Rum and Popcorn

Poster Hunt

Poster Hunt #7 -James Bond and The Matrix - Ghana style

This month Poster Hunt comes in the form of TWO gorgeously ridiculous hand-painted posters from Ghana. Many of these paintings were made by (incredibly creative) artists who had not seen the film

And if you like these, you should definitely check out Ephemera Assemblyman

Poster Hunt #6 - Count Yorga, Vampire

After completely missing out December, Poster Hunt makes a glamorous 2010 return with this rather lovely poster for Count Yorga, Vampire.

They just don’t make them like that any more…

IMDb here

Trailer here:

Poster Hunt #5 - The Erotic Adventures of Zorro

What with November being quite busy and the poster for The Killer Shrews being quite so fab, Poster Hunt got left somewhat by the wayside this month.

Still, just over half-way through, the showcase of fabulous and/or strange posters returns with the Erotic Adventures of Zorro. How classy.

Poster Hunt #4 - The Incredible 2 Headed Transplant

As we’ve moved into October, it’s about time that Poster Hunt returned with another helping of cinematic presentation wonder…

This time, we’ve left behind the Nazisploitation and Spillane’s Man-Woman violence and moved to the uh.. somewhat unrecognised ‘Head Transplant’ sub-genre. Infact, The Incredible 2 Headed Transplant is IMDb user’s 6th Favourite Head Transplant film. Out of 6.

It was released to DVD fairly recently, coupled with the The Thing With Two Heads. I think there might be a theme running there….

Several site claim to have the full film available to view online. The ones I tried didn’t seem to be working (my connection is slowww) and, to be honest, I didn’t try too hard. This is one of those where I suspect the poster is better than the film…

Poster Hunt #3 - I, The Jury

Another month can mean only one thing; it’s time for another Poster Hunt post. This time, fresh from the stash of exploitation flick posters for films I haven’t seen (and have little desire to…), comes Micky Spillane’s I, The Jury.

Coming from an era (1954…) when “man-woman violence” could be used as a selling point, here is I, The Jury