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Showing posts with label stop-motion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stop-motion. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

OUTPOST EARTH -- Movie Review by Porfle



Originally posted on 4/2/17

 

Remember that cool low-budget monster flick where the giant stop-motion-animated crab terrorized a small town? No, I'm not talking about one of the great black-and-white 50s classics, but 2015's QUEEN CRAB, which came as a welcome CGI-free throwback to the old days when filmmakers with limited resources were trying to make Ray Harryhausen movies.

Now, the same team behind that bundle of old-school fun is at it again, this time going the pulp sci-fi route with their alien invasion thriller OUTPOST EARTH (2016).

Human civilization gets destroyed during the opening titles in a scaled-down riff on INDEPENDENCE DAY by way of EARTH VS. THE FLYING SAUCERS, leaving a devasted dystopian world whose few human survivors are being hunted down by hostile aliens and their mutant mongrel pets.


Erin Waterhouse plays Kay, a bow-hunting babe with supermodel looks who encounters brash, wisecracking anti-hero Blake (Titus Himmelberger) while wandering the wasteland "hunting wabbits" and avoiding other hungry humans out for food.

After Blake saves her from some "goons" (slang for aliens) Kay invites him back to her hideout which she shares with naive sister Penny (Kristen Gylling), dour den-mother Kagen (Yolie Canales, QUEEN CRAB), and brilliant theoretical physicist Uncle Zayden (Mason Carver), a white-bearded egghead who's always in his makeshift lab trying to figure out what makes the aliens tick.

It takes Blake a while to gain the trust of the others, especially the skeptical Kagen.  But when Penny gets captured by a group of bad humans (including QUEEN CRAB's Ken Van Sant as the loathsome eye-patched Manny) he comes through during a daring rescue and then later discovers the secret to operating one of the crashed alien spacecraft (part of which involves getting really drunk).


OUTPOST EARTH plays a bit like a small-scale DAY OF THE DEAD (Uncle Zayden reminds me of that film's giddy scientist, Dr. Logan) and 50s classic THE DAY THE WORLD ENDED, both featuring the remnants of humanity battling outside forces from their secluded hideout. There's also a hint of the flash-forward scenes in THE TERMINATOR albeit much less populated. 

Locations are well-chosen for their desolate, bombed-out look, bringing to mind the final segment of "Threads."  Performances and dialogue are good and the characters are likable, particularly the two leads whom we just know will eventually form a twosome and help repopulate the Earth. 

But that's for later--in the meantime, it's interesting how writer-director Brett Piper (QUEEN CRAB, TRICLOPS, A NYMPHOID BARBARIAN IN DINOSAUR HELL) takes what is basically a James Cameron-level scenario and drastically scales it down while still coming up with something that's fun to watch.


Much of the fun, in fact, comes from seeing how he solves various SPFX challenges without simply being able to throw money at them.  This includes not only humanoid aliens in nifty masks and full-body suits, but a delightful array of stop-motion creatures, some of which do battle in the time-honored monster movie tradition. 

These SPFX remind one of such films as EQUINOX, THE CRATER LAKE MONSTER, and THE EVIL DEAD, along with the stop-motion creatures on the 70s Saturday morning series "Jason of Star Command." 

One humanoid mutant, who may or may not have once been human (he's played by Steve Diasparra in full body-suit before morphing into a towering animated behemoth), even resembles something out of those old Jack Kirby monster comics as well as KING KONG animator Willis O'Brien's sketches for his proposed KING KONG VS. FRANKENSTEIN.


The film ends with a wild sequence involving Blake getting good and loaded (for the cause, of course), hopping into that crashed spacecraft with Kay, and making a daring attack run (aka "drunken joyride") on an alien outpost thought to be one of their main command centers.  The ending is left wide open for a sequel.

Despite the miniscule budget, OUTPOST EARTH is loaded with entertainment value--especially for us nostalgic Monster Kids--and intriguing elements of both serious and pulp sci-fi.  It's the kind of flick I used to run home from school to watch on the afternoon movie.



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Monday, June 2, 2025

All the Black Scorpion Scenes From "THE BLACK SCORPION" (1957) (video)





Richard Denning and Mara Corday star...

...in this Mexican-American giant monster extravaganza.

Legendary "King Kong" animator Willis O'Brien supervised the special effects.

His assistant, Pete Peterson, performed most of the actual stop-motion animation.
Peterson also worked on "Mighty Joe Young" and "The Giant Behemoth."

It is one of the most effects-intensive stop-motion animation films ever made...
...filled with detailed sets, multiple models, and inspired animation.

It is reminiscent of some of the most horrific scenes from "King Kong."
And also foretells some of the monster effects for "Starship Troopers."

The cavern sequence hints at what the "spider pit" scene in "King Kong" may have looked like.
Some of the models may, in fact, be left over from that scene.

The final monster vs. military battle is a SPFX spectacle...
...and ranks as one of the finest stop-motion sequences ever filmed.


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it.  Thanks for watching!



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Sunday, June 1, 2025

QUEEN CRAB -- DVD Review by Porfle



 

Originally posted on 9/23/15

 

"Let me get this straight--your best friend is a giant crab?"

Like one of those old Roger Corman B-movie creature features, or a giant-monster cheapie that wanted to use stop-motion animation for its oversized critters but couldn't afford to get Ray Harryhausen to do it (think MONSTER FROM GREEN HELL or CRATER LAKE MONSTER), the monster-movie spoof QUEEN CRAB (2015) is a giddy, goofy throwback to those hokey flicks we grew up eating TV dinners to.

The first "crab" we see is an ill-tempered young wife and mother who constantly berates her well-meaning but mischievous daughter Melissa and henpecks her nerdy scientist husband whose upstairs laboratory is home to experiments in unnatural animal growth.  While dancing around on the banks of Crabbe Creek Pond, Melissa finds and makes a pet of a small crab which she feeds with some strange berries grown in her father's lab.  You can pretty much guess what happens next.


Skip ahead a decade or two, and Melissa (Michelle Miller, who earlier played the part of Melissa's mother), orphaned by an unfortunate lab explosion, is now an eccentric trigger-happy hermit with an isolated cabin near Crabbe Creek Pond where she can commune with her crab-monster significant other, whom she has dubbed "Goliath."

But encroaching on her personal space are childhood friend Jennifer Kane (Kathryn Metz), now a Hollywood actress popping in for an unexpected visit, and state wildlife agent Stewart MacKendrick (A.J. DeLucia), drawn to the area after examining Sheriff Ray's plaster cast of a giant crab pincer print made at the scene of a cow-devouring. (It seems something really big and awfully hungry has been crashing through barn walls and chowing down on the local livestock.)

What really sets the colossal crustacean off, however, is when she pops out a passel of football-sized crab eggs that are shotgunned by Sally (Yolie Canales), another of the reclusive local loons who all seem to wield shotguns.  The eggs that actually hatch into little baby giant crabs are crunched by a recklessly driving  yokel who laughingly careens all over the highway while his terrified passenger, a woman he picked up after her own narrow escape from the creatures, screams in terror (one of my favorite scenes).


The caustic relationship between burly Sheriff Ray (Ken Van Sant), who raised niece Melissa after her parents' death, and boneheaded deputy Sonny Huggins (Rich Lounello) is also rife with lowbrow humor.  Some of it takes place in the town biker bar where Sonny picks a fight with Jennifer and, unaware that she has received martial arts training for one of her films, gets the old foot to the face until dizzy.

This comic interlude is interrupted, however, by the beginning of what will become a full-scale crab attack, which is when QUEEN CRAB really takes off.  Once Goliath goes into action, the fun barely lets up with a succession of stop-motion animation sequences that are a real treat to anyone who loves this particular medium and is a little tired of seeing nothing but CGI at every turn. 

While not exactly spectacular, the effects are smoothly executed and well integrated into the live action.  One particularly nice shot is when Melissa actually mounts Goliath and rides her "like a pony" as MacKendrick describes it.  It reminded me of one of those shows about a circus kid and their pet elephant.  Also impressive are some of the attack sequences with the crab pursuing her human prey and disposing of them in well-animated fashion.


There's even some nicely rendered miniature backgrounds, model vehicles (including a jeep and an army tank), and a couple of jet planes that dive bomb the creek where Sheriff Ray and a well-armed local militia (called into service with the promise of something to shoot at like they're never seen before) have the Queen Crab cornered.

The acting ranges from serviceable to pretty good, with even the lesser-skilled non-thespians in the cast managing to be rather amusing.  (I like the guy who plays the mechanic filling in for the bartender and getting everyone's drinks wrong.  The guy can't act but he's still funny.)  Prolific schlock filmmaker Brett Piper (TRICLOPS, A NYMPHOID BARBARIAN IN DINOSAUR HELL) handles the technical end of things well enough and knows how to direct this kind of hokey material.

The DVD from Wild Eye Releasing is in widescreen with 2.0 sound.  No subtitles.  Extras include a commentary with director Piper and producer Mark Polonia, a blooper reel, behind-the-scenes featurettes, and trailers for this and other Wild Eye releases including some of Piper's other films. 

It's definitely lightweight stuff and it isn't likely to win many awards, but QUEEN CRAB is the kind of movie that intentionally tries to be "so bad it's good" and actually succeeds.  Although don't be surprised if you pop it into the DVD player and then end up watching it alone after the unenlightened have fled the scene.





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Thursday, May 22, 2025

Legendary "King Kong" Volkswagen Ad (1972): Stop-Motion Animation By Dave Allen (video)




(Originally posted on 10/6/18)

 

Dave Allen was one of film's leading stop-motion animators.

His work can be seen in such films as "The Crater Lake Monster", "Equinox", and "Honey, I Shrunk the Kids."

In 1972 Volkswagen hired him to recreate the classic King Kong for a TV commercial.

The woman is Fay Wray's daughter, Victoria Riskin.

The commercial was aired only once.

Volkswagen pulled it because viewers didn't remember the car...just Kong.
(I got to see it!) 


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it.  Thanks for watching!



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Tuesday, January 14, 2025

The Burning Orphanage Scene From "MIGHTY JOE YOUNG" (1949) (video)




(spoilers)

Jill Young (Terry Moore) and her friend Gregg (Ben Johnson) are fleeing from the law...

...after a judge orders that her beloved pet gorilla Joe be shot to death.

But a burning orphanage causes them to cut short their escape.

Excellent stop-motion animation by Willis O'Brien and Ray Harryhausen...

...make this is one of the most thrilling sequences ever filmed.


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it.  Thanks for watching!



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Monday, January 13, 2025

MORE Lesser Known Stop-Motion Animation Monsters (video)




The most famous stop-motion animators are Willis O'Brien (KING KONG)…

...and Ray Harryhausen (JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS).

But other animators have given us their own interesting creations throughout the years...

The Lost Continent (1951)
The Black Scorpion (Willis O'Brien, 1957)
The Giant Behemoth (Willis O'Brien, 1959)
Dinosaurus! (1960)
Planet of Dinosaurs (1978)
Caveman (1981)


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it.  Thanks for watching!



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Sunday, January 12, 2025

Lesser Known Stop-Motion Animation Monsters (video)




The most famous stop-motion animators are Willis O'Brien (KING KONG)…

...and Ray Harryhausen (7th VOYAGE OF SINBAD).

But other animators have given us their own interesting creations throughout the years...

Three Ages (Buster Keaton, 1923)
Beast of Hollow Mountain (1956)
Monster From Green Hell (1957)
Jack the Giant Killer (1962)
Equinox (1970)
The Crater Lake Monster (1977)


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it.  Thanks for watching!



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Saturday, January 11, 2025

Kong Undresses Ann in (Censored!) Scene From KING KONG (1933) (video)




When "King Kong" (1933) was re-released in 1938, several violent shots which violated the Production Code were removed.

Along with these went a scene considered much too risque' in which a curious Kong peels off some of Ann Darrow's clothing.

The new edit cut away just as Kong was getting started.

Here's the original, restored version...


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it.  Thanks for watching!



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Friday, January 10, 2025

KING KONG (1933) -- DVD Review by Porfle



(NOTE: This review was written upon the DVD's initial release in 2005.)

Before CGI, before summer blockbuster films like JAWS, before "giant-monster-on-the-loose" movies of any kind, there was...KING KONG. Depression audiences who barely had two coins to scrape together jammed theaters in 1933 to witness this thrilling pinnacle of pure escapism and marvel at the sight of a giant gorilla battling dinosaurs, wrestling elevated trains, and swatting biplanes from his lofty perch atop the towering Empire State Building. Up to that time, KING KONG was the most spectacular, jaw-dropping adventure film ever made, and few films since, if any, have even come close to topping it.

The first forty minutes or so consist of careful, methodical build-up as flamboyant movie producer Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong) sets sail for Skull Island with the crew of a merchant ship called The Venture. He's heard stories of a giant monster called Kong who lives on the island, and plans to capture the beast on film. Along for the ride are the beautiful Ann Darrow (Fay Wray) to provide the "love interest" for his movie, and first mate Jack Driscoll (Bruce Cabot) to provide the love interest for Ann.

When they arrive, they witness a tribe of natives preparing to sacrifice a young girl to Kong. But one look at Ann, whom they call "the golden woman", convinces them that she would make a much more unique bride for the beast. ("Well, blondes are scarce around here," Denham notes.) They steal onto the ship that night and kidnap Ann, then open the massive doors of the huge protective wall that separates them from the rest of the island and bind her to an altar. As the crew of The Venture discover Ann's absence and race to the rescue, the natives wait atop the wall in awed silence for the arrival of the fearsome Kong. Suddenly there are loud, echoing footsteps...the trees are torn aside...and there stands King Kong, the greatest of all movie monsters.


 
All necessary exposition is laid out for us so that when Kong makes his appearance at this point, the rest of the film is a non-stop rollercoaster ride of action. Kong takes Ann in hand and disappears into the dense jungle, with Denham, Driscoll, and most of the Venture crew in hot pursuit. But it doesn't take long for these hunters to become the hunted, when they suddenly find themselves on the run from an array of ill-tempered prehistoric beasts ("from the dinosaur family!", Denham informs us). In one horrific scene, the sailors are trapped on a log over a deep chasm as the enraged Kong shakes them off into the pit below. Having dispatched his pursuers, Kong takes Ann to his lair at the top of Skull Mountain, engaging in awesome battles with various other giant creatures along the way.

But Driscoll, who managed to avoid plunging into the pit, rescues Ann and returns her to the native village. An angry Kong arrives moments later, pounds his way through the door of the great wall, and goes on a rampage in which he chews and stomps several unfortunate villagers. Denham, however, is prepared for such an eventuality, and hurls a gas bomb which knocks Kong unconscious. Realizing that the giant ape himself is worth more than any motion picture, Denham arranges to have a giant raft built to transport Kong back to New York, where he will be put on display for paying customers. "We're millionaires, boys!" he cries to the surviving sailors. "I'll share it with all of you!"

We all know, of course, that once Kong is taken to the Big Apple, he escapes and goes on a rampage of destruction that climaxes at the top of the Empire State Building, where he must fight off attacking biplanes amidst a hail of machine gun bullets -- one of the most enduring images in movie history and popular culture. 

KING KONG continues to astound all but the most jaded viewers even today, which is a tribute to the imagination and ingenuity of its makers. Special effects wizard Willis O'Brien laid the groundwork for all future effects-laden "event" movies as he created ways of bringing the most outrageous visions to the screen, many of which are still used today. His meticulous frame-by-frame stop-motion animation of Kong and the various dinosaurs never fails to impress, especially in the spectacular battle between Kong and the Tyrannosaurus Rex. 

Murray Spivack's sound design was an amazing feat considering that sound itself had only existed in movies for a few years before KING KONG. And the musical score by Max Steiner, with its beautiful descriptive passages and themes for various characters, is a masterpiece that showed all film composers to come how it should be done.

Upon its re-release in 1938, several of the more violent scenes were censored, including Kong popping various Skull Islanders and New Yorkers into his mouth and chewing on them, or stomping them underfoot. And the scene in which Kong curiously peels off bits of Fay Wray's clothing and sniffs them was deemed inappropriate as well, and out it went. The film was also darkened considerably to disguise much of the blood that flows during the battle scenes. For many years, this was the only version of the film available, until finally the excised scenes were rediscovered and restored in the early 70s.


 
Now, with Warner Brothers' current release of KING KONG on DVD, the film is restored, uncensored, and better-looking than ever before, with special features that will delight fans of the film. There is a commentary featuring stop-motion master Ray Harryhausen (SEVENTH VOYAGE OF SINBAD, JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS) and special-effects veteran Ken Ralston that is fun to listen to since the men are such devoted Kong fans. 

A documentary on the life of Kong producer Merian C. Cooper (upon whom the character of Carl Denham is based) is a fascinating look at a man whose exploits rival those of Indiana Jones. And the seven-part documentary "RKO Production 601:The Making Of Kong, Eighth Wonder Of The World" is packed with fascinating details about the film and comments from well-known filmmakers who have been influenced by it.

LORD OF THE RINGS director Peter Jackson, whose KONG remake hits theaters in December 2005, went to great lengths to help make this DVD a special event, including assembling his special-effects artists to recreate the legendary lost "Spider Pit Sequence" which was originally removed from the film due to its intensity ("It stopped the show!", as Merian C. Cooper put it). Jackson also created a new Kong scene using the same equipment and methods employed by Willis O'Brien, simply to give us an idea of how the effects for KONG were done since there is so little behind-the-scenes documentation of the original work. 

Also included are scenes from Willis O'Brien's aborted dinosaur project CREATION, which are so well-restored that they look as though they might have been filmed yesterday. And rounding out the special features on the disc are trailers from KING KONG, SON OF KONG, MIGHTY JOE YOUNG (Willis O'Brien's three great "Giant Ape" movies), and other Cooper productions.

If you're a fan of KING KONG, or you just want to see what all the fuss is about, there's never been a better time to watch this film in all its glory. The passage of time, and the advancement of special-effects technology, have not dimmed its power. It is still one of the greatest -- perhaps the greatest -- adventure films ever made.



Read our review of the 2005 Peter Jackson remake

Read our review of SON OF KONG


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Thursday, January 9, 2025

MY TOP 20 FAVORITE STOP-MOTION ANIMATION MOVIES! by Porfle




These aren't movies that are entirely stop-motion, such as A NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS or a Wallace and Gromit movie, but ones featuring stop-motion monsters or other creatures.  With hats off, of course, to the greats--Willis O'Brien and Ray Harryhausen.






Read our review of  KING KONG (1933)
Read our review of  SON OF KONG




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Wednesday, January 8, 2025

SON OF KONG -- Movie Review by Porfle



Originally posted on 10/25/15

(Caution: the last couple of paragraphs contain spoilers.)

 

I watched SON OF KONG (1933) again last night, and this toned-down sequel affected me just the same as ever. Most of the ingredients of KING KONG are there, but mixed together in such a different way as to explore whole new areas of cinematic enchantment.

The opening titles are reminiscent of KONG at first, but then they go into a cast montage and the music shifts dramatically to the jaunty but melancholy "Runaway Blues", and darned if that alone doesn't make me start to get misty-eyed. 

The stop-motion creatures are great as usual (although with little participation from special effects wizard Willis O'Brien, who was disillusioned with the project), and there's an exciting climax which anyone who saw this as a kid should vividly recall.


After the disaster of Kong's opening night in New York, showman Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong) is forced to flee lawsuits and creditors by going into the shipping business with Captain Englehorn (Frank Reicher) in the South Seas. 

Along the way he meets a sweet young down-on-her-luck woman named Hilda (Helen Mack), loses his ship to mutineers, and ends up back on Skull Island, where he and the rest encounter a baby Kong who protects them from danger as they search for a fabled island treasure. 

There's considerably less tension in this laidback sequel--the nightmare of KONG is over, and despite the hardships it caused this seems to have been cathartic for Denham as a person. He's no longer so manic and driven, content now to be Englehorn's business partner, and can enjoy little things in life like a two-bit tent show with dancing monkeys and an adorable young girl (Hilda) playing the ukelele.


The romance between Denham and Helen Mack's plucky, lovable Hilda is low-key and very sweet, more so because of the recurring "Runaway Blues" theme. The trip to the island and their adventures on it aren't dark and heavy as in the previous film, but KONG had already been done. Rather than trying to do it over again or continue its nightmarish tone, SON OF KONG gives us a fairytale ending.

It's not as much a sequel as it is a prolonged denouement--a long sigh of relief after the horrors that ended when Kong hit the pavement. All the sexual tension and Freudian complexities of KING KONG have been resolved, leaving Denham free to lead a simpler life with Hilda and, we assume, a happy ending. 

And then, of course there's little Kong (known by many as "Kiko") himself.  Some viewers fault the film for being too comedic, and indeed, this 12-foot albino ape is quite the clown.  Still, his interactions with Denham and Hilda are fascinating to watch, as are several furious battles between him and a variety of giant island creatures.  While rushed into production the same year as its predecessor, SON OF KONG still boasts some amazing special effects.


The grand finale is a terrifying earthquake which threatens to destroy the island, with Denham, Hilda, and Englehorn scrambling to escape in a rickety rowboat.  In the film's most heartbreaking moment, little Kong's foot is caught in a crevice as the island begins to sink beneath the waves, and as he wails in distress you can clearly make out the words: "Mom-my!  Mom-my!" 

Seeing Denham and Hilda at the rail of a rescue ship in their robes, as it begins to sink in that they're really in love and "Runaway Blues" creeps in one last time, still plucks the old heartstrings.  (It's here that Denham the "no funny business" mug finally cracks up and goes sappy.)  More than anything, SON OF KONG is, to me, a lovely fairytale adventure that gets a little more magical every time I see it.

Read our review of KING KONG

"The Runaway Blues" -- instrumental





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Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Phantom Animation Devices Visible In "KING KONG" (1933) (video)




In the old days, stop-motion animators like KING KONG's Willis O'Brien and crew used a "surface gauge" to measure minute movements.

Sometimes they'd accidentally leave these devices in the shot. This happens at least twice in KING KONG. The first time isn't so noticeable. The second time is pretty obvious.

I neither own nor claim any rights to this material. Just having some fun with it. Hope you enjoy it!




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Tuesday, December 26, 2023

Was The Beverly Hillbillies' "Granny" in "Mighty Joe Young"? (1949) (video)




Irene Ryan played crotchety old "Granny"...

...in the hit 1960s TV series "The Beverly Hillbillies."

But in her younger days, Ryan made a brief comedic appearance...

...in the SPFX-heavy monster thriller "Mighty Joe Young" (1949).


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it.  Thanks for watching!




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Thursday, February 10, 2022

Classic Creature-Feature "MONSTER FROM GREEN HELL" on Special-Edition Blu-ray & DVD March 8th

 


 

Classic Creature-Feature Monster From Green Hell

On Special-Edition Blu-ray & DVD March 8th

Featuring New 4K Transfer, Exclusive Bonus Features &

Rare, Colorized Version of the Film’s Climax

Too Awesome to Describe! Too Terrifying to Escape!


 

LOS ANGELES — Feb. 9, 2022 — For Immediate Release: Cinedigm announced today that The Film Detective (TFD), the classic film restoration and streaming company, will release Kenneth G. Crane’s classic B-movie creature feature Monster From Green Hell (1957) on special-edition Blu-ray and DVD, March 8.

 

From the era of giant bugs and atomic testing comes this low-budget howler about mutant wasps. When scientists try to understand the effects of radiation on earth creatures, the result brings them to an area of Africa known as “Green Hell,” where wasps have mutated into monsters!

 




Jim Davis, who later starred in the TV series Dallas, plays Dr. Quent Brady, the scientist who starts the whole mess. The film also stars Vladimir Sokoloff (The Life of Emile Zola, Mission to Moscow) as the skeptical Dr. Lorentz and Joel Fluellen (Raisin in the Sun) as Arobi, who warns Brady to beware of the African location. The locals don't call it “Green Hell” for nothing! Monster From Green Hell was co-written by Louis Vittes, famed writer of the classic I Married a Monster From Outer Space.

 

The special-edition release features a stunning 4K transfer, including both widescreen (1.85:1) and full frame (1.33:1) versions of the film. Monster From Green Hell comes as the latest in a series of collaborations between TFD and The Wade Williams Collection.

 


BONUS FEATURES: Missouri Born: The Films of Jim Davis, an all-new career retrospective with author/film historian C. Courtney Joyner; The Men Behind the Monsters, an essay by author Don Stradley featured in a full-color booklet; and commentary with artist/author Stephen R. Bissette.

 

Monster From Green Hell will be available on Blu-ray ($24.95) and DVD ($19.95) March 8 or fans can secure a copy by pre-ordering now at: https://www.thefilmdetective.com/monster-from-green-hell

 

About The Film Detective:

The Film Detective (TFD) is a leading distributor of restored classic programming, including feature films, television, foreign imports and documentaries and is a division of Cinedigm. Launched in 2014, TFD has distributed its extensive library of 3,000+ hours of film on DVD and Blu-ray and through leading broadcast and streaming platforms such as Turner Classic Movies, NBC, EPIX, Pluto TV, Amazon, MeTV, PBS and more. With a strong focus on increasing the digital reach of its content, TFD has released its classic movie app on web, Android, iOS, Roku, Amazon Fire TV and Apple TV. TFD is also available live with a 24/7 linear channel available on Sling TV, STIRR, Plex, Local Now, Rakuten TV and DistroTV. For more information, visit www.thefilmdetective.com.

 

About Cinedigm:


For more than 20 years, Cinedigm has led the digital transformation of the entertainment industry. Today, Cinedigm entertains hundreds of millions of consumers around the globe by providing premium content, streaming channels and technology services to the world's largest media, technology and retail companies.

 

Monster From Green Hell

The Film Detective


Genre: Horror/Sci-Fi

Original Release: 1957 (B&W)

Not Rated

Running Time: 61 Minutes

Language: English

Subtitles: English/Spanish

SRP: $24.95 (Blu-ray) / $19.95 (DVD)

Discs: 1

Release Date: March 8, 2022 (Pre-order Now)

UPC Code: 760137830887 (Blu-ray) / 760137831099 (DVD)

Catalog #: FB1019 (Blu-ray) / FD1019 (DVD)


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Sunday, November 17, 2019

All The Giant Behemoth Scenes From "THE GIANT BEHEMOTH" (1959) (video)




THE GIANT BEHEMOTH is a radioactive monster from the depths of the sea.

The film was known in England as BEHEMOTH, THE SEA MONSTER.

The director, Eugène Lourié, also directed THE BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS...
...as well as GORGO and THE COLOSSUS OF NEW YORK.

The stop-motion animation was done in Los Angeles...
...by SPFX pioneer Willis O'Brien of KING KONG fame.

These effects were then integrated into footage filmed in Great Britain.
O'Brien made the most of a relatively low budget.

Audiences noticed the film's similiarities to BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS.

Distributors insisted on such a dinosaur-like creature...
...instead of the script's original radioactive blob.

British film censors originally gave the film an "X" certificate.
This was changed to an "A" after two minutes were removed.


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it. Thanks for watching!
 
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Saturday, November 16, 2019

Porfle's Trivia Quiz #14: "KING KONG" (1933) (video)




KING KONG (1933) is arguably the greatest giant monster movie of all time.

Question #1: What does Ann Darrow (Fay Wray) call the ship's monkey?

A. Ziggy
B. Iggy
C. Wiggy
D. Biggy
E. Izzy

Question #2: What does Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong) say is "scarce" on the island?

A. Booze
B. Dames
C. Jazz
D. Blondes
E. Crooners

Question #3: What does Kong do with the first woman he grabs in New York?

A. Eats her
B. Steps on her
C. Puts her down
D. Drops her
E. Carries her away

Question #4: What does Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong) say "killed the Beast"?

A. Desire
B. Bullets
C. Beauty
D. Heartbreak
E. Greed


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it. Thanks for watching!



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Saturday, February 2, 2019

Does Kiko Cry "Mommy!" At The End Of SON OF KONG? (1933) (video)




"Son Of Kong" is a delightful, fairytale-tinged follow-up to "King Kong."

(You can read our review of it HERE.)

Kong's son "Kiko" is a likable character played for laughs and sympathy...
...with decidedly human-like qualities.

Kiko's life is threatened when the island begins to sink...
...and his foot gets caught in a crevice.

Does the poor little soul actually call for his Mommy?

What do you think?


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it.  Thanks for watching!


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Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Incredible Silent Movie Stop-Motion Dinosaurs! ("The Lost World", 1925) (video)




When Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's adventure "The Lost World" was brought to the screen...

...and Prof. Challenger (Wallace Beery) set off in search of prehistoric dinosaurs...

...future KING KONG (1933) special-effects master Willis O'Brien brought them to life.

For 1925 audiences, such sights were nothing short of astounding.

Even now, these unique stop-motion creatures retain their power to delight and astonish.


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it.  Thanks for watching!


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Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Phantom Support Rods During Kong vs. T-Rex Fight in KING KONG (1933)(video)




The fight between King Kong and the T-Rex is a terrific action sequence...

...as well as being some of the finest stop-motion animation ever put on film.

What many people never noticed (at least, not until the DVD release allowed them to study each frame)…

...are the support rods for the models which are visible in some frames.

When viewed normally, they're hardly noticeable.

But once you're aware of them, they're a reminder of the animators' artistic efforts.


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it.  Thanks for watching!



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Friday, June 8, 2018

Fun Blooper from "20,000,000 Miles To Earth" (1957) (video)




1. Monster in farmer's barn.

2. Farmer watching from a safe distance behind nerdy guy.

3. Farmer gets involved.

4. Oops--farmer STILL watching from a safe distance behind nerdy guy.

Maybe they're twins?


I neither own nor claim any rights to this material.  Just having some fun with it.  Thanks for watching!




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