Project Grizzly
I've never been a huge fan of documentaries, they just never seem to live up to the hype. I'd rather watch an original film shot like a documentary or a mockumentary, something like Spinal Tap. Unless you are super excited about the topic, documentaries rarely have enough material to keep you interested, and there is typically no payoff at the end. Such is the problem with Project Grizzly. This documentary is the story of Troy Hurtubise, a man whose life was spared by a grizzly while walking through the Canadian wilderness. Now years later he is back to find the grizzly, with the help of his homemade bear-suit, the Ursus Mark VI.
Trailer Tuesday: Demolition University
Just last week we brought you the Corey Haim gem "Demolition High", and for this week's Trailer Tuesday, we bring you "Demolition University"!
If this is half as good as Demolition High, then y'all are in for a huge treat! We'll be taking a look at Demolition University in the coming days, so stay tuned.
Trailer Tuesday: Mandroid
For today's Trailer Tuesday, we're gonna take a look at the 1993 flick Mandroid
A scientist creates a robot that can be controlled by humans using a special suit. The scientist offers the suit up to the CIA, but before he's able to hand it over, his partner gets other ideas.
Stay tuned for our upcoming review of Jack Ersgard's MANDROID!
Street Fighter: The Movie

Back in 1991, the arcade game Street Fighter II was probably the biggest thing going in video games. I remember taking $5 every couple days up to my local arcade "The Red Baron" and pounding every single quarter into that machine, trying to figure out and master the special moves for each character. The one character that really drew my attention was Guile, the American Special Ops soldier who had a mean blonde flattop haircut (I had a flattop too, so I thought this was super rad). I'm sure my daily $5 addiction helped fuel the millions upon millions of dollars that both the arcade games and each iteration of the console version of the game put on Capcom's (the company that made SFII) bottom line. And in 1994, it eventually convinced them that their game was popular enough cross over from nerdy obsession (like mine), to big budget Hollywood live action movie called Street Fighter. Unfortunately, they probably made arguably one of the worst movies based on a video game that the world would ever see.