tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8707040.post3673191056677781762..comments2024-02-25T12:47:03.941-06:00Comments on Johnny LaRue's Crane Shot: The KeepMarty McKeehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02084642122976337263noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8707040.post-24950086557841948522021-03-27T15:27:44.914-05:002021-03-27T15:27:44.914-05:00I like this movie. I saw the first five minutes of...I like this movie. I saw the first five minutes of it on TV when I was a child and was fascinated but then my father changed the channel and I never got to see the rest of it. I looked for it for years and years, but looking for “that movie where the Germans are in the haunted castle and I think it had ‘Keep’ in the title” only ever led me to <i>Castle Keep</i> (1968), which Grant mentioned above. Finally I found it on VHS at a thrift store about ten years ago and it was very satisfying. It had aged very well. The soundtrack is definitely one of the best aspects. How can you not be immediately intrigued by the sight of World War II tanks rumbling through a village while new wave music plays?Felicity Walkerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07983958177951363405noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8707040.post-88343232640197950642017-12-04T07:37:31.874-06:002017-12-04T07:37:31.874-06:00I'm surprised "Wehrmacht soldiers meet th...I'm surprised "Wehrmacht soldiers meet the Golem" hasn't become an entire category of war-oriented horror story. There must be others, but the only one I can name is a horror comics story in an early issue of "Weird War."<br /><br />When it comes to movies about WWII soldiers (of either side) ending up in a castle, I'm sure nothing beats CASTLE KEEP from 1968.Granthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09603892208775996594noreply@blogger.com