MILL CREEK SCI-FI CLASSICS: Destroy All Planets (1969)

American International Television renamed nearly all of the Gamera movies for television. This is really Gamera vs. Viras.

This time, Gamera is defending our planet from aliens. He starts off by destroying one of their ships, but not before an entire planet declares that he is their enemy.

The aliens come back to Earth and learn Gamera’s one weakness: he loves children. They kidnap some kids and force him to do their bidding, but before long, he’s broken loose and is battling all of the aliens at once, who have combined their form into the menace known as Viras.

Daiei was in financial trouble, so this movie suffers from a smaller budget than previous films. But this is where the idea of Gamera protecting kids from aliens and monsters began. Yet it’s also the first of the series to use flashbacks from past films to pad the running time. This will get much, much worse as Gamera would battle on.

There was also an agreement with AIP that an American kid had to be in the movie. They couldn’t find any kids that could speak Japanese, so the studio cast Carl Craig, whose father was an army soldier stationed in Japan, despite Carl having no acting experience.

Don’t have the box set? YOu can watch this on Tubi or download it on the Internet Archive.

MILL CREEK SCI-FI CLASSICS: Crash of the Moons (1954)

Hollingsworth Morse went from the casting department at Paramount Pictures to serving under director George Stevens in the U.S. Army Signal Corps. He saw plenty of Europe and helped capture footage of the Battle of Normandy and other significant events of World War II. When he came back to the U.S., he directed plenty of TV, starting with Sky King and ending with The Fall Guy. Along the way, he also made fifty episodes of The Lone Ranger, seventeen of The Dukes of Hazzard, forty six of McHale’s Navy, seventeen of H. R. Pufnstuf and the movie, the “Mystery Island” parts of Skatebirds and Daughters of Satan.

Unlike so many shows of early television, Rocky Jones, Space Ranger was filmed instead of being aired live. That’s why the series has survived and could be edited into movies such as Beyond the Moon, Duel in Space, Forbidden Moon, Gypsy Moon, The Magnetic Moon, Manhunt in Space, Menace from Outer Space, Renegade Satellite and Robot of Regalio.

This is the last time that Rocky (Richard Crane) would be up against his enemy Queen Cleolanta (Patsy Parsons). She stands in the path of him evacuating the planet of Ophecius before a moon destroys everything. She even tries to stay before her assistant makes her leave. Then, she watches as her home is destroyed before apologizing to Rocky and his crew, which includes Venna Ray (Sally Mansfield), Winky (Scotty Beckett), Prof. Newton (Maurice Cass), Bobby (Robert Lyden) and their leader Secretary Drake (Charles Meredith).

After this chapter ended, Cass died of a heart attack and Professor Newton was replaced by Professor Mayberry (Reginald Sheffield). Winky was also changed, as Beckett was arrested after a gunfight with the police and Juliandra, Suzerain of Herculon (Ann Robinson) was picked as the new villainess for the last set of stories.

Don’t have the box set? You can watch this on YouTube.

MILL CREEK SCI-FI CLASSICS: Cosmos: War of the Planets (1977)

For an entire article on the space films of Alfonso Brescia, visit this link.

Space is all about computers, at least in Italy in 1977. It’s also very close to when Star Wars was a big deal, so if there could be some cheaply made versions of an already big movie, Italy knew how to do exactly that.

A spaceship’s computer — The Wiz — seemingly saves everyone on-board from a space storm as they are only seeing refractions of the past. Meanwhile, Captain Mike Hamilton (John Richardson, Black Sunday) is being dealt with for slapping around an officer. He’s given the penalty of flying his ship — the MK-31 — to repair a satellite. When he gets there, he sees that they have no idea how to properly fix things and have moved past human sex and now lie on beds and watch light shows instead of messily putting the banana in the ham salad.

He investigates an unstable planet where two flying saucers — disintegrators — are protecting it from being explored. Narrowly avoiding a crash, Hamilton lands on the desert planet and learns that everyone is under the command of a computer. Only one of the people on this sphere survive, coming on board the M-31 while the computer possesses one of the crew who goes on a killing spree. The alien stops them at the cost of his own life and as everyone celebrates, only our hero realizes that the alien machine has now taken over The Wiz.

The cast includes Yanti Somer as Meela. She’s in all of Brescia’s space movies — Star OdysseyWar of the Robots, Battle of the Stars and this movie — as well as Man of the East. There’s also Katia Christine (Spirits of the Dead) as Greta, Maliso Longo (who was also in all of the space movies made by the director) as Halla, Massimo Bonetti as Vassilov, Giuseppe Fortis as Marseille and Italian western actor Vassili Karis as Peter Segura.

Director Alfonso Brescia has all sorts of movies on his list of films, including Naked Girl Killed in the Park, the wonderful Iron Warrior and the demented The Beast In Space. He wrote the story with Aldo Crudo (who made two possession movies in a row, Return of the Exorcist and Beyond the Door) and Maxim Lo Jacano.

In no way is this Star Wars. It’s closer to Planet of the Vampires with a little 2001. That said, I kind of adore it for being that.

Don’t have the box set? You can watch this on Tubi.

VISUAL VENGEANCE BLU RAY RELEASE: Vampires and Other Stereotypes (1994)

Kevin J. Lindenmuth is still making movies as recently as 2015 with The Life of Death. Yet he started his career here, directing and writing a movie that seems to come fully aware and alive from a world already built. It begins with Ivan (Bill White) being told by a woman that he’s about to meet the woman of his dreams.

Ivan, along with his partner Harry (Ed Hubbard), are Demon Immigration Officers that keep the humans safe from the constant threat of demons. They stop a cult from their blood ritual that will open the gates to the other side, only for party people Linda (Anna Dipace), Jennifer (Suzanne Scott), Kirsten (Wendy Bednarz) and Kirsten’s boyfriend Eric (Mick McCleery) to show up and one of them to accidentally bleed and bring all heck to our mudball.

Kristen also might be that dream girl.

This is the kind of movie that seems like it’s going to be one genre film and then successfully flips the script on you at every turn. There’s an astounding scene with a wall full of heads that verbally accost our heroes. And this somehow brings together a demonic story with hardboiled detectives and Men In Black on a budget where none of this should work and it all does.

Like everything Visual Vengeance does, this movie is PACKED with extras. There’s a new director-supervised SD master from 1-inch tape, three commentary tracks (director Kevin Lindenmuth; actor Mick McCleery and Lindenmuth; Tony Strauss of Weng’s Chop Magazine), interviews with Lindenmuth, Laura McLauchlin, Mick McCleery, Suzanne Turner, Sally Narkis, Ralis Kahn, Scott Sliger, Sung Pak and Joe Mauceri, as well as behind the scenes images, Lindenmuth’s early Super 8 films, a trailer, liner notes by Tony Strauss of Weng’s Chop Magazine, a poster and a sticker set.

The art on everything Virtual Vengeance does is incredible. This has a new cover by Stemo, the original release cover and the slipcover has artwork by The Dude Designs.

These are movies released and put together by people that truly love these kind of movies. The Strauss commentary is great and backed up by his essay in the liner notes. He effortlessly moves through how this got made, Lindenmuth having a childhood love of horror encouraged by a grandmother who loved slasher movies and how he worked to constantly keep viewers guessing despite working a demanding editing job while making this.

This is beyond recommended.

ARROW BLU RAY RELEASE: The Desperate Hours (1955)

Directed by William Wyler and written by Joseph Hayes and Jay Dratler, it was based on Hayes’ novel and stage play. That play had Paul Newman in the lead, but Humphrey Bogart was a much bigger star for the movie.

The story is based on the Hill family of Whitemarsh Township, Pennsylvania. On September 11 and 12, 1952,. they were held hostage for 19 hours. Hayes’ storyline was invented and didn’t take everything from the Hill family’s experience. However, Life magazine published an article that had the actors from the play — Newman, Karl Malden and Nancy Coleman — in the actual Hill home. The family sued Time, Inc. over this as they had been trying to stay out of the public eye. They also believed that the article falsely described the actual events while claiming it represented the truth. Mr. Hill told the press that his family had been treated well during the crime while the article said that the family was assaulted. They were rewarded with compensatory damages.

Glenn Griffin (Bogart), his younger sibling Hal (Dewey Martin) and Sam Kobish (Robert Middleton) have broken out of jail and are on the run. They hide out at the home of the Hilliard family, which is Daniel (Frederic March), Ellie (Martha Scott), Cindy (Mary Murphy) and Ralphy (Richard Eyer). Plus, you get Arthur Kennedy as a deputy sheriff who has to figure this all out.

They create a terror-filled situation not just for the family but for the entire neighborhood, killing a garbageman (Walter Baldwin) and Glenn decimating the suburban dream. The exterior of the house is the same from Leave It to Beaver and here’s Bogart, in his last role as a bad guy — he said, “I’m too old to play gangsters.” — and his next-to-last movie making life horrifying for everyone around him.

Glenn and Daniel have the same problems as fathers — well, older brother and father — and yet they come from different worlds. The idea of a home invasion movie remains frightening even today. Imagine how it felt in the post-war 1950s.

 

Arrow’s blu ray release of Desperate Hours has a brand new restoration by Arrow Films from a 6K scan of the original VistaVision negative. It features extras like a new audio commentary by film historian Daniel Kremer, several appreciations of the film, a new audio interview with Catherine Wyler, daughter of director William Wyler, a reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Jennifer Dionisio, an illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by Philip Kemp and Neil Sinyard and even a lobby card gallery.

You can get this from MVD.

VCI BLU RAY RELEASE: The Gamblers (1970)

Based on the Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s novel The Gambler, this is a movie of gambling, confidence men, dirty tricks, twists and so many turns.

Director Ron Winston mostly worked in TV, directing episodes of Branded, Hawaii Five-O and McMillan & Wife. There’s a fun cast, including Richard Ng as martial artist Koboyashi, Don Gordon as the protagonist Rooney and Suzy Kendall as the love interest Candace. Oh yeah and Stuart Margolin from The Rockford Files.

It nearly feels like a TV movie and that’s not a bad thing. It also feels vaguely Italian — Massimo Serato from Autopsy and Faith Domergue from Perversion Story are in it — but it’s an American/Yugoslavian production.

I mean, you can do worse than watch a movie with Suzy Kendall in it.

The VCI blu ray of this movie has  audio commentary by writer/podcaster Rob Kelly. You can get it from MVD.

Spagvemberfest 2023 and Arrow Video Savage Guns box set: El Puro (1969)

El Puro (Robert Woods, Massacre ManiaLucifera Demon Lover) was once a dangerous and much feared gunfighter. But today, well, he’s a drunk lying low in a nothing town, concerned that a killer trying to make his name by shooting him is behind every corner. He’s treated as a whipping boy by every man in the bar and only Rosie (Rosalba Neri!) — who knew his legend — treats him kindly. She’s been saving money so they can get away from all this.

Or they would, if it wasn’t for Gipsy (Marc Fiorini) and his gang, who are riding into town to collect the ten grand on El Puro’s bounty while also killing grandfathers and assaulting young women. Just as certain that El Puro will find redemption is the fact that Rosie won’t survive. That said, her death is beyond upsetting and sure, one hates when its only the death of a woman that galvanizes a man to action, but trust me, you’ll want him to get revenge.

Also known as The Reward’s Yours… The Man’s Mine10,000 Dollars for a Gunslinger and El Puro Sits, Waits and Shoots, this movie was directed by Edoardo Mulargia, who made the giallo Tropic of Cancer and Don’t Wait, Django…Shoot! He also directed two of the movies — Hotel Paradise and Escape from Hell — that were remixed for the Linda Blair movie Savage Island. He wrote the script for this movie along with Ignacio F. Iquino, Fabrizio Gianni (second unit director on The Good, The Bad and The Ugly) and Fabio Piccioni (the writer of Murder Syndrome and the director of The Erotic Adventures of Robinson Crusoe).  

Arrow Video’s Savage Guns box set has high definition 2K restorations of all four films from the original 35mm camera negatives, with El Puro newly restored by Arrow Films. Plus, you get brand new introductions to each film by journalist and critic Fabio Melelli, an illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the films by author and critic Howard Hughes, a fold-out double-sided poster featuring newly commissioned artwork by Gilles Vranckx and limited edition packaging with reversible sleeves featuring original artwork and a slipcover featuring newly commissioned artwork by Gilles Vranckx.

El Puro has two versions of the film: the 98-minute cut, presented in Italian and English, and the longer, 108-minute version, presented in both Italian and a newly created hybrid English/Italian mix. There’s also new commentary by Troy Howarth and Nathaniel Thompson, an interview with Robert Woods and a new appreciation of the soundtrack and its composer Alessandro Alessandroni by musician and disc collector Lovely Jon.

You can get this set from MVD.

MILL CREEK SCI-FI CLASSICS: Colossus and the Amazon Queen (1960)

Vittorio Sala made the Eurospy film Spy in Your Eye as well as Beach Casanova,  Bang You’re Dead and Diamonds Are a Man’s Best Friend. He made this along with the traditional large army of writers, which included Ennio De Concini, Fulvio Fo, Augusto Frassinetti, Giorgio Mordini, Vittorio Nino Novarese and an actual Oscar winner in Ennio de Concini, who won the “Best Original Screenplay” for Divorce Italian Style.

Rod Taylor is Pirro, who has been captured by a tribe of Amazon women along with Glauco (Ed Fury) who is the Colossus of the title. Yes, the hero of The Time Machine in a peplum.

The Amazons are played by Dorian Gray, Gianna Maria Canale, Giorgia Moll and Daniela Rocca. Taylor claims to have rewritten the script and compared this being rereleased on home video to someone founding out he was in porn.

Don’t have the box set? You can download this movie from the Internet Archive.

UNEARTHED FILMS BLU RAY: August Underground’s Mordum (2003)

The sequel to August Underground, this shot on digital video — in Pittsburgh — movie is supposed to look like snuff and does a pretty good job of getting close, one assumes.

Peter Mountain (director and writer Fred Vogel) now has a girlfriend, Crusty (Cristie Whiles) who also has a relationship with her brother Maggot (Michael Todd Schneider).

After nearly attacking his girlfriend — she gets him off by self-mutilating herself instead — they got to a crackhouse and beat the owner with a hammer. This is followed by watching a drug abuser die, assaulting a kidnapped woman and cutting a man’s penis off. This is about ten minutes in, so you know, if you want to turn back now, this would be the time.

There’s also a scene where they caused a ruckus in the old Incredibly Strange Video in Dormont and I wish the whole movie was just an hour or so of Bruce walking the camera through the aisles and showing what movies he just got in versus watching people defile corpses and cut themselves, but I didn’t make this one, you know?

This film was also directed and written by Whiles, Jerami Cruise, Michael Todd Schneider and Killjoy, who is Killjoy DeSade from the bands Necrophagia, Viking Crown, Eibon, Wurdulak, Forlis, The Ravenous and Enoch.

Unearthed has given this movie a packed blu ray including commentary with Jerami Cruise and Ultra Violent Magazine‘s Art Ettinger plus a Toetag commentary; new interviews with Vogel, Cruise and Maggot; a Necrophagia music video; memories of Killyjoy; deleted and extended scenes; a photo gallery; trailer and even breakdowns of some of the most disgusting and terrifying scenes in this.

A warning: This movie isn’t for everyone. It wasn’t for me. I see no redeeming value in non-stop murder presented as near pornography with no conclusion other than the credits. Yet some people like extreme movies and to prove that they can make it through some repugnant material. Who am I to tell you what to watch? That said, the actual blu ray is so well made and Unearthed has gone all out on it. If you’re a fan, here it is.

You can get this from MVD.

MILL CREEK SCI-FI CLASSICS: Bride of the Gorilla (1951)

Edward G. Robinson Jr. was originally in this movie but was fired by the producers after his arrest for writing a bad check for $138 to the Laguna Beach Garage.

Director and writer Curt Siodmak had already written The ApeThe Wolf Man, Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man and I Walked With a Zombie before making this his first directed effort. He had ten days to make it.

Deep in the Latin American jungles — a bad place to be if you stay too long — plantation manager Barney Chavez (Raymond Burr) has murdered his boss and stolen away his wife Dina Van Gelder (Barbara Payton). Bad news for them: Al-Long (Gisela Werbisek), a witch, has seen the crime and cursed Chaves to transform every night into a gorilla. A cop by the name on Taro (Lon Chaney Jr.) puts the murder of the rich man and all the gorilla killings together. The natives believe Sukura, a demon, is the killer. And as for Dina, Barney seems way too into going out alone amongst the wildlife at night when he should be in bed with her. By the end, Lon Chaney shoots a weregorilla and Burr sees his own reflection before he dies, which feels like the reverse roles for what we should be watching.

Speaking of bad checks, Payton got arrested for that, plus had a reputation as a drinking party scene girl before she even started acting. Even after rehab, her parents would indulge in heavy drinking with her. Two years after this movie, Payton was paid $1,000 for her autobiography, I Am Not Ashamed. It had unflattering photographs of her and she discussed how she was homeless and had been beaten while a call girl. She’d die in 1967 at the age of 39 of heart and liver failure. Her parents died of alcoholism a few years later.

Woody Strode is in this as a cop. He’d have an affair with Payton, which would have caused a big uproar in 1951.

Don’t have the box set? You can watch this on Tubi.