From Zombos Closet

April 29, 2024

Frankenstein’s Castle of Freaks
(1974) Pressbook

The pressbook for Frankenstein’s Castle of Freaks is only four pages, 11 by 17 inches, but the illustrations are really pretty good and they help sell a movie that needed more visual and script goodness devoted to it. As it stands, assuming you don’t poke your eyes out half-way through, it is a fun romp with a little alcohol consumption to loosen up your critical faculties. It falls into the category of it’s really bad, but cheeky enough to make it worthwhile to see. If you can see it with friends, even better. Make a party of it, pour the wine but hold the cheeses. The movie has enough of them. How you can put Michael Dunn and Rossano Brazzi together and come away with this weird tale is a self-study course in what bad movies are all about. Even the director, Dick Randall, is questionable. No one really knows who directed it. Dick’s a fake (now I’m thinking how many times I can say Dick in this article and get away with it, all legit like).

So what if it’s “one of the trashiest horror movies produced in Italy in the 1970s” (Roberto Curti, Italian Gothic Horror Films, 1970-1979), trash can still be fun. What does Roberto know that we don’t? Well, yeah, he’s an expert film historian and all that. But anyway, what’s very interesting is the stapled, typed notice on the cover. There’s some questionable moments in the movie that are definitely not PG, so not sure who went to lunch during the ratings screening, but the note is a tad off.

Ook, the giant running amok killing people, is Salvatore Baccaro, but they gave him the name Boris Lugosi in the credits. Now that’s a movie I’d love to see: someone cloning Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi and a tragic lab accident renders them one-half each of the same body. Wild, right? I got dibs on the screenplay.

Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks pressbook Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks pressbook Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks pressbook Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks pressbook

 

Frankenstein’s Castle of Freaks (1974)

Frankensteins_castle_of_freaks Zombos Says: WTF (but goes well with crackers. Also, Spoiler Warning! )

“Atrocious lighting, abominable story, ludicrous Neanderthal men dressed in furs and carrying clubs, and thrift store couture from the costume department; shall I go on?”

I folded my arms tightly, waiting for Paul Hollstenwall to counter my argument. I dared him to find a shred of decent creativity or craft in Frankenstein’s Castle of Freaks.

“Michael Dunn as Genz, the necrophilic, breast-squeezing pervert,” he replied. “He brings a little respectability to it, don’t you agree?” Paul’s wide, earnest, eyes drilled into me.

“So… you’re saying the small part Dunn plays was a wise career move?”

“Well, it’s not like he can pick and choose from a variety, really. He’s a little person. After the Wild, Wild, West, what else is there?”

I thought about what Paul said. “True. But Genz is a long drop from playing the mirthfully nefarious Dr. Miguelito Loveless. A very long drop.”

Paul leaned back and took a sip of lemonade. We were sitting in the solarium, enjoying the warmth, peace, and quiet, next to the pelargoniums, whose scent of chocolate wafted through the room. Zombos and Zimba were out and about, hence the peace and quiet. The aftertaste of that movie still lingered in my mouth, no matter how much lemonade I drank.

There is no peace or quiet in Frankenstein’s Castle of Freaks, otherwise known as Terror! Il Castello Delle Donne Maledette. The plot ignores incredulity, but makes for a perfect accompaniment to crackers when viewed after two or more glasses of Chianti.

Dr. Frankenstein (Rossano Brazzi), using a Walmart-bought laboratory, operates on Goliath, one of two Neanderthal men terrorizing the countryside. The other is Ook, but I’ll get to him in a minute. For now, just sit back, close your eyes, and think about it. That’s right. It’s that awful and dopey. This is the first time I’ve ever used the word ‘dopey’ in a review.

Genz is one of Frankenstein’s assistants, but his habit of feeling up the nocturnal goods, fresh from the grave, gets him into trouble. He’s sent packing, to roam the countryside simmering with revenge on his mind. He and Ook find each other and become fast friends. Ook is the other Neanderthal terrorizing the villagers. Genz teaches Ook all he knows about sexual deviancy, which terrorizes the villagers even more. Even Mexican horror movies don’t stoop this low.

Frankenstein’s other assistants include a lecherous hunchback (“come with me, we go to woodshed!”), who fools around with the cook. The cook looks a lot like the ugly sister, Doris, in Shrek. Their pantry hanky-panky upsets her husband, the clumsy butler, Hans (Luciano Pigozzi). Visiting the castle are Frankenstein’s daughter Maria (Simonetta Vitelli) and fiancé, and her friend Krista (Christiane Rucker), who studies science and becomes fascinated by the savings Frankenstein accomplishes by using all that Walmart laboratory equipment. A portrait with moving eyes watches Krista take a bath, and eyes behind a wall clock’s glass door watches Maria make love to her fiancé. We watch in horror—not the good horror movie kind—as flaccid close-ups, lethargic pacing, and choppy zooms make high-school theatrical endeavors appear to have more carefully arranged production values than this production. The accompanying music sounds mostly like someone gargling throughout the movie. While Frankenstein shows Krista his “accumulator,” Genz shows Ook how to cook meat in Ook’s real man-cave. Gratuitous nudity is provided by Maria and Krista bathing in the man-cave’s natural hot tub, but they act like sisters unfortunately.

Not much heat is generated by the sparse showing of townsfolk, who light the torches to go after Ook when a local girl is killed. When Genz sneaks back to the laboratory to free Goliath, that Neanderthal brute kills the hunchback, the butler, and Frankenstein. I confess I was glad he did that. After Ook grabs Krista—she returned to bathe in the man-cave again—he and Goliath go into smackdown mode. Both smack each other back and forth until Goliath kills Ook. (Note to self: suppress urge to write ‘he does it with a left (h)Ook)’.)

The villagers show up to kill Goliath. Inexplicably, Krista hugs Genz, the homicidal pervert as the movie ends on a philosophical note when someone sums it all up: “There’s a bit of a monster in all of us.” Travelogues have more drama. Watch one instead.

It Came From Beneath the Sea
(1955) Pressbook

Ray Harryhausen strikes again in It Came From Beneath the Sea. The 1950s nuclear bomb paranoia brings another irritated giant monster to attack mankind. The Wikipedia entry notes a humorous problem for Kenneth Tobey as he kept sinking in the sand next to Faith Domergue, and Harryhausen’s budget only allowed for six of the octopus’s eight tentacles to be animated. Thanks to ZC lurker Terry Michitsch for requesting this pressbook (and the one for First Men in the Moon, which I’ll post as soon as I can find it. It’s buried in the closet Terry, somewhere, I swear). This movie was double-billed with Creature with the Atom Brain. (ZC Note: I pulled this one from the 2018 archives to go along with Granny’s radio spots for It Came From Beneath the Sea. If you have any issues with that, you can speak to my lawyer, Tryan Sumi.)

Comic reader version:  Download It Came From Beneath the Sea Pressbook

 

It Came From Beneath the Sea Pressbook_01

It Came From Beneath the Sea
Radio Spots!

It Came From Beneath the Sea movie poster

Granny goes seaside this week! (or seasick, either one)

I was sitting on my bed the other night reading my old copy of Film Fantasy Scrapbook when I heard a tapping at my bedroom window. Looking over I saw a ghastly face peering in at me. At first I was startled, but then I realized what, or who, it was. Getting out of bed, I went over and opened the window.

“Reaper,” I said. “What are you doing out here at this late hour?”

“I have another set of spots for you,” he said.

I took the vinyl record from his cold, clammy hands and looked it over.

“Oh, ho, ho,” I said. “This is a good one!”

He smiled and shuffled away into the darkness. I took the record back to bed with me and examined it closely. To think, the spots on this record hadn’t been heard for almost seventy years and here I was holding them in my hand. I could only imagine what the listeners back then thought when they heard the spots, and how they reacted when they saw the film on the big screen with its magnificent special effects. And the title…..who could resist seeing a movie called It Came From Beneath The Sea?

Released in 1955, the Columbia Pictures movie starred Kenneth Tobey, Faith Domergue, and Donald Curtis. But, the real star was the giant radioactive octopus so skillfully brought to life by Ray Harryhausen. Using his unique split-screen “sandwich” technique he was able to create many exciting visuals, incorporating his animated model with live action plates in a most convincing way.

The spots capture the mystery and excitement of the movie and prepare the listener for the wonders they would see on the screen. I hope they grab you as well as they do me.

A wave of the tentacle goes to The Radio Reaper (ZC Note: OMG, there’s two of them now!) for providing this exciting look back at one of the greats of the 1950s. So, beware… and enjoy! Here are seven cool radio spots including 15, 30, and 60 second variations.

 

It Came from the Sea monster attacking the golden gate bridge
The giant octopus attacks the Golden Gate Bridge. Notice the great detailing on the stop-motion model.
It Came from Beneath the Sea monster tentacle groping around
Only Ray Harryhausen could give personality to a tentacle!
It Came From Beneath the Sea monster attacks a ship.
Nightmare at sea – in the dark, no less. Sailors see a giant tentacle rising up out of the water, followed by more!

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