Help support the Mego Museum
Help support the Mego Museum

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

RIP Mike Vraney (Something Weird Video Founder)

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • palitoy
    live. laugh. lisa needs braces
    • Jun 16, 2001
    • 59705

    RIP Mike Vraney (Something Weird Video Founder)

    I got this news today. I'd call Mike a friend, when I was a struggling (bootleg) video dealer in 1990 he was extremely kind to me on many occasions. He didn't have to be, I was nobody but that's who he was. I remember him telling me that he was going to start releasing vintage exploitation and try to make a legitimate releases. I always smiled when his logo would swirl up after a movie on TV, he did it. Although I haven't seen him a long time, I will truly miss Mike.

    We regret to tell you that Something Weird’s founder, Mike Vraney, passed away on January 2, 2014 after a long heroic battle with lung cancer. He was 56 years old, way too young to leave this planet. There was still so much Mike wanted to do in his life, so many films to be found, and adventures to be embarked upon.
    This sad news may come as a shock to most of you. Mike was a very private person and didn’t want anyone, except his closest friends, family and colleagues, to know about his illness. He went through aggressive chemotherapy and radiation treatments for over a year, but sadly the cancer spread and cruelly took him from us.
    Mike had a larger-than-life personality and a genuine enthusiasm for movies. Something Weird was his heart and soul, he was obsessive in his pursuit of tracking down the weirdest, wildest movies out there. And it wasn’t enough to find a few forgotten films, he was always in search of the movie motherload. (Making 370 two-hour volumes of Nudie Cuties loops is a good example of this. Who does that?! Mike Vraney!) Even as a child, Mike loved movies. During his teenage years, he worked at the Bel-Kirk Drive-In, and then later as a projectionist at the Green Parrot and Apple Theaters in Seattle. Then around 1990, Mike went in search of as many old, unusual, obscure, and lost low budget exploitation movies as he could, and preserved them for prosperity. Mike amassed thousands of these rare movies and had them transferred to video so that people could relive the good old days of going to the drive-in or grindhouse theater, in their very own home. We have him to thank for introducing fandom to the wonderful world of sexploitation sinema, rescuing it from the dark recesses of forgotten film vaults and defunct movie theatres.
    Some of you may know that prior to Something Weird, Mike was involved in the early Seattle punk rock music scene. He was a partner in Modern Productions, the group who started Seattle’s seminal rock venue, The Showbox, in 1979. Mike then went on to manage such well-known bands as The Dead Kennedys, TSOL, and Seattle’s own The Accused. Mike always seemed to be at the forefront of whatever was happening and cool.
    Mike’s second greatest passion in life was collecting old comics, vintage toys, movie memorabilia, and pop cultural ephemera. He enjoyed going to the swap meet and always had a magical ability for finding great stuff. But when he wasn’t working, collecting, or telling great stories, Mike spent quality time with his beloved family. Mike adored his wife and business partner, Lisa, and two (now young adult) children, Mark and Danielle. These three were the center of his universe, and his reason for getting up each and every morning.
    The folks at Something Weird fully intend to honor Mike’s incredible legacy. Mike may be gone, but his remarkable achievements will live on. One of the happiest days of Mike’s life was when legendary David F. Friedman and Dan Sonney called him “the forty-first thief,” which to him was the ultimate compliment and recognition for his work. We’d like to think that Mike’s now hanging out with his old pals Dave and Dan, reminiscing and talking shop with Dwain Esper, Kroger Babb, Barry Mahon, Joe Sarno, Doris Wishman, Bob Cresse, Dale Berry, Michael Findlay and all the other exploiteers and smut peddlers who’ve gone to the great grindhouse in the sky.
    We will miss Mike with all our hearts. Goodbye dear friend, husband, father, and fearless leader…
    -- Lisa Petrucci, Tim Lewis, Kendall Bechtel, Mark Vraney, Danielle Vraney of Something Weird Video
    Places to find PlaidStallions online: https://linktr.ee/Plaidstallions

    Buy Toy-Ventures Magazine here:
    http://www.plaidstallions.com/reboot/shop
  • cjefferys
    Duke of Gloat
    • Apr 23, 2006
    • 10180

    #2
    Oh man, that really sucks. And he was only 56? Way too young to go...

    Mike saved tons of really obscure films and loops from oblivion, stuff that most "legit" companies didn't care about at all, but he had the passion to hunt down and preserve what many folks would have considered just trash (wrong!). I've enjoyed watching tons of Something Weird releases over the years, from the early grey market VHS releases up to official Blu-ray releases of films like "Basket Case". And man, I spent hours pouring over the various Something Weird catalogs.

    RIP Mr. Vraney.

    Comment

    • raycastile
      Museum Super Collector
      • Sep 11, 2004
      • 170

      #3
      We can thank Vraney for introducing Coffin Joe to the U.S. by releasing his films on VHS in the early 1990s. I doubt Coffin Joe fandom would have grown as it has without him. CJ's popularity in the U.S. helped fuel his resurgence in Brazil, so who knows if CJ could have made Embodiment of Evil or done all the other things he's done in the last 20 years if it had not been for Mike Vraney.

      I think one or two of my Coffin Joe posters came out of Vraney's collection. I've got eight Something Weird Coffin Joe VHS tapes on the shelf next to me, and maybe a dozen Something Weird DVDs. Back when I first got into DVDs, the Something Weird releases were among my favorites. The Curious Dr. Humpp, Terror in the Midnight Sun, all the Herschell Gordon Lewis films. My favorite was Monsters Crash the Pajama Party. I still play that DVD every Halloween.

      Comment

      • Godzilla
        Permanent Member
        • Nov 3, 2002
        • 3009

        #4
        I can't even tell you how many SWV releases (both VHS and DVD) and I owned or still have in my collection. I never met the guy, but he was a huge inspiration to me.
        Mortui Vivos Docent
        The Dead Teach the Living

        Comment

        • palitoy
          live. laugh. lisa needs braces
          • Jun 16, 2001
          • 59705

          #5
          Originally posted by raycastile

          My favorite was Monsters Crash the Pajama Party. I still play that DVD every Halloween.
          Yeah that's a treasure in my DVD collection as well.

          I still remember when Coffin Joe appeared at Chiller for the first time. I also remember when the (sadly defunct) Scream channel started playing them on TV here.
          Places to find PlaidStallions online: https://linktr.ee/Plaidstallions

          Buy Toy-Ventures Magazine here:
          http://www.plaidstallions.com/reboot/shop

          Comment

          • 4NDR01D
            Alpha Centauri....OR DIE!
            • Jan 22, 2008
            • 3266

            #6
            When I worked at Sam the Record Man I can proudly say I turned a lot of people on to SWV.
            We used to get the SWV sampler and sell it at cost (the unfathomably cool low price of $5). It was a great promotional tool as you can't watch it without wanting to see at LEAST one of the movies that it shows. We sold a ton of SWV.

            Comment

            • vulcan2074
              Live Long and Prosper
              • Mar 23, 2008
              • 7817

              #7
              Originally posted by 4NDR01D
              When I worked at Sam the Record Man I can proudly say I turned a lot of people on to SWV.
              We used to get the SWV sampler and sell it at cost (the unfathomably cool low price of $5). It was a great promotional tool as you can't watch it without wanting to see at LEAST one of the movies that it shows. We sold a ton of SWV.
              I have a couple of those samplers and they are awesome. I got turned on to a lot of cool movies because of them. R.I.P. Mike Vraney.

              Comment

              Working...
              😀
              🥰
              🤢
              😎
              😡
              👍
              👎