Glenn Erickson's
Review Page and Column

Tuesday March 4, 2025

Not much of a fan of Miss Reynods, but this Tashlin comedy does it for me …

The Naked Maja 03/04/25

MGM
Blu-ray

This one is for fans of Ava Gardner — an expensive Italian production we have never seen in a decent video copy, now remastered from the original Technirama negative. Anthony Franciosa is an emotional, altruistic Francisco Goya, caught up in the court intrigues of 18th century Madrid. Neither his tempestuous romance with his rumored muse (Ava) nor the story of his famous and controversial paintings are strictly historical — but the artist was indeed investigated by (whisper) The Spanish Inquisition. Also with Amedeo Nazzari and Massimo Serato. On Blu-ray from MGM.
03/04/25

Don’t Torture a Duckling — 4K 03/04/25

Arrow Video
4K Ultra HD

No, it’s not about the secret life of Scrooge McDuck — reviewer Charlie Largent takes the measure of Lucio Fulci’s delirious giallo about horrible crimes and the ugly human responses they bring about — undue suspicion, false accusations, hysteria, more violence. Some pretty twisted people are involved, played by a Class-A cast: Florinda Bolkan, Barbara Bouchet, Tomas Milian, Irene Papas; the new UHD transfer is a beauty. On 4K Ultra HD from Arrow Video.
03/04/25

CineSavant Column

Tuesday March 4, 2025

 

Hello!

It’s a Flying Saucer Scare, from 1957.

Circulated by both David J. Schow and Joe Dante are these vintage newspaper photos that tell a story every Sci-fi fan will appreciate. They say these surfaced years ago, so they must have slipped unseen past these eyes.

According to the message I received, the The L.A. Times ran these photos in January 1957, taken ‘in the mud and dark of night in an area off Lakeridge Road.’  Hearing some talk about a flying saucer landing in the neighborhood, none other than Gloria Swanson and some friends (one of them in a very posh-looking coat) trundled through the mud and took these photos. We like seeing that the practical Ms. Swanson was smart enough to wear her mud shoes; she took off her dark glasses for the photo. As it looks like a dark and rainy day, were the glasses an attempt to maintain anonymity?

‘Just off Lakeridge Road’ places the saucer not in Bronson Caverns, but in Cahuenga pass up behind Lake Hollywood and the Ford Theater, in some clearing between Mulholland Drive and the Hollywood Sign. Monster movie fans will recognize the saucer right away, as being from Tom Graeff’s tiny, over-achieving production  Teenagers from Outer Space.

I think even Roger Corman would make sure to clean up after himself, as this is a rather large piece of junk to leave behind for somebody else cut up and haul away. The Teenagers movie is a hard-luck Hollywood tale … apparently filmed in late 1956, it didn’t surface until 1959. It’s not likely that Tom Graeff saw any profit participation in its national release from Warner Brothers.

(Both images enlarge.)  I saw Teenagers from Outer Space new in 1959 at age seven. I thought it was terrific, and really felt sorry for the teenage spaceman. But even I wasn’t fooled by those big lobster shadows.

 


 

And some scheduling news gives us the opportunity to say something nice about Turner Classic Movies. The blurb is short and sweet — the cable station is presently devoting a ton of air time to  Hollywood Pre-Code Movies,  dozens of them. It’s happening now and continues through March.

They’re listing at least ten we haven’t seen, so the DVR will get a workout. TCM has grown more corporate, but it still provides a basic access to classic films, and they still make it their business to air rare and unusual items.

TCM has its own list, but the one at this pre-code.com link is convenient. It comes in an article that also plugs a new TCM book by Kim Luperi and Danny Reid.

 

Pre-Codes on TCM in March 2025
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday March 1, 2025

An odd militarist fantasy — half Jules Verne, half re-armament plea.

The Keep — 4K 03/01/25

Vinegar Syndrome
4K Ultra-HD + Blu-ray

Michael Mann’s WW2 horror disaster is still a fascinating item, especially in 4K. We marvel at its moody ‘architectural’ atmosphere, that generates dread even when the movie just plain ain’t workin’. The interesting actors include Jürgen Prochnow, Gabriel Byrne, Scott Glenn and a very different-looking Ian McKellen. Elijah Drenner’s full stack of extras digs deep into the hows and whys of this ‘Nazis versus Golem’ opus; we’re still short on guesses as to exactly what writer-director Mann was after. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from Vinegar Syndrome.
03/01/25

Paint Your Wagon — 4K 03/01/25

KL Studio Classics
4K Ultra-HD + Blu-ray

This great-looking (especially now) super-musical splits opinions right down the middle. It charms many who love the songs and the rustic comedy; others find it an overlong departure from the original stage musical. Lee Marvin and Clint Eastwood sing, which for some invalidates the whole show. Yet after a few viewings we can see that they’re croaking and squeaking by — Harve Presnell is on hand to belt out the big tune. The great Jean Seberg carries more than her weight throughout. She makes the ‘liberated’ rewrite work, at least for the stellar threesome in that mountain cabin. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
03/01/25

CineSavant Column

Saturday March 1, 2025

 

Hello!

Just to show you how organized we are here at CineSavant, until a few minutes ago, today’s Column bore the proud date ‘February 29, 2025.’

The tireless Joe Dante has circulated an article from the page ‘boundingintocomics.com,’ by J.B. Augustine.  It discusses a CineSavant-compatible subject — Godzilla — and also gives us another opportunity to praise the late Michael Schlesinger, a much-missed producer, director, studio exec. and super-fan of all things cinematic.

Among Michael’s wildest assignments at Columbia was the writing and production of an American release version of Toho’s Godzilla 2000. It was liked so much by Toho that for quite a while, a followup project was in Columbia’s production hopper …. another American-made Godzilla movie.

The article describes the proposed show as a mix of comedy — the human side of the story — and fairly serious Kaiju monster-stomp action. How cool it is to be able to read all these details about a movie that was to be called Godzilla Reborn.

 

Kaiju History: The Time Spider-Man Killed A Godzilla Movie
That Could Have Starred Bruce Campbell And Jamie Lee Curtis
 


 

And the alert Gary Teetzel tells us of another desired title in the works, now with a confirmed release date …

Coming May 13th is a remastered Blu-ray of 1965’s  Crack in the World.  We’ve viewed Olive Films 2010 Blu-ray many times, and see a lot of room for improvement … dirt here and there, film damage, and splices that jump in the gate. Kino’s disc is said to be a new 4K scan, so hopefully it will be brighter and spiffier presentation all around.

The new disc will have a Gary Gerani commentary, plus a two-part video discussion with Stephen R. Bissette and Tim Lucas.

Our existing, old DVD Savant review is  here.

 

Crack in the World
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday February 25, 2025

He recognizes this woman, but not from the neck up …

Joan Crawford: Toxic Times Two 02/25/25

Powerhouse Indicator
Region B Blu Rays (separate purchases)

She said she preferred to play ‘bad’ women because they were more interesting than virtuous characters, but it’s tempting to speculate that Joan Crawford, the ultimate Hollywood survivor, was expressing her own conflicted personality. With the help of two trusted directors, one her lover, Crawford ruled the roost in a pair of indictments of American womanhood turned vicious, Harriet Craig and Queen Bee. Or, as Powerhouse Indicators’ essayists suggest, did these stories just highlight the anxieties of women in a patriarchal social system?  Each heroine is a prosperous homemaker-turned-control freak, tormenting their husbands and wrecking lives left and right. But Harriet and Eva really know how to dress, so what’s the big problem? On Blu-ray from Powerhouse Indicator.
02/25/25

Blood and Lace 02/25/25

Kino Cult
Blu-ray

It’s bloody havoc at the orphange … the deadly Mrs. Deere presides over horrible mutilations by a scarred maniac, visited on the likes of Melody Patterson, Milton Selzer, and a young Dennis Christopher. Reviewer Charlie Largent confirms that “Terror Strikes AGAIN and AGAIN!” — The big star is Gloria Grahame, who expects her charges to overlook a few random hammer murders, with bodies stashed away in a freezer. Oh yes, a meat cleaver is involved as well. That’s what you get when the state will pay only $2 a day for warehousing orfinks. On Blu-ray from Kino Cult.
02/25/25

CineSavant Column

Tuesday February 25, 2025

 

Hello!

With no pressing column items today (read: random, irrelevant), we’re distracting ourselves from the demolition of the nation we love with the frivolous pursuit of arcane Science fiction titles… our weakness.

We may still be able to review Film Masters’ Monster from the Ocean Floor.  It’s an attractive disc, and said to be scanned from the original negative, something we didn’t expect. It’s Roger Corman’s first solo outing as producer, and I’ve always thought it a winner, even produced at its tiny scale.

We’re also tempted by a foreign Region B import, a U.K. Eureka disc set titled Strange New Worlds: Science Fiction at DEFA. Two of the pictures were scanned from 70mm. The box looks very desirable — especially the extra videos and text extras.

The only issue is one many collectors face — a much- desired title shares a box with other pictures that aren’t so essential. Perhaps the extras will make the difference. The poster above with the words  “Milcząca gwiazda” is the Polish title for  The Silent Star, aka  Der schweigende Stern or  First Spaceship on Venus.

 


 

A lack of compelling news items encourages more disc news. A massive box arrived yesterday, with review discs scattered all over the calendar. All but one are from Vinegar Syndrome. For horror fanatics, it’s quite a haul.

The packaging on these special editions is really handsome. They’ve gone in for heavy boxes to hold the keep cases, vertical sleeves and boxes that open from the front.

I can’t go into full descriptions but there are several here that will get full reviews. I’l compensate with sales links, that ought to please the marketers — fans of these pictures might not know they’re available.

Congo 4K,  Street Trash,  Women on the Run,  Blood Tracks,  Crack House,  Virtuosity 4K,  Deranged 4K,  The Seventh Curse & Witch From Nepal,  Sliver 4K,  Curse of the Devil, The Vampires Night Orgy & Demon Witch Child,  Black Eyed Susan,  The Keep 4K,  The Terrornauts,  Looking for Mr. Goodbar 4K,  Neither the Sea Nor the Sand,  White Cannibal Queen,  The Possession of Joel Delaney 4K,  The Carpenter,  The Mansion of Madness (La mansion de la locura).

Also arrived was a 4K of  Don’t Torture a Duckling from Arrow Video …. a major upgrade.

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday February 22, 2025

The movie wasn’t bad, but this sweet little ceramic character broke our hearts.

The Cat  — Die Katze 02/22/25

Radiance Films
Region A+B Blu-ray

Düsseldorf is ground zero for a superior Deutscher Kriminalfilm that never made it to the U.S.. Heist mastermind Götz George guides a bank hostage standoff from afar, stage-managing the details of an amorous inside job. Director Dominik Graf winds up the tension for this precise ‘puzzle-crime:’  Only ‘The Cat’ knows the full plan, and he’s the one who must scramble to improvise when the cops change their tactics.  Excellent extras tap the director, the screenwriter and the producer. On Region A+B Blu-ray from Radiance.
02/22/25

The Conqueror 02/22/25

KL Studio Classics
Blu-ray

This Golden Turkey embarrassment is far too entertaining to be dismissed as a mere Bad Movie — Howard Hughes’ ode to Mongol barbarians does have perhaps the worst-cast star role of all time, and every third dialogue line is fall-down hilarious, but it’s great fun. John Wayne, Susan Hayward and Pedro Armendariz give it their best. So do a dozen tough guys from westerns and war films, outfitted in the weirdest costumes imaginable. The joke’s not on any of them — we applaud their commitment. Dick Powell’s second units whip up fine action sequences, churning up that red Utah dust — that was lethally radioactive. On Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
02/22/25

CineSavant Column

Saturday February 22, 2025

 

Hello!

 

I think this first item is a Michael McQuarrie link …

It’s one show of a PBS series (?) called Locationland, hosted by author Harry Medved — who I remember spending an afternoon editing with about 40 years ago, putting together ‘Golden Turkey’ clips he had gleaned from VHS recordings.

This show tracks down movie locations, and the subject of this episode is none other than the Ed Wood movie  Plan 9 from Outer Space. Harry is aided by comedian Dana Gould. They run all over the San Fernando Valley, finding various houses, a cemetery, etc. The sound stage where all the interiors were filmed is not very big at all, more like a rehearsal stage.

Harry looks great, and is a good host — the editing of clips and graphics is pretty cute, too.

 

Locationland: Plan 9 Adventures
 

 


 

And correspondent-advisor Malcolm Alcala sent along this more-or-less unidentified short subject. The people who posted it on YouTube say it’s untitled but invent a title anyway. The six-minute piece will gain attention because it is Stop-Motion Animated, and features dinosaurs.

Elaborate puppets represent humans, a couple of strange monsters and several dinosaurs. It does resemble an attempt at a pilot for a kid’s show like Art Clokey’s Gumby. The story begins with a prehistoric egg that hatches. A little girl forms a relationship with a baby Tyrannosaurus; then, a machine called a ‘Radartron’ becomes a time portal for an accidental trip back to dinosaur days.

A number of concepts are shoehorned into the six minutes. The voices and characterizations aren’t the best — everybody looks perpetually anguished — and the surviving soundtrack has innocuous music that doesn’t add much. We wonder if potential investors found the toothy monsters too threatening for kiddie programming — the adult Tyrannosaur has a face like a demon from a Tim Burton animation. Plus the ‘endearing’ finale is almost macabre. A child not yet clued into the concept of death might get quite a jolt from what’s left of the little girl’s ‘adorable’ pet dinosaur named Tina.

The surviving print has only one color register left — red !  We have an attic full of old 16mm prints in the same condition.

 

Radartron – Journey to the Dinosaurs
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday February 18, 2025

They don’t get worse than this … but who doesn’t like Richard Kiel?

Performance  — 4K 02/18/25

The Criterion Collection
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

Donald Cammell’s collision of gangster brutality and drug-soaked decadence steps up to 4K clarity. Excellent extras properly credit the writer-director, whose name is sometimes omitted in favor of co-director Nicolas Roeg. Mick Jagger’s first dramatic role is as a recluse who interrupts his drugs ‘n’ sex lifestyle to shelter a mobster on the run; James Fox is excellent as the sadistic thug in hiding. A psychological transformation takes place when two personalities begin to merge. Also starring Anita Pallenberg and Johnny Shannon. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
02/18/25

Frankenstein Jr. and the Impossibles 02/18/25

The Warner Archive Collection
Blu-ray

The Complete Series  Reviewer Charlie Largent takes on Hanna-Barbera’s catch-all cartoon subject goulash: monsters, superheroes and rock music. Kid genius Buzz Conroy fights crime with his super robot Frankenstein Jr.; and ‘The Impossibles’ is a rock group composed of super-freaks with weird superpowers — ‘Coil Man,”Fluid Man,’ etc. It’s the whole show, 18 half-hour episodes on two discs with an extra animated short subject thrown in for good measure. On Blu-ray from The Warner Archive Collection.
02/18/25

CineSavant Column

Tuesday February 18, 2025

 

Hello!

Since we never post anything with the slightest political bias, today we’ve got a great educational short from 1946, with an important message. We first reviewed it on a worthy old Fantoma DVD called  The Educational Archive: Patriotism, where it led off a selection of classroom films about good citizenship, etc..

We think the disc is OOP, but its short subject Despotism is presently up on Youtube. It is inspiring.

The 10-minute Encyclopedia Britannica short is basically a lecture presentation with an animated slide show / PowerPoint describing a gradient between Democracy and Despotism. Back in 2003 I wrote:

“… an interesting part-animated examination of the difference between a free society and a despotic one, using a number of relative values to indicate how free a country is. Its main positive idea is that no country can call itself completely free, and even despotic countries may have some freedoms working. This is refreshing because the terminology used cuts out the -ism labels and gets down to hard facts. Curiously, the objective standards raised here put today’s America in the ‘at risk’ category: our information system is quickly being consolidated into one source of control, and an emergency has allowed our executive to override constitutional guarantees of illegal search & seizure, and imprisonment without trial or counsel.”

That was 2003; I guess I was referencing post- 9/11 developments. We like that the show is so dry and simple. We still find the arguments compelling … just the facts, immediately understandable, and no emotional baggage.

 

Despotism (1946)
 

 


 

Last Saturday we reviewed a disc called  Fade-In. Friend and advisor Randall William Cook responded to my obvious crush on actress Barbara Loden by sending over a YouTube link to an excerpt from an old Ernie Kovacs Television Show.

Being so well informed, we were completely unaware that one of Barbara Loden’s first major gigs (outside of being a member of the Actors Studio) was as Ernie Kovacs’ regular TV assistant, sidekick and skit-player. There appear to be scores of Kovacs TV shows and specials. From personal experience I only knew (barely) his later on-screen collaboration with the great Edie Adams, his wife.

There aren’t that many opportunities to see Ms. Loden perform. Just to give us a few more minutes with her, Randy sent along this ten-minute clip of Kovacs doing a funny (and sloppy) ‘bad magician’ skit, with Barbara as his assistant and foil:

 

Ernie Kovacs as Matzoh Hepplewhite Saws a Woman in Half!
 

Another forward from Randy: If you enlarge the inset graphic to the right, it’s an article showing one of Kovacs’ creative comedy gags … Barbara Loden ‘starred’ as Kovacs’ very own miniature dream girl … almost a ‘Femlin?’

 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson