Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Good Night, 2019!

Whereas last year felt to me like a time of great harvest, 2019 felt to me like a year of hard work and hard decisions. It was not without its accomplishments - I wrote, recorded, and edited more than 20 new audio commentaries, roughly 60 new blog entries, several new articles and essays for Quentin Tarantino's New Beverly Cinema blog (some actually written at Quentin's request), the Foreword to Tanya Constantine’s memoir OUT OF MY FATHER’S SHADOW, and also added a second Saturn Award and two new Rondo Awards to my mantel. In the midst of all this (with some days off for general sloth and other days dedicated to feeling either hopeless or uninspired), I also managed to complete my MAN WITH KALEIDOSCOPE EYES novel, finish the first draft of my 1960s Joe Sarno book (its polishing is already underway), and take an important step toward getting my long-neglected novel THE ONLY CRIMINAL finally into print. Last but certainly not least, I also managed to set up the groundwork to protect my musical collaborations with dear Dorothy Moskowitz Falarski and stream the first of them (“Merry Christmas Anyhow”), which has been a very special joy.

So as this busy year ends, the stage is somewhat set for a happy harvest next year. I did not leave myself much time to attend to physical maintenance or personal relationships, which I regret and hope to amend in the coming year. 

Other 2020 plans include seeing my Nick Cave-inspired novella and soundtrack into print through PS Publishing, finding a publisher for my Sarno book(s) and starting work on the second volume, and hopefully doing some work toward a new novel. In a sane world, all of this would constitute a full plate but bills must be paid, so my first priority will be the stack of exciting new audio commentary assignments already awaiting my attention. 

Thank you all for your interest, attention, and support of me and this blog these past twelve months. Wishing all of you and yours a safe, productive, and loving New Year! And as always, "responsibrate celebly" tonight!

(c) 2019 by Tim Lucas. All rights reserved.

Monday, December 23, 2019

My 13 Favorite Fantastic Blu-rays of 2019


1. ULTRA Q (Mill Creek Entertainment)
The forerunner of ULTRAMAN and its many spin-offs, this complete set of 28 half-hour episodes is not entirely what one might expect from its legacy. Some episodes are indeed about new Tsubaraya monsters (and some thinly disguised old ones) arising to crush cities underfoot, but its real basis is THE TWILIGHT ZONE; there are also unsettling stories about existential situations, haunted houses, science fiction, and childhood imagination - and its all shot in gorgeous 35mm black-and-white, giving this most satisfying package the flavor of a self-contained Japanese new wave fantastique festival. Mill Creek has also issued similar sets collecting the spin-off series ULTRAMAN, ULTRA SEVEN, ULTRAMAN GEED and ULTRAMAN ORB.


2. LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD (Kino Lorber)
One of my favorite movies, given a breathtaking 4K Studio Canal presentation and couched in some of the year's best supplementary features, including a dazzling, enraptured, in-depth interview with assistant director Volker Schlöndorff, actual 8mm home movies documenting the behind-the-scenes reality of the production, a fascinating visual essay by James Quandt, and a booklet essay by K. Austin Collins. I must also mention that it contains a new audio commentary by me; I gave it my all, and it's one of the more than 100 I've done of which I'm most proud.






3. HAMMER VOLUME FOUR: FACES OF FEAR (Indicator)
Indicator's fourth box set of Columbia Hammer titles is, to put it plain, their best yet, collecting Terence Fisher's THE REVENGE OF FRANKENSTEIN and THE TWO FACES OF DR. JEKYLL, Seth Holt's suspense thriller TASTE OF FEAR (aka SCREAM OF FEAR), and Joseph Losey's masterful THE DAMNED (aka THESE ARE THE DAMNED), which may be my own favorite Hammer film of all and a science fiction film I consider equal to METROPOLIS at the very least. The films have not been equally upgraded; REVENGE is given a powerful 4K reading (if you know and love the film, and whether you saw it theatrically or just know it from lesser home video incarnations, the red lettering of the main titles will knock you back in your seat) and THE DAMNED's 2K upgrade is lovely; but this is not to say there's anything disappointing about how the other two look. I found TWO FACES (another Hammer favorite of mine) a revelation in its uncut form. As always, Indicator brings in a number of British Hammer authorities to provide opinion and context; especially appreciated is David Huckvale's talks on the musical scores of the various films, and the female perspectives brought to bear on the heroines of each picture. I've yet to delve into the audio commentaries, but we get Stephen Jones and Kim Newman on REVENGE, Josephine Botting and Jonathan Rigby on TWO FACES, Kevin Lyons on TASTE, and Kat Ellinger and Samm Deighan on DAMNED - the billing alone promises fascinating listens. This is a strictly limited edition of 6,000 numbered copies. Follow this link for a complete breakdown of the remarkably thorough contents.





4. UNIVERSAL HORROR COLLECTION VOLUME 1 (Scream Factory)
Collecting the remaining prime collaborations of Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi - THE BLACK CAT (1934), THE RAVEN (1935), THE INVISIBLE RAY (1936) and BLACK FRIDAY (1940) - this box set brings together 2K scans of all but the first title (which is nevertheless beautifully detailed), along with an engrossing set of commentaries by Gregory William Mank, Tom Weaver, Gary D. Rhodes, Steve Haberman, Randall Larson, and Constantine Nasr. These are the foremost scholars on the subject and their talks take many different approaches to their subjects, ranging from great intensity, fannish veneration, scholarly distance, juicy gossip, even occasional irreverence - sometimes all in a single commentary! The set also includes a background documentary about the two stars that graduates from disc to disc like chapters from a fat, rollicking, illustrated book exploring their personas, their respective fortunes, and their much-speculated-upon rivalry. Scream Factory has since issued two more such collections of the studio's most macabre B-pictures (VOLUME 4 is coming in March), as well as a stand-alone release of Robert Florey's MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE (1932) with Lugosi, which stands as one of the finest film restorations of the year.


5. THE DEVIL RIDES OUT (Scream Factory)
This the first-ever Blu-ray release of this Hammer classic in its original form; an earlier UK release tinkered with the sadly unfinished climactic special effects footage in an unfortunate attempt to bring them up to date. Seeing it again confirmed a few things for me, but I can sum them up in a single line: this is arguably the best work Terence Fisher, Christopher Lee, and Richard Matheson ever did for the screen. Happily, the disc gives the film all the contextualizing it deserves, including the Christopher Lee/Sarah Lawson commentary from the previous DVD release, a new and invigorating commentary shared by Constantine Nasr and Steve Haberman, and featurette input from Kim Newman, Jonathan Rigby, Marcus Hearn and others.


6. ROBOCOP LIMITED EDITION (Arrow Video)
Ken Russell once famously said that Paul Verhoeven's ROBOCOP was the greatest science fiction film since METROPOLIS, praise that covered half a century. This 4K restoration lovingly preserves all the lustre it ever had and brings us into closer contact with some great performances. In addition to Peter Weller's deeply felt starring role, it's poignant to revisit the raw youthful ambition of Miguel Ferrar's performance. Priced at less than $30 at Amazon, this is much more than a two-disc set; it's also not merely three different versions of the film - just follow the link to look agog at the extras and bonus content. Get it before they're gone. PS: There are also three distinct soundtracks on offer. They're all good, but top marks go to the 4.0 theatrical mix.


7. ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment)
This is the only contemporary film on my list, which is at least partly due to my not seeing many new genre films this past year. Even so, each new viewing of this picture - written by Quentin Tarantino in a kind of celebration of the VIDEO WATCHDOG ethic - makes it more and more intoxicating; on the big screen, it's environmentally absorbing, and on Blu-ray it's Robert Richardson's master class in how to combine camera movement and historically recreated detail. Nearly every shot has something in it that's hypnotic, nostalgic, and loving. Some people will tell you this film doesn't have a plot, but it's there - just really spread out over an impressive territory, much like Los Angeles itself. Accompanied by 20 minutes of deleted scenes and five shorts to enhance one's appreciation of the cinematography, the clothes, the art direction, and the cars, this is an immensely satisfying disc but I wouldn't be surprised if a more deluxe package comes along later. In the meantime, I recommend Twilight Time's Blu-ray of Jaques Demy's THE MODEL SHOP for a terrific aperitif.


8. ALPHAVILLE (Kino Lorber)
Before ROBOCOP was made, novelist J.G. Ballard claimed Jean-Luc Godard's ALPHAVILLE as the greatest science fiction film ever made - and again, who am I to argue? This is another top shelf Studio Canal 4K restoration, but the black-and-white image retains a certain coarse quality that was apparently - as Anna Karina explains in a 4m interview segment - baked into the picture by Godard's use of a then-new film stock that could shoot in low light. Though ALPHAVILLE has enjoyed a past Criterion release, this is the first ever to include the film's English dubbing track, for which many of the film's American admirers have a special affection as it was how the film was initially shown here in the States. My audio commentary aspires to give equal time to Godard and star Eddie Constantine, and it includes input from Eddie's daughter Tanya (who was a visitor to the set) as well as from co-star Christa Lang Fuller.



9. DEAD OF NIGHT (Kino Lorber)
There were earlier horror anthology films, silent ones and maybe one or two sound ones made in Germany, but this is the acknowledged starting point of all those that would famously follow, from DR. TERROR'S HOUSE OF HORRORS to SCARY STORIES TO TELL IN THE DARK. More importantly, the film's various directors (particularly Basil Dearden and Alberto Cavalcanti, though Charles Crichton is also aboard) adeptly raise its shocks to a level stronger than what came before, much as THE EXORCIST would so again in the 1970s - watching it, it's very easy to understand how postwar audiences would have been jolted by it. The perfect fodder for a popcorn and gooseflesh night. There is a slight but persistent scratch on the print but it's worth it to see the film a grade closer to its original camera source; there is contrast and detail here never before seen in earlier renderings. There is a terrific feature-length supplement, "Remembering DEAD OF NIGHT" with on-camera reminiscences from Keith M. Johnston, Danny Leigh, Kim Newman, Matthew Sweet (not the musician), Jonathan Romney, Reece Shearsmith, and John Landis - and I provided an audio commentary, which SLANT Magazine's Chuck Bowen described as "characteristically detailed and erudite." 


10. FRITZ LANG'S INDIAN EPIC: THE TIGER OF ESCHNAPUR / THE INDIAN TOMB (Film Movement)
This lavish diptych was producer Artur Brauner's bid to tempt Fritz Lang back to postwar Germany to direct motion pictures. For confounding reasons - possibly political, but more probably rooted in American International's decision to whittle this opulent masterpiece down to a combined single-feature length - it has never enjoyed the respect here that it fully warrants. The story itself is pure pulp, but the rest is eye candy of the highest caliber - never moreso than when American actress Debra Paget performs two of the most erotic, downright tantric dances in film history. Not available on disc since Fantoma's 2003 DVD set, both films have been treated to 4K restorations but here include only a subtitled German sound option - so hold onto the Fantoma disc if you want to reserve the English dub option never otherwise heard in this country in its entirety. David Kalat provides two remarkably thorough audio commentaries, incorporating a wealth of research. Other supplements include a 21m making-of documentary, a 36m Mark Rappaport visual essay on La Paget, and an illustrated booklet including a Tom Gunning essay.



11. HERCULES IN THE HAUNTED WORLD (Kino Lorber)
The directorial filmography of the great Mario Bava takes another long stride toward completion with HERCULES IN THE HAUNTED WORLD - his second feature as director, his first in robust Technicolor, and an early return to the sword-and-sandal genre. Like PLANET OF THE VAMPIRES, the film is an exercise in how to pull the most rewarding rabbits out of a cheap hat, giving us not only Bava the director but Bava the maestro of special effects magic, all produced using charmingly antiquated yet convincing in-camera techniques. Reg Park makes a splendid Hercules, and the story - though it doesn't quite makes sense and evinces a lot of rewriting during production - never stops moving, whether it's forward or sideways. This double-disc set includes no less than three different cuts of the film (Italian, British, and the extensively tinkered-with American version, never before officially released), along with a lengthy if sparse interview with co-star Giorgio Ardisson (then struggling with throat cancer) and my audio commentary, first released on a 2018 Koch Media BD in Germany. That release included a bonus feature as an extra, Mario Soldati's THE TAMING OF DOROTHY (1950), which Bava photographed.


12. DER GAUNER VON BAGDAD aka THE THIEF OF BAGHDAD (Colosseo Film)
Arthur Lubin's THE THIEF OF BAGHDAD was made around the same time and I've been waiting literally decades for it to make the leap to disc; it's been missing in action since its 1980s release on Embassy Beta and VHS. Though the special effects of this glorious Steve Reeves fantasy are credited to the British technician Tom Howard, and its miniature scale models attributed to Joseph Natanson, the film also features glass matte paintings and second unit direction by Mario Bava - who chose not to be credited to protect his then-new advent into the director's chair. This German import disc marks the first time the film has been available in full widescreen and its colors, art direction, wardrobe, choreography and battlefield spectacles (one involving a magic army of Reeves lookalikes) are a constant treat for the eye, while Carlo Rustichelli's score blends ethereal exotica and darkly suspenseful cues reminiscent of his work on BLOOD AND BLACK LACE. I've heard complaints about not all the shots looking so great, but the brief shots of slightly coarser quality were all mildly compromised by optical dissolves and have always looked this way.




13. BLOOD HUNGER: THE FILMS OF JOSÉ LARRAZ (Arrow Video)
A box set collecting three of the most representative works of the late Spanish specialist in erotic horror and suspense: the debut feature WHIRLPOOL, not available for viewing for almost 50 years; his most famous feature VAMPYRES; and a powerful and ambitious art feature about the potency of myth, THE COMING OF SIN. Audio commentaries by Samm Deighan, Kat Ellinger, and myself help to fill in the blanks of what's missing and to contextualize what's here; also among the extras providers are Kim Newman, Marc Morris, various cast members, and archival interviews and video of Larraz himself, who was quite a character. The 2K restorations of all three features are superb and one sincerely hopes another such set will follow to prolong the conversation.

13 HONORABLE MENTIONS:

1. THE QUEEN OF SPADES (Kino Lorber)
Thorold Dickinson's enthralling British production from 1949, based on an Alexander Pushkin story, is really an historical melodrama and only tangentially fantastic - Dame Edith Evans stars as an aged Countess who is rumored to have sold her soul for the secret of winning at cards, a mystic secret hungrily coveted by a penniless young officer, played by an intense Anton Walbrook. It's as gripping and dreamy as any Technicolor Powell and Pressburger epic.  Graced with a thoroughly informative commentary by Nick Pinkerton, two archival interviews with Dickinson, and an elegant video essay by author-critic Philip Thorne.

2. BLACKMAIL (Kino Lorber)
Includes both the celebrated sound and overlooked silent versions, as well as my audio commentary. According to DVD Beaver, it's at my "usual proficient level and adds significant value and appreciation."

3, SCARS OF DRACULA (Scream Factory)
The extras, notably the new commentary by Constantine Nasr and Randall Larson, and a new 18m documentary, goes a long way toward explaining the shortcomings of a beloved but compromised film.

4. VIY (Severin)
The most celebrated of Russian horror features, distinguished by wonderful special effects sequences by the great Aleksandr Ptushko, makes its Blu-ray debut. Includes "The Portrait," a silent-era short by Ladislas Starewitch, which anticipates THE RING by nearly a century.

5. FANTOMAS THREE FILM COLLECTION (Kino Lorber)
A sterling presentation of Andre Hunebelle's comic crime fantasies, including two sequels that never before had a US release. My audio commentary accompanies the first.

6. THE MAN WHO LAUGHS (Flicker Alley)
One of the year's most impressive 4K restorations, this Blu-ray makes Paul Leni's silent masterpiece almost contemporary in its presence. It also offers a choice of musical accompaniments and a wealth of enriching bonus content, including a Kevin Brownlow essay in the accompanying booklet.

7. QUATERMASS II (Scream Factory)
8. QUATERMASS AND THE PIT (Scream Factory)
Having these two films on Blu-ray is absolutely essential, but under the direction of producer Constantine Nasr, these discs represent important new blocks of research. Three (count 'em), three new commentaries on QUATERMASS II (Ted Newsom, Constantine Nasr and Steve Haberman, and the classic Val Guest and Nigel Kneale track), while PIT includes two commentaries (Bruce G. Hallenbeck, Nasr and Haberman) and more than an hour of new on-camera interviews with various cast and crew members and Kneale's widow Judith Kerr (who has since passed away).

9. THE LOST SKELETON RETURNS AGAIN and TRAIL OF THE SCREAMING FOREHEAD (Hydraulic Entertainment)
Both funded by Kickstarter campaigns, these two fully-loaded discs bring two of Larry Blamire's surreal genre comedies into high definition, with the latter including two different cuts of the film, one being the US debut of his long-withheld director's cut. The extras include audio commentaries, behind-the-scenes documentation, and some brand-new comedy shots that are absolutely hilarious in their inspired weirdness. I'm counting these two as one, so less call this a tie!

10. TOYS ARE NOT FOR CHILDREN (Arrow Video)
11. AMERICAN HORROR PROJECT VOLUME 2 (Arrow Video)
12. ALICE, SWEET ALICE (Arrow Video)
These three Arrow releases feel related, with TOYS and ALICE both belonging (and, to some extent, crowning) the territory defined by Stephen Thrower's book NIGHTMARE USA and the AMERICAN HORROR PROJECT series. The three titles included in the second AHP box set (DREAM NO EVIL, DARK AUGUST, and THE CHILD) are minor disappointments but the way the set contextualizes and analyzes them is essentially faultless and where the real value of the set resides. TOYS is an inspired and unsettling descent into the sick underbelly of 1970s America, and ALICE - a film that may have somewhat worn out its welcome due to its inclusion in various PD DVD sets - is completely revitalized, not only with a much warmer looking restoration but an ace audio commentary by Richard Harland Smith.

13. LET THE CORPSES TAN (Kino Lorber)
Released early in the year, this is the third feature by the exciting team of Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani (THE STRANGE COLOR OF YOUR BODY'S TEARS) and, as with Tarantino, it proposes a new post-VIDEO WATCHDOG meta-language of storytelling. The genre here is crime with western elements - imagine BREAKING BAD co-directed by Alejandro Jodorowsky and Sergio Corbucci. The filmmaking is consistently dazzling.


RESTORATION OF THE YEAR:



HOUSE OF SEVEN BELLES (ByNWR)
The sole work print of Andy Milligan's not-only-long-lost but never-completed antebellum, anti-everything epic has been treated to a deluxe restoration by Nicolas Winding Refn's streaming-only channel and is also due to screen on MUBI. Say what you will about it, HOUSE is unmistakably the work of its wonderfully deranged director/photographer/editor/costume designer and this is an important chapter of his story - the last of his Staten Island productions before he relocated to the west coast. The sort of major recovery one simply cannot stop gawking at in disbelief, this never could have happened without Andy's friend, biographer, and archivist Jimmy McDonough, whose completely redesigned and updated book THE GHASTLY ONE is due in March from FAB Press.

I am acutely aware that my list omits most everything of a contemporary nature and heavily favors the classic titles. I have only included titles I have seen. I'm sure there are many titles not on my list that probably belong there - to name just a few: Criterion's GODZILLA: THE SHOWA ERA FILMS; Arrow's deluxe box sets on NIGHTBREED, the RINGU series, and Akio Jissôji's BUDDHIST TRILOGY; and Kino Lorber's LA PRISONNIÈRE and so many, many others.

All in all, this was quite a bountiful year!  

(c) 2019 by Tim Lucas. All rights reserved.



Saturday, December 21, 2019

Filling The MILLION EYES Gaps

Lorna Thayer, Dona Cole and Paul Birch in the Roger Corman-produced BEAST WITH A MILLION EYES.




Mondo Digital recently ran a review of Scorpion Releasing's BEAST WITH A MILLION EYES and included some much appreciated words for my "in-depth and rewarding" commentary. Not having yet received my contributor's copies of the disc, I was disappointed, however, to learn from their coverage that "There are some extremely long silent gaps here, though that may be due to the same factors involved in other MGM-connected audio commentaries over the past year or so (to put it tactfully)."

It's a personal rule for me, when doing commentaries, to avoid dead air as much as possible, though I do sometimes allow for silences where I want to focus the listener's attention on a particular passage of dialogue, music, or something else on the film's soundtrack. However, MGM (from whom this title was sublicensed) has their own concerns in these matters, which means that all commentaries now submitted to them must be vetted by their legal team. I have no control over this; my contract with MGM stipulates that they are not obliged to use "any or all" of the material I submit, so while I can certainly wish it were otherwise, it's not really my place to complain. However, some consumers have, and it is within my rights to make them feel better about their purchase by sharing here the material they won't find anywhere else.

One of these consumers, Mark S. Zimmer, gave his copy of the disc a close reading and responded with a list of eight spots where he noted significant gaps in my commentary. I have checked his findings against my original typescript, and the following breakdown will show you where, when, and what content was deleted from the track I submitted. 

24m 58s: Anima animal turned loose against the mother... [over a minute gap] If we have any... 

Missing: I haven’t gone back to compare the two, but doesn’t the setting of this film – and its use of the axe – remind you a bit of William Castle’s STRAIT-JACKET, made in 1964?

28m 13s: You've just taken an axe to the family dog... [45 seconds gap] I think Dona Cole pays her dues...

Nothing is missing here.

29m 45s: Force that has taken hold of their very lives...[1-minute gap] For a 1955 film...


Nothing is missing here.

34m 00s: Death of the American Dream...[1 1/4 minutes gap] Again there is the assertion...


Nothing is missing here.

36m 50s: Pet mule or a pet cow... [FOUR+ minute gap] I shouldn't interrupt myself...


Missing:

So were its ideas original or did they come second-hand? And if so, what were its antecedents?

One that I have already hinted at – and which I want to address first, during this chicken attack - is Daphne Du Maurier’s novella “The Birds.” It was first published in 1952, and was subsequently performed on radio by the shows LUX RADIO THEATER and ESCAPE in 1953 and 1954, respectively - and then as a TV adaptation on the CBS series DANGER in May 1955. So screenwriter Tom Filer had numerous opportunities to be acquainted with the story, if the similarities were not entirely coincidental. The similarities are actually extensive. Like this film, Du Maurier’s story is set on a ranch or farm, and it focuses on a man and his daughter, as well as a neighboring family and workman. In BEAST, the threat visiting the ranch is first perceived as an irrational attack of birds; as the story continues, we see them operating with intelligence, even performing kamikaze dives on transformers to disrupt people’s communications with the outside world.

What is most interesting about this connection is the extent to which Alfred Hitchcock’s later filming of THE BIRDS (in 1962) shares ideas in common with this film, rather than the Du Maurier story. For example, when the aerial buzzing of the Kelley home by the spacecraft breaks their glassware and sets all their picture frames askew, the home’s interior exactly resembles the look of Jessica Tandy’s home in the wake of its bird attack. In a few minutes from now, Allan is going to discover his neighbor Ben Webber’s dead body, in a scene that is very similar to the way Mitch / Rod Taylor would discover Annie / Suzanne Pleshette’s dead body in THE BIRDS. Allan’s daughter Sandy will eventually suffer a minor breakdown as a result of the attacks, withdrawing into herself and becoming almost catatonic – as Melanie Daniels / Tippi Hedren would in THE BIRDS. This film also builds to a “Love Conquers All” finale and, in Hitchcock’s THE BIRDS, the little girl played by Veronica Cartwright pleads with Mitch to let her take with them the love birds that Melanie gave to her as a gift. The love birds are a fascinating element because they are so ambiguous – in a sense, they seem to attract the fury of other birds, but as the film reaches its final fade, the birds seem to reach a very tentative state of truce as Mitch and Melanie, armed with the love birds, gingerly navigate a path through these settled furies, the minefield of her trauma, toward a loving relationship. The film is almost a poetic metaphor for what Hitchcock’s MARNIE would be about. If you think Hitchcock was somehow above being influenced by this level of filmmaking, look once again at PSYCHO and its promotional ballyhoo and the prior success of William Castle and his brand of horror exploitation.  

On a related note, in 1961, author Fredric Brown published a novella called THE MIND THING, whose story resembles the alien possession plot we find here. I have read an unconfirmed reference on the internet that Alfred Hitchcock’s company had optioned THE MIND THING in the wake of PSYCHO’s success, but made THE BIRDS instead… if true, this data could provide us with a fascinating explanation for the unexplained bird attacks in that classic motion picture. I’ve heard THE BIRDS described as Hitchcock’s only science-fiction film, and this connection would make that description still more plausible. 

42m 0s: Related in a sense to Him's inability to speak... [1-minute gap] By examining newspaper pages...

Missing: As for the idea of an indescribable alien being finding shelter in a variety of human and animal forms, this can be traced back to John W. Campbell Jr.’s WHO GOES THERE? – first published in the August 1938 issue of ASTOUNDING SCIENCE FICTION and subsequently filmed in 1951 by producer Howard Hawks as THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD, and more faithfully filmed by John Carpenter in 1982 as THE THING.  The Hawks picture, directed by Christian Nyby, could have influenced Corman and his screenwriter, but only as a result of leading people back to the original Campbell story. Even before this well-known tale, Campbell had written “Brain Stealers from Mars” for THRILLING WONDER STORIES, in which alien beings, unknowingly living amongst Earth people disguised as their friends and neighbors, comment wryly on their activities. I should mention that, within a few years of this film, Corman would similarly produce a film called THE BRAIN EATERS (1958), another of his “invisible monster” movies, that was subsequently charged with plagiarism by Robert Heinlein, who saw it as a rewrite of his novel THE PUPPET MASTERS. The conflict was settled out of court. 

44m 12s: Reckless paranoid actions of others... [1 & 1/2 minute gap] My friend and colleague Steve Bissette...

Missing: As I mentioned earlier, another of this film’s clear antecedents is Charles Finney’s novel THE BODY SNATCHERS, serialized over three installments in the pages of COLLIERS Magazine as this film was being scripted and sent into pre-production. Not only is it a valid predecessor due to its alien possession angle – which had also been an important part of William Cameron Menzies’ INVADERS FROM MARS, released in 1953 – but because, unlike the film version that would soon follow, the novel found closure in a “love conquers all” finale, which sends the aliens and their pods back into space, after a hard reconsideration of the value of Earth people. So THE BEAST WITH A MILLION EYES made full use of the finale that Don Siegel rejected in favor of a more political “wake up” statement. But Corman was still just getting started with this picture; had this film been made closer to 1963, around the time of his movie THE INTRUDER, I don’t think the “love conquers all” message would have sufficed for him any longer.

48m 30s: It's closing in, she tells her mother... [45 seconds] Carol doesn't want to leave Alan...
Nothing is missing here.

50m 47s: More content with what we've been given...[2 minute gap] The attack of the birds...


Missing at 52:07: Here we have another scene that strongly foretells Hitchcock’s THE BIRDS, but sadly the film couldn’t afford to do its script justice.

Finding out what was deleted from the track is illuminating to me, as it emphasizes concerns about commentators tracing connections between the distributor's property and other properties they may or may not own. So this is a line of thought that I and other commentators may wish to avoid when approaching future work. Of course, drawing such points of comparison not only enriches the viewing experience but tells us where a film fits into its genre historically; it is an important facet of critical thinking. It's also certainly within MGM's rights to prefer to avoid such discussions altogether. That said, I would like to submit the constructive criticism that it would be to my and many others' advantage if a Commentator's Guide existed to acquaint us film historians with a list of potentially sensitive topics best to avoid so that, in future, everyone might bring their best and most complete effort to the work at hand.

(c) 2019 by Tim Lucas. All rights reserved. 







Monday, December 16, 2019

RIP Anna Karina (1940-2019)

In the wake of Anna Karina's death two days ago at the age of 79, I’ve been wondering what I might say about her that would be as meaningful as she was to me. Of late, I’ve been reading THE NEW NATURE OF THE CATASTROPE, a collection of "Jerry Cornelius" stories by Michael Moorcock and other writers, and somewhere in the book someone, possibly Brian Aldiss, observes that Jerry Cornelius was more of a technique than a character. I believe the same could be said of Anna Karina; she didn't play characters so much as she brought a particular and utterly exclusive color to a picture - and yet she was all women. To be more precise, she was a tone, a fantasy, an insight, a line of poetry that could be applied to all women, or at least the one who, at a given moment, you might love.

Last night, for the first time since I finished my audio commentary for it, I looked at Kino Lorber's Blu-ray of ALPHAVILLE and noticed two things I should have mentioned. First, even though the information is given about her and Eddie Constantine earlier in the track, I wish I had pointed out once again at the end of this movie about the power of words that both she and Eddie went on to write novels. This is an almost miraculously rare detail in cinema. And secondly, I wish I had noted something that Jean-Luc Godard seems to have discovered about her first, and perhaps exclusively: that she was that rare actress who was inherently cinematic. Her face, her expression, her forming of words needed no editing to make her magical. There was something about her that seemed to resist, if not defy, editing. Most actors' performances have to be guided, shaped, even created in the editing.

She was a true fauna of the cinema, a reliable source of truth and light in darkened auditoriums. For as long as her movies survive, generations to come will be able to see and understand in a single throw what we boomers perceived as cinema.

(c) 2019 by Tim Lucas. All rights reserved.