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The following is a list of RiffTrax, downloadable audio commentaries featuring comedian Michael J. Nelson and others ridiculing (or riffing on) films in the style of Mystery Science Theater 3000, a TV show of which Nelson was the head writer and later the host. [1]
A RiffTrax Player is also offered as a free download for Windows computers. [49] The movies chosen for RiffTrax are based on two criteria: whether the movie lends itself towards a funny riffing, and whether the film is widely available on DVD. [45] [47] These criteria have resulted in a wide variety of genre and era of movies chosen to be riffed.
[2] Mill Creek Entertainment included R.O.T.O.R. in their "Sci-Fi Invasion 50 Movie" DVD boxed set in 2011. [3] In October 2014, RiffTrax released R.O.T.O.R. as a video-on-demand title with humorous commentary. [4] In February 2016, the film was released on Blu-ray by Shout! Factory in a double feature with Millennium. [5]
To Catch a Yeti is a 1995 British-Canadian made-for-TV movie, directed by Bob Keen and featuring Meat Loaf and Rick Howland. The film was shot over 13 days in Ontario, Canada in 1993, and first broadcast two years later.
Incognito Cinema Warriors XP (abbreviated ICWXP) is a post-apocalyptic zombie comedy DVD and web series created by Rikk Wolf and produced by Agonywolf Media.The show premiered on Myspace and was meant to be a one-time homage to Mystery Science Theater 3000, but after Wolf was contacted by the producers of RiffTrax to participate in the launch of their new site iRiffs, he decided to produce ...
A 3 movie marathon performed in Glenside, PA at the Keswick Theatre. Performed on New Year's Eve, the first two movies were performed before midnight, and the third after midnight. Dave (Gruber) Allen opened. January 30, 2010: Danger on Tiki Island: San Francisco CA One public show at the Castro Theatre in San Francisco, CA. Warm-up material ...
The Guy from Harlem was the subject of a 2012 episode of RiffTrax.They described the film thus: "It trades most of the sleaze, grime, and, well, exploitation that you expect from the genre for dopiness, sexual situations that fail to lead to actual sex, a clumsy confused sweetness, and more botched lines per minute than anything we've ever seen."
Howard Thompson of The New York Times wrote, "If ever there was a tired, synthetic, plodding sample of movie junk, it's this 'epic' about two prehistoric animals hauled from an underwater deep-freeze by some island engineers." [3] The film was adapted into a comic book of the same name. [7] It was parodied by RiffTrax on August 28, 2014. [8] [9]