Some catching up to do:
THE TIN DRUM (1979): Certified Weird! "...a comic nightmare about 'little people’s' acquiescence to Fascism in the 1930s and 1940s; as Germany goes insane, children refuse to grow up, eels breed in horse’s heads, and Santa Claus turns into the Gas Man."
VALERIE AND HER WEEK OF WONDERS (1970): Certified Weird! "...a Freudian version of 'Alice in Wonderland,' with the confusion of new hormones surging through the young heroine’s body coloring her encounters with a dark and fearful tinge: Valerie faces vampires and rapist priests instead of Alice's White Rabbits and Cheshire Cats."
BLOODSUCKING FREAKS (1976): "...if you don’t mind watching something Ted Bundy probably masturbated to, then by all means, have at it."
KING KONG LIVES (1986): " Kong—who, you may recall, had been riddled with machine-gun bullets until, obviously dying, he fell off the World Trade Center—has been comatose, kept alive by a vast custom-built life-support system. Why? Don’t ask, and then you won’t mind when they don’t bother to tell you."-OB
WEIRDSVILLE (2007): "...if Satanists plagued by midgets and junkies sounds like your kind of scene, you’ll probably enjoy
Weirdsville."
OSCAR NOMINATED SHORT FILMS (LIVE ACTION) (2012): "When we think back over the most memorable and influential (post-silent era) short films of all time, titles like 'Meshes of the Afternoon,' (1943), 'La Jetee' (1962), and 'Scorpio Rising' (1964) spring to mind. Naturally, none of these classics were acknowledged by the Academy, who instead consistently nominate competent but boring shorts that disappear into the mists of time."
LOST AND FOUND: THE HARRY LANGDON COLLECTION: "Langdon’s persona was only suited to the abstract plane that silent cinema offered."-AE
THE STRONG MAN (1926): "An endless staircase, an imagined rape, and a shocking eyeful of a nude model sends Paul exit, stage left."-AE