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Seconds (1966)

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‘Seconds is not for weak sisters. It may not even be for strong stomachs!’

Seconds is a 1966 American science fiction drama film directed by John Frankenheimer (Prophecy; The Manchurian Candidate) and starring Rock Hudson (Embryo). The screenplay by Lewis John Carlino (Haunted Summer) was based on ‘Seconds, a novel’ by David Ely.

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The black and white cinematography by James Wong Howe (Bell, Book and Candle; Mark of the Vampire) was nominated for an Academy Award. The distinctive helvetica opening titles were designed by Saul Bass (director of Phase IV; title design for Hitchcock’s Psycho). The score was by Jerry Goldsmith (Matinee; Link).

Although poorly received at the time and a box office failure, Seconds has gone on to become a cult classic. In 2015, the United States Library of Congress selected the film for preservation in the National Film Registry, finding it “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.”

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  • Gorgeous restoration from a 4K transfer, in 1080p HD on the Blu-ray
  • Two feature-length audio commentaries: one by director John Frankenheimer, and one by film scholar Adrian Martin
  • New video interview with novelist and critic Kim Newman
  • Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hearing-impaired
  • Original theatrical trailer
  • Booklet featuring new essays by critics David Cairns and Mike Sutton

Plot [contains spoilers]:

Arthur Hamilton (John Randolph) is a middle-aged man whose life has lost purpose. He’s achieved success, but finds it unfulfilling. His love for his wife has dwindled and he seldom sees his only child. Through a friend, a man he thought was dead, Hamilton is approached by a secret organization, known simply as the “Company” which offers him a new life.

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Upon arriving for a meeting , Hamilton arrives at a meat packing plant. He is given workman overalls and hat, then exits the facility out a different door where he is next seated inside the back of a truck which proceeds to another building. He disappears into a large complex filled with dark, empty hallways where he awaits his transformation. The Company gives Hamilton the body of a young man (Rock Hudson) through plastic surgery and a new identity. He later discovers this identity has been taken from someone who recently passed on.

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He is resettled into a community filled with people like him who are “reborns”. Eventually, Hamilton decides the new life isn’t what he wants. He contacts the Company, letting them know he wants a different identity and they seem to agree. It turns out to be a lie and Hamilton learns as he is wheeled to the operating room, before being sedated, that he is to be killed…

Reviews:

” …the film’s uptight view of the hang-loose West Coast feels like a slightly forced argument, until Frankenheimer regroups and the jaws of the narrative shut tight on one of the most chilling endings in all American cinema.” Trevor Johnston, Time Out London

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“To watch Seconds is to enter a special kind of Hell that leaves no one unscathed. It indicts the money-grubbing culture of businessmen and the  burgeoning hippie aesthetic as equally hollow with a simple, sinister premise.” Eric Melin, Scene Stealers

“Within a few years, the capitalist and consumerist critique that Seconds put to such thrilling use would be more commonplace in a film industry desperate for counter-cultural cachet. But unlike many of those rebel statements against the mainstream, Frankenheimer’s film understood that there were no easy answers to Arthur’s kind of despair.” Chris Barsanti, Pop Matters

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“Director John Frankenheimer and Veteran Photographer James Wong Howe manage to give the most improbable doings a look of credible horror. Once Rock appears, though, the spell is shattered, and through no fault of his own … Seconds has moments, and that’s too bad, in a way. But for its soft and flabby midsection, it might have been one of the trimmest shockers of the year.” Time, October 14, 1966

“This has some intriguing aspects on the yearning for youth and a chance to live life over again by many men. But this Faustian theme is barely touched on and the hero’s tie with the past is also somewhat arbitrary. Film [from the novel by David Ely] does not quite come off as a thriller, sci-fi adjunct or philosophical fable.” Variety, December 31, 1965

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  • New 4K digital film restoration, with uncompressed monaural soundtrack
  • Audio commentary featuring director John Frankenheimer
  • Actor Alec Baldwin on Frankenheimer and Seconds
  • New program on the making of Seconds
  • Interview with Frankenheimer from 1971
  • New visual essay by film scholars R. Barton Palmer and Murray Pomerance
  • An essay by critic David Sterritt

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Cast and characters:

  • Rock Hudson – Antiochus “Tony” Wilson
  • Salome Jens – Nora Marcus
  • John Randolph – Arthur Hamilton
  • Will Geer – Old Man
  • Jeff Corey – Mr. Ruby
  • Richard Anderson – Dr. Innes
  • Murray Hamilton – Charlie Evans (also in Jaws; Jaws 2 and The Boston Strangler)
  • Karl Swenson – Dr. Morris
  • Khigh Dhiegh – Davalo
  • Frances Reid – Emily Hamilton
  • Wesley Addy – John
  • John Lawrence – Texan
  • Elisabeth Fraser – Plump Blonde
  • Dodie Heath – Sue Bushman (as Dody Heath)
  • Robert Brubaker – Mayberry
  • Barbara Werle – Secretary
  • Tina Scala – Young Girl stomping on the grapes in the party scene

Wikipedia | IMDb



Berserk (1967)

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‘The motion picture that pits steel weapons against steel nerves!!!’

Berserk is a 1967 British horror thriller film starring Joan Crawford (Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?; Strait-Jacket) and Judy Geeson (Inseminoid; Goodbye Gemini) in a macabre mother-daughter tale about a circus plagued with murders.

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The screenplay was written by Herman Cohen and Aben Kandel, and the film directed by Jim O’Connolly (Tower of Evil; The Valley of Gwangi; The Night Caller – script). The film marks Crawford’s second-to-last big-screen appearance before Trog (1970). Columbia Pictures promoted the film as Berserk! on a double-bill with Torture Garden and it also later released as Circus of Blood.

In North America, the film grossed more than $1,100,000 and ranked #85 on Variety’s list of top money makers of 1968. Box office receipts overseas nearly doubled that amount, coming in at $2,095,000. This made Berserk the most successful film Herman Cohen ever produced.

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Plot (contains spoilers):

Monica Rivers (Joan Crawford) and Dorando (Michael Gough) own a travelling English circus. Monica acts as the ringmistress, and Dorando is the business manager.

When tightrope walker Gaspar the Great falls to his death, it appears that his tightrope might have been purposely weakened. Monica’s unemotional reaction to the tragedy alarms Dorando. When she suggests it will be good for business, he asks her to buy him out, which she refuses to do.

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Monica hires a new high-wire walker, Frank Hawkins (Ty Hardin). Not only is he handsome, he is daring, doing his act over a carpet of sharp bayonets. Monica is impressed, especially by his physical appearance. Shortly after an argument, Dorando is found gruesomely murdered.

Suspicion of Monica’s guilt grows. Frank in particular suspects her, having seen her leaving Dorando’s trailer before the body was discovered. He confronts Monica, demanding a share in the circus for his silence.

Monica’s daughter, Angela (Judy Geeson), having been expelled from school, shows up at the circus. Not knowing what to do with her unruly daughter, Monica pairs her with Gustavo the knife thrower (Peter Burton). Another member of the circus company, Matilda (Diana Dors), attempts to seduce Frank, which Monica discovers.

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During Matilda’s act, a magician’s trick involving the illusion of being sawn in half, there is a malfunction in the equipment and she is killed. And during his next high-wire performance, Frank falls onto the bayonets and is killed.

It was not an accident. Angela was seen throwing a knife into him before he fell. She confesses having hated her mother for years as a result of being ignored, now “removing” those who take up her mother’s time. She then unsuccessfully tries to kill her mother. As Angela attempts to escape, she is electrocuted by an exposed wire during a rainstorm. Monica sobs inconsolably over her daughter’s body.

Reviews:

Berserk! isn’t a ‘must see’ classic from horror history, but there’s enough here to please fans of Joan Crawford horror (Strait-Jacket, Whatever Happened To Baby Jane?), Michael Gough (Konga, Batman Returns), and sixties Brit horror. It’s interesting to see a ‘creative serial kill’ horror with so little blood in it, considering what would happen a few years later…” Black Hole Reviews

Berserk achieves its meager reputation by being a brightly-colored Joan Crawford film, a Hammer horror knockoff with too little substance to balance the moments of high camp. The camp, when it happens, is well worth the watch, and a reasonably high body count make the film worthwhile, especially for those who enjoy 1960s cheesy British horror.” She Blogged By Night

“The biggest issue with Berserk seems to be that it doesn’t know what kind of film it is. Yes, it’s certainly a thriller but the moodiness and grim deaths interspersed by dancing elephants, prancing poodles and an awkward, bizarre song make it tonally inconsistent.” Andi B. Goode, The Sofa Cinephile

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“Much of the film in between is padded with real-life circus footage. Unless one wants to see circus performances back from the era when animal acts were not protested by the animal rights people, these prove fairly uninteresting to watch. Certainly, the film does have the benefit of its lurid appeal – there is Joan Crawford dominating the show, along with 1950s British sexpot Diana Dors doing her stuff and turning every line into a bitchy taunt (even engaged in a catfight at one point).” Richard Scheib, Moria

“The murders are, inevitably, the most fun aspect of the film, though Crawford’s fan base gets its money’s worth by way of a game performance confirming her late entry into genre roles…” Steven West, The Shrieking Sixties: British Horror Films 1960 – 1969

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” …despite its Grand Guignol trappings, it’s a glorified whodunnit, ably directed by Jim O’Connolly…” John Stanley, Creature Features

“But the capable Mr. O’Connolly is no Hitchcock. And what drains the picture of merit and real persuasiveness is the round-up of bloodless characterizations, a petty and conniving gang of meanies. Even a last-minute, mother-love injection doesn’t thaw Miss Crawford’s portrayal of a ruthless iceberg who, one feels, gets what she deserves.” Howard Thompson, The New York Times, January 11, 1968

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Interviews:

Herman Cohen talks to Tom Weaver

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Herman Cohen (centre) with stars of Berserk

Cast and characters:

  • Joan Crawford as Monica Rivers
  • Ty Hardin as Frank Hawkins
  • Diana Dors as Matilda (Craze; Theatre of Blood; Nothing But the Night)
  • Michael Gough as Albert Dorando (Satan’s Slave; Horror Hospital; Konga)
  • Judy Geeson as Angela Rivers
  • Robert Hardy as Detective Supt. Brooks (Dark Places; Psychomania; Demons of the Mind)
  • Geoffrey Keen as Commissioner Dalby (Taste the Blood of Dracula)
  • Sydney Tafler as Harrison Liston
  • George Claydon as Bruno Fontana
  • Philip Madoc as Lazlo (Spine Chillers; Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde; Daleks’ Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.)
  • Ambrosine Phillpotts as Miss Burrows
  • Thomas Cimarro as Gaspar
  • Peter Burton as Gustavo
  • Golda Casimir as Bearded Lady
  • Ted Lune as Skeleton Man
  • Milton Reid as Strong Man
  • Marianne Stone as Wanda
  • Miki Iveria as Gypsy Fortune-Teller
  • Howard Goorney as Emil
  • Reginald Marsh as Sergeant Hutchins
  • Bryan Pringle as Constable Bradford

Wikipedia | IMDb | Image thanks: Black Hole Reviews | She Blogged By Night


Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1965)

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‘The world’s most evil vampire lives again!’

Dracula: Prince of Darkness is a 1965 British supernatural horror film directed by Terence Fisher from a screenplay by Jimmy Sangster. The film was photographed in Techniscope by Michael Reed, designed by Bernard Robinson and scored by James Bernard. It stars Christopher Lee, Andrew Keir, Francis Matthews, and Barbara Shelley.

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Dracula does not speak in the film, save for a few hisses. According to Christopher Lee: “I didn’t speak in that picture. The reason was very simple. I read the script and saw the dialogue! I said to Hammer, if you think I’m going to say any of these lines, you’re very much mistaken.”

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Screenwriter Jimmy Sangster disputed that account in his memoir Inside Hammer, writing that “Vampires don’t chat. So I didn’t write him any dialogue. Christopher Lee has claimed that he refused to speak the lines he was given … So you can take your pick as to why Christopher Lee didn’t have any dialogue in the picture. Or you can take my word for it. I didn’t write any.”

The film was made back-to-back with Rasputin – the Mad Monk, using many of the same sets and cast, including Lee, Shelley, Matthews and Farmer.

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Opening plot:

A prologue replays the final scenes from Dracula, in which Dr. Van Helsing (Peter Cushing) destroys Dracula (Christopher Lee) by driving him into the sunlight.

The main story begins as Father Sandor (Andrew Kier) prevents local authorities from disposing of a woman’s corpse as if it were a vampire. Sandor chastises the presiding priest for perpetuating the fear of vampirism, and reminds him that Dracula was destroyed 10 years previously. The Father visits an inn and warns four English tourists – the Kents – not to visit Karlsbad; they ignore his advice.

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As night approaches, the Kents find themselves abandoned by their fear-stricken coach driver, in view of a castle. A driverless carriage takes them to the castle, where they find a dining table set for four people. A servant named Klove explains that his master, the late Count Dracula, ordered that the castle should always be ready to welcome strangers. After dinner the Kents settle in their rooms.

Later that night, Alan investigates a noise and follows Klove to the crypt, where Klove ritualistically kills him and mixes his blood with Dracula’s ashes, reviving the Count…

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Reviews:

“The gruesome sequence where the infamous bloodsucker is resurrected in a perverse religious ritual still retains its shock value, with scream queen Barbara Shelley’s demise just as memorable. Andrew Keir is no real substitute for Peter Cushing … but in every other respect this is a textbook example of top-grade ghoulish horror from Hammer’s golden era.” Alan Jones, Radio Times

“Lee, sans dialogue plays the part with demonic fury but it is Barbara Shelley who steals the show. As Helen, she is the very picture of prim, Victorian repression, but after she is bitten by Dracula, she turns into one of filmdom’s most rapacious female vampires. Her death scene is a highpoint of Hammer horror.” Gary A. Smith, Uneasy Dreams: The Golden Age of British Horror Films

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“The film’s only weak point is the dispatch of Dracula himself which seems a bit unimaginative when compared to Meinster’s inventive dispatch in Brides of Dracula. However this is a mere blip in an otherwise brilliant film in the Dracula series and is without doubt the strongest and most dramatic entry. Absolute quintessential Hammer.” Adam Scovell, The Spooky Isles

“The build up is tense and kinetic, let down a bit by obviously limited budgetary restraints. Dracula, Prince of Darkness is the last Dracula Hammer with genuine style via Fisher’s red-blooded type of poetic horror. The sequels became increasingly clumsy, repetitive and pale in comparison…” Alfred Eaker’s The Blue Mahler

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” …Dracula is deprived not only of dialogue but also of any worthwhile motivation, not even the paltry revenge motif which was to crop up in subsequent sequels.” Jonathan Rigby, English Gothic: A Century of Horror Cinema

” …Fisher opted for an unsettling combination of graphically gruesome violence and lusciously poetic atmosphere, which gives the movie a sense of stylish formalism and invites an appreciation of the way the story is told, rather than taking the more direct, ‘innocent’ approach of Dracula.” The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Horror

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“The best moments are the reconstitution and the imaginative ending. A grandly melodramatic score dates the film and the pace is slow by current standards, but it still stands up well to another viewing. The small cast is excellent. The women are classy and about as sexy as the 1965 screen would allow.” Mike Mayo, The Horror Show Guide

” …the main snag is that the thrills do not arise sufficiently smooth out of atmosphere. After a slowish start some climate of eeriness is evoked but more shadows, suspense and suggestion would have helped. Christopher Lee, an old hand at the horror business, makes a latish appearance but dominates the film enough without dialog.” Variety, December 31, 1965

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Cast and characters:

  • Christopher Lee as Count Dracula
  • Barbara Shelley as Helen Kent
  • Andrew Keir as Father Sandor
  • Francis Matthews as Charles Kent
  • Suzan Farmer as Diana Kent
  • Charles Tingwell as Alan Kent
  • Thorley Walters as Ludwig
  • Philip Latham as Klove
  • Walter Brown as Brother Mark
  • Jack Lambert as Brother Peter
  • George Woodbridge as Landlord
  • Philip Ray as Priest
  • Joyce Hemson as Mother
  • John Maxim as Coach Driver
  • Peter Cushing as Dr. Van Helsing [archive footage only]

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The film was written into a novel by John Burke as part of his 1967 book The Second Hammer Horror Film Omnibus.

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Filming locations:

Black Park, Buckinghamshire, England
Bray Studios, Bray, Berkshire, England

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Wikipedia | IMDb | Image thanks: Wrong Side of the Art!


Dwarfs in Horror Cinema – article by Daz Lawrence

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For some, all the world’s a stage, for others, a battlefield. Circumstances sometimes mean that these two options are thrust upon a person, both socially and as a career. It’s one thing to possess what would be deemed ‘unconventional looks’ as an actor – these would perhaps be accentuated or swathed in make-up for a role, the over-riding tone being that they are instantly recognisable and often fit that most go-to pigeonhole-means-nothing phrase – ‘character actor’. For some actors, there is no disguise, no hiding place and often no sympathy.

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The use of men, women and children affected by dwarfism and other related conditions is, of course, nothing new – from freak shows, circuses and the entertainment of royalty there is a rich, if unforgiving history of short entertainers. With the exception of the Ancient Egyptians who gave dwarfs exalted status and the most desirable occupations, more often they have found themselves slaves to be used for sex, salacious entertainment and mockery in ancient Roman, Chinese, African and European culture.

A modicum of respect and deference was given to some dwarfs in the European courts of the 15th to 19th centuries but more often this gave way to treating dwarfs more like pets than members of their immediate social circle. Eye-popping examples include the demeaning-as-you-might-expect ‘dwarf pits’ of the Medicis, to the playthings of the courts of France and Russia, where numbers were often assembled into harems.

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By the 19th and well into the 20th century, it was considered almost de rigueur for dwarfs to consider the travelling fair or freak show as not only gainful employment but also a way of life. Regardless of intellect or talent, it has often proved impossible for people to look beyond the stature and physique, though the exploits of P.T. Barnum did at least offer the opportunity to showcase the skills of many performers whose look differed from the norm, in return for safe surroundings and an often not inconsiderable income.

Many of the dwarf actors in this article come from a circus background, from Harry Earles to Luis de Jesus, their performances on-screen often reflecting the wide-eyed acts they honed in front of live audiences desperate for salacious and thrilling spectacle. It is notable that in many of the films mentioned – Freaks, She-Freak, Circus of Fear and others – the circus environment and the tapestry of strange characters therein, hold the key to the unfolding double-crossing and hidden secrets of the narrative.

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Upon establishing Barnum’s American Museum in 1841, what would nowadays be recognised as a ‘freak show’ was born. Though not the first to exhibit people with physical deformities as entertainment, Barnum’s outlandish showmanship and feverish marketing techniques brought the spectacle out of the royal palaces and sordid backstreets an uncomfortably into the mainstream. Though distasteful on many levels, they were enormously successful and gave performers denied an opportunity to demonstrate their skills in other forms of employment, a meaningful career.

One of Barnum’s most celebrated stars came early in his career, in 1842, the Connecticut-born Charles Stratton Sherwood, he would become better known through his stage name, General Tom Thumb. Hitting the stage when aged only four-years-old (though advertised as being eleven), Stratton never grew beyond 3’35” (though spent most of his career nearer the 2’5” mark) and his performance pitched his size against his age in adulthood, smoking a pipe, joke-telling and impersonating the likes of Napoleon, whilst masquerading as an infant. It is said that Stratton was always grateful for the life Barnum had afforded him, despite the apparent exploitation a modern audience may perceive.

Incidentally, it is said that Barnum first suggested the use of the word ‘midget’ to differentiate between small but proportioned individuals and ‘dwarfs’, those with a condition which affects the proportions. In either case, modern reference generally defines either as being at or below the height of 4’10”.

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By the time of Barnum’s death in 1910, the appeal of freak shows was still at its height – touring shows appeared across America and Europe, with previously hidden natural wonders now eagerly proffered for the potentially sizeable returns for exhibition. As well as mobile presentations, there were also static displays, of particular note Coney Island in New York and Ripley’s Believe It Or Not.

Though it would take until towards the end of the century for attitudes to change (at least to some extent – it still took some time to largely banish phrases such as ‘the handicapped’), there remains a fascination for many, with films such as David Lynch’s The Elephant Man (1980) shining a different light on the lives of those presented as freaks. However, though travelling fairs died out, there became a new medium for to both satiate the thirst for the exotic and to give careers to those regularly shunned.

Harry and Daisy Earles

Harry was born Kurt Fritz Schneider in 1902 in Germany, one of seven children, four of whom were small in stature, including his sister Daisy (born Hilda, in 1907). In 1915, both Harry and Daisy relocated to America where they soon found employment in both the travelling circus and vaudeville around the New York area. Just after the turn of the decade, their similarly-sized siblings, Gracie (born Frieda) and Tiny (Ellie), joined them and they named themselves ‘The Doll Family’ an entertainment troupe specialising in song and dance, with the extra string to their bow of being skilful horse-riders.

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Appearing for both the Ringling and Barnum circuses, they had initially assumed the surname Earles after the American entrepreneur who enabled their passage to America. It was Harry and Daisy whose performances really stood out, particularly Harry’s ability to hold the audience in his hand and Daisy’s glamourous looks.

It isn’t clear as to when or how they found themselves in Hollywood but they soon came to the attention of the director, Tod Browning, who at this time had already worked with the legendary Lon Chaney on the highly effective 1919 film, The Wicked Darling. In 1925, Browning was ready to adapt a short crime story, The Unholy Three, into a film, and began a search for the casting of one of the most critical roles – a miniature adult thief disguised as a baby to avoid detection.

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Once Harry came to Browning’s attention, he was soon cast and made his appearance in the dark and often alarming The Unholy Three in 1925, alongside a cross-dressing Lon Chaney and Victor McLaglen. The film was the first of a remarkable six occasions that Earle would appear as an adult masquerading as an adult – typecasting of a most unusual kind but still often bypassing the roles he really wanted to avoid – comedies which amounted to little more than ridicule.

The advent of sound led to a remake in 1930, again featuring Chaney and Earles. It is a much undervalued film, abruptly startling and unforgiving. Earles is excellent as the squinting, debauched miniature menace, a perfect foil for Chaney in his only speaking role. Despite his fulsome German accent, Harry is undubbed throughout.

Without question, it is Earle’s portrayal of Hans in Tod Browning’s Freaks (1932) that lingers longest in the memory. Playing the pivotal role of a soon-to-be wealthy sideshow performer, he is tempted to stray from his similarly-sized fiancée (played by Daisy Earles) by the conventionally-sized Cleo, a money-hungry trapeze artist in cahoots with her strongman boyfriend, Hercules, to woo, then bump off her target. An astonishingly expressive performance from Harry is both believable, and by turn, doused in pathos and overflowing with over-wrought indignation and largess.  When Cleo reels Hans yet further into her spiteful web by getting him drunk, the camera is unforgiving, yet sympathetic, showing the character as vulnerable, despite his regular bravado. What really comes across from the performance is Earle’s extraordinary confidence as an actor – in a film packed with real sideshow performers, many amateur actors at best, he more than holds his own, an essential ingredient to adding a veil of reality to the film, immediately elevating the film above what could so easily have been cringe-worthy and farcical.

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Along with his three siblings, Harry appeared, perhaps inevitably, in The Wizard of Oz (1939), as part of the ensemble of Munchkins, indeed he is instantly recognisable. Though this was his last known screen role, Harry continued to perform on stage in travelling shows for many years to come, certainly until he was well into his 50’s, after which he retired with his three siblings in Florida, in a specially adapted house, dying in 1985 at the age of eighty-three.

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Daisy had a much briefer career on-screen – a brief, uncredited role alongside Harry in the 1928 circus-set drama, Three-Ring Marriage, was her only appearance before taking the role of Frieda in Freaks. Both Harry and Daisy were amongst the first of the circus-folk to be cast, through virtue of already having been acquainted with director, Tod Browning. Partly due to their prowess, though more likely to pertain to their less alarming appearance, both Daisy and Harry were permitted to dine with the other studio staff and actors at MGM’s canteen.  It would be reasonable to say that Daisy’s role was the lesser of the two Earle’s roles – Daisy’s doe-eyed concern at her beloved’s taunting at the hands of Cleo borders on the saccharine, though her predicament is made all the more sympathetic by Harry’s oddly brusque and uncaring attitude to her pleas for caution. As was the unspoken requirement, Daisy also appeared in The Wizard of Oz, passing away at the family home in 1980.

Angelo Rossitto

Often known as Little Ang or simply, Moe, Angelo Rossitto was born in Nebraska in 1908 with dwarfism, restricting his height to only 2’11”. Angelo’s prolific and varied acting career can be seen as a benchmark of sorts for actors of restricted height, his seventy film career, as well as roles on television being only one aspect of his remarkable life. Along with the other noted dwarf actor, Billy Barty, he formed The Little People of America, a non-profit organisation still offering support and information to people of short stature and their families today.

From his earliest acting days, Rossitto was happy with roles of any magnitude, from pivotal speaking parts to uncredited appearances in heavy disguise. By his own admission, he was a “ham and eggs actor”, never expecting stardom and supplementing his income for large parts of his life by selling newspapers from a stand on Hollywood and Vine, becoming one of Hollywood’s most recognisable faces somewhat via the backdoor.

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Rossitto’s first film role was in The Beloved Rogue in 1927, alongside the meaty acting chops of John Barrymore and Conrad Veidt. His name now in casting director’s contacts books, he starred as everything from pygmies to Vikings to monsters, usually in blink and you miss him roles , though had a slightly more extended appearance in Benjamin Christensen’s Seven Footprints to Satan as a mysterious goateed house guest, up until the Year Zero for actors of unusual appearance, 1932’s Freaks. With a good deal of screen time and an unusual weighty presence, Angelo achieved a level of pop culture fame which would resonate for decades to come, leading the chant of “one of us”, at the sideshow performers’ wedding feast.

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In no sense did Angelo’s appearance in Freaks lead to his acting star rising heavenwards. Though he could be seen onscreen in vehicles as diverse as Cecil B. DeMille (Sign of the Cross) and Laurel and Hardy (Babes in Toyland) it was only in roles that could politely be referred to as ‘supporting’ – occasionally parts would present themselves in the unlikeliest places (Shirley Temple’s stunt stand-in, for example).

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His connection to the horror genre was never far away, not least due to regular appearances alongside screen giants Boris Karloff (two Mr. Wong films) and more especially Bela Lugosi, alongside whom he made several well-intentioned but often somewhat ropey films. However, for every dud (1941’s Spooks Run Wild; 1947’s Scared To Death) there’s the odd gem (1942’s The Corpse Vanishes).

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By the 1950’s, work was beginning to thin out, not least in the sense of his time onscreen in films anything above camp trash – 1953’s Mesa of Lost Women; the iconic lead alien in Invasion of the Saucermen (unrecognisable under Paul Blaisdell’s costume) and the Johnny Weissmuller atrocity, Jungle Moon Men (1955) will give you an idea of the standard of parts available. Even what, on paper, looked like blockbusters were a false dawn – 1957’s The Story Of Mankind may have boasted stars such as Vincent Price, John Carradine, Caesar Romero and the Marx Brothers, but even then it was hailed as camp of the highest order.

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Some salvation came in the mid-60s when television was given greater credence, leading to role in the likes of Gunsmoke, The Man from U.N.C.L.E, as well as a recurring role in, of all things, H.R. Pufnstuf. If Angelo’s film roles in the 40’s and 50’s seemed a little on the low-budget side, audiences can rightly have left cinemas heading straight for the shower after his appearances in two of Al Adamson’s trashiest sleazefests – Brain of Blood and Dracula vs. Frankenstein (both tainting 1971).

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Although Angelo had the longest-running role of his career in the mid-70’s, in the fondly remembered Beretta as shoe-shine boy informant, Little Moe, the twilight of acting life also saw him accepting roles which were as garish, out-there and sleazy as ever.

On the tamer side of things were the likes of the well-worth seeking out gangster film, Little Cigars (1973) and literal and metaphorical car crash of a movie, Smokey Bites the Dust (1981), whilst the other end of the scale saw appearances in the largely forgotten William Devane-starring The Dark (1979) and 1980’s thoroughly entertaining Galaxina. A low point, but still entirely in keeping with his philosophy of taking whatever job was presented to him, was the softcore movie Adult Fairy Tales, which saw Rossitto as one of the few stars to keep his clothes on.

Rossitto’s final roles of note are amongst his most engaging since the 1930’s – a small role in the impressive interpretation of Ray Bradbury’s Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983); an iconic turn as The Master in Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome (1985 – an experience he regarded as the most enjoyable of his career); and his final on-screen role in the Vincent Price-starring From a Whisper To a Scream (1987). By this stage, Angelo was almost totally blind – though his body and mind were willing to still carry on, film producers were unable (or unwilling) to give him roles as no insurance company would provide appropriate cover for him.

Having already achieved immortality in a 61-year film career (and in music, featuring on the cover of Tom Waits’ seminal 1983 album Swordfishtrombones). Rossitto retired, dying at the grand old age of eighty-three in 1991.

Billy Barty

Though his involvement in horror was somewhat fleeting, despite his lengthy career, it would be wrong of us not to spend a moment considering the contribution of Billy Barty.

Born in 1924, the 3’9” Barty was the driving force behind the formation of The Little People of America in 1957, alongside the aforementioned Angelo Rossitto. His acting career clung far closer to the mainstream, becoming popular for comedic roles and voice-acting right up until his death aged seventy-six in 2000.

Barty’s earlier appearances on-screen had run the usual course of ‘baby’ roles, though with a slight twist – a regular participant in pre-code Busby Berkeley musicals, he often played a quite shockingly seedy infant, leering and plotting to catch glimpses of the chorus girls.

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In 1935, he made what could be politely described as a cameo appearance in Bride of Frankenstein, in rather indistinct long-shots of Dr Pretorius’ bottled experiments, perhaps inevitably, dressed as a baby in a high chair. Clearer still shots have been discovered in recent years.

A far more prominent horror role came in 1957’s The Undead, a blisteringly bad, though inadvertently entertaining time-travel farrago from Roger Corman, which sees Billy playing the part of an imp. An equally enjoyable/painful watch is 1989’s Lobster Man from Mars, a spoof film-within-a-film in which Barty plays a somewhat fleeting part.

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Billy Curtis

Despite being born in 1909, Curtis, who stood at 4’2” tall, was never either compelled or drawn towards exhibiting himself at sideshows and enjoyed a healthy fifty-year career as an actor.

After spending some time on Broadway (often playing children, as was de rigueur), his very first screen role was no less than the lead in the now derided musical Western, The Terror of Tiny Town, rather like The Wizard of Oz, an almost obligatory gig if you were of a certain size in the industry at the time. However, at the time, the film made huge returns at the box office and promised several sequels and spin-offs, none of which materialised.

Like many of the short actors who appeared in 1939’s Wizard of Oz, Curtis’ part goes uncredited, a fact that rather supports his oft-quoted line that Toto the dog got paid $200 dollars, compared to those with roles as Munchkins’, $50. However, Curtis’ career revolved not only around his size but equally his acting prowess – he rarely took roles which others may consider demeaning, appearing in many Westerns as a character who happened to be short, as opposed to a comedic aside of sorts.

Curtis changed direction just before the end of the War with a (yet again) small, uncredited role in Ghost Catchers and in the 1943 supernatural anthology, Flesh and Fantasy, which he could at least console himself with the fact Peter Lawford also appeared without an acting credit.

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The 1950’s and the advent of the dreaded Atom, provided slightly more opportunities to appear in film, though not necessarily in stellar roles. In George Reeve’s debut in Superman and the Mole Men (1951) he played, yes, a Mole Man; in the peculiarly heavyweight Gorilla at Large he featured alongside Anne Bancroft, Lee Marvin and Cameron Mitchell, leading to a lead role… of sorts… in 1954’s Gog, in the unenviable position of being responsible for manoeuvring the metallic/cardboard contraption.

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Other genre roles from this period include the excellent The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957) and Angry Red Planet (1959) and a strange bookend to everything we’ve seen so far – the role of Harry Earles in The Unholy Three re-enactment in James Cagney’s rather so-so biopic of Lon Chaney, Man of a Thousand Faces (1957).

Like Billy Barty, television allowed more regular opportunities for work, though it could be argued that Curtis got the cooler parts – the 1960’s saw him appear in everything from Batman to The Monkees to Bewitched to Get Smart. Curtis had certainly warmed to science fiction and fantasy; he starred alongside Horrorpedia favourite Reggie Nalder in the Star Trek episode Journey to Babel and as an ape child in the genre-shaking Planet of the Apes.

Skip Martin

Hailing from London and born in 1923, Skip became something of a horror film regular, fondly thought of by keen-eyed enthusiasts for his appearances in movies with a very European gothic slant. Acquiring his nickname from his habit of skipping school, Martin was born Alec Derek George Horowitz, the surname being due to his Russian father. Although managing a perfectly serviceable career as an actor, he earned his trade on a more stable footing as a tobacconist.

Filmed in 1958, though released in 1962, Martin appeared in the Christopher Lee and Boris Karloff vehicle Corridors of Blood as a tavern regular – not a part that saw him speak or do very much other than slowly carry his gruel to his table but certainly a part he could boast about to his regular customers. Continuing his habit of appearing with horror film icons, he next appeared in the 1961 film, The Hellfire Club, alongside Peter Cushing, the film itself scripted by Hammer stalwart, Jimmy Sangster.

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The role for which Martin is best remembered is undoubtedly that of Hop-Toad in Roger Corman’s Masque of the Red Death (1964), also giving him the opportunity to complete his holy quadrangle of horror co-stars alongside Vincent Price. Rather than the silent cameos he had been given previously, Hop-Toad is given a pleasing amount of screen-time, as well as some particularly juicy lines and the film’s standout killing.

Clearly doing enough to catch the eye of Harry Alan Towers, his next appearance was equally significant, as Mr. Big in the 1966 film, Circus of Fear, another chance to work with Christopher Lee, as well the challenge of being on-screen with Klaus Kinski. Whilst not an especially rewarding film, Skip’s character has a lurking menace which at least makes it a fascinating study of shady dealings and potential danger in every shadow.

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An easy to miss role in Tinto Brass’ highly-stylised 1967 murder mystery Col Cuore In Gola (I Am What I Am aka Deadly Sweet) may have suggested an increasingly steady decline in more meaty acting parts but instead proved only to be a blip before three more significant horror films.

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In Vampire Circus (1971), he again creates unease as the tumbling, mysterious clown, leading to a particularly satisfying revenge enacted upon him by the poor, pestered villagers.

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Martin also lends his sonorous voice and magnetic charisma to Horror Hospital (1973) before an unfortunate coda to his career: firstly an appearance in the irredeemably poor rock ‘n’ roll musical Son of Dracula alongside the likes of Ringo Starr and Harry Nilsson; and finally the role of a mini-Rolf Harris in the famous episode of The Goodies set in a zoo. True horror!

Michael Dunn

Born Gary Neil Miller in Oklahoma, Dunn allegedly taught himself to read at the age of three, a sign that the rare case of dwarfism, which affected both his bone structure (both his hips were dislocated, making walking extremely painful) and his lung-growth, would do little to hold him back. A talented pianist and singer, Dunn and his family rejected overtures for him to receive an education in a ‘special school’, preferring instead that his voracious appetite for knowledge be satiated in a standard setting.

Dunn’s acting ability is arguably a step ahead of many of his shorter contemporaries, indeed, often degrees above both his averagely-heighted co-stars and the calibre of vehicle he was appearing in. His acting career began in the theatre after moving to New York from his home in Miami where he had gained a degree in journalism. His parts initially were off-Broadway, though he became a familiar fixture in local bars where he sung with his surprisingly strong voice to great applause.

In 1963, his dedication to his craft paid off when he appeared in the Edward Albee adaptation of the novella, The Sad Cafe, by Carson McCullers. Playing the mysterious hunchback, Cousin Lymon, he earned a Tony award nomination, the play itself sweeping the board at that year’s ceremony.

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After forming a nightclub act alongside the actress Phoebe Dorin, he appeared in 1965’s Ship of Fools, alongside the likes of Lee Marvin and Vivienne Leigh. His lynchpin part, narrating both the beginning and end of the film, alongside a moving role in the main body, led to an Academy Award nomination.

It was from this springboard that his most famous appearances on television: firstly on Get Smart as Mr Big, then to fondly remembered one-off parts in Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea; Star Trek (in which he would have stolen the show appearing as Alexander in the episode, Plato’s Stepchildren, now more often remembered as the episode in which Kirk kisses Uhura) and Wild, Wild West, where his role as the villainous Dr. Miguelito Loveless endeared him to a generation of viewers.

Dunn’s first true genre appearance was in Gordon Hessler’s (Scream and Scream Again; Cry of the Banshee) 1971 adaptation of Poe’s Murders in the Rue Morgue, a small part in an unfulfilling movie. Better was to come with an appearance in the Night Gallery episode, The Sins of the Fathers, one of the more alarming episodes of Rod Serling’s less appreciated TV series.

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Roles became more and more difficult to find, leading to Dunn taking increasingly less-stellar parts in what could be seen as more demeaning for a man with such great notices earlier in his career. 1973 saw him appear in The Werewolf of Washington, as Dr. Kiss, presumably a nod to Wild, Wild West.

Far worse was to follow the year after in Frankenstein’s Castle of Freaks as the perverted, corpse fondling Genz, alongside Horrorpedia favourite, Sal Boris (here listed as Boris Lugosi). It’s a film that doesn’t even pass the ‘so bad it’s good’ test, a waste of Dunn’s considerable talents.

From his early days appearing in New York nightclubs, Dunn had developed a fondness for alcohol (he was already a smoker from an early age), not uncommon for the actors of the time in the city. It had taken its toll on his liver and an ill-fated relationship with a burlesque dancer had left him wiped out financially. It was now a case of taking roles of any kind, though his later appearances show him moving with even more difficulty than only a few years prior.

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It was in this state of physical degradation that Michael Dunn appeared in The Mutations (aka Freakmaker), alongside Donald Pleasence. He lends a terrific element of the unnerving to what veers towards farce on occasion, his ability to hold the camera with his gaze evident in abundance. It was to be his final appearance during his lifetime.

Whilst filming The Abdication in London during 1974, he passed away at the hotel he was staying in whilst in London. Though rumours still circulate that his body was ‘stolen’ for a period and his room ransacked, evidence suggests no foul play and that his medical condition has led to his death at the age of 38.

Felix Silla

Felix Silla was born near Rome, Italy, in 1937, moving to the United States in 1955, joining a succession of circuses where he perfected various skills, from bareback horse-riding, to acrobatics to flying trapeze. When the Ringling Brothers circus he performed with disbanded in the early 1960s, he became an in-demand stunt performer, his stature (3’11”) filling a niche for skilled performers who could fulfil roles not normally possible for average-heights actors.

His relocation to Hollywood quickly earned him to bit-parts in TV series, though it was a casting-call for the soon-to-be aired The Addams Family which led to sustained employment. Passing the audition on-sight, his role was to be that of Cousin Itt, a part which left him disguised under a heap of (real) hair and shades – his burbling voice was dubbed over afterwards. The costume was later replaced with a synthetic, flame-retardant hair ensemble, lest Felix be engulfed in fire from a stray cigarette butt.

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Silla was always willing to take parts which either had little value in terms of art or craft, or indeed left him unidentifiable on-screen. A role where Felix is able to exercise his acting chops more clearly came in 1967, with She-Freak the shaky-handed re-telling of 1932’s masterful Freaks. Appearing as the conniving Shorty, he is in an environment he no doubt knew only too well, though the casting of Silla in the film led to an even more shadowy outcome, a nine-year affair with lead actress, Claire Brennan, one which led to them having a child but was kept secret from the outside world.

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Aside from a minor role as a child gorilla in Planet of the Apes, Silla worked extensively in television, from H.R. Pufnstuf to Bewitched, toothsome film parts being few and far between. Little Cigars alongside Billy Curtis promised much but only led to inconsequential, appearances as sideshow acts and diminutive monsters –neither as an attraction in 1973’s SSSSnake; a fireplace imp in TV movie Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark; a malformed infant in 1977’s Demon Seed; nor an admittedly creepy supernatural being in 1978’s The Manitou led to critical acclaim nor award nominations, though as one of the creatures in David Cronenberg’s The Brood, he at least worked with a notable auteur.

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More financially rewarding was the role of the somewhat annoying robot, Twiki, in the much-loved (at the time) Buck Rogers in the 25th Century television series, the second repeat appearance he made in a landmark sci-fi show, following from his appearances in Battlestar Galactica.

Towards the end of his screen career, he made the requisite appearance as an ewok in the third instalment of the Star Wars saga (or the sixth, if you’re picky), a critter in House and Dink in Mel Brooks’ Spaceballs. Whilst Silla was rarely given (or perhaps even craved) the acting opportunities afforded to his similarly-sized contemporaries, he has achieved lasting fame playing monstrous oddities and comedic weirdos, something many in Hollywood would be grateful for.

Hervé Villechaize

Hervé Jean-Pierre Villechaize, some twenty-odd years after his death is still one of the best-known dwarf actors, to the extent where his name will often prompt an impression from someone in the room, should alcoholic drinks have been taken.

Born in France in 1943 of Filipino and English extraction, the 3’10” Villechaize preferred to be referenced as a midget, as opposed to a dwarf, his head and body being in proportion. Despite several medical procedures, something his doctor father was insistent upon, his thyroid-related condition led to his growth being restricted.

Although nationally recognised at an early age for his painting and photography skills, Villechaize left for America aged 21, having taught himself English by watching American television programmes, appropriate given that his greatest success would be via that medium.

Settling in New York, he appeared in blink-and-you-miss-it film roles until a meatier role came along in the form of Christopher Speeth’s 1973 film, Malatesta’s Carnival of Blood. Now considered a classic of American low-budget drive-in cinema, it allowed the actor to use his own very drawly French accent to convey an appropriately strange tone to an already bewildering spectacle.

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The following year saw him build on this somewhat cult foundation by starring as the evil Spider in Oliver Stone’s big screen debut, Seizure. Evidently a casting agent had caught one of these early appearances as he soon found himself in the James Bond film, The Man With the Golden Gun, as Nick-Nack, still now hailed as one of the franchise’s greatest villains. It was the first acting part that really paid off financially, the actor living rough at the time in Los Angeles.

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Despite the fame this brought him, it did not lead to further blockbuster roles, his next meaningful film appearance being in 1980’s, The Forbidden Zone, as the sexually-charged King Fausto. Indeed, Villechaize’s experience on Bond had sparked an outward confidence with the ladies, fuelled by a fondness for alcohol.

His star actually peaked on television from 1977-1983, as the character Tattoo in Fantasy Island, his refrain, “De plane, de plane!” being better remembered than the show itself. It was here he met his future wife, Donna Camille, a minor actress and model. The relationship only lasted two years, Villechaize a victim of drink, the self-aggrandisement his TV fame brought him and depression, leading to suicidal thoughts. Not long after, Villechaize had an appeal for a wage increase declined, leading to his departure from the hit show and the beginning of a downward spiral into far more intermittent work.

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By 1993, he was reduced to self-referential TV cameos, the end truly being self-inflicted when he committed suicide by shooting himself. His suicide note explained he could no longer live with the severe pain his condition caused him.

Luis De Jesus

Born in New York in 1952, details of the 4’3” Luis de Jesus’ life and indeed film career are somewhat sketchy, perhaps befitting of a performer who took exploitation to a whole new level. It is said he began his career in entertainment at the circus, entirely believable considering that the sideshows of Coney Island were still a going concern. From here, his attentions turned to a particular form of film – one in which he appeared in for much of the rest of his life, to almost legendary notoriety.

The first appearance of de Jesus in film is agreed to be a 1970 peep-show loop, later expanded to a full feature, entitled Anal Dwarf, which featured Luis doing exactly what you’d expect. For many years, it was thought to be something of an urban myth, something now ‘helpfully’ clarified. During this somewhat hazy period, it was alleged the actor in question was not in fact de Jesus but Hervé Villechaize, disregarding the fact there was no resemblance beyond their height.

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Not long after this, the director, Joel M. Reed, was casting for the horror-sleaze epic, The Incredible Torture Show (1976, later re-titled Blood Sucking Freaks when picked up by Troma in the early 80’s), the key role of the demented and sadistic dwarf, Ralphus, being earmarked, ironically, for Hervé Villechaize, whom he knew via his appearance in Oliver Stone’s aforementioned Seizure. Villechaize had at that time relocated briefly back to Paris and was insistent that his airfare be covered, should he accept, something Reed’s budget would not stretch to. Eager to find a replacement quickly, de Jesus was the first through the door and passed the audition through size and appearance alone, his mass of curly hair and fiendish grin being more than enough talent.

Without an R-rating, The Incredible Torture Show received limited showings in New York, eventually an excellent marketing tool, though at the time a disaster. Less so for de Jesus, who had enjoyed sexual liaisons with at least one of the models who featured in the film off-camera, despite the presence of her boyfriend. It was clear his acting career was not going to lead to a slew of offers from Hollywood after this part, a riotously entertaining, though equally filthy romp.

Indeed, he quickly returned to adult films, appearing in the likes of Gerard Damiano’s Make My Puppets Come (perhaps the only film that could compare to The Incredible Torture Show in terms of ludicrousness) Ultra-Flesh and Fanta-sex Island, a parody of Fantasy Island that yet again saw the two actors briefly crossing the horizon at the same time. By the time of his death in 1988, de Jesus had made a vague attempt at a mainstream career, appearing briefly in Under the Rainbow and as an ewok in Return of the Jedi.

Nelson de la Rosa

Nelson was recognised by the Guinness Book of Records as the world’s shortest man in 1989, reaching an adult height of only 2’4”. He became something of a national hero in his native Dominican Republic after becoming a regular fixture on Venezuelan television, though genre fans will remember him best for his appearance as the titular RatMan, a 1988 Italian production shot on location in his homeland.

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His fanged mutation, technically classed as a rat/monkey hybrid, is a real treat, de la Rosa cropping up in the unlikeliest of places with a genuine creepy menace. Yet greater stardom beckoned, cast in the doomed Richard Stanley retelling of The Island of Dr. Moreau. The acting behemoth, Marlon Brando, became somewhat obsessed with de la Rosa, insisting his role was greatly expanded and goading him into making sexual advances towards female members of cast and crew.

Whilst the H.G. Wells film did not lead to further screen success, he became an adopted mascot by the Boston Red Sox baseball team and de la Rosa earned a comfortable living in circuses across South America, leaving a wife and child on his death in 2006.

Zelda Rubinstein

Zelda Rubinstein was something of a late-comer to the world of entertainment, not venturing into the void until she was in her late 40’s. At 4’3” and with a distinctive, high-pitched voice, roles did not necessarily jump out at her, though her first job as a voice-over artist on The Flintstones cartoon did however, give her the confidence to leave her job as a blood bank technician and become a performer full-time.

Work on television adverts followed, leading to her first film role in Under the Rainbow, along with The Wizard of Oz and the Star Wars films, almost a rite of passage for actors of restricted height in Hollywood.

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Her breakthrough came quickly, in Tobe Hooper’s (more likely the stewardship of writer, Steven Spielberg) 1982 hit, Poltergeist. Playing the psychic, Tangina, Rubinstein plays a pivotal character arriving slap-bang in the middle of the film. The part was written specifically for a small person and it was one which the actress had to battle hard for, going through several auditions to win the role. Her performance is one of both tenderness and stern warnings, many of her lines – “this house is clean”; “go into the light” – becoming quoted and referenced for many years afterwards.

A huge box-office hit, the film revitalised the haunted house genre and ushered forth two sequels in 1986 and 1988 – more were considered but the death of the little girl, JoBeth Williams brought the run to a close.

Rubinstein remained busy: of note for horror fans was Anguish, Bigas Luna’s dazzling, extremely strange 1987 film which sees the actress in an even more central role as a domineering mother controlling her son via hypnosis to commit grisly crimes. Here, her stature and voice add a more outwardly uneasy tension to the action, an excellent use of her acting skills in a far arty, surreal setting.

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Television continued to be a reliable source of employment – recurring roles in Picket Fences and Santa Barbara still allowing time for one-off appearance in Tales from the Crypt and lesser feature films including Little Witches (1996); Wishcraft (2002) and Southland Tales (2006).

Her final film role came in 2006 in Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon. Away from the world of film and television, she was a strong HIV/AIDS awareness activist, as well as supporting other actors of short stature – she founded the non-profit Michael Dunn Memorial Repertory Theatre Company, named after the trailblazing actor who broke down so many barriers before her. Zelda died in Los Angeles in 2010.

Warwick Davis

Perhaps the most well-known dwarf actor in the world (certainly in the UK), Warwick’s 3’6” stature won him the role of Wicket the ewok in Return of the Jedi at the tender age of 11, an association with the franchise that extended to the two spin-offs, Caravan of Courage: An Ewok Adventure and Ewoks: The Battle for Endor, as well as different roles in The Phantom Menace, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story and the as-yet-untitled part 8. He became the go-to actor for roles in many fantasy films of the 1980’s onwards, from the still fondly-remembered, Willow (1988); Labyrinth (1986) and, most memorably to younger eyes, the Harry Potter films.

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For fans of horror, Davis became a horror icon, albeit, arguably, one of a rather lower division to that of Jason, Freddy et al – the wise-cracking anti-hero in the long-running Leprechaun series of films (six thus far – surely no more!?).

The 2004 film, Skinned Deep, a lousy Texas Chain Saw rip-off about a dysfunctional family of ghouls and 2007’s appalling Small Town Folk may have paid a gas bill but Davis’ career has largely been on television in recent years, in comedic roles and, bizarrely, as a game-show host.

Phil Fondacaro

New Orleans native Fondacaro was born in 1958 and has carved out an extremely productive career both onscreen and off as a voice-over artist. The ever-reliable Under the Rainbow in 1981 set him off on a career in entertainment that regularly weaved between genres, utilising his 3’6” stature and acting skill to play everything from evil villains to henchmen, monstrous entities and regular Joes. Fondacaro has shown more of a willingness than many dwarf actors to embrace horrific roles, rationalising that these are only characters, as any actor plays, and not a reflection of himself.

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A role as a killer clown in Something Wicked This Way Comes in 1983, followed by the inevitable ewok in Return of the Jedi proved to be the springboard for a slew of roles in horror films. Fondacaro voice the character of Creeper in 1985’s Black Cauldron; The Dungeonmaster; Mickey in the ridiculous Hard Rock Zombies before appearing buried under the impressive costume of Torok in the highly successful Troll (1986). The cherry on the cake of Troll is its opportunity for his dual role as Malcolm Mallory, allowing Fondacaro to demonstrate his considerable acting skills.

TROLL, Phil Fondacaro, 1986, (c) Empire Pictures

The voice of Greaser Greg in The Garbage Pail Kids, roles in Invaders from Mars, Willow, Tales from the Darkside and Phantasm II led to an acting part in Ghoulies II, yet another opportunity to work with the infamous Band clan, here for the prolific Charles.

Later collaborations include Dollman vs. Demonic Toys; Blood Dolls; Decadent Evil Dead; Evil Bong and Devil Dolls (spot the running theme). Also of note is his appearance as Dracula in Band’s 1997 film, Deformed Monsters, hailed as the shortest Dracula on screen, a peculiar badge of honour.

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Fondacaro had the distinction of taking Felix Silla’s role as Cousin Itt in the small screen revisit to The Addams Family Reunion, before an appearance in George Romero’s Land of the Dead. With regular mainstream TV appearances on the likes of Sabrina the Teenage Witch and CSI have ensured a healthy career for the actor.

They Also Served:

Piéral

1923 – 2003 – 4’0”

The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1956)

Spermula (1976)

Luigi Francis Shorty Rossi

Born 1969 – 4’0”

Sideshow (2000)

Ice Scream – The ReMix (2006)

Mészáros Mihály

1939 – 2016 – 2’9”

Waxwork (1989)

Warlock: The Armageddon (1993)

Freaked (1993)

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Torben Bille

1945 – 1993 – height unknown

The Sinful Dwarf (1973)

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Rusty Goffe

Born 1948 – 4’2”

Disciple of Death (1972)

Spidarlings (2016)


Tony Cox

Born 1953 – 3’6”

Dr. Heckyl and Mr. Hype (1980)

Invaders from Mars (1986)

Retribution (1987)

Beetlejuice (1988)

Rockula (1990)

Silence of the Hams (1994)

Leprechaun II (1994)

Ghoulies IV (1994)


Chumbinho

Details Unknown

As Taras do Mini-Vampiro (aka Little Vampire Taints) (1987)


Kiran Shah

Born 1956 – 4’1”

The People That Time Forgot (1977)

Legend (1985)

Gothic (1986)

Aliens (1986 – stunt performer)

Jekyll & Hyde (1990)


Deep Roy

Born 1957 – 4’4”

Alien from L.A. (1988)

Disturbed (1990)

Howling VI: The Freaks (1991)

Shatterbrain (1991)

Freaked (1993)

Corpse Bride (2005, voice only)

Paranormal Movie (2013)


Arturo Gil

Born 1960 – 3’6”

Nightmare Cafe (TV Series, 1992)

Freaked (1993)

The Munsters’ Scary Little Christmas (1996)

Deadtime Stories (TV Series, 2013)


Patty Maloney

Born 1936 – 3’11”

Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark (1973)

The Addams Family (1991)

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Jerry Maren

Born 1920 – 4’3”

Bewitched (1967)

Planet of the Apes (1968)

Bigfoot (1969)

Something Wicked This Way Comes (1983)

The Being (1983)

House (1986)

Frankenstein Rising (2010)

Dahmer vs. Gacy (2010)


Kenny Baker

1934-2016 – 3’8”

Circus of Horrors (1960)

The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1982)

When the Devil Rides Out (currently in post-production)


Tamara De Treaux

1959-1990 – 2’7”

Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark (1973)

Ghoulies (1984)

Rockula (1990)


Adelina Poerio

4’2” date of birth unknown

Don’t Look Now (1973)

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Debbie Lee Carrington

Born 1959 – 3’10”

Invaders from Mars (1986)

Monsters (TV series, 1989)

Seedpeople (1992)

Daniel Frishman

Born 1946 – 4’3”

Twilight Zone (TV Series, 1986)

Night of the Creeps (1986)


Joseph S. Griffo

Born 1952 – 4’3”

Night of the Creeps (1986)

Freaked (1993)

Carnival of Souls (1998)


Little Frankie

Biographical Details Unknown

Godzilla vs. Space Godzilla (1994)

Blind Beast vs. Dwarf (2001)

blindbeast


Kevin Thompson

D.O.B. unknown – 4’5”

Night of the Creeps (1986)

Twilight Zone (TV Series, 1986)

Munchies (1987)

Nightmare Cafe (TV Series, 1992)


Ed Gale

Born 1963 – 3’4”

Phantasm II (1988)

Child’s Play (Chucky’s Stunt Double, 1988)

Chopper Chicks in Zombietown (1989)

The Munsters’ Scary Little Christmas (1996)


Jordan Prentice

Born 1973 – 4’1”

Wolf Girl (2001)

Long Pigs (2007)

Silent But Deadly (2011)


Sadie Corre

1918-2009 – 4’2”

Devil Doll (1964)

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The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975)

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

George Claydon

1933-2001 – Height Unknown

Berserk (1967)

Twins of Evil (1971)

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I Don’t Want to be Born aka The Monster (1975)

Shadows (TV Series, 1975)

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George Appleby

4′ 6″

Wilhelm the Dwarf Vampire (short film, 2011)

Ravenwolf Towers (streaming and DVD series)

Article by Daz Lawrence, Horrorpedia © 2017

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


William Peter Blatty – writer and filmmaker

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William Peter Blatty (January 7, 1928 – January 12, 2017) was an American writer and filmmaker.

The Exorcist, written in 1971, is his most well-known novel; he also wrote the screenplay for the 1973 film adaptation, for which he won an Academy Award, and wrote and directed the 1990 sequel The Exorcist III.

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Blatty was born in New York City, the son of Lebanese parents who travelled to the USA on a cattle boat. His father left home when William was three-years-old. He was raised in what he described as “comfortable destitution” by his deeply religious Catholic mother, whose sole support came from peddling homemade quince jelly in the streets of the city.

He attended a Jesuit school, on scholarship, then Georgetown University. also on a scholarship. He went on to The George Washington University for his master’s degree in English Literature. His writing career began in earnest in the 1960s and aside from novels he worked on screenplays, writing comedy films such as the Pink Panther film, A Shot in the Dark (1964).

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Allegedly retiring to a remote and rented chalet in woodland off Lake Tahoe, Blatty wrote The Exorcist, a story about a twelve-year-old girl being possessed by a powerful demon, that remained on the New York Times bestseller list for 57 straight weeks and at the Number One spot for 17 of them. It would eventually be translated by himself and director William Friedkin into one of the most famous mainstream horror movies of all time.

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William Peter Blatty with Max Von Sydow

The first sequel, Exorcist II: The Heretic (1977), was disappointing both critically and commercially. Blatty had no involvement in this first sequel and his own follow-up ignored it entirely.

In 1978, Blatty adapted his novel Twinkle, Twinkle, “Killer” Kane! into the retitled The Ninth Configuration; and in 1980 he wrote, directed and produced a film version. In it, a commanding officer who attempts to rehabilitate patients at an insane asylum for Army soldiers by allowing them to live out their fantasies. The film was a commercial flop. It has since acquired a cult following.

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In 1983, Blatty wrote Legion, a sequel to The Exorcist which later became the basis of the film The Exorcist III. He originally wanted the movie version to be titled Legion but the studio insisted otherwise.

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On September 27, 2011, The Exorcist was re-released as a 40th Anniversary Edition in paperback, hardcover and audiobook editions with differing cover artwork. This new, updated edition featured new and revised material. Blatty commented:

“The 40th Anniversary Edition of The Exorcist will have a touch of new material in it as part of an all-around polish of the dialogue and prose. First time around I never had the time (meaning the funds) to do a second draft, and this, finally, is it. With forty years to think about it, a few little changes were inevitable – plus one new character in a totally new very spooky scene. This is the version I would like to be remembered for.”

The Exorcist was adapted into a TV series in 2016.

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Blatty died on January 12, 2017, five days after his 89th birthday. His death was announced a day later by The Exorcist director William Friedkin via Twitter.

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Wikipedia


The Slaughter of the Vampires (1962)

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The Slaughter of the Vampires – promoted as Slaughter of the Vampires – is a 1962 Italian horror film written and directed by Roberto Mauri (Night of Violence; Kong Island). The original title is La strage dei vampiri (“The Massacre of Vampires”).

A 1966 British release by E.J. Fancey was cut for an ‘X’ certificate by the BBFC but their website contains no details of the censored material.

In the United States, the film was also re-titled Curse of the Blood Ghouls in 1969 and issued on a double-bill with Bloodsuckers

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The film was a low budget production, so much so that actor Dieter Eppler (also in Castle of the Walking Dead) stated that many cast members were not paid for their work.

Cast:

In 19th Century Germany, a newly-wed couple Marquis Wolfgang (Walter Bigari) and Louise (Graziella Granata) acquire a castle. To commemorate the occasion, Louise performs a piano piece she has written during a party. Louise then feels a strange sensation and retires to her room.

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She is visited by a vampire (Dieter Eppler) who she originally sees at the party she was in and sucks her blood, leading her to desire him.

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As a result, Louise’s health declines which leads to Wolfgang seeking aid from Dr. Nietzche (Luigi Batzella). Wolfgang is too late as when the doctor arrives Louise is already dead. As the doctor diagnoses this, Wolfgang is shocked to find Louise alive as she approaches him and sucks his blood.

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The doctor later seeks out Louise’s hiding place and stakes her to death, along with the servant Corrine, who is also a vampire. Wolfgang’s hiding spot is not found as the doctor seeks another abode in the castle. Wolfgang, who is not entirely converted into a vampire, corners his adversary and stakes him with spikes of an iron grating…

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Reviews:

” … an engaging gothic tale from the golden age of Italian horror. Filled with romantic melodrama, exceptional period costumes and exquisite locations, the film is less silly than the previous vampire films Brandi starred in, and quite frankly, more entertaining.” George R. Reis, DVD Drive-In

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” …Mauri’s direction is tautly edited, with an impressive number of inventive set-ups and roving camera shots of good locations, and at just 79 minutes interest never flags. The film may be the first to offer a vampire bride whose ample, heaving bosom almost becomes a character in itself (themselves?). Granata’s low-cut dresses pre-date what became the standard at Hammer by a half-dozen years.” Stuart Galbraith IV, DVD Talk

“Some good moments can be found in this otherwise lackluster film, including a highly atmospheric early bit in which the vampire spies on Louise through bushes outside her house, and a later scene in which Louise stalks Wolfgang through a courtyard at night. Graziella Granata is quite alluring as the vampirized Louise, and makes for an extremely compelling sight.” Fright.com

“Eppler’s vampiric assaults on Granata provide a few mildly erotic moments […] Ugo Brunelli’s camera makes the most of the atmospheric sets and enhances the sense of foreboding present within a few eerie clusters of trees. Aldo Piga’s heavy-handed score seems more appropriate for a tearjerker than for a vampire flick.” Lawrence McCallum, Italian Horror Films of the 1960s

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Buy: Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com | Amazon.ca

Cast and characters:

  • Walter Bigari as Marquis Wolfgang
  • Dieter Eppler as the vampire
  • Graziella Granata as Louise
  • Luigi Batzella as Dr. Nietzsche
  • Gena Gimmy as Corinne
  • Edda Ferronao as Nietzsche’s maid
  • Carla Foscari as Teresa
  • Maretta Procaccini as Resy
  • Alfredo Rizzo as a servant

Filming locations:

The Castle of Monte San Giovanni, Italy

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Wikipedia | IMDb

 


The Snake Woman (1960)

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‘Nothing ever struck you like…’

The Snake Woman is a 1960 British horror film directed by Sidney J. Furie (The Entity; Doctor Blood’s Coffin) from a screenplay by American Orville H. Hampton (The Alligator People; Mesa of Lost Women; Lost Continent). It stars Susan Travers (Peeping Tom), John McCarthy and Geoffrey Denton.

Buxton Orr, who provided the score, also contributed the music to First Man into Space; Doctor Blood’s Coffin; Corridors of Blood; Fiend Without a Face and The Haunted Strangler.

Over many years, a scientist in a turn of the century English village in Bellingham, Northumberland, successfully keeps his wife’s mental illness under control by injecting her with snake venom.

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When she dies giving birth to a daughter, a local witch claims that the child is pure evil and must be destroyed. The scientist is killed by an angry mob, but the baby girl is miraculously saved with the help of an understanding doctor.

Nineteen years later, several corpses are discovered on the moors, containing lethal amounts of snake poison. Fearful villagers believe the curse of the snake woman has struck, but Charles Prentice, a young Scotland Yard inspector, is sceptical of the supernatural as he begins his investigation…

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Reviews:

” …this black-and-white programmer blatantly misses all the cues that would insure even the slightest spark of box office fire. The script is clumsy, overly-talkative and there is practically no action to alleviate the plodding pace.” Video Confidential

” …a competent enough B-movie programmer, entertaining in its own way and enjoyable enough to fit into the ‘cosy horror’ subgenre.” BritMovie

“Amateurishly directed, the film fails on all levels.” The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Horror

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Cast and characters:

  • Susan Travers as Atheris
  • John McCarthy as Charles Prentice
  • Geoffrey Denton as Colonel Clyde Wynborn
  • Elsie Wagstaff as Aggie Harker
  • Arnold Marlé as Dr. Murton
  • Michael Logan as Barkis
  • Stevenson Lang as Shepherd
  • John Cazabon as Dr. Horace Adderson
  • Dorothy Frere as Martha Adderson
  • Hugh Moxey as Inspector
  • Frances Bennett as Polly, the barmaid
  • Jack Cunningham as Constable Alfie

Choice dialogue:

Aggie Harker, the midwife: “It is evil! It has the eye! It is the Devil’s offspring!”

Plot keywords:

snake | venom | scientist | pregnant | midwife | police constable | pub | landlord | village | angry mob | Northumberland | cobra | Scotland Yard | inspector

Wikipedia | IMDb | Thanks: The Dwrayger Dungeon

 


Matango (1963)

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Matango (マタンゴ) – also known as Matango, Fungus of Terror and Attack of the Mushroom People – is a 1963 Japanese tokusatsu movie. It was directed by Ishirō Honda (The Human Vapour; The H-ManGodzilla) from a screenplay by Takeshi Kimura, based on the story “The Voice in the Night” by William Hope Hodgson. Eiji Tsuburaya handled the special effects.

Matango was apparently nearly banned in Japan due to some of the makeup resembling the facial disfigurements characteristic of those who survived atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

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It was never released theatrically in the United States, but was released directly to television by American International Television (AIP-TV) in 1965 as Attack of the Mushroom People.

In the UK, the film was released with an ‘X’ certificate by Orb Films in 1969. VHS releases by JVI and Sheptonhurst/Private followed in the home video era.

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Plot:

After a yacht is damaged in a storm and its occupants become stranded on a deserted island. The passengers; a psychologist and his girlfriend, a wealthy businessman, a famous singer, a writer, a sailor and his skipper, take refuge in a mysterious fungus-covered boat.

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While using the mushrooms for sustenance they find in the ship’s journal that the mushrooms are poisonous, however some members of the shipwrecked party continue to ingest the mysterious fungi transforming them into hideous fungal monsters…

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Reviews:

With a slow-boiling tension, smart writing, convincing portrayals and some simple but effective special effects, Matango deftly explores the limits of human will and the lengths of social restraints. At the same time it directly questions the fabric of reality and the nature of happiness. And somehow, it also manages to consider life in a post-nuclear world with a rather nihilistic point of view.” Sean Kotz, Sci-fi Japan

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“Illogical on any level except that of fantasy, where it is glaringly consistent, this is a picture that, like Honda’s Chikyu Boeigun/The Mysterians (1957), allows us to glimpse something of the nature of the dream logic that structures the monster movie scenarios.” The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Science Fiction

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“The pace of this undeniably trippy imagery steadily gains inertia before escalating into full-blown psychedelia, with hallucinatory flashbacks of the Tokyo skyline superimposed over by seductive dancing girls as the characters descend into complete delirium at the climax.” Jasper Sharp, Midnight Eye

“Far from a piece of Grade Z schlock, it’s a good, very atmospheric, serious, fairly compelling horror / survivalist picture about the dark side of human nature and the depths some people will go to save their own ass at the expense of others. […] Shot in Tohoscope, there’s a very hazy / foggy sheen that creates a great amount of dreary atmosphere and the makeups and monster designs are effective.” The Bloody Pit of Horror

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“Of course, none of it makes any sense, even in the demented world of horror films. But as a metaphoric fantasy (in the tradition of Alice in Wonderland and Gulliver’s Travels), Ishiro Honda has once again created an atmospheric, dream-like fable…” Thomas Weisser, Yuko Mihara Weisser, Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: Horror – Fantasy – Science Fiction

“The flaws are slow pacing, poorly-shot action scenes, and the incomplete character development. But the atmosphere of grimness and mystery more than compensates. The film has a large cult following.” David Elroy Goldweber, Claws & Saucers

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com | Amazon.ca

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Toho concept art for Matango (1963)

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Cast and characters:

  • Akira Kubo as Professor Kenji Murai
  • Kumi Mizuno as Mami Sekiguchi
  • Kenji Sahara as Senzō Koyama
  • Hiroshi Tachikawa as Etsurō Yoshida
  • Yoshio Tsuchiya as Masafumi Kasai
  • Hiroshi Koizumi as Naoyuki Sakuda
  • Miki Yashiro as Akiko Sōma

Wikipedia | IMDb | Image thanks: Sci-fi Japan | VideoCollector.co.uk

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It’s Alive! (1969)

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‘Trapped in a cave of terror!’

It’s Alive! is a 1969 American horror film written, edited, produced and directed by Larry Buchanan (The Loch Ness Horror; Zontar: The Thing from Venus; The Naked Witch).

The film’s screenplay was apparently based on ‘Being’, a 1964 script for a film production of Richard Matheson’s story of the same name. Much to AIP’s chagrin, ‘Being’ had to be shelved after lead actor Peter Lorre passed away before filming could commence. Buchanan inherited the project for one of AIP’s TV cheapies.

Plot:

A mad farmer finds a prehistoric monster hiding in a cavern on his land. To feed his critter, the demented farmer kidnaps three people who desperately try to escape…

Main cast:

Tommy Kirk, Shirley Bonne, Bill Thurman (The EvictorsKeep My Grave Open; Night Fright), Corveth Ousterhouse and Annabelle Weenick (Don’t Look in the Basement).

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Reviews:

“The monster is a guy in a rubber suit with fangs and ping-pong balls for eyes. Even a barely adequate director would have realised such a shoddy monster required the use of lightning-fast cut-aways in order to diminish its comical potential, but Buchanan presents us with lengthy head shots so that we can examine its awfulness in detail.” Richard Cross, 20/20 Movie Reviews

“Thurman’s performance aside, however, the movie is a stinker, with too many dull stretches and a particularly ill-conceived monster.  The latter uses the same outfit that Buchanan used for Creature of Destruction; it was a lousy monster suit to begin with, but at least in that movie it made a little sense. Here, it’s supposed to be a giant dinosaur, but it never once conveys any sense of real size, and it looks not the least bit dinosaurish.” Dave Sindelar, Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings

“The opener with the couple getting lost is mildly effective – as it’s helped by an ominous kind of Texas Chainsaw Massacre-style voiceover – but the rest is a poorly acted snoozer.” The Terror Trap

Choice dialogue:

Narrator: “There is a legend in these hills. That when it rains and sun shines at the same time, the Devil is kissing his wife.”

Filming locations:

Eureka Springs and Beaver, in Ozark Mountain area of northern Arkansas

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

Wikipedia | IMDb


Bad Movies = Great Trash – article by Bret McCormick

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“Movies are so rarely great art that if we cannot appreciate great trash we have very little reason to be interested in them.”

This quote is attributed to Pauline Kael, one of cinema’s best known professional critics. She also confessed to having a fondness for the biker movies that made such a mindless splash in the late 60s and early 70s.

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“I’m a little unclear on this whole good/bad thing.” Dr. Peter Venkman, Ghostbusters (1984)

Inevitably, when someone tells me they love my 1986 movie The Abomination, it’s because they stumbled onto the film at a very formative age. As kids, we are sponges, soaking everything up and trying to make sense of the insanity that passes for reality on this planet. A completely inane film can leave a deep mark in our developing consciousness, because it is puzzling to us or so incredibly different from anything we could imagine adults creating.

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I have a very vivid memory of the impact a cheesy film from the 50s, From Hell It Came, had on my five-year-old mind. I was at the babysitter’s house and had been told to take a nap. It was mid-afternoon and the sitter was watching the film on Dialing for Dollars, a local program that enticed people to watch B-movies by giving them the chance to win cash if their number was dialed on the air.

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I stood behind the door and peered through the crack to watch this film about a murdered tribesman who comes back to life as a killer tree. It was about as hokey as a film can be; the “monster” a tree not much different than the one that threw its apples at Dorothy and the gang in The Wizard of Oz.

Still, the movie left a very creepy mark on my psyche. Partly, because I was raised in a strict Baptist environment in which the word “Hell” was simply not spoken. And I’m sure, the fact that I watched secretly through a narrow slit heightened the experience. For years, I would get an inexplicable chill down my spine when I watched that silly film.

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I believe the question ultimately is not, “Why do people like bad movies?” The real question is, “Why do humans insist on labelling movies either good or bad?” I think the answer lies in the cognitive dissonance that inevitably arises in our minds when we attempt to reconcile the world as it is with the world authority figures have encouraged us to believe in.

Religions have always shaped the here-and-now by applying threats and promises of consequences in a hereafter. Taking a cue from the religions, governments have generated a secular world view that aims at having citizens police themselves. These influences in early life can only lead to the compulsive division of all we see or experience into good/bad, sheep/goats, dark/light, etc. Duality.

Humans are an odd species. They like bestowing awards on people and things. A warrior is given a medal by his king, leading him to be exalted as a hero. Meanwhile, on the foreign turf where he rode rough-shod over men, women and children, he’s viewed as a psychopath. The warrior is both a hero and a murderer, depending on your perspective. It’s no different with movies. We bestow awards on films because they are congruent with the current zeitgeist, or because they support the agenda of a particular organization.

WTF, man? I thought this was about bad horror movies! What’s all this high-falutin’ verbiage have to do with it?

Everything.

We humans want to believe things are separate. We like taking things and dissecting them into little bits. We pretend we’re learning from this process. In reality, I believe we’re just whistling in the dark. The answers to all our deepest questions are not answered. We escape the oppression and uncomfortable uncertainty by turning to entertainment.

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Boys love dinosaurs. A lot of little girls do, too. This love of giant reptiles often expands into an appreciation of all sorts of “monsters.” Perhaps parents encourage you to watch something they think will capture your imagination.

So, you overcome your fear and start watching monsters, aliens and such. Still, you’re probably only watching the “good stuff;” the big budget movies your folks are familiar with. Often times, the young person’s appetite for weirdness outstrips the supply of A-list titles. This is where the schlockmeisters creep into the scenario, filling the demand for the outré.

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Initially, the child is disappointed by these inferior films. Even so, he/she keeps watching every quirky title that gets a hook into the young imagination: Cat-Women of the Moon, The Killer ShrewsI Was a Teenage Frankenstein, The Brain That Wouldn’t DieHow to Make a Monster. These mad movies still demand a viewing simply for the enticing allure of their title alone.

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As the child approaches puberty, a sort of jaded quality sets in and watching “bad” movies with friends seems fun. What better bonding experience than pointing out the many flaws of films such as Larry Buchanan’s The Eye Creatures or Zontar: Thing from Venus while ingesting sodas and popcorn with your mates?

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Invariably, the young viewer crosses a line into dangerous territory… forbidden fruit… films that seem somehow threatening to the adults in the family. A defugalty arose when I was fifteen over an Andy Milligan poster I had hanging in my room. My Mom had previously ignored the thing, Bloodthirsty Butchers, whose infamous tag line was:

“Their prime cuts were curiously erotic… but thoroughly brutal!”

When my grandmother visited, she was scandalised. How could a fifteen-year-old boy be allowed to have such filth in his bedroom? It wasn’t healthy. My mother was swayed and she insisted I take it down. I retaliated by refusing to get a haircut.


Bad films are most certainly an acquired taste. Akin to masochism, I suspect.

As a purveyor of really cheap movies, I must admit that all my creations fall into the “bad” category. The uninitiated viewer is mistaken to think these things are accidentally bad. When they ask questions like, “How on Earth did this atrocity receive funding?” they completely miss the point.

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Earth Girls Are Easy (1988)

Bad movies are dredged up from the same polluted well as rock ‘n’ roll (including punk, metal, rap and all popular music’s more violent permutations). Bad films arise from the same impulses that birthed surreal art and the non-art of people like Andy Warhol (whose name was used to promote Paul Morrissey’s Blood for Dracula and Flesh for Frankenstein). They surge toward receptive minds in response to the morbid curiosity that causes people to ogle car wrecks and freak shows.

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As Pablo Picasso said: “Ah, good taste! What a dreadful thing! Taste is the enemy of creativeness.”

Bret McCormick, Horrorpedia © 2017

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Coming soon from Bret McCormick: Texas Schlock: B-Movie Sci-Fi and Horror from the Lone Star State

Related: 

B-Movie Baggage: Filmmaker versus Distributor in a Fight for Survival – article by Bret McCormick

Worst Horror Films of All-Time


Kuroneko (1968)

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 – 藪の中の黒猫 Yabu no Naka no Kuroneko – is a 1968 Japanese horror film directed by Kaneto Shindo. The English title translates as “Black Cat”. (The Japanese title translates as “Black cat in a [bamboo] grove”.)

A mother, Yone (Nobuko Otowa) and daughter-in-law Shige (Kiwako Taichi) – who are raped and murdered by a bad of samurai soldiers who then burn their home to the ground. In their dying moments, the women make a pact with the spirit world and are brought back to life as vengeful cat demons.

The younger of the two appears at the entrance to a bamboo grove to seduce passing samurai into accompanying her home. After plying them with sake, she then savagely murders them, tearing out their throats with her teeth as they make love.

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Eventually, after several bodies are found, a local warlord decides enough is enough, and despatches his best warrior to kill the spirits. However, the samurai in question turns out to be Gintoki (Kichiemon Nakamura) the son and husband of the murdered women and so begins a conflict on both sides.

The wife cannot bring herself to kill her husband, just as he cannot kill his wife and mother – but a broken pact with the underworld sees the younger woman banished to Hell after spending seven nights with him. Alone, the older woman carries on with the killing, forcing a confrontation between the two…

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Review:

Shot in crisp, moody black and white and set in feudal, war torn Japan, this is a more overt ghost story than OnibabaA creepy, atmospheric study love, death and duty – both the son and the mother are bound by promises made, no matter what they feel for each other – Kuroneko is pretty remarkable.

The film uses a lot of theatrical techniques, with characters appearing from shadows thanks to stage lighting and the use of kabuki style dramatics, with the ghostly characters almost gliding with silent footsteps and scenes of Otawa dancing in traditional kabuki style; yet it remains extremely cinematic.

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The bamboo grove is dark, brooding and sinister and the scenes of the samurai being taken to their doom are full of dread and darkness. The seduction scenes are not as frank in terms of nudity as Onibaba, yet have a definite eroticism nevertheless, while the moments of violence and horror are suitably graphic.

The film’s final scenes, with the cat demon mother returning to reclaim her severed limb (the result of a previous battle with her son), are unsettling and moody and the conflict between mother and son sees some impressive early wire work.

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Also worth a mention is Hikaru Hayashi’s remarkable score, that is astonishing. At times, it sounds remarkably similar to Jerry Goldsmith’s later Planet of the Apes soundtrack, full of discordant percussion and strange, unsettling sounds. It’s a score certain cranks up the tension and the sense of tragedy at the heart of the film.

Beautifully shot by Kiyomi Kuroda, Kuroneko proves to be very impressive. Not as startling as Onibaba, perhaps, or as haunting as Ugestu Monogatari, but nevertheless essential viewing for fans of classic Japanese horror.

David Flint, Horrorpedia

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“One could even spend time discussing the film as an examination of class in feudal Japan. But the real pleasure of Kuroneko is watching ghosts that can gracefully do slow motion leaps in the air, backward somersaults, and lunge at the necks of their victims.” Coffee Coffee and More Coffee

Wikipedia | IMDb

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Curse of the Swamp Creature (1966)

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‘ …his victims fought for their lives in a silent, eerie underwater battleground!’

Curse of the Swamp Creature is a 1966 American science fiction horror film produced and directed by Larry Buchanan (The Loch Ness Horror; It’s Alive; Zontar: The Thing from Venus; et al) from a screenplay by actor Tony Houston. It stars John Agar (Hand of Death; The Mole People; et al), Francine York (The Centerfold Girls), Jeff Alexander and Shirley McLine.

screen-shot-2017-02-27-at-12-40-33Although Buchanan was producing low budget 16mm colour remakes of American International Pictures sci-fi movies for television distribution around this time, he claimed this was an original even though it bears striking similarities to Voodoo Woman (1957) and White Zombie (1932).

The film re-uses Ronald Stein’s previous music from both It Conquered the World and Invasion of the Saucer Men.

In his autobiography, It Came from Hunger! Tales of a Cinema Schlockmeister, Buchanan said: “We were plagued by the humidity, cottonmouth snakes, and mechanical troubles throughout the shoot, and John made me promise that next time we worked together, it would be a cakewalk.”

Buy It Came from Hunger! Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

swamp1-e1436165163377Plot:

Deep in the rural swamps of Texas the reclusive and ruthless wife-abusing mad scientist Dr. Simond Trent is conducting experiments in his laboratory on the local impoverished voodoo-worshiping black “natives” in an attempt to discover the secret to reversing evolution, feeding the failures to the alligators he keeps in his covered outdoor swimming pool.

When a party of oil surveyors comes upon his isolated yet strangely suburban-style home he decides to take the final step and turn the duplicitous female leader of the expedition into a grotesque and virtually indestructible amphibious “fish man” so that he can take his revenge upon the world…

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Reviews:

” …another one of those examples that simply defines schlocky cinema as an art form in every way possible — from lousy acting, to shoddy camera set ups, to an array of unintended laughs and a disappointing monster that doesn’t show his face until the final minutes of the film.” George R. Reis, DVD Drive-In

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“The pacing is so slow that the camp is muted. But Swamp Creature probably ranks third in Buchanan’s oeuvre, behind Zontar and Mars Needs Women. The high-pitched voodoo drums are amusing and the bayou boat footage decent.” David Elroy Goldweber, Claws & Saucers

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” …Swamp Creature is a surprisingly mature melodrama, touching on several significant themes, including the overthrow of totalitarian leadership, the use of cold science as a replacement for failed human relationships, and the emergence of female emancipation and black empowerment as leading social movements of the day.” Rob Craig, The Films of Larry Buchanan 

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” …unbearably undynamic suspense and incoherent subplots build up to the most spectacularly anti-climactic “shock” monster revelation ever filmed – the Swamp Creature is nothing more than a guy in a putty-smeared cheap fright-mask with ping pong ball eyes. Buchanan films all this with grim seriousness, which combined with his murky camera work and Agar’s alcoholic resentment, makes this one of the more interesting of Buchanan’s epics.” Brian Curran, Fear of Darkness magazine

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“Bare-bones sets, amateurish acting (star John Agar looks tired and really has nothing to do except sit around and smoke cigarettes), pacing that’s more sluggish than the bayou current, deadening dialogue, dim lighting, tinny sound dubbed in later […] and muddy photography make this picture the very nadir of voodoo cinema.” Bryan Senn, Drums of Terror: Voodoo in the Cinema

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“Perhaps more horrifying in the end than the Swamp Creature itself is the dismal and endless tape-loop of bongo-drums that pounds throughout the screen-shot-2017-02-27-at-12-59-05film. Strangely, we never see the source of all this drumming. What do these drums mean? Are they symbolic of the terminal boredom of the film itself… or a formal device to drive the audience mad, like the abominable Dr. Trent?” Freddie Mertz, Zontar, the Magazine from Venus

” …the monster scarcely does anything once it comes to life successfully. Its role in the story is limited to shambling out of Trent’s basement laboratory, offing the doctor, and then standing around by the side of the swimming pool/alligator pit for a few moments while Pat tries to convince it to commit suicide. All this takes maybe five minutes.” Scott Ashlin, 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

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“There’s an overall wooden quality to every performance, but once you get past that there are some enjoyable moments. The mad scientist character is entertaining on occasion. He’s a smarmy douchebag to everyone around him despite looking more like a high school biology teacher than an actual threat. He acts like he thinks he’s super cool even to the point of wearing sunglasses at all times. Weird.” Zak Greene, Wicked Horror

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Cast and characters:

  • John Agar as Barry Rogers
  • Francine York as Pat Trent
  • Jeff Alexander as Dr. Simond Trent
  • Shirley McLine as Brenda Simmons (aka “Mrs. Brenda West”)
  • Cal Duggan as Ritchie
  • Charles McLine
  • Bill McGhee
  • Ted Mitchell
  • Roger Ready as Frenchie
  • Bill Thurman as Driscoll West / The Swamp Creature
  • Tony Huston as Tom
  • Gayle Johnson as Mura
  • Michael Tolden
  • Annabelle Weenick as Hotel clerk
  • Patrick Cranshaw
  • J.V. Lee
  • Naomi Bruton

Filming locations:

Caddo Lake and Uncertain, Texas, USA

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page21Trivia:

A Curse of the Swamp Creature mask was one of the last items produced by the famed Don Post Studios before it went out of business in 2012.

Wikipedia | IMDb


The Brainiac (1961)

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The Brainiac – original title: El barón del terror  is a 1961 (released 1962) Mexican horror film directed by Chano Urueta (The WitchThe Living Head; Blue Demon vs. the Satanic Power) from a screenplay by Federico Curiel, Adolfo López Portillo and Antonio Orellana.

The film stars producer Abel Salazar and Germán Robles as well as future directors René Cardona and Federico Curiel.

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Plot:

1661, Mexico City: Baron Vitelius of Estara is condemned by the Inquisition and sentenced to be burned at the stake. As this sentence is carried out, the Baron promises that he will return with the next passage of a comet, and slay the descendants of his accusers.

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In 1961, the promised comet does indeed return, carrying with it Baron Vitelius, who takes advantage of his considerable abilities as a sorcerer to carry out his threat: he is able to change at will into the hairy monster of the title in order to suck out the brains of his victims with a long forked tongue; furthermore, he has strong hypnotic capabilities and is able to render his enemies motionless or force them to act against their wills.

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Reviews:

“With a profound title that’s not easily forgotten, soundstage-bound sets, awkwardly hilarious dubbing, and an outrageous monster (with a head that pulsates!) that’s just as memorable as anything Paul Blaisdell created for AIP in the 1950s, The Brainiac is one of the most popular of the Mexican monster romps (if not the most popular).” DVD Drive-In

“Alternately unnerving and hysterical, The Brainiac is a genuinely surreal experience, just as one might expect from director Chano Ureta (who also helmed the equally worthwhile The Witch’s Mirror). Nowhere even close to a “good” film, The Brainiac is an acquired taste but well worth the effort.” Nathaniel Thompson, Mondo Digital

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“Words cannot describe, nor cause one to fully  appreciate the gleeful insanity on display here. It’s because of movies like this that the word ‘cult’ was coined. You’ll see the craziest cinematic monster ever created and some priceless performances amidst  scenes of brain slurping and cops with flame throwers.” Cool Ass Cinema

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“Chances are the monster suit will steal the show to such an extent that you won’t even notice all the other stuff that’s f*cked up about the film at first, and that’s entirely understandable. Not only is this a creature costume that no sane man would ever devise, the filmmakers have such tremendous misplaced pride in it that they brazenly defy the conventional wisdom about keeping it mostly offscreen until the last couple of reels.” Scott Ashlin, 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

“Without question, The Brainiac epitomises virtually everything that a bad-film connoisseur would want: ineffective special effects, glaring technical errors, histrionic acting, and obvious budget limitations, all of which are augmented (or compounded) by Murray’s brand of unnatural and often unintentionally-hilarious dubbed dialogue.” Doyle Green, Mexploitation Cinema

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“The perverse script is filmed rather primitively, but the mischievous enthusiasm with which the scenarist concocted the outrageous tale does communicate itself.” Phil Hardy (editor), The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Horror

“Like other classic Mexican sci-fi horror films (Ship of Monsters most notably) Brainiac is alternately confusing, disturbing, and hilarious. It’s certainly never boring. For me it was akin to Robot Monster in how it feels eerily serious even at its most ridiculous.” David Elroy Goldweber, Claws & Saucers

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Cast and characters:

  • Abel Salazar as Baron Vitelious
  • Ruben Rojo as Rolando Miranda/Marcos Miranda
  • Ariadne Welter as Victoria Contreras
  • Luis Aragon as Prof. Milan
  • David Silva as The Detective-Inspector
  • German Robles as Indelacio Pantoya/Sebastian de Pantoja
  • Mauricio Garces
  • Federico Curiel
  • Victor Velazquez
  • Rosa Maria Gallardo
  • Ofelia Guilmain
  • Susana Cora
  • Roxana Bellini
  • Magda Urviza

Release:

In 1963, the film was distributed in the United States by Clasa-Mohme Inc. in its original, Spanish-language-only form, for exhibition in Spanish-speaking American communities’ cinemas.

In 1964, Florida-based entrepreneur K. Gordon Murray acquired rights to dub the film into American English and distribute it in the United States via his Trans-International Films Inc. firm. This version played largely in smaller, Southern towns and at drive-ins, but got wider American exposure on television in the early 1980s, via the USA Cable Network to which Murray syndicated his library of dubbed Mexican horror, sci-fi and fantasy films as a package deal.

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Artwork courtesy of Richard Sala. Visit his Tumblr blog

Wikipedia | IMDb | Amazon.com


Frankenstein Conquers the World (1965)

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Frankenstein Conquers the World is a 1965 Kaiju film produced by Toho. The film was directed by Ishirō Honda (Varan the Unbelievable; Matango; Godzilla) with special effects by Eiji Tsuburaya. It stars Nick Adams, Kumi Mizuno, Tadao Takashima, with Koji Furuhata as Frankenstein and Haruo Nakajima as Baragon.

This film features a Japanese version of the Frankenstein Monster, who becomes giant-sized to fight the huge subterranean monster, Baragon. In Japan, it was released as フランケンシュタイン対地底怪獣バラゴン “Frankenstein versus Subterranean Monster Baragon”). Toho’s official English title for the film is Frankenstein vs. Baragon.

The film is notable for its memorable brooding score by veteran Akira Ifukube (which would be recycled for further use), touch tones of the Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the infamous giant Octopus ending (see pics below), which was intended for the US version but never used.

An even more bizarre semi-sequel, The War of the Gargantuas, was produced a year later. In it, pieces of Frankenstein’s cells mutate into two giant humanoid monsters: Sanda (the Brown Gargantua) and Gaira (the Green Gargantua).

Plot:

Nazi Germany, in the final days of World War II: A Kriegsmarine Officer barges into the laboratory of a Dr. Riesendorf with orders to seize the immortal heart of the Frankenstein Monster. The heart is summarily transported to be passed off to their Japanese allies.

In the Indian Ocean, the U-Boat meets up with a Japanese submarine to make the exchange. They are sighted by an Allied Forces scout plane and bombed, but not before the Japanese take it back to Hiroshima for further experimentation. However, just as the experiments are about to begin, Hiroshima is bombed by the Allied Forces, and the heart and the experiments vanish in the atomic fireball.

Fifteen years later, in 1960, a feral boy runs rampant in the streets of Hiroshima, catching and devouring small animals such as dogs and rabbits…

Reviews:

” … the cartoony child-like pulp of the Japanese monster movie has become so established that the film quickly falls into these lines without doing anything the slightest bit remarkable with the idea. The effects are cheap, although the climactic wrestling match between Frankenstein and Baragon, which looks like a reptilian puppy dog, is entertaining.” Moria

“Destruction scenes are few, but the final battle between the monsters is fun. Baragon is an unattractive ankylosaurus-triceratops combination with a glowing central horn. At the coda, a giant octopus appears for no reason. This octopus was (wisely?) cut in the American release.” David Elroy Goldweber, Claws & Saucers

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“Even 35 years later, Frankenstein Conquers the World is among the most demented movies Toho ever made, and it is frankly beyond my powers even to speculate how this happened with an American moneyman (who, let’s face it, could be expected to harbor certain pre-conceived notions of what a Frankenstein movie ought to look like) looking over the shoulders of the Japanese creative team. All I can say is, there was weirder still yet to come.” Scott Ashlin, 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

Cast and characters:

  • Nick Adams – Dr. James Bowen (Japanese voice actor: Goro Naya)
  • Tadao Takashima – Dr. Ken’ichiro Kawaji
  • Kumi Mizuno – Dr. Sueko Togami
  • Yoshio Tsuchiya – Captain Kawai
  • Yoshifumi Tajima – Murata
  • Takashi Shimura – Hiroshima surgeon
  • Susumu Fujita – Osaka Police Chief
  • Peter Mann – Dr. Riesendorf (Japanese voice actor:Kazuo Kumakura)
  • Keiko Sawai – Tazuko Tooi
  • Haruya Katô – TV Director
  • Yutaka Nakayama – News Cameraman
  • Senkichi Omura – News Cameraman
  • Kozo Nomura – Reporter
  • Tadashi Okabe – Reporter
  • Kenji Sahara – Soldier
  • Yoshio Kosugi – Soldier
  • Koji Furuhata – Frankenstein
  • Sumio Nakao – Younger Frankenstein
  • Haruo Nakajima – Baragon

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Wikipedia | IMDb | Image credits: 3B Theater Poster ArchiveRobby’s Super 8


The Bird with the Crystal Plumage (1969)

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The Bird with the Crystal Plumage – aka L’uccello dalle piume di cristallo – is a 1969 (released February 1970) Italian giallo thriller film written and directed by Dario Argento (Phenomena; Suspiria; Deep Red; et al), making his directorial debut. It stars Tony Musante, Suzy Kendall (Tales That Witness Madness; CrazeTorso) and Enrico Maria Salerno.

The film is an uncredited adaptation of Fredric Brown’s novel The Screaming Mimi, which had previously been made into a 1958 Hollywood movie of the same name title, directed by Gerd Oswald.

Sam Dalmas (Tony Musante) is an American writer living in Rome with his model girlfriend Giulia (Suzy Kendall). Suffering from writer’s block (“I haven’t written a line in two years”), Sam is on the verge of returning to America, but witnesses the attack of a woman in a modern art gallery by a mysterious black-gloved assailant dressed in a raincoat.

Attempting to reach her, Sam is trapped between two mechanically-operated glass doors and can only watch as the villain makes his escape.

The woman, Monica Ranieri (Eva Renzi), the wife of the gallery’s owner, Alberto Ranieri (Umberto Raho), survives the attack and the local police confiscates Sam’s passport to stop him from leaving the country; the assailant is believed to be a serial killer who is killing young women across the city, and Sam is an important witness…

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On 19 June 2017, Arrow Video is releasing the film on Blu-ray + DVD with new artwork designed by Candice Tripp (and the original poster art on the reverse) and the following special features:

  • Brand new 4K restoration of the film from the camera negative in its original 2.35:1 aspect ratio, produced by Arrow Video exclusively for this release
  • High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) and Standard Definition DVD presentations
  • Original mono Italian and English soundtracks (lossless on the Blu-ray Disc)
  • English subtitles for the Italian soundtrack
  • Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing for the English soundtrack
  • New audio commentary by Troy Howarth, author of So Deadly, So Perverse: 50 Years of Italian Giallo Films
  • The Power of Perception, a new visual essay on the cinema of Dario Argento by Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, author of Devil’s Advocates: Suspiria and Rape-Revenge Films: A Critical Study
  • New interview with writer/director Dario Argento
  • New interview with actor Gildo Di Marco (Garullo the pimp)
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Candice Tripp
  • Limited edition 60-page booklet illustrated by Matthew Griffin, featuring an appreciation of the film by Michael Mackenzie, and new writing by Howard Hughes and Jack Seabrook

Reviews:

“Argento never had a stronger plot than this one, which anchors his trademark visual flourishes into a recognizable thematic and human fabric that would later be jettisoned for the candy-colored fantasias of Suspiria and Inferno. Ennio Morricone’s groundbreaking, jittery score still manages to eke out every bit of suspense from the murder sequences, and the actors all do a fine job, partial dubbing notwithstanding.” Nathaniel Thompson, Mondo Digital

” …while Argento’s fondness for all things psychological may not out-Freud Hitchcock, the film’s ending brings to mind Psycho‘s own. If Hitchcock’s ending needlessly showcases the Hitchcock’s fascination with psychoanalysis, Bird With the Crystal Plumage‘s ending is at least tidier and more poetic.” Ed Gonzalez, Slant magazine

The Bird With the Crystal Plumage is frankly not the most innovative of mysteries, nor even the goriest of horror outings, but it’s quite notable for its oppressive sense of terror and subterfuge […] Argento manages to be both rather shockingly lurid (the final showdown between the killer and Sam is almost an exercise in outright sadism) and surprisingly restrained (the film is much less bloody than some might expect).” Jeffrey Kauffman, Blu-ray.com

“Picking up on the ambitions of his one-time collaborator Sergio Leone, Argento sought to split the difference between art and exploitation with The Bird With The Crystal Plumage, and the result was one of the era’s signature films. It won over the arthouse crowd with its crisp, arid look, and it won over the mainstream crowd because it was as chic as Blow-Up, but easier to understand.” Noel Murray, A.V. Club

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“If you take the ending of the movie and really begin to break it down after watching the film it may not all add up to you. I wouldn’t go as far to say it’s silly but it’s not entire believable. None of that matters while watching the movie. Argento has you so hooked from the start that by the time you get to that payoff you’re willing to buy anything he sells.” Chris Coffel, Bloody Disgusting

” …there’s a sense of humor that doesn’t lessen the suspense or creepy moments and both the development of the mystery and the juggling of the red herrings are competently handled […] All that said, this is neither inventive (conceptually, stylistically or otherwise) nor original enough to be the genre masterwork some make it out to be. It is simply a solidly-crafted, entertaining and above average film of its type.” Justin McKinney, The Bloody Pit of Horror

“Taking the lead from Mario Bava, Argento quickly established his trademark elements of beautifully staged set pieces, fetishizing graphic violence, and clever misdirection.” J.A. Kerswell, Teenage Wasteland: The Slasher Movie Uncut

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“This is a film that provides a segue from the noir genre that inspired it – the femme fatale and the amateur detective following her – to a new form of filmmaking and storytelling that seems equally inspired by Ennio Morricone’s jazz score (Argento often cut his films to his musical scores) and Freudian dream logic.” Alex Fitch, Electric Sheep

“The frequently misogynistic nastiness of Argento’s films was laid down in one set-piece here where a big-breasted woman is first seen undressing for bed and putting on a scanty night top and is then attacked by the killer who takes time out to rip off her top and panties with his knife before stabbing her, a clear example where her desirability is laid out for us before she is then slaughtered.” Richard Scheib, Moria

“The dialogue is sappy; the post-synchronization dreadful; the blood too thin; the moods too thick—and yet The Bird With the Crystal Plumage has the energy to support its elaborateness and the decency to display its devices with style. Something from each of its better models has stuck, and it is pleasant to rediscover old horrors in such handsome new décor.” Vincent Canby, The New York Times, July 23, 1970

The Bird with the Crystal Plumage is billed as a thriller, and it’s a pretty good one. But its scares are on a much more basic level than in, say, a thriller by Hitchcock. It works mostly by exploiting our fear of the dark.” Roger Ebert, October 14, 1970

Cast and characters:

  • Tony Musante as Sam Dalmas
  • Suzy Kendall as Julia
  • Enrico Maria Salerno as Inspector Morosini
  • Eva Renzi as Monica Ranieri
  • Umberto Raho as Alberto Ranieri
  • Reggie Nalder as the assassin
  • Renato Romano as Professor Carlo Dover
  • Giuseppe Castellano as Monti
  • Mario Adorf as Berto Consalvi
  • Pino Patti as Faiena
  • Gildo Di Marco as Garullo
  • Rosita Torosh as Fourth Victim
  • Omar Bonaro as Police Detective
  • Fulvio Mingozzi as Police Detective
  • Werner Peters as Antique Dealer
  • Karen Valenti as Tina, Fifth Victim
  • Carla Mancini (girl in the street)

Wikipedia | IMDb | Image credits: FilmGrabWrong Side of the Art!



The Strangler of Blackmoor Castle (1963)

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The Strangler of Blackmoor Castle – aka Der Würger von Schloss Blackmoor – is a 1963 German ‘krimi’ murder mystery film directed by Harald Reinl (Castle of the Walking Dead; The Sinister Monk) from a screenplay by Ladislas Fodor and Gustav Kampendonk. The story is based on a novel by Bryan Edgar Wallace. It stars Karin Dor, Harry Riebauer and Rudolf Fernau.

The film features a distinctive electronic score by Oskar Sala composed using the instrument he invented, the trautonium (also used in Hitchcock’s The Birds, the same year) which pre-dated the synthesizer (later used for many movie scores).

Reviews:

“Looking at it, it’s hard to believe the formula for the type of films we know and love was already firmly set in place years before, but it’s true. The killer is effectively creepy, the music sets a great, disturbing mood, and the film has enough gothic set pieces to keep audiences enthralled.” Wes R., Oh, the Horror!

“an entertaining, black & white entry with elements interchangeable with the horror genre. Aside from the masked menace and the adequately gothic castle, there are a several beheadings, resulting in severed heads with the letter “M” marked on the forehead (one of the heads is delivered in a parcel package!).” George R. Reis, DVD Drive-In

“It’s krimi time again, and this is a good one. Like most krimis, it gets confusing during the middle section and it has too many characters, but the musical score is unique and effective, the comic relief (a Scottish landlord) is fairly decent, and it’s full of effective touches and scenes.” Dave Sindelar, Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings

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“The plot is serviceable, but the characters are blandly drawn, and the action sequences few and far between. Only Dor musters some charisma, and the scene where she’s terrorized by an electric drill is the best moment here.” The Terror Trap

Main cast:

Karin Dor (What Have You Done to Solange?; Castle of the Walking Dead), Harry Riebauer (The College Girl Murders), Rudolf Fernau, Hans Nielsen, Dieter Eppler (Slaughter of the Vampires), Hans Reiser, Richard Häussler, Walter Giller, Ingmar Zeisberg, Peter Nestler, Gerhard Hartig, Albert Bessler, Werner Schott and Carl de Vogt.

IMDb | Image credit: The Dwrayger Dungeon


Terrified (1962)

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‘How much shock can the human brain endure before it cracks’

Terrified is a 1962 American horror film directed by Lew Landers (The Boogie Man Will Get You; The Return of the VampireThe Raven) from a screenplay by producer Richard Bernstein (From Hell It Came). It stars Rod Lauren, Steve Drexel and Tracy Olsen.

Composer Michael Andersen’s only other horror soundtrack score was for Roger Corman’s Tower of London, made the same year.

US distributors Crown International Pictures promoted the film for its 1963 release as Terrified!

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Reviews:

Terrified certainly has its moments, mainly the cat and mouse game that plays out between Ken and the masked killer, but on the whole has little to be desired. The acting is often stiff, save for Rod Lauren who tends to overact but in an almost appropriate fashion. Tracy Olsen in particular is quite dull as the sexual interest of both teenager and killer alike.” Jason McElreath, DVD Drive-In

“Visually the movie is pretty poor. The ski-mask killer is kind of modern, but the lighting and the Ghost Town sets are too dark to take advantage. A good chunk of the movie is spent in a restaurant set that looks like it came out of a ’50s or ’60s sitcom.” JP Roscoe, Basement Rejects

“Wonderfully bad dialogue full of nonsense, at times reaching close to Ed Wood levels, will either leave you smiling or shaking your head. It has a fairly weak ending and the acting is terrible, but those things almost add to the enjoyment of the film.” Josh Mogan, Quick Horror Movie Review

“The biggest weakness in Terrified is the script. The whole thing feels padded, like the film could take place in the span of about 30 minutes, but writer Richard Bernstein (From Hell It Came) drags it out into a feature length screenplay. The resulting script is uneven, with too much dialogue in some places and long stretches without dialogue in others.” James Jay Edwards, Film Fracture

“The identity of the killer is painfully obvious; I knew who it was ten minutes into the movie, but the movie actually works itself up to an effective ending once the unmasking occurs and we get some insight into why he’s doing what he’s doing. In short, this is one very mixed bag, but it has its moments…” Dave Sindelar, Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings

Main cast:

Rod Lauren (The Black Zoo; The Crawling Hand), Steve Drexel, Tracy Olsen (The Couch), Stephen Roberts, Sherwood Keith, Barbara Luddy, Denver Pyle (The Legend of Hillbilly John), Lee Bradley, Ben Frank, Danny Welton, Nona Carver, Michael Fellen, Robert Towers.

IMDb | Image credits: Basement Rejects

Related: Hellgate


Tomb of Torture (1963)

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‘Born murdered!’

Tomb of Torture – aka Metempsyco – is a 1963 Italian horror film directed by Antonio Boccaci [as Anthony Kristye] from a screenplay co-written with Giorgio Simonelli [as Johnny Seemonell]. It stars Annie Alberti, Adriano Micantoni and Marco Mariani.

In the US, Richard Gordon distributed the film on a double-bill with 1964 German horror film Cave of the Living Dead.

A young woman is tormented by nightmares that she is the reincarnation of a dead countess. Her father, trying to get her to stop the dreams, takes her to a village near the castle of the late countess.

In the village she meets a reporter who is investigating reports of the deaths of two young women who it is believed were killed by a creature that lives in the castle. Meanwhile, an Indian psychic, Rahman, lurks nearby…

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Review:

Despite some initially intriguing torture chamber scenes that anticipate the delirious 1970s work of director Renato Polselli (Black Magic Rites), this low-rent castle-caper soon becomes bogged down in the kind of joker reporter/hidden treasure shenanigans that bedevilled horror thriller films since the 1930s.

Worse still, the Scooby-Doo type plot is dreadfully lame and – perplexingly – the scenario seems to be set in England, with the inclusion of a laughably fake British bobby (whose costume bears no similarity to a proper uniform) and the director himself as a browned-up ‘Indian’ psychic.

Meanwhile, the monster, whose lopsided face seems to have suffered the same fate as Blood of the Vampire‘s hunchback Carl (as played by Victor Maddern), laughs irritatingly whenever he’s onscreen and, as is the case in The Beast in Heat (1977), the supposed threatening torture chamber rats are clearly benign hamsters.

Minor positives include some arresting gothic imagery and a disarmingly obvious yet smile-inducingly bonkers ‘creepy’ score by Armando Sciascia (The Erotic Rites of Frankenstein).

Yet, for all its faults, Tomb of Torture is at least worth a late-night look just to see how other 1960s Italian cobwebbed gothic horrors by the likes of Antonio Margheriti match up in terms of entertainment value. And, amidst its histrionic and decidedly humble horrors, at least it never drags…

Adrian J Smith, Horrorpedia

Other reviews:

Tomb of Torture has a plot that’s anything but stirring, but it’s got a wicked torture chamber, as well as a very ugly monster (complete with one half of his face completely mutilated and sunken) who likes to tie up young girls and (seemingly) do nasty things to them! Basically, Tomb is the kind of flick that would give you nightmares for days had you caught it on TV as a kid, but it can still induce a chill or two if the moment is right.” George R. Reis, DVD Drive-In

“The movie also seems at least partially a comedy, and the primary comic relief character is our reporter-hero; just as a rule, don’t put too much hope on how effectual your hero will be if his musical theme prominently features an oboe. Overall, the movie is rather clumsy and crude, but it somehow remains rather watchable all the same…” Dave Sindelar, Fantastic Movie Musings & Ramblings

“It goes from being an enjoyable Gothic yarn to a talky, plodding mess in an instant. You know, the kind of movie where everyone has to constantly explain what’s going on almost all the time, while poor attempts at characterization and next to nothing happens on the screen. It also doesn’t help that there’s no mystery or suspense on display.” Joseph Howell, Talk of Horrors

Choice dialogue:

Doctor Darnell: “Just as I thought. It’s caught it Dobson, you drink too much. A good enema is what you need. And above all, don’t get frightened. Goodnight!”

Main cast:

Annie Alberti, Adriano Micantoni (The Gestapo’s Last Orgy), Marco Mariani (Death Smiles on a Murderer; Frankenstein ’80; Your Vice Is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key), Flora Carosello, Antonio Boccaci, Bernard Blay, Emy Eco, Terry Thompson, Fred Pizzot.

Filming locations:

Castello Orsini, Nerola, Lazio, Italy
Palazzo Borghese, Artena, Italy

IMDb


Cave of the Living Dead (1964)

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‘Beyond the black mouth of the cursed cave lurk the unfleshed…’

Cave of the Living Dead is a 1964 West German-Yugoslavian horror film produced and directed by Ákos Ráthonyi [as Akos von Ratony] from a screenplay co-written with Kurt Roecken. It stars Adrian Hoven, Carl Möhner, Erika Remberg and Wolfgang Preiss.

The film’s original title is Der Fluch der grünen Augen (“The Curse of the Green Eyes”). It was released by Richard Gordon in the US on a double-bill (“Twice the thrills! Twice the chills!”) with Italian film Tomb of Torture.

Inspector Frank Dorin (Adrian Hoven) is sent to a remote village to investigate a number of mysterious deaths and encounters local superstition, racism and a suspicious professor in the local castle…

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Reviews:

“Like most Eurohorror, Cave is long on atmosphere and short on any logical narrative sense or structure. Like a dream (or nightmare), characters react to missing bodies and vampires living in caves with a disquieting complacency.” Films from Beyond the Time Barrier

Basically an atmospheric bore, Cave of the Living Dead still has several things to recommend it including some nice homages to early German horror films (notably Nosferatu) […] There’s also Karin Field who flashes her curvy figure (from behind) while stripping down to a pair of black panties, then throwing on a see-through negligee that she parades around in for several moments.” George R. Reis, DVD Drive-In

“Though Hoven is an engaging enough presence as the omnipresent Doren, perhaps the major mystery about Der Fluch is that Von Ratony got hold of an iconic figure like Wolfgang Preiss yet gave him so little to chew on. The Professor is a sketchy character; engaged in research that’s presumably intended to reverse his own vampirism, he never gets the opportunity to elucidate it slightly.” Jonathan Rigby, Euro Gothic

Buy: Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com | Amazon.ca

“The humour is slightly off-kilter, as I mentioned, full of bungling characters and a Lothario lead. It doesn’t work brilliantly, but this might be due to the poor dubbing and translated dialogue. That said there is something pleasingly groovy, despite the uncomfortable moments, about the film – perhaps due to the swing jazz soundtrack.” Taliesin Meets the Vampires

Choice dialogue:

Landlord: “And what am I left with? Just the wine…”

Village doctor: “They gossip so much in the village, particularly about foreigners. And when the other one is black they have great material.”

John, the manservant: “Say, Inspector, do you think vampires like black blood?”

Inspector Frank Dorin: “Either coffins are cheap around here or they haven’t got enough beds!”

Main cast:

Adrian Hoven (producer of Mark of the Devil and director of its sequel), Erika Remberg (Circus of Horrors), Carl Möhner, Wolfgang Preiss (Mill of the Stone WomenThe 1,000 Eyes of Dr. Mabuse), Karin Field (The Demons; Legend of Horror; Web of the Spider), Emmerich Schrenk, John Kitzmiller.

Running time: 81 minutes

IMDb | Image credits (big time!): Zombos’ Closet

Plot keywords:

inspector | village | grotto | murder | innkeeper | doctor | castle | professor | caves | witch | villagers | underwear | panties | nylons | well | snake | vampire


Fear No Evil (1969)

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‘How can you fight an abstraction? What defense can you use against the infinite?’

Fear No Evil is a 1969 American made-for-television film directed by Paul Wendkos (From the Dead of Night; Good Against EvilThe Mephisto Waltz) from a screenplay by Richard Alan Simmons. It was based on a short story by Guy Endore (author of The Werewolf of Paris).

This film and Ritual of Evil (1970) were pilots for a proposed Universal Television series called Bedeviled. It should not be confused with Frank LaLoggia’s 1981 film of the same title.

Plot:

Dr. David Sorell (Louis Jourdan), a psychiatrist turned reluctant paranormal investigator, begins looking into a friend’s accident and soon discovers that it may be linked to the sinister workings of a satanic cult and a mirror which may reflect doom for those who possess it…

Review:

Airing March 3rd 1969 on NBC, Fear No Evil has the distinction of being considered the first US made-for-television horror film; at least two others had been made previously – Dark Intruder (1965) and Chamber of Horrors (1966), unsold pilots for the series The Black Coat and House of Wax, respectively, which never became realities – but instead of running on television at the time, both films were released theatrically. All three share not only the horror format but also what has become a fixture in the genre, the serious-minded parapsychological investigator, a type that originally debuted in Robert Wise’s 1963 theatrical movie, The Haunting.

In this Universal Television production, pervasive face of 1970’s genre vehicles, Bradford Dillman, plays Paul Varney, a physicist at Interspace and a man haunted by lost memories and seemingly influenced by possible occult forces; Linda Day George, another prevalent face of the decade, as Barbara Anholt, Paul’s fiancée, is the bewildered ingénue desperately trying to maintain her grip on reality after an unforeseen car accident briefly leaves her without Paul’s companionship but in too close proximity to an ominous mirror Paul had absentmindedly purchased just before the accident; television legend, Carroll O’Connor, only three years away from his iconic role as Archie Bunker, plays Myles Donovan, Paul’s co-worker at Interspace and a man that, at times, swings unnervingly between pleasant amiability and vague mendaciousness; Marsha Hunt, a neglected talent from the Golden Age of Hollywood, plays Mrs. Varney, Paul’s mother and the bridge between Barbara’s happy past and perilous future; the fine-tuned, ever-smooth Louis Jourdan plays Dr. David Sorell, psychiatrist and hesitant believer in the paranormal; rounding out the major cast members is the always reliable, and seminal British actor, Wilfrid Hyde-White as Harry Snowden, Dr. Sorell’s mentor and genteel clubhouse lawyer concerning the paranormal.

Fear No Evil’s opening scene masterfully sets the tone for the rest of the movie and expertly whets the viewer’s appetite; it depicts a distressed Paul Varney deep in shadows and frantically racing through L.A.’s famous Bradbury Building at night, careening from door to door, desperately trying to find a way out. He’s obviously experiencing some nightmarish state which has yet to be clarified and which is made eerily manifest by meaty Dutch angles from cinematographer Andrew J. McIntyre and the brilliantly macabre wheels-within-wheels organ music and reverberating voice accompaniment of composer William Goldenberg.

McIntyre’s camera work and lighting are superb throughout the film, with creamy illumination where appropriate in less claustrophobic moments and suffocatingly tenebrous during the darker bits, beautifully intensifying a mounting anxiety and ghoulish dread brought on by possible satanic rituals likely linked to the dark and ornate mirror mentioned previously. Thankfully, Goldenberg repeats this sinister organ and echoing voice motif during heavier scenes but astutely mixes it up by replacing the organ with tinkling chimes, floating wind instruments, and a moody, undulating double base during other more hallucinatory sequences.

Paul Wendkos’ direction, as usual, is solid, and his craftsman’s eye for the moody and ominous comes through with intensity and spine-chilling spookiness. The entire cast delivers on performance, with Carroll O’Connor furnishing what could possibly be the standout in the film; he’s both understated and believable while being edgy and charming, leaving the viewer frequently wondering where he stands in the midst of all the diabolical goings on.

Marsha Hunt comes in a close second, her character at first coming off as slightly cold toward her son’s fiancée but then warming up rather effectively in the second act; her subtle and shocking turn in the third act is just as convincing and surprisingly refreshing, thanks to the shrewd and perceptive script by Richard Alan Simmons.

If a viewer had to tag, the one slight drawback of Fear No Evil would have to be the special effects by Don Record; the mirror sequences, which play a major part in the movie, seem a bit brittle and almost cartoonish, while the flashback/dream episodes have a touch of the flimsy about them. This is only a minor quibble, though, and not really a reflection on Don Record’s skill as a special effects artist, considering this was pretty advanced technical fair for television in the late 1960’s. Essentially, the work probably couldn’t have been done any better at that time, which makes this first official entry in the long and prestigious line of made-for-TV shudderfests legitimately worth your attention and an absolute must for all fans of venerable, well-made horror films.

Ben Spurling, Horrorpedia

Other reviews:

” …the story is fascinating and takes some very interesting turns, the acting is strong, and it was quite ambitious […] The biggest problem with the movie is that the dialogue is clumsy at times; it’s full of dialogue that looks better on paper than it sounds coming from the mouths of actual people. Nevertheless, this is a unique and and interesting TV movie that works well as both horror and mystery.” Dave Sindelar, Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings

“This early teleterror is well acted, especially from a fresh faced young Day (she hadn’t yet married Christopher George) and Jourdan is good as Sorel. A bit talky at times, nevertheless this knows when to reel it in when necessary and manages to be decent late nite viewing.” The Terror Trap

Cast and characters:

  • Louis Jourdan – Dr. David Sorrell + Swamp ThingCount DraculaDaughter of the Mind
  • Lynda Day George – Barbara Anholt + Mortuary + Pieces + Day of the Animals + Ants!
  • Carroll O’Connor – Myles Donovan
  • Bradford Dillman – Paul Varney + Piranha; Bug; Chosen Survivors; Moon of the Wolf
  • Wilfrid Hyde-White – Harry Snowden + The Cat and the Canary; Chamber of Horrors; Ten Little Indians
  • Marsha Hunt – Mrs. Varney
  • Katherine Woodville – Ingrid Dorne
  • Harry Davis – Mr. Wyant
  • Ivor Barry – Lecturer
  • Jeanne Buckley – Miss Barnett
  • Robert Sampson – First Party Guest + The Dark Side of the Moon; Re-Animator; City of the Living Dead
  • Lyn Peters – Second Party Guest
  • Susan Brown – Third Party Guest

Wikipedia | IMDb


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