Friday, October 4, 2024

Unseen Terror 2024: The 50s Were Odd (Days 3 & 4)

Yep, here be the annual giant monster movies. And this time, they’re a trio of B&W flicks too? What a treat!

 

Anyways…








 

I have a funny history with spiders: one of my earliest memories of horror films was being scared terribly by 1990’s Arachnophobia. It was so bad that I couldn’t sleep even after the film was long over and my dad kept insisting and stating that spiders weren’t going to crawl into our popcorn or burst out of the walls. Even though the flick is (rightfully) marketed as more of a horror-comedy, it got under 7-year-old Ryan’s skin more than certified hood classics such as Alien or The Exorcist ever did. And yet, less than a year later, the fear was all but gone and I went back to loving them. Time is a strange thing.

 

That being said, I’m somewhat surprised that it took me over thirty years to watch 1958’s schlockfest Earth vs. the Spider (renamed to just The Spider at the last minute by the studio, but whoever edited the opening credits must’ve missed the memo), as it is discussed in a staple VHS tape of my childhood called “Fantastic Dinosaurs of the Movies.” I’ve talked at length about this compilation in the past on at least two separate occasions, but it is essentially a collection of assorted monster movie trailers with everything ranging from classic pictures like Godzilla & assorted Ray Harryhausen projects to pictures like At the Earth’s Core and Son of Kong. Even as a kid though, I wondered “why does the titular monster just look like a blown-up spider instead of an actual prop?”  This was before I knew what “composite” films were, and even if I had gotten around to watching this as a child, I think seeing “spider handler” listed in the opening credits should’ve given away the fact that this wasn’t exactly going to be of the highest quality.

 

Sure enough, I was 100% correct. However, that isn’t necessarily a bad thing in the case of Earth vs the Spider, because it’s almost so incompetent and cheaply made that it’s quite charming. Hell, I’d even bet audiences at the time would’ve been laughing at this as much as I did. The primary cast is full of people who are FAR too old to be playing teenagers (and some could’ve had children of their own at that time for all I know), but not too young to understand ‘B’ movie acting. The plot, for what it attempts to have, has a couple of “teens” go in search of one of their missing parents, only to stumble into the lair of a big spider that screams like an elderly woman yelling with a stomachache because she ate too many enchiladas. They escape, and eventually the spider gets out and causes trouble. I honestly couldn’t tell if the scenes of panicked crowds were lifted from other films, but what I COULD tell while watching this picture was how badly they treated the tarantulas used throughout. I don’t want to sound like a buzzkill (and this might not mean much to anyone who hates arachnids), but scenes of a “comatose” spider are clearly that of an already deceased one flipped upside down, and a quick scene of someone scooching a regular-sized tarantula off a table also bummed me out, as they are surprisingly quite delicate creatures. Then again, I doubt that the rules about animal cruelty during 1950s filmmaking applied to anything that sported six or eight legs around that time. Oh well. On the plus side, the closeups of the spider’s legs look like giant pool noodles covered with hay and hair. I also learned that apparently rock and/or roll can revive a monster that’s close to death. Can we try applying that to modern day science as well?

 

This is a perfectly fine and incredibly silly creature feature. It’s nowhere near as solid as something like Them! or the Toho-distributed bangers from Japan, but considering that it cost less than $150k to produce, it’s a fun low budget monster movie to add to your monthly “bad movie nights” that you may or may not do with your friends. If you lack the ability to make newer friends like me though, there’s also a Mystery Science Theater 3000 riff out there for good measure as well.

 

 

Anyways, let’s get on to another flick from the aforementioned Fantastic VHS tape. This one features an intimidating reptile that up until February of this year, never had a single human fatality to its name! Special shoutout to the “Tooth & Claw” Podcast for that fun little bit of info.





 

 


The Giant Gila Monster was released around the end of the 1950s when this kind of stuff was most likely burning out at a quicker pace than expected. It’s directed by Ray Kellogg, who also helped give us the infamously bad The Killer Shrews (of which this played alongside of as a double feature in theaters). Both were shot back-to-back, which may explain why most of this movie feels somewhat rushed and lacking in, well, everything. The plot initially centers around a young couple who goes missing, and instead of wondering if the two lovers could be in danger, the town sheriff is absolutely convinced that they must’ve run off to get married. I have no clue as to how any person in law enforcement (even from that period) would immediately jump to that conclusion and why he’d have such a monumentally huge problem with that. Would he prefer they were cutting one another into pieces or doing hard drugs? I politely ask any of the older generation to give me an explanation about whether this was normal or not. Anyways, regardless of whatever happened to the young lovers, a giant lizard emerges from the far-off world of “Composite Island” to (very) slowly terrorize the world.

 

So, I’ll get the good out of the way first: lead actor Don Sullivan actually wrote all three original songs featured in the film. While the songs aren’t particularly good, it’s kind of nice that he was willing to do that for the sake of hopefully elevating the quality of the film. After all, there have been plenty of below-average pictures with great songs in them, so why not try at the very least? The Giant Gila Monster is also technically a very short watch, clocking in at around the seventy-five minute mark.

 

As for the bad? Well, even for a short, bad ‘B’ movie, it is HIDEOUSLY boring. If you were the watch the trailer for this online, nearly all the “Gila Monster” footage was shown in there. Things don’t get particularly fun until nearly an hour has gone by, which hurts quite bad when you remember what the running time is. Also, it’s technically a Mexican Beaded Lizard being utilized here, not a Gila Monster. Yes, they look similar, but it’s like when you stare at a milk snake and a coral snake (though in this case, both lizards pack quite a nasty bite).

 

While researching The Giant Gila Monster, I discovered that filmmaking junkie and ‘Z’ movie connoisseur (yes, there are grades in this field) Jim Wynorski apparently remade this in 2012. For those unfamiliar with Wynorski’s filmography, he’s done everything from Chopping Mall & The Return of Swamp Thing to nearly every bizarre porn parody you’d catch on late night Skin-amax in the early 2000s. I’m not quite sure if I’ll seek out his updated take (simply titled Gila!), but if I do, there is no way in hell it can be as sluggish as this was. As was the case with Earth vs the Spider, this was also infamously riffed in MST3K, and the Mystery Science Theater 3000 crew must be commended for taking on something so uneventful and most likely turning chicken shit into chicken salad.






 

If I were to wrap up this bizarre group of movies from the past couple of days, I figured I’d venture outside of my comfort zone (or rather, go for another 1950s creature feature that ISN’T featured on the VHS) but stay in familiar territory. Thus, we get 1957’s The Black Scorpion, a film about a group of kaiju-sized scorpions who emerge from beneath the earth after volcanic activity disrupts their slumber. Plot-wise this is eerily similar to 1954’s Them!, with the titular arachnids even sporting the same chirping sound that the giant ants possessed. This cheapness isn’t terribly surprising when you consider that both motion pictures were distributed by Warner Bros., who likely thought that general audiences would fall for anything. Given the legacy and historical importance of both flicks, I’d say that they gambled and lost on this one.

 

As for the cast and crew, it’s a bit of a mixed bag. Lead actor Richard Denning (also seen in Creature from the Black Lagoon and An Affair to Remember) is strong, but everyone else around him is hit-or-miss. I did feel very bad for leading lady Mara Corday though; in the same year as this, she also starred in an all-timer of bad cinema called The Giant Claw (reviewed right here!). Poor woman couldn’t seem to catch a break around this time. Hell, two years prior to this and The Giant Claw, she starred in yet another creature feature called Tarantula, which perhaps we’ll review on here one day. The characters aren’t anything to write home about, but there are some attempts at fleshing them out a bit when they’re not being terrorized by these scurrying threats.

 

Oddly enough, The Black Scorpion marks the Unseen Terror debut of stop-motion pioneer Willis O’Brien, who helped bless us with influential projects such as King Kong, The Lost World, and Mighty Joe Young (the latter also featured fellow legend Ray Harryhausen’s first venture into animation work). It’s also one of the final pictures in O’Brien’s filmography, as he would pass away five years after its release. Perhaps because of his involvement, that may explain as to why we’re able to see some of the man’s unused props from prior project King Kong in one scene inside of an underground lair. During the first attempt at killing the monsters, a trapdoor spider chases one of the side characters during its second act, and apparently that creature was intended to appear in one of the most infamous bits of “lost” footage from King Kong. That whole sequence (lovingly nicknamed “The Spider Pit”) will likely never see the light of day unless someone gains access to a time machine. As for the scorpions themselves? Well, the stop-motion effects are quite solid, but the close-up shots of their drooling maws brought to mind the giant spider from 1990’s It miniseries (and that is NOT a compliment).

 

This is an overall very fun, if not dumb and slightly dated monster flick from one of the genre’s pioneers. It isn’t one of Willis O’Brien’s finest hours, but for fans of the old school creature feature stuff and “natural” horror genre, this is one you can add to your collection. Come to think of it, this could for a nice double feature with the aforementioned Earth vs the Spider, all while you use a copy of The Giant Gila Monster as a beverage coaster.

No comments: