The Exterminator

After surviving grisly mission in Vietnam, where one of their fellow Army Rangers was beheaded with a machete, John Eastland (Robert Ginty) and Michael Jefferson (Steve James) return to New York to work on a loading dock, moving sides of beef and produce for a grocery store. One day, during a normal work day, John takes a load to a isolated storage unit to find a local gang, the Ghetto Ghouls ransacking it. When he tries to get them to put back the stuff that they're stealing, he gets held up at knifepoint and Michael comes to the rescue. Little do the know how this chance encounter will change their lives forever.
The Beast Must Die

Note to future self: If an extremely rich "friend" who enjoys hunting invites you to his house in middle of nowhere and tells you that you'll be spending the weekend without the chance of leaving, regretfully decline the offer and write off "friend". 1974's The Beasts Must Die is a film in which Tom Newcliffe (Calvin Lockhart), the rich friend, invites 5 of his friends that have all been strangely surrounded by tragedy wherever they go, to his sprawling estate for the weekend. Tom is an avid hunter and has been said to "shoot anything that moves" in order to add it to his collection. You might think from this description that Tom is interested in adding the Homo Sapien to his trophy collection, but in fact he's searching for something much more elusive. Tom reckon's that the due to the strange circumstances surrounding the tragedies that his friends have been involved in, that one of them is... A WEREWOLF!
Overkill

Mike Delano (Steve Rally), a detective for the LAPD, refuses to let the Yakuza take over the west coast. While eating in a sushi restaurant, Mike and his partner witness the murder of the owner and his daughter when they won't pay protection money to a couple Japanese gangsters. Mike's partner gets killed during the investigation, and he gets informally teamed up with Akashi (John Nishio), a Tokyo cop to out for vengeance for slain family members who were killed in the restaurant. Akashi is used to dealing with the Yakuza in Japan, and shows Mike that he had been dealing with them in the wrong way. While the Yakuza are not afraid of death, they do respect the method of death, so Akashi quickly dispatches one of the thugs and marks him with the phoenix to send a message. Now they must battle the gang to earn their respect. Will the Yakuza kill of Mike and Akashi, or will Mike and Akashi collect all of the limbs of the gang to earn the respect they deserve - and stop them from taking over the whole west coast? Did we mention that this was directed by Ulli Lommel, the same guy that directed one of our least favorite movies "Cocaine Cowboys"? This should be interesting...
Black Christmas

Merry Christmas everyone from your friends at Internal Bleeding! I'm not really sure what's so bad about a Black Christmas, I have one every year. Well my last name is Black, so maybe that explains it?!? My guess would be that a lot of strange things happen, and we are scared out of our seats. Anywho... lets take a look back at the 1974 Christmas tale which launched a remake a couple years back that went highly unnoticed. The original stars such names as Margot Kidder and John Saxon. It was director by Bob Clark who went on to direct Porky's, a movie at the complete opposite end of the spectrum from this one.