306 lines
20 KiB
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306 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
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The following article is reprinted from the April 1985 issue of NEW CANADIAN
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FANDOM, Canada's national science fiction fanzine.
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For Diehard Film Viewers Only
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-----------------------------
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Dave Szurek
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Prologue: Before launching into the body of this article, there are a few
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things that I want to set straight. First, those who dislike films are advised
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to re-read the title. To the best of my knowledge, a good number of science
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fiction buffs, myself included, moonlight as film fans. I've had enough
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experience though with all of the various subgenres within the sf/horror field
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to know that there may be many polar opposites, and I don't expect everyone to
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be into films. It is to those readers who find cinema more bearable than
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fingernails on a blackboard, and most of all for my own pleasure, that this
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article is written. As a footnote, those who dislike film "fans" and look down
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at buffs of that or any other entertainment medium, earn somewhat less respect
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from yours truly. (The same principle applies to film buffs with a similar
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snobbish attitude toward nonfilm buffs.) I can better understand opposition to
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all vicarious imitations of life than I can to one specific type. In my
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opinion, matters of private taste cannot legitimately be represented as dogma
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without exposing the proponent as a pompous fool. Any door that fails to swing
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both ways is nothing more than a sham.
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Second, while all of the films reviewed here in capsule form are available to
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television there isn't a "made-for-TV" picture in the lot. Everything here
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received some, if in many cases very limited, theatrical distribution. The
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thoughts expressed reflect nothing more concrete than my own subjective
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impressions. I also want to stress that the "standards" employed are those
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observed during more casual viewings such as on television. Entertainment
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value, except that provided by unintentional camp, has most definitely been
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taken into consideration. This may appear self-evident, but a handful of
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self-styled "Film Scholars" look down on this approach. In one sense, the
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following collection was compiled at random, but in another, the structure is
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deceptively formal. My avoidance of over-publicized titles is deliberate.
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Many of the best---and many of the worst---films in the genre have been exposed
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to the point of absolutely indelible deja-vu. You will find no signs of Bride
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of Frankenstein, Night of the Living Dead, Alien or King Kong (the first
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version) here. Neither, granting equal time for the same reason, will you be
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forced to encounter the movies over-exposed due to their "lack" of quality such
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as Plan Nine From Outer Space, Robot Monster, Bride of the Monster, and Cat
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Women of the Moon.) Sitting through films of this prestigious nature may offer
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greater promise of satisfaction, but if I read one more word about them, I'll
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scream!
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As a result of my efforts to bypass monotony, the majority of those films
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I've chosen to cover are relatively obscure, even among circles of
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horror/sf/fantasy film fans. As a further result, most are ultra-low budget
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(not necessarily a pejorative), shoe-string and independent productions that
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ended up being distributed to quickie first-run openings, the drive-in circuit,
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kiddies' matinees and all-night flophouses, if at all. Even on the tube,
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treatment is shabby; these are more likely run as late night second features
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and specialty shows than on the networks (although, ironically, that's where
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two on this list debute TV-wise). The names at the end of each capsule review
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are those of the lead players; the country at the opening denotes the origin.
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+ + +
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The Astro-Zombies (USA, 1971). The title gives us an accurate picture.
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Mindless, amateurish mishmash of pseudo-horror and espionage as operatives of
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"both" sides compete for a mad doctor's reanimation device. Neither seems
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particularly concerned that the "zombies" automatically engage in murderous
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rampages, and we, the audience, aren't given any clear indication of the
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motives behind such anti-social behaviour other than that the reanimated
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corpses are instantly struck with a compulsion to kill females. (The "mad
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scientist," incidentally, is aided by a traditionally hunchbacked lab
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assistant, while an ever present and unidentified woman spends the entire
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picture strapped to a table, periodically screaming and fainting, but serving
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no apparent purpose other than the titillation of kinkier viewers.) Absurdist
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trash might be tolerated by the kiddies, but it's doubtful that anyone else
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will go for it. Even the laughs, and they do exist to a limited extent, aren't
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enough to prevent the itches from attacking. Tom Pace, Joan Patrick, John
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Carradine, Wendall Corey, Rafael Campes, Victor Izay.
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Boy Who Cried Werewolf (USA, 1973) This lightweight mediocrity reminiscent of
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the slightly more palatable 50's quickies is no great shakes, but does
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relatively well considering the extent of potentially lethal drawbacks facing
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it. (For example, the incredibly unconvincing "make-up" closely resembling a
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second-rate Halloween costume, laughably hammy acting by the person behind the
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obvious mask, the cornball equation of "hippy" and "Jesus" movements, the
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intrusion of exceptionally bad comedy relief and some stereotypic soap opera
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exchanged between the film's love interests.) A man is turned into Werewolf by
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a lycanthropy bite received during a wilderness trip and is discovered by his
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prepubescent son whose vain attempts to convince others that his findings are
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more than flights of fancy justify the title. Merely fair (and then only by
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grade "B" standards), yet still a miniature cut above its economic
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counterparts, but leaves little, if any after taste. Not worth going out of
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one's way to see, and probably won't make a powerful enough impression to be
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remembered on anyone's "ten worst" list, but at least it shouldn't agonize
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shut-ins. Scott Sealey, Kerwin Matthews, Elaine Devry, Bob Hommel, Robert J
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Wilke, Susan Foster.
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Cave of the Living Dead (Germany, 1962) Atrociously dubbed and talky,
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plodding and chiefly uneventful crud effort at combining espionage and horror.
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The secret agent investigating mass murders suspected to be of a cloak and
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dagger nature learns that they were actually committed by a colony of modern
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day vampires. Dullsville incarnate. Health and Welfare should attach a
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warning to this one. Carl Mohner, Adrian Hoven, John Kitzmiller, Wolfgang
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Priess.
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Creature With the Blue Hand (Germany, 1969) Another in the string of oddball
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crime films Germans are so fond of labelling "horror." Most are released
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directly to TV in this country, although this one was an exception, having been
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distributed with the Phillipines-shot Beast of the Yellow Night. This badly
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dubbed murder mystery with horror overtones tells of an innocent man wrongly
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convicted of being a costumed mass murderer (the uniform's glove is blue; hence
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the title, which is an example of limb climbing if I've ever seen it) who
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escapes prison intent on establishing innocence by (literally) unmasking the
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true culprit. No better and no worse than others of its ilk; about average, in
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fact, but in light of the field's general condition, I see no reason to torture
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oneself. Harold Leipnitz, Klaus Kinski, Diana Koerning, Carl Lange.
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Equinox (USA, 1968) An amateur film, which was rewarded with (limited)
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commercial release after being screened by poverty-row distributors, shows it's
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home movie origins (except in the surprisingly good special effects and the
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talented script) and for that reason alone may be unfairly condemned without a
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trial by purists and pseudo-intellectuals, but if so, it's their loss.
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Redeemed by a consistently bizarre atmosphere, this is no unforgettable
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classic, but it is several cuts above the average "cheapie." College students
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come up against satanic forces while searching for a professor (Fritz Leiber in
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a brief but pivotal role) who disappeared while investigating the occult in a
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rural site. The script consistently alternates the refreshingly plausible (as
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grade B horror films go) and the outrageous. This film was more impressive at
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the release date, before screen depictions of Satan and his minions had grown
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commonplace. Edward Connel, Barbara Hewitt.
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Frankenstein's Bloody Terror (Spain, 1968) Ohmigod! Most foreign cheapies
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are pretty bad, yes, but this utterly brainless garbage, apparently designed
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with grade-schoolers intentionally in mind, makes the others look good. Most
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imports suffer from tawdry American treatment (bad dubbing, editing, etc.) and
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while this is no exception, it looks as if it were miserable to begin with.
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Unfortunate viewers will wonder what the title has to do with the content if
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they miss the brief (and probably tacked on by US distributors) explanation
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that the Frankenstein clan changed it's name somewhere along the line to
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"Wolfstein" and were cursed with lycanthropy as punishment for the Baron's
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crimes. Yeah, sure. Worse yet, the miasmic plot concentrates on an unrelated
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man turned into a werewolf by a bite from (you guessed) it) Wolfstein. Further
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complicating this topsy-turvy mess, his efforts to find a cure lead to his
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unwitting involvement with a vampire pair posing as professional exorcists to
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secure a steady stream of victims. Unsurpassed idiocy. Among the screen's
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darkest moments. The extremely tacky look that leaves no question about the
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picture's financial status compounds my amazement that this one ever made it to
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other shores. Paul Naschy (the Spanish John Belushi), Diana Zura, Mike Manza,
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Gilbert Granger, Anita Avery.
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The Fury (Usa, 1978) Poor old Brian DePalma temporarily lived down his
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positive reputation with this tedious hokum, as bad as most of the worst "C"
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cheapies, but without the excuse of a shoestring budget to make it more
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tolerable. A muddled fantasy-horror-espionage combination where, following the
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abduction of his telekinetic son, a former spy sets out to crush an
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unscrupulous cloak and dagger outfit utilizing paranormal secret weapons. No
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sense of enthusiasm is radiated, although it is to be assumed that at least a
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smidgen was involved. This vapid absurdity is dull enough that the potential
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for camp is rarely realized. Kirk Douglas, Amy Irving, Carrie Snodgrass, John
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Casavettes, Charles During, Carol Rossen, Andrew Stevens.
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Invasion From Inner Earth (Canada, 1974) Markedly shoddy physical appearance,
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an indicator of the virtually nonexistent budget is transcended by
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stress-building tension and a weird atmosphere in an eerie Night of the Living
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Dead imitation. Travelers stranded in a strangely deserted rural Manitoba
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encounter aggressive emissaries of a subterranean race. Attention to a "hollow
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Earth" theory and a brooding sense of doom dominates this cheap but creepy
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little yarn. Certain elements, like the theft of The Good, the Bad, and the
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Ugly theme song are better left ignored. This film is no classic, but has more
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to offer than it initially leads us to believe. Slightly more competent acting
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than traditionally associated with these ultra-cheapies comes in handy. Paul
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Bentzen, Debbie Pick, Nick Holt, Karl Wallace.
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Let's Scare Jessica to Death (USA, 1971) Regarded as a "mini-sleeper" by
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some, this uneven shocker does indeed posses isolated moments, but they are too
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far between to sustain closer examination. A string of film clips might have
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been more effective... A former mental patient and her husband move to a small
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town inhabited by vampires. Her observations are, of course, taken as
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symptomatic of mental illness. The moderately unexciting script could benefit
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from a more stable flow of events. This one has potential, but is skittish.
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Zhora Lampert, Kevin O'Conner, Barton Heyward, Gretchen Corbett, Mark
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Claire-Costello.
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Lost Continent (UK, 1969) (This is not to be confused with the earlier
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"dinosaur" film of the same name.) This painfully juvenile film adaptation of
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Denis Wheatley's Uncharted Island might satisfy the youngsters, but it is
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unsuitable fare for anyone else. In a Victorian setting, sea-going smugglers
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and their unwary passengers are stranded in unfamiliar territory where they run
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into monsters and a hostile civilization. Nothing much happens, which means
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that Wheatley's novel must not have been followed very closely. This is not
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just a bad Hammer film, but a bad film period, and not at all what we've come
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to expect from the England. Eric Porter, Hildegare Neff, Tony Beckley, Nigel
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Stock, Suzannah Leigh.
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Man Who Haunted Himself (UK, 1970) Imaginative, and stylish, if somewhat
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prolix, novelty. As the title implies, an executive recently discharged from
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the hospital is jeopardized by his unscrupulous double. No Citizen Kane, but
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this obscure, almost unknown sf movie should be seen by those who insist that
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the field has never produced anything of worth. The "surprise" ending,
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previously used in another picture is predictable, but what the heck. Viewers
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who didn't see the antecedent might be impressed. Roger Moore, Hildegarde Neil
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(not Neff), Anton Rogers, Olga Georges-Picon, Thorley Waters, Alastair
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MacKenzie.
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Man With the Icy Eyes (Italy/USA, 1971) This inept crime/melodrama/mystery
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with almost incidental supernatural overtones isn't as inspired as some in the
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foreign-cheapie category, and never attains more than run-of-the-mill stature.
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Likewise, the uneven dubbing isn't uniformly bad, but just obvious enough to
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let us know that it wasn't shot in Hollywood. A newspaper is menaced by
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elements of both mortal and occult origin while trying to vindicate an
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erroneously convicted assassin. The obvious efforts at trying to generate
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suspense fail. Fair as late night TV features go, an evaluation which you may
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interpret as you like. Antonio Sabato, Barbara Bouchet, Victor Buono, Keenan
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Wynn.
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People That Time Forgot (UK - USA, 1977) The dinosaurs are more convincing
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than the virtually catatonic lead player, although the supporting cast is
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adequate at light work. If one is able to ignore Patrick Wayne's wooden
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performance and some of the uproariously sexist dialogue (causing one to wonder
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if this is what the title refers to), this so-so film version of E R B's novel
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is one of the more palatable of the special kiddie matinee-oriented fantasy
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adventures. A search party hunting a missing war hero in the Antarctic
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discover a "lost" tropical area populated by prehistoric beasts, warring
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tribesmen, and the obligatory volcano. No new ground is broken, but the
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execution is somewhat above the average lost world opus. The inconsistent
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special effects alternate between the exemplary and the poor. This innocuous
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froth holds little for anyone past puberty, but if you can recall your younger
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days, it's not too bad. Beside Wayne, principals include Sarah Douglas,
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Thorley Waters, Dana Gillespie, Doug McClure.
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S-S-S-S (USA, 1973) Almost no atmosphere or suspense, but a mildly diverting
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script and a lack of pretension make up for it. An unwitting college student
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is subjected to experiments by a typically deranged serum researcher intent on
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solving our problems by creating a snake-Homo Sapiens hybrid. A fun film, with
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a healthy sense of vitality, this one is raised from being another juvenile
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"monster-on- the-loose" picture by not taking itself too seriously. The
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tounge-in-cheek approach plays it straight for the kiddies, and as near-satire
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for adults. Strother Martin, Dirk Benedict, Heather Menzies, Jack Gina,
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Richard B Shull.
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Stanley (USA, 1970) This one seems indecisive about whether it wants to be
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psychological horror, action-adventure, mild crime, or an "anti- establishment
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youth cult" film. It compromises in nearly episodic fashion, and as a result,
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fails miserably in each department. The first half, straight adventure,
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focusing on a defender-of- wildlife Vietnam veteran (who happens to be a native
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American) who skirmishes with a band of villainous hunters is just typical
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haphazard cheap film fare. It goes progressively downhill in the second half
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where he abruptly transforms into a homicidal maniac using snakes as a murder
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weapons. The one- dimensional nature is emphasized by the film's pretension of
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"making a statement". Unbelievable finale. Chris Robinson, Susan Carole, Alex
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Rocco, Steve Alaimo.
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Teenage Zombies (USA, 1960) When players actually speak lines like "eck" and
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"ugh", you know what to expect. Incredibly bad, outrageously amateurish,
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substandard by even home movie standards, this is representative of the era
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ostentatiously oriented toward adolescents, but aimed more at prepubescent
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minds. This is a downright embarassment, wherein teenage castaways on a
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tropical island become the target of a female mad scientist employed by "the
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Enemy" to conduct mind control experiments. The plot to turn the good guys
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into mindless vegetables is foiled, of course, but the calibre of acting talen
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makes one wonder. The bulk of monster antics are supplied by the obligatory
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and homicidal lab assistant. One of the all-time worst, this falls short of
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approaching it's own unique form of high art. You won't quite believe the
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stupidity unraveling before your eyes. Don Sullivan, Katherine Victor, Steve
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Conte.
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Thin Air (UK, 1968, aka The Body Stealers) The tepid script condemns
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well-made sf/super/spy concoction to mediocrity. The government agent assigned
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to investigate disappearances of key military personnel discovers that they
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were abducted by hostile aliens. Moderately dreary, but quickly forgotten.
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Patrick Allen, Lorna Velda, George Saunders, Hillary Dwyer, Maurice Evans, Neil
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Connery, Allan Cuthbertson.
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Tower of Terror (UK, 1971) Not much atmosphere, and only a tad more suspense,
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a fairly enjoyable psychoshocker/mystery/-suspense yarn. As two of the most
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vital ingredients in the film are left dangling (although continuity appears
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intact in all other departments), it seems likely that this film suffered
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unwise editing. A co-ed turns amateur sleuth to avenge the victimization of a
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close friend by the rapist-murderer plaguing the campus. Not up to the level
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of most UK thrillers, but a cut above the average American cheapie, it lies
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somewhere in between. Suzy Kendall, Frank Finley, James Laurenson, James
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Donald.
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The Twisted Brain (USA, 1974, alternate title, Horror High) Fantastically
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predictable but somehow mildly entertaining formula cheapie (due to competent
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acting), a downtrodden (and conventionally milquetoast) student is afflicted
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with chemically- induced split personality and goes on to wipe out his enemies
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while under the influence of his alter ego. Heavily flawed, but acceptable on
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it's own shoddy terms. Trashy, but for the lenient, amiable. Pat Cardi, Rose
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Holotik, Austin Stoker, John Niland.
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Valley of Gwangi (USA, 1969) The prestigious Ray Harryhausen special effects
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can't hide the fact that every cliche in the books is used here, and the story
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is a welfare recipient's rehash of King Kong. This extremely poor combination
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monster tale and trite western is recommended only for the most insistent
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completist. A Wild West Show inadvertantly discovers a prehistoric valley.
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After the predictable shenanagins take place, a dinosaur is captured,
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exhibited, and breaks loose, causing all manner of havoc. Sound familiar? In
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more ways than one, it is. Unfortunately, the pathos element that made the
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forerunner work is conspicuously absent. The merit of the visuals can't
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salvage the lame, anemic, lacklustre and quite tiresome screenplay. Really
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plastic. James Franciscus, Gilda Golan, Richard Carlson, Lawrence Naismith,
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Curtis Arden.
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-----------------------------------
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The preceding was reprinted from the April 1985 issue of NEW CANADIAN FANDOM.
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Comments, requests for hardcopy (with artwork) or submissions to NCF should be
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directed to Robert Runte, 72326,730. (You might want to use e-mail, since
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forum messages are sometimes scrolled off the system faster than I can check
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for messages...)
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