CHILLER THEATER MONTH: Voodoo Woman (1957)

Harry West (Norman Willis) finds gold in an idol worshipped by a tribe in Bantalay and hires treasure hunter Marilyn Blanchard (Marla English) to help get it out of the country. Instead, she murders him and gets Ted Bronson (Mike Connors) to help her get deeper into the jungle to recover the gold.

In that very place, Dr. Roland Gerard (Tom Conway) is trying to make a superbeing and using voodoo and science to keep the natives on his side, as well as his wife, Susan (Mary Ellen Kay), who wants to leave. As soon as the mad doctor meets Marilyn, he knows that he’s found the perfect woman to become his dream monster.

The original make-up for the Voodoo Woman was tossed at the last minute, so they just used the suit from The She-Creature. They got rid of the fins, claws and tail, then wrapped the costume up in a sarong, added a new skull mask and threw on a blonde wig.

Producer Alex Gordon attended the Burbank, California, premiere with his fiancée Ruth Gordon. She was so upset by this movie and how cheap it looked that she threw her ring at him. His brother explained to him the realities of working in Hollywood, and years later, she would write some of Gordon’s films like The Bounty KillerRequiem for a Gunfighter and The Underwater City.

Larry Buchanan remade this as an AIP made-for-television film, Curse of the Swamp Creature. This meant that when people said how bad this was, they would have something that many think is even worse. Not me. I love them both.

You can watch this on Tubi.

UNSUNG HORRORS HORROR GIVES BACK 2025: Tobe Hooper’s Night Terrors (1993)

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 works to save the lives of cats and dogs across America, giving pets second chances and providing them with happy homes.

Today’s theme: Tobe Hooper!

About the Author: Parker Simpson is a writer and podcaster focusing on cult films and their social impacts. They currently cohost Where Is My Mind, a podcast focusing on underappreciated films from a variety of genres and countries. They have also held panels, chartered local organizations, and written articles to their blog. When not writing or studying, they like to spend time with their pets and go outside. Check out the podcast Linktree and blog.

Being a fan of Freddy Krueger led me to this, and I was very intrigued seeing this in Tobe Hooper’s late output. Surely this will be a compelling feature.

Night Terrors is a direct to video effort that Tobe Hooper was asked to direct after Gerry O’Hara left the project. Featuring Robert Englund as the Marquis de Sade and a slew of actors familiar to the direct to video scene (including William Finley), it follows a young woman visiting her father in Egypt (it’s really in Israel) as she gets wrapped up in a cult run by de Sade’s descendant.

If you read that and thought “what the fuck?” to yourself, you’d be correct! How de Sade’s family ends up in Egypt is never explained, nor is the formation of his cult. The film reeks of unexplained bullshit thrown in just to happen. Naked dude on a horse? Painted snake lady? Exorcisms during an orgy featuring snakes? Cool, I guess. I’m ok with weirdness, but after a certain point it needs to make some sense.

Another choice is to intercut the modern day storyline with de Sade’s ramblings from his prison cell. I’m all for giving Robert Englund more screentime, and to his credit he is very fun to watch. But the back and forth makes no sense; it would work better as a straight period piece like it was originally intended.

Englund’s performance excluded, the acting from most of the cast is questionable at best. Zoe Trilling as Genie (a play on Eugenie, ha ha) overacts and screams a lot. I don’t like that her character is constantly a damsel in distress and is saved by forces outside her control, but she doesn’t make it any more watchable. Most everyone else phones it in. No one, not even Englund or Finley, truly attempts to elevate this nonsensical script; they all just play into its absurdity (intentionally or not). Combined with the silly premise, it’s really quite fun to watch.

The whole movie looks cheap. 90s DTV has a certain charm that I find irresistible, but even with the on location filming, the budget is painfully clear. The dungeon/basement settings are particularly hard to look at. A 4:3 ratio does nothing to help the film, and there is a distinct orange tinge over everything, likely indicative that this needs a restoration. 

I feel bad not liking this. Tobe Hooper, Robert Englund, and de Sade should have been a match made in heaven (or hell, depending on what you believe). Turns out none of them can help a lousy script. It’s not the worst thing I’ve ever seen, but watching this is akin to watching a car crash. At least it was fun.

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: The Monolith Monsters (1957)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Monolith Monsters was on Chiller Theater on Saturday, October 20, 1973 at 11:30 p.m.; Saturday, March 8, 1975 at 2:30 a.m.; Saturday, November 15, 1975 at 1:00 a.m. and Saturday, December 10, 1977 at 11:30 p.m.

A large meteorite crashes into the Southern California desert and explodes into hundreds of black fragments that, when exposed to water, end up growing. It also makes people petrified. What happens if you feed them after midnight?

Perhaps I’m not crazy. Both this movie and Gremlins were made at Universal and used the studio lot’s famed Courthouse Square as their on-screen town centers. They also feature William Schallert in an uncredited role.

Well, these black rocks are drawing silicon from everything, including a schoolgirl who took one on a field trip. You know what saves the day? Saline solution. You could defeat the monolith monsters and clean your contact lenses at the same time.

Playing on a double feature with Love Slaves of the Amazons, this is also the movie playing in the unhoused camp in They Live. Director John Sherwood also made The Creature Walks Among Us.

You can watch this on Tubi.

THE IMPORTANT CINEMA CLUB’S SUPER SCARY MOVIE CHALLENGE DAY 19: Haxan (1922)

19. A Horror Film That Takes Place on a Non-American Holiday

Director and writer Benjamin Christensen did a study of Malleus Maleficarum, a 15th-century German guide for inquisitors also known as Hammer of Witches. He believed that the burning of witches was more about mental health and mass hysteria than witchcraft. While initially this ran into censorship issues in the U.S. due to its torture, nudity and sex, it was re-released in 1968 as Witchcraft Through the Ages with a new English-language narration by William S. Burroughs.

By the end, we’ve seen Satan lure women away from their husbands’ beds, murdering women by choking them and attacking monks and a woman claiming to give birth to children fathered by Satan, then being smeared with witch ointment, desecrating a cross, having dinner with demons and kissing Satan’s buttocks.

Actress Maren Pedersen told the director, “The devil is real. I have seen him sitting by my bedside.” Yet there’s no square-up reel here. Instead, if anything, sexual repression is the cause of many of the possessed moments.

A contemporary review said that Haxan had a “…satanic, perverted cruelty that blazes out of it, the cruelty we all know has stalked the ages like an evil shaggy beast, the chimera of mankind. But when it is captured, let it be locked up in a cell, either in a prison or a madhouse. Do not let it be presented with music by Wagner or Chopin to young men and women, who have entered the enchanted world of a movie theatre.”

Haxan has been used to show demons or the supernatural in many movies since it was made and it’s still powerful a century later.

UNSUNG HORRORS HORROR GIVES BACK 2025: Night Angel (1990)

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 works to save the lives of cats and dogs across America, giving pets second chances and providing them with happy homes.

Today’s theme: KNB

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Adam Hursey is a pharmacist specializing in health informatics by day, but his true passion is cinema. His current favorite films are Back to the Future, Stop Making Sense, and In the Mood for Love. He has written articles for Film East and The Physical Media Advocate, primarily examining older films through the lens of contemporary perspectives. He is usually found on Letterboxd, where he mainly writes about horror and exploitation films. You can follow him on Letterboxd or Instagram at ashursey.

Screenwriter Joe Augustyn (Night of the Demons) uses the legendary character of Lilith for Night Angel, the story of a centuries old succubus who is planning on infiltrating the minds of men via the cover of a magazine (yes, we are back in the 1990s folks).

As the story goes (in the Talmud), Lilith was Adam’s first wife before the creation of Eve. She was banished from the Garden of Eden for not being subservient to Adam. This disobedience allegedly included refusing to lie in the missionary position. Depending on the source, once Lilith leaves the Garden, she gives birth to hundreds of demons, many of whom die daily. In retaliation, she kills the infants of the Jewish people.

In Night Angel, Lilith is a demon herself, a succubus posing as a high fashion model, hoping to bring death and destruction to anyone who comes across her. It appears that humanity’s only hope for Pearl is 227 (Helen Martin), a woman who lost the love of her life to Lilith years ago, and may be the only person who has a way to destroy her forever.

In one of their earliest efforts, the special effects team of KNB provides the effects for Lilith’s transformation into her true demonic form at the end of the film. As always, great work by them.

Personally, I’m always fascinated by the incorporation of Jewish folklore into horror movies. We just do not see it enough in my opinion, although the source material is ripe for exploration. I will have another film that bases its plot on an aspect of this folklore for my 1980s pick. Stay tuned.

UNSUNG HORRORS HORROR GIVES BACK 2025: Doppelganger (1993)

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 works to save the lives of cats and dogs across America, giving pets second chances and providing them with happy homes.

Today’s theme: KNB!

About the Author: Parker Simpson is a writer and podcaster focusing on cult films and their social impacts. They currently cohost Where Is My Mind, a podcast focusing on underappreciated films from a variety of genres and countries. They have also held panels, chartered local organizations, and written articles to their blog. When not writing or studying, they like to spend time with their pets and go outside. Check out the podcast Linktree and blog.

Dude, I don’t know how to begin this write up. This fucking movie is so bizarre I highly recommend you watch it before reading on. It’s on Prime and Tubi. Go in cold, like nature intended.

If you’re being insolent and reading on… alright then. Doppelganger centers on Holly Gooding, a woman who moves across the country after her implication in her mother’s murder. She moves in with Patrick, a struggling writer trying to break into Hollywood. They begin a strange relationship, but Holly’s sanity increasingly comes into question as “doppelganger” commits violent acts she’s accused of.

I know this thing covers a lot of ground. It’s very cliche and riffs on many sources, ranging from Truman Capote to Brian De Palma. It also combines multiple genres: comedy, neo-noir, romance, horror, erotic thriller, it’s all there. It’s paced in a way that you wouldn’t think would be able to fit in everything, but surprise! It works, and it’s for the best most of the time.

Like all good 90s horror movies, Doppelganger throws in a heavy dose of offbeat comedy that is either hilarious or beyond annoying. You have multiple side characters that are so damn entertaining, but pushed aside to focus on the leads (more on that later). Patrick’s writing assistant is close to insufferable, yet she has fantastic one-liners that attempt to snap him back into reality. In terms of plot twists and visuals, it wants to be a De Palma movie so badly, yet it cannot shake the trends of the time. This leaves me no other choice but to place it in a special category known as camp: a film that in spite of its silliness, is seemingly aware of what it’s doing and doesn’t mind winking back to the audience (a normally hated trait of mine).

The casting of Drew Barrymore is simultaneously genius yet a terrible mistake. Holly Gooding’s struggles with mental health (that feels too kind to put here) and rough relationship with her family closely resemble Barrymore’s; I wouldn’t be shocked if this role was written with her in mind, like how Marilyn Monroe was Truman Capote’s inspiration for Breakfast at Tiffany’s. The issues are 1. Barrymore is rather young to be playing the female lead in a film with several erotic moments (including a topless shower scene) and 2. She is a charisma vacuum. I couldn’t buy her as sultry, just a weird edgy girl who needed an apartment. Pairing her with George Newbern, a frequent Superman voice actor, threw me off. Newbern, bless his heart, also has no real magnetism and is playing a wannabe screenwriter. Director/writer Avi Nesher tried channeling his best Hepburn/Peppard pairing and ended up with a mentally ill girl and dollar store Quentin Tarantino. Which isn’t terribly far from the source material, but trying to put that in an erotic thriller/horror film just doesn’t work. That being said, the clusterfuck is very fun to watch.

Where the camp comes in is found in other choices. My god, this movie looks far better than I expected. There are times you can tell it’s a soundstage with walls; other times the locations are immersive. This whole thing looks like it had a much higher budget than it likely did, a common trait of 90s B-rate horror films. Then there’s the editing… Nesher knows his pacing is quick considering most of his content is pretty mundane. How to spice it up? Quick cuts from everyone and everything! I broke my neck watching. Also, the score is insane. Too much. Too dramatic. Too anxiety inducing for regular everyday things. And yet it works. This film has no right to position itself as such a moving piece and yet it assures the audience that it is. There’s a certain nerve to be found and it’s really quite entertaining to watch.

Up to this point the reason for the season, KNB EFX has yet to be mentioned, or even considered to why it should be put in relation to the film. Hello spoilers! Go watch the movie. Please, it’s worth your time.

For most of the film, it’s just a regular thriller with flashes of grotesqueness, ranging from bloody showers to distorted reflections to a couple of murders. It’s not enough to warrant Kurtzmann, Nicotero, and Berger’s involvement, but a gig is a gig. Then the finale happens, and a gooey transformation of a singular woman into two skinless ghouls (her dual personalities) ensues, killing her psychiatrist who has taken advantage of her before morphing back. It’s the last thing you would expect from a film like this (that’s becoming a running theme here, isn’t it?).

Even before the final twenty minutes, before realizing  it was a riff on Capote, before connecting Drew Barrymore’s childhood to it, I knew Doppelganger was deeply rooted in abuse, mental instability, and the loss of identity as it pertains to show business. Barrymore’s past closely mirroring the events of the film adds a subtle layer of meta, one welcome in a world pre-dating Scream’s takeover of the genre. Within that lies the dual personalities of Holly – one that acts on her violent impulses, and one that goes about her day, frightened of what the other will do next. Having developed due to her troubled childhood, she can’t form particularly healthy relationships, the most prominent being with Patrick (I believe the kids call this a situationship). The disturbing reveal that she has been taken advantage of by her psychiatrist also follows this trend. Paired with Patrick’s concurrent storyline of being a struggling writer in the entertainment industry, and a plot mixed with insecurity arises, not long before David Lynch tried his hand at similar themes. And just like my initial watches of Lost Highway and Mulholland Drive, I know I’ll need a few more tries to fully unpack… this.

This is definitely one of my favorite watches of the month so far. Thanks to Lance and Erica of Unsung Horrors for putting myself and many others onto this little movie last year! Glad I could finally watch it.

2025 Scarecrow Psychotronic Challenge Day 19: Cub (2014)

19. THE ABANDONED PLACE: This spooky classic trope that must inhabit tonight’s viewing.

Sam (Maurice Luijten) is abused by his fellow Cub Scouts, like pack leader Peter (Stef Aerts). This disruption causes the scouts to be lost in the mountains, just as two of the older scouts start telling ghost stories. One of them, about a werewolf child, leads to Sam running away, only to find a feral child  (Gill Eeckelaert), the son of a poacher (Jan Hammenecker). Together, they have filled the forest with traps.

The Scouts en Gidsen Vlaanderen, the Flemish Boy Scouts, condemned the “all ages” rating this film was awarded and asked parents not to allow their children to see it. They totally saw it. I mean, it’s a slasher. Kids are going to see it even more if you tell them no.

With a striking poster, I had wanted to see this for years. While the tone isn’t always consistent—it tries for humor at times, then shifts away from it, only to work back toward it and then launches harrowing moments and a surprising ending—it’s still different with death machines all over the woods.

The first film directed by Jonas Govaerts, it reflects his influences, particularly when a Scout leader’s ringtone is the Goblin theme from Suspiria.

UNSUNG HORRORS HORROR GIVES BACK 2025: Doppelganger (1993)

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 works to save the lives of cats and dogs across America, giving pets second chances and providing them with happy homes.

Today’s theme: KNB

Holly Gooding (Drew Barrymore) was suspected of murder in New York City, so she goes to Los Angeles. Could she have an evil twin doing these things? Patrick Highsmith (George Newbern) doesn’t care. Seriously, 1993 Drew Barrymore could stab someone in front of me and I’d defend her. Patrick is the same, even when his ex-girlfriend and writing partner, Elizabeth (Leslie Hope), tries to speak truth to him.

The end of this movie is the most magical bullshit ever. Dr. Heller (Dennis Christopher), Holly’s therapist, is the person behind all of this murder, er, and he shows off his extensive latex mask collection. Just before he kills Patrick, Holly splits into two people and kills him. Yes, we’ve been told there’s no way a doppleganger can be real and get evidence, then it happens before our eyes. You thought Malignant wasn’t basing its twist on direct-to-video 1990s horror?

The end almost leads us to feel like this was all an analogy. Who can say!

Drew got a role for her mother, Jaid, as her mom in this movie, a woman who tries to kill her for her trust fund and is then killed. I guess confession and wish fulfillment.

Plus, George Maharis, Sally Kellerman, Danny Trejo as a construction worker and Luane Anders from Reform School Girl (and many other movies, I know).

Director and writer Avi Nesher also made She, which is more than awesome. Oh! He also made Ritual, a Tales from the Crypt Presents movie. It wasn’t created as a series tie-in, but released on home video that way.

You can watch this on Tubi.

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: Samson In the Wax Museum (1963)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Samson In the Wax Museum was on Chiller Theater on Saturday, September 14, 1968 at 1:00 a.m. It’s Santo en el Museo de Cera

You have to hand it to the people who made Santo movies, this time Alfonso Corona Blake (who made Santo vs. Las Mujeres Vampiro) and Manuel San Fernando (who made three Santa Claus movies and the American version of Johnny Socko).

Santo is an obsession for me, as he perfectly finds himself in nearly every genre through his long career. He’s a detective. He fights monsters. He becomes a spy. He appears in a gothic horror occult exploitation film. He battles aliens. He goes to the Bermuda Triangle. And then he’s in a karate movie. Santo can be all of these things and so much more.

This time, I can only assume someone watched House of Wax and thought, “This movie would be better with lengthy wrestling scenes and a masked hero.”

The evil Dr. Karol looks the same as he did when he came to Mexico twenty years ago as the survivor of the Dachau concentration camp. He runs a haunted house packed with some of your favorite monsters that come to life, because have you ever seen a horror movie set in a wax museum where things go well?

By the end of the movie, this gets all Dr. Moreau with animal men get whipped. But you have to love a movie where Santo tells the police he’ll get back to crimefighting just as soon as he finishes his next match.

You can download this from the Internet Archive.

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: The Slime People (1963)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Slime People was on Chiller Theater on Saturday, February 25, 1967 at 11:20 p.m.; Saturday, March 30, 1968 at 1:00 a.m.; Saturday, March 29, 1969 at 1:00 a.m. and Saturday, June 12, 1971 at 11:30 p.m.

There’s so much fog in this movie that Lucio Fulci got jealous.

There was so much fog that the Elizabeth Dane wrecked.

So much fog…

You get it, right?

A bunch of lizard people emerge from under Los Angeles and use their fog machine to invade the city because, well, we nuked them out of their homes. Luckily, Tom Gregory (Robert Hutton, who also directed the movie) joins a group of survivors to battle the slimy reptiles, who can’t handle salt or their own spears.

Susan Hart — who would one day marry American-International Pictures president James H. Nicholson and appear in their beach movies — is one of the humans battling the mucky scaly heels.

This entire movie was filmed in the studios of KTLA, but ran out of money after nine days. The slime creatures cost most of the money, and neither the stuntmen nor Hutton got paid. There was also the wild thought of using small people as giant voles to lead the invasion, but when they watched the footage, it seemed too silly to use. Just think of that, as this movie is one of the goofiest films ever made. I wish I could watch that footage.

Hutton would go on to write Persecution, which was one of Lana Turner’s last films. It’s just as goofy — maybe more — than this one.