From Zombos Closet

Book Review: The Grand Hotel

The-grand-hotelZombos Says: Very Good

A supercilious host who manages the front desk, a group of tourists not sure where they are, and an ancient hotel, dimly lit and filled with boundless rooms, found at the end of a “desolate, mist-shrouded street,” are the strange characters in Scott Kenemore’s portmanteau novel, The Grand Hotel. And let’s not ignore the disconcerting young red-haired girl, “perhaps 11 or 12.”

Red-haired girls are always of particular interest in movies and novels (unless you’re watching The Ring or some other Japanese Horror movie, of course, then it would be dark-haired girls instead). Anne of Green Gables had red hair, and so did Victoria in The Twilight Saga. Even Pippi Longstocking had red hair, with an attitude to match.

Kenemore’s red-haired girl doesn’t have a pet monkey or a horse like Pippi (I guess he didn’t want to go after the young adult market), but she does have other things in common with Ms. Longstocking. Take her attitude for instance. It’s as bright as her hair and attracts Vic’s attention (but don’t call him that, he hates that nickname). Vic is our reluctant front desk manager, oddly reluctant but still insistent tour guide, and the somewhat pompous narrator. He isn’t loquacious, really. He leaves most of the talking to his charges, the hotel’s regulars, who have been there perhaps too long–but are still welcomed. He also loves to use words that will have you scrambling for the dictionary. Pompous narrators like to do that.

Vic’s tour begins with Mr. Pence, a very short visit to be sure since Mr. Pence is a corpse lying in bed, behind one room’s stylish brass doorknob and keyhole. He still writes his little notes to Vic and pays his bills. Or so Vic insists as he leads the way to their next stop, the sunroom, where Mr. Orin spends much of his time. We listen, along with the small group of tourists, to Mr. Orin’s encounter with a rather large fish in Northern Alaska, then we are hustled to the grand ballroom where Ms. Kvasov dances with her tuxedoed mannequins. She also has a tale to tell as does Detective Click, who they find, where he always is, on the large western balcony of the hotel. Each person encountered is a chapter to be told, and a lesson, perhaps, to explore. But only Vic and the red-haired girl are deathly interested in the right conclusions to be drawn. When Vic threatens to end their tour immediately should the girl not be able to provide him with satisfactory answers to his questions, the game is on, yet the mystery remains until the last visit is made.

Each visit becomes a short story in itself, of encounters with demons and other odd bumps in the night, allowing Kenemore room for variety in his deeper machinations (or a cool way to use some short stories he had collecting dust). His use of words like cruor, japery, kerfuffle, and acronychal, help set the time and place and demeanor of our host. Or confuse it, just like his guests become increasingly confused about Vic’s ulterior purpose in bringing them on a tour of his grand hotel. But even the tourists aren’t sure how they found the place to begin with. Neither is the red-haired girl.

The game Clue quickly comes to mind. There is indeed a mystery to be solved, but Kenemore, providing a hint in his author’s note, states he was inspired by The Five and Twenty Tales of the Genie. I’m willing to bet, however, that he actually was lent a copy of Sivadasa’s work by Miss Scarlet, in the library, on a dark and stormy night.

Comic Book Review: Wolf Moon Issue 1
Of Wolf and Man

Wolf-moon-1-coverZombos Says: Very Good

A carefully structured balance between Cullen Bunn’s narrative and Jeremy Haun’s art keeps this first issue of Wolf Moon moving quickly, yet packed with enough groundwork explanation to set the storyline’s future progression.

Dillon, a scarred man both literally and figuratively, is haunted by the werewolf and its victims, and is consumed by his need to kill the monster. He tracks the killing sprees, looking for his chance to finally end its terror.

Unlike traditional werewolf lore’s bitten-and-be-cursed dilemma, Bunn hints at a different method of transmission, something that may be more random in its selection process for each person who hosts the transformation into the werewolf, and then is left with vivid memories of what has happened.

Making the monster especially dangerous is its joy for killing (and disemboweling, dismembering, and demolishing) every human being within reach; a graphic propensity that Haun has no trouble depicting. A notable panel shows the gooey impact as a fleeing victim’s face is suddenly mashed up against a car window by the monster’s large, hairy arm.

Why does Dillon hesitate, causing him to miss his one opportunity to finally nail the monster? Who is Mason, the other hunter, who, along with Dillon, wants to stop the werewolf from killing again? And what is causing these transformations into this killing machine at every full moon? And what the hell is going on with that cover? Let’s hope the next issues answer these questions to our satisfaction as well as this first issue sets them up.

Cracked’s For Monsters Only
Issue 9, September 1971

With the dropping of "Cracked's" in the title, and more movie articles than cartoons, this issue may still have the gag-captioned photos, but it does have more bite for serious horror fans. House of Dark Shadows, Taste the Blood of Dracula, a monster comic, and Richard Bojarski's John Carradine, The Master Villain, make this a fun read. Trog gets extensive coverage, too. 

For-monsters-only-9-cover

Mexican Lobby Card: Nabonga! (1944)

If you've snooped around my blog long enough, you would have noticed I have a thing for jungle movies and giant apes (and big gorillas). Can't explain it. Just accept it. This Mexican lobby card for Nabonga! is awesome to behold. Click it to make Nabonga even bigger! I dare you. (Note: Seasoned jungle movie lovers will notice Buster Crabbe's name is mispelled as Grabbe.)

mexican lobby card nabonga

Monster World Issue 2, May 1975
Part 2

Go to Part 1 of Monster World

In this second part to Monster World, issue 2, the story of Lon Chaney Sr. is revealed by Jeff Waisley, The Hydra Horror comic by Norman Nodel menaces readers, and Nightmare Theater episodes are examined. Also, for all those monsterkids who remember the glories of mail order before Amazon made it chic, the ad pages will bring back memories. Especially those memories where you kick yourself, again and again, regretting that you didn’t hold onto all those cool model kits and monster toys that are now worth big bucks to collectors. Just sayin’.

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Monster World Issue 2, May 1975
Part 1

Kicking butt on the magazine racks in 1975 was Monster World, which would turn into Quasimodo’s Monster Magazine by issue 3. I can offer no explanation for the title change, but unlike Cracked’s For Monsters Only, and Famous Monsters of Filmland, the humor and monstermash shtick were kept at bay by more rational coverage of horror movies. Critics like to point out how cheaply the magazine was printed, but at least it was filled with more than space-filling cartoons and lazy-crazy-captioned pictures used to keep copy down to bare bones. In this issue Lon Chaney Sr. and Vincent Price have articles, written by Jeff Waisley and Kenneth Kirk, respectively and coverage on House of Whipcord, King Kong, Captain Kronos, Phantom of the Paradise, Frankenstein and the Monster From Hell, and the continuation of an article on Nightmare Theater by I. Sukaynick.

Monster-world-2-cover

Cracked’s For Monsters Only
Issue 3, November 1966

With issue 3 of Cracked’s For Monsters Only, the cartoons and comic stories, the photo-gags, and the horror coverage for both old and newer monsters packed its pages well. Even the John Severin cover was quite inviting as it stared back at you from the overcrowded magazine rack daring you to join the monster party. In this issue Richard Bojarski writes a lengthy, informative article in The Horror Worlds of Karloff (and remember kids, there wasn’t any Google or Wikipedia to refer to!), the School for Monsters shows us where all those monsters appearing everywhere in the 1960s were graduating from (note that horror host Zacherle headed the employment bureau), and John Severin provided some Dungeon Dan-Dan-Dandies to chew on.

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Comic Book Ads: Not Star Wars

Hey, there's more to life than Star Wars. Here's a great ad for Buck Rogers and The Lord of the Rings. I love the way the artist has Buck Roger's starfighter zooming past Bilbo, Strider, and Sam. Talk about giving someone a hot foot. Oh, and there's also Battlestar Galactica, too. 

Comic book ad

comic book ad battlestar galactica

Comic Book Ads: Star Wars

Wish I had kept all of my early Star Wars toys and action figures. Kick me now, please. I deserve it. In the 1980s I came across a comic book shop that had all the original boxed toys, sealed, for 5 dollars each. Grabbed all of them. Then later I came across a collector who had the first issue action figures, and I paid around 200 bucks for them. Of course today all of it is worth much more; but the memories are still priceless.

star wars comic book ad

star wars comic book ad

Book Review: Michael Ripper Unmasked

Michael-ripper-bookZombos Says: Very Good

This review first appeared in We Belong Dead, issue 15, a stellar issue celebrating 15 years of Hammer Horror. 

You’ve seen him. You know his face. You’ve come to expect seeing him in every Hammer Horror you love. Derek Pykett in Michael Ripper Unmasked reveals the man behind that face, and the unforgettable character actor behind the horror. After reading about his career you will wish he had appeared more often. That’s the greatest strength Pykett brings to this straightforward, uncomplicated biography of Ripper’s career on stage, in movies, and, most importantly for us Hammer Horror fans, his involvement with those horrors. In 224 pages, which includes filmography, theatrical and television appearances, and letters from fans, Pykett briskly moves us through Ripper’s entire career. Of course you probably want to know most about his work with Hammer so let’s cut to the chase, shall we?

In Quatermass II, it was “bloody freezing” during filming and Ripper relates the adventure with Brian Donlevy—who did enjoy his whiskey—and Donlevy’s toupee as it squared off against the wind machines. Brief comedic turns followed in other Hammer films such as Up the Creek and Further Up the Creek but the beefier parts in Camp on Blood Island and Secret of Blood Island are singled out. Ripper recalls Bernard Robinson’s attention to set design and detail as being the real stars of the movies, and notes some incredulity at being cast as a Japanese officer with, as Bill Owen, who appeared alongside him in Secret of Blood Island, puts it, “a suitable North Finchley Japanese accent.” Owen goes on to relate a funny observation made by Ripper to the director on the first day of shooting. While the extras playing the “other” POWs looked the part, the principal actors didn’t. “Turning to the director he [Ripper] inquired, ‘Please, what is my attitude towards these fat prisoners of war?’”

Such cheeky playfulness springs up again and again in Ripper’s career, in his performances, and in his attitude to it all. Given his physical stature, his facial features—that roundish head and those expressive, roundish eyes—and his acting style honed through theatrical performances, this attitude proved immensely useful across his greater and lesser roles. Ripper recalls how Jimmy Sangster had him in mind and “was responsible for that lovely little part I played in The Mummy.” The Mummy is the first movie to have Ripper appear with Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. It’s interesting that Ripper says of Lee “He always makes me laugh,” and Lee says of Ripper, in the foreword, “He is the only actor who consistently made me laugh uncontrollably.”

Given Ripper’s unhappy childhood, due to his oddly belligerent but still supportive father, who alternated between thrashing him for reasons Ripper never understood while pushing him toward an acting career, one wonders how such a testy family dynamic shaped Ripper’s talent, which was vetted through repertory, the Gate Theater, his hope then reluctance to test the Hollywood waters, and the conversations that Ripper would listen in on between his father and Alastair Sim, who visited often, helping to diffuse the tension between father and son if only for a brief time. There seems much more to be written here, and Pykett, being a close friend, may not have delved as deeply or asked more pointedly for explanations as he could or should have.

The wealth of Ripper’s reminiscences and the coverage of his acting career easily make up for that. From his good reason for looking absolutely horrified when locked in the cell with Ollie Reed in The Curse of the Werewolf (“He was a very gutsy actor, and you were never quite sure what he would do next.”), to a God awful scene in The Pirates of Blood River (“It was a swamp scene we were filming. Hell it was dreadful.”), not once do you ever feel Ripper was not having a hell of a good time, or looking for any opportunity to cut up the production tedium through his humorous eye.

The most fascinating revelation for me comes when Ripper remembers Sammy Davis Jr’s visit to The Pirates of Blood River set. You don’t often hear about Sammy Davis Jr’s monsterkid passion for Hammer Horror, or that he was a close friend of both Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing. Sadly, he died before he could realize his dream of playing Erik in the broadway production of Phantom of the Opera. Brook Williams, who played opposite Ripper in Plague of the Zombies recalls meeting Sammy Davis Jr on another set and how he could recite, line for line, everyone’s dialog from Plague.

There’s more of course, much more, about his movies and a lot more about his television roles when studios didn’t seem all that interested and Hollywood was not all that appealing; but you can read it for yourself. Pykett and Ripper share a knack for making it seem all so practical and inevitable, but we know that, through it all, it takes more than just talent to be the face people remember, but just can’t place the name. And while we may forget the name, we’ll never forget his characters and the face of Michael Ripper, the man unmasked to the delight of the generations of horror fans to come.