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Handy Dandy Puppet Horror Pic
Due October 2018
More puppet mayhem coming…I like puppet mayhem…here's the press release…let's hope they focus on the horror first and the gore second.
FIRST LOOK: BILL MOSELEY and BILL OBERST JR Star in Upcoming Killer Puppet Horror Pic ‘HANDY DANDY’
DETROIT (August 28, 2018) – Horror veterans Bill Moseley (Rob Zombie's The Devil’s Rejects, 3 From Hell) and Bill Oberst, Jr. (3 From Hell, Death House) star in the upcoming killer puppet feature film, HANDY DANDY.
Helmed by Jeff Broadstreet (Night of the Living Dead 3D), HANDY DANDY commences at a shuttered TV studio haunted by a 200 year old dark magician known as Mr. Jolly (Oberst). Once the star of a 1960’s children’s show, Mr. Jolly has a long history of stealing living hearts from kids and adults alike in order to keep his evil puppet family alive. Tonight, as five unsuspecting intruders stumble into the puppets' bloody lair, one brave man (Moseley) has come to face his past in the form of Mr. Jolly and stop the magician from taking any more innocent life.
The cast also features Jake Red, Cody Cameron, Arthur Marroquin, Danni Spring, Kyle Anderson and Katelynn Newberry as the puppets' prey.
Oberst shared, “I've done a lot of horror films, guys, and I think you're really going to like this one. It's fun. There's a lot of gore, brutality, really cute puppets…and it has Bill Moseley and the main puppet, Handy Dandy. That makes it pretty special.”
Shot on location in Detroit, Michigan, the film is produced by Don Borza, CEO of Milwaukee Junction Entertainment, from a script penned by J.S. Brinkley.
Fans can learn more about the production by going to HandyDandyMovie.com.
Juvenile Jungle (1958) Double Bill Pressbook
Quite a bit of promotion for two teenager and crime movies from Republic Pictures, that's for sure. I have a fondness for these fold-out pressbooks with sleeves to hold the promotional sheets (see Brain from Planet Arous and How to Make a Monster).
Comic reader version: Download Juvenile Jungle Double Bill Pressbook
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Destination Moon (1950) Pressbook
The Destination Moon pressbook is big. At 13.5 by 20.25 inches, and 31 pages, it is an impressive promotional campaign for the movie. It is interesting to note that this movie presaged the notion of private enterprise spearheading space exploration, not the government. Of course, NASA did the heavy lifting in the beginning, but now it seems private enterprise is taking the lead (for better or worse). Woody Woodpecker has the honor of explaining the scientific principles behind space travel. For the story behind that, see Wikipedia's entry on Destination Moon.
Comic reader version: Download Destination Moon Pressbook
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World of Horror No. 6
The British World of Horror magazine came out in 1974 through 1975 and lasted 9 issues. Not very polished in layout, but overall, content-wise, it did include a good range of movie coverage, some fiction (if you're into having short stories mixed in with your horror movie articles: I'm not), and black and white and color pictures (although the printing quality was poor). The Scream Scene section was similar to The Monster Times' own The Monster Scene. A few cartoons were also tossed into the mix. In this issue, a classic horror article on Lon Chaney Sr. rubs elbows with coverage of The Exorcist, Rosemary's Baby, and Young Frankenstein.
Comic reader version: Download World of Horror (more in the magazine morgue!)
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Danger: Diabolik (1968) Pressbook
Here's one for Mario Bava fans, from the Italian comic series Diabolik.
Comic book reader version: Download Danger Diabolik Pressbook (and see more pressbooks)
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Monster Madness No. 3, 1973
While the humor doesn't improve much for this last issue of Monster Madness, the inclusion of articles was a last gasp attempt at enticing the maturing monsterkids into spending their coinage. In this issue you will find cool reading on the Creature from the Black Lagoon (with a great pic of Milicent Patrick at work), reviews for Asylum, Blacula, and Dr. Phibes Rises Again, the redoubtable Robert Bloch, and a letters page. Special note: the Fright Gallery ad on page 61; who wouldn't want all of these 24 x 36 inch posters to stare at in the middle of the night?
Comic book reader version: Download Monster Madness 3 (read more monster madness in the magazine morgue)
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The Spider (1958) Pressbook
Movies with spiders always creep me out. Originally titled Earth vs. the Spider, after The Fly successfully buzzed theaters, AIP honchos decided to shorten the title to The Spider. Now that would have made a nice midnight double bill showing, don't you think? The poster art shows more verve than the movie, but it's still enjoyable: big spiders and small towns always work well together.
Download The Spider Pressbook (viewable in a comic book reader app)
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Mad Monsters No. 6, 1963
Charlton Publications joined in the monster magazine mash with Mad Monsters, providing lots of pictures, a little text, and fun monsterkid merchandise to covet. So much to be ordered! So little allowance money to stretch and stretch and stretch. In this issue Queen of Outer Space still looks awful, Boris Karloff is the Man of a Million Horrors, Coffin Capers provides a tidbit of humor, and a Black Zoo Party provides an historical glimpse at movie promotion back in the day.
Comic book reader version: Download Mad Monsters Issue 6
More cool magazines from Zombos' Closet.
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The House with Laughing Windows (1976)
An Overlooked Giallo
Zombos Says: Very Good
This review was written for the upcoming Unsung Horrors, an anthology of horror movies you should watch, written by the fiends at We Belong Dead magazine. The book should be available at the end of this month.
The House with Laughing Windows (La casa dale finestre che ridono) is a neglected giallo.
Directed by Pupi Avati with music composed by Amedeo Tommasi, and a screenplay by Avati, Gianni Cavina, Antonio Avati, and Maurizio Costanzo, you would be hard pressed to find much written about this slowly building suspense movie, shot in Lido degli Scacchi, in the Ferrara province of the Emilia-Romagna region in Northern Italy. Yet, with its mounting dread, a longstanding mystery in a way-too-quiet town where tourists are never seen, and an undercurrent of old evils that may still be walking around, there should be more attention paid to this little gem of terror that builds to a deliberately arguable climax.
The opening credits hint at the madness and horror that have transpired in the town where Stefano (Lino Capolicchio) arrives by ferry. He is greeted by the short Mayor Solmi (Bob Tonelli) and the taller Coppola (Gianni Cavina), providing an odd contrast as the two wait near a red car for his ferry to dock. He has come to restore a fresco in the local church, a painting depicting the martyring of St. Sebastian, at the request of a very nervous friend who is conducting water tests for the mayor.
With a budget that needed to stay lean, Avati uses his camera wisely. There are no flourishy or overtly stylized frames, but three instances, each involving Stefano, are worth noting. Two involve seeing Stefano through an open door, with him standing in the light of the room, but darkness outside that room. This impresses by implying he is surrounded by the unknown and the unseen, a strong foreshadowing element created by his position within the room, the open doorway, and the darkness leading to the camera watching him from a distance.
The third instance is either an aberration of the camera lens or a brilliant toss-away, which, either way, comes at the right moment in the movie to show the uneasiness slowly mounting in Stefano, and the shaky hold he has on the unknown and unseen that is closing in around him. As he slowly walks up a narrow stairway, the camera appears to remain immobile as the walls jiggle around Stefano’s ascent. Perhaps a camera anomaly due to the need for a handheld camera in such a tight space, or maybe it is an artifact from duping the film to DVD. A discussion on IMDb is not conclusive. You will need to decide for yourself. However it happened, it still leaves a strong impression.
The stairway leads Stefano to a large, mostly empty room, where Legnani, the painter who committed suicide, who tortured and murdered local villagers in the pursuit of his madness, mixed his palette with paints and blood. The painter was aided by his two sisters, who shared in and inflamed his insanity. All this ties to the fresco in the church that Stefano is restoring, and as he slowly uncovers more and more of the painting, he begins to delve deeper into the life and death of Legnani and the secret of the house with laughing windows. The priest in the church is non-committal: he can take or leave the restoration. But why? The assistant to the priest is an oddball who does nasty things and is allowed to. But why? Stefano’s nervous friend, who involved him in the restoration, is desperate to tell him something important about the painting, but will he be able to since no one else wants Stefano to know?
Sound and silence help build the mystery and the sense of foreboding throughout the movie. An old wire recorder comes to life as power fuses are blown. The recording is Legnani’s voice describing his ecstasy experienced through the agony of others and his visions from tortured madness. The effect is as chilling and telling as the recordings heard in The Exorcist and The Evil Dead. Threatening phone calls are made to Stefano, warning him to give up and get out; deep-voiced, throaty calls that mean business. And Tommasi’s score provides the convincing atmosphere of danger and oppressiveness, while the silence of townspeople and the quiet countryside establishes a sense of collusion and indifference.
Coppola, bothered by his conscience, decides to help Stefano. How long both of them will live to find the answers is questionable. While the body count is low and people are not murdered in the usual graphic giallo style, House with the Laughing Windows compensates and goes one better, by relying on the slow burn, the unsettling painter of agony’s legacy, and a twisted ending that leaves you with hope or despair, depending on how you want to paint this picture.
Lost Sounds and Soundtracks. Pupi Avati's "The House with the Laughing Windows"
Castle of Frankenstein No. 6, 1965
Lon Chaney Jr's monstrous creations, The Munsters, and Christopher Lee kick off the 6th issue of Castle of Frankenstein. A timely article on Alfred Hitchcock (for me, that is: I had just watched the documentary, Hitchcock/Truffaut, and I'm reading the splendid book) is to die for, and a nostalgic look at Horror on the Air and those wonderful radio shows makes this a solid reading experience.
(This copy courtesy of Professor Kinema.) Here's the comic book reader version: Download Castle of Frankenstein Issue 6
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Fantastic Monsters of the Films
Vol.1 Issue 1, 1962
Here's a treat courtesy of Professor Kinema (Jim Knüsch). We were discussing The Beast with a Million Eyes and he brought along Fantastic Monsters of the Films Issue 1, which has an article on the puppet creature (with only two eyes) Paul Blaisdell created for Roger Corman's movie. Great use of color and with a lively layout, Fantastic Monsters magazine was a feast for the eyes of monsterkids everywhere. Here's the comic reader version if you're so inclined: Download Fantastic Monsters of the Movies 1
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Fantastic Monsters of the Films
Vol.1 Issue 1, 1962Read More »
