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DONNA MARIE GOLDSCHMIDT LUCAS
November 7, 1955 - October 10, 2022
AT PRESENT, VIDEO WATCHDOG IS NO LONGER ACCEPTING OR ABLE TO FILL PHYSICAL BACK ISSUE ORDERS. I BELIEVE THE DIGITAL EDITION SALES ARE AUTOMATED AND MAY CONTINUE. I WILL RETRACT THIS STATEMENT IF IT IS FOUND TO BE UNTRUE.
PLEASE UNDERSTAND I AM SIMPLY NOT PREPARED TO HANDLE ANYTHING BEYOND AUTOMATIC TRANSACTIONS AT THIS POINT.
VIDEO WATCHBLOG WILL CONTINUE AS SOON AS I AM ABLE TO RETURN TO MY WRITING.
AS YOU KNOW, DONNA WAS ONE OF A KIND - IRREPLACEABLE. SHE AND I THANK YOU FOR YOUR MANY YEARS OF LOYAL ATTENTION AND ENTHUSIASM, AND THE LIFE YOU MADE IT POSSIBLE FOR US TO SHARE FOR SO LONG.
- Tim Lucas
Photo by Linda Wylie.My love of 48 years, the designer of MARIO BAVA ALL THE COLORS OF THE DARK, and the publisher and art director of every VIDEO WATCHDOG publication, Donna Lucas unexpectedly passed away Monday morning at Mercy Health - Anderson Hospital in Cincinnati, Ohio, becoming unresponsive during a routine test in preparation for later heart valve surgery. She served as the office manager to GENII Magazine for the last few years of her life. She is survived by two brothers and four sisters, their respective spouses, children and grandchildren and a vast number of people who loved her from up close and afar - none closer than me.
We hoped to correct her heart problem and keep this thing running for at least another twenty years, but she has been taken from us. Our talents dovetailed perfectly, but I do not have her gifts, so necessary to keep this website functioning. Do check back occasionally to see if our status has changed.
Please forgive this sudden and unhappy ending to our story, but if you know anything about us at all, you know it was one of the most beautiful ever told.
I’m now up to the last disc in Volume 5 of THE ADVENTURES OF OZZIE AND HARRIET. Only a few appearances by neighbor Thorny (Don Defore) in this, his last season; the show is opening up to new friends like Lloyd Corrigan’s Wally Dipple, Lyle Talbot’s devilish Joe Randolph and Mary Jane Croft as the funny-voiced Clara, not to mention the fledgling musical performances of son Ricky Nelson. I’ve not said anything about these releases since the first two, where I found a number of episodes tampered with musically; it appears to have been done either to recover copyright of the restored elements or to cover periods of silence. However, this unnecessary revisionism stopped with the third volume and the restoration work has generally been sublime ever since. One of the real treats of having the entire series presented in original broadcast order is seeing, for the first time, a surprising number of episodes that disappeared from active rotation in syndication. The funny thing about these rarely seen episodes is that there is usually some content in them that may have later judged as distateful - for example, Hal Smith’s pre-Otis drunk character routines, Ozzie and Harriet trading cute kitchen banter about someday getting a divorce, some sexy appearances in several episodes by Joi Lansing, or Ricky making an off-hand reference to how Coke tastes even better with a little rum in it. (“How do you know that?” Ozzie inquires. “I, uh, read it in a book somewhere,” ad-libs the 16 year-old). Which just goes to show that the “wholesome” image that led to the show’s rejection by the counterculture in the 1960s was really only engineered in selective syndication.
Around the time of Season 4, the sponsors must have noted an absence of displays of affection between the family members; suddenly, Ozzie and the boys kiss Harriet whenever they leave the house or say good morning or good night. And in Season 5 there is a noticeable new emphasis on the family's musical heritage, with Ozzie and Harriet singing some sweet duets, the entire family banding together as a sort of barber shop quartet, and of course Ricky's coltish first attempts at rock 'n' roll. There are some real surprises too - like an episode I saw last night in which Harriet’s women’s club takes up sculpting. Ozzie assumes they’ve all shown up at the Nelson house to sculpt him, so he dresses up as a suitable model in classical Roman garb, only to return downstairs to the living room and find the women sculpting another live model - none other than a pre-Hercules Steve Reeves! Funny thing: when Reeves finally speaks, he’s dubbed (by the series’ frequent supporting player and radio announcer Jack Wagner)! I believe it's during Ricky's first singing performance of "I'm Walking'" that I spotted another bodybuilder in the audience: Brad Harris! Another episode, “The Duenna,” features the original Lina Romay, who was fun to see in this context. Halfway through the series, older son David’s maturing personality seems a little withdrawn, helped along by Ricky’s blooming talent and personality, while Ozzie has developed into a remarkable physical comedian and a pleasingly complex character: a sentimentalist but also a profoundly competitive and insecure man whose pride and boastfulness inadvertently set many plots in motion. This was also the season with show writer Jay Sommers (later the creator of GREEN ACRES) really stepped up to bat with many scripts according him top billing. Especially notable, I think, is “The Reading Room” in which Ozzie’s paternal editorializing about how today’s young people should spend more time reading the old classics leads to the family surprising him with a new reading room in the attic, which leads to fears that he may have outgrown his usefulness to the family - hilarious, but also a little existential and frightening, as Ozzie is once again hoisted on his own petard. Just great television.
* * *
When I learned the Criterion Channel was showing a new 4K restoration of Lou Reed and John Cale's SONGS FOR DRELLA performance, I watched it immediately. Originally shot in 16mm, it looks much better now than it used to, and it still sounds great. For me, the most powerful songs are up front ("Open House" always kills me), but the silent artistic connection and tension between Cale and Reed hold the viewer for the duration. What I wasn't prepared for is how young they both look. This was 1990, which doesn't feel that long ago; but Lou's been gone now for almost ten years. A stinging reminder that 30 years is nothing, and that's why I agree with Andy when he says "the most important thing is work."
* * *
We’ve spent the last several nights watching the Showtime limited series THE MAN WHO FELL TO EARTH. Some months back I saw a trailer for it and wasn’t attracted, but needing another series after SUCCESSION, we chose this one. Though allegedly based on the Walter Tevis novel, it’s actually a sequel to the Nicolas Roeg film with an (excellent) mostly black cast including Chiwetel Ejiofor, Naomi Harris and Clarke Peters, with Bill Nighy appearing irregularly as the elusive Thomas Jerome Newton, the character played in the film by David Bowie. Each episode takes its title from a different Bowie song, a structure which plays out surprisingly well. (Little winks to the Bowie mythos also turn up now and then.) There are little annoyances I could pick on, but most of these become surprisingly relevant to points raised by the story and illustrate the differences between basic alien and earthly temperaments. The important thing to say is that this show is a rarity among science fiction dramas of our time: a serious work of actual science fiction, not just a space opera, one that tackles the most pressing problems of our time; it’s also a worthy sequel though it does clear away some of the mystery that so nicely adhered to the obliqueness of Roeg’s storytelling. The show concludes in such a way that it could have a follow-up season if demanded, while also managing a satisfying closure on its own. Recommended.
As morning breaks, Steckler gives his viewers a moment to absorb what they have seen by inserting some early morning shots grabbed on the fly. In his commentary, Steckler speaks of his attraction to photographing little poetic moments of reality that he's unlikely to remember otherwise and which others might never see otherwise, moments that have the impact of professional still photography. These shots are a perfect illustration of what he means and other similar moments are to be found in his other films as well.
Jerry wakes up late and, after a brief talk with Harold, who’s still under the hood trying to get his heap of junk running. (Shall I stretch the metaphor to recall that Jerry was himself "under a hood" during his own misadventure? Maybe not.) Either way, Harold returns his “kiz” and Jerry drives over to Angie’s house, where he finds Madison grilling burgers and his Angel sunbathing by the kidney-shaped pool. She's forgiving of his actions but remains “a little mad” about the way he acted. Jerry admits to some confusion about his actions on his own part. When Angie admits “I sure would like to know what happened after I left,” she raises a parasol into frame and twirls it, reigniting the hypno-whirl in Jerry’s mind.
Steckler remembered this being a spontaneous decision, prompted by the presence of the parasol at the location, and its incorporation into the scene has an eerie, nightmarish logic that's purely visual. When the parasol is lowered, Angie has become Marge. Jerry starts to strangle her—and only Angie’s mother’s scream and Madison’s rush to her defense prevents Jerry from strangling Angie herself to death. In an editing toggle well ahead of its time, obviously anticipated by Steckler during filming, Marge and Angie flash in and out of his subjective perceptions. Madison succeeds in breaking his death grip and the spell clouding his mind, and Jerry—shocked and ashamed of his own behavior—flees the scene.
Jerry tracks Carmelita down to the backstage apartment she shares with Estrella. Throughout this scene, Jerry is filmed so that he is constantly framed outside and inside Carmelita's vanity mirror. Steckler's commentary asserts that he was simply making himself visible even when he paced offscreen, but it's also an eloquent illustration of his now-divided nature. He demands to know what happened last night behind the curtain.
At this point, the camera adopts Jerry’s POV as he approaches and parts the curtains, once again revealing the spinning Hypno disc. His senses are flooded with images of Estrella compelling him to obey and her recent meeting with Stella, who now must be destroyed.
I don’t want to spoil the ending for anyone who hasn’t experienced the film already. Suffice to say, the story surprisingly sticks to its guns and remains a tragedy, but it builds to an exuberant ending nonetheless. Before it concludes, the film packs its last ten minutes with a full ouse of stylistic surprises: a striking reveal of the Jerry-zombie wielding a flashing blade in the dark that seems to prophesy every single scare in John Carpenter’s HALLOWEEN (1976); an abrupt turn-of-the-tables on Madam Estrella as her imprisoned horde of acid-test rejects escape and run amok (providing Steckler with the perfect opportunity to break the fourth wall with zombies-in-person theater invasions in subsequent reissues; and—just when you least expect it—another music-and-dancing extravaganza, this one set to another instrumental, "The Mixed-Up Zombie Stomp" (again anticipating Tenney's THE HORROR OF PARTY BEACH, which features a Del-Aires song called "The Zombie Stomp"). As some key characters are murdered, the film intercuts the massacre with topsy-turvy images of the Sky Wheel, the Nu-Pike's double ferris wheel which, as mentioned before, had claimed actual lives of its own. The sequence of the police arriving at the amusement park and shooting down the so-called “zombies” benefits from Tom Scherman’s original rubber mask designs (which recall some of the bizarre characters from Revell’s “Weird-Oh” model kits) and the tight editing of Don Schneider, whose dynamism looks forward to George A. Romero’s muscular cutting on his own zombie films, NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (1968) and DAWN OF THE DEAD (1979).
THE INCREDIBLY STRANGE CREATURES… doesn’t end happily, but it resolves its case study in irresponsibility and carelessness in bigger-than-life fashion. In the last few minutes, Steckler takes all of Mother Nature’s fury onto his own shoulders in a truly heroic culmination.
No stunt men were involved; this is real Lillian Gish and Richard Barthelmess in WAY DOWN EAST stuff with Steckler dead center, his performance ascending to heights that recall Brando or Nicolas Cage at their most self-involved. Just as impressive, Atlas King, Sharon Walsh, Madison Clarke and a couple of cops doggedly pursue him through the same salt water assaults in a sequence that encompasses several perspectives, including an impressive high-angle viewpoint in depth. Though its not at all a similar setting, when Jerry finally ascends a high rock, I don't think there's any question that Steckler is summoning a memory of the tragic finale of KING KONG (1933); the sequence follows much the same trajectory and pushes the same emotional buttons.
His pursued of careless fun now behind him, as misunderstanding as he himself is misunderstood, Jerry finally awakens to the real world of responsibilities and other people's feelings. Alas, it's too late and he loses his girl, his dream, and his friends in this ultimate showdown with forces larger than he. When we see Ray Dennis Steckler standing atop that crag rising out of the sea, he not only lights the candle on the cake but presents a powerful heroic metaphor for the filmmaker at bay, surrounded and diminished by all the adversities life can hurl at him. And yet, in the end—with a little help from his friends—he has somehow prevailed. Exactly what he's accomplished is ultimately for others to decide but, in one last show of pride, he plants a flag in this new (and perhaps greatest) level of accomplishment.
It reads "Made in Hollywood, U.S.A."
THE INCREDIBLY STRANGE CREATURES WHO STOPPED LIVING AND BECAME MIXED-UP ZOMBIES!!?, whose very title seems astonished (if not baffled) by its 81-minute appendage, has outgrown its reputation as a bad film and demands to be regarded and discussed more seriously. A snapshot of American pop sponteneity, as it briefly existed during the first surge of the French nouvelle vague and on the cusp of the British invasion, it stands out today as a master class in low-budget technique. It also strikes me as a powerfully confessional, autobiographic, and defiantly individual work and—despite these lofty accolades—one of the most ebullient, entertainingly accessible examples of bizarre cinema we are likely to ever see.
This is literally the turning point in the film and analogous to the origin of all evil, beginning with Adam’s temptation in the Garden of Eden. It’s another probable accident, nevertheless a conscious artistic decision, that Steckler or his cameramen more tightly composed the subsequent shot of the three main characters at their point of divergence with only a portion of Madam Estrella’s sign visible to the right—the portion that reads “Adam.”
When she storms off in indignation, he doesn’t follow her like a puppy—even at his best moments, “he wouldn’t be Jerry if he did.” Instead, he hands over his car keys to Harold, like a man intoxicated, and asks him to see her safely home. He then proceeds to pursue this embodiment of sexual mystery to his doom. The film is exactly 30 minutes into its running time as he buys his ticket to disaster.
Inside the tent (I say it's a tent but the production couldn't afford to actually erect such a thing), a crowd of ticket holders is treated to much more than the usual hootchie-cootchie show. We’re immediately treated to a full-on production number headlined by dancer Patrice Michaels. The film carries no wardrobe credit, so we can only assume that the dancers’ outfits in each number were found at Western Costume or some comparable outlet; however, the imaginative sets were designed by Mike Harrington and the dance numbers choreographed by Bill Turner (Carolyn Brandt’s dancing partner “Bill Ward”) and Allan Smith—and then filmed all in one day, with three cameras rolling simultaneously, after a single rehearsal of each.
That's Sharon Walsh at the left. |
After the dance number, we get a sweetly played little set-up for a later scene as the rakish carny barker (Neil Stillman) approaches one of the dancers, Stella (Tony Camel), for a date backstage. The scene then dissolves to another musical number, this one “Not You,” a country-flavored torch ballad nicely sung by attractive Carol Kay. If one listens attentively to the lyric, Kay might well be expressing emotions that Angie's character is anticipating at this time ("It only hurts / when I kiss someone new / Someone that's... not you").
Released February 10, 1964, THE INCREDIBLY STRANGE CREATURES... was correctly billed as "The First Monster Musical!"—unless you count Universal's 1943 and 1962 versions of THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA. The earlier version was especially qualified, offering far more music for stars Nelson Eddy and Susannah Foster than opportunities for menace by Claude Rains. On June 1, 1964, Del Tenney's THE HORROR OF PARTY BEACH would make a similar boast, calling itself "The First Horror Monster Musical!" The movie does beggar the question of why it opted for such a schizophrenic profile, but the reasons behind Steckler's choice are not so difficult to imagine. First of all, the young audience of this era was equally attracted to monsters and pop music (witness the success of Top 40 songs like "The Monster Mash" and "The Martian Hop," from 1962 and 1963 respectively), and Steckler was ahead of his time in playing both cards. Tenney's film would be the first to follow, and AIP's own BEACH PARTY musical series would eventually go the same route with PAJAMA PARTY (1964, featuring Tommy Kirk as a visiting Martian) and THE GHOST IN THE INVISIBLE BIKINI (1965). Secondly, we shouldn't overlook the fact that Steckler had been cohabiting with Carolyn Brandt for several years at this point, and her interests in music and dancing were a likely influence on the material—and not just to give her something to do. Finally, it also seems that, as a storyteller, Steckler had difficulties sustaining feature-length stories in his films generally. (His 1965 film THE THRILL KILLERS was originally about the three insane prison escapees only, with his top-billed "Mad Dog Click" character added at the last minute to fill the story out.) By adding the songs and dance numbers, INCREDIBLY STRANGE CREATURES... is not noticeably padded and the songs are well-selected in terms of supporting the dramatic material thematically. They offer a virtual libretto for the story.
But Jerry soon finds the object of his mystification in a nearly pitch-black room that appears to be Madam Estrella’s parlor. There Carmelita leads him behind a curtain (we'd call it a Lynchian curtain today) that, once parted, ensnares him in the vertiginous clutches of a spinning Hypno-swirl wheel. The scene then dissolves to a broader room of the darkness surrounding the inviting vortex, inhabited by Madam Estrella, Ortega, and Carmelita.
As Estrella invades his thoughts with directions of how to think and feel, the camera very subtly tips to one side. “See only that which I choose to show you,” she bodes, and the shadows enveloping Jerry’s head narrow to a belt of light crossing his face from eye to eye. As her words take root in his consciousness, compelling him to go “deep into the spinning hole,” the shots of Jerry’s eyes begin to zoom in and out, suggesting a literal brain fuck, accompanied by a sound effect similar to a shy man’s gulp. Mock Brett O’Hara’s faux gypsy phrasings if you will; she sells this scene like gangbusters; the scene evokes macabre memories of John Farrow’s film of Cornell Woolrich’s novel NIGHT HAS A THOUSAND EYES (1948), which—like this film—whose female protagonist shares with Jerry a fearful, paranoid attitude toward the stars.
But what is the purpose of Madam Estrella’s taking control of Jerry? Steckler answers this question without breaking his own spell as the scene cuts to Marge returning to her Hungry Mouth dressing room. Steckler subtly tells us that we are still occupying Jerry’s unhinged perspective because the camera documenting her movements itself performs a full circle, spinning weightlessly around her image in a Hypno-twirl of its own, as she slumps into her chair. Bravely, Steckler leaves the exposition of events to his technique, his mise-en-scène, rather than to his dialogue or some other blunt basis.
If we take the song as a guide to Jerry’s own sublimated feelings, starting with the morose tenor of the piece, he’s gone his own way not only because “what he says, goes” but because he’s frightened of the depth of his feelings for Angela, which could mean the end of his life of “fun.” He’s also likely intimidated by the prospect of becoming family to Angela’s disapproving, conservative mother, a possibility driven still more deeply home by the fact that, off to Snyder’s right as he performs his confessional song, in none other than Joan Howard (who plays Angela’s mother) in a dual role.
Of course, Madam Estrella is puppeteering Jerry to settle her own petty scores and also to make her own prophecies come true, but there is also a certain Freudian interest attached to the fact that Steckler has Jerry programmed to kill the character played by Carolyn Brandt, his real-life wife, rather than Angela or even her adversarial mother. Steckler’s own audio commentary and other witnesses interviewed in the Severin box set, such as Carolyn Brandt and Gary Kent, admit that the Steckler-Brandt marriage was rocky from the start; despite their mutual devotion (they were together eighteen years, married for ten), they had children immediately and were oppressed not only by financial difficulties but by Steckler’s wrestlings with his dreams and his demons, particularly his frequent affairs with other women. These very personal problems seem to lie at the heart of this film, where everything goes wrong at the moment Jerry's spirit of fun and adventure insists on his right to stray from Angela. In this regard, his stabbing of Marge is a symbolic injury dealt to his wife, and the film becomes his confession and his penitence.
We don’t see Jerry flee the scene of his crime. We don’t see whether he remembers doing the dirty deed or not. Instead, the film cuts to him sleeping restlessly in bed, so restlessly that his tossing and turning wakes Harold, whose pillow appears to be at the foot of the same bed. They’re sharing the room like two little boys, and the scene suggests that Jerry has subconsciously taken refuge in his own past innocence. Steckler shot this scene in his young daughter’s bedroom and a further note of the ridiculous is struck by the head of a Flintstones “Dino the Dinosaur” toy poking its purple head out of the shadows. As he sweats and squirms on his mattress, we dissolve into his dream...
As I watched this presentation for the first time, Jerry’s dream sequence is where I first felt myself in the undeniable grip of a master. Remember as you're watching: this is 1963; this is a guy who can’t even afford to shoot in 35mm; and no one on the screen has acted onscreen before. (Steckler himself is just directing here, replaced as Jerry by the male dancer Bill Turner, because Ray had to admit he was too physically clumsy himself to pull it off.) As the spinning spiral bores inside the dreamer’s head, we’re treated to an initially Felliniesque array of the film’s many women, with Marge lounging at the front of them all, her face painted a murderous shade of red. Other women’s faces are painted white, blue, even black and they mock and plague Jerry; a few of them don’t even play a specific role in this film. Angie appears, beckoning to Jerry and then commanding him, like a dog, to “come over here”—as if his nightmare is that she’s become the dominant partner in their relationship, not that he’s lost her.
The dream sequence runs roughly three-and-a-half minutes, and it looks and feels radically different to any other dream sequence to emerge from the horror genre at or prior to this time. Certainly there were earlier horror films that braved this form of expression, like John Parker and Bruno ve Sota’s DEMENTIA (1955) and the Pathé Color delirium sequences of Roger Corman’s Poe pictures (1960-65)—but Jerry’s dream is not merely illogical, symbolic or “psychological”; it’s actually psychedelic, with kaleidoscopic layered imagery and layers of interpretation. The only earlier work it even vaguely resembles would be the short films of Kenneth Anger. It’s four years ahead of Corman’s THE TRIP (1967).
To be continued...
Severin Films' Steckler box set is available here on their website at significant savings.
(c) 2022 by Tim Lucas. All rights reserved.