Browsing the archives for the Cool Cinema Trash tag

The Latest Review

It’s November 1st and that means there’s updates at Cool Cinema Trash. Be sure to check out the 25th Anniversary review of Ator: The Fighting Eagle. November also marks CCT’s 4th Anniversary on the web. Yipee!!!

Dragon Wars

Please don’t think any less of us, but Jeff and I actually went to a theatre and paid to see Dragon Wars. If you read this blog on a regular basis you’ll know that my personal taste concerning culture can sometimes be… well, questionable, but Jeff is a perfectly intelligent human being, though the fact [...]

Summer of Sarli

There’s a new review up at Cool Cinema Trash, the sexplotation classic, Fuego. The film stars former Miss Argentina Isabel Sarli and she’s just too fabulous for words! Her funky fashions and gigantic hairdo’s would make any drag queen green with envy. The film is colorful, campy and sexy, in a outrageous 1960′s kind of [...]

Pride Month: Cinema Edition

All month long TCM will be running a series of movies dedicated to the representation of LGBT characters in Hollywood film. Every Monday and Wednesday night there will be a new batch of classic films and each night will carry its own theme. The mini film festival begins tonight with “The Early Years” and looks [...]

Happy B-Day Barbara!

No, not that Barbra. Barbara Parkins, the whispery voiced ingenue who portrayed Anne in the super-gay, ultra-camp cinematic trash heap that is Valley of the Dolls! Today also happens to be Laurence Olivier’s birthday. Eh, whatever.

Happy Birthday Diane McBain!

You may be asking yourself, just who exactly is Diane McBain? As a starlet in the 1960′s, McBain co-starred in some of my all-time favorite camp classics such as the soapy Troy Donahue melodrama Parrish (1961), the Joan Crawford psycho-drama The Caretakers (1963), and the teens on dope flick Maryjane (1968). Below is the trailer [...]

F#@k her way to the top

Today is Pia Zadora’s Birthday. Below is a montage of her trashiest moments from the camp classic The Lonely Lady. If you don’t think it’s the most fabulous thing you’ve ever seen… well then, there’s just no hope for you.