Monster of the Day #3078
“Bees! Bees! Thousands of Bees!” (Hey, not everyone has Irwin Allen’s budgets.) GalaxyJane pointed out to me that 1978’s delirious The Bees, no doubt rushed to drive-ins to (somewhat ironically) cash in… Read Article →
“Bees! Bees! Thousands of Bees!” (Hey, not everyone has Irwin Allen’s budgets.) GalaxyJane pointed out to me that 1978’s delirious The Bees, no doubt rushed to drive-ins to (somewhat ironically) cash in… Read Article →
One of the great recent finds at a T-Fest, courtesy of Sandy, was The Golden Bat, a 1966 crazy Japanese superhero movie that inspired near Ship or Monsters or Super Inframan levels… Read Article →
Yesterday I featured the recent killer gator movie Crawl, which is available on both Hulu and Amazon Prime. Maybe you’d like to pair that one with a more old school example though…. Read Article →
OK, this one is on both Amazon Prime and Hulu, so hopefully many of you could watch it. SYFY (ugh) managed to largely kill my lifelong love of killer animal movies, and… Read Article →
Time to help a brother out. BChasm writes: “Hi Ken, attached is a picture of Satan, from the 1985 film “The Adventures of Mark Twain,” directed by Claymation pioneer Will Vinton. Mr…. Read Article →
Horrible day. The last standing member of the Golden Age of Hollywood, Olivia De Havilland, has passed at the age of 104. A generation older than even the recently deceased Kirk Douglas,… Read Article →
Certainly the lesser of the two ’50s Brit sci-fi flicks Forrest Tucker starred in (obviously Crawling Eye is the other), this is one of those overly convoluted flicks that tosses a few… Read Article →
If you have a whole afternoon to blow this weekend, you could certainly do worse than to watch the Daimajin trilogy. All three films are (currently) available on YourTube with sweet widescreen… Read Article →
Sorry about yesterday, I had technical issues. The print is zoomboxed and soft and features a dub track, which I usually can’t stand. But hey, that’s what we grew up on. It’s… Read Article →
It’s sad to think how few people are left who would go, “Ohhh, George Zucco and Glenn Strange?!” Anyway, the Cult Cinema Classics channel on YouTube had added 1942’s The Mad Monster…. Read Article →