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The Spirit Of '76 Moviethon by
Richard
Of DM
In the summer of 1976, when I
was 2 weeks old, men in black cloaks came to take me away. My family was
living in Great Falls, Montana when one afternoon someone banged at the
front door. My mother answered with me in her arms and asked these
mysteriously garbed individuals what they wanted. They told her that they had come
for her son. Frightened but headstrong, my mother held me closer and told
them to leave immediately. Perhaps it was something in her eyes or her
voice that stole their resolve but the men in black cloaks quickly
retreated from the yard. Only feeling safe after she had shut and locked
the front door, my mother looked at her young son and realized that he was
something special.
Now the story keeps changing and I’m probably embellishing it here. When I
first heard this tale from my mother, there were men in black cloaks. But
recently they have morphed into just one man dressed as a monk who came to
take me away. I have no idea if this story is true and my mom is very
vague on the details. But that’s what she told me. Whatever really
happened that day, it seems to me that it had something to do with horror.
The theme of this moviethon is all things 1976 but there is a twist. The
rules are simple: 1) the horror films in question have to have been
released sometime in 1976 (not just in theaters at the time) and 2) they have to be titles that I’ve never
seen before. So many fantastic things happened in that magical year such
as
The Omen,
Carrie,
Werewolf Woman,
Plot Of Fear,
and
Burnt Offerings
but I’ve already friggin’ seen them. Oh well, this moviethon is about
mining for the unknown in hopes of beholding the wonderful (and terrible)
discoveries waiting for me in my birth year.
For further preparation, I looked at newspapers from 1976 on microfilm to
see what was playing in theaters that year and I also watched 1976 TV on
the blessed Youtube. "The Charo TV Special" was especially entertaining
although almost all of the jokes centered on how no one could understand
what she was saying. In order to truly envelop myself in half-assed
research I picked up the 1976 edition of one of those Remember When
booklets at our local Bob Evans (random facts appear below). That's like receiving a master's degree
for the entire year!
Friday
The usual Friday afternoon
post-work stuff is made particularly awful by the wicked humidity. We hit
the CVS on 56th street so LeEtta can have wine and then we quickly pick up
some dinner (Wendy’s salads are almost healthy). Once dinner is consumed
and everything seems to be in order, it is time to begin. The lousy
foulness I’ve been experiencing all through the day have melted away now
that things are about to start. This horrible hypochondria has been
haunting me ever since the werewolf moviethon was almost ruined by a dang
head cold.

“Okay, shark-boy, I’m gonna
break your fin.”
5:17pm
Mako: The Jaws Of Death
First, a little back story on
obtaining this film. I found a VHS copy of
The Jaws Of Death
on Amazon used for less than a buck. When I got the tape and tried to
convert it to DVDR, everything went to shit. My VCR started making this
high-pitched whine and the film was playing in a terribly distorted and
unwholesome manner on my TV screen. Even though I figured it was a lost
cause, I brought the tape to my friend Nafa who is something of an expert
at VHS repair. After unspooling and re-spooling the entire tape and running
it through an impressive looking tape-cleaning
machine, we got it to play again and I
managed to get it on DVDR, finally.
After just a few minutes into this flick, I’m already regretting having
Nafa go to all the trouble rescuing this piece of
shit. Sonny (played by
Richard Jaeckel) loves sharks. I mean really, really
loves them. He gives
them names like Mattilda and Sammy. Unfortunately, he’s totally naïve to
the ways of the world (that’s putting it nicely) and puts his trust in a
pretentious
scumbag like Mr. Whitney.
Down at the world-renowned Rustic Inn, we have the lovely
Karen (played by
Jennifer Bishop), an underwater dancer, and her sickeningly obese husband
Barney (played by someone named Buffy Dee). They soon discover what a
total sucker Sonny is and quickly take advantage. These people want to use
him and his sharks for some reason or another and it’s all going to end in
tears and blood.
Whoa, this movie almost just redeemed itself. Getting to see Sonny’s 1,000
yard
stare is pretty priceless. I love how everyone takes turns shitting
on this guy when he is clearly deranged. Sonny rescues Karen from some
would-be rapists and one of them is Harold “Oddjob” Sakata. After an
awkward kiss between Sonny and Karen, I realize that Sonny has probably
never kissed a non-shark person before. Uh oh, things are going south as
Sonny realizes he shouldn’t have trusted these
evil people.
Man oh man, between the endless underwater scenes and all the poorly lit
nighttime scenes, this is one murky ass movie. Take the poor quality of
the film and match it with the cheapness of the videotape and the end
result is more than a little challenging to watch. Thankfully, I can still
see Barney in all of his sensual
glory. Of course,
Mako: The Jaws Of Death
has all the tension and drama of a bathtub fart. Oh good, a flashback
sequence! This explains everything! I want to go to sleep now. If there
was ever a time to nap during a moviethon, it is right now.
As the
climax of this ass festival gets closer
and closer, a horrible realization has just hit me: I’ve seen this film
before. How depressing is that? I go out of my way to avoid films I’ve
seen before and this sneaky bitch turns out to be a (happily) repressed
memory or some shit. Oh Florida, why do you want to hurt us with your hurricanes? And it’s
over. Sonny got his revenge but the angry townsfolk got their comeuppance
when he was eaten by his own sharks. I hope that by revealing a big
whopper of a spoiler like that encourages everyone to avoid
Mako: The Jaws
Of Death.
Random 1976 Fact: The "Son of
Sam" claims his first victim in July.
Cigar Break
After that
Jaws Of Death
business, an early cigar break is essential. The father-in-law hooked me
up with a fistful of cigars last time I saw him so I’m all set in that
department. The weather has changed. A steady breeze has kicked in and the
humidity has been lifted making this July evening quite pleasant. I smoke
a Bohio cigar and wash it down with some Arizona green tea. Very nice. The
cigar isn’t rolled very well and is falling apart in my hands but the
flavor holds out so I’m satisfied. Once that’s done, I head back in for
another flick.

“Do you really wanna talk to that piece of puke?”
7:32pm
Drive-In Massacre
Drive-In Massacre
introduces itself with some fake Santana opening credit music. Seeing that
the magic of the drive-in has been captured on film forever, I’m already
feeling good about this one. The couple getting hot and heavy in their car
at the beginning has a problem: the guy is too busy watching the movie
while his chick wants to jump his bones. This is the 70s, you friggin’
moron, you’re supposed to get it on. Better hurry before the AIDS comes. That is just so sad and it’s even
sadder now that they’ve just been brutally murdered by a psycho killer who is
stalking the drive-in. Whoa, that cheap gore sure is sweet and
sassy.
The
miserable cops, Detectives Mike and Larry, show up to question the
owner of the drive-in, Mr. Austin Johnson, who is described as being the
“perfect asshole”. Johnson just said “wang-bangers” and I think I’m going
to have to strive for
perfection myself. We are introduced to
Germy, our
special buddy, who’s wearing what looks like a Peter Pan hat minus the
feather and who has the illustrious job of waving the cars in and picking
up trash. Now the soundtrack sounds like three disjointed organ grinders
playing at once. So it’s as perfect as Mr. Austin Johnson.
The film slows down for some psychobabble and some dull police procedural
stuff but it hasn’t thrown me yet. The cops are a real riot shaking down
their chief suspect, the local
pervert who utters the line: “I just wanted to beat my meat!”
I just saw some boobs; the first of the moviethon. In order to catch the
killer stalking the drive-in, one of the detectives dresses up in drag for
a goofy stakeout. You’ve got to love a slasher flick where half of the
characters are ex-carnies.
Drive-In Massacre slows down AGAIN for a
carnival sequence and then some
boring crap in a warehouse. Hello
Arlene! Why hasn’t she been in the rest
of the picture? Oh yes, this is all going to end in tears. The open-endedness
of the finale is absolute
genius. A little nod to William Castle, I think.
This is a marked improvement over
Mako: The Jaws Of Death, to say the
least.
Random 1976 Fact: Life
expectancy is 72.9 years.

“She’s evil and this house is rotten with her memories.”
8:56pm
Death At Love House
Ladies and gentlemen, I
present to you, E.W. Swackhamer and Aaron Spelling AKA The Dream Team!
Joel (played by Robert Wagner) and
Donna (Kate Jackson) visit the mansion
of Lorna Love to help Joel write a book about the dead Hollywood legend.
There’s a cat named Nosferatu, a ghostly figure running through a
courtyard, and some mention of the Malleus Maleficarum (which LeEtta
points out as being totally out of context here). Spooky stuff, let me
tells ya. But I’m really just afraid of Joel and Donna’s friend
Oscar who
always shouts when he speaks.
John Carradine kicks ass as usual which is good since the plot just ain’t
doing it for me. Joel’s dad was one of the mysterious Lorna Love’s lovers
and… Well, there are some
sepia-toned flashbacks. That’s great. Beware the duder in the black goat’s head cloak. His name is Father Eternal Fire and
he was a holy man “of sorts”. Was he the one who tried to steal me as a
baby?
Things start getting freaky when we meet the nutty
Marcella (played by the
legendary Joan Blondell) and hey, hang on a minute! That’s the luscious
Marianna Hill from
Messiah Of Evil as Lorna Love. Score! The scene where
one of Lorna’s films comes to life and starts calling to Joel is
surprisingly well done and hypnotic. Oh shit, Donna is getting the cold
shoulder as Joel becomes more and more obsessed with the dead actress.
Death At Love House is pretty tame and
the plot is convoluted as hell but I’m having a
good time. The film has a decent full-bodied soundtrack and the climax
(despite the cheese) is awesome. Of course, everything has to go up in
flames. Whoa, that denouement was abrupt. LeEtta expresses her
dissatisfaction with that super quick wrap-up and I am in total agreement.
So I guess everything just turned out okay then. That’s just like in real
life.
Random 1976 Fact: "Afternoon
Delight" by The Starlight Vocal Band is a number one hit.
Saturday
You know, I’m starting to get
sick of the whole “something must go wrong every moviethon” bit. We
decided to call it quits early last night so that we could get a jump on
the films. Ha ha, a jump indeed. We get up bright and early, go to the gas
station, fuel up, and the car won’t start. Luckily, a guy there is nice
enough to get my 1978 (not ’76) Ford Thunderbird going again with a
jumpstart. At AutoZone, we find out that my battery is toast. Luckily, it
was still under warranty, so we get a new battery for $2. We immediately
get breakfast, hit the grocery store for moviethon supplies, and head back
home.

“My name is Morgan and I play football.”
10:10am
The Food Of The Gods
Bert I. Gordon brings us a
flick that I could have sworn that I’d seen before but after only a few
moments of this schlocky nonsense, I realize that I’ve seen its 1989
sequel. Morgan (played by
Marjoe Gortner of
Starcrash)
delivers some crummy foreshadowing in his voiceover. To sum things up:
nature is sick of mankind's BS and is making animals grow all big and stuff. The
end. Okay, there’s more to this film than that but it’s all logic free
cheese.
Attack of the giant rats! Attack of the big rubba bug! Attack of the giant
rooster! This is anything but dull, that’s for sure. Oh crap, those giant
maggots are really
nasty. Ida Lupino is very charming as the perpetually
freaked out Mrs. Skinner. Careful lady, they’re using the old good
scientist/bad scientist routine on ya. Some of these
lame effects are
starting to get to me already. Well, look at that, the homely chick named
Lorna the actress I
had a major crush on from
Legend Of Hell House!
She fell down a hole? What a dumbass.
Why do giant rats make cat noises? Whatever the reason, these rat attacks
prompt my wife to start laughing like a madwoman. I am starting to strongly dislike
the treatment of the rats in this movie. They’re shooting them with
paintballs, knocking them about in little explosions, and drowning them
for the climax. Hmm, that really took the fun out of this one. I rarely
get worked up about animal rights but that seemed excessively cruel to me.
God, I’m such a whiner. Next!
Random 1976 Fact: A new car
costs $4,557.

“I’m sick of his God-damned jokes.”
11:45am
The Clown Murders
Any film that starts with a
rousing game of
polo has got to be good, right? Ugh, 7 minutes in and I
already don’t care. Come on, duder, this has a good ominous soundtrack,
give it a chance. I’m talking to myself already. Speaking of animal violence!
There’s a gratuitous chicken beheading. Hmm, is that better or worse than
the rat torture from
Food Of The Gods?
Whatever, this film is Canadian, they don’t have the same rules that we
do.
Fat jokes and headless chickens? Can do.
This strange ass flick is well acted but the plot is ridiculous. Our
“heroes” cook up a plot to kidnap the lovely
Allison in order to stop some
land deal from going through. This is one of those seemingly innocent but
idiotic schemes where things invariably go very wrong. It doesn’t help
matters much that one of their gang is crazy
Charlie who still has a thing
for Allison. I think my initial allergic reaction to
The Clown Murders may
have been too hasty. This is such a bizarre little thriller with a knack
for building tension. After the POV stalking kicks in, I feel more at
home.
This Rosie guy is a complete piece of shit. LeEtta would like him to be
the first one to die. His name is
Rosie. You know what? There is some
creepy business buried in this movie. There’s a killer stalking these
folks but that’s not central to the plot. Or is it? I’m certainly
surprised by all of this. Adventurous viewers, this batshit flick is
waiting for you. Then it just goes on this total
exploitation bender.
Okay, that’s John Candy rape.
Oh, this would have been perfect for
Doomed WTFiethon. I’m not sure about
this film. It’s gone from horror to exploitation but I… I’m speechless.
It’s the weirdest one so far. Either way, this is equal parts boring,
entertaining, and
painful to watch. Talk about your roller coaster shifts
in tone. This
beast is unclassifiable.
Random 1976 Fact: The
Pittsburgh Steelers are the Pro Football champions.
Short Break
Nafa calls to say that he will
be joining the moviethon festivities in a little while. He informs me that
people are crashing their makeshift planes into a nearby lake. That sounds
reasonable but way less entertaining than this hot movie action. LeEtta
makes some guacamole dip which we devour and then it’s back to the flicks.

“All right, big creature, here we come.”
1:42pm
Creature From Black Lake
This soundtrack is very, very
special. Could this film like actually be good? My expectations for a
Bigfoot movie are rock bottom, so this flick’s got a fighting chance. Our
two main goofballs, two old college students named
Reeves and
Pahoo, are
traveling to the swamps of Louisiana to find Bigfoot. Is Pahoo slang for
something? ‘Cause it sounds awfully dirty. Pahoo is obsessed with
hamburgers and French fries. And just like me, he’s all fired up about
Cajun women!
This flick is done surprisingly well and well acted even. Legendary
lazy-eyed Jack Elam plays
Joe, the crazy old freak who had a negative
experience with the creature (it ate his friend). So, I guess that
explains why he has a
doll in a noose in his shack. Them there Bigfoot
creatures do that to a man. Holy crap, that is one
hot waitress there. Pahoo and Reeves are going to gather evidence with the height of 1976
technology: a tape recorder.
Orville is a good old boy with a story to tell (strictly off the record).
We meet his pappy who is played by the incredible
Dub Taylor. Don’t even
mention the creature around this guy.
Whoa, Pahoo just flipped out. Now
Reeves and Pahoo are picking up
chicks. Two bad one of the girls is the
daughter of the sheriff. That might be problematic. Jeez, these guys are
crappy anthropologists. Maybe they can tell me what hole the company that
released this shitty pan and scan DVD are hiding in.
This movie is entertaining as hell… sometimes. There’s lots of comic
relief. Guys, come on, stop arguing! We have got to stick together! Well,
the
creature isn’t all that impressive but at least they keep it hidden
pretty well. Wow, what an awful ending. So that’s it. Really? To answer
that question, we are tortured with some wimpy ending song with pitiful
lyrics that I've already forgotten.
Random 1976 Fact: Nelson
Rockefeller is the Vice President of the United States.
Almost Nap
I decide to take one of my
world famous power naps. I get about 10 minutes into it when LeEtta knocks
on the door and tells me that Nafa has already arrived. So, I don’t get my
nap or the fantastic disorientation that comes afterwards. Boo hoo! Nafa
brings me an awesome bicentennial
flag which I immediately hang up to inspire us. Thanks to that
flag, 1976 is so much closer now.

“I don’t want to kill! I don’t want to kill! I just want to live!”
3:38pm
Embryo
Uh oh, this one opens with a
very important
message that sends chills up my… Well, not my spine, that’s
for sure. Ladies and gentleman, Rock Hudson. Sadly, Doris Day will not be
joining us for this bleak and muddled little movie. Hudson plays Paul, a
doctor who seems to have lost his way since the death of his wife. So one
dark and stormy night, he runs over a pregnant Doberman and gets inspired
to try and save the unborn puppies with science. Maybe that constant boom
mike dipping into the shot can help.
Things fall apart when Dr. Paul calls his son in the middle of the night
and asks for a million cc’s of dog plasma. DOG. PLASMA. His son Gordon is
more than happy to oblige. He and his pregnant wife Helen (who was the mom
on “Alf”) show up to see a
puppy fetus in a big tank and they aren’t fazed
at all. I guess when you’re drowning in pseudoscience, everything just
seems normal. Paul manages to do a bunch of stuff to so that the puppy
fetus is full grown in a week. My God, he’s created a super pooch!
So what do you think our newly mad scientist will do next? Get a
human
fetus and try it again. This is such a sad little film. He’s smoking in
the same room where the baby is developing in the tank. That can’t be
good. Okay doctor, we are no longer listening to your gibberish. This
movie is dragging. The entire suspense at this point is the horror and
revulsion we’re supposed to be feeling at this unnatural birthing. Gee, I
wonder why this wasn’t a huge hit.
Now it’s the Helen Keller story as Paul teaches his instant woman (played
by the lovely Barbara Carrera) to speak. He names her
Victoria and it
isn’t long before we know something ain’t right. She tends to hide behind
doors with sharp scissors when someone frightens her. Poor Diane Ladd
(yeah, she’s in this too). Her character,
Martha, is the nails on the
chalkboard in this flick. Between Victoria’s wide-eyed disconnectedness
and Martha’s smarty pants cattiness, we’re really in a pickle here.
Roddy McDowall is in fine form here (read as: he gets to look incredulous
and shout a lot). NO! We’re back in the poorly lit laboratory again. Half
of this movie is hard to see and this busted ass DVD doesn’t help either.
Can we please just go back to the dog plasma? No we can’t because Victoria
needs human fetus extract because Dr. Paul fucked up the growth
acceleration procedure because... I think this movie will defeat us.
I love the synthesizer in the soundtrack and there are some
eerie moments
but damn, this shit will just not end. Victoria starts
aging really
quickly and her list of victims grows because she just can’t get enough
fetus juice. The ending finally comes with a car chase and the rest is
just painfully hilarious and
overblown melodrama. Nafa, LeEtta, and I are
totally confounded. It ends and we’re kind of ruined but the bad movie
adrenaline is pumping. Nothing to do but go to Taco Bell.
Random 1976 Fact: Bacon is
$1.05 per pound.
Dinner
It’s bright out and very hot.
The clouds in the sky aren’t substantial enough to give us any relief from
the sun. Nafa and I head out to Athenos to get LeEtta a veggie platter.
Like a dumbass, I forget the spanakopita. We park in the Taco Bell parking
lot and walk next door to CVS. Nafa grabs some Powerade and I get a 20oz
Sunkist (the caffeinated orange soda). After getting stuck in line behind
a scattered and bizarrely behaving Spanish family, we walk back to Taco
Bell.
Despite experiences from previous moviethons where fast food has done me
wrong, I order way too much food for myself and get a big Mountain Dew.
Nafa and I jump in the car and head back home. On the way down 56th
Street, we pass the legendary Morrisound Studios where death metal bands
such as Deicide and Malevolent Creation have recorded their albums. Nafa
and I decide that our very un-death metal band should record there as
well. Back at the apartment, we find that Shelly has arrived. She and
LeEtta are on the patio smoking while Nafa and I dig in. Once LeEtta has
eaten and Shelly has ordered her Chinese food, we move on to the next
movie.

“Who dares come between an Irishman and his drink?”
6:33pm
Naked Massacre
This movie is political
because it takes place in Belfast. We see some hot Irish nurses and I begin to suspect that
we’re in for a trashy ride. This disgruntled
Vietnam vet is going to
make some trouble. There’s lots of dialogue about nothing in particular
and jump cuts galore. The most priceless scene in the history of film: the
bad guy (does he have a name?) paying an old hooker to dance naked while
he plays “Oh Susanna” on the harmonica. Okay, she isn’t really dancing so
much as spasmodically jerking to the music while her big saggy everything
shimmies to and fro.
Things are starting to look very grim for the four of us viewers as this
trashy piece of trash finally reveals itself. So this guy kidnaps a bunch
of nurses living together and starts raping and killing them. Even worse,
he tells them bad jokes. Was Richard Speck really this “charming”? This is
some seriously horrible shit. I’d had a just a tiny taste of exploitation
with
The Clown Murders, this is the real
rapetastic deal.
We are all heckling
Naked Massacre to keep from
screaming. Talk about a
totally wrong selection for a moviethon but that’s what happens when you
pick a bunch of unseen titles. This is just unpleasant as hell and we’re
all mortified and pretty embarrassed. I will say this in the movie’s
defense: if I was watching this alone, I probably wouldn’t feel so totally
miserable right now. But honestly, this movie just sucks. The
end.
Random 1976 Fact: Reese
Witherspoon is born on March 22nd.
Cigar Break
We are more than happy to go
outside after that. I light up my H. Uppman cigar which is really, really
good. It’s got a ton of flavor and it goes very well with Sunkist orange
soda. Shelly joins me in the smoking with her cloves while Nafa just hangs
out. The summer sun is finally going down and it is much cooler outside.
Thank God. I apologize profusely about the
Naked Massacre incident but
nobody is too upset about it. The “Oh Susanna” scene was almost worth the
pain of the rest of the film. It was shitty but not gloriously shitty like
Embryo. After the break is over, Nafa takes his leave but Shelly hangs on
for more flicks.

“There’s nothing wrong with my capacity!”
9:04pm
Land Of The Minotaur
Donald Pleasence and
Peter
Cushing go to Greece. Flame on, minotaur, flame on! We are treated to a
ceremony featuring some retarded KKK-like
duders in multi-colored robes.
This breathy and weird Brian Eno soundtrack is seriously friggin’ awesome.
Then a trio of hippies show up. They disappear and Father Roche (Pleasence)
goes looking for them. He calls up Milo, a detective friend from Boston,
who looks like
Father Ted. Feck!
The locations for this flick are
beautiful and there’s plenty of
atmosphere to spare. “You’re out of line, Tom!” So Peter Cushing is
Carpathian? That’s nice. Of course he’s the ringleader of this busted ass
minotaur cult that needs human sacrifices for some reason. He’s the one
who is responsible for all the suspicious glances in the village too.
Damn, that
Laurie chick (played by Luan Peters of
The Flesh And Blood
Show) is so crazy hot. She’s in peril, people. We need to keep a better
eye on her. Mm-hmm.
I refuse to believe you, sensible priest! This movie is really strange and- Ha! I knew it! There are men in black cloaks! Finally, they are
here. My mom was right. They came from Greece to get me. So much freakin’
oddness going on here. I want to say that this movie is boring but it is
just so awesome. And explosive! So the only minotaur in the movie is a
statue? That is rather
lame but yet I can’t wait to watch this one again. I
think we’re finally out of the rut. Next!
Random 1976 Fact: The Supreme
Court votes to reinstate the death penalty.

“None of us is without sin, be sure of that.”
10:32pm
The House Of Mortal Sin
Oh
Jenny (played by Susan Penhaligon), you could so much better. Man, this chick is whipped by her
scumbag boyfriend. Enter one seriously
creepy priest who happens to be one
twisted and murderous motherfucker. Father Xavier Meldrum is his name and
he kills the boyfriend in a very
brutal manner. Father Meldrum isn’t alone
in his lunacy.
Miss Brabazon is helping the priest keep it real. Brabazon
is played by the incredibly creepy Sheila Keith from
Frightmare.
The priest secretly tape records people’s confessions, is stalking Jenny,
and is killing all the men close to her. Now he’s killing to cover up his
other killings. That isn’t very holy behavior, dude. This might be
director Pete Walker’s
finest hour. We’ve got some great kill scenes,
cool cinematography, and priestly temptations. I
think the director may have been taking notes from the Giallos for this
one. The cyanide sacrament! I saw that one comin’ a mile away.
Unbeknownst to Father Xavier, Mrs. Brabazon is going behind his back and
torturing his poor decrepit
mother. His mother, mute from a stroke, tries
to
warn people. The
subplot with Father Bernard and his love affair with
Jenny’s sister comes to a horrible end as well. Wow, this movie is
outrageously cruel, malevolent, and dark.
The House Of Mortal Sin accomplishes what many strive
but fail to be. I’m looking at you,
Naked Massacre!
Random 1976 Fact: "Happy Days"
is the number one TV show.
Very Short Break
Shelly is leaving and LeEtta
is getting ready for bed. That leaves little old me to fend for myself.
Hey, how about if I eat a taco? Buying too much food at Taco Bell earlier
was a blessing in disguise. I put sour cream and hot sauce on this taco. I
eat this taco. I put another movie in the DVD player. Things are going to
be okay.

“The world is crazy.”
12:23am
Who Can Kill A Child?
Things are not going to be
okay. There is no light at the end of the tunnel. The very real and very
horrifying news footage at the beginning of this film lets me know in an
extremely unsubtle way that the fun is over. My God, this introduction is
8 minutes long! The world is chaotic and filled with hate. You will be
destroyed exquisitely.
Our biologist buddy, Tom and his pregnant wife Evelyn, arrive in a small
village in Spain for a vacation. They head out alone to an island nearby
where there seems to be no adults anywhere. The children are oddly quiet
and very suspicious. The beautiful
scenery has given way to an undeniable
eeriness. Things are so very wrong on this picturesque island and the
children are so
ominous, I would have bugged out already.
Who Can Kill A Child? is one of the most
frightening and
claustrophobic
films I’ve seen in a while. The tension just keeps growing. Those kids are gonna be so disappointed. There’s no candy in that old man they’ve strung
up and are now beating like a piñata. Tom is trying to protect Evelyn from the
things he’s seen. Fuck it, man, these kids is evil. This is like
Village
Of The Damned on
meth.
They find one living adult who relates the chilling story of when the
children woke up one night and starting killing all the adults. When Tom
finally lashes out against their attackers, it isn’t cathartic like in a
regular horror movie. There is no relief. This is a
bold and challenging
film from beginning to end that shows you inconceivable horrors awaiting
our protagonists around every corner. And it only gets worse at the end.
Amazing.
Random 1976 Fact: Stephen
Wozniak and Steven Jobs found Apple Computers.

“Death is a place where no one’s ever happy.”
2:21am
A Whisper In The Dark
I need you right now gothic
Italian horror movie. My God, this movie is pretty already. A fog
enshrouded mansion? Thank you! We are introduced to a typical Italian
family. Normal except for their son, Martino, who insists that his
invisible friend Luca is real. Whoa,
Martino is one freaky and angry
little kid. Well, with horrid
sisters like his, I’d be freaky and angry
too.
Mom of the feathered hair is clueless and dad is
John Phillip Law of
Diabolik (but is also clueless). Their marriage is on the rocks and their
son going nuts is really quite bothersome.
That was strange. Martino describes a dream that sounds like a scene out
of
Who Can Kill A Child? A self-referential moviethon? It’s hard to focus
when this kid is so dang
hypnotic. The score by Pino Donaggio is very
haunting and adds to the dreamy atmosphere. I know something terrible is
going to happen. The family is starting to fall apart and things are
becoming more and more surreal.
Ha ha! The sisters don’t get to go to the
party!
Some
comic moments come out of nowhere. I realize that I can no longer be
trusted. My
notes are getting more and more erratic and it is clear to me
that only folks really, really into Italian horror will enjoy this. No, even they won't like this one.
A
Whisper In The Dark is visually stunning but is there any substance? The
spell of the mysterious specter of Luca is taking over.
Joseph Cotten (of
Mario Bava’s
Baron Blood) is here as the professor whose come to study
Martino’s condition. How could a duder this unsettling ever make it as a
child psychologist?
The
party sequence is so outlandish and beautiful that I have ceased to
wonder what happened to the plot. Drinking vodka and smoking in the bath?
Jeez professor, when are you going to fix that dang kid’s crazy brain?
Oops, he’s dead! I have a funny feeling about this movie but I can’t quite
put my finger on it. I love the POV camera angles letting you know that
someone is always watching. Leave mom alone, she’s
goth. No wonder the
reviews for this film were so bad. That ending wasn’t really an ending at
all. Mom and dad have screwed and all is right with the world.
Random 1976 Fact: Sonny and
Cher resume their TV show, despite their real-life divorce.
Trouble
It's 4:15am and I just put in
the last film of the Moviethon:
Mansion Of The Doomed.
I’m about 5 minutes into it when I realize that I can’t even look at the
screen, my eyes and head hurt so bad. This isn’t fun anymore. I stop the
movie and write down this gibberish: “I can barely moves. My eyes are
distant shores. Nobody feels this way while my cat coos in his sleep.
Sorry almost made it.” I am now going to haul my ass off to bed.
Many Hours Later…
I wake up around 10:00am
Sunday morning and I really need to get out of the house. I’m pretty
depressed when I wake up. I realize that I have one movie to go and that I
should have been able to get through all ten movies yesterday. But then
LeEtta reminds me that I should just start giving myself a schedule for
these dang things. I feel run down but alive as the wife and I run to
breakfast and go catch
Hellboy 2 at the theatre. How un-moviethon and
1976-inappropriate is that? Oh well, we get back home and I return to the
final film.

“No! I’m a scientist! No more nightmares.”
3:37pm
Mansion Of The Doomed
The movie opens with some
stock footage of eye surgeries that are just plain old nasty to behold.
Something tells me that we’re gonna be violating some eyes very soon. Oh
great, another mad scientist. I hope this one doesn’t have to send out for
his dog plasma. Richard Basehart plays
Dr. Chaney who has to conduct
illegal and experimental eye surgery on his daughter Nancy. He feels just
a tad guilty for breaking her eyes in a car accident.
A very young
Lance Henriksen (from
Pumpkinhead and a million other awesome
things) is on board as Nancy’s fiancé. Dr. Chaney drugs the guy, steals
his eyes, and then locks him up in a cage (with electrified bars!) located
in the filthy basement of his mansion (of the doomed). When the eye transplant
doesn’t take, the very evil doctor starts kidnapping more and more people.
God, this movie is great. It’s claustrophobic and perfectly
grungy in
almost every way.
I sure hope Lucio Fulci got to see this one with all the eye violence and
gaping blood-filled eye sockets we get to see. I really don’t like
Nancy
at all. Waa, I’m blind so my life is over, waa! Well, at least she’s
better than the doctor’s washed out assistant,
Kathy, who assists the evil
bastard in all of his bastardliness. Mad scientists should never have
children or wives or friends or colleagues. They’re a goddamned liability.
Character actor
Vic Tayback is totally underused as the detective trying
to find out what’s up with all these empty eyeholes.
Seriously, duders, this movie is messed up. Instead of
Eyes Without A
Face, this is
Face Without Some Eyes. This is just one of the most
satisfying horror experiences I’ve seen in a while. Why is
Mansion Of The
Doomed so friggin’ obscure? Could be that crappy soundtrack. I am consumed
by the evil badness of these people keeping their eyeless victims alive in
the basement until they starve to death or kill each other. Things go just
as
bad as they should and everything falls into place just as horribly as
it should. It’s all about the
eyes.
Random 1976 Fact: Tawny Godin
of Saratoga Springs, NY becomes the next Miss America.
The End
This will forever be known as
the moviethon that made John Candy cry or at the very least, the cruelest
of all moviethons. Sure, I got burned a couple of times but by watching 13
unseen films (with
Mako being the sneaky exception) but that’s just part of the adventure. The most startling
aspect was their brutality. There were more than a few eye-opening scenes
as well as entire films that were just painful to watch with their
unrelenting torture of their characters. What can you do with a moviethon
with a mean streak a mile wide?
So, have I beaten 1976, the year of my birth? I have to say no. There are
too many horror titles released that year that remain out of print and
will have to be acquired for a sequel. And once again, I’ve learned that
poor scheduling, evil junk food, and OD’ing on caffeine can screw up the
whole scene. With Marjoe Gortner as my witness, I will conquer my
inadequacies as a moviethoner and become the man that I was always meant
to be. I will not let the men in black cloaks win. And mother, I promise,
you did not save your son’s life for nothing.
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