From Zombos Closet

Mama (2013)
The Horror of Motherly Love

Mama
Zombos Says: Very Good

Japanese long-haired vengeance-ghost dynamic meets folkloric tragedy in Andres Muschietti’s Mama when two young sisters, 3-year old Victoria (Megan Charpentier) and 1-year old Lilly (Isabelle Nelisse), are lost in a spooky deserted cabin deep in the woods. Lost with them is a forlorn entity they name Mama, who is trapped between here and ethereal-there, feeding them berries to stay alive and entertaining them as time passes. In the ensuing years, the girls become more feral and forget their parents.

Lucas (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau), the brother of Victoria and Lilly’s dad hasn’t forgotten, and he eventually finds the girls. As they move from the cabin to their new home with him and their new reluctant mother, Annabel (Jessica Chastain), Mama follows; many big moths, miasmic black moldy wall stains that grow, and unsettling creature-induced discomforts ensue. What is it with moths and wall stains in horror movies these days?

At least here they are given plausability: the moths provide a meal for the girls (berries can only go so far), and the wall stains act as portals for Mama to travel through.

What keeps Mama from devolving into the familiar slap-death histrionics of a long-haired, malcontented ghost with demonic powers and anger management issues are the girls’ growing attachment to their new and more tactile mom, Mama’s sad life before and after death, and Annabel’s nurturing instinct slowly kicking in over her need for punking out with her rock band. A sad moment has Mama removing the older Victoria’s new eye-glasses so she can’t see how terrible Mama’s appearance really is; Lilly, of course, being younger, doesn’t remember her life before Mama and bonds strongly with her ghostly mom; being flown around the room for fun helps solidify that bond.

CGI enhancements to Mama and her distorted facial features, combined with bone-cracking contortions only horror movie corpses can do, become more distracting than frightening, but the relationship between mothers and children provides a more thoughtful approach; especially when Lucas is removed from the action early, leaving Annabel to deal with her ambivalent feelings and increasingly dire situation. A clever use of long-hair running around like Cousin Itt provides the best chill-thrill moment.

Eager to learn as much as he can from the children’s 5 year ordeal in the woods is psychiatrist Dr. Dreyfuss (Daniel Kash). A more creative story thread has him shift gears when he realizes Mama is not a figment of the children’s imaginations conjured to help them cope with their isolation. Unfortunately, this thread is clipped too soon, in a blatantly script-convenient way, to bring Lucas back into the finale. Getting everyone back to the cabin in the woods turns almost funny as first Dr. Dreyfuss, then Lucas, then Annabel, and finally Mama and the girls converge for a showdown that will certainly annoy those looking for a happier resolution.

But on the positive side, it doesn’t leave room for a sequel. You’ve got to love any horror movie that dares to do that.

Movie Pressbook: Jungle Woman (1948)

From  Tony Rivers' collection comes this 11 x 17 inches, 1948, Jungle Woman Realart Pressbook. Tony says: "Unfortunately the previous owner put punch holes in it to keep it in a binder.  Aside from the fact it was folded, it's the only defect in it.  I like that they show all 8 lobby cards on the poster page even though in B&W.  Still hoping someday to get the other two Ape Woman press books, either Universal originals or realart releases." 

A binder!?

Jungle Woman 1948 Realart Pressbook
Jungle Woman 1948 Realart Pressbook
Jungle Woman 1948 Realart Pressbook
Jungle Woman 1948 Realart Pressbook

Real Scenery for Popeye Animation

Beginning a new series on Zombos Closet…Travel back in time with me…To yesterday’s tomorrows: Real Scenery for Popeye, Popular Science, November, 1936…

“Fleischer cartoons differed highly from their counterparts at Walt Disney Productions and Warner Bros. Cartoons. The Popeye series, like other cartoons produced by the Fleischers, was noted for its urban feel (the Fleischers operated in New York City, specifically in Broadway), its manageable variations on a simple theme (Popeye loses Olive to bully Bluto and must eat his spinach and defeat him), and the characters’ “under-the-breath” mutterings. The voices for Fleischer cartoons produced during the early and mid-1930s were recorded after the animation was completed. The actors, Mercer in particular, would therefore improvise lines that were not on the storyboards or prepared for the lip-sync (generally word-play and clever puns). Even after the Fleischers began pre-recording dialog for lip-sync shortly after moving to Miami, Mercer and the other voice actors would record ad-libbed lines while watching a finished copy of the cartoon. Popeye lives in a dilapidated apartment building in A Dream Walking (1934), reflecting the urban feel and Depression-era hardships.” (from Wikipedia)

popeye animation popular science
popeye animation popular science

Movie Pressbook: Two on a Guillotine Part 1

You can see the effect television had on the 1960s movie industry in this 27  page, 11 x 17 inches, Warner Brothers pressbook for Two on a Guillotine. There’s a wealth of promotional material for the theater to sell this movie: a horror kit, “heady” television spot, Internation Brotherhood of Magicians (IBM) tie-ins, giveaway herald, fright insurance, and exploitation stunts galore.

Two on a Guillotine Pressbook
Two on a Guillotine Pressbook
Two on a Guillotine Pressbook
PP01242013_0003
Two on a Guillotine Pressbook
Two on a Guillotine Pressbook
Two on a Guillotine Pressbook
Two on a Guillotine Pressbook
Two on a Guillotine Pressbook
Two on a Guillotine Pressbook
Two on a Guillotine Pressbook
Two on a Guillotine Pressbook
Two on a Guillotine Pressbook
Two on a Guillotine Pressbook

 

Mexican Lobby Card:
Los Vampiros De Coyoacan

This crude, paste-up hodgepodge has its charms: the glaring vampire and skull faces, the positions of the masked wrestlers looking toward those faces, the repetition of the flying bat between them, and the skeleton holding onto a cross and rosary. Hammer Horror used Eastman Color for its vivid reds, so while I’ve not seen this movie, I wonder if the production team here was thinking the same thing?

Los Vampiros De Coyoacan Mexican Lobby Card

Mexican Lobby Card: Macumba Love (1960)

Ritos Malditos (Macumba Love) presents a striking illustration of terror and danger. The use of the inset scenes, done in cartoon format, indicate the artwork is taken from the American poster art. However, the American posters differ in their use of a skull face for the voodoo woman, instead of this alluring face of evil seen here (see American poster below).

ritos malditos lobby card

Macumba love

La Invasion De Los Muertos (1973)
Mexican Lobby Card

La Invasion De Los Muertos screams 1970s by the look of this lobby card. Zovek looks like he's channeling Billy Jack. Here's the lowdown from The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia by  Peter Dendle: 

There's no real explanation for the unhappy catastrophe afflicting the Mexican countryside–just a lot of talk of the mysteries of the cosmos and shots of a starry sky. Whatever's to blame, the dead return from their moldy coffins with blank stares and a thirst for murder. Congregating in large groups, they choke and maul their victims and then tip over the furniture for good measure…Most interestingly, these zombies have an unprecedented fetish for vehicles: they hover around a bulldozer, and make off with any car or truck the keys have been left in.

La Invasion De Los Muertos Mexican Lobby Card