Archive | October, 2009

My Favorite Universal Monster Movies

31 Oct

So I finally get to write this. Believe it or not, what became The History of the Universal Monsters was originally meant to be just a list of my favorite Universal Monster movies. Notice I said Universal Monster and not Universal Horror. Though I’ve liked the Lugosi/Karloff pairings I’ve seen in the past month and especially enjoyed The Raven, it is the monsters that keep me coming back for more.

Maybe by this time next year I’ll be knowledgeable enough to have a list of favorite Universal Horror films, but this is the year of the monsters. You’ll notice a lack of The Mummy/Invisible Man/Creature from the Black Lagoon movies. Well, that’s because I’m not all too familiar with those films and many of them I’ve never seen. Hey, I can always update this list next year too, right?

The Wolf Man also does not make my list. While I like the character, the movie doesn’t impress me when compared to Dracula and Frankenstein films. I like the Wolf Man in the monster mash ups, but I don’t think he carries a film well on his own.

It is obvious that the Frankenstein franchise was treated with the most care by Universal (again, the studio showing preference to KARLOFF) and the first two films from that line are two of the most respected movies in horror history. The only Frankenstein movie that does not make my list is 1942′s  The Ghost of Frankenstein.

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HAPPY HALLOWEEN TO ALL!

31 Oct

And what a beautiful Halloween day it is here in Lansing, Michigan — mid-40s, windy as heck and rainy! Actually, the rain has backed off, but it’s still pretty dreary outside, should be good weather for trick-or-treating tonight.

My plans are a bit different than what I initially imagined for the day, but so far I’ve watched My Bloody Valentine 3D (my thoughts coming on this later today, I hope), then it’s over to Connie’s parents’ house for trick-or-treating, then it’s back home to watch horror movies and eat candy. I bought the 3D edition of Friday the 13th Part 3 when I bought My Bloody Valentine 3D, so I plan on watching that today as well.

I plan on having one more post today. So check back later this evening after you’ve already had your fill of candy. I didn’t get to touch on everything I wanted to this year for Halloween Scream, but there’s always next year, right?

The Return of NES Horror Games

30 Oct

Ah, now we’re moving onto the more famous (and infamous) of the NES’ ghoulish output…

Castlevania (1986)/Castlevania II: Simon’s Quest (1988)/Castlevania III: Dracula’s Curse (1989)

The original Castlevania was one of my first games for the system, so I was into it for that reason alone, but it was always a hard game for me and I never got very far in it. All told, I’m not really a fan of the game or the series. I get frustrated easily with games and the Castlevania series is too maddeningly difficult for some with a short-fuse like me.

Frankenstein: The Monster Returns (1991)

A Frankenstein Nintendo game? Hey, cool! Oh wait, no it’s not. I played this one a couple of years ago and it’s pretty bad.

Chiller (1990)

An unlicensed Nintendo game, but if this game doesn’t deserve mention, I don’t know what does. If you’ve never played this game, you owe it to yourself to download find a copy. Easily the sickest NES game ever, but it’s fun in a “I feel dirty for doing this” way.

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Movie of the Day: Black Friday

28 Oct

Black Friday (1940) is yet another Universal movie starring Karloff & Lugosi (Maybe I should’ve just called this “Boris & Bela Month”). Much like The Invisible Ray, it’s not a horror tale as much as it is science fiction. Actually, at the core it is science fiction, but for most of the movie, it plays like a crime thriller.

Karloff plays Dr. Ernest Sovac, who ends up performing an unproven and illegal brain transplant on his friend Professor George Kingsley and gangster Red Cannon after they are involved in a car accident. Sovac’s intentions are honest, if puzzling, as he takes Cannon’s brain and puts it into Kingsley body, wanting to save the life of his friend (yet he does not tell anyone he has done this). To me, all that does is save Kingsley’s body if it is Cannon’s brain that’s kept living. It may be Kingsley’s body, but it really is Cannon.

Thankfully, it is later explained that only “part” of Cannon’s brain was transplanted into Kingsley’s body and both personalities are fighting for control in a Jekyll & Hyde twist (thus explaining how for the film’s first twenty minutes or so, it is the Kingsley personality being seen).

Anyway, Sovac learns that Cannon hid $500,000 somewhere and he decides to draw out that personality in an attempt to get the money. Sovac convinces Kingsley to take a trip with him to New York and he proceeds to give Kingsley a tour of Cannon’s usual hangouts in a sly attempt to get Cannon to take over. Of course, Cannon has scores to settle with his former gang,

Where is Lugosi in all of this you ask? Good question. He plays Marnay, a member of Red’s gang who is also trying to get the money and he isn’t used as much as he should have been, really only being the third most important character in the film. I don’t even think Karloff and Lugosi shared a scene in this movie. That’s just bad form, Universal! Kingsley/Cannon is the movie’s central character and Stanley Ridges did a great job going back and forth between kind polite professor and agitated gangster.

All in all, as a gangster movie, its a decent film and I enjoyed it better than The Invisible Ray, but I’d rather see Karloff and Lugosi sharing scenes in a horror movie.

Initially, Lugosi was scripted to play Sovac and Karloff was to be Kingsley, but Karloff insisted on playing the Sovac role and Bela got shuffled down to the second-tier Marnay character.

My Two “Go To” Halloween Costumes When I Was A Kid

26 Oct

There’s always a great assortment of children’s Halloween costumes. In fact, I’m kind of jealous of the kids today because their costumes are so much better than the cheap licensed plastic masks with the rubber band and restrictive plastic bodysuits we wore featuring our favorite cartoon characters.

As uncomfortable as those licensed costumes could be, I was always excited to get one just so I could be Superman, He-Man, Chuck Norris or an officially licensed “G.I. Joe” (that’s right, no Duke or Flint, you were just a generic green shirt). But as I got older, those costumes didn’t really suit my taste. I wanted something a little more “real”. Probably around age 10 or so, I left the plastic behind and found myself pretty much trading off between these two themes besides the odd ghost or “skull guy” outfit:

G.I. Joe aka “Army Man” (when I got to be too cool to act like I still enjoyed G.I. Joe)

A real G.I. Joe! Forget the silly bodysuit with “G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero” plastered all over it. And the great thing about being an “army man” was that as a young male, you probably own the complete outfit and accessories already and maybe even use it every weekend when you play “war” with your friends. I never had to buy a single thing whenever I opted to enlist on October 31st. Toy guns, toy knife, army jacket, army helmet/marine hat, military fatigues… I had it all, baby! No wonder I played this role for so many years.

Dracula

Another fairly easy costume to put together (I’m beginning to think I picked these two themes so much out of pure laziness), but it required a few accessories to be bought initially. I had the wig (complete with a sweet widow’s peak), fangs, cape with the super cool collar, and even a medallion to wear. I usually would wear some black dress pants and a white button up. Add a dash of homemade blood around my mouth (with the option to buy some face paint to make myself a bit pale looking) and I was transformed into a classic, respectable Halloween costume.

What were some of your Halloween standards?

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