Monster of the Day #3143
Sorry, I couldn’t get the thumbnail to load. Back to Weird Tales. As the magazine flourished, it still jumped around a lot regarding cover subjects. While imperiled, half-dressed women were basically a… Read Article →
Sorry, I couldn’t get the thumbnail to load. Back to Weird Tales. As the magazine flourished, it still jumped around a lot regarding cover subjects. While imperiled, half-dressed women were basically a… Read Article →
Apparently I haven’t actually seen this since I was a kid. I watched it on Amazon this weekend and I was shocked that the entire film was in color. Admittedly it was… Read Article →
Yesterday I was talking about mainstream comical movies of the 80s that had monsters in them as a minor feature. That includes My Science Project, a Ghostbuster-ish, largely forgotten flick about a… Read Article →
I’ve always been vaguely interested in mainstream movies from the ’80s and early ’90s that you forget/didn’t know had monsters in them for no real reason. Like, oh, The Coneheads, or Howard… Read Article →
Yesterday we talked about Nezura, the aborted giant rat movie that inadvertently led to the creation of Gamera. We’ve also touched before on Nessie, the aborted Dai Kaiju film that would have… Read Article →
I’m sure some of you know this story, but I’d never heard of it. Nezura was meant to Daiei’s entry into the Kaiju market then at a peak due to (obviously) Toho…. Read Article →
So I thought I’d mix up Monster of the Day a bit. Rather than just post a picture on Mondays, assuming I can rouse the energy, I’ll examine a monster in text…. Read Article →
Happy Thanksgiving, everyone! Sadly, Blood Freak isn’t on Amazon anymore, but there is a decent print on YouTube. I’m sure they will autoinsert some commercials in there, but hey, it’s available. If… Read Article →
You know the economy’s gone south when the Devil outsources his rosaries to China. Man, I’m digging the ’20s art aesthetic. I think I’ll probably post tomorrow (hopefully after sleeping in a… Read Article →
I’m sure The Ghost Table fostered gigantic sales, but how could you follow it up? (That would be achieved for years, until Clark Ashton Smith’s epic multi-part The Ottoman Empire.) So for… Read Article →