episode list:

Check Out the Show's Seventh Year

Check out the Show's Eighth Year

Check Out the Show's Ninth Year

The Show's Seventh Year

313.) (rerun) Julianne Lorenz interview
314.) (rerun) Joe Sarno interview
315.) interview with character actor Brion James (best known for featured roles in Blade Runner and The Player). Candid, honest, wacky man who unfortunately passed away shortly after I conducted the interview.
316.) Brion James interview, part 2
317.) Discussion of the U.S. release of the trendsetting anime feature Princess Mononoke, including clips, interview with the voice talent director and comic book writer and cult icon Neil Gaiman (who worked on the English-language script).
318.) Neil Gaiman interview, part 2--Gaiman talks about his work in comics, his possible film projects, coming up with humorous scenes, and his own favorite films and filmmaker.
319.) Consumer round-up: the early '30 version of Fantomas; obscure, entertainingly blasphemous film scripted by Luis Bunuel The Monk; and Ted V. Mikels' astounding shot on video feature Apartheid Slave Women's Justice.
320.) (rerun) Alan Rudolph interview
321.) Yet another salute to the work of filmmaker Marco Ferreri—this time with clips from four other bizarre Ferreri works: The Ape Woman, Dillinger is Dead, L’Udienza, and Harem.
322.)Consumer Guide: Franju's Judex, Serge Gainsbourg publicity films; the outlandish early '70s sex comedy The Telephone Book featuring New York City locations, young nymphettes, Warhol superstars, and middle-aged actors (Roger C. Carmel,Barry Morse, William Hickey) acting out a bizarre scenario about an obscene phone caller
323.)(rerun)Doing Rude Things, part 1
324.) Liz Renay interview
325.) Xmas special--tribute to Jean Shepherd; scene from "Scrooge's Rock'n'Roll Xmas" with Jack Elam as Scrooge!
326.) Film noir--a chronological, detailed, and highly subjective survey of the noir cycle, part 1 (1943-1947)
327.) Film noir, part 2 (1948-1954)
328.) Film noir, part 3 (1950-1958)
329.) (rerun) Sammy Petrillo interview
330.) "Deceased Artistes"--tributes to Shirley Stoler, Dirk Bogarde, Abraham Polonsky
331.) Potpourri--Nightmare Alley (playing locally in repertory); scenes from the truly horrifying '70s kiddie comedy show "The Hilarious House of Frightenstein," a low-budget effort which featured comic Billy Van ("The Sonny and Cher Show") in a variety of roles (including a "wolfman" deejay who danced to a variety of psychedelic hits)--and "narrated" by Vincent Price!; also, scenes from "The Woody Allen Special," including Woody's interview with evangelist Billy Graham!
332.) Potpourri/consumer guide: review of Sex--The Annabel Chong Story; scenes from Rocket Boy, the wholesome '50s film co-scripted by Lenny Bruce; review of Splendor, a delightful tribute to movie-loving (unreleased in this country), starring Marcello Mastroianni, Marina Vlady, and Massmio Troisi; and scenes from the home-video "Mondo Psychotronic," compiled by the folks from "Psychotronic Video" magazine
333.) "Beat" Takeshi, part 2--featuring the films that have gone unreleased in this country, A Scene from the Sea, Getting Any? and Kids Return
334.) Jean-Luc Godard tribute: scenes from Made in USA and Godard's entry to the BFI-financed "Century of Cinema" series 2 x 50 years of French Cinema; also: scenes from another "Century of Cinema" entry, "I Am Curious, Film" (a history of the Scandinavian film)
335.) Consumer guide: "The New York Underground Film Festival" Featured: scenes from Book Wars (documentary about New York sidewalk book deals); Eyes from Heaven (low-budget horror); and Shadow Boxers (documentary about women boxers). Also: scenes from "Century of Cinema" entry I am Curious, Film
336.) consumer guide: review of Jim Jarmusch's Ghost Dog; the overseas video release of Lars Von Trier's The Idiots; and more scenes from the "Century of Cinema" series (the German entry)
337.) consumer guide: review of theatrical feature Beyond the Mat (documentary about professional wrestling); Soft Fruit (theatrical release of Australian feature); and the astounding Turkish version of The Wizard of Oz!
338.) (rerun) "The Last Goon Show of All"
339.) (rerun) "Calling all Girls"
340.) (rerun) Can Heironymous Merkin Ever Forget...?"
341.) Director's cut of the Hong Kong cult action film The Naked Killer, the ultimate lesbian hitwoman opus.
342.) Our seventh annual Easter special, featuring clips from Carman (live performance), the "Veggie Tales" computer-animated series, and "The Knock-Knock Show" (the daily TV series that featured "Donut Man" Rob Evans). Also: discussion of a particularly bizarre website obsessed with crucifixion--and picturesque international locales!. Part 1
343.) Easter, part 2. Scenes from the children's straight-to-video production, "Bibleman" with sitcom star Willie Ames as a Batman-like, bible-toting superhero; also, scenes from the straight-to-video feature R.I.O.T. starring Carman as a hard-bitten Chicago cop who encounters gang-bangers in laid-back Oklahoma. Also: Carman music videos
344.) Scenes from the astounding Deafula, the immaculately awful feature-film, made entirely in sign language (with an Ed Wood-like voice track for those hearing viewers). See it--you won't believe it
345.) Guest cohost Michael Weldon, editor of "Psychotronic Video" magazine, helps us pay tribute to "Ghoulardi," the Cleveland horror host who helped spark Weldon's interest in genre films. "Ghoulardi" was in fact announcer Ernie Anderson, better known to TV viewers of the '70s and '80s as the "voice of ABC" ("the Luh-uh-uve Boat..."). Featuring rare clips from '60s Cleveland TV
346.) consumer guide: review of Alan Rudolph retrospective; the home video release of Coming Apart; and scenes from the astounding Japanese Female Prisoner Scorpion film series
347.) "Ghoulardi," part 2
348.) "Deceased Artistes"--tributes to Charles Schulz, Jim Varney, "Screamin'" Jay Hawkins, and Oliver Reed (including scenes from the director's cut of Ken Russell's amazing The Devils, unreleased in this country)
349.) consumer guide: mail-order video items, including Shirley Clarke's The Cool World, a vintage "underground film featuring wonderful footage of early 1960s Harlem; Brillantina Rock, an Italian film that's a mishmash of Saturday Night Fever and Grease (with plenty of bad Euro-disco); the Turkish remake of The Exorcist (made on a low, low budget); and a wonderful Brazilian straight-to-video feature film starring children's star Xuxa on an odd, fantasmagorical quest to find her missing dog (with senseless, spontaneous musical numbers)
350.)(rerun)Uncle Floyd interview
351.)Consumer Guide: reviews of video release of silent Indian Tomb and theatrical release The Woman Chaser. Interview with Woman Chaser director Rob Devore.
352.)review of Forty Deuce(mail order consumer guide); footage from symposium given by Alan Rudolph and Emily Watson (on the occasion of the opening of Trixie).
353.)tribute to Tuesday Weld, featuring footage from TV appearances ("Dobie Gillis"), movies (Lord Love a Duck, Pretty Poison), plus rare items: the movie Play It As It Lays and the episode of "Naked City" based on the Charles Starweather/Caril Fugate crime spree starring Weld and Rip Torn.
354.)Fassbinder tribute show--from "high" to "low." Review of theatrical release Water Drops on Burning Rocks,(based on an early play by Fassbinder), Whity(early Fassbinder film), and mail-order video releases of Shame(German '60s exploitation starring Fassbinder friend Udo Kier), and (women's prison camp film directed by Fassbinder collaborator Kurt Raab and starring Raab, Kier, and Barbara Valentin).
355.)Deceased Artistes--Frank DeVol, Sylvia Sydney, Dana Plato, Zoe Tamerlis.
356.)On the occasion of the show being reviewed in Timemagazine, a tribute to "little people." Included: William Castle's midget noir It's a Small World, the little-guy-spy parodies For Y'r Height Only and Nothing is Impossible, and our favorite: "el hombre mas pequeno del mundo," Nelson De La Rosa.
357.)(rerun)Russ Meyer interview.
358.)Sammy Davis tribute, part one. Covering Sammy's early life, with clips from the short film "Rufus Jones for President" (1933), the TV show "Hollywood Hotel" (approx 1951), and the now-lost Porgy and Bess.
359.)Sammy Davis tribute, part two. "Sammy and the '60s." Footage from "Hullaballoo," the "Dismas House special," the Rat Pack at the Sands, the crime movie Johnny Cool, "The Mod Squad," "Laugh-In," and an eye-opening interview Samy did with Gil Noble on "Like It Is" in 1969.
360.)Tribute to underground filmmakers Kenneth Anger and George Kuchar. Including clips from Anger's now-unavailable "Scorpio Rising."
361.)Jerry Lewis, year 7. A "State of the Jer" report, another Tashlin collectible, and scenes from "Martin and Lewis at the Copa" and "The Jazz Singer."
362.)Leos Carax and Guillaume Depardieu interviews (on the occasion of U.S. release of Pola X).
363.)Leos Carax interview, part 2.
364.)(rerun)Stella Stevens interview, part one.

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The Show's Eighth Year

365.)Consumer Guide: video releases of two Beat Takeshi films and three B-budget noirs; museum tribute to the work of Budd Boetticher.
366.)(rerun)Stella Stevens, part two.
367.) Consumer Guide: offbeat mail-order oddities. '70s porn flick Breakdown (featuring a black militant plotline); Robert Downey Sr.'s completely gonzo Pound; the Japanese '50s version of Tarzan; the Indian variant Lady Tarzan (hot babe in loincloth does her best amidst tame animals, indian men in blackface, and a female rival who dances better than she does--all in CinemaScope!); and the Turkish version of E.T.!
368.) Joseph H. Lewis "Deceased Artiste" tribute.
369.) Halloween: Consumer Guide reviews of At Midnight I will Take Your Soul; the outtake tape "The Blood Trilogy" (outtakes from Herschell Gordon Lewis's classic gore trilogy); Micky Dolenz in slasher movie Night of the Strangler (Micky is not the titular killer, by the way); and William Shatner in the artsy horror film (in Esperanto) Incubus.
370.) (rerun) Peter Greenaway's The Falls.
371.) (rerun)Fred Olen Ray interview, part 1.
372.) Carroll Baker interview.
373.) Luis Bunuel, part 1. On the occasion of a comprehensive centennial tribute at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
374.) Luis Bunuel, part 2.
375.) Luis Bunuel, part 3--the blasphemous scenes! Plus, review of "Cinema/Berlin," a documentary portrait of the city featuring Wim Wenders and Uncle Jean, Jean-Luc Godard.
376.) (rerun) Filippino "Batman" comedy.
377.) Xmas Show, featuring '50s/'60s variety show clips; also, first of a multi-part "Deceased Artiste" tribute to Steve Allen.
378.) Steve Allen "Deceased Artiste" tribute, part 2: Scenes from Steve's '50s NBC primetime show.
379.) Startling '80s TV: as part of ongoing "Deceased Artiste" tribute to Steve Allen (part 3 here), scenes from two Irwin Allen TV movies he scored and cameos in: Alice in Wonderland and Alice through the Looking Glass. A who's who of schlocky '80s TV--from Sherman Helmsley to Charlene Tilton--with two all-time "Funhouse" favorites, Ringo Starr and Sammy Davis Jr.!!!!
380.) Consumer Guide: foreign classics Portrait of an Assassin (screen legends Erich Von Stroheim and Maria Montez distinguish this oddball character study/noir); Jules Dassin's The Law (an Italian small-town has its torried secrets, with Marcello Mastroianni, Gina Lollobrigida, Yves Montand, and Melina Mercouri!); and Antonioni's Beyond the Clouds (co-directed by Wim Wenders, featuring an international cast of stars, plus some young actresses in the altogether--old Michelangelo is now more interested in showing "texture," one assumes....), plus the making of the film, Antonioni's daughter's docu, To Make a Film is to be Alive.
381.) Deceased Artistes: Small performing legend Billy Barty; Amusin' rocker Ian Dury; "Batman" scripter (and sometime film critic) Stanley Ralph Ross; and Victor Borge.
382.) Deceased Artistes: singer-songwriter Kirsty MacColl; Julie London (check out the album covers, plus her appearances in the films of "Funhouse" favorites Hugo Haas and Frank Tashlin); and beloved Jason Robards Jr. (one of the best-ever comedies about conformity and the importance of avoiding it, A Thousand Clowns).
383.) As a tribute to Chinese New Year, Stan Freberg's "Chun King Hour." Amazing special that celebrates that holiday while commenting on the medium of television, its attitude towards comedians (Sterling Holloway guides Stan), its violence (guest Mike Mazurki helps out), its commercials (voice specialist June Foray here), and its singalong music shows (Stan as Mitch Miller). Oh yeah, the whole thing is a big fat infomercial for Chun King frozen products--the finest informercial ever, and quite a nice social comment (Stan has his old puppet alter-ego deliver an anti-nuke message!).
384.) Groucho tribute--scenes from Groucho appearances on "The Jackie Gleason Show" (1967); "The Hollywood Palace" (1965); "The Music Scene (1970); and "The The Dick Cavett Show" (primetime, 1969).
385.) "The Joey Bishop Show" with special guests Sammy Davis and Peter Lawford. Regis and Joey wear Nehru jackets, Sammy sings Newley, there's a pie-fight, Sammy and Joey's relatives come up from the audience to tap-dance, and the whole audience celebrates Joey's birthday (and the release of the film Salt and Pepper).
386.) Karen Black interview, part one.
387.) Steve Allen "Deceased Artiste" tribute 4--clips from Steve's "Tonight Show" run; scenes from "Meeting of Minds"; and Steve's 1968 low-budget syndicated talk show. Plus his "Prickly Heat Telethon" sketch, an obvious swipe at Jerry Lewis (something he fervently denied).
388.) (rerun) Alice Cooper group interview, part one.
389.) Presentation of clips from a 1957 Thanksgiving "Dinah Shore Chevy Show." "Couples night" guests include: Dinah's husband George Montgomery, Louis Prima and Keely Smith, and Ernie and Edie Adams.
390.) Consumer Guide: Agnes Varda fest at Film Forum; Re-releases of Melville's Leon Morin, Priest and Le Doulos, and Rivette's wonderfully blasphemous The Nun; also, scenes from the comedy compilations Arbuckle and Keaton.
391.) Latest works by former "Funhouse guests: Rudy Ray Moore's kung fu patchwork movie Shaolin Dolemite (watch the lady ninja distract her male opponent with her womanly attributes--believe me, it's better than the comedy); also, Ted V. Mikels' Corpse Grinders 2, a video feature that is a sci-fi sequel to Ted's classic no-budget horrorfest, featuring two other "Funhouse" guests, Dolores Fuller and Liz Renay.
392.) Karen Black, part two.
393.) Our annual Easter episode features scenes from the Japanese debauched-clergy opus Wet Rope Confession: the Convent Story, featuring kinky nuns and priest (and disco dancing!); the latest batch of Carman videos (in which we learn that the Devil runs abortion clinics and adult book stores--and warlocks are generally Jewish!); and the yearly visit to the "Donut Hole Repair Club."
394.) "Deceased Artiste" tribute to Joey Ramone. Featured: Joey and Marky Ramone guest on "The Joe Franklin Show."
395.) (rerun) Peter Ustinov, part one
396.) (rerun) Peter Ustinov, part two
397.) mini-editorial about Time Warner's "DTV" service; clips from Ustinov's "Vice Versa," the prototype for the adult/child switcheroo movies (with "Colonel Blimp" Roger Livesay and a very young but still scarily tic-ridden Anthony Newley); "Mooch Goes to Hollywood," a dazzlingly weird TV-movie co-written and co-produced by Jim Backus. A female dog travels to L.A. to be a star--with narration by Zsa Gabor and Richard Burton (!), and guest appearances by Vincent Price, Jill St. John, James Darren, Backus (dressed as Magoo in a fantasy), and, in one startling "party" scene set at the Backus manse, Darren McGavin, David Wayne, Dick Martin, Rose Marie, Sam Jaffee, Jay C. Flippen--and Edward G. Robinson (talking to "Mooch"). See it, then you can believe it.
398.) Steve Allen, part five. We progress from Steve the old fogey (talking vulgarity and its prevalence) to hip younger Steve, with a reading of some of his most "modernist" prose (from his second novel, "The Wake," 1972), some music from his "hippie" LP "Songs for Gentle People," and a montage of his cooler-than-cool guests (Winters, young Zappa, Dylan, Lenny, Kerouac, and others).
399.) (rerun) Brion James, part one
400.) (rerun) Brion James, part two
401.) Budd Boetticher interview, part one. Entertaining chat with a legendary Hollywood director about his many lives (his filmmaking career came about by chance--he first worked as a professional bullfighter!), and his films (his series of "adult westerns" with Randolph Scott and a number of great actors playing "bad guys" influenced Peckinpah, Leone, and every Western director that followed).
402.) Ed's birthday show. Latin music videos: Molotov and my three favorite Latina singers: Alejandra Guzman, Shakira, and Thalia. The show's closer is one of the oddest music videos I've ever seen, "Mi Poquita Fe" by Susana Zabaleta. The vid combines giant toilets (seen in various places around a city--and a graveyard), religious imagery (including people praying in their respective faiths), little kids, old folks, our singer dribbling milk down her chin, and raw meat--how can you go wrong?
403.) (rerun) Internet websites
404.) Japanese exploitation--taking it to the limit, in '60s girl-gang fashion (Alley Cat Rock), shot-on-video camp style (Playmates, with female spies fighting a villainess dressed like the Joker), and out-there fetish weirdness (a revamped version of Fowles/Wyler's The Collector, titled winsomely Woman in the Box 2). High, and brightly-colored, weirdness from mail-order house Shocking Videos.
405.) Consumer guide time: tribute to genre moviemaker Kinji Fukasaku (including clips from his high-school-kids-wipe-each-other-out message pic Battle Royale); the ever-trippy Candy; and the makers of Mondo Cane and Goodbye Uncle Tom take on Voltaire in the highly anachronistic, incredibly bizarre Mondo Candido.
406.) Consumer guide: Alain Robbe Grillet's oblique, elliptical, visually striking bit of pseudo-erotic cine-dreaming, La Belle Captive; celebrating the 100th birthday of Marlene Dietrich with Von Sternberg clips and the English variant version of the original Blue Angel; the mob comedy Made; and the re-release of Bunuel's final provocation, That Obscure Object of Desire.
407.) Kiyoshi Kurosawa interview, part one.
408.) Kiyoshi Kurosawa interview, part two.
409.) (rerun) Ghoulardi, part one.
410.) Budd Boetticher interview, part two.
411.) Complaints and clips--your humble servant rails on with these entertainments: 1965 "Tonight Show" clips with delightfully meandering guests; 1968 "Dark Shadows" promos featuring Jonathan Frid in full Barnabas regalia; Guy Maddin's odd fable Twilight of the Ice Nymphs; and a video from band Ilya Kuryaki, featuring our fave small person, Nelson De La Rosa.
412.) Seventh annual Jerry Lewis episode, with guest John Mariano, discussing Jerry's marathon Learning Annex performance. Included: tribute to Jer's straight woman Kathleen Freeman; footage of Jer on "Tony Orlando and Dawn."
413.) (rerun) Ghoulardi, part 2
414.) Budd Boetticher, part 3
415.) (rerun) Deafula
416.) Commentary on the Sept. 11 attack on the World Trade Center. Includes: anti-war, anti-patriotic comedy by The Marx Bros, Bill Hicks, and George Carlin. Also a montage of the World Trade Center as a movie location (nice assemblage of clips, if I do say so myself).

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The Show's Ninth Year

417.) (rerun) Liz Renay interview
418.) Consumer Guide--Bunuel book, Ferreri's The Last Woman, and the Eastern European summer musical Hot Summer.
419.) "Deceased Artiste" tribute to Brother Theodore, cohosted by comedy expert Ron Smith.
420.) Halloween show, featuring the "vampire lesbian cycle" in Euro cinema, circa the early 1970s.
421.) (rerun) Neil Gaiman interview.
422.) D.A. Pennebaker/Chris Hegedus interview, part 1. We talk about the documentary Town Bloody Hall, a chronicle of the night in the early 1970s when "Norman Mailer met the feminists" (for a debate at NYC's Town Hall). Also: a review of the French feature The Town is Quiet.
423.) D.A. Pennebaker/Chris Hegedus interview, part 2. Discussed are Norman Mailer's features (no clips, sorry); Dylan's Eat the Document; P&H's The War Room and Startup.com; and Pennebaker's first film, the short Daybreak Express (1958).
424.) Thanksgiving tribute to '60s actors on "lean times." Featured is Hell Riders, a biker movie directed by our fave auteur, Renee Harmon, and starring Adam West and Tina Louise (!).
425.) (rerun) Leos Carax, part 2.
426.) D.A. Pennebaker/Chris Hegedus interview, part 3. Included in this segment are discussions of Pennebaker's work with Drew Associates (Primary, Crisis); his filming of the Monterey Pop Festival; his work with Ms. Hegedus on filming a Samuel Beckett original production (Rockabye); their documenting an Alvin Ailey dance number (Dance Black America); and Pennebaker's Original Cast Album: Company.
427.) "Deceased Artiste" tribute to George Harrison. Includes rare footage of Harrison in and out of the Beatles, and a "higher-tech" look for the Funhouse.
428.) "Deceased Artistes 2001" Numerous performers and creators are featured from Lorenzo Music to Jack Lemmon.
429.) (rerun of previous episode--to allow the Forces That Be to air it right this time!)
430.) Consumer guide: W.C. Fields festival at AMMI. "Deceased Artiste" tributes to Jason Miller, Ken Kesey, and Imogene Coca.
431.) Interview with Kathryn Leigh Scott, "Dark Shadows" star turned independent publisher.
432.) (repeat) Noir night, Part 1
433.) Sammy Davis, Part 3 (part four if you count the "Joey Bishop Show"). Featuring clips from Sammy's 1969 appearance on the Mod Squad and a simultaneous hosting gig on The Hollywood Palace, with guest stars Nipsey Russell, Peggy Lipton (singing a duet with Sam), Dave Madden...and the Godfather of Soul, James Brown, in perfect form (cape and all).
434.) Serge Gainsbourg, part 1. Musical clips from the singer/songwriter's TV appearances, 1958-1967.
435.) The British 1976-77 miniseries Rock Follies is featured. Musical clips and scenes featuring guest stars Tim Curry, Little Nell, and Bob Hoskins. Remember--this is the series that featured catchy pop tunes from Roxy Music's Andy Mackay, and...Rula Lenska!
436.) Brigitte Bardot, in clips from Godard's masterwork Contempt and her 1967 Xmas special, with songs written by (and co-performed by, in some cases), good old Serge Gainsbourg, Special Bardot (aka Le Bardot Show).
437.) (rerun) Noir, part 2
438.) Consumer Guide: "Rendezvous with French Cinema": reviews of Cet Amour-La, Tanguy, Betty Fisher, God is Great, I'm Not, and The Pornographer.
439.) Deceased Artistes: Lawrence Tierney, tough guy extraordinaire, and Chuck Jones, Looney Tunes animator.
440.) (rerun) Noir, part 3
441.) Aki Kaurismaki tribute. Scenes from films unreleased in the U.S.: Take Care of Your Scarf, Tatiana, Drifting Clouds, and I Hired a Contract Killer.
442.) (rerun) Carroll Baker interview
443.) Consumer Guide: Olivier Assayas' Les Destiness, AMMI festival "Hardboiled Hollywood," and Godard's Keep Your Right Up!.
444.) D.A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus interview, part 4. Discussed are Depeche Mode 101; Sweet Toronto(aka Keep on Rockin'); and the unfinished Leacock-Pennebaker collaboration with Jean-Luc Godard, One P.M.
445.) Consumer Guide time once more: Chris Marker's remarkable documentary about the rise (and fall) of the Left in world politics Grin Without a Cat; the Aki Kaurismaki oddball "hick comedy" Leningrad Cowboys Meet Moses; and the East German 1973 drama (with cool period rock music) The Legend of Paul and Paula.
446.) (rerun) Our salute to "little people."
447.) "Deceased Artiste" tributes to Dudley Moore (incl. his brilliant work with P. Cook as "Pete and Dud" and "Derek and Clive") and Milton Berle.
448.) Consumer Guide: praise for CUNY-TV's French film festival (footage of the 1964 Fantomas, the Danish documentary The Humiliated (about the making of Von Trier's The Idiots), and Seijun Suzuki's Branded to Kill.
449.) Scenes from Serge Gainsbourg's only musical, the TV-film Anna starring Anna Karina and Jean-Claude Brialy. Echoes of Fellini, William Klein's Mr. Freedom, The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, and A Man and a Woman in this downbeat tale of romantic longing, punctuated by some very catchy tunes by the inimitable Gainsbarre. Anna's joyous "Roller Girl" kills.
450.) Anna, part 2. Also: musical clips of Serge Gainsbourg.
451.) Ernie Kovacs tribute (clips from various shows).
452.) Tribute to George Sidney, part 1. Cohost Eric Monder introduces clips from the director's career, ranging from MGM short subjects (and "Our Gang") to vehicles for Kim Novak and Ann-Margret.
453.) George Sidney, part 2
454.) Soupy Sales interview, part 1
455.) Soupy Sales interview, part 2
456.) Korean music videos--see American trends, musical genres and visual tropes copied, and in many cases, improved upon, in a selection of "K-Pop" music videos.
457.) Evil Roy Slade. Clips from the 1970s cult TV-movie, plus a mini-tribute to star John Astin.
458.) Our second tribute to little people. Scenes from an informercial, a Mexican comedy, an incredible Mexican horror film (Al Filo de Terror, in which an angry ventriloquist punishes his dummies, gets his daughter to replace one in performance, and finally receives his comeuppance...), and an update on the life of "el hombre mas pequeno del mundo," Nelson de la Rosa.
459.) (rerun) Groucho Marx on TV
460.) (rerun) Karen Black interiew, part 1
461.) Our annual Jerry Lewis tribute focus on news updates in the life of "le Roi du Crazy," as well as clips of Jer clowining around with his pal Sammy Davis Jr. in the movies, on TV, and (you guessed it) the MDA telethon.
462.) Consumer guide: reviews of video releases. Brigitte Bardot in Plucking the Daisy and Don Juan, or if Don Juan were a woman; also: The Confessions of Robert Crumb and Seijun Suzuki's classic bit of technicolor, widescreen erotica Gate of Flesh.
463.) Interview with filmmaker Claude Miller, part 1
464.) Claude Miller, part 2
465.) Interview with Francois Ozon, plus career overview.
466.) "Media Funhouse West"--Ed visits the home of L.A. memorabilia collector Wally Wingert, and focuses on Wally's stash of "Batman," Andy Kaufman and Lon Chaney Sr. collectibles.
467.) (rerun) Kiyoshi Kurosawa interview, part 1
468.) Antonio Fargas interview, part one

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