The Severed Head Network - Movie Reviews and Your Movie Experience
The Severed Head Network was an incredible movie! Both Jamie Ebert and D.J. Vivona were amazing! The great cast includes Jamie Ebert, D.J. Vivona, Tommy Biondo, Eli DeGeer, Chris Grega. If you love watching Jamie Ebert or D.J. Vivona, you are deffinetly going to want to watch The Severed Head Network.
This compilation contains short films from America's most controversial cult filmmakers. FAITH IN NOTHING is a fever-dream of eroticism and haunting beauty. VOMIRE is a sucker-punch of expressionistic imagery about angels, sex, and meat. SATISFACTION explores the intense relationship between an abused woman and her one-night-stand. Eight daring, unique, and bizarre shorts in all.
Tokyo Joe - What a Movie Review is Not
Tokyo Joe- It is a movie that everyone can enjoy together.This is something not usually seen in movies of this type, so it makes it an unusual, yet pleasant experience.The movie is absolutely stunning and Humphrey Bogart deliver some award-winning performances in this movie. I also think Alexander Knox was great!
I think Humphrey Bogart and Alexander Knox worked wonderful in Tokyo Joe. The great supporting cast includes Humphrey Bogart, Alexander Knox, Florence Marly, Sessue Hayakawa, Jerome Courtland.
You should see it, make no mistake this is a definite blockbuster!
I left some information, immages, and video previews of Tokyo Joe below.
Summary of Tokyo Joe: It's hard to imagine nowadays that someone so innately bitter and cynical as Humphrey Bogart could be a major movie star--but he was, and the movies were richer for it. In Tokyo Joe, Bogart plays an Air Force colonel who returns to Tokyo after World War II to reclaim a nightclub he'd had to abandon. When he discovers that his former lover, a Russian refugee, is still alive and now married, he sets out to win her back--but in the process gets drawn into a fraudulent air freight scheme that may endanger the stability of post-war Japan, as well as a child he never knew he had. Tokyo Joe isn't a classic, but when the camera catches the lightning in Bogart's eyes or his calm voice twists into a snarl, it's a powerful jolt. His dark persona makes his virtuous acts all the more compelling. --Bret Fetzer