Shock Waves

Starring:Peter Cushing, Brooke Adams, Fred Buch, Jack Davidson (III), Luke Halpin, D.J. Sidney, Don Stout, John Carradine, Clarence Thomas, Sammy Graham, Preston White, Reid Finger, Mike Kennedy (IV), Donahue Guillory, Jay Maeder, Talmadge Scott, Gary J. Levinson, Robert Miller
Director: Ken Wiederhorn
Studio: Blue Underground
Product Type: DVD
Average customer rating:
- not so scary
- My all time favorite! Why? Many reasons!
- The Moral Of The Story: Don't Fire A Flare Gun In A Refrigerator
- Nazis!!! Zombies!!! Nazi Zombies!!! UNDERWATER NAZI ZOMBIES!!!!!!!!!!!!
- Creepy SS Zombies
|
Shock Waves
Starring: Peter Cushing , Brooke Adams , Fred Buch , Jack Davidson (III) , and Luke Halpin
Director: Ken Wiederhorn
Manufacturer: Blue Underground
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
General
| Horror
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Monsters
| Things That Go Bump
| Horror
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Zombies
| Things That Go Bump
| Horror
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
General
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Nazis
| By Theme
| Military & War
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Blue Underground
| Cult Movies
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Boating
| Boating & Sailing
| Outdoor Recreation
| Special Interests
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
| Cruising & Racing
| Maintenance
| Navigation
Adams, Brooke
| ( A )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Carradine, John
| ( C )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Cushing, Peter
| ( C )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Halpin, Luke
| ( H )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Wiederhorn, Ken
| ( W )
| Directors
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Used DVDs
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
| Action & Adventure
| African American Cinema
| Animation
| Anime & Manga
| Art House & International
| Classics
| Comedy
| Cult Movies
| Documentary
| Drama
| Educational
| Fitness & Yoga
| Gay & Lesbian
| Horror
| Kids & Family
| Military & War
| Music Video & Concerts
| Musicals & Performing Arts
| Mystery & Suspense
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Special Interests
| Sports
| Television
| Westerns
General
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Horror
| By Genre
| Indie & Art House
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
DVDs Under $9.99
| Today's Deals in DVD
| Special Features
| DVD
| Video
( S )
| Titles
| Features
| DVD
| Video
Similar Items:
- Burial Ground - Night of Terror
- Zombie Lake
- The Asylum
- Zombi 2 (25th Anniversary Special Edition 2-Disc Set)
- The House By The Cemetery
ASIN: B000096I9X
Release Date: 2003-09-30 |
Customer Reviews:
not so scary.......2007-05-18
I'm a big fan of 70th horror movies but this one is not so interesting.
There is not one drop of blood, all victims die drowend, and the zombies aren't very scary.
On the good side we have Brooke Adams in bikini, Peter Cushing speaking german and John Carradine (only some time - he dies first).
My all time favorite! Why? Many reasons!.......2007-03-09
There is something about this truely creepy film that I love. Maybe alot of things. It has a great cast of believable actors, cool slimey zombies, great sets[the hotel] Excellent directing / cinemat. An excellent storyline A DARN creepy soundtrack. All in all I'd have to say it is a very believable horror story. I might as well just stop here because I WILL ramble on forever! This is a "sleeper" type of film but prob. the best I've ever seen, and I've probably seen it 100 times. 2 vhs and 1 dvd version. You may want to rent first but you may come back to buy it. Hey, I could watch it right know!
The Moral Of The Story: Don't Fire A Flare Gun In A Refrigerator.......2007-02-24
"Shock Waves" has been proclaimed "the best of the Nazi zombie movies" and bears that ringing endorsement on the DVD cover. I am inclined to agree. Although I am not normally an enormous fan of the zombie genre, the presence of both John Carradine and Peter Cushing was enough to persuade me to watch it, and I found it more enjoyable that I expected. I am a Carradine completist ever since seeing his enticing performance in "Red Zone Cuba," and true to form, John lives up to his cranky reputation here.
The movie opens with some sailors recovering an insane woman in a rowboat from the open sea; the remainder of the film is told in a flashback. The body of the story commences with Captain John Carradine berating a sailor about the importance of accurate navigation on the open sea. I should mention that John looks even more like the grim specter of death warmed over than usual here, and has an unsightly beard-like protuberance on his jaw that makes him look decidedly unsavory. His boat is a leisure craft (think "Gilligan's Island" without the sophistication) with a few passengers including a used car salesman so annoying that you will be very eager for his encounter with the aqua-Nazis. The boat first encounters a strange yellow light and then collides with a ghost ship while under the guidance of the First Mate. The boat grounds out near and island and the occupants of the boat go ashore in a glass-bottomed rowboat (how often do you see one of those?) to look for John Carradine, who has vanished. He stays on the MIA list a very brief time when we see him float under the boat dead as a stump.
After finding an old hotel (actually a Biltmore hotel in Florida, then abandoned, but now rebuilt) once ashore, the boat occupants meet superstar number two, Peter Cushing, who like John Carradine was paid $5,000 for four days of work. Cushing explains in his creepy German accent that he was the head of a secret underwater Nazi zombie project during World War Two, and the zombies have returned. The movie is slow to start, as it is halfway over before the first zombies arrive, but when they do they are unexpectedly creepy. The scenes where they emerge from the water are very effective, and the last half of the film works quite well as a horror picture. Although the Nazis do have a weakness (they die if their goggles are removed,) this is only used against them a few times, strangely.
The psychological effects of being pursued (like "The Most Dangerous Game" on steroids) rend the group and fracture their cohesiveness, ultimately sealing their fate one by one. It turns out that you don't want to be in a walk-in refrigerator when a flare goes off inside it: it will drive you into the waiting arms of aqua-Nazis. Ultimately two survivors (including the insane woman recalling the story) escape, but trouble once again awaits in a genuinely creepy scene once again involving the glass-bottomed boat.
I think the film is quite good for the genre, although more screen time from Carradine and Cushing would have been welcome (and it would have been better yet if they had scenes together.) The film drags in some places, is implausible in others, and has a couple of continuity errors, but overall it will definitely please zombie and horror movie fans.
The DVD includes several extras including commentary track with Director Ken Wiederhorn and legendary B-filmmaker Fred Olen Ray, a television spot, and the original theater trailer that announces "You are in the deep end of horror!," and "The faster you run, the quicker you die!" I give it three stars overall; the reduction stems from the limited screen exposure of the two stars, and the relatively slow start and pacing in the first half of the film.
Nazis!!! Zombies!!! Nazi Zombies!!! UNDERWATER NAZI ZOMBIES!!!!!!!!!!!!.......2006-06-01
Saw the trailer for this as a sophomore in high school, circa 1977. The second I saw the begoggled undead shock troops emerge from the ocean I was hooked - SHOCK WAVES has gone on to be my favorite low-budget film of all time, and I've seen a-plenty. No cannibalism here, no gore, no entrails - just bizarre, creepy atmosphere to burn and the claustrophic paranoia that is at the very heart of this classic Florida-shot mood piece. And if that ain't enough, you also have John Carradine, Peter Cushing, Luke Halpin (all grown up from his "Flipper" days) and the excellent Brooke Adams, who wears a bathing suit better than anyone since Julie Adams (no relation as far as I know) in CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON. Blue Underground has done an excellent job with this package. In addition to enlightening, entertaining commentary from director/co-writer Ken Wiederhorn, filmmaker/photographer Fred Olen Ray and make-up designer Alan Ormsby, there is a wealth of advert media: original trailer, a Luke Halpin interview, TV and radio spots and a gallery of stills and newspaper ads for double feature and drive-in showings. To have this in your library is to have a bona-fide minimalist cult classic. VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!!!!!
Creepy SS Zombies .......2006-05-22
A little low budget treasure this one, nice special effects, especially the underwater scenes which are very clever done, all wraped in an eerie soundtrack which contribute to a very creepy atmosphere.
Blue Underground have done a very nice restoring job on this one, with an informative commentary track by Widerhorn, Alan Ormsby and Fred Olen Ray.
Another haunted tale with returning SS ghosts but without any zombies, - Death Ship (1980)
Average customer rating:
- not so scary
- My all time favorite! Why? Many reasons!
- The Moral Of The Story: Don't Fire A Flare Gun In A Refrigerator
- Nazis!!! Zombies!!! Nazi Zombies!!! UNDERWATER NAZI ZOMBIES!!!!!!!!!!!!
- Creepy SS Zombies
|
Shock Waves (Ws)
Starring: Peter Cushing , Brooke Adams , Fred Buch , Jack Davidson (III) , and Luke Halpin
Director: Ken Wiederhorn
Manufacturer: Image Entertainment
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
General
| Horror
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Adams, Brooke
| ( A )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Carradine, John
| ( C )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Cushing, Peter
| ( C )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Halpin, Luke
| ( H )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Wiederhorn, Ken
| ( W )
| Directors
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Used DVDs
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
| Action & Adventure
| African American Cinema
| Animation
| Anime & Manga
| Art House & International
| Classics
| Comedy
| Cult Movies
| Documentary
| Drama
| Educational
| Fitness & Yoga
| Gay & Lesbian
| Horror
| Kids & Family
| Military & War
| Music Video & Concerts
| Musicals & Performing Arts
| Mystery & Suspense
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Special Interests
| Sports
| Television
| Westerns
( S )
| Titles
| Features
| DVD
| Video
Similar Items:
- Burial Ground - Night of Terror
- Zombie Lake
- The Asylum
- Zombi 2 (25th Anniversary Special Edition 2-Disc Set)
- The House By The Cemetery
ASIN: B00006FMCB
Release Date: 2002-09-03 |
Description
Beneath the living, beyond the dead, they rose from the depths of hell's ocean! In the dark days of World War II, the Nazi High Command ordered its scientists to create the Death Corps, a top secret race of indestructible zombie storm troopers--un-living, unfeeling, unstoppable monstrosities able to kill with their bare hands. No member of this horrific SS unit was ever captured by the Allied forces--and somewhere off the coast of Florida, they have survived. Peter Cushing (The Curse of Frankenstein), Brooke Adams (The Dead Zone), and John Carradine (The Howling) star in this suspenseful and genuinely creepy shocker co-written and directed by Ken Wiederhorn (Return of the Living Dead 2). One of the great horror "sleepers" of the '70s, "Shock Waves" has now been transferred from the director's own vault print and digitally restored for this premiere DVD release!
Customer Reviews:
not so scary.......2007-05-18
I'm a big fan of 70th horror movies but this one is not so interesting.
There is not one drop of blood, all victims die drowend, and the zombies aren't very scary.
On the good side we have Brooke Adams in bikini, Peter Cushing speaking german and John Carradine (only some time - he dies first).
My all time favorite! Why? Many reasons!.......2007-03-09
There is something about this truely creepy film that I love. Maybe alot of things. It has a great cast of believable actors, cool slimey zombies, great sets[the hotel] Excellent directing / cinemat. An excellent storyline A DARN creepy soundtrack. All in all I'd have to say it is a very believable horror story. I might as well just stop here because I WILL ramble on forever! This is a "sleeper" type of film but prob. the best I've ever seen, and I've probably seen it 100 times. 2 vhs and 1 dvd version. You may want to rent first but you may come back to buy it. Hey, I could watch it right know!
The Moral Of The Story: Don't Fire A Flare Gun In A Refrigerator.......2007-02-24
"Shock Waves" has been proclaimed "the best of the Nazi zombie movies" and bears that ringing endorsement on the DVD cover. I am inclined to agree. Although I am not normally an enormous fan of the zombie genre, the presence of both John Carradine and Peter Cushing was enough to persuade me to watch it, and I found it more enjoyable that I expected. I am a Carradine completist ever since seeing his enticing performance in "Red Zone Cuba," and true to form, John lives up to his cranky reputation here.
The movie opens with some sailors recovering an insane woman in a rowboat from the open sea; the remainder of the film is told in a flashback. The body of the story commences with Captain John Carradine berating a sailor about the importance of accurate navigation on the open sea. I should mention that John looks even more like the grim specter of death warmed over than usual here, and has an unsightly beard-like protuberance on his jaw that makes him look decidedly unsavory. His boat is a leisure craft (think "Gilligan's Island" without the sophistication) with a few passengers including a used car salesman so annoying that you will be very eager for his encounter with the aqua-Nazis. The boat first encounters a strange yellow light and then collides with a ghost ship while under the guidance of the First Mate. The boat grounds out near and island and the occupants of the boat go ashore in a glass-bottomed rowboat (how often do you see one of those?) to look for John Carradine, who has vanished. He stays on the MIA list a very brief time when we see him float under the boat dead as a stump.
After finding an old hotel (actually a Biltmore hotel in Florida, then abandoned, but now rebuilt) once ashore, the boat occupants meet superstar number two, Peter Cushing, who like John Carradine was paid $5,000 for four days of work. Cushing explains in his creepy German accent that he was the head of a secret underwater Nazi zombie project during World War Two, and the zombies have returned. The movie is slow to start, as it is halfway over before the first zombies arrive, but when they do they are unexpectedly creepy. The scenes where they emerge from the water are very effective, and the last half of the film works quite well as a horror picture. Although the Nazis do have a weakness (they die if their goggles are removed,) this is only used against them a few times, strangely.
The psychological effects of being pursued (like "The Most Dangerous Game" on steroids) rend the group and fracture their cohesiveness, ultimately sealing their fate one by one. It turns out that you don't want to be in a walk-in refrigerator when a flare goes off inside it: it will drive you into the waiting arms of aqua-Nazis. Ultimately two survivors (including the insane woman recalling the story) escape, but trouble once again awaits in a genuinely creepy scene once again involving the glass-bottomed boat.
I think the film is quite good for the genre, although more screen time from Carradine and Cushing would have been welcome (and it would have been better yet if they had scenes together.) The film drags in some places, is implausible in others, and has a couple of continuity errors, but overall it will definitely please zombie and horror movie fans.
The DVD includes several extras including commentary track with Director Ken Wiederhorn and legendary B-filmmaker Fred Olen Ray, a television spot, and the original theater trailer that announces "You are in the deep end of horror!," and "The faster you run, the quicker you die!" I give it three stars overall; the reduction stems from the limited screen exposure of the two stars, and the relatively slow start and pacing in the first half of the film.
Nazis!!! Zombies!!! Nazi Zombies!!! UNDERWATER NAZI ZOMBIES!!!!!!!!!!!!.......2006-06-01
Saw the trailer for this as a sophomore in high school, circa 1977. The second I saw the begoggled undead shock troops emerge from the ocean I was hooked - SHOCK WAVES has gone on to be my favorite low-budget film of all time, and I've seen a-plenty. No cannibalism here, no gore, no entrails - just bizarre, creepy atmosphere to burn and the claustrophic paranoia that is at the very heart of this classic Florida-shot mood piece. And if that ain't enough, you also have John Carradine, Peter Cushing, Luke Halpin (all grown up from his "Flipper" days) and the excellent Brooke Adams, who wears a bathing suit better than anyone since Julie Adams (no relation as far as I know) in CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON. Blue Underground has done an excellent job with this package. In addition to enlightening, entertaining commentary from director/co-writer Ken Wiederhorn, filmmaker/photographer Fred Olen Ray and make-up designer Alan Ormsby, there is a wealth of advert media: original trailer, a Luke Halpin interview, TV and radio spots and a gallery of stills and newspaper ads for double feature and drive-in showings. To have this in your library is to have a bona-fide minimalist cult classic. VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!!!!!
Creepy SS Zombies .......2006-05-22
A little low budget treasure this one, nice special effects, especially the underwater scenes which are very clever done, all wraped in an eerie soundtrack which contribute to a very creepy atmosphere.
Blue Underground have done a very nice restoring job on this one, with an informative commentary track by Widerhorn, Alan Ormsby and Fred Olen Ray.
Another haunted tale with returning SS ghosts but without any zombies, - Death Ship (1980)
Average customer rating:
- not so scary
- My all time favorite! Why? Many reasons!
- The Moral Of The Story: Don't Fire A Flare Gun In A Refrigerator
- Nazis!!! Zombies!!! Nazi Zombies!!! UNDERWATER NAZI ZOMBIES!!!!!!!!!!!!
- Creepy SS Zombies
|
Shock Waves
Starring: Peter Cushing , Brooke Adams , Fred Buch , Jack Davidson (III) , and Luke Halpin
Director: Ken Wiederhorn
ProductGroup: DVD
Binding: DVD
General
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Genres
| DVD
| Video
Adams, Brooke
| ( A )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Carradine, John
| ( C )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Cushing, Peter
| ( C )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Halpin, Luke
| ( H )
| Actors & Actresses
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Wiederhorn, Ken
| ( W )
| Directors
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
Used DVDs
| Stores
| DVD
| Video
| Action & Adventure
| African American Cinema
| Animation
| Anime & Manga
| Art House & International
| Classics
| Comedy
| Cult Movies
| Documentary
| Drama
| Educational
| Fitness & Yoga
| Gay & Lesbian
| Horror
| Kids & Family
| Military & War
| Music Video & Concerts
| Musicals & Performing Arts
| Mystery & Suspense
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Special Interests
| Sports
| Television
| Westerns
( S )
| Titles
| Features
| DVD
| Video
Similar Items:
- Burial Ground - Night of Terror
- Zombie Lake
- The Asylum
- Zombi 2 (25th Anniversary Special Edition 2-Disc Set)
- The House By The Cemetery
ASIN: B00005LDG3 |
Customer Reviews:
not so scary.......2007-05-18
I'm a big fan of 70th horror movies but this one is not so interesting.
There is not one drop of blood, all victims die drowend, and the zombies aren't very scary.
On the good side we have Brooke Adams in bikini, Peter Cushing speaking german and John Carradine (only some time - he dies first).
My all time favorite! Why? Many reasons!.......2007-03-09
There is something about this truely creepy film that I love. Maybe alot of things. It has a great cast of believable actors, cool slimey zombies, great sets[the hotel] Excellent directing / cinemat. An excellent storyline A DARN creepy soundtrack. All in all I'd have to say it is a very believable horror story. I might as well just stop here because I WILL ramble on forever! This is a "sleeper" type of film but prob. the best I've ever seen, and I've probably seen it 100 times. 2 vhs and 1 dvd version. You may want to rent first but you may come back to buy it. Hey, I could watch it right know!
The Moral Of The Story: Don't Fire A Flare Gun In A Refrigerator.......2007-02-24
"Shock Waves" has been proclaimed "the best of the Nazi zombie movies" and bears that ringing endorsement on the DVD cover. I am inclined to agree. Although I am not normally an enormous fan of the zombie genre, the presence of both John Carradine and Peter Cushing was enough to persuade me to watch it, and I found it more enjoyable that I expected. I am a Carradine completist ever since seeing his enticing performance in "Red Zone Cuba," and true to form, John lives up to his cranky reputation here.
The movie opens with some sailors recovering an insane woman in a rowboat from the open sea; the remainder of the film is told in a flashback. The body of the story commences with Captain John Carradine berating a sailor about the importance of accurate navigation on the open sea. I should mention that John looks even more like the grim specter of death warmed over than usual here, and has an unsightly beard-like protuberance on his jaw that makes him look decidedly unsavory. His boat is a leisure craft (think "Gilligan's Island" without the sophistication) with a few passengers including a used car salesman so annoying that you will be very eager for his encounter with the aqua-Nazis. The boat first encounters a strange yellow light and then collides with a ghost ship while under the guidance of the First Mate. The boat grounds out near and island and the occupants of the boat go ashore in a glass-bottomed rowboat (how often do you see one of those?) to look for John Carradine, who has vanished. He stays on the MIA list a very brief time when we see him float under the boat dead as a stump.
After finding an old hotel (actually a Biltmore hotel in Florida, then abandoned, but now rebuilt) once ashore, the boat occupants meet superstar number two, Peter Cushing, who like John Carradine was paid $5,000 for four days of work. Cushing explains in his creepy German accent that he was the head of a secret underwater Nazi zombie project during World War Two, and the zombies have returned. The movie is slow to start, as it is halfway over before the first zombies arrive, but when they do they are unexpectedly creepy. The scenes where they emerge from the water are very effective, and the last half of the film works quite well as a horror picture. Although the Nazis do have a weakness (they die if their goggles are removed,) this is only used against them a few times, strangely.
The psychological effects of being pursued (like "The Most Dangerous Game" on steroids) rend the group and fracture their cohesiveness, ultimately sealing their fate one by one. It turns out that you don't want to be in a walk-in refrigerator when a flare goes off inside it: it will drive you into the waiting arms of aqua-Nazis. Ultimately two survivors (including the insane woman recalling the story) escape, but trouble once again awaits in a genuinely creepy scene once again involving the glass-bottomed boat.
I think the film is quite good for the genre, although more screen time from Carradine and Cushing would have been welcome (and it would have been better yet if they had scenes together.) The film drags in some places, is implausible in others, and has a couple of continuity errors, but overall it will definitely please zombie and horror movie fans.
The DVD includes several extras including commentary track with Director Ken Wiederhorn and legendary B-filmmaker Fred Olen Ray, a television spot, and the original theater trailer that announces "You are in the deep end of horror!," and "The faster you run, the quicker you die!" I give it three stars overall; the reduction stems from the limited screen exposure of the two stars, and the relatively slow start and pacing in the first half of the film.
Nazis!!! Zombies!!! Nazi Zombies!!! UNDERWATER NAZI ZOMBIES!!!!!!!!!!!!.......2006-06-01
Saw the trailer for this as a sophomore in high school, circa 1977. The second I saw the begoggled undead shock troops emerge from the ocean I was hooked - SHOCK WAVES has gone on to be my favorite low-budget film of all time, and I've seen a-plenty. No cannibalism here, no gore, no entrails - just bizarre, creepy atmosphere to burn and the claustrophic paranoia that is at the very heart of this classic Florida-shot mood piece. And if that ain't enough, you also have John Carradine, Peter Cushing, Luke Halpin (all grown up from his "Flipper" days) and the excellent Brooke Adams, who wears a bathing suit better than anyone since Julie Adams (no relation as far as I know) in CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON. Blue Underground has done an excellent job with this package. In addition to enlightening, entertaining commentary from director/co-writer Ken Wiederhorn, filmmaker/photographer Fred Olen Ray and make-up designer Alan Ormsby, there is a wealth of advert media: original trailer, a Luke Halpin interview, TV and radio spots and a gallery of stills and newspaper ads for double feature and drive-in showings. To have this in your library is to have a bona-fide minimalist cult classic. VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!!!!!
Creepy SS Zombies .......2006-05-22
A little low budget treasure this one, nice special effects, especially the underwater scenes which are very clever done, all wraped in an eerie soundtrack which contribute to a very creepy atmosphere.
Blue Underground have done a very nice restoring job on this one, with an informative commentary track by Widerhorn, Alan Ormsby and Fred Olen Ray.
Another haunted tale with returning SS ghosts but without any zombies, - Death Ship (1980)
DVD:
- Dracula II: Ascension
- May
- Baba Yaga
- Cronos
- Halloween III - Season Of The Witch
- Scream (Dimension Collector's Series)
- Taste the Blood of Dracula
- Day of the Dead (Divimax Edition)
- Cheerleader Camp
- Sisters - Criterion Collection
DVD
DVD
DVD
Mapp & Lucia Series 2
Time Bytes 1947 DVD Card - Long Wave
Revenge in Olympia (REGION 1) (NTSC)
DVD: Mask of Vengeance
Election