CBS LATE MOVIE: The Keeper (1976)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Keeper was on the CBS Late Movie on December 19, 1985.

Christopher Lee is The Keeper, the crippled administrator of a secluded and exclusive mental hospital known as Underwood Asylum. It’s where the richest and most well-known families in British Columbia send their mentally disturbed relatives for care. Yet these families are killed off en masse, with their insane relatives suddenly becoming relatively well-off. Dick Driver (Tell Schreiber) is the detective — Triple D, as it were — who is out to find out what’s happening.

In a 1976 interview shared on Reeling Back, Lee had praise for this low-budget movie shot in Vancouver, saying, “I’ve never come across a story quite like this one. The character is extremely well-written. It has so many different sides to it that I said to my wife when I read it, “Here, this is good.” I gave it to her to read, and she said, “Yes, it’s perfect.” I said, “I’m going to do this. I’d like to do this very much.” The story itself appealed to me as a story. One of the major reasons, if not the major reason, I accept a role is because of what the story is and what the story is about.”

Three years later, he was asked of the film in this article: “It was a little movie. Drake directed it on a $135,000 budget, 60 percent of which came from the federal government’s Canadian Film Development Corporation. After Lee had returned to London, “I received a letter from British Equity, passing along a letter from Canadian Equity, advising me not to do the picture. ‘They were concerned because it was a completely non-union project.” The film, one that had appealed to Lee, “because it was an original idea, totally original,” has never been released. “An actor never goes into a picture with the knowledge that it’s going to be a disaster,” he said. “I always hope for the best, and work to do my best for the producers””

The Keeper sat unwatched for nearly a decade before being sold to TV, and in 1985, nine years after its release, it aired on the CBS Late Movie. It was released on VHS.

Directed and written by Canadian singer-songwriter, film director, and screenwriter T.Y. Drake (who would go on to write Terror Train), this film features the detective sending his assistant, Mae B. Jones (Sally Drake) is undercover at the sanitarium, where Lee is putting his patients through their worst fears because, well, he loves to watch that. Then, Dick commits himself to learning more. If you could explain to me what The Keeper’s plan is and how he’s supposed to make it all happen, I’d be so happy.

You can find this movie, but it’s as close to a lost one as there is these days. However, it’s by no means a discovery. It’s…something. I mean, I had fun with it, but as this site should prove to you, I have a distinct lack of taste.

The Monkey (2025)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Exploitation-film historian A.C. Nicholas, who has a sketchy background and hails from parts unknown in Western Pennsylvania, was once a drive-in theater projectionist and disk jockey. In addition to being a writer, editor, podcaster, voice-over artist, and sometime actor and stand-up comedian, he’s a regular guest co-host on the streaming Drive-In Asylum Double Feature and has made multiple appearances on Making Tarantino: The Podcast. He also contributes to the Drive-In Asylum fanzine, the B & S About Movies Podcast, and the Horror and Sons website. His most recent essay, “Jay Ward, J-Men, Dynaman, and the Comedy Re-Dub,” will appear in the next issue of Drive-In Asylum.

I was thinking of giving The Monkey a two-word review: “Stupid fun.” But the more I thought about it, perhaps it deserved five words: “Very stupid, sort of fun.” Those lines are accurate, but you want and deserve more, don’t you? Hang with me, and I’ll elaborate.

I rarely enjoy new horror films because I find most of them to be inferior to those from the 1970s and 1980s. For every excellent film by one of my favorite directors of this generation—Robert Eggers, Peter Strickland, or Ben Wheatley—there are a dozen formulaic cash-grabs from filmmakers who don’t understand the genre. Back in the day, with the first cycle of movies based on Stephen King properties, you had three categories of adaptations: masterpieces like Carrie, The Shining, and Dead Zone; low-rent stuff like Thinner, Graveyard Shift, and The Mangler; and things, that, while not great, were either better than expected or at least fun, like Cujo, Christine, and The Night Flyer.

Which brings us to The Monkey, a recent addition to the killer-toy universe inhabited by Chucky and M3GAN, written and directed by Oz Perkins and based on a story from Stephen King’s Skeleton Crew collection. With his first three films—The Blackcoat’s Daughter, I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House, and Gretel & Hansel—Perkins stood out on the playground. He was a talented filmmaker who understood horror (of course; it was in the DNA he got from his father, Anthony) and made idiosyncratic, personal films, which were arty without being pretentious and self-important (yeah, that’s your filmography, Ari Aster). But then he had a huge commercial success with Longlegs, a film that Sam Panico and I despise. A lot of folks, especially critics enamored with “elevated horror,” loved it, comparing it favorably to The Silence of the Lambs and calling it scary as hell. (OK, Nicolas Cage in a dressing gown and a putty nose was frightening … at first.) I, on the other hand, thought it was a mess. Despite having a distinctively cold look and feel, it seemed as though Perkins had simply written down a bunch of commercial ideas that he liked on 3×5 cards and shuffled them to create the screenplay. It was dispiriting watching a fine cast, in a well-made film, trying to inject something, anything into this lazy, borderline insulting, conglomeration of tropes. See Nic Cage chew scenery as a serial killer writing a crazy manifesto in code! But wait. There’s more! Maika Monroe’s a troubled FBI agent on his trail, and guess what? She’s psychic! Wow! Is that Alicia Witt playing an old woman in an old house with scary old dolls, who’s harboring an old secret? And look! There’s Blair Underwood—haven’t seen him in a while—collecting a paycheck in a nothing part. Maybe “dispiriting” is too kind. Longlegs made me angry.

With that background, I approached The Monkey with trepidation. Would this be a return to form for a filmmaker I once liked? I’m afraid the answer is “no.” Once again, Perkins, now a beloved horror icon, leans hard into his own worst traits. The King story about a mechanical monkey toy that can kill in Final Destination style when its key is turned is short and to the point. But, like most of King’s writing, it doesn’t lend itself well to a feature film. Perkins, aware of this, gives the lead character an evil twin and incorporates a non-linear structure with lots of flashbacks. Though the film runs a commendably short 98 minutes, for well over the first hour, my thought was Perkins had only about 20 minutes’ worth of material. And, as others have suggested, this material might have been better served as an episode of a streaming anthology series, like Creepshow or Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities. Things do pick up with some plot, rather than just set pieces, in the last act, but it’s all yet another trope: sentimental Stephen King reconnected-family boilerplate.

As for the cast, for the second film in a row, Perkins wastes some talented folks who give nice performances. Christian Convery (Cocaine Bear) plays the twins as boys, with Theo James (Divergent and Underworld films) taking over when they become adults. Both are excellent, with James having fun doing a riff on Tim Hutton’s evil twin in George Romero’s flawed, but still very good, adaptation of King’s The Dark Half.

In addition, it was nice to see a movie role for the wonderfully natural Sarah Levy from Schitt’s Creek. Perkins himself plays her husband and proves that he’s not just a filmmaker, but also a competent actor. But both are cardboard cutouts, around only long enough to die gruesome deaths. More about those shortly. Adam Scott shows up in the funny cold opening, which promises a better film, but then he’s gone. And Elijah Wood has an unfunny cameo, which exists only to play to the horror fandom.

But the most egregiously wasted cast member is Tatiana Maslany. Since first seeing Ukrainian-Canadian Maslany playing multiple clones (and those clones impersonating each other) on BBC America’s Orphan Black, I’ve referred to her as the “Meryl Streep of Television.” She’s a phenomenal talent, one of the best actresses working today, who has yet to break out and become a mainstream success. Here, she’s perfect as the boys’ put-upon, bedraggled mother, smoking cigarettes, tossing off quips, lecturing them on the inevitability of death, and making the most of her few scenes before the inevitable.

And I’ve saved the inevitable, all the gory deaths, for last. They’re outside the hopscotch boundaries of a film released to thousands of theaters. I’ll hand it to Perkins, his sense of humor, almost nonexistent in his previous films, is sick. Really sick. I was startled, shook my head, and laughed at the ridiculous ways people die, including via a shotgun, a lawn mower, an errant air-conditioning unit, and stampeding horses. (And wait until you see the cheerleaders on the school bus.) Perkins, cinematographer Nico Aguilar, and editors Greg Ng and Graham Fortin get high-fives for replicating a Tex Avery cartoon. The nuttiness of the violence is the best thing about the film, but even that’s a mixed blessing. Unlike another recent horror film, Malignant, which starts out stupid before becoming stupid and ludicrous—and ultimately stupid and ludicrous but entertaining, The Monkey never finds its tonal footing. Perkins earns my respect for trying something different, but it’s well-nigh impossible to deliberately make a campy cult film. They happen accidentally.

To wind up (feel free to groan out loud), The Monkey’s not great, but at least it’s not dire, like Longlegs. I enjoyed the cast, appreciated the craftsmanship, and chuckled at the set pieces. But that’s about it. I’ll lump it into my category of King adaptations, that, while not dreadful, aren’t anything to lose your feces over, though lots of folks did over The Monkey. Hmmm… Maybe I shouldn’t have monkeyed around with all those keystrokes and instead settled upon a three-word review: “Barely passable junk.” 

CBS LATE MOVIE: The Fantastic Seven (1979)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Fantastic Seven was on the CBS Late Movie on January 5 and September 9, 1983 and May 16, 1984.

Directed by John Peyser (The Centerfold Girls) and written by David Shaw, this starts with actress Rebecca Wayne (Elke Sommer) being kidnapped by Boudreau (Patrick Macnee) and taken to Finland, where she’ll be killed in 72 hours if the ransom isn’t paid. The studio won’t pay it; her last two films were failures. That means stuntman Hill Singleton (Christopher Connelly, so many Italian movies) must recruit, well, six more people, like his friend Horatio (Brian Brodsky), swimmers Elena Sweet (Morgan Brittany) and Dinah Latimore (Juanin Clay), explosives lover Skip Hartman (Christopher Lloyd), weaponer Wally Ditweiler (Bob Seagren) and bartender and (because he’s Asian) martial arts expert Kenny Uto (Soon-Tek Oh). Of course, they’re successful, even if this pilot wasn’t picked up for a series. I mean, I still watched it on the CBS Late Movie and wrote so many episodes for it. Ah, if only — I mean, a weekly show about stuntmen solving crimes? I mean, that would never work. Oh, The Fall Guy?

This has stunts by a Swamp Thing (Dick Durock) and two Michael Meyers (Dick Warlock and George Wilbur), as well as “Judo” Gene LaBelle.

You can watch this on YouTube.

CBS LATE MOVIE: The Plutonium Incident (1980)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Plutonium Incident was on the CBS Late Movie on January 21, 1983.

If you see the German poster for this, you may think it’s an Italian post-apocalyptic movie. No, it’s not. It’s very much we have Silkwood and The China Syndrome at home.

Directed by Richard Michaels (who directed a movie I’m obsessed with finding, Death Is Not the End) and written by Thomas B. Allen and Darlene Young, this has Judith Longden (Janet Margolin) working at a plant in Oregon where she finds some shocking safety problems, but also finds time to hook up with Art Reeves (Bo Hopkins). Good for her. Anyways, she and Harry Skirvan (Joseph Campanella) try to inform the world about all of these issues, which leads to The Crazies suit-wearing maniacs busting into her house, tons of harassment and — spoiler — her death by the end of the movie.

Powers Boothe is Dick Hawkins, the boss, and man, more movies with evil Powers Boothe. I say that as a yinzer who watched him hold my hockey team hostage.

You can watch this at the Cave of Forgotten Films.

Sizzlin’ Summer of Side-Splitters 2025: Bad President (2021)

July 21-27 Eddie Griffin Week: This motherfucker is funny!

Is Eddie Griffin becoming the black comedy Eric Roberts? How else can we explain him playing the devil in this film, the demon who got Donald Trump (Jeff Rector, whose career includes Dinosaur Valley GirlsStreet Soldiers, and Hellmaster) to the White House? All those times that he got away with things that you didn’t understand? All the devil.

Director Parem Gill must have something on Eddie, as he also directed Going to America, another movie starring the actor.

This is essentially everything we experienced in 2016. I didn’t enjoy it then, and I don’t really want to see it now. That said, the casting of Stormy Daniels as herself is somewhat inspired. As for Putin (Kevin Indio Copeland) being part of this hellplot, well, sure. I guess.

This should be a stunning indictment, but it’s instead a boring nap, one from which you wake up hating yourself. Why does the devil need a Game of Thrones chair? Why did I watch this? I use movies to escape, and this made me question everything I believe in, like spending day after day in my basement, watching Jess Franco movies. Man, if Jess and Lina were alive, they’d make a pretty good Trump movie. I imagine he steals diamonds, uses them to pay off Lina for his affair, and then ends up facing off with the Red Lips, only to be drained of life by Soledad Miranda.

Maybe that’s a good use of AI, finally, huh?

You can watch this on Tubi.

MEET JOE ZASO ON THE DIA DF!

Bill and I are back with producer, director, actor and horror himbo Joe Zaso this Saturday 8 PM EST on the Groovy Doom Facebook and YouTube channels. Joe will be promoting the new Vinegar Syndrome release of his film Five Dead On the Crimson Canvas, which Sam did a video essay for!

Want to know what we’ve shown before? Check out this list.

Have a request? Make it here.

Want to see one of the drink recipes from a past show? We have you covered.

Up first, it’s Giallo classic Blood and Black Lace, which you can watch on YouTube or download it from the Internet Archive. It’s also on Tubi.

Every week, we watch movies, discuss them, look at the ads and make a cocktail. Here’s the first recipe:

Blood and Blackberries

  • 1 oz. J&B
  • Dash of lemon juice
  • 1 oz. simple syrup
  • 10 blackberries
  1. Crush blackberries and pour simple syrup over them. Stir.
  2. Add J&B and blackberries; put on your mask, black gloves and grab a knife. Drink.

Our second movie is Dracula, Prisoner of Frankenstein. You can watch it on Fawsome or Plex.

Here’s the recipe.

Frankenstein, Prisoner of Booze

  • 2 oz. vodka
  • 1 oz. blue curacao
  • 2 oz. pineapple juice
  • 2 oz. orange juice
  1. Shake everything with ice in a cocktail shaker.
  2. Pour in a glass, fight a werewolf and drink it.

See you Saturday night!

Perversions of Science E1: Dream of Doom (1997)

From June 7 to July 23, 1997, HBO attempted something similar to Tales from the Crypt, adapting the science fiction books of EC Comics for pay cable. But where the Crypt Keeper had bad puns about horror and death, sexy robot Chrome (Maureen Teefy) seems DTF years before we knew what that meant, constantly hitting us with sexual innuendo.

In “Dream of Doom,” Arthur Bristol (Robert Carradine) is trapped in a dream that turns into another dream, an art film like way of kicking off a dirty science fiction anthology TV show. Lolita Davidovich appears as a doctor, Adam Arkin is a therapist, Lin Shaye is a nurse, and Peter Jason is a priest.

Descartes gets name dropped and this gets weird. It’s a good start, directed by one of the shows producers, Walter Hill, and written by David S. Goyer.

This story is based on “Dream of Doom” from Weird Science #12, which was written by William Gaines and Al Feldstein and drawn by Wally Wood. In that story, just like this one,  Aman experiences a sequence of dreams occurring after dream after dream. He’s also a comic book artist who works for Gill Baines. What’s the company, CE Comics?

You can download all of the episodes here or watch this episode on YouTube.

CBS LATE MOVIE: Visions of Death (1972)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Visions of Death was on the CBS Late Movie on September 15, 1976 and October 27, 1977.

Telly Savalas plays Lt. Phil Keegan, a cop before Kojak, and he’s dealing with the visions of Prof. Mark Lowell (Monte Markham), who can see the future. He tells the police that someone is about to plant a bomb, which makes him the prime suspect.

Directed by Lee H. Katjin (Death Ray 2000) and written by Paul Playdon, one wonders if a young Steve King watched this and thought, “Hey, that idea of a psychic being able to touch people and see their future seems pretty neat.” Except that Mark is a professor and Johnny in The Dead Zone was a teacher and…yeah.

They also brought in a real-life psychic — cold reader, more like it — James Van Pragh.  Barb Anderson, Eve Whitfield from Ironside, is also in this.

You can watch this on YouTube.

CBS LATE MOVIE: The 11th Victim (1979)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The 11th Victim was on the CBS Late Movie on August 27, 1982.

Airing on November 6, 1979 as the CBS Tuesday Night MovieThe 11th Victim — released on VHS as The Lakeside Killer — has Jill Kelso (Bess Armstrong) coming from Des Moints to Los Angeles, looking for the killer of her younger sister, Cindy Lee (Marilyn Jones), who was trying to be an actress and ended up a sex worker. She refuses to believe that, however, even as cop Andrew Spencer (Max Gail) tries to keep her safe when she investigates on her own.

The bad influence on her sister was Sally Taylor (Pamela Ludwig), who got Cindy Lee to pose nude for a German calendar. She barely knows Jill and soon she’s taking her to a “video disco” and getting her to do drugs. Then Jill gets the idea to become a girl fresh off the bus named Kelly and follows in her sister’s footsteps, meeting this movie’s version of Jim South, Spider (Eric Burdon, yes from The Animals), whose secretary Cathy (Annazette Chase) seems so lovely, then tells Jill/Kelly to take off her clothes, right there in the office. And before you know it, Jill/Kelly is agreeing to do hardcore with megastar Red Brody (David Hayward), who she believes is a killer, the very person who killed her sister.

Dick Miller appears as a cop, and this was the last film for Tara Strohmeier, whose career is marked by a list of notable movies, including Hollywood BoulevardTruck TurnerThe Kentucky Fried MovieThe Student Teachers, and more.

After Mr. Billion and Over the Edge flopped, director Jonathan Kaplan found himself working in TV. He also made The Gentleman Bandit and Girls of the White Orchid, which is much better and nearly the same movie, before achieving success with Heart Like a Wheel. This was written by Ken Friedman, who also wrote Death by InvitationWhite Line Fever and Cadillac Man.

This movie is definitely “We have Hardcore at home.”

You can watch this on YouTube.