From Zombos Closet

How to Collect a Monster:
Monster Bash June 2007

With permission from Arena Publishing and Dr. Vollin, MD (aka Freddie Poe), here’s How to Collect a Monster from issue # 711, September 2007, of Movie Collector’s World. Wherein the good Dr. V pays a visit to the metaphysically inspiring Monster Bash Convention.

Funny, but we must have brushed shoulders without realizing it because I was at the Bash that year, too. On top of that, it was the first time I met up with the zany Drunken Severed Head (aka Max). Max spent a good amount of time at the convention carrying around Bela Lugosi’s pants. But that’s another story.

monster bash 2007 movie collectors world
monster bash 2007 movie collectors world
monster bash 2007 movie collectors world
monster bash 2007 movie collectors world
monster bash 2007 movie collectors world
monster bash 2007 movie collectors world

Adventures of Captain Marvel (1941)

In the 1960s I spent hours in the basement running my film projector, playing all of my Castle Films and Republic small reel movies. Adventures of Captain Marvel was my favorite mini-movie. I had to splice the celluloid together now and then with scotch tape, but I did get a lot of use out of it. Just think, all 12 chapters condensed into a few minutes running time. Now that’s editing.

Ronald Stephenson informed me this booklet is one of several published by Jack Mathis in the late 60s or early 70s.  Mathis wrote Valley of the Cliffhangers and Republic Confidential. His Valley of the Cliffhangers Supplement gave the chapter by chapter synopsis and cliffhanger photos for all 66 Republic serials.

adventures of captain marvel pressbook
adventures of captain marvel pressbook
adventures of captain marvel pressbook
adventures of captain marvel pressbook
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adventures of captain marvel pressbook
adventures of captain marvel pressbook
adventures of captain marvel pressbook

Francisco’s Mid-Nite Spook Frolic
Promotion Flyer

Dr. Vollin, MD surprised me when he sent along this wonderful original promotion flyer for Francisco’s Mid-Nite Spook Frolic, tucked in-between the pages of an issue of Movie Collector’s World. The issue was among a bunch he had mailed to me, so I could catch up on his many How to Collect a Monster articles.  I can’t explain why spook shows are the cat’s meow for just about every monsterkid, including me, but maybe it has to do with nostalgia, simple frights that aren’t too frightful, and the creepy cool atmosphere of schlock and art delivered through movie and magic and monster antics that makes it so endearing.

Francisco's Mid-Nite Spook Frolic Promotion Flyer
“Francisco (real name unknown…and no first name of San) was one of the first from the earlier days of the ghost show craze to have huge success. He also was one of the few who continued to do his so-named “Midnight Spook Frolic” through most of the decades these live shows were the most popular–while keeping it relatively free of the gore and sexuality others started using later. He mostly played up the spiritualism aspects that legendary Houdini and Thurston did a decade or two earlier in their own similar shows. A lot of that involved the old floating table routine, mind-reading tricks and the famous cabinet where a fake séance takes place as the magician sits with his hands tied while the audience sees objects being thrown around the area. Francisco did incorporate a little horror in his shows (within reason) by using a well-known illusion of a skeleton who removes his head that then conveniently floats over the supposedly goosebumped audience. This segment used the process of black art that these shows relied on for most of the best effects.” (The History of the Midnight Spook Show, Greg Brian, Yahoo Voices)