A creepy, violent, and surprisingly dark little film, The Brain That Wouldn’t Die is definitely a b-movie classic. It does have its share of goofy moments, but it is still a solid film and far more disturbing than many of today’s higher budget horror films.


    

This is one of the most insane Christmas movies ever made. Watch in stunned silence as Santa Claus, along with his friend Merlin, battles Satan for the soul of a sweet little girl named Lupita—all from his floating fortress in space. Have a bug-nutty, bats#!t crazy Christmas!


    

Santa Claus battles a group of nefarious Martians for control of Christmas in this 1964 b-movie classic. Features a cute-as-a-button Pia Zadora as a Martian child. Hooray for Santy Claus!


    

Mix two parts exploitation with one part fundamentalist Baptist rants; sprinkle liberally with Commies; bake for about an hour on bat-spit insane, and you’ve got yourself a recipe for one helluva movie!


    

Robert Vaughn stars as a not-so-teenage, teenage caveman in this 1958 Roger Corman classic.


    

Poor John Agar stars in this made-for-tv remake of the 50s sci-fi classic, It Conquered the World. Directed by legendary schlockmeister Larry Buchanan.


    

The worst movie Tor Johnson ever appeared in isn’t Plan 9, it’s this little abomination from the twisted mind of Coleman Francis. Guaranteed to be the longest hour of your life. No Dialogue, No Plot, No Movie.
Warning: Brief Female Nudity


    

Cut and paste ninja action like only IFD Films could do. Starring poor Richard Harrison in a period of his career he’d like to forget. Be sure to keep an eye out for the ridiculous toy robot scene.
Godfrey Ho + Joseph Lai = GOLD!


    

Extraterrestrials attempt to warn humanity of an enormous meteor on a collision course with Earth. Unfortunately the aliens in question are ridiculous starfish creatures with gigantic eyes in the center of their bodies. Hilarity ensues.


    

A giant monster terrorizes a small Texas town and our hero is armed with little more than a ukelele and “The Mushroom Song.”