From Zombos Closet

January 22, 2024

AIP News Clips Galley Packet
Vincent Price, Dunwich Horrors, and Dali in De Sade

Here’s another news clips roundup courtesy of It Came From Hollywood. In this packet: famous Fondas star in film together, blurbs on The Dunwich Horror with Dean Stockwell and Sandra Dee, Vincent Price’s Scream and Scream Again, and AIP does Wuthering Heights (yeah, probably with bikers, though, Heathcliff, fill my arms with leather!)

AIP News Clips Galley Packet

The Lady from Shanghai (1947) Pressbook

As was par for the course with Orson Welles and Hollywood, he’d polish up a gem of a movie and they would just chisel away at it until, while it still had its luster, Welles sparkle of cinematic genius was dulled and edited away into lost pieces of what should have been. Another director who also wasn’t taken all that seriously by Hollywood was William Castle (but taken seriously by horror movie fans), who was originally hoping to direct The Lady from Shanghai, but had to settle for an assistant director position. Welles’s whimsical and dark comedic wit permeate the movie that Harry Cohn hated, and the shootout in the hall of mirrors is classic noir. So much editing was done outside of Welles’ control that elaborate scenes and extended drama in the fun house were lost. I wonder what Welles, given today’s streaming environment, could have accomplished? Rita Hayworth and Everett Sloane were perfect in their roles. Definitely, this is one movie to see on the big screen.

 

The Lady From Shanghai movie pressbook

Peter Fonda Festival Movie Promotion

It Came From Hollywood…and the American International Exchange! The Fonda Festival, three great shows, with Bruce Dern, Dianne Ladd, Dennis Hopper, Susan Strasberg, Jane Fonda, and Nancy Sinatra. Oh, and members of the Hell’s Angels of Venice, California. A drive-in wet dream for sure. You’ve got bikers, baddies, and naughty behaviors galore in The Wild Angels, an Edgar Allan Poe movie (sort of) Spirits of the Dead, and Jack Nicholson’s scripting for The Trip, an acid-tripping movie. Spirits of the Dead boasted directors Roger Vadim, Federico Fellini, and Louis Malle, but IMDb notes that Orson Welles and Luis Buñuel were supposed to direct, along with Fellini (wow, what could have been!).

AIP Peter Fonda Festival Movie Promo AIP Peter Fonda Festival Movie Promo AIP Peter Fonda Festival Movie Promo AIP Peter Fonda Festival Movie Promo

The War of the Gargantuas (1966)
Mexican Lobby Card

Intended as a sequel to Frankenstein Conquers the World (1965), but re-edited to a point where it lost that connection, The War of the Gargantuas (La Guerra de los Gorillas) was rated a “bomb” by Leonard Maltin in his Movie and Video Guide. Remember those paper movie reference guides? But Stuart Galbraith IV in his Japanese Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films book disagrees. He says “despite a much less interesting storyline [than Frankenstein], War of the Gargantuas is silly fun and underserving of the “BOMB” rating…War of the Gargantuas may not be very good but it’s never boring…while hardly one of Toho’s best efforts, War of the Gargantuas is entertaining, and holds up well today.”

You be the judge. He goes on to mention how the monster suits were more mobile than the rubber reptiles and that the actors “could see and express themselves with their own eyes, rather than electronically controlled ping pong balls.” Russ Tamblyn had hit the skids in his career by the time he did this movie. Galbraith mentions that Bill Warren told him that, according to Tamblyn, the dialog track went missing so Tamblyn had to redub his lines without the benefit of the script.

War of the Gargantuas mexican lobby card

Them! Radio Spots!

Them! movie scene with scared little girl
Is it formic acid or Granny Creech’s witch’s brew? (There’s a difference? –editor)

Cough, Cough, ah-choo! Oh…Hello. Sniff, sniff…
You’ll have to excuse me. Old Granny has been doing some cleaning here in the Crypt and it’s a little dusty. I’ve been looking for some old radio spots and I think I’ve found them.
Yesindeedy! Over there beside cousin Jasper’s tomb and behind some old shelves, I found a stack of old Famous Monsters of Filmland and World Famous Creatures magazines, and under them I found some radio spots for the 1954 movie “Them!,” the first big bug movie. These go ‘way back. I remember hearing about this movie when I was a wee little thing: It was one of my dad’s favorite movies.  I really didn’t know what it was about…the title doesn’t give it away…and it wasn’t until I was older that I finally got to see it and understood what “them” was….or who “them” were…or who they were…or…

Anyway, here are the spots to Them!, a movie about GI-ANTS! Ahem, cough, sniff…

 

Them! Radio Spots: 15 seconds a, 15 seconds b, and 55 seconds to ant-tagonize your ears!

 

 

 

Them! behind the scenes with giant ant film crew
Technicians prepare the set for filming of one of the giant mechanical ants used in the movie “Them!”
Them! movie theater banner
Them! movie theater banner used for promotion.

Do you have any radio spots you would like to share? Contact Granny (Gary Fox) at [email protected]