Category Archives: horror films

Movie essentials: ‘The Dead Zone’

the dead zone walken tunnel

In the 1970s, I was reading everything that Stephen King wrote as fast as I could get my hands on it. I always thought “The Dead Zone,” his 1979 novel of a man with psychic powers trying to live a normal life and, failing that, trying to stop an apocalypse, ranked right up there with his work of the time, including “Salem’s Lot” and “The Stand.”

And I thought director David Cronenberg’s 1983 adaptation of King’s book was among the best movie versions of the author’s work. Much better than Kubrick’s “The Shining,” for example.

Watching “The Dead Zone” again recently, I think it’s held up remarkably well. The story is a pretty timeless one of love and loss and its small-town setting keeps everything from looking too dated.

Christopher Walken – who has, in the 30-plus years since “The Dead Zone” was released, become an icon and has verged on self-parody – plays John Smith, a Maine school teacher looking forward to marrying his girlfriend, Sarah (Brooke Adams).

But Smith has an accident and is in a coma for five years. Although his parents are still around, Sarah has married someone else and had a young child.

Before he even gets out of bed, Johnny discovers another change: His coma has apparently awakened within him a psychic ability. If he touches someone, he can read their mind and see visions of their future. He is even able to tell his doctor, played by Herbert Lom, that his mother, separated from him in Europe in World War II, is still alive.

Not surprisingly, this unexpected talent doesn’t bring Johnny any peace of mind or comfort. Particularly when he touches the hand of a huckstering politician, Greg Stillson (Martin Sheen) and sees that he’s destined to one day be elected president and bring about the end of the world.

King’s book has more layers, but Cronenberg’s movie does a pretty good job of capturing the details and somber mood of King’s story.

Johnny is a haunted man, a man who can see everyone else’s future but has no future of his own, and the character is perfectly played by the Christopher Walken of 1983. The actor hadn’t yet become so familiar to us, through offbeat characters in movies like “Pulp Fiction” and through TV appearances on “Saturday Night Live” (“I pranked him in my basement”). We had a bad feeling about Johnny Smith just by looking at Walken’s pale and pained face.

Cronenberg’s movie feels as fresh as if it was made just a few years ago, thanks in part to its lack of trendy-at-the-time touches and the chilly blue-gray “look.”

Random observations:

It’s startling seeing Sheen as a maniacal, murderous president. That’s President Bartlet, man!

“The Dead Zone” makes me wonder why Brooke Adams, so good in this and the “Invasion of the Body Snatchers” remake, didn’t have a longer movie career.

Lom, who played “The Phantom of the Opera” way back in the 1960s and the nemesis of Clouseau in the “Pink Panther” movies in the 1970s, is a nice, steadying presence here.

Anthony Zerbe, one of my favorite character actors of the 1970s, is likewise welcome here as a potential campaign donor who sees through Stillson’s shtick.

‘Carnival of Souls’ still creepy

carnival-of-souls screaming

“Carnival of Souls” represented, until just recently, another of the few holes in my movie-watching experience.

Between late-night and weekend afternoon TV airings in my youth (hello, “Francis the Talking Mule”) and rampant cable and home video watching in the 1980s and 90s, I had caught up on many movies that came out before my time, movies that played in theaters in the 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s and 60s.

But I hadn’t seen “Carnival of Souls” until just the other day, when I watched it on one of those multi-movie, public domain collections of horror films.

And I thought it was pretty good. It’s effective and creepy and fairly innovative for its time.

The movie, which is in the public domain and thus shows up on many home video collections of horror films, was released in 1962 and reportedly made by director Herk Harvey for $33,000.

The movie shows its bigger-than-it-has-any-right-to-be budget in its first scene. Two carloads of teenagers (?) drag race and one goes over the side of a bridge … and you actually see the car go off the bridge and into the water, not just impressions of movement and shocked expressions on faces.

Church organist Mary Henry (Candace Hilligoss) is the only survivor of the car that went into the river. Understandably rattled, Henry begins seeing a white-faced man peering at her through windows and in darkened corners.

When she’s introduced to an abandoned amusement park, she is drawn to the haunted place, a gathering place for ghosts.

The movie plays out like an episode of “The Twilight Zone,” but that’s okay. As plots go – no spoilers here, even after a half-century – the story for “Carnival of Souls” is spooky and effective.

carnival of souls candace hilligoss

Hilligoss, who made only one other film – “The Curse of the Living Corpse,” in 1964 – is pretty good in the movie. She’s sharp-edged and not particularly likable yet still manages to evoke our feelings of sympathy and curiosity. And she’s striking.

Speaking of striking: The movie’s visually quite stark and eye-catching. The black and white cinematography helps, but Harvey found great locations and let them well.

Random observations::

Raza Badiyi is listed as assistant director. He is really Reza Badiyi, who worked for another 40 years or so and directed the “Out of Mind, Out of Sight” episode of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” in 1997, featuring an invisible girl. According to his IMDB page, he also shot the famous curling wave for the credits of “Hawaii Five-O.”

herk harvey carnival of souls

There’s lasting scare value to the scenes in which Hilligoss suddenly sees a white-faced figure looming toward her. The ghostly apparition is played by director Herk Harvey.

Department of unhelpful information, from the dialogue: “Hysteria won’t solve anything. Now control yourself!”

Unsung actors: Kenneth Tobey

kenneth tobey the thing from another world

Kenneth Tobey was one of those actors who, when he appeared on screen in anything from the classic sci-fi horror film “The Thing from Another World” to the TV series “I Spy,” you just felt like everything was under control.

Tobey, who was born in 1917 and died in 2003, was a character actor in films like “The Howling” who occasionally got to play the lead, as in his 1950s series “Whirlybirds,” about helicopter pilots.

the thing lobby card

Tobey is one of my favorite actors in one of my favorite movies, “The Thing from Another World.”

In the classic 1951 Howard Hawks production, Tobey played Captain Patrick Hendry, who quickly took control of a remote installation in danger from a fearsome alien (James Arness).

Hendry is low-key and no-nonsense and you had the feeling Tobey was likewise.

Classic shlock: ‘Superbeast’

superbeast daughters of satan poster

Believe it or not, I’d never heard of “Superbeast” before I saw it among the free movies on the On Demand menu on my cable.

Okay, maybe that’s not all that hard to believe.

The movie was filmed in the Philippines as part of a subset of the movie industry I’ve always been interested in: Cheap exploitation movies filmed – or at least partially filmed – there for release to the US drive-in circuit. For a while there, note some biographies of legendary exploitation filmmaker Roger Corman, exploitation movies and especially exploitation movie trailers included prodigious amounts of Filipino footage of jungles and helicopters and girls firing machine guns. It’s all a little like the footage of chicks shooting machines guns in Quentin Tarantino’s “Jackie Brown.”

superbeast double bill

“Superbeast” was released in 1972 on a double-bill with “Daughters of Satan,” a thriller that starred future TV icon Tom Selleck. Selleck went on to greater things, but the same can’t be said for the male lead here, Craig Littler, who did have a stint in the Saturday morning kid’s show “Jason of Star Command.”

Considering the exotic locales in “Superbeast,” there’s a lot of travelogue material here, including trips down rivers with hippos and the like lying alongshore. All this footage serves to fill out the running time of the movie, which has a rather thin storyline.

“Superbeast” is another variation on a couple of well-remembered and much-exploited stories: “The Island of Dr. Moreau” and “The Most Dangerous Game.”

A doctor, played by Antoinette Bower, investigates mysterious goings-on in the jungle and finds lab experiments that turn men into half-men/half-animals.

But there’s really not a whole lot going on for the first half of the movie, except for the doctor waking up to the sounds of screams and gunshots. The doc finds out that the mutated results of these jungle experiments become targets for the mastermind behind it all, a hunter played by Harry Lauter.

Even this description makes “Superbeast” seem more action-packed and coherent than it is. It’s marked by the lazy lack of cleverness that is the ruin of many low-budget movies – and makes clever low-budget films seem even better by comparison. Rather than writing and shooting meaningful plot points, the filmmakers include lots of footage of people just wandering in and out of scenes.

superbeast

“Superbeast” tries to create shocks by including some real-life gore. There’s an autopsy scene using real footage and another with real organs in a jar. And “Superbeast” might be one of the few movies with exposition delivered via slide show. The movie has a real WTF moment when the female doctor dreams about having sex with one of the mutated natives.

After meandering through the plot for nearly 90 minutes, Litter goes all manimal and shows up in an immobile apeman mask. A struggle ensues and well, that’s pretty much it.

The movie even ends with a “huh?” freeze frame, as if to emphasize the futility of trying to find a coherent plot here.

“Superbeast” didn’t have a life much beyond those 1972 drive-in theaters, and that’s just as well.

Classic horror: ‘Night of the Creeps’

night of the creeps poster

If I hadn’t seen it in theaters in 1986 – and numerous times on stone-age VHS tapes in the years that followed – I might think that “Night of the Creeps” was a modern-day spoof of low-budget 1980s horror/sci-fil flicks.

That’s because director Fred Dekker’s movie is so sarcastic, so canny, so knowing that it feels like a modern-day retro pastiche of cliches from movies of the time.

“Night of the Creeps” is very much an “everything plus the kitchen sink” kind of movie. The opening sequence, set in the 1950s, shows both a meteor landing and a homicidal maniac on Lover’s Lane. In black and white, yet.

Of course, the two calamities coincide and slug-like aliens from the meteor infect a body that is cryogenically preserved until it’s accidentally thawed out in 1986.

Before you can say “Nightmare on Frat House Row,” the alien slugs are turning people into zombies.

“Night of the Creeps” has even more than zombies and alien parasites. There are exploding heads, flame throwers, college nerds suddenly turned marksmen, topless coeds … even future Oscar bait David Paymer in a brief role as a morgue attendant who ends up slug infested. Yes, David Paymer.

There are so many funny moments in the movie, but maybe the first LOL moment – 20-some years before anybody knew what LOL meant – is when a young lover in the 1950s hears the beginning of a report on his car radio about an escape from the local institution for the criminally insane .. and clicks off the radio before the germane information.

night of the creeps tommy atkins

Tommy Atkins, well-remembered for his roles in classic John Carpenter films like “The Fog” and “Escape from New York,” is great here. As student zombies head for the sorority house, Atkins – as a tough cop whose “thrill me” catchphrase is a wee bit overused – turns to the girls and says, “The good news is your dates are here. The bad news is … they’re dead.”

Dekker pays tribute – and provides Easter eggs for fans – in the names of his movie’s main characters, who bear the last names of such directors as David Cronenberg and George Romero. Heck, the university where all the creepy hijinks ensue is names after Roger Corman.

“Night of the Creeps” is a funny, clever horror spoof that’s got just the right amount of spoofery and just the right amount of horror.

 

Classic TV movie: ‘The Norliss Tapes’

norliss tapes title card

“The Norliss Tapes” is one of those TV movies best remembered for its freaky, scary moments.

It seems it scared the hell out of a lot of kids back in the day. I know it made an impression on me.

The movie, which aired in 1973, was pretty clearly inspired by the success of “The Night Stalker” a year earlier. The two movies shared a premise – a writer investigating the undead – and Dan Curtis, the producer of “The Night Stalker,” produced and directed here.

“The Norliss Tapes” is no “Night Stalker,” however. But it’s a pretty good scare-fest.

The story begins with David Norliss, a writer with a contract to write a book exposing phony psychic phenomena, talking to his publisher and sounding bleak. Norliss (played by David Thinnes of “The Invaders” fame) recounts – via audio cassettes – how he found it easy to debunk mystics and psychics … but then he got caught up in the story of Ellen Cort (Angie Dickinson). Cort tells Norliss that she’s been attacked by – and she subsequently shot – a particularly strange intruder in her home: Her late husband Jim.

the norliss tapes creature

The storyline plays out not unlike “The Night Stalker,” with seemingly random murders by a supernatural being running counterpoint to the mystery of the apparently resurrected Jim Cort. The plots tie together, of course. As a matter of fact, there’s not a lot of mystery or subtlety, as Cort – freaky eyes and blue skin prominently displayed – is clearly the attacker.

Norliss begins investigating the possibility that Cort – whose body rests peacefully in his family crypt – is getting up and attacking people in the dead of night. And what about that mysterious Egyptian ring Cort was wearing?

dan curtis

Director Curtis was the man behind groundbreaking supernatural TV shows like “Dark Shadows” and “The Night Stalker,” and “The Norliss Tapes” shows that. The movie has a style and a music soundtrack familiar to fans of those shows. Robert Cobert, a Dan Curtis regular creative partner, was the composer of the score here.

Some cast members of “The Night Stalker” even recur here, including Stanley Adams as a witness and Claude Akins as a gruff sheriff who’s only too happy to keep a lid on spooky happenings.

Michelle Carey, a gorgeous 1960s and 1970s actress with a breathy, throaty voice, plays Ellen Cort’s sister and a friend of Norliss.

Keep watching through the end credits: There’s a recapping series of  scare scenes, ala “The Night Stalker,” among the credits.

Today in Halloween: ‘Phantom of the Opera’ live

dennis james

One of the coolest live theater experiences I ever had was one October evening in the 1980s when I experienced a unique way of seeing Lon Chaney’s classic 1925 silent film “The Phantom of the Opera” – with a live organ performance.

Dennis James, at the time the resident organist for the Ohio Theatre in Columbus, Ohio, came to Muncie with a Halloween-season show he had been doing for a while: A live organ performance with the Chaney film.

dennis james halloween

I’ll never forget standing onstage before the show – by virtue of covering the event for the newspaper, I had a little access – and seeing James, a showman, walking out of the dark wings at Emens Auditorium.

Actually, my friends and I heard James first: His footsteps echoed across the stage. When we could finally see him in the still relative darkness of the stage, he was wearing a tuxedo, top hat … and Chaney Phantom mask.

Phantom_of_the_Opera_organ

James, whom I had interviewed by phone before he came to town, is a friendly guy with extensive knowledge of not only music but the Chaney film.

He performed, on the theater organ, the historic score to Chaney’s film, Watching James perform added immensely to the experience, which to this day remains one of my favorite Halloween-era memories.

Today in Halloween: TCM movie schedule

vincent price pit and the pendulum

A few days back I noted that AMC has concentrated on more modern movies, including the “Halloween” and “Friday the 13th” series, for its Halloween fare.

The classics are left to TCM (Turner Classic Movies), which has an interesting mix of films set to air on Oct. 31.

Much of the morning and early afternoon hours are devoted to classic Hammer films of the 1950s and 1960s, including “Curse of Frankenstein,” “The Mummy” and “Dracula, Prince of Darkness.”

The evening hours are devoted to Vincent Price, starring in “Pit and the Pendulum,” “Masque of the Red Death” and “Haunted Palace.”

There are some offbeat choices mixed in through the day. “Horror Express,” a 1972 “missing link” movie starring Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing and … Telly Savalas is a good example of that.

It’s a little disappointing that the old Universal horror classics aren’t included this year. But maybe TCM decided those were played out.

Anyway, here’s the schedule for Oct. 31:

31 Thursday
6:00 AM CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN, THE (1957)
  A scientist’s attempts to create life unleash a bloodthirsty monster.

DirTerence Fisher CastPeter Cushing , Hazel Court , Robert Urquhart .

C-83 mins, TV-14, CC, Letterbox Format

7:30 AM MUMMY, THE (1959)
  A resurrected mummy stalks the archaeologists who defiled his tomb.

DirTerence Fisher CastPeter Cushing , Christopher Lee , Yvonne Furneaux .

C-88 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format

9:00 AM HORROR CASTLE (1963)
  A Holocaust survivor tortures women in the dungeons of an ancient castle.

DirAnthony Dawson CastRossana Podestà , Georges Rivière , Christopher Lee .

C-84 mins, TV-14, Letterbox Format

10:30 AM CASTLE OF THE LIVING DEAD, THE (1964)
  A traveling circus entertains a medieval count who uses them in his bizarre experiments.

DirMichael Reeves CastChristopher Lee , Donald Sutherland ,

BW-90 mins, TV-14, Letterbox Format

12:15 PM DRACULA, PRINCE OF DARKNESS (1965)
  Four travelers unwittingly revive the bloodsucking count.

DirTerence Fisher CastChristopher Lee , Barbara Shelley , Andrew Keir .

C-90 mins, TV-14, CC, Letterbox Format

1:45 PM DEVIL’S BRIDE, THE (1968)
  Small town Satanists lure an innocent brother and sister into their coven.

DirTerence Fisher CastChristopher Lee , Charles Gray , Nike Arrighi .

C-96 mins, TV-14, CC, Letterbox Format

3:45 PM DRACULA HAS RISEN FROM THE GRAVE (1969)
  Dracula goes after the niece of the monsignor who destroyed his castle.

DirFreddie Francis CastChristopher Lee , Rupert Davies , Veronica Carlson .

C-92 mins, TV-14, CC, Letterbox Format

5:30 PM HORROR EXPRESS (1972)
  An anthropologist discovers a frozen monster which he believes may be the Missing Link.

DirEugenio Martin CastChristopher Lee , Peter Cushing , Telly Savalas .

C-88 mins, TV-14, Letterbox Format

7:15 PM NOW PLAYING NOVEMBER (2013) (2013)
   

 

BW-21 mins, TV-PG, CC,

8:00 PM PIT AND THE PENDULUM (1961)
  A young man investigates his sister’s death in a mysterious castle.

DirRoger Corman CastVincent Price , John Kerr , Barbara Steele .

C-80 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format

9:30 PM HAUNTED PALACE, THE (1963)
  After inheriting a decaying estate, a man discovers his family’s deadly secret.

DirRoger Corman CastVincent Price , Debra Paget , Lon Chaney [Jr.] .

C-87 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format

11:15 PM MASQUE OF THE RED DEATH, THE (1964)
  A sadistic nobleman isolates his court from a world stricken with the plague.

DirRoger Corman CastVincent Price , Hazel Court , Jane Asher .

C-89 mins, TV-14, CC, Letterbox Format

1:00 AM ABOMINABLE DR. PHIBES, THE (1971)
  A madman uses the plagues of ancient Egypt to avenge his wife’s death.

DirRobert Fuest CastVincent Price , Joseph Cotten , Virginia North .

C-95 mins, TV-14, CC, Letterbox Format

2:45 AM TWICE-TOLD TALES (1963)
  A poisonous young beauty, the secrets of eternal life and a haunted house chill this collection of Nathaniel Hawthorne stories.

DirSidney Salkow CastVincent Price , Sebastian Cabot , Mari Blanchard .

C-120 mins, TV-14, CC, Letterbox Format

5:00 AM TOMB OF LIGEIA, THE (1964)
  A man’s obsession with his dead wife leads to trouble for his new bride.

DirRoger Corman CastVincent Price , Elizabeth Shepherd , John Westbrook .

C-82 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format

 

 

 

Today in Halloween: AMC has a little bit of Fear Fest left

amc fear fest

You know, I’m a big fan of today’s AMC. What’s not to like? “The Walking Dead,” “Mad Men,” “Breaking Bad.”

But this time of year I miss the old AMC, the all-movie network that couldn’t really compete with Turner Classic Movies … except for the last couple of weeks of October, when AMC programmed virtually non-stop horror movies.

From the old Universal Monsters classics to Hammer horrors, AMC made me want to sit in front of my TV 24-7.

Well, a lot of the classics have fled elsewhere – I’m guessing TCM – and there’s a preponderance of “Friday the 13th” and “Halloween” movies during the final two weeks of October on AMC now.

But that’s okay. Cause you can never see John Carpenter’s classic “Halloween” too many times. And none of us have seen the offbeat “Halloween 3” often enough.

And yes, I’ll stop and check out a “Friday the 13th” movie, if only long enough to determine if it’s the one with Kevin Bacon.

There are a few schedules online for AMC’s lineup this year. True, too many of the timeslots are filled with inferior stuff.

But beginning with a “Walking Dead” marathon over the weekend leading up to the new season premiere at 9 p.m Sunday and great movies like “Slither” on tap, AMC will still give us some Fear Fest this year.

Today in Halloween: Michael Myers in the shadows

halloween street scene

As Count Floyd would say, “Oooo, that’s scary.”

There’s something about a lone figure in the distance, in the darkness, that prompts chills.

That’s never been more true than when Michael Myers is lurking in “Halloween.”

I’m of the opinion that John Carpenter’s 1978 classic horror film “Halloween” is one of the best fright flicks ever.

A big part of that was Carpenter’s “less is more” approach to showing Michael Myers. The killer was forever slowly fading into sight from a dark doorway or standing motionless across a street or down a sidewalk or in a backyard.

Or, even worse … approaching slowly from that distance.

Goosebumps.