nowhereman page for some other great private channels.

Impending Geekgasm on Netflix Instant Watch – June edition

Perhaps the biggest highlights this month are the premieres of Thor and the little known Chinese comedic action film Let The Bullets Fly. I’m sure some are excited about the third Tranformers film. Since I couldn’t make it past 20 minutes of the first nstallment, I could care less. Lethal Weapon and Misery are among the better returning films.

I’m skipping the list of expiring this month. Ran out of time. Hopefully, next month won’t be a problem. Sorry.

* streaming for the first time via Netflix.

Premiering June 1:
Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever
*Beast Wars: Transformers Seasons 2-3
Cutthroat Island
*Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame
The Faculty (1998)
Fallen (1998)
Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within
First Knight
Forever Young
Friday the 13th: Part 3
Friday the 13th: Part 4: The Final Chapter
Friday the 13th: Part 6: Jason Lives
Friday the 13th: Part 8: Jason Takes Manhattan
The Golden Child
Gothika
Lethal Weapon
Leviathan
*Messages Deleted
Misery (1990)
*National Lampoon’s The Legend of Awesomest Maximus
Natural Born Killers: Director’s Cut
*Nude Nuns With Big Guns I know next to nothing about this movie but it has one of the greatest titles ever!
*One Fall
Practical Magic
*PressPausePlay
*Robotropolis
Superfly
Tales From the Hood
Transylmania
*What Planet Are You From?
Wild Wild West Bears only a superficial resemblance to the amazing TV series The Wild Wild West, which its supposedly derived from. If you enjoy the original series, westerns, or steampunk, AVOID this at all cost!
Zonad

Premiering June 5:
*Episode 50

Premiering June 7:
*Playback (2012)
*Tim and Eric’s Billion Dollar Movie

Premiering June 8:
The Iron Mask (1929)
Svengali (1931)

Premiering June 9:
*Thor Yes, that Thor. Captian America: The First Avenger premieres later this summer.

Premiering June 12:
*Don’t Go in the Woods (2010)

Premiering June 15:
*Alien Opponent
BloodRayne 2: Deliverance
*Occupant

Premiering June 17:
Bug Off!
Trinity & Beyond: The Atomic Bomb Movie

Premiering June 23:
*Let The Bullets Fly My review of the not-be-missed film:

Quote:
From the opening sequence, Let The Bullets Fly quickly establishes the picture’s exquisite tone. A lone train car—steam spewing from it spout—is pulled by a team of horses along railroad tracks. After the exchange of gunshots between the travelers and raiding band on horseback, events quickly lead to an exaggerated, comedic train derailment in the finest Chinese movie slapstick fashion.

With 1920s China as the backdrop, screen legends Chow Yun Fat and Jiang Wen (who also directs and wrote the screenplay) deliver virtuoso performances as the power hungry, greedy gangster and the Robin Hood style bandit, respectively. The thinly veiled pro-Chinese Revolution story abounds with fun fight scenes, intriguing interactions, and as the title promises, abundant gunplay, all wrapped within the epic feel of a Sergio Leone western.

Premiering June 24:
Hellboy

Premiering June 25:
*Hostel: Part III

Premiering June 26:
*Red Mist (2008)

Premiering June 30:
*Transformers: Dark of the Moon

The above is accurate as of May 31. As with all things streaming, the info is in constant flux. YMMV.

Content courtesy of FeedFliks .