Mutant

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While on vacation, two brothers discover a small town’s hideous secret. A nearby chemical plant has been dumping toxic waste just outside of town, turning the townspeople into contaminated, mutant zombies. Now, there’s nowhere to run as the growing army of blood thirsty ghouls takes over the town and devours the remaining humans, one by one.

 

When I originally bought the original Vestron video of Mutant many years ago, I thought I was in for some huge mutated monster movie due to the cover art (a beast head hovering over a town) and the title. This proves how misleading some incarnations of the cover art and title can be. To my surprise Mutant was a thinly disguised “zombie” movie and I will get into that more later. The title sequence is kinda of bad and I originally thought “yep, I got exactly what I expected.” The film actually becomes a lot better as the movie trucks along. We start off with a killing and then delve into a story about two “city boy” brothers traveling along a remote southern highway where they run into some clich? rednecks who wreck their car. They are forced into going into a small town but the kicker is that toxic waste being illegally dumped near the town has turned many of the residents into mutated zombie like ghouls who start to feast on the blood of the remaining normal tenants of the town. Eventually it dwindles down to a few survivors (with Bo Hopkins playing an alcoholic run-down cop) having to escape the zombie-like hordes.

The idea of the mutant zombie creatures is actually interesting for this kind of film. The toxic waste changes the person’s blood into a green/yellowish substance and swells. It swells to degree that their palms split. Through these splits the “mutant zombies” suck blood from victims like a leach. The make-up job on these ghouls is actually quit good and they have a nice terrifying appearance in dark corridors.

Not only are the ghouls impressive, but director John Cardos (Kingdom of the Spiders) is also able to make many great scenes of suspense. There are two terrific scenes with “zombies” attacking a women and a kid in a school bathroom and another when “zombies” surround a car and start burning through the glass to get to the person inside. I’ve been a horror film fan for years and nothing really makes me squirm, but there a a few number of scenes here that actually got me on the edge of my seat. He also moves the film along at nice pace and it builds and builds until the suspense filled climax. Nice job Cardos!

The acting here also brings this film up a couple of notches. Usually genre films like this have poor acting and actors that usually cause unintentional laughter. The cast here is very good lead by seasoned veterans Wings Hauser (Vice Squad) and Bo Hopkins. The supporting cast is also good and they all play the film seriously. There is a scene towards the end of the film where a female lead starts to lose emotional control and Hauser has to comfort her while being terrified himself. I really felt they were scared out-of-there minds. Thumbs up on the acting which is rare for this type of film.

The only really cheese thing is the story, which I know the story sounds like direct-to-video material. No doubt today it would be, but Mutant was made back in the early 80′s and that was a great era because movies like mutant got a theatrical release and because of this, they a high-quality look them that director-to-video fodder sorely lack.

For horror fans looking for a nice mostly forgotten 80′s horror film that actually has quality, then give Mutant a shot. It’s got a great cast, good acting, nice effects, and some truly suspenseful moments. I was totally surprised by Mutant and liked it very much.

For some reason Mutant as been released in many different incarnations on DVD (4 that I know of). I originally bought the Diamond Entertainment version (It portrays the same cover art as the original Vestron video release)but its picture quality was no better than my VHS. By far the best edition available on DVD is the Elite Entertainment version sold here on Amazon. The picture is crystal clear (you can actually see what’s happening in the dark scenes!) and in anamorphic widescreen. A beautiful release of a rare film. If you want to own this film, you owe it to yourself to get the Elite Version!

Written by: Good Zombie Movies
Mutant
Date published: 04/29/2012
4 / 5 stars

Dead Heat

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Violent criminals who can’t be killed are shooting up Los Angeles, and the investigation leads LAPD detectives Roger Mortis (Treat Williams) and Doug Bigelow (Joe Piscopo) to a mysterious pharmaceutical firm. But when Mortis is suddenly murdered, his coroner girlfriend and loose cannon partner discover the company’s ‘resurrection machine’ that turns Roger into the walking dead. Now the department’s most unstoppable cops must battle zombie hit men, a butcher shop gone berserk and the deceased industrialist (the legendary Vincent Price in one of his final film roles) who may hold the key to it all. But can Mortis solve his own homicide case before he completely decomposes?

 

Dead Heat kinda fell into obscurity right away, so I don’t think it even reached cult film status. This is one of those that you may have caught late at night in the old glory days of HBO. It’s not a horror film, it’s more of your typical buddy action/comedy in the vein of Tango & Cash, but with a few horror elements thrown in. Zombies are roaming around robbing jewlery stores and causing other assorted mischief due to a new resurrection machine. The zombies are pretty much normal looking people who are a pain in the ass to kill. Some are a little yucky and decomposed too. Treat Williams and Joe Piscopo are the cops on the case. Naturally, Williams being the straight cop and Piscopo being the wisecracking tough guy cop. I’ve always liked Williams, and though his performance is nothing to shout about, I enjoy his presence.Piscopo is another story. In general I do like Piscopo, but his role in this film is I guess a real love it or hate it affair. The humor of the movie is almost all set on him, yet he is probably the unfunniest wisecracking cop I have ever seen in a movie. He has absolutely no delivery and the jokes seem forced and just plain bad. It’s strange coz he is so not funny that it actually becomes kinda funny. Funny for reasons other than intended. Plus, he’s supposed to be a big, buff badass, yet he’s always saying stuff like, “Oh, that’s gross!”, “That’s really disgusting”, and “I think I’m gonna throw up”. These aren’t tough guy lines, and he comes off sounding like a wuss. Steve Johnson’s fx are pretty good. We have a mean looking mutant biker guy, a disintegrating woman, and a Chinese restaurant full of reanimated ducks and pigs and stuff. Williams’ half melted face in the last 10 minutes looks good too.

Some cool appearances here too, including Darren McGavin, who you may remember as the leg lamp obsessed dad in A Christmas Story(“Oh, you should see what it looks like from out here!”). Vincent Price has a small walk on part as well. The leading lady is quite flat and boring. All in all, Dead Heat may be a cheap action/comedy, but it obviously had more money invested in it than other films of this type. The fx are top notch and the film really doesn’t look that cheap at all. This is no masterpiece for sure, but I must say that I really miss this kind of film, coz stuff like this just isn’t made anymore. Enjoy.

Written by: Good Zombie Movies
Dead Heat
Date published: 04/29/2012
4 / 5 stars

Attack of the Vegan Zombies!

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Dionne Talbott and her husband, Joe Bryant, own and operate a family vineyard. After yet another failed crop, Joe wants to give up on their dream and sell the vineyard. Dionne solicits the help of her mother Audra, a practicing witch, who casts a spell on the farm. The following year they have such a bountiful harvest that they hire an old friend, Professor Frank, to help them pick the grapes. Professor Frank arrives with four college students to join him over the weekend. While working, they begin to notice phenomenal growth rates for the vines. Professor Frank ventures into the woods to investigate the water supply after their neighbor disappears.

This movie was absolutely hilarious.Anytime you pair killer plants with a spoof, its going to be good — just remember Killer Tomatoes people, need I say more?

There are several key scenes where you wonder to yourself if they are serious or joking, but they really do mean to be funny all the way around. The acting is great for the genre it’s in, you can tell that people put a lot of hard work into the movie. All of these people deserve to move up in the world of acting — they fake bad acting and seriousness all at the same time, it makes for an extremely good laugh.

Also, this is probably a great movie for a drinking game…..there’s a signal phrase or action in there somewhere, I’m sure of it.

Written by: Good Zombie Movies
Attack of the Vegan Zombies
Date published: 04/29/2012
5 / 5 stars

6teen: Dude of the Living Dead

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After staying up late to watch an all-night monster movie marathon, Jude arrives to find some very weird things are happening at the mall. One by one, patrons and staff alike are succumbing to an unknown virus and acting very strange. The customers at The Khaki Barn seem much pastier than usual. Wyatt finds a human thumb in his taco. Coach Halder has taken to biting customers, and Caitlin s new boyfriend has turned pasty gray and has really nasty breath – eww! And we won t even mention what becomes of poor Pokey the Panda. It doesn t take the gang long to realize what s happened the mall has been overtaken by ZOMBIES!

Imagine a PG-Rated Zombie movie. Now imagine it ROCKS! Good for teens AND for family! Great for Halloween, or any other time!Fun characters, decent storylines & a really different animation style makes this a standout series.

Comes from the same people that created “Total Drama Island”, with similar art styles.

Setting— a gigantic shopping mall, in Canada.
Main Characters–
Jen: brunette, the sensible girl. Helpful, kind, yet bossy. Works at the Sports Barn for maniac employer, The Coach. Step-sister of Jonesy
Nikki: purple-haired nonconformist, forced to work in the Khaki Barn, a store for fashion conformists. Plagued by her co-workers, the Clones, who engage in groupthink. Nikki possesses a whim of steel. Dating Jonesy.
Caitlin: Blonde uber-priviliged girl, fashion-minded, who must work off her credit card debt in a lemonade shop which is shaped like a giant lemon. Forced to wear foam rubber hat, which is shaped like a giant lemon.
Wyatt: Musician, poet & dreadlocked romantic. In love, dumped, writes songs/poem about lost love, which attracts a new love; dumped. Repeat cycle endlessly.
Jonesy: charmer & con artist. Prepetually fired from every job, usually within 24 hours. Dating Nikki. Step-brother of Jen. Torments Jen with pranks.
Jude: Laid back, fun & goofy skateboard dude. Attempts the impossible on his skateboard. No fear…no sense. Loves animals. Obsessed with Zambonis.

Also includes a bonus episode, “BOO!”, covering a rather more normal Halloween at the Mall.

Written by: Good Zombie Movies
6teen: Dude of the Living Dead
Date published: 04/29/2012
5 / 5 stars

Bela Lugosi in Voodoo Man / White Zombie

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Voodoo Man-1944-black and white-Lone female motorists traveling a particular highway have been mysteriously vanishing without a trace. They are victims of a weird trap created by Dr. Marlowe, played by Bela Lugosi. With the help of John Carradine as Bela’s half-witted henchman Toby, and George Zucco as Nicholas the Voodoo Priest, Dr. Marlowe uses his captive women in a bizarre attempt to bring his beautiful wife back from a state of zombie-like coma, or rather a living death.

But when lovely Stella Saunders also goes missing on that lonely road, her cousin Betty and Betty’s fiancee Ralph get suspicious of Dr. Marlowe. Henchman Toby accidently allows Stella, who is in a voodoo trance, to escape.

I thought I saw all of Bela Lugosi’s movie over the years, from Dracula to Plan 9 From Outer Space. Then I stumbled on this one, a rather rare treat, I’m surprised it’s not more famous. Not only is Bela at his menacing best, but horror staples George Zucco and John Carradine are in this movie as well. The plot involves a conspiracy by Bela to abduct women to help bring his wife out of a zombie trance, with scary results. Great fun. There’s also White Zombie which I’ve seen before and always enjoyed. Oddly enough, the events that occur in white zombie are based on fact, not fiction.

There were, or are, master’s on Haiti that are able to put people into a zombie like state and use them as slaves. There was a reent story obout a man who was thought dead by his relatives but was in reality in a zombie trance working as a slave for years, creep

Written by: Good Zombie Movies
Good Zombie Movies
Date published: 04/29/2012
5 / 5 stars

Cannibal Lunch Box Triple Feature

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WARLOCK MOON -a bizarre blood cult is on the prowl for human sacrifices! A beautiful college co-ed is lured to an abandoned country club by a strange coven of cannibalistic witches, ghosts and brutal axe murderers. Will she be able to thwart their plans to recruit new victims for ritualistic murder? Or will she be the main course in a blood cult banquet? Starring a young Laurie Walters of TV s Eight is Enough and Joe Spano of TV s Hill Street Blues. BLOOD FEAST II-from the godfather of gore, Herschell Gordon Lewis, comes from the most eagerly awaited sequel in the annals of splatter cinema!

The prices of these three packs from Shriek Show are unbelievable. The list prices of each of these movies are $20-25. The Shriek Show three pack prices are usually $20. Most Shriek Show three packs are nothing special but some of them are very good. The most popular packs are Psycho Killers(Delirium, House on the Edge of the Park, and Beyond the Darkness), Jungle Horrors(Jungle Holocaust, Eaten Alive: Mangiati Vivi, and Massacre in Dinosaur Valley), Evil Animals(Day of the Animals, Grizzly, and Devil Dog), Zombie Pack I(Zombie 3-5), and Zombie Pack II(Zombie Holocaust, Burial Ground, and Flesheater).I’m reviewing the Cannibal Lunch Box Triple Feature which I don’t see much reviews for. I was very interested because it had Man from Deep River and Blood Feast 2. I never heard of Warlock Moon but it did sound interesting. The catch is Blood Feast 2 is R-rated in these packs. The unrated Blood Feast 2 is expensive which is lame. Who could complain because it has Man from Deep River.

Warlock Moon(1973)= A very low budget movie with a similar atmosphere to Texas Chainsaw Massacre. A college couple go to a defunct Victorian Hotel that has a blood cult. Very slow in the first half but picks up later. It is predictable though that should not get in the way. Joe Bob Briggs is a special feature which is a plus. This is one under-rated movie. It’s best to watch at night, no lights, and don’t expect anything. Give Warlock Moon a chance! Four Stars!****

Man from Deep River(1972)= The first film of the cannibal genre. Directed by legendary Umberto Lenzi, and starring cannibal film vets Ivan Rassimov and Me Me Lai. A British photographer(Rassimov) goes to Thailand and runs into trouble. The fugitive photographer travels into the bowels of the Thai jungle to do his job and stay away from the law. A tribe imprison the photographer and mistreat him. Over time, the tribe slowly assimilates the photographer into their tribe and the photographer experiences tribal life. Very different from other cannibal movies. This movie had more of a sexploitation feel than the shock feel. Not as gory as the later cannibal movies. Animal killings were real and gross like later movies. Lots of nudity, more nudity than violence. I like Man from Deep River and it’s the best feature of the pack. Five Star!*****

Blood Feast 2(2002)= Herschell Gordon Lewis and David Friedman made this sequel 39 years after Blood Feast. Both movies are about a serial killer caterer who uses body parts for a feast to honor a Egyptian goddess. The difference is the caterer in Blood Feast 2 is a descendant of the caterer in Blood Feast. This Blood Feast 2 is R-rated and heavily cut. I don’t mind it though if they cut stuff out but not too much like in Blood Feast 2. Blood Feast 2 is the worst in the pack. Two and a half stars. **1/2.

Written by: Good Zombie Movie
Cannibal Lunch Box Triple Feature
Date published: 04/29/2012
5 / 5 stars

George A. Romero’s Night of the Living Dead DVD Starring Judith O’Dea, Russ Streiner, Duane Jones, Karl Hardman, Keith Wayne

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George A. Romero’s first film would revolutionize horror movie making forever. Night of the Living Dead, shot in straightforward black and white, brought gore and despair to the screen in a manner never before attempted: as blunt a representation as possible.Not the first film to utilize gore, Night of the Living Dead was the first film to present weird, bloody carnage as an existential terror that had no meaning and no resolution. This concept was embraced by youth who were disillusioned with the Vietnam War and thus the no-budget zombie flick became a cult success. Shot with a stark feel, the mindless zombies descend upon the completely innocent.

This simple structure has lead many to interpret the film as political allegory meditating upon white people’s fear of minorities. But for its political significance, rebellious filmmaking, and historical importance, Night of the Living Dead is a definitive classic.

This is definitely a great movie to watched. It is actually one of my most favored zombie film. You should definitely watch this.
Written by: Good Zombie Reviews
George A. Romero’s Night of the Living Dead DVD Starring Judith O’Dea, Russ Streiner, Duane Jones, Karl Hardman, Keith Wayne
Date published: 04/29/2012
5 / 5 stars

Colin Blunstone and Rod Argent of the Zombies: Live at the Bloomsbury Theatre, London

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Together on stage for the first time in more than 30 years, Colin Blunstone and Rod Argent, two founding members of the legendary UK beat group, The Zombies, performed live at the Bloomsbury Theatre in London! Track Listings:
Andorra
This Will Be Our Year
I Love You
Mystified
A Rose For Emily
Beechwood Park
Time Of The Season
I Want To Fly
Keep On Rolling
Hold Your Head Up
Sanctuary
Pleasure
Indication
Tell Her No
She’s Not There
God Gave Rock ‘N’ Roll To You

 

In the broadest sense, I think it’s fair to say that the Zombies got a raw deal. They were one of the most talented and intelligent bands during the latter part of the British invasion, and yet they were thrown on the scrap heap of history. Two ridiculously catchy hit singles swept through America during our ’64-’65 obsession with the London scene; “Tell Her No” and “She’s Not There” combine raw rock and roll with a jazz sensibility that still sounds fresh today. Subsequently, their record company rewarded the band by refusing to issue their brilliant psychedelic album masterpiece entitled “Odessey and Oracle.”Thankfully, Al Kooper (of Blood, Sweat & Tears, the Dylan sessions, et. al.) saw the folly of this decision and begged Columbia to right the situation. Eventually, the album saw daylight, but sold poorly, despite the extracted single that became a best seller. “Time of the Season” sounded ahead of its time in 1968, despite the fact that it was recorded nearly two years before its release. Eventually, the band collapsed under the weight of so much indifference, and the most we’ve heard since then is the occasional project by keyboardist Rod Argent.

“Live at Bloomsbury Theatre” celebrates the reunion of Rod Argent with vocalist Colin Blunstone. Technically, they alone cannot represent a reforming of the Zombies, since songwriter/vocalist Chris White has always been an integral part of the band. His absence is felt, but after so much time, it’s nice to hear these tunes, even without White’s crucial input. The CD is a generous 2-disk set containing 25 songs, while the DVD pairs the song selection down to a less unwieldy 15 tracks. The editing is a good thing, allowing the video to hold the viewer’s interest significantly better than the CD collection.

All of the major hits are here, including Argent’s best-known solo work, such as “Hold Your Head Up” and “God Gave Rock and Roll to You.” The performances are admirably executed, often utilizing a string section to augment that standard rock and roll configuration of the actual band. Argent sounds great and Blunstone is in fine voice throughout. In summation, “Live at the Bloomsbury” is a fine but faulted collection, never quite transcending its aura of nostalgia, while glossing over the absence of Chris White. B Tom Ryan

Written by: Good Zombie Movies
Colin Blunstone and Rod Argent of the Zombies: Live at the Bloomsbury Theatre, London
Date published: 04/29/2012
4 / 5 stars

The Dead Next Door

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The government sets up a Zombie squad after an epidemic has made the world run rampant with living corpses. Raimi, Mercer, Kuller, and others head off to Ohio to try and find a cure to the epidemic but soon run into a crazy cult of zombie lovers who are set on preserving the zombies and letting a new world be born because they believe that it’s God’s will. When Mercer gets infected with the zombie virus, Raimi and the others must work quickly to find a cure.

Sometimes things get better with age – wine, cheese… zombie movies. Although I’d never seen THE DEAD NEXT DOOR (or even heard of it, actually) until now – it’s still a good zombie film… so good in fact that it almost knocks a lot of current zombie films off their soap boxes. While it can’t touch SHAUN OF THE DEAD, although both films share the same obsessive love when it comes to zombie films, it does leave the DAWN OF THE DEAD remake in the dust… more violent, more fun, more in tune with the times (which is itself strange since this film was made in 1986) it packs punch after punch, most of which hit their target.

Granted the budget was low, and most of the money went into the zombie effects (good call) and the acting ranges from “not bad” to “please, please – somebody stop him/her” and the film itself looks as cheap as only Super-8 can look – it actually all adds up to something like gravity and atmosphere that helps to ground THE DEAD NEXT DOOR and gives it some of its power.

While the story runs from right to left, it does take some time for a few twists and turns and ends on a highly promising (but downbeat) note. You can see all the parts in this film – from using all the famous names (and famous titles and famous clips from other undead/zombie films), from directors to SFX wizards – to using setups and payoffs of all the zombie films that have come before it.

It’s a film of parts, of moments, of gags and reflexes that now have become the LAWS of zombie films… and while we can see the jumps and surprises a mile off, it does not lessen the impact of the film. There are flashes of the original here, touches of creativity, and some outright gory SFX (and one all natural man made effect that truly is one of the grossest moments of the film – when it happens you’ll know).

This edition comes with all the bells and whistles – touched up print (which looks very nice), commentary (which is fast, funny and informative – great stuff here) and more, more, more – so much more that again, like a lot of zombie films released on DVD, it blows them away. Love and a lot of sweat went into making this the best edition possible for this film.

Those too new to the zombie genre will find THE DEAD NEXT DOOR a bit hard to take – the jokes will fall flat, and while the gore is top notch, clever and wildy camp, the lack of MTV editing, pop tunes, slow motion, jerky fast motion, running zombies and catch phrases will leave more than a few wondering just what all the fuss is about… while those who’ve been along for the ride for the long haul time will find a lot here to laugh at and chew over.

THE DEAD NEXT DOOR works – and it’s worth watching, owning and turning all the newbies on to.

The Dead Next Door
Date published: 04/29/2012
4 / 5 stars

The Swamp of the Ravens – bonus: Zombie

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WAMP OF THE RAVENS: Dr. Frosta (Ramiro Oliveros) has been conducting illegal and immoral experiments on the recently deceased in an effort to conquer death and perfect the mental control of his subjects. All that Simone (Marcia Bichette), his estranged girlfriend knows is that the doctor works too hard and doesn t give her enough attention. The police inspector (Fernando Sancho) assigned to the case is getting closer and closer to catching and stopping the doctor. Also, Dr. Frosta has been dumping the dead rejects from his experiments into the swamp. Unfortunately, the dead are now undead, and the swamp water is infested with living corpses bent on a showdown with the mad doctor!
VCI Entertainment has scored another coup by releasing gorgeous transfers of 2 titles which have been saturated in shoddy prints by budget companies which continue to release poor product on unsuspecting exploitation fans. Director Michael Cannon’s ‘SWAMP OF THE RAVENS’-1974 is a Spanish/American co-production trying to capitalize on the gore fests of Director Herschel Gordon Lewis but came along on the advent of the Slasher genre in the states and quickly disappeared.

It does nothing more than rehash past Euro horrors this time the misled mad scientist who gets thrown out of the medical field by his peers and proceeds to experiment on his own climaxing with his creations trying to get the upper hand but there is a bit of a surprise ending. The highlight is Euro actor Fernando Sancho who shows up as a police inspector but this film may have the honor of containing the worst music score in the history of genre film making. The honor goes to Joaquin Torres and has to be heard to be believed. The film also boasts that it contains real autopsy footage but it looks like anything that could have been done in a makeup studio. Next up is Director Del Tenney’s ‘I EAT YOUR SKIN’-1971 here billed as ‘ZOMBIE’.

Known for its infamous pairing with Director David Durston’s ‘I DRINK YOUR BLOOD’ , it emerges as a taut, sleazy jungle thriller adorned with hot women and crude zombie makeup , in other words, a perfect midnight party movie. A best selling author crash lands conveniently on Voodoo Island and finds a doctor experimenting with snake venom and a witch doctor who controls the zombie population? but the real bummer is that they want to sacrifice the doctors daughter in a Voodoo ritual.

Originally released as ‘VOODOO BLOOD BATH’ in 1964, it remains the lesser known film in his horror output including ‘THE HORROR OF PARTY BEACH’ and ‘THE CURSE OF THE LIVING CORPSE- both 1964 and both available from Dark Sky Films but definitely deserves repeated viewings and a better reputation. It is also co-directed by future genre director William Grefe who would go on to directing ‘DEATH CURSE OF TARTU’-1967 and the over the top William Shatner opus ‘IMPULSE’- 1974. The film also has a James Bondish music score by Lon E. Norman and after sitting through the score of ‘SWAMP’, it sounds like Miklos Rosza. Both films are in their original aspect ratios and look incredible which means throw away all your old copies. For a good old fashioned Grindhouse experience, look no further and click the add to cart button.

The Swamp of the Ravens – bonus: Zombie
Date published: 04/29/2012
4 / 5 stars
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