

An emotionally disturbed teenager whose father is a research scientist takes a rat from his father’s laboratory that is infected with an incurable virus that can kill 100 million people in three weeks.Read More »


An emotionally disturbed teenager whose father is a research scientist takes a rat from his father’s laboratory that is infected with an incurable virus that can kill 100 million people in three weeks.Read More »
Plot
Helen keeps on receiving phone calls from a child, who claims being her nephew Michael – but Michael died 15 years ago…Read More »
A Brooklyn couple suspects foul play when their rent controlled neighbor suddenly drops dead.Read More »
PLOT:
Jay Grobart is an outlaw who was married to Native American woman Cat Dancing. After Cat is raped and murdered, a distraught Grobart kills the man responsible for the crime, before being arrested. After his release, he soon pulls a train robbery with the help of his friends Dawes, Charlie and Billy, and is now on the run from the law.Read More »
Synopsis
Old Redwood Series – 95 min. silent, 1974-1979
Animations – by Jack Fisher and Carl Conversa
In 1974 I moved to a rural property on Old Redwood Highway in Sonoma County near the town of Penngrove California where I still live. I had started a filmmaking curriculum in the Art Department at nearby Sonoma State University in 1969 after obtaining an MA in Film from San Francisco State University, and wanted to live closer to work.Read More »
At a mountain ski resort, some two hundred passengers board the train for the return to Jackson City. At the controls is veteran engineer Holly Gibson, and as the train proceeds downhill, Gibson discovers that the main brakes have frozen….Read More »
A juror on a murder case begins to believe that the man on trial is innocent of the crime – and then discovers that the real killer is her own husband.Read More »
Quote:
Adapted by Sluizer from a screenplay written by Jim Barton, the film offers up an offbeat twist on a well-tread story — something akin to Knife in the Water meets The Hills Have Eyes, with the latter’s flesh-eating mutants replaced by a mournful loner who’s part-Native American (the “dark blood” of the title) and altogether horny and weird.Read More »