Nightmare (aka Nightmare in a Damaged Brain)
Not much good can come from a mental patient on the lam. You're either gonna hear about them standing in a busy intersection, swinging a samurai sword and getting subdued by pepper spray, or they're putting themselves or someone else in some pretty big danger. You gotta feel bad for them, especially if it's something that happened in their childhood that caused such emotional harm - and that's exactly George Tatum's problem in Romano Scavolini's 1981 film Nightmare (aka Nightmare in a Damaged Brain).
Zombie (aka Zombi 2)
An opening shot of a man shooting a gun at what appears to be a body tied up in a canvas bag and a single line of dialog - "The boat can leave now, tell the crew" is the only clue Lucio Fulci provides you before the title of Zombie. Next we know, that boat is sailing aimlessly into the New York harbor, where some Coast Guard officers find what's left of the crew - a lone decaying zombie - and it's got a hankerin' for some fresh flesh.
Gang Wars
What do you get when you mix a blaxploitation kung-fu movie and an Asian horror movie? You get Gang Wars, a weird combination of bad fight choreography, drug dealers and a monster movie all rolled up in to one.
Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins

The story of Remo Williams is based on books from the 70s called “The Destroyer”, which went on become one of the longest men's adventure series in history. He (formely Samuel Makin) is a New York cop who was recruited by a government agency that doesn’t exist. This agency faked his death, gave him a new name and forces him to hunt bad guys no one has ever heard of. So why not make a movie about it right? Well, I guess you could say the “Adventure” began and ended with this movie. There was a TV pilot made a few years later but like the movie it did poor and was never picked up. It’s a shame too because Remo, played by one of my B-movie favorites Fred Ward, is the kind of tough-talking government agent with a chip on his shoulder that people usually root for!