WRITE FOR MILL CREEK MONTH!

November is the annual Mill Creek Month and this year I’ve picked two different sets. I’d love to have you write for the site and here are the movies that you can choose from.

Sci-Fi Classics: Choose from fifty science fiction movies, which you can find on this Letterboxd or IMDB list. You can get the set from Amazon. There are some used ones for $3.49!

  • The Alpha Incident
  • The Amazing Transparent Man
  • Assignment: Outer Space
  • The Astral Factor
  • The Atomic Brain
  • Attack of the Monsters
  • Battle of the Worlds
  • Blood Tide
  • The Brain Machine
  • Bride of the Gorilla
  • Colossus and the Amazon Queen
  • Cosmos: War of the Planets
  • Crash of the Moons
  • Destroy All Planets
  • Eegah
  • First Spaceship on Venus
  • The Galaxy Invader
  • Gamera the Invincible
  • Gamera vs. Guiron
  • Gamera vs. Viras
  • Giants of Rome
  • Hercules Against the Moon Men
  • Hercules and the Captive Women
  • Hercules and the Tyrants of Babylon
  • Hercules Unchained
  • Horrors of Spider Island
  • The Incredible Petrified World
  • Killers From Space
  • Kong Island
  • Laser Mission
  • The Lost Jungle
  • Menace from Outer Space
  • Mesa of Lost Women
  • Monstrosity
  • Moon of the Wolf
  • Phantom From Space
  • The Phantom Planet
  • Planet Outlaws
  • Prehistoric Women
  • Queen of the Amazons
  • Robot Monster
  • She Gods of Shark Reef
  • The Snow Creature
  • Snowbeast
  • Son of Hercules: The Land of Darkness
  • Teenagers From Outer Space
  • They Came From Beyond Space
  • Unknown World
  • Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women
  • Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet
  • Warning From Space
  • The Wasp Woman
  • White Pongo
  • The Wild Women of Wongo
  • Zonar: The Thing from Venus

The Swingin’ Seventies: Choose from fifty movies from the 1970s, which you can find on this Letterboxd or IMDB list. You can get the set from Amazon. There are some used ones for $3.47!

Movies include:

  • Against a Crooked Sky
  • The Border
  • The Borrowers
  • C.C. and Company
  • Cold Sweat
  • Concrete Cowboys
  • Congratulations, It’s a Boy!
  • The Cop in Blue Jeans 
  • Hannah, Queen of the Vampires
  • David Copperfield
  • The Death of Richie
  • The Deadly Trap
  • Identikit
  • Evel Knievel
  • Fair Play
  • Firehouse
  • The Four Deuces
  • Get Christie Love! 
  • Good Against Evil
  • The Gun and the Pulpit
  • The Hanged Man
  • How Awful About Allan
  • James Dean
  • Jane Eyre
  • Jory
  • Katherine
  • The Klansman
  • Las Vegas Lady
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald and the Last of the Belles
  • Maybe I’ll Come Home in the Spring
  • Rulers of the City
  • Mr. Sycamore
  • The New Adventures of Heidi
  • The Proud and Damned
  • A Real American Hero
  • The River Niger
  • Rogue Male
  • Stunts
  • The Swiss Conspiracy
  • The Squeeze
  • They Call It Murder
  • To All My Friends On Shore
  • The Treasure of Jamaica Reef
  • Wacky Taxi
  • The Baby Sitter
  • The War of the Robots
  • Warhead
  • The Werewolf of Washington
  • The Young Graduates

AND!

On Thanksgiving, the site will celebrate like it’s the 70s and we;’e watching WOR. Giant monsters all day, so send in your favorite.

TUBI ORIGINAL: Sinister Assistant (2023)

Gigi (Lucy Barrett) never knew her mother or father, raising herself with the help of her roommate and longtime best friend Rachel (Phoenix Best). She makes most of her money running scams, like stealing video games and selling them to kids whose parents don’t allow them to get them.

This all changes when she figures out that her mother might be Linda (Tiffany Kyle), the owner of Fusefire, the biggest video game company in the world. But to get closer to her mother, she has to lie and scheme and get close to her assistant Blair (Jillian Kinsey) and deal with the sexual threats of her stepbrother Vincent (Brandon Mitchell).

Directed by Tamar Halpern (Her Affair to Die For), this movie is not The Assistant, which is also a Tubi original. It does have Gigi going all out to get revenge, as well as discussion of video games that feels like your grandmother wrote it: “The touch screen controls are now more intuitive.” as well as “No one watches the cut scenes.” Someone spent five minutes on Reddit for that line.

You can watch this on Tubi.

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: Attack of the Puppet People (1958)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Attack of the Puppet People was first on Chiller Theater on Saturday, September 26, 1964 at 11:15 p.m. It also aired on July 31, 1965 and February 18, 1967.

With the totally awesome working titles The Fantastic Puppet People and I Was a Teenage Doll, as well as the provocative UK title Six Inches Tall, this Bert I. Gordon auteur project — he wrote, directed and produced — was rushed into theaters by AIP to capitalize on the success of the previous year’s The Incredible Shrinking Man. It was paired with War of the Colossal Beast, which is ironic, as this film features that movie’s first installment, The Amazing Colossal Man.

Mr. Franz (John Hoyt, who was in everything from Cleopatra to Flesh Gordon) owns a doll factory and seems quite nice, but the lifelike dolls stored in glass canisters — his special collection — seem quite odd. That’s because they’re all real people transformed into dolls!

June Kennedy (Teenage DollSorority Girl and the incredibly named The Saga of the Viking Women and Their Voyage to the Waters of the Great Sea Serpent) plays Sally Reynolds, who takes a job with Mr. Franz. Before long, she’s gotten all into salesman Bob Westley(John Agar, who has a vast career from John Wayne films to tons of B movies and science fiction films all the way to Miracle Mile; he was also the first husband of Shirley Temple), which seems to upset her boss. Before long, the guy is gone — just when they were about to get engaged and move away!

Soon, the twosome finds themselves part of Franz’s doll collection, forced to act out Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Keep an eye out for Laurie Mitchell (who played Queen Yllana, the ruler of Venus, in Queen of Outer Space) and Susan Gordon, the daughter of the director. She’s also in his films Tormented and Picture Mommy Dead.

This movie is part of American history, believe it or not. On the evening of June 17, 1972, Alfred C. Baldwin III (in a nearby hotel as a lookout for the Watergate burglars) became so interested in the film that he didn’t notice the two plainclothes detectives who made the historic arrests that led to the event known as Watergate.

You can watch this with Rifftrax commentary on Tubi. You can also get the Shout! Factory blu ray release with a 2K scan if you’d like.

THE IMPORTANT CINEMA CLUB’S SUPER SCARY MOVIE CHALLENGE DAY 12: Incubus (1966)

October 12: A Horror Film in which William Shatner appears.

Created by ophthalmologist L. L. Zamenhof in 1887, Esperanto is supposed to be a universal second language for international communication. In English, the name means one who hopes and it’s the largest constructed international auxiliary language with a few thousand speakers.

Zamenhof had some big dreams that go past making an easy and flexible language. He thought that this new way of speaking would lead to world peace.

Incubus is the second film to be made in the language, following Angoroj. This was directed and written by The Outer Limits creator Leslie Stevens, who used the cancellation of that show to make an art house movie with that show’s cinematographer Conrad L. Hall and composer Dominic Frontiere.

This is the story of a spring in Nomen Tuum that heals the sick and makes ugly people ravishing and oh yes, there are many succubus and incubus there to lure humans to Hell.

Kia (Allyson Ames) wants a pure man to be her perfect target, but her sister Amael (Eloise Hardt) tries to tell her that if she falls in love, she will lose so much. Then she goes after Marc (Shatner), a soldier here to heal his wounds of battle. He’s with his sister Arndis (Ann Atmar) who is so dumb that she loses her sight by staring at the sun.

This gets wild, as Marc’s purity defiles the demons, who call upon an incubus (Milos Milos, whose life is insane; he was the bodyguard for Alain Delon and a friend of Stevan Marković, who died owning sexually explicit photos of Claude Pompidou, wife of French President Georges Pompidou, causing a big scandal and an unsolved crime; Milos went to America where he married Cynthia Bouron, who had a paternity case against Cary Grant, and was beaten to death and found in the trunk of her car outside a grocery store. As for Milos Milos, he was dating Barbara Ann Thomason, the wife of Mickey Rooney, at the same time he was married to Cynthia Bouron, and they died in a murder suicide that many believed that Rooney engineered) to kill Marc and defile and murder his sister.

This was thought to be a lost film, shown only at the San Francisco Film Festival — where Esperanto speakers laughed at how bad the actors spoke — and in France. Between the language and the scandal over Milo killing his girlfriend and himself, the movie was kind of dead. It was found in 2001 when it was reassembled from existing materials.

2022 Scarecrow Psychotronic Challenge Day 12: Codename: Wild Geese (1984)

12. GUERILLAS IN THE MIDST: One involving soldiers or set during a war.

Code Name: Wild Geese is not the sequel to The Wild Geese but don’t let that stop you from watching it and making the filmmaker’s money.

This is directed by an absolute master of the low budget war movie, Antonio Margheriti, written by Michael Lester and produced by a man who made seventeen movies with Jess Franco, Erwin C. Dietrich.

DEA agent Fletcher (Ernest Borgnine) heads an operation to cut off the supply of opium out of Hong Kong. As always with these deep cover government jobs, the money has to come from somewhere. Here, it’s funded by an American businessman named Brenner (Hartmut Neugebauer).

Working with his partner Charlton (Klaus Kinski), Fletcher hires Robin Wesley (Lewis Collins, who is also in Margheriti’s Commando Leopard), a man who has just lost his son to heroin. He’s all for this mission: to burn down heroin operations throughout the Golden Triangle alongside an army of mercenaries like Klein (Manfred Lehmann) and helicopter pilot China (Lee Van Cleef). As you can expect, there are twists, turns and double crosses. Most importantly, it has Mimsy Farmer and a flamethrower mounted on a helicopter.

UNSUNG HORRORS HORROR GIVES BACK 2023: Maniac Driver (2020)

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: Japan

I haven’t seen any of Kurando Mitsutake’s movies before this and, well, now I’m looking for more.

The director of Samurai Avenger: The Blind WolfLion-Girl and Gun Woman, in Maniac Driver he’s loudly proclaiming that this is a Japanese giallo.

A taxi driver (Tomoki Kimura) is usually quite normal and even mild until gorgeous women get into his vehicle. Then he loses his mind and is driven to the kind of murderous impulses that get your movie named after animals and filled with black gloves, wearing a motorcycle helmet like the murderer in Strip Nude for Your Killer.

While there are moments of Argento in this and definite tones of Maniac — the poster tagline is “I warned you not to take a taxi tonight” and The New York Ripper — this also draws on the pinky violence genre of its native country.

With a cast of Japanese AV stars (Saryû Usui, Ayumi Kimito, Iori Kogawa, Ai Sayama), a metal soundtrack by the band Aim Higher that makes this feel like the 80s wave of giallo and neon lighting, Maniac Driver is unafraid and unashamed to go there. Is it a giallo? Well, it has the feel of the genre, even if it gives away the killer right away and his reasons — his wife was killed while he was unable to protect her — aren’t discovered by someone else or the police blundering in the dark.

It’s closer to a slasher or Taxi Hunter. That said, I could care less what bucket it has to fit into. It’s fast running time is filled with non-stop violence and sex, a movie that’s ready to be lurid and cheap. And I mean that as a good thing.

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: Fiend without a Face (1958)

EDITOR’S NOTE: Fiend Without a Face was first on Chiller Theater on Saturday, June 6, 1964 at 4 p.m. It also was on the show on January 2, 1965.

Based upon Amelia Reynolds Long’s 1930 short story “The Thought Monster”, originally published in the March 1930 issue of Weird Tales magazine, this independent British film played in the US on a double bill with The Haunted Strangler.

U. S. Air Force Interceptor Command Experimental Station No. 6 is a long-range radar installation located in the fictional town of Winthrop, Manitoba, Canada, which is a farming village that’s been plagued by unexplained deaths. It turns out that people are being killed with their brains and spinal columns being taken. The townies are up in arms, as they feel that the radiation experiments are to blame.

That leads Air Force Major Jeff Cummings starts to investigate the murders and quickly fingers Professor R. E. Walgate as a person of interest. Turns out that the Professor has been experimenting with telekinesis and thought projection for some time. That said — the radiation from the base has turned his thought projections into an entirely new life form that is attacking the locals and using them for host bodies. Of course, those bodies are mostly invisible, but also show up from time to time as moving brains with spinal columns with eyes at the end of extended eye stalks. They’re creepy as hell and led to a public uproar after its British premiere, with the public and critics angry over the films horrifying levels of gore (for the time, at least).

When this movie debuted at the Rialto Theatre in New York City, it came complete with a sidewalk exhibit of a “living and breathing Fiend” that moved and made sounds. The crowds that gathered to watch the caged Fiend created large crowds that the NYPD had to disperse.

It’s a pretty effective picture. Maybe that’s not even due to the film’s director, Arthur Crabtree. He believed that science fiction was beneath him and walked off the set at one point, with star Marshall Thompson finishing the direction of the movie.

If you like 1950’s atomic science fiction, scenes of people boarded in a room trying to hide out from pulsating brains and stop-motion blood and guys, well, this is the movie for you.

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: House On Haunted Hill (1959)

EDITOR’S NOTE: House On Haunted Hill was first on Chiller Theater on Saturday, May 2, 1964 at 4 p.m. It also was on the show on July 17, 1965; June 25, 1966; November 24, 1979 and October 16, 1982.

William Castle is one of my heroes. While he isn’t a world-class director, he was a top of the line showman. His book Step Right Up!…I’m Going to Scare the Pants off America is required reading. You can also check out the great documentary Spine Tingler! The William Castle story to learn more.

One of the gimmicks that he used to sell his movies was called Emergo. As theaters played this movie, an elaborate pulley system released a plastic skeleton that would fly across the presumably horrified — or amused and even rancorous — audience.

This movie ended up being a huge success. Alfred Hitchcock — who Castle often imitated in movies like Homicidal — took and made his own low-budget horror film. You’ve probably seen it. It’s called Psycho.

It’s such a simple set up: Frederick Loren (the always awesome Vincent Price, whose line in this movie “It’s close to midnight” starts off the Michael Jackson song “Thriller,” a track on which he also appears) is an eccentric millionaire — is there any better kind? — who invites five people to a party for his fourth wife Annabelle (Carol Ohmart, Spider Baby) in an allegedly haunted house.

If any of these people can survive one night, they get $10,000. They include test pilot Lance Schroeder (Richard Long, who was the professor on Nanny and the Professor), newspaper columnist Ruth Bridges (Julie Mitchum, yes the sister of Robert), psychiatrist Dr. David Trent (Alan Marshal in his next to last film; the actor Marshal died two years later from a heart attack while appearing in Chicago with Mae West in a production of her play Sextette. He had a heart attack on stage but finished the performance. The show, as they say, must go on…), Nora Manning (Carolyn Craig, probably best known for this movie) and Watson Pritchard (Elisha Cook, Mr. Nicklas from Rosemary’s Baby).

The only thing that these strangers have is that they all need money. The Lorens also hate one another and are convinced that they are trying to kill one another. And for what it’s worth, Watson believes that the house is genuinely haunted by the ghosts of those murdered there, including his brother. There’s also a vat of acid in the basement that was used to kill the previous owner’s wife.

So is the house truly haunted? Is Annabelle trying to kill her husband Frederick? Who will survive? And how cool would it have been to have seen this movie in person with a giant skeleton bursting loose at the right moment?

House On Haunted Hill was filmed at the Ennis House in Los Feliz California, which was designed in 1924 by Frank Lloyd Wright. It also appears in the movie Blade Runner and was the mansion that Angel, Spike, and Drusilla lived in on the TV version of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. It was also used on the soap opera show within a show Invitation to Love on David Lynch’s Twin Peaks.

This was remade in 1999 and that film also had a 2007 sequel, Return to House on Haunted Hill.

You can get this movie as part of Shout! Factory‘s The Vincent Price Collection II on blu ray. Or you can watch it with or without Rifftrax commentary on Tubi. It’s also available on the Internet Archive.

One last bit of trivia: The theme song to this movie actually has lyrics! They are:

“There’s a house on Haunted Hill / Where ev’rything’s lonely and still / Lonely and still / And the ghost of a sigh / When we whispered good-bye / Lingers on / And each night gives a heart broken cry / There’s a house on Haunted Hill / Where love walked there’s a strange silent chill / Strange silent chill / There are mem’ries that yearn / For our hearts to return / And a promise we failed to fulfill / But we’ll never go back / No, we’ll never go back / To the house on Haunted Hill!”

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: I Bury the Living (1958)

EDITOR’S NOTE: I Bury the Living was first on Chiller Theater on Sunday, April 26, 1964 at 11:10 p.m. It also aired on April 3, 1965 and May 11, 1968.

John S Berry wrote this wrote the site awhile ago. I really like this review as it gets into the working class nature of this movie. You can read more of his words on his Twitter

A few years ago I saw a movie called The Canal. In the opening scene, a man gets an auditorium of noisy kids to pipe down asking them if they want to see ghosts. The “ghosts” he is referring to are the people in the film and how none of them are alive today.

I often think of these “ghosts” when I watch older movies. How odd (and wonderful)it must be to get to see relatives long gone. Not just the visuals but also their mannerisms and hearing their voices. I Bury the Living has that feeling for me. I am seeing ghosts pleading, going mad and caring that have been gone for some time.

I Bury the Living was released in 1958 and I am not sure how well it was received. Most of the reviews and articles I read about it compared it to a longer episode of the Twilight Zone. It runs an efficient 77 minutes and was made by Albert Band, who is the father of Charles. Looking up his career I found the sweet support of a father who served as a producer for many of his son’s projects including one of my favorites Castle Freak. I wondered what he thought of his son’s films then I realized he was the director of Dracula’s Dog and Ghoulies II. Thanksgiving in the Band house must have been a lot of fun.

Stephen King is a huge fan of this film but hates the ending. That is a fact steeped in irony since I often find the endings of his books to be lacking (throw rotten tomatoes at me here). I am not going to spoil the ending, but I have watched this several times and am still undecided. I don’t hate it but after some viewings, I think they could have done more with it. But I am not sure how or what (no not a giant spider).

I Bury the Living is very atmospheric and you can feel the coldness of the main set of an office at a cemetery. Richard Boone is kind of a grumpy 50s businessman that has to take his turn in being the chairman for the cemetery. When he is sworn in they tell him it is not a tough job but slowly it possesses him and he goes from a confident and well-groomed man to a confused, flustered and downright scared man.

Andy is the caretaker who does the real day-to-day running of the cemetery. There is something charming and sweet about him and he is a man who truly loves his job. It was a sign of the times and a sad reminder of how people used to have pride in their work no matter how lowly or menial the job was. Andy didn’t have nice suits and slick hair like Mr. Kraft but he appreciated the scenic views at the cemetery and the comfort and peace.

Mr. Kraft imposes his values on Andy and thinks he is doing him a favor when he tells him it is time for him to retire and to find his replacement. Kraft being the typical businessman pats himself on the back not realizing work and this place provides Andy with most of his purpose. And a man can be truly lost when he has lost his purpose.

The giant map has a great look to it. In it are white pins for unoccupied spots that have been sold and black ones are for the ones that have bodies in them. Kraft makes a mistake and puts the wrong color of pin into the map and starts a chain reaction of doom. Or does he?

Kraft’s lady Ann comes to visit and she seems a bit younger than Kraft. I like the fact that the leads are older. It seems like films these days never cast older people (they consider mid 30s old now) and I think it adds to how Kraft actually wears down after all the bad things that start happening around him. He even questions his sanity and wonders if he is truly to blame which is what we often do as we age. Much more meaningful then Archie trying to spend time with his best gal no matter what is going on around him.

No one seems to believe Kraft and he in a sense is doing the math. They seem to think he is buckling from all the pressure of being a modern businessman. A few costly experiments are done and Kraft really starts to go off the rails. The music used is top notch and eery and Band does some very interesting visuals for Kraft’s descent into possible madness.

It is hard to write without spoiling the film. But it is definitely worth a watch. Sure it could be a supernatural force at work or a whodunnit. I feel it is a film about the upper class not truly understanding how the working class feel about life and their jobs and that is all you are going to get out of me. I am still not sure how I feel about the ending, but really I love the room to speculate and wonder about the ending of a film.

THE IMPORTANT CINEMA CLUB’S SUPER SCARY MOVIE CHALLENGE DAY 11: Decoys (2004)

October 11: A Horror Film That Features Many Tentacles

Tentacles usually menace women, but in Decoys, directed by Matthew Hastings, who wrote this with Tom Berry, men deal with being knocked up by evil aliens.

In what other movie would you see men made icey from the inside out and their mouths open in a death mask of sheer horror? And oh yeah, they still have boners after the end. Yes, these female aliens are sick of dudes being the ones who want to have sex with their throats and are turning the sexual battleground on them.

This movie looks like a teen sex comedy more than a horror movie. I think that’s probably why it’s so surprising when the attractive girls that two college guys meet in a laundromat turn out to have tentacles that emerge from their breasts.

The one constant in all alien battles is that man has invented the flame thrower and this will be our best weapon in the war against titty extraterrestrials.