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The Blob (1988)
Ethan Hawke looks weird with long hair -- kinda like '90s Michael Jackson but without the bad plastic surgery.
7/10
Careful (1992)
The moral of this story: Don't date rape your mother. If you do, you're liable to burn your lips with a hot coal, cut the fingers of your left hand off with a pair of pruning shears, and then commit suicide by throwing yourself off a mountain, thus setting about a series of unfortunate events which will culminate with the death of everyone in your family save a single, solitary brother.
8/10
Tower of London (1962)
Though I love B&W cinematography, I feel that Roger Corman's films look best when shot in colour; there's just so much he can do visually with a full palette of bright, bold colour to work with. As a consequence, this movie is pretty drab compared to his later, better films.
Still, there is Vincent Price as Richard III. While not his best performance, he still breathes plenty of hammy life into this picture, elevating it above what it would have been without his presence.
8/10
Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933)
If it hadn't been for Glenda Farrell's performance and the fact that the film was shot in two-colour Technicolor, I probably would have found Mystery of the Wax Museum plainly average. As it is, though, Farrell steals every scene she's in, and I just love the look of two-colour Technicolor.
7/10
Tower of London (1939)
I expected to like this movie more than I did. Unfortunately, I didn't.
I found the story hard to follow in the first half of the film, and Boris Karloff -- who is the only reason why I wanted to watch the movie in the first place -- didn't have very much screentime, leaving me disinterested in pretty much the rest of the proceedings. And that ending -- I don't think I've ever seen an anticlimax that anticlimactic before in my life.
6/10