Movie Pressbook:
Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968)
Note the humor angle used to promote Dracula Has Risen from the Grave, especially in the poster illustrations.
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Movie Pressbook:
Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968)Read More »
Tower of Evil (1972)
Normally, Tower of Evil, also known as Beyond the Fog and Horror on Snape Island, a Shepperton Studios’ budget-minder with process shots (you know them as phony background scenes), get-it-done scene lighting, and enough bare buttocks and breasts to raise an eyebrow’s–if nothing else–worth of attention, wouldn’t be worth a critical mention. The story, however, does warrant one.
Attractive young people running around au naturel looking for action, then getting more action they hoped for, would become a staple of popcorn-munching horror fans later in the 1970s, when cutting up nubile teenagers in ever more creative ways became the box-office drawing power to emulate. Here we see an inkling of that direction to come, salted with supernatural and Gothic elements, making Tower a notable transitional horror movie if nothing else.
Gurney and his father, John (George Coulouris), are heading to Snape Island in the opening scene. It’s late at night, or too early in the morning, with darkness and dense fog obscuring the many rocks aiming to cripple their small boat as they approach the island. They have important business to finish that couldn’t wait. On the island, more gory business greets them with one severed hand, one severed head, two dead males, and an understandably upset survivor wielding a mean knife in her frenzied breakdown. The mystery begins, and it’s added to when the large, solid gold, and ancient sword used to pin one of the victims to a door, like a bug to a board, perks the interest of the police and archaeologists who believe it’s part of a sizable Phoenician burial treasure. The impaled, door-hanging, male reminded me of a similar door-hanging murder seen in Carpenter’s Halloween.
The survivor, Penny (Candace Glendenning), is comatose and placed under psychiatric evaluation. The police have to wait for answers as a very progressive psychiatrist rolls out a syringe and flashing colored lights to hypnotize Penny into recalling what happened. Given the long sideburns, bell-bottom pants, and Barrymore-collared shirts worn in this movie, the flashing lights fit right in. Her brief but vivid recollections provide flashbacks that exploit the gore and nudity. Each flashback digs deeper into Penny’s mind allowing O’Connolly to cut back and forth between what happened to her and what is happening on the island, now that the archaeologists and Gurney have returned to it to find the hidden treasure. The gruesome deaths, the mystery of the sword, the isolation of the lighthouse, and hints of the former lighthouse keeper’s family tragedy provide plot depth that goes beyond simply waiting and watching for people to be killed. Equal attention is also given to male and female nudity, a savvy move that broadens the movie’s audience appeal. We get to see John Hamill’s tight bum as much as Glendenning’s perky breasts. Murderous intent also is equally distributed among the sexes and not driven by the undercurrent of misogynistic contempt seen in later slasher slaughterfests.
It’s easy to forgive the obvious pandering to the audience; many horror movies do it to pad weak storylines while titillating audiences anyway, but the sexual display and tension here works with the movie, not against it, especially when you’ve written a horny Phoenician god into the subplot. Of course, slasher enthusiasts will reason that lusting and groping is necessary to initiate the morality-righting vengeance of the killer, which brings back propriety and social stability by butchering its flaunters. Bouncing bare breasts and firm derrières do little to bring in box office, of course, so the enthusiasts may have a point. Hard to excuse is the cheap trick of re-releasing Tower in 1981, re-titled Beyond the Fog, in hopes of cashing in on The Fog‘s success by faking Tower as a sequel to John Carpenter’s more studious movie. That’s pretty low, even by today’s standards of marketing.
I can be fairly lenient with Jim O’Connolly’s (Valley of Gwangi) direction. It’s tight and sufficient for generating enough atmosphere to move his (and George Baxt’s) story along at a no-dawdling pace. He makes good use of his studio-bound frame depth and the few sets where the events take place, creating a claustrophobic atmosphere suitable for terror with his close camera and its angles, especially in the caves running under the lighthouse. Bolstering the ensemble of frisky and bickering characters is Jack Watson’s Hamp Gurney. He’s steady as a rock while everyone else is being chipped away around him. His heavily-lined face, strong masculine presence, and ability to move effortlessly to the foreground or background of a scene is always impressive to watch. His classy presence benefits every movie he’s in. The usual bickering and libidinous undercurrents break out among the boys and the girls, but he’s just along for the ride. Or is he? His secret agenda adds a little more suspense and mystery as everyone does what they shouldn’t by opening doors best left closed, walking up to rocking chairs that shouldn’t be rocking in the dark by themselves, investigating odd sounds alone, and meandering through damp caves after splitting up.
I must be less lenient with Desmond Dickinson’s (City of the Dead, Horrors of the Black Museum) set lighting. Moonlit scenes are shown in bright, full color, and the lighthouse model isn’t lit in such a way as to help camouflage that it is a model–and it’s not helped by the dry ice haze, either. The lighthouse interiors are overly lit–you can’t get that much steady light from paraffin lamps–but the narrow stairway, small rooms, and the abandoned condition they’re in, along with the creaky furnishings, provide an adequate level of unease for us as much as it does for the archaeologists and investigator (Bryant Haliday) hoping to either find the gold or the truth. To be fair to Dickinson, using the Technicolor process could have reduced the amount of light hitting the film stock, requiring increased lighting on the set. Given his black-and-white background, Dickinson may have overcompensated with too much lighting for his color scenes given the film stock used. Or he simply had no choice and did the best he could with what he had to work with. But I have no reservations in recommending Tower of Evil to the slasher fan who thinks he or she’s seen it all, or any horror fan not satisfied, so far, by 2014’s paucity of decent horror fare to scream at.
British Pressbook:
To the Devil a Daughter (1976)
This 11 by 14 inches British pressbook for To the Devil a Daughter is printed on heavy stock paper, has a full-color cover, and the interior page layout is well done. In other words, this pressbook wasn't cheap to produce. Please note there is one picture showing Nastassja Kinski nude from the front.
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British Pressbook:
To the Devil a Daughter (1976)Read More »
Graphic Book Review: Criminal Macabre
The Eyes of Frankenstein
Too many cigarettes, an itchy trigger finger, ghoul’s blood, and a vexing inability to get a day off, ever, makes Cal McDonald more surly than usual. Shooting up Mo’Locks gift on wheels wasn’t too smart, either. But let’s face it, it’s McDonald’s too-nervous energy and paranoia that keeps us coming back for more dead and deader occult shenanigans. And Steve Niles and Christopher Mitten in The Eyes of Frankenstein do their best to shake them up for McDonald.
In-between chain smoking–how can he afford all those packs of cigarettes?–McDonald’s called into the middle of something bad happening to the ghouls. They’re dying, for real this time. Tag teaming his attention is Adam, also known as the Frankenstein Monster to those who didn’t read the book but did catch the movies. Adam’s going blind. Being a heavy reader, that makes him a very angry and destructive monster.
McDonald’s quick fix for Adam is a pair of store-bought eye-glasses. With them, Adam can count the number of aspirin McDonald hasn’t chewed on yet. But the bigger solution, the one that will tie Adam’s failing eyes and the ghouls sudden dying together, requires a lot more effort, and bullets, than McDonald’s in the mood for. But he persists in spite of vomiting up the aspirin and alcohol that’s not working much for his headaches and annoying tingly sensations. The patented quips and mannerisms are all here as McDonald sucks it up and keeps on going, and the dry wit of Mo’Loch playing against them is drier than ever.
Not so cut and dried is Jason Hemlock’s involvement. Hemlock’s the supernatural expert McDonald couldn’t care less for, although he’s reluctantly teaming up with him for Adam’s sake. Which agenda Hemlock eventually puts into play is the question, and McDonald will need to not only find an answer, but also keep breathing at the same time.
Mitten’s art vexes me and entertains me. He’s quirky, minimalist in panel details and depth, but he gets away with it by keeping the emotion flowing between ghouls, monsters, and one very sore detective with a bad smoking habit. Niles is a minimalist, too, but he keeps the dialog to the point and McDonald able to change direction on a dime once he realizes he’s heading the wrong way. If Niles could blast past the 4-issue mark for his usual story arcs, maybe McDonald could work in some much needed vacation as the terrors mount up waiting for him. Or maybe not, given his run of luck. He does have a bad habit of stepping in it both shoes deep even when standing still. Now that takes a certain knack, and Niles and Mitten capture it for us here.
Movie Pressbook: Black Zoo (1963)
This extensive 15 by 22 inches movie pressbook for Black Zoo is well thought out, and even includes promotional coverage to be done through Famous Monsters of Filmland and other monster magazines.
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Graphic Book Review: The Wraith
It's ironic that the real monsters of our world often defy explanation, yet in fiction we often demand and often relish knowing their histories. Those histories are always filled with poignant experiences, traumatic events, and possibilities never achieved. Told well, you find yourself fearing and hating the monster while feeling sorry for it. Or him.
In Joe Hill's The Wraith, the history of Charlie Manx and the origin of his evil is told well, serving as the prequel to his novel NOS4A2. The 1938 Rolls-Royce Wraith is here, so is Christmasland and the "private roads of thought, where emotions are weather, blowing across the landscapes of your imagination." Manx calls these landscapes inscapes, and with a scared child listening in the backseat of his Wraith, he tells her all the sordid events of his life, beginning with his father who died in the arms of a fat lady named Sally Grapefruits.
Manx's mother blames him for everything bad in her life, of course, calling him names, treating him poorly. He never had a Christmas where Santa brought him a present so he bought a sled for himself called the fantom. Racing it down the slopes he notices the landscape changes and another world pushes itself through. A horrible event makes that world very angry and murderous, leaving 13-year old Manx free of his former, unsavory, surroundings.
Life perks up for him, briefly. He falls in love and gets married. He is wealthy. He is finally happy. He loses it all. His wife and children are left with nothing. Their carefree happiness turns to drudgery. His wife turns into his mother, calling him names, blaming him for, well, it doesn't matter really, since he's heard it all before.
What little cash he's managed to save is given to a traveling salesman selling dreams; and a place called Christmasland. He buys into the dream hook, line, and sinker. He even buys the Rolls-Royce Wraith to visit the amusement park for opening day. The Wraith comes cheaply, its former owner committed suicide in it, even if it was lightly used. A road trip to Christmasland with his kids and wife in the back seat turns ugly. The landscape he's known before opens up around him, swallowing them whole. The children lose their baby teeth.
But that was in the past. The story picks up again in 1989. Escaped convicts put in a call to Manx, now the go-to guy for making people disappear. He takes them to Christmasland to play with the kids, who welcome them, standing in front of a foreboding Christmas tree hung with ghoulish ornaments. And the kids are holding sharp, dangerous things, smiling in anticipation. I'll mention a balloon filled with delirium 101 is critical to survival for some, and you may catch a glimpse of the Bumble in all the mayhem, and leave it at that. Except for the payback, of course, there's always payback.
Joe Hill does more with his words than most writers of horror fiction today, which is why he can sell you, like Charlie Manx was sold, such a tall story that's part nightmare, part dreamscape, and mostly horrifying. His characters have befores, middles, and endings, and those endings can be very unpleasant, but their histories are ones you will relish. There may be a better artist to capture the glory and gory of Christmasland than Charles Wilson, but no one else comes to mind. Especially when he's "painted pretty" by Jay Fotos. The narrative and the art capture the murderous delights of Christmasland very well, while leaving enough room for emotions stretching beyond the necessary artifices of the story.
What we don't learn is what Christmas did to Joe Hill to make him want to turn its holiday of cheer into a holiday of drear.
Movie Pressbook: Satellite in the Sky (1956)
Exciting poster art and energetic ad campaign make this pressbook awesome.
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