Sunday, February 25, 2024
The NEW Sin City Horror Club !!!
Wednesday, June 15, 2022
The Gothic Gems of Cliff and Ivy !!!
In 2021... Las Vegas' ghoulish horror host Sicko-Psychotic (a.k.a. Jim Childs) from the Super Shock Show featured their music videos "Reincarnation" (from the CXI 111 album) and "Fossil Fuel" (from the Spirit Room LP) on Sicko-Psychotic's Halloween Music Marathon special, which aired on WBXZ-TV's 56.4 Throwback Television, The Monster Channel (www.TheMonsterChannel.com), and The Vortexx (www.horrorhost.net).
Monday, November 22, 2021
A Thank You from Sicko-Psychotic
A special thank you to all of the artists out there who continue to create, entertain, and bring joy to us. This Halloween was a memorable one for us from the Super Shock Show because of the participation and generous contributions all of these people provided to our holiday Music Marathon. We thank you for reminding us that life is about LIVING and CREATING not just for ourselves, but for the SHARING with others.
Angels and Devils; Apology None; Arachna of the Spider People (Alexis Hmielak); Aunt Clarice; Bobby Gammonster; Captain Isotope (Erik J. Nielsen); Cathrina Ortiz; CJ (Colin Reboy); Cliff and Ivy; Crematia Mortem (Roberta Solomon); The Cutthroat Brothers; Dali's Llama; Danvers (John Benjamin Faust); Destroyah; The Dev; Dr. Dreck (Michael Legge); Dr. Fearless (David Dastmalchian); Dr. Sarcofiguy; Drac and Countess Carita; The Evil Dr. Toad; First Boy on the Moon; Halloween Jack; J. Gust Anderson; Jerome P. Eadeh; Joe Reboy; Mama Lilith; Marquis of Vaudeville; Michael Raco-Rands; Mike Diva; The Mobile Hot Spots; Molly the K; The Monster Channel; Mr. Nasty; Penny Dreadful XIII (Danielle Gelehrter); Phoenix Comics + Toys (Rob Fleck); Phyllis Johnson; Princess Daphne; The Rhythm Coffin; Sally the Zombie Cheerleader (Nicole M. King); Scarlett Kaiju; Sheiks of Neptune; Slash; The Slow Poisoner; Sluggo Gonzales; Steve Ritchie (from WBXZ-TV); Tim the Enchanter; Undadogz; Vincent Grimmly (Darren T. Knaus); The Vortexx; ZombieSuckers
Friday, November 5, 2021
New Title ! New Show !
This is the new opening title sequence for the new Sicko-Psychotic show (Sicko-Psychotic's Super Shock Show). The program features horror, sci-fi, suspense, and fantasy films hosted by the title's sadistic ghoul. Las Vegas actor Jim Childs returns as the King of Ghouls and now voices both Cameo and Silky Harlot.
"Sicko-Psychotic Theme" composed by Jerome P. Eadeh and Jim Childs
Thursday, October 23, 2014
Elvira's Music Macabre Discography


TRACKS:
1. "3-D TV (Three Dimensional)" by Elvira and The Vi-Tones
2. "Elvira's Theme" by Mark Pierson

TRACKS:
1. "Elvira's Theme (Intro)" by Mark Pierson
2. "Monster Mash" by Bobby "Boris" Pickett
3. "Haunted House" by Jumpin' Gene Simmons
4. "The Munsters" by Comateens
5. "Horror Movies" by The Bollock Brothers
6. "Purple People Eater" by Sheb Wooley
7. "It's Halloween" by The Shaggs
8. "(Midtro: Side A)" by Elvira
9. "(Midtro: Side B)" by Elvira
10. "Twilight Zone" by Neil Norman & His Cosmic Orchestra
11. "The Vegas Vampire" by Jim Parker
12. "Out of Limits" by The Challengers
13. "Horror Movies" by Dickie Goodman
14. "Drac's Back" by Red Lipstique
15. "Elvira's Theme (Outro)" by Mark Pierson

ELVIRA'S HALLOWEEN PARTY OCTOBER 1987 (1987; MCA Radio Network; 818/777-5775). Three-disc vinyl LP for radio broadcast play. As Schroeder (publisher of Cult Movies Magazine) graciously pointed out in a message, it included an introduction letter, a reply card, and a 3-page program of airplay. Unfortunately, I don't know what the discs' content consisted of.



1. "Monster Mash" by Bobby "Boris" Pickett & The Crypt-Kickers
2. "Haunted House" by Jumpin' Gene Simmons
3. "Ghostbusters" by Ray Parker Jr.
4. "Out of Limits" by The Marketts
5. "The Blob" by The Five Blobs
6. "The Creature from the Black Lagoon" by Dave Edmunds
7. "The Purple People Eater" by Sheb Wooley
8. "The Addams Family (Main Title)" by Vic Mizzy
9. "Attack of the Killer Tomatoes" by Lewis Lee
10. "Welcome to My Nightmare" by Alice Cooper
11. "Dead Man's Party" by Oingo Boingo
12. "Twilight Zone" by Neil Norman & His Cosmic Orchestra
13. "Little Demon" by Screamin' Jay Hawkins
14. "Attack of the Fifty Foot Woman" by The Tubes
15. "King Kong" by Big "T" Tyler
16. "The Creature" by The Jayhawks
17. "Halloween Spooks" by Lambert, Hendricks & Ross
18. "Horror Movie" by The Skyhooks
19. "I Put a Spell on You" by Screamin' Jay Hawkins
20. "I Was a Teenage Werewolf" by The Cramps
21. "Voodoo Voodoo" by LaVern Baker
22. "Martian Hop" by The Ran-Dells
23. "Full Moon" by Elvira

TRACKS:
1. "Introduction" by Elvira
2. "Monsta' Rap" by Elvira
3. "Little Demon" by Screamin' Jay Hawkins
4. "Feed My Frankenstein" by Alice Cooper (Elvira's voice is edited into the song)
5. "Monster Mash" by Bobby "Boris" Pickett
6. "A Nightmare on My Street" by D.J. Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince
7. "The Addams Family" by Joey Gaynor
8. "Here Comes the Bride (The Bride of Frankenstein)" by Elvira
9. "Outro" by Elvira


1. "Introduction" by Elvira
2. "Haunted House" by Elvira
3. "It's Your Voodoo Working" by Charles Sheffield
4. "Attack of the Fifty Foot Woman" by Tubes
5. "Werewolves of London" by Warren Zevon
6. "Monsters' Holiday" by Bobby (Boris) Pickett & The Crypt-Kickers
7. "Weird Science" by Oingo Boingo
8. "Zombie Stomp" by Elvira
9. "Outro" by Elvira

TRACKS:
1. "Overture (Opening Titles)"
2. "Carpathian Gypsy Dance"
3. "The Graveyard"
4. "Elura Remembered"
5. "Le Music Hall" by Jerry Jackson; performed by Elvira
6. "Lust"
7. "The Nightmare"
8. "The Adulterers"
9. "Escape from Destruction"
10. "Closing Titles"
11. "Entombed"
12. "Dr. Bradley's Coach"
13. "Castle Hellsubus"
14. "Portraits/Elura's Theme"
15. "Marseilles"
16. "Elura's Ring"
17. "Elvira's Departure"
18. "Vladimere's Delusions"
19. "Earthquake"
20. "Hypnotized"
21. "Elura's Ghost/Elura's Coffin"
22. "Roxanna's Wake"
23. "Hellsubus Curse"
24. "The Dungeon"
25. "Adrien to the Rescue"
26. "The Pendulum"
27. "The Sinking of Castle Hellsubus"
28. "Carpathian Night"
29. "Coachride to Hell"

TRACKS:
1. "Zombie Killer: Remix Featuring Elvira"
2. "Zombie Killer: Z.K. Chastity Pariah Mix Featuring Elvira"


1. "Exorcist (Main Theme)"
2. "Frankenstein"
3. "Toccata and Fugue"
4. "Hells Bells"
5. "Moonlight Sonata"
6. "Funeral March of a Marionette (Main Theme to Alfred Hitchcock Presents)"
7. "Godzilla"
8. "Black Cat"
9. "Phantom of the Opera"
10. "In the Hall of the Mountain King"
11. "Carmina Burana, O Fortuna"
12. "Halloween (Main Theme)"

CD TRACKS:
1. "Mistress of the Dark"
2. "Return of the Living Dead"
3. "My Halloween"
4. "Drink with the Living Dead"
5. "Mistress of the Dark (Reanimated Mix)"
6. "Mistress of the Dark (Dance of the Dead Mix)"
DVD FEATURES:
1. "Mistress of the Dark Music Video"
2. "Making of the Video Featurette"
3. "Storyboard to Video Comparison"
4. "Episode of the Har Har Show"

TRACKS:
1. "Elvira's Theme" by Mark Pierson
2. "Once Bitten, Twice Shy" by Lori Chacko
3. "3-D TV (Three Dimensional)" by Elvira and The Vi-Tones
4. "Full Moon" by Elvira
5. "Monsta' Rap" by Elvira
6. "Zombie Stomp" by Elvira
7. "Haunted House" by Elvira
8. "Here Comes the Bride (The Bride of Frankenstein)" by Elvira
9. "Here I Am" by Elvira
10. "Le Music Hall" by Elvira
11. "Zombie Killer: Remix Featuring Elvira" by Leslie Hall and The LYs & Elvira
12. "Mistress of the Dark" by Ghoultown
13. "Once Bitten, Twice Shy (12" Single Version)" by Lori Chacko

TRACKS:
1. "What Can I Do?" by The Black Belles
2. "What Can I Do? (Instrumental)" by The Black Belles

TRACKS:
1. "2 Big Pumpkins" by Elvira, Mistress of the Dark
2. "13 Nights of Halloween" by Elvira, Mistress of the Dark
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Alfred Hitchcock: Film & TV List
For decades the Master of Suspense had movie audiences riveted on the edge of their seats, all the while, pioneering many of the visual and storytelling techniques cinematographers, scriptwriters, and directors use today. Although Alfred Hitchcock is considered one of the most influential filmmakers in the history of cinema, his early contributions to the film industry exhibited very little of the artistic license we've come to associate him with in his later and superior works. They did, however, provide the British filmmaker an excellent training ground and opened further opportunities. The ambitious director eventually achieved commercial success in 1927 with his very first thriller, The Lodger, which proved to be a sign of things to come. As Hitchcock's distinctive style of filmmaking began to mature, the intricate use of frames to enhance the psychological profiles of the characters, the voyeuristic camera work, and the frequent use of the 'McGuffin' as a plot-moving device, all came to define the 'Hitchcockian' film. Despite having made numerous cameos in many of his films, it wasn't until Hitchcock hosted the popular television program Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1955-1962) that he truly reached the peak of the public's consciousness and became a cultural icon. Today, when we think of the great Alfred Hitchcock, his gallows humor and unmistakable profile immediately come to mind. Also, as a result of the successful TV show, we cannot help but associate Charles Gounod's musical composition 'Funeral March for a Marionette' with Hitchcock.
The Call of Youth (1921) -- as title cards designer; lost film
The Great Day (1921) -- as title cards designer; lost film
The Princess of New York (1921) -- as title cards designer; lost film
The Man from Home (1922) -- as title cards designer; lost film
Number 13 (a.k.a. Mrs. Peabody) (1922) -- directorial debut; unfinished film; all footage is lost
The Spanish Jade (1922) -- as title cards designer; lost film
Tell Your Children (a.k.a. Protect Your Daughter; Reckless Decision) (1922) -- as title cards designer; lost film
Three Live Ghosts (1922) -- as title cards designer
Always Tell Your Wife (1923) -- uncredited as co-director; half of the film is lost
Woman to Woman (1923) -- as writer; lost film
The Passionate Adventure (1924) -- as writer
The Prude's Fall (a.k.a. Dangerous Virtue) (1924) -- as writer; partially lost
The White Shadow (a.k.a. White Shadows) (1924) -- as assistant director, writer, editor, and set designer; only half of the film survives
The Pleasure Garden (1925)
Die Prinzessin und der Geiger (a.k.a. The Blackguard) (1925) -- as writer
Downhill (a.k.a. When Boys Leave Home) (1927)
The Farmer's Wife (1928)
Juno and the Paycock (a.k.a. The Shame of Mary Boyle) (1929)
The Manxman (1929)
An Elastic Affair (1930) -- lost short film
Elstree Calling (1930) -- directed a segment
Murder! (1930)
Mary (1931)
Rich and Strange (a.k.a. East of Shanghai) (1931)
The Skin Game (1931)
Lord Camber's Ladies (1932) -- as producer
Number Seventeen (a.k.a. Number 17) (1932)
Waltzes from Vienna (a.k.a. Strauss' Great Waltz) (1934)
Sanders of the River (1935) -- directed part of the film
Sabotage (1936)
Foreign Correspondent (1940)
Men of the Lightship (1940) -- editor of U.S. version; documentary short
Mr. & Mrs. Smith (1941)
Suspicion (1941)
Target for Tonight (1941) -- editor of US version; documentary short
Picture People No. 10: Hollywood at Home (1942) -- appearance; documentary; lost film
Saboteur (1942)
Forever and a Day (a.k.a. The Changing World) (1943) -- as one of the writers
Shadow of a Doubt (1943)
Show-Business at War (a.k.a. The March of Time Volume IX, Issue 10) (1943) -- appearance; documentary
Aventure Malgache (1944) -- short film
Bon Voyage (1944) -- short film
The Fighting Generation (1944) -- documentary short
Lifeboat (1944)
Spellbound (1945)
Watchtower Over Tomorrow (1945) -- uncredited as one of the directors; lost short film
Stage Fright (1950)
I Confess (1953)
Dial M for Murder (1954)
Lux Video Theatre: 'To Each His Own' (a.k.a. Summer Video Theatre) (1954) -- guest appearance; TV series episode
Rear Window (1954)
What's My Line?: 'September 12' (1954) -- guest appearance; TV game-show episode
The Red Skelton Show: 'Look Magazine Movie Awards Show' (1955) -- appearance; TV series episode
To Catch a Thief (1955)
The Trouble with Harry (1955)
Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1955-1962) -- as host; TV series
The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956)
The Wrong Man (1956)
Suspicion (1957-1959) -- as executive producer; TV series
Vertigo (1958)
Tactic: 'unknown episode' (1959) -- appearance; TV series episode
Psycho (1960)
Ford Startime: 'Incident at a Corner' (a.k.a. Lincoln-Mercury Startime; Startime) (1960) -- TV series episode
Alcoa Premiere: 'The Jail' (1962) -- as executive producer; TV series episode
CBS: The Stars' Address (1963) -- appearance; TV special
The 40th Annual Academy Awards (1968) -- appearance; TV special
Hollywood: The Selznick Years (1969) -- appearance; documentary
London Aktuell: 'Episode #1.1' (1969) -- appearance; TV documentary series episode
The Mike Douglas Show: 'December 30' (1969) -- appearance; TV series episode
Aquarius: 'Alfred the Great' (1972) -- appearance; TV series episode
Camera Three: 'The Illustrated Alfred Hitchcock: Part 1' (1972) -- appearance; TV series episode
Camera Three: 'The Illustrated Alfred Hitchcock: Part 2' (1972) -- appearance; TV series episode
The Dick Cavett Show: 'Alfred Hitchcock' (1972) -- appearance; TV series episode
Film Night: 'The Master of Suspense' (1972) -- appearance; TV series episode
Frenzy (1972)
V.I.P. - Schaukel: 'Episode #2.4' (1972) -- appearance; TV documentary series episode
The Men Who Made the Movies: 'Alfred Hitchcock' (1973) -- appearance; TV documentary special
The Elstree Story (1976) -- appearance; TV special
Family Plot (1976)
La Nuit des Césars: '2ème Nuit des Césars' (1977) -- appearance; TV documentary series episode
The 29th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1977) -- appearance; TV special
Memory of the Camps (1985) -- as editor; previously unreleased documentary made in 1945