
every movie ever made, in alphabetical order
(we’re in the K’s, with anti-alphabetical cheats)
Kid Galahad (1937)
The Kid Stays in the Picture (2002)
Kiddin’ Hollywood (1933)
Kidneys for Jesus (2003)
The Kids are Alright (1979)
The Kids in the Shoe (1935)
Diary of a Lost Girl (1929)
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Kid Galahad (1937)
This is one of those boxing movies where the fights are rigged, and I’ve seen so many rigged-boxing match movies I’m wondering whether boxing has always been rigged and still is.
Edward G Robinson plays a fight manager who keeps firing fighters because they think for themselves in the ring instead of boxing exactly as he coaches them. He wants a fighter who doesn’t think at all, and soon enough finds one.
Some of the boxing scenes are clearly choreographed and sped up, but most of it looks like real fights.
Bette Davis and Humphrey Bogart co-star, with Jane Bryan and Harry Carey, and Wayne Morris as the lovably brainless fighter. Ms Davis sings, though she’s obviously dubbed. Directed by Michael Curtiz, based on a serial from The Saturday Evening Post. I didn’t yawn much.
Verdict: YES.
♦ ♦ ♦
The Kid Stays in the Picture (2002)
Robert Evans was a women’s wear executive who he lucked into work as an actor, achieving minor success in such films as Man of a Thousand Faces and The Sun Also Rises. His talent was being handsome and schmoozing, and when his acting career ended, he became a hot-shot movie producer (Chinatown, Marathon Man, Black Sunday).
This is a documentary about Robert Evans, starring and narrated by Robert Evans, and probably underwritten by Robert Evans, who’s seriously impressed with the artistry and success of Robert Evans. Wanna spend an hour and a half with a cocky megalomaniac? Here’s the ticket.
Verdict: NO.
♦ ♦ ♦
Kiddin’ Hollywood (1933)
A short subject with nothing but child actors, and one of them is Shirley Temple. She’s 5, about a year before she became a star, but she’s the only thing watchable here. Gets her first screen kiss, too. It’s all pretty stupid, and the sound sucks, at least on the copy I watched.
Verdict: MAYBE.
♦ ♦ ♦
Kidneys for Jesus (2003)
Perpetually interesting Brit filmmaker Jon Ronson explores a cult called Jesus Christians. Lots of cults demand believers give up their worldly possessions; this cults demands you give a kidney.
Which leads to some interesting conundrums, like — religion for a worthy cause? Actually following the teachings of Christ? Wacky stuff like that.
I’m all for kidneys, but the Jesus Christians are wackadoodle, and I suggest you find kidneys elsewhere, or donate yours through other means.
My viewing experience was somewhat wounded by WOW TV’s large, ugly, very distracting logo, knitted into the corner of every frame. Fuck you, WOW TV.
Verdict: YES.
♦ ♦ ♦
The Kids are Alright (1979)
This is a great documentary about a great band, with plenty of great music. It’s The Who: singer and pretty boy Roger Daltrey, bassist John Entwistle, drummer and smartass Keith Moon, and guitarist/philosopher Pete Townshend, who also wails athletically on a tambourine. Many guitars and drums are destroyed. Ringo Starr and Keith Richards hang around.
The interview segments are revealing enough to get a sense of these four young men, and their rock’n’roll rocks, from “Baba O’Reilly” to “Ba-Ba-Ba Barbara Ann,” and “Happy Jack,” “I Can See for Miles,” “My Generation,” “Pinball Wizard,” “See Me, Feel Me,” “Tommy Can You Hear Me,” “Who Are You?,” “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” and wait, there’s more.
“It’s not people just saying, ‘Listen, you’ll disappoint your fans if you don’t go on, the show must go on, you must go on, otherwise all those people will be so upset’. It’s, ‘You’ve got to go on, man. Otherwise, all those kids, they’ll be finished. They’ll have nothing to live for.’ That’s rock and roll.”
Verdict: BIG YES.
♦ ♦ ♦
The Kids in the Shoe (1935)
Illustrated in the delightful style of early animation, and told in poetry and song, here’s seven minutes with a woman who lives in an XXXXXXXXXXL shoe, raising her many children between the laces and soles. It’s cute, and all the kids singing “Mama Don’t Allow No Music in Here” is early rock’n’roll. Even the shoe/house dances.
Verdict: YES.
♦ ♦ ♦
Kill, Baby… Kill! (1966)
a/k/a Operazione paura
The ghost of a young girl is frightening people into suicide, in an 18th century European town crowded with cobwebs, gothic architecture, and bad actors dubbed into worse English.
A gust of wind blasts a window open, rustling a few papers on the worst actor’s desk. He rushes to the open window, leaves it open, and stands looking out for half a minute, then has a brain-dead conversation with someone else, all while near-hurricane sound effects continue but the papers on the desk remain still.
Horror aficionados claim this is a classic, but they’re wrong and it’s quite stupid. Zero goose bumps or shivers for me, even when the ghost comes knocking, and a young woman’s response is to intentionally and fatally impale herself with rebar instead of asking the kid why she’s knocking.
The sets, cinematography, and color palate are excellent, and Mario Bava directed and co-wrote, so it’s conceivable that the original Italian-language version (Operazione paura) might be worth watching. The English-dubbed version is all I could find, though, and it’s not.
Verdict: NO.
♦ ♦ ♦
Diary of a Lost Girl (1929)
Thymian is barely past being a kid, wearing a white dress and flowers on her head for her confirmation, when she’s raped by the manager of her father’s pharmacy. Now she’s pregnant, and the traditionally cruel punishment is that she’ll be forced to marry her rapist, but Thymian ain’t having it.
When she refuses forced wedlock, she’s shunned by her father, her baby is taken away, and Thymian is sent to a home for wayward girls. It’s basically a prison, with a psycho jailer who looks like the bailiff from Night Court. The psycho’s shrew boss demands Thymian’s diary, but she ain’t getting it.
This is a ginormous soap opera, the quintessential silent melodrama, epic in scope and with very pre-code allusions to masturbation, lesbianism, suicide, prostitution, etc. Which is why it was banned for many years across several continents.
The story is dated, thank cripes, because we no longer demand pregnant girls marry their rapists, etc, but the film is terrific across almost every frame. Louise Brooks stars, and a century later she’s still radiant.
It’s a museum piece, but so’s Rembrandt.
Verdict: BIG YES.

4/10/2026
Logo illustration by Jeff Meyer.
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If you can’t find a movie I’ve reviewed, or if you have recommendations, please drop me a note.
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No talking once the lights dim, and only real butter on the popcorn, not that fake yellow stuff.



