Ben Cooper Captain Marvel
Halloween Costume
Shazam! You too can play young Billy Batson as he turns into the superhero, Captain Marvel!
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Shazam! You too can play young Billy Batson as he turns into the superhero, Captain Marvel!
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Good thing this Beatnik costume, Beatnick Boy, from Ben Cooper is flame retardant; you never know what those beatniks are smoking. Just practice snapping your fingers together with an air of aloofness, and have a short beat poem ready to amuse the candy givers. (For those of you old enough to know what I'm talking about, for the life of me, the mask keeps reminding me of Paul Winchell!) Oddly enough, this is the first mask I've seen that fits comfortably in the box–like, just hanging out man–you know what I mean?
Go wild on Halloween with this Panther costume from Ben Cooper.
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While horror, fantasy, and science-fiction magazines crowded the racks at the corner store in the 1960s and 70s, fanzines grew in popularity as more fans became knowledgeable in the genre and rolled their own. Here's Famous Fantasy Films from 1965, courtesy of Professor Kinema, which addressed the following concern: "Are you sick and tired of puns? Are you vexed at seeing the same monster pictures and information repeatedly printed? Do you enjoy reading magazines which contain over 25% advertising? If these are your complaints, then Famous Fantasy Films will try to alleviate them."
Comic book reader version: Download Famous Fantasy Films 1
Read more cool monster magazines from Zombos' Closet.
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From the Wikipedia entry on fanzines: "Alex Soma's Horrors of the Screen, Calvin T. Beck's Journal of Frankenstein (later Castle of Frankenstein) and Gary Svehla’s Gore Creatures were the first horror fanzines created as more serious alternatives to the popular Forrest J. Ackerman's 1958 magazine Famous Monsters of Filmland." Courtesy of Professor Kinema's archives comes issue 3 of Horrors of the Screen, murky fanzine printing and all. Articles include Edwin Schallert's How the Invisible Man Was Filmed, which delves into the special effects used to create the illusion of invisibility, Annette Florance's Peter Cushing. Steven Jochsberger recalls a birthday with Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi's career coverage is continued in part 2 of William G. Obbagy's article.
Comic book reader version: Download Horrors of the Screen No. 3
Read more cool monster magazines from Zombos' Closet!
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Now, if only this voodoo witch-styled Collegeville costume for Super Witch had a box to match the wicked mask and macabre costume illustration, that would be super, too.
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I don’t read French, but Professor Kinema visits Paris every year. He brings back a lot of good reading he finds in the book stalls. Here’s his copy of La Methode Revue De Cinema No. 9, which is full of great horror movies. While we were punning our way through the movies in the 1960s, the French took a more serious approach to our horrors. We caught up in the 1970s but I will always be grateful to the French fans and critics who saw the classic in our terrors before we did.
Here’s the comic book reader version: Download La Methode Revue De Cinema No. 9
Read more monster magazines from Zombos’ Closet.
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Museumoftheodd on eBay has come up with a cute little oddity, indeed, from Ben Cooper: Belfry the Bat. Imagine yourself flying around Halloween evening dressed as Belfry, filching candy from door to door, quickly, before the zombie clowns walk up the driveway and scare the old folk out of their wits and walkers. Makes you kind of miss the good old days, don't it?
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