Late Shift at the Grindhouse - Wednesdays get weird when
Late Shift hosts Ross Meyer, Joe Derderian and Aaron Holmgren dig up low-budget
b-movies, horror and gore-fests, and camp classics for your viewing pleasure.
Buy your ticket and take a ride in our Time Machine! Punch in and earn a bonus!
$3 Pabst Blue Ribbon tallboys and $2 small popcorn! PLUS-- special custom
trashy trailer reel curated by Ross with cheap swag and prize giveaways!
The Zodiac Killer
a.k.a. The Zodiak Killer
a.k.a. Zodiac
Who is he?
What is he? When is he going to strike again??
"Disturbing and
effective." -
Michael Weldon, The Psychotronic Video Guide
"This is a tier of
tabloid-horror that, once discovered, takes an instantaneous position as 'one
of the good ones'." - Joseph A. Ziemba, BleedingSkull.com
"It's a fun testament of the
bygone era of grindhouse cinema." - Mike Haberfelner, SearchMyTrash.com
What kind
of lunatic goes around cheerfully killing total strangers - and even helps a
little old lady change a flat by hashing her over the head with the spare -
then writes letters to newspapers taunting the police? Yup, the kind who
also goes down to the basement, dons a ceremonial robe and prays aloud to a
plaster idol: "I am reborn in Paradise!
Atlantis shall rise again!..." Based on the still-unsolved
"Zodiac" murders that occurred between 1966 and 1969, The Zodiac
Killer is a tabloid blend of truth, fiction and sick humor "based on known
facts." But please note: If some of the scenes, dialogue and letters
seem strange and unreal, remember, they happened!
Directed by
Tom Hanson, who had previously owned a chain of Pizza Man restaurants, The
Zodiac Killer was made to capture the real-life Zodiac Killer. That plan didn’t
work. Instead, we got the most outrageous and compelling "tabloid
horror" vortex in the history of planet Earth. And beyond. During
theatrical screenings, Hanson constructed in-theater "traps" to lure
the killer from hiding. These included the use of an ice cream freezer filled
with rent-a-cops and a raffle with a motorcycle as a prize. You won’t get
insight like this by watching a David Fincher movie. But you will get it while
watching The Zodiac Killer.
Lovingly
resurrected for cinemas by American Genre Film Archive and Something Weird
Video.