CHILLER THEATER MONTH: She Devil (1957)

EDITOR’S NOTE: She Devil was on Chiller Theater on Sunday, March 22, 1964 at 11:10 p.m., Sunday, August 30, 1964 at 11:10 p.m., Saturday, February 3, 1973 at 1:00 a.m., Saturday, March 9, 1974 at 1:00 a.m., Saturday, January 11, 1975 at 1:00 a.m., Saturday, March 13, 1976 at 1:00 a.m. and Saturday, March 28, 1978 at 11:30 p.m.

Based on the short story “The Adaptive Ultimate” by Stanley G. Weinbaum, She Devil played double features with Kronos.

Dr. Dan Scott (Jack Kelly) has created a serum that goes into the pineal gland — the part of the body that changes people for science fiction movies — and creates a way for the body to fight off any illness and injury. It’s worked in animals of all shapes and sizes, so Dr. Scott wants to give it to a human, something his mentor Dr. Richard Bach (Albert Dekker) keeps warning him about.

Kyla Zeelas (Mari Blanchard) is dying of tuberculosis when she’s given the unproven formula and before you know it, she’s beating up men, stealing dresses and changing her hair to blonde just by thinking about it. Scott is, by now, in love with her, even when she tries to sleep with a man named Barton Kendall (John Archer) at a party and then kills his wife Evelyn (Fay Baker). The doctors even try to drug her in her sleep to fix that pesky gland and she ends up running away.

After she marries Kendall, she starts to abuse him, even forcing him to shoot her. As he watches, she heals and he still tries to take her to the hospital, where she wrecks their car and kills him. When the doctors catch up to her, they finally gas her and do the surgery against her will, which seems like something that in 2024 could happen again. Kyra goes back to her old self, dying of a disease, but hey, maybe Scott has a chance with her now.

This movie was directed by Kurt Neumann (Rocketship X-MThe Fly), who wrote it with Carroll Young, It looks better than it should, as it was shot by Karl Struss and steals a car crash from Preminger’s Angel Face.

Gorgeous demon! They created an inhuman being who destroyed everything she touched! The woman they couldn’t kill! Man, what a tagline.

You can watch this on YouTube.

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: Ghost Diver (1957)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Ghost Diver was on Chiller Theater on Saturday, January 12, 1964 at 11:10 p.m.

A diver by the name or Rico finds an ancient idol and soon loses it and his life to Manco (Nico Minardos), who sells it to TV hose Richard Bristol (James Craig). Soon, Bristol, his son Robin (Lowell Brown) and secretary Anne (Audrey Totter) have come to where the idol was found, looking for temple ruins with the dead diver’s daughter Pelu (Pira Louis, a Syrian swimming champion).

They have the idea that if they return the idol, it will point them to more treasure. They’re right, even if Manco keeps trying to kill them over and over again. Luckily, these white invaders outsmart everyone and Robin even ends up taking Pelu back to America.

This was directed and written by Richard Einfeld and Merrill G. White, who also produced it. I love that Chiller Theater sometimes showed movies like this before starting to show only horror.

You can watch this on YouTube.

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: Friday the 13th (1980)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Friday the 13th was on Chiller Theater on Saturday, November 6, 1982 at 1:00 a.m.

After the success of John Carpenter’s Halloween, every studio wanted a piece of the horror pie, which to this point had been exploitation fodder. Paramount Pictures was first. Sure, critics salvaged the film, but after $40 million in profit, no one really cared.

Produced and directed by Sean S. Cunningham (Last House on the Left), this movie was envisioned as a roller coaster ride. The script came from Victor Miller, a soap opera scribe. And spoilers — but this movie doesn’t even really have Jason in it!

The movie starts in the summer of 1958 at Camp Crystal Lake, where two counselors sneak off and have sex before being killed. This sets up one of the many rules of slasher films: never fuck in the woods.

The camp closes for 21 years, but on Friday, June 13, 1979, that’s all about to change. That said, no one in the town wants it to happen. When Annie Phillips arrives in town, everyone treats her strangely or acts like Crazy Ralph (Walt Gorney, who shows up in the next film and was the narrator for Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood). She lasts for about five minutes, as she gets killed after her third hitchhike of the day. I’d say this is more of a warning against hitching in the late 1970s than I would serial killers in the woods.

The other counselors — Jack (Kevin Bacon!), Ned, Bill (Harry Crosby III, son of Bing), Marcie, Alice and Brenda (Laurie Bartram, The House of Seven Corpses) — and owner Steve Christy all show up to get the camp ready. This is where you’ll notice just how different fashion is. Becca and I have seen this live several times in a theater now and everyone laughs as soon as Steve shows up in his short shorts and bandana.

Ned is killed pretty quickly, then Jack is killed with an arrow and Marcie takes an axe to the face. Brenda is murdered as she responds to the voice of a child. Steve gets killed on the way to camp. Before you know it, Alice and Bill are the only ones left, but Bill lasts pretty much seconds. Then we have another future slasher trope: every body is discovered, hung like trophies.

Now, we have our Final Girl: Alice, who ends up meeting Mrs. Vorhees, who tells the tale of how her son Jason drowned and the horrible counselors who allowed it to happen. Much like the giallo/pre-slasher film Torso, the movie now focuses on the battle between Alice and the real killer. Alice ends up beheading her and sleeping in a canoe. As the police arrive, she has a dream that Jason rises from the water to kill her. This scene wasn’t in the script, but special effects king Tom Savini thought a Carrie-like ending would be more powerful.

Another way that the film pays sort of homage to Italian filmmaking is in the snake scene. It was another Savini idea after an experience he had in his own cabin during filming. The snake in the scene? Totally real, including its on-screen death — someone alert Bruno Mattei!

Some trivia: the film was shot just outside Lou Reed’s farm. The rock star performed for the cast and even hung out with them! Sweet Jason?

To me, the film works because of how great Betsy Palmer is as Jason’s mom. It’s a fine film, but nowhere near the excesses that the series would grow into. This was also the start of critics really hating on slasher films. Gene Siskel was so upset about Betsy Palmer being in the film that he published her address in his column and encouraged people to write her and protest. Of course, he published the wrong address.

I HOPE YOU SUFFER OCTOBER FILM CHALLENGE: The Amityville Playhouse (2015)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The I Hope You Suffer podcast said that “Since everybody is doing these movie challenges now, we made the only one worth doing.” Bring the pain.

Look, if you can’t have a house in Amityville, have a theater. And if you can’t shoot in Amityville, shoot your movie in Canada and the UK. After evil monkeys, lamps, lumber and furniture, what else can become part of the dark side and get possessed, you know?

Spencer Banks, who plays Reverend Simon Randall, played a character named Simon Randall on the British 1970 children’s series Timeslip. His co-star on that show, Cheryl Burfield, is his wife in this movie and Lesley Scoble, who plays Karen, was Alpha 17 on that very same programme. Yes, I did spell it the British way.

Following the death of her parents, Fawn Harriman inherits a theatre in Amityville. She takes three victims — I mean friends — to spend the weekend there to check the place out. A homeless girl shows up, as does one of her high school teachers, who wants to warn her of the evil inside the playhouse. You know, every playhouse I’ve ever been in has been said to be haunted.

Director John R. Walker will show up in the upcoming Amityville: Evil Never Dies, which is pretty meta. Even more meta, he’ll be playing the Peter Sommers character he’s also played in GhoulMeathook Massacre 4 and another movie he’s directed that has a great title, Ouijageist.

This isn’t the worst Amityville movie I’ve seen. It’s pretty competently made, which is a major step above and beyond a lot of these films. I don’t know if that’s a good review or I have desert island syndrome, where everything looks better than some of these movies.

2024 Scarecrow Psychotronic Challenge Day 14: Blood Quantum (2019)

14. HALLOWED GROUND: Made by an indigenous filmmaker or has featured indigenous cast members.

Blood quantum is the measurement of the amount of “Indian blood” that people have and is used to determine Native American status and tribal citizenship. It’s calculated by dividing the combined degree of “Indian blood” of an individual’s parents in half.  This law was created by federal and state governments to establish legally defined racial groups with many Native nations still using blood quantum as a requirement for citizenship.

Director and writer Jeff Barnaby was a member of the Canadian Mi’kmaq tribe and was married to Navajo filmmaker Sarah Del Seronde. Sadly, he died three years after making this movie, succumbing to cancer.

Gisigu (Stonehorse Lone Goeman, a member of the Tonawanda Band of Seneca), a fisherman, knows things are wrong when fish he has caught refuses to die. He calls lawman Traylor (Michael Greyeyes, a member of the Muskeg Lake Cree Nation), who has just visited his ex-wife Joss (Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers, a member of the both the Blood Reserve and Sampi tribe of Norway), having to put her dog to sleep and learn that their son Joseph (Forrest Goodluck, citizen of the Three Affiliated Tribes) and his half-brother Lysol (Kiowa Gordon, a Hualapai tribe member) have been arrested for vandalism.

In jail, Joseph has been bitten by a white man, so he is taken to the hospital where his pregnant girlfriend Charlie (Olivia Scriven) comes to get him. That night, Taylor is attacked by a white woman and the hospital turns into a nightmare.

Six months later, the world knows all about Zeds, which is what they call zombies. Unlike the last several hundred years, indigenous people have the high ground, as they are immune to the virus. The Red Crow Reservation remains cut off and only accessible to those with a blood quantum that says that they are natives.

Even then, man’s inhumanity to man is not confined to other races. Lysol has his penis bit off by a zombie girl named Lilith (Natalie Liconti) — how did that get in there — and starts killing all of the undead, who soon overrun the reservation and kill almost everyone. The rest of the movie is about how the survivors either survive or don’t, but wow, Bumper (Brandon Oakes, a member of the Akwesasne Mohawk Nation) is somehow able to kill thousands of the walking dead with samurai sword.

Lysol should be the hero of his people, but his actions doom all of them. That said, it’s as if the world is righting itself, giving the land back to those who deserve it. Barnaby didn’t want to make a zombie movie for awhile, but then got the idea: “What if the Indians had been immune to smallpox?”

UNSUNG HORRORS HORROR GIVES BACK 2024: Night of Fear (1973)

Each October, the Unsung Horrors podcast does a month of themed movies. This year they will once again be setting up a fundraiser to benefit Best Friends, which is working to save the lives of cats and dogs all across America, giving pets second chances and happy homes.

Today’s theme: Australia

Terry Bourke made both this and Inn of the Damned for the Fright TV show, but there’s no way either could air on TV. He would go on to make Lady Stay Dead.

A girl (Briony Behets) riding a horse stops to take a break. A man (Norman Yemm) unties her steed and it runs away. As she chases after it, he attacks her and locks her in his home as the credits play, giving a brief fast forward of the evil to come.

Another woman (Carla Hoogeveen) finds herself going off the road and trapped in a dead end. The man returns and smashes her windshield with a shovel and chases her, finally forcing her into his home where he appears nude with a bloody skull over his cock. He then pulls a lever and a rain of rats covers her, an act which excites him to the point that he gets off watching her die.

And that’s it! An hour of a chase and a horrifying ending with no punishment for the man. This feels like the Sawyer clan but was made a few years before Tobe Hooper’s film was shot nearly a world away.

No dialogue, no names and a movie that almost didn’t make it into theaters because of censors. This is how Australian exploitation got its start.

You can watch this on Tubi.

I HOPE YOU SUFFER OCTOBER FILM CHALLENGE: Amityville Karen (2022)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The I Hope You Suffer podcast said that “Since everybody is doing these movie challenges now, we made the only one worth doing.” Bring the pain.

The true Amityville curse is that I must watch all of these films. Just look at this ever-expanding article and Letterboxd list.

Has everything been done in the world of 112 Ocean Avenue?

Director Shawn C. Phillips and writer Julie Anne Prescott say no and also want to speak to your manager.

Just look at this line: “Every neighborhood has a Karen and Amityville is no exception.”

Karen (Lauren Francesca) is so cold and mean to people that she insults them in her sleep. Her latest target is a local winery (run by James Duval!). After getting service that isn’t to her liking, she takes a bottle of wine. A bottle of cursed wine. I mean, this is Amityville after all.

That said, this movie may not need to be an hour and forty-five minutes. It could get tighter, but that said, it does have a death by corkscrew, which is always something that I enjoy in a film.

Somehow, the movie slides into an underground occult circle within the town — it’s Amityville, come on, be open — as well as female demons which means that yes, this movie may not have foreign investors demanding nudity but it has nudity all the same.

This is Phillips’ first solo film and he was wise to get Francesca as his lead. She’s really great in the role and is understated when you expect this to be out of control the whole time. The film nearly gets her to be a sympathetic figure if she wasn’t abusing everyone around her nearly all the time.

If you watch a lot of direct to streaming and disk horror, you’ll recognize a lot of the cast, including Jennifer Nangle, Caleb Thomas, Ashleeann Cittell, Derek K. Long, Marc Pearce, Mike Ferguson and Dawna Lee Heising.

I think what this movie needs are some fun taglines for the poster, however. So I will attempt to write a few in the hopes that they get used for the sequel:

For God’s sake, she wants to speak to your manager.

She’s so haunted that it’s unacceptable.

Do not lose her business.

All lives no longer matter.

Bleached. Bobbed. Possessed.

She demands death. And an apology.

I wait to see where Amityville movies go from here and raise you Amityvid-19Make Amityville Great Again and Critical Amityville Theory.

You can watch this on Tubi.

TUBI ORIGINAL: Famously Haunted: Hollywood (2024)

Look, this movie references The Entity so if that’s all it did, I would have liked it.

Go figure, Hollywood is haunted. Well, you know how many lives were ruined there, so you can only imagine that there has to be some paranormal activity or at least crazy people willing to tell you that there is.

There are no bigger BS artists than paranormal investigators, much less ones that show up for a Tubi Original. Can you believe the girl who got a sore throat from walking around Sharon Tate’s murder house? How about the house where they filmed American Horror Story that probably wasn’t haunted until they did the show there? And hey, the Comedy Store used to be a mob hangout called Ciro’s so there have to be ghosts there and here’s a podcast clip to prove it!

Even the Hollywood sign is haunted by Peg Entwistle, an actress who jumped off the sign. You can smell her perfume and hear her screams. And you may have been wondering, will we get to the Cecil Hotel? Of course we will. Will we talk about Lisa Lamb in the elevator and dying in the water tank and hotel guests drinking her body for weeks? We must.

This is filled with stock footage and I love it for that.

Also: A girl takes her doll Lola to a haunting.

There are professional paranormal investigators in this that say things like dark energy and heavy feeling and temperature drop. How do they get hired? How much do they make? These are the questions I want answered.

You can watch this on Tubi.

Drugs as Weapons Against Us: The CIA War on Musicians and Activists (2018) / CIA Drugs R Us! A Drugs as Weapons… Sequel (2024)

These movies are based on the book Drugs as Weapons Against Us: The CIA’s Murderous Targeting of SDS, Panthers, Hendrix, Lennon, Cobain, Tupac, and Other Activists by John L. Potash. Within the pages of that tome, you’ll learn how a group of opium-trafficking families came to form an American oligarchy and eventually achieved global dominance.

Sure, they may have helped fund the Nazi regime and then saved thousands of the Third Reich during Operation Paperclip to start the CIA and push LSD through MK-Ultra, but in the midst of their war on drugs which was funding by drugs, they got into targeting the left leaning groups that sought to usurp their power.

And then, they went after rock ‘n roll.

Drugs as Weapons Against Us: The CIA War on Musicians and Activists (2018): After going after so many of the younger politically radicalized types that made up organizations like the Black Panthers, the ruling class — according to this film, directed and written by Potash — went after the artists who inspired them.

How did LSD get into the public consciousness? Did MK-Ultra agents party at acid tests? Why did George Harrison and John Lennon’s dentist dose them? Why would the FBI give the Rolling Stones drugs and then turn around and bust them? Who killed Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin? Did this strange method of connecting with the youth culture also claim the lives of Tupac and Kurt Cobain?

As we hear from narrator Douglas Barron, the film contends that everyone from Yoko Ono and Timothy Leary to Ken Kesey and Courtney Love were government agents used to hook stars on different drugs and then kill them when they tried to get clean.

It all seems a little too simple, but this documentary reminds me of the times when conspiracy theories were ramshackle narratives that collapsed when you pricked the balloon of them too much. Sure, we’d love to believe that John Lennon wasn’t an egomaniac drug abuser and wife beater. We hope that Tupac is still alive. Maybe through conspiracy, we are able to get back to the parasocial relationships that we have with rock stars.

Or maybe not.

This also willy nilly rips off so many web sites, Nick Broomfield’s documentaries, Benjamin Statler’s Soaked In Bleach, YouTube videos and anything it can get its hands on to build its narrative which skips around so much and frankly skips so many things that you wonder if this is also a compromised conspiracy. Or, you know, if you’re like me, deny everything until finally you can’t deny the idea of reality itself.

I kind of do love the idea that the government created Courtney Love to be a James Shelby Downard-style wires out the butt honey pot exotic dancing in Japan before she could legally drive and getting Cobain hooked on heroin so that his stomach would stop hurting which is the exact opposite of how heroin usually treats its addicts before he heals his stomach and she pays El Duce to shoot him.

You can watch this on Tubi.

CIA Drugs R Us! A Drugs as Weapons… Sequel (2024): Listed as a “comic sequel” to the first movie, this covers much of the same ground with more focus on Lennon, Cobain and Tupac, as well as how MK-Ultra was connected with the Manson Family (never mentions that sex films including Sharon Tate and the Hollywood elites), the government infiltrating the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and finally, gloms on to The Keepers by exploring the Maryland’s Catholic Church sex abuse scandal and how it may be connected to MK-Ultra.

This has the same YouTube of the 2000s quality along with music by a band called ElectroCult Circus which I figure has director and writer Potash as a member. That may also because none of the many bands in this would be OK with their music being taken for it. Then again, there’s a Chris Rock joke taken directly from one of his specials.

This also goes deep into Amanda Claire Marian Charteris, Countess of Wemyss and March, who founded the Foundation to Further Consciousness (now the Beckley Foundation). This group uses psychoactive drugs to treat depression, anxiety, and addiction while enhancing well-being and creativity. She also trepanned herself in 1970 with a dental drill. That means she drilled directly into her brain to expand her consciousness. In the world of this film, this woman is behind so many things and that LSD can have no positive benefits no matter what because it was used by Nazis to kill your favorite rock star.

I’m paraphrasing.

Despite having a three-hour length, I watched and enjoyed all of it. Your mileage — like that of my wife — may vary, as she said that she felt that this lasted for a week and only cared when The Keepers was mentioned. The connection this movie makes, like all of the best conspiracy theories, is tenuous.

I yearn for the days when politics hadn’t yet invaded my safe space of fake moon landings and UPC codes being the Mark of the Beast. Yes, this is beyond left-leaning, but it made me wistful for Art Bell and wildcat lines.

You can watch this on Tubi or buy it from MVD.

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: The Last Woman On Earth (1960)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Last Woman On Earth was on Chiller Theater on Saturday, September 5, 1964 at 11:10 p.m. and Saturday, October 24, 1964 at 1:00 a.m.

Harold Gern (Antony Carbone) is a rich man constantly getting in trouble with the government. He’s in Puerto Rico with his new, younger and very attractive wife Evelyn (Betsy Jones-Moreland) and his lawyer Martin Joyce (Edward Wain), as they prep for his latest trial.

As the three go diving, they learn that everyone on the surface is dead and that they have to keep on oxygen tanks until they get into the jungle. Most of the animals are still alive and Harold takes control, as he thinks they are the only three left in the world.

You know what happens next, right? Evelyn and Martin have sex, her husband thinks that she had to have been raped and she tries to run away with the man who is her age. Then, spoiler warning, Harold beats Martin to death and asks for his wife’s hand. She takes it and man, did anyone learn anything in this? Everyone in this movie is a horrible person.

Directed by Roger Corman, this was written by Robert Towne, who was also Edward Wain. That shocked me. The reason he got the part was that the script wasn’t done, so Corman needed a writer and an actor, so he saved money by hiring just one person.

Shot at the same time as Creature from the Haunted Sea, this played double features with Little Shop of Horrors.

You can watch this on Tubi.