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1-50 of 71
- The late Dr. Frankenstein's son returns to the ancestral estate in Germany, where he revives his father's infamous creation. Mayhem ensues.
- President Ronald Reagan, seeking to find a new spokesperson for the 1988 Presidential campaign, frees Regis Stanely from prison to resurrect Elvis Presley from the dead. With the help of Bela Lugosi, Stanely and the revived "King of Rock 'n' Roll" proceed on a rampage, resulting in a series of baseball-bat murders. Reagan must then stop them by using a thermonuclear device.
- An escaped homicidal maniac rummages through a garage, picking up an old garden scythe. Venturing out only in the evenings, the killer resembles the Grim Reaper as he goes on his murderous rampage.
- A veteran suffering from PTSD imagines that he is a combatant in the European theater during World War II. Although he is subdued and admitted to a mental health facility, he escapes and continues his rampage.
- A day in the life of the Frankenstein Monster, from his point of view.
- Former Jethro Tull guitarist Martin Barre leads his own band through two sets of Tull classics, covers and his own new songs at Martyrs' nightclub in Chicago during late April 2017.
- The Silver Kid, a reformed outlaw, and Red, a notorious desperado, battle corrupt law enforcement and tame a wild Western town by gunning down the maniacal Dover Gang Midget.
- "The Bad Sanctum" is a 15 minute movie hosted by Bruce F. Gantenbein as "Dr. Morbius". The movie has Enoch Rector, "The Man Who Was Bad," going through life encountering constant mediocrity and tastelessness in society.
- Director Scott Allen Nollen, now living in a rest home, recalls his comic adventures with Jeff "Roo" Nelson, a fumbling high school student and party animal. Features the film debut of Toby Huss.
- A faithful adaptation of the famous horror story by Edgar Allan Poe. Tormented by his boss, a man goes mad and murders him, only to be forever tormented by the beat of his victim's heart.
- The Frankenstein Monster demands that Dr. Frankenstein create a mate for him.
- A series of comic vignettes depicting various levels of "insane" behavior, improvised by Scott Allen Nollen and Ryan Baumbach.
- President Ronald Reagan orders Regis Stanely to travel back in time to quash the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution in Russia before it begins. Using Dr. Clayburgh's time machine, Stanely encounters a series of "time mishaps," including a visit to Depression-era Chicago, before he ultimately becomes the Omega Man, with the earth decimated by an enormous thermonuclear holocaust.
- This "unofficial" sequel to Edward D. Wood's notorious "Plan Nine from Outer Space" follows the frightening misadventures of postal carrier Regis Stanely, who joins forces with the intrepid Dr. Clayburgh to rid the planet of the space vampire, Bela.
- Musician Joseph Lundgren pioneers his first television telethon, gathering his buddies and celebrities from the Omaha, Nebraska, area to raise funds for his groundbreaking saxophone clinic.
- Loosely based on the novel by Bram Stoker, the film follows Count Dracula from Transylvania to London and back again. Shot in moody black and white.
- A series of comic vignettes depict various forms of bizarre behavior, resulting in an unwelcome fate for each protagonist.
- Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson must solve a cryptic puzzle that will lead them to the insidious Professor Moriarty, who plans to sell a new secret armament device to the enemies of the British Empire.
- A 1983 blues-based performance of the traditional English song "Greensleeves" by Scott Allen Nollen (synthesizer, bass guitar and drums) and Todd Jacobsen (electric guitar), now known as The Bramwell Fletcher Band.
- Escaped killer Edmond Bateman finds refuge with plastic surgeon Richard Vollin, who hideously disfigures him in order to blackmail him into carrying out several nefarious deeds. Several elements from the works of Edgar Allan Poe drive Vollin's madness.
- Van Helsing resurrects Count Dracula, only to "stake" him again.
- An extraterrestrial virus breaches the Earth's atmosphere, creating a giant bug-eyed monster which a team of physicists must destroy at any cost.
- A trip to tropical South Seas tea gardens, shot on location at Ciwidey, West Java, Indonesia, in March 2018.
- Historian, writer and filmmaker Scott Allen Nollen performs original music to a poem by Robert Louis Stevenson.
- Eight-year-old Joseph Lundgren, Jr., takes up where his late father left off, gathering local celebrities to raise money for the Lundgren saxophone school.
- Talk show host Ludwig Stossel headlines an all-family holiday special.
- A village on Java is terrorized by "The Killer Dwarf of Sumatra." Indo Samurai leader Lambei and young Katsolihin recruit three more Samurai (two Indonesian and one Japanese) to defeat him.
- A faithful adaptation of the Edgar Allan Poe story about subjectivity, in which a man believes he sees a hideous monster approaching his home. He actually is viewing a sphinx moth outside his window.
- The improvisational avant-garde jazz-rock band Baseball Bat performs one final time, to celebrate their 31st Anniversary.
- Images of Bramwell Fletcher Band members Todd Jacobsen and Scott Allen Nollen, Jethro Tull band member Ian Anderson, and English actor Bramwell Fletcher (known for his role in the classic horror film "The Mummy" (1932]) illustrate the instrumental tune, "Kharis Barred from His Lifesong" (the title containing references to Jethro Tull guitarist Martin Barre and Rush guitarist Alex Lifeson).
- In the post-apocalyptic world, the few survivors become disciples of Regis Stanely, who falls under the evil control of the Reverend Bela. After chaos ensues, Bela is bludgeoned to death by the baseball bat-wielding disciples and Stanely is crucified.
- Two eccentric teenage brothers living on an Iowa farm fuse lethargy and mayhem into a fine art.
- Inspired by the work of Alfred Hitchcock, this third "sequel" to Edward D. Wood's "Plan Nine from Outer Space" continues to follow the misadventures of Regis Stanely, Dr. Clayburgh and Bela, the space vampire.
- David "Perckle" Mickels and his faithful sidekick, Todd Snyder, smoke marijuana from a tea pot, burglarize a service station, invade a supermarket, and play several embarrassing games at the local bowling alley.
- A National Archives and Records Administration documentary featuring the staff of the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library-Museum, including Christine Jacobs Mouw, Jennifer Pedersen, Cindy Worrell and Scott Allen Nollen.
- Scott Allen Nollen hosts a history of the musical career of singer-songwriter-guitarist Todd Jacobsen, up to 1990. Music videos, including the songs "Friday Night," "Ode to Leroy Engel," "Cardboard Box" and "Ward Bond," are combined with live performances of "Bingo Hall Massacre," "Down in Alabama" and an excerpt from the rock opera "A Boy Has Never Wept, Nor Dashed a Thousand Kim."
- Yuyun Yuningsih Nollen's garden, in preparation for the adventure-fantasy film tribute to Akira Kurosawa, "Five Indo Samurai," directed by Scott Allen Nollen for What-Is-Mean Productions in Bandung, West Java, Indonesia.
- A career-spanning journey with celebrated film historian and author, Scott Allen Nollen.
- Sherlock Holmes, his son, Steel "Rod" Holmes, and Dr. John H. Watson track down a notorious serial killer.
- Musicians Scott Allen Nollen and Todd Jacobsen perform a song from the album BEDLAM: "Punishment Farm" (1995).
- Set to Scott Allen Nollen's Scottish suite "The Forty-Five," about the 1745 Jacobite rebellion, this short features photographs taken while writing the book ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON: LIFE, LITERATURE AND THE SILVER SCREEN..
- Iowa musicians Scott Nollen and Todd Jacobsen perform original and traditional music from their 21-year collaborations. Songs include "Down in Alabama," "Cold Shoulder," "Back from the Past" and "Bonny Boys of Bedlam." The concert video premiered at the Freethought Artfest in Los Angeles on October 19, 1996.
- Sherlock Holmes, his son, Steel Rod Holmes, and Dr. John H. Watson investigate the disappearance of an antique divan, believed to be part of a drug-smuggling ring led by the nefarious "Barbecue," a man who had burned his parents alive during childhood. Sex, drugs and murder all play a part in this adventure, which is highlighted by the over-the-top performance of Todd Jacobsen as the insanely eccentric Inspector Grayson.
- Historian, writer, filmmaker and musician Scott Allen Nollen and his wife, Yuyun Yuningsih Nollen, in Indonesia, to a tune from the album "Indonesian Odyssey."
- Telethon host Joseph Lundgren gathers local celebrities to raise money for his groundbreaking saxophone school. When his goal is not reached, he commits suicide.
- Based on a true story, this "docu-comedy" presents an impressionist account of the first two decades in the lives of two eccentric, rural Iowa brothers, John and Jerry Jensen.
- The Frankenstein Monster encounters a blind hermit, who welcomes him into his home, where a series of comic incidents occur. The festivities end when a villager arrives to drag the hermit off to the local jail. The Monster makes himself at home.
- Telethon host Joseph Lundgren, Jr., returns to the screen, gathering local celebrities, this time to raise money for a select group of children without parents. Guests include Marlon Brando and M. Vanausdale, who is murdered on-screen during the show.
- On March 20, 1986, when the news of James Cagney's death reached historian and author Scott Allen Nollen, he recorded an elegy for the actor in just 30 minutes.
- Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson hunt down and eliminate a serial killer terrorizing London.