Bad Girls is out now – Order Here – and check out this crazy trailer:
Bad Girls is a shocking drug-fueled post-modern female rage-odyssey from acclaimed director of The Theta Girl, Christopher Bickel, and producer Crystal Colligan
Films Colacitta announces the release of Bad Girls, a violent underground film by Christopher Bickel, premiering in early 2021. 2021 is poised to be the year of the underground film. Due to the void of Hollywood content caused by the 2020 pandemic, audiences are clamoring for new and unusual programming. Heading the charge for unique DIY boutique cinema is Bad Girls, an eye-popping artsploitation road movie from acclaimed director of The Theta Girl, Christopher Bickel. The film’s producer, Crystal Colligan, describes Bad Girls as a “shocking drug-fueled post-modern female rage-odyssey.”
Bad Girls gleefully subverts genre tropes in telling its lurid, hyperreal tale. After robbing a strip club, three desperate teenage girls lead a grizzled Federal Agent on a lysergic cross-country chase,...
Bad Girls is a shocking drug-fueled post-modern female rage-odyssey from acclaimed director of The Theta Girl, Christopher Bickel, and producer Crystal Colligan
Films Colacitta announces the release of Bad Girls, a violent underground film by Christopher Bickel, premiering in early 2021. 2021 is poised to be the year of the underground film. Due to the void of Hollywood content caused by the 2020 pandemic, audiences are clamoring for new and unusual programming. Heading the charge for unique DIY boutique cinema is Bad Girls, an eye-popping artsploitation road movie from acclaimed director of The Theta Girl, Christopher Bickel. The film’s producer, Crystal Colligan, describes Bad Girls as a “shocking drug-fueled post-modern female rage-odyssey.”
Bad Girls gleefully subverts genre tropes in telling its lurid, hyperreal tale. After robbing a strip club, three desperate teenage girls lead a grizzled Federal Agent on a lysergic cross-country chase,...
- 2/16/2021
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Though the actual history has retained its hypnotic allure for generation after generation since, the original cinematic cash-in gold rush on Charles Manson had long ebbed by the time Charles Manson Superstar appeared in 1989. A product of the underground, it was made by Nikolas Schreck, who, before converting to Buddhism and launching a band called Kingdom of Heaven, led the theatrical, ritualistic, controversial L.A.-based Goth music act Radio Werewolf and was a practician of "magical resistance." He was definitely in the first half of that personal evolution when he published The Manson File, a study of the titular figure’s religious and philosophical ideas. To a large degree, it offered a defense of the prison lifer who from all available evidence never actually killed anyone. (Manson was convicted of murder by joint-responsibility conspiracy in the Tate-labianca case, and like his fellow “Family” defendants has been denied parole ever since.
- 8/8/2015
- Fandor: Keyframe
Though the actual history has retained its hypnotic allure for generation after generation since, the original cinematic cash-in gold rush on Charles Manson had long ebbed by the time Charles Manson Superstar appeared in 1989. A product of the underground, it was made by Nikolas Schreck, who, before converting to Buddhism and launching a band called Kingdom of Heaven, led the theatrical, ritualistic, controversial L.A.-based Goth music act Radio Werewolf and was a practician of "magical resistance." He was definitely in the first half of that personal evolution when he published The Manson File, a study of the titular figure’s religious and philosophical ideas. To a large degree, it offered a defense of the prison lifer who from all available evidence never actually killed anyone. (Manson was convicted of murder by joint-responsibility conspiracy in the Tate-labianca case, and like his fellow “Family” defendants has been denied parole ever since.
- 8/8/2015
- Keyframe
By Jennica Lynn Johnson
Does possession happen to people in real life? Is the Devil real? Tears streaming down my face, those were the kinds of questions weighing heavily on my mind after my first viewing of The Exorcist (1973). The fear of becoming Satan’s next vessel was instilled in me at nine years old.
Since its 1973 release, The Exorcist inspired the production of many copycat films with Beyond the Door (1974) aka Che Sei? being the “most commercially successful,” according to Nikolas Schreck, author of The Satanic Screen: An Illustrated Guide to the Devil in Cinema. In fact, Beyond the Door star Juliet Mills confessed that the film was believed to resemble The Exorcist so closely that Warner Bros. had to be paid approximately $90 million. Although still loaded with as much shock value as The Exorcist, Beyond the Door reveals a sneakier, more seductive side to satanic culture and there...
Does possession happen to people in real life? Is the Devil real? Tears streaming down my face, those were the kinds of questions weighing heavily on my mind after my first viewing of The Exorcist (1973). The fear of becoming Satan’s next vessel was instilled in me at nine years old.
Since its 1973 release, The Exorcist inspired the production of many copycat films with Beyond the Door (1974) aka Che Sei? being the “most commercially successful,” according to Nikolas Schreck, author of The Satanic Screen: An Illustrated Guide to the Devil in Cinema. In fact, Beyond the Door star Juliet Mills confessed that the film was believed to resemble The Exorcist so closely that Warner Bros. had to be paid approximately $90 million. Although still loaded with as much shock value as The Exorcist, Beyond the Door reveals a sneakier, more seductive side to satanic culture and there...
- 9/3/2014
- by admin
- MoreHorror
By Kristen Bialik
In 1989, Reverend, televangelist and Founder of the International School of Exorcism Bob Larson sat down for a friendly interview with two people who represent everything he opposes in life. Those two people were Nikolas Schreck and his wife Zeena, daughter of Anton Lavey -- the founder of the Church of Satan. Together the Shrecks were black magicians and leaders in the Church of Satan's Werewolf Order, which they defined as a "magical resistance movement, esoteric research network, and radical ecology faction." As the daughter and son-in-law to Anton Lavey, the Schrecks were arguably (outside Lavey himself) two of the closest people to Satanism. In a way, they were connected to the very reason it exists, to the movement that was giving a name and strength to all that Bob Larson believes is wrong with the world. At any given point in time, the interview is any combination of openly aggressive,...
In 1989, Reverend, televangelist and Founder of the International School of Exorcism Bob Larson sat down for a friendly interview with two people who represent everything he opposes in life. Those two people were Nikolas Schreck and his wife Zeena, daughter of Anton Lavey -- the founder of the Church of Satan. Together the Shrecks were black magicians and leaders in the Church of Satan's Werewolf Order, which they defined as a "magical resistance movement, esoteric research network, and radical ecology faction." As the daughter and son-in-law to Anton Lavey, the Schrecks were arguably (outside Lavey himself) two of the closest people to Satanism. In a way, they were connected to the very reason it exists, to the movement that was giving a name and strength to all that Bob Larson believes is wrong with the world. At any given point in time, the interview is any combination of openly aggressive,...
- 5/25/2012
- by Network Awesome
- Aol TV.
It's been an Exorcist kind of week around here, so why stop now? Evangelist Bob Larson was a popular figure during the satanic panic craze of the 1980s. The radio and television personality regularly spoke about the devil infiltrating the innocent masses and interviewed folks like husband and wife Zeena Lavey (yes, Anton's daughter) and musician Nikolas Schreck about their wacky satanic shenanigans. Larson's still at it — and this time he's enlisted the help of his three teenage daughters. Brynne, Tess, and Savannah are ridding the world of demons one exorcism at a time. The girls do things that your average kid might enjoy — like horseback riding, Karate, and beauty pageants — but they have a side gig: Satan. The bubbly gang of exorcists charge...
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- 4/6/2012
- by Alison Nastasi
- Movies.com
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