July 2015
Mexican Lobby Card: Godzilla vs. Megalon (1973)
I'm not sure if this was used as a lobby card, window card, or theater handout. The paper is glossy and thin and there's a space below the image to add theater information. Window cards have the space, but usually it's larger, positioned at the top, and the card's paper stock would be thick and rigid. However it was used, you can't beat robots and monsters doing a smackdown with Godzilla.
Mexican Lobby Card: Superman Flies Again
Okay, so what if my buddy Steven and me pinned pillowcases to our backs and played George Reeves' Superman when we were kids? We didn't jump off of tall buildings, but we did bound around a lot on the porch steps. My mom drew the line when I embellished my pillowcase with the Superman insignia. Not even Lex Luthor was that mean. Then Adam West's Batman hit television and off I went again, but this time I had a plastic, store-bought, Caped Crusader cape. By then my buddy had moved away, but Batman was a loner anyway, so I did okay.
Pressbook: Night Creatures (1962)
Captain Clegg (titled Night Creatures for the American market) is one of the lesser know Hammer movies. With Peter Cushing, Oliver Reed, Michael Ripper, and other very good actors, it's an engaging yarn of costume intrigue. The spectral image of the skeleton riders impressed a great deal–I was in the single digits at the time–when I first watched this movie on television. (You can see the Mexican lobby card here.)
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Movie Herald: Gorgo (1961)
Here's the big movie herald for Gorgo, "The Greatest Motion Picture Ever Produced!" "Picture of a million amazing thrills!" "Like Nothing You've Ever Seen Before!" This tabloid-sized herald was offered in 1 or 2 colors, blank or with the theater's info. See the pressbook here.
Shock Vol. 2 Issue 3
September 1972
What's really terrifying in this issue of Shock: Chilling Tales of Horror and Suspense are the sizes of the word balloons. Now those are monstrous!
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Mexican Lobby Card: Invaders from Mars (1953)
Here's the Mexican lobby card for Invasores De Marte, one of the most frightening, for kids, of all the 1950s science fiction movies. Striking in its simplicity and the skillfully handled budget-art design, who can forget the images of people being swallowed by the sand accompanied by that unearthly sound, or those tall, gawky, fuzzy-clad aliens and their tentacled leader in the glass bowl? And you like ray guns? Well, that's a ray gun! Invaders from Mars is still a film–with its paranoia and mind-control themes even more relevant today–not to be missed.
El Castigo De Frankenstein
I don't recall where I picked this up, but that's par for the course with a lot of stuff in my closet. Although in Spanish, you can see it contains the radio spots and other promotional information for Hammer's The Evil of Frankenstein. Of interest is the Universal Pictures Corp de Mexico in the top left corner.
Pressbook: Invisible Invaders (1959)
One of those movies that's unforgettable for its rough edges as well as its influence. Dead people rising up, possessed by aliens intent on destroying the world. The shambling ghouls are said to have influenced George Romero. And the setpiece with people trapped in a military bunker, besieged by the walking dead, and their experimentation on one captured animated-dead individual to find a way to stop them all, is familiar to anyone who has seen Day of the Dead (1985).
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Mexican Lobby Card:
Cat-Women of the Moon (1953)
Here's another Mexican lobby card for Cat-Women of the Moon. For a variation, see this one. Funny how the women would always be glamorous in space, and the guys would be weighted down with bulky space suits. Go figure.
Mexican Lobby Card:
Devil Girl from Mars (1954)
Some very thoughtful movies came out of the 1950s science fiction cycle. Some of the others involved sexy alien women with dominatrix attitudes and big ray guns, lusting after earth men. Or, we went to them instead as Earthian astronauts, lusting after exotic alien women (oddly, all dressing the same way in tight fitting clothes) on distant planets. Take your pick, it was still fun.
