Glenn Erickson's
Review Page and Column

Saturday May 30, 2026

This confusion between what is and isn’t human is going to have a real affect on the perceived value of human life.

7 Faces of Dr. Lao 05/30/26

The Warner Archive Collection
Blu-ray
George Pal’s production had a hard nut to crack, adapting a highly misanthropic adult novel to serve as a family attraction for all ages. On its own terms it works, with an engaging cast and creative visual effects. Tony Randall’s charm is a huge asset, while Arthur O’Connell and especially Barbara Eden ace their parts. Chilling, disturbing elements of the original still peek out from behind the veneer of reassurance and family values homilies. Fans love the fantastic creatures — Pal’s show is a special effect showcase for the designs of Wah Chang and the Oscar-nominated stop-motion magic of Jim Danforth. Blu-ray brings the visuals up to full quality. On Blu-ray from The Warner Archive Collection.

05/30/26

Night World 05/30/26

KL Studio Classics
Blu-ray

Nope, it’s not a stealth Karloff horror feature, but another of his underworld roles … actually, a semi-underworld role in a nifty ensemble thriller about a Night Club with connections to The Mob. Karloff is Happy MacDonald, and Everybody comes to ‘Happy’s Club’ — including the drunken Lew Ayres and Broadway sharpie George Raft. Showgirl Mae Clarke seems to be everybody’s romantic ideal. The Busby Berkeley-directed floor show is good, the booze flows freely, and the few patrons not cheating on their spouses have some other kind of racket going. Clarence Muse’s ‘philosopher doorman’ is a standout. With audio commentary from Jeremy Arnold, Tim Lucas and Joe Busam. On Blu-ray from KL Studio Classics.
05/30/26

CineSavant Column

Saturday May 30, 2026

 

Hello!

We found something interesting while spooling through a better-than-average compilation of 1930s travelogue pictures of Hollywood and environs … you know, those YouTube things that show up optimized and colorized.

This one has some pretty good items, such as the still-standing radio buildings and the Earl Carroll theater on Sunset, the Griffith Observatory on mostly undeveloped hills, the Hollywoodland Sign, etc. Also, (at 8:04) we see some really handsome shots of the Pan Pacific Auditorium and its distinctive pylons, from right in my neighborhood. The present day replacement building has but one pitiful pylon.

The big surprise was seeing, on the Columbia Ranch Lot, a glimpse from afar of  the giant set for Frank Capra’s 1937   Lost Horizon. The shot pans right from a fake mountain until we see the distinctive art deco towers poking out over the edge of a wall. The really impressive set looks even bigger on screen.  (beginning at 7:22 )

 

1930s – Los Angeles, Hollywood in color
 

Looking online for a good photo, we came across these Instagram movies of the stars posing for pictures on the huge Lost Horizon set — Ronald Colman, Jane Wyatt, John Howard, H.B. Warner. Jane can’t have been happy bundled up in that costume.

 

Instragram On-location footage, Lost Horizon.
 


 

Then, CineSavant correspondent Phil Smoot responded to last week’s column picture of Vincent Price, to write to tell me about seeing a screening of A.I.P.’s Vincent Price horror show  The Last Man on Earth with a completely different main title card … The Damned Walk at Midnight.

CineSavant’s go-to authority on all things A.I.P. is Gary Teetzel, so I asked him if he knew anything about such a title change. It wasn’t rare for distributors and theater owners to ‘invent’ new titles for movies, especially far away from Hollywood. The title might be changed for print ads, but the movie itself would usually retain the original title. John McElwee brought up this subject at least once on his  Greenbriar Picture Shows page, about  Major Dundee.

Gary had heard about the title The Damned Walk at Midnight. He forwarded a picture from the web, supposedly taken at a drive-in theater. Not only does Last Man have a new title card, it’s obviously a studio-produced job. The lettering matches the original design, and the text is cleanly matted over the correct background scene.

My idea of deep research, reviewer’s style, is a double-click to the IMDB. It indeed lists The Damned Walk at Midnight as an alternate title …. but where, how, and why?  No doubt about it, CineSavant is a treasure trove of important mysteries to be solved.

 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday May 26, 2026

An interesting direction for Vincent … and it was very influential for future movies with monsters that start with the letter ‘z.’

Marlowe 05/26/26

Arrow Video
Blu-ray

James Garner takes a spin as the world-weary detective Philip Marlowe — “unassailably virtuous, invariably broke.” An updating of Raymond Chandler’s The Little Sister takes Marlowe to 1969 Hollywood, but the story remains the same: blackmail, gangsters and ice pick murders. Gayle Hunnicutt and Sharon Farrell are the Quest sisters, Bruce Lee a kung-fu hoodlum and Rita Moreno a star’s gal Friday who doubles as a striptease sensation. On Blu-ray from Arrow Video.
05/26/26

The Thief of Bagdad  — 1924 05/26/26

Kino Classics / Photoplay Productions
Blu-ray

Douglas Fairbanks’ miracle film of the silent era is back in a new restoration from Photoplay Productions, with a bounty of extras; we can marvel that this 102 year-old masterpiece is in such good condition. The physical production was mounted on a massive scale, right in the middle of Hollywood: enormous sets, fantastic designs and wondrous special effects. Fairbanks was the silent screen’s first physical Adonis, too handsome and athletic to be believed. With a newly recorded music score. a commentary by Anthony Slide and reels of original outtakes and EFX tests. On Blu-ray from Kino Classics / Photoplay Productions.
05/26/26

CineSavant Column

Tuesday May 26, 2026

 

Hello!

Hey! From The Warner Archive Collection, it’s the FEEL BAD movie of the decade!

Frank and Eleanor Perry’s Last Summer was a shocker in 1969, and a star-making release for actors Bruce Davison, Richard Thomas and especially Barbara Hershey. It was adapted from a best-seller by Evan Hunter, the author behind  Blackboard Jungle,  High and Low and  The Birds.

I’ve heard from time to time from readers wanting desperately to see this Allied Artists release, as many as wanted to see the now-elusive Darker than Amber. The build-up is so great for Last Summer that I wonder what new viewers will think of it. Back in the day, I remember seeing it at least three times in a theater. After it ran its course it more or less disappeared. Desspite being heavily requested on DVD, it was always unavailable.

We’re told that the film was distributed in two versions, an initial “X” rated cut and a slightly trimmed “R” a little later on. The sticking point is a ‘controversial’ rape scene. I didn’t know which I saw in 1969; according to what the AFI has to say, we probably saw the ‘R.’  That was the year of  The Wild Bunch (“R”) and  Midnight Cowboy (“X”).  The conservative theater owners in San Bernardino blocked 17 year-olds from attending, and stopped screening many pictures with those ratings.

But the saving grace for me was the U.S. military, which showed everything released by the majors at its base theaters, as I explain in  an autobiographical article. Being able to see shows like  If …,  Medium Cool and  Age of Consent was a big benefit that my fellow high-schoolers didn’t have.

It looks as if Last Summer will become The Warner Archive Collection’s big rediscovery for 2026. Their copy text says that they’ve resolved a rights dispute, located the original elements and will have a Blu-ray available on June 30. The new 4K restoration will revive the original ‘X’ rated cut; I guess we’ll find out if it’s something new and/or shocking.

In 1969 my teenaged girlfriend and I were strongly impressed by the movie, and somewhat depressed as well. It certainly doesn’t present a favorable view of people.  Later movies like  River’s Edge tried to express the same kind of inbred nihilism, but weren’t as compelling. We hadn’t run into such malevolent personalities, and it probably put us on the lookout for them. Back then I’d have called it the toxic side of affluence, although I’ve met kids and people just as vicious from every strata.

A number of years back somebody did track down what happened to the elusive actress Catherine Burns, who was good in  Red Sky at Morning and amazing in this, but faded from film work almost immediately. I’m sure we’ll once again be reading more about her.

Anyway, that’s the very short explanation for folks wondering what the fuss is about.

 


 

And here’s some very promising news, only a day old; we think it qualifies as Get Up and Dance news. Following up on hints from last year,  Hammer Films has made a bold announcement regarding its top title  Dracula   aka  Horror of Dracula.  They’re promising a new 4K remaster before Halloween, for both theatrical and 4K disc, that will be a version of the film before it was censored by the BBFC back in 1958. In Hammer’s words,

“Painstakingly restored in 4K from the best original archival materials sourced from around the world, Dracula (1958) returns in its most complete form ever presented. For the first time outside of Japan’s original 1958 theatrical release, footage believed lost for over six decades has been meticulously restored and reintegrated into the film. This footage has never been released in the UK or the US, and has never been seen on home entertainment anywhere in the world.”

Well Hokey Smokes, we’re all for that. John Gore says that a pre-censor director’s cut of was simply discovered in the Warner Bros. film vaults. So this won’t be the ragged (but wonderful) rescued fix-up with Japanese shots that came out 13 years ago. Those were an extended scene of Melissa Stribling and Christopher Lee, and added makeup effects cuts at the climax. Rumored unseen footage might include shots of Valerie Gaunt actually biting John Van Eyssen. John Gore mentions that ‘3 minutes of material were deleted;’ we thought the additions would be just a few seconds.

We weren’t fully sure that rights issues would allow Hammer to do a full-on Dracula/Horror of Dracula revival, so this is very good news. So far the ‘new’ John Gore Hammer is one happy surprise after another.

Hammer’s accompanied its announcement is a slick teaser-trailer. We even like its color values:

 

Official Teaser Trailer  Hammer’s  Dracula  The Cut the Censors Tried to Bury
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday May 23, 2026

We witness him create … some works evolve as we watch, changing before our eyes.

Hi, Mom!   — 4K 05/23/26

Radiance Films
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

Brian DePalma’s wild skit + provocation comedy cemented his status as a capable, meaningful filmmaker just before he turned to a commercial career dedicated to the screen effects of Alfred Hitchcock. This new release brings this early Robert De Niro tale, which now resembles an alternate-universe prequel to Taxi Driver, to disc in a new 4K remaster and encoding. De Palma addicts take note: a prime HD extra is the entire feature film Dionysus in 69, a multi-image recording of an experimental play by Richard Schechner’s The Performance Group. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from Radiance Films.
05/23/26

D.O.A.  +  Borderline 05/23/26

VCI
Blu-ray

VCI showcases a pair of independently produced films noir, one a decent programmer and the other one of the best of its kind. Borderline puts Fred MacMurray and Claire Trevor in the middle of drug smugglers led by (who else?) crooked Raymond Burr; D.O.A. drops Edmond O’Brien into a nightmare, when he finds he’s been poisoned and has little time to find out who did him in and why. On Blu-ray from VCI.
05/23/26

CineSavant Column

Saturday May 23, 2026

 

Hello!

It’s awful but it needs to be seen to be believed. That notorious Star Wars Christmas Special has become something to avoid, but it was accompanied by many agonizing TV guest star arrangements involving personal appearances by robots and wookies. Michael McQuarrie found this 1970s example, a Donny and Marie variety special.

Only a part of the show is present. At about a minute-twenty in, they call out the night’s guest stars, all of whom are costumed for a galaxy far away:

“Tonight, our guests are Redd Fox (cloaked like Obi-Wan), Kris Kristofferson (no costume), Paul Lynde (in an imperial uniform), The Osmond Brothers (split screen), and from Star Wars, R2-D2, C-3PO, Chewbacca, Darth Vader — and our own Ice Angels! (cakewalk line)”.

The show has been trimmed down to favor the Star Wars skit, with Donny as Luke and Marie as Leia. A storm trooper chorus enters snapping their fingers. Why wasn’t this filmed in IMAX?

 

Donny & Marie Special
 


 

Advisor Gary Teetzel turns us toward something that might be fun, although it might help to be 14 years old again — a reboot of a classic Japanese fantasy from Toho, and from the effects people that made Godzilla Minus One.

Ishiro Honda and Eiji Tsuburaya’s original The Human Vapor (Gas Ningen Daiichigo) from 1960 starred the great Yoshio Tsuchiya. It wasn’t released here until 1964, imported and dubbed by ‘Brenco Pictures Company’ to serve on a double bill with Toho’s  Gorath. Both pictures soon went to TV, and rights issues have so far held up a U.S. disc release of any kind. In the original, the Human Vapor commits his crimes ‘for the sake of his love, a beautiful dancer.’

Back around 1999, Gary Teetzel and I asked author Stuart Galbraith to loan us his Japanese laserdiscs of numerous Toho classics. They were letterboxed and sometimes in stereo sound, but none had English subtitles. So we picked our way through the fun visuals of  Atragon (why are there so many characters?) and  Furankenshutain Tai Barugon (what, it’s all different!) without really following the stories. The Human Vapor was no exception. I vaguely remember an ending set up as a double suicide situation — could that be correct?

This new streaming promo sees the new Human Vapor shaping up as an action spectacle. It’s a pretty classy teaser edit. The transformation visuals certainly harmonize with the original, and the rest looks reasonably stylish. It’s coming to Netflix early in July.

 

Human Vapor  Official Teaser
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Tuesday May 19, 2026

It may be an inferior version, but Monsieur Quinn is a very good Citoyen sonneur de cloches Q.

Stray Dog   — 4K 05/19/26

The Criterion Collection
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray

The depressed streets of postwar Tokyo are the hunting ground for detective Toshiro Mifune, who lost his service automatic on a streetcar and is desperate to retrieve it. Soulful old cop Takashi Shimura gives him guidance and encouragement; an unhappy showgirl knows how to find the gun, but won’t talk. Akira Kurosawa’s prime goal is to document the struggle of Tokyo’s period of recovery, with millions trying to subsist in the war’s ruins — and to get it past the censors of the U.S. Occupation authority. The new restoration is excellent. On 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray from The Criterion Collection.
05/19/26

Swashbuckler 05/19/26

KL Studio Classics
Blu-ray

Spectacular!  Colorful!  Action-packed!  A big production, big stars, but where’s the movie?  James Goldstone’s pirate picture has energetic action and little else; we salute Robert Shaw and Genevieve Bujold, who generate the star personality needed to keep it on its feet. A bounty of screen talent is marooned in unflattering roles: James Earl Jones, Peter Boyle, Beau Bridges, Geoffrey Holder, Dorothy Tristan. Anjelica Huston doesn’t even speak, but a chicken gets screen credit. Enjoy it for the beautiful locations, worthy stunt work and clever visual effects. On Blu-ray from Kino Lorber Studio Classics.
05/19/26

CineSavant Column

Tuesday May 19, 2026

 

Hello!

Michael McQuarrie came through again — we’ve been checking out this little video prize: 45 minutes of fabulous 16mm home movies from the set of Franklin Schaffner’s original  Planet of the Apes.

It’s the work of actor Roddy McDowall, whose still photos and home movies are legendary. Some of these scenes showed up in featurettes promoting the release of the first Planet of the Apes discs, but this is McDowall’s entire uncut reel.

The location is the Malibu cove that serves as the Chimpanzees’ archeological dig that proves heretical to the Ourang powers that be. If I’m not mistaken, the rocks at the south of this particular beach is the location for the fabulous crane setup and effects composite for the film’s famous final shot.

Everybody cooperates with Roddy and his camera — it looks like a happy set. The 16mm footage was posted by one ‘twilightfan69.’

 

Roddy McDowall Planet of the Apes Home Movies
 


 

And since we’re on the subject of monkeys, this is a good time for a Book Review that I should have posted a week ago.

The book in question is by Ray Morton, whose  Close Encounters Making-Of Book from 2007 is also a good read. This tome is King Kong, The History of a Movie Icon, published on April 2 of this year. It’s an updating, revision and enlargement of a first edition published in 2005.

Especially with its new material, this overall survey of all things King Kong is a good follow-up to George Turner’s older making-of book, which of course only covers the 1933 original. Morton chronicles the entire Kong saga, through the 1933 sequel, the Toho films of the 1960s, Dino De Laurentiis’s films, Peter Jackson’s 2005 reboot and the ongoing series from Legendary Entertainment.

None of the chapters are given short shrift, not even Toho’s effort. This where the fans divide into two groups, where the ‘Willis O’Brien or Nothing’ purists face off against those that see merit in some of the newer versions, or just choose to be non-judgmental. Author Morton is good at organizing the facts in a logical and entertaining way. We read about what the major players Merian Cooper, Ruth Rose and others did to earn their fandom fame, as well as their backgrounds and other accomplishments.

The book sticks to the major ‘official’ Kong films first, which brings in a great many players in films made in different decades. There’s the infamous John Beck, and the beloved Eiji Tsuburaya, the mogul Dino de Laurentiis with his super-Kong given a 99% to 1% split between Rick Baker and Carlo Rambaldi, and Peter Jackson choosing Kong as his pet project after Lord of the Rings.

Along the way Morton offers succinct and (to this date) definitive accounts of subjects as diverse as the ‘missing’ 1933 spider pit sequence, Ray Harryhausen’s work on Mighty Joe Young, the non-functioning robot Kong and De Laurentiis’s full-court press to have said robot win an Oscar. Jackson’s Kong and the Legendary reboot are covered just as thoroughly as the classic versions. And the book winds up with what seems like an endless stream of Kong TV shows, special films, and outright rip-off productions that used the Kong name but sometimes didn’t even have a giant ape.

The text offers up nuggets we hadn’t heard. Apparently the rights holder RKO General was going to sue the makers of the rip-off feature Konga, until its producers arranged to buy a lot of advertising on RKO General’s TV stations.

At about 360 pages, Morton’s book is a substantial read and a good reference to all filmic angles on the Big Monkey of Skull Island. The text is accompanied by many B&W photos and illustrations. It can be ordered from most booksellers; the link given here is a direct line to Bloombury Academic:

 

King Kong, The History of a Movie Icon
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson

Saturday May 16, 2026

Color would have ruined this movie, but they took some amazing still photos.

Million Dollar Legs 05/16/26

Universal Studios Home Entertainment
Blu-ray

Paramount’s catch-all comedy makes zero sense but has a great attitude. It showcases a number of eager funnymen from Vaudeville and silent comedies: W.C. Fields, Andy Clyde, Ben Turpin, Hugh Herbert, Billy Gilbert. Top-billed Jack Oakie is in love with Klopstokian lass Angela; all of her fellow citizens are super-athletes, so he brings a bunch to Los Angeles to compete in the Olympic Games, Ice or no Ice. Silly shenanigans are the rule but everybody shines. Slinky songstress vamp Lyda Roberti gets away with a sizzling ‘cooch’ dance number with the lyrics, “It’s terrific when I get hot!”  The story is by none other than future writer-director Joseph L. Mankiewicz. On Blu-ray from Universal Studios Home Entertainment.

05/16/26

Crack-Up  (1946) 05/16/26

The Warner Archive Collection
Blu-ray

This noir tries something different: an art expert must play detective to find out why everybody thinks he’s gone insane. Who knew that the most dangerous noir creeps are to be found skulking around a museum gallery? Ex- Warner contractee Pat O’Brien tries out RKO for size, with a screenplay that goes in for arty dream montages, yet encourages us to laugh at modern artworks. Claire Trevor’s femme is hopefully not the fatale type, while Herbert Marshall may hold the key to O’Brien’s crazy hallucinations, tricked out by the RKO special effects department. On Blu-ray from The Warner Archive Collection.
05/16/26

CineSavant Column

Saturday May 16, 2026

 

Hello!

If the news from Film Masters is true, we’re in for a pleasant surprise. A series of Roger Corman films are going to be shown at Cannes this year, and it looks like Film Masters is behind the recent restoration of Corman’s gangland saga Machine Gun Kelly. The 1958 feature stars Charles Bronson, Susan Cabot, Barboura Morris, Morey Amsterdam, Richard Devon and Jack Lambert. It’s quite a kick.

In the link to the original (very good) trailer one can see the blurb for a process called ‘Superama.’ It’s not a dodge, like American-International’s misleading ‘Wide Screen’ logos … it’s a variation on the film format SuperScope, grabbing a 2:1 slot out of the middle of a flat image. I saw a 35mm print of Machine Gun Kelly projected at Warners in 1978, when James Ursini was hired to do research for a film company. The anamorphic re-position cropped out at least one hand-held gun positioned low in the frame.

We assume that A.I.P. also made flat prints available … old 16mm TV prints were flat, with lots of ‘free space’ top and bottom. Film Masters says A.I.P. released two features format-adjusted for Superama in 1958, but there is actually a third.

Film Masters promises a ‘larger announcement,’ which we hope will mean a disc release. It’s a nice movie to book-end with Roger Corman’s later studio picture  The Saint Valentine’s Day Massacre.

 

Machine Gun Kelly  — original trailer
 

 


 

Next up, Joe Dante circulated this link to the “Missing Movies Newsletter” for Spring 2026, which celebrates two re-found movies —

The first is a 1989 adaptation of a Jim Thompson novel, The Kill-Off, directed by Maggie Greenwald. The page has a link in which Ms. Greenwald herself explains what happened to her movie, and how she found it.

The second movie is a ‘gritty independent action film’ by Sam Firstenberg, Riverbend, also from 1989. We get to learn the story of the recovery of that film as well.

 

Missing Movies  Newsletter Spring 2016
 

Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson