Sixty-five years ago, you might have decided to celebrate Halloween by making a late season visit to the Lorain Drive-in on Lake Road. Above is the ad that ran in the Lorain Journal on October 31, 1959. As you can see, it was a special Halloween program consisting of three spooky features.
First up was Horrors of the Black Museum (1959), a British-American horror film. The gimmick here is that it was shown in Hypno-Vista, which "puts YOU in the picture."
Here's the creepy trailer, with a preview of Hypno-Vista. I was kind of grossed out with the needle demonstration. And I probably would stay away from binoculars for a while.
Next up was The Headless Ghost (1959). It's another British film, but this time a horror-comedy. The poster makes it look like a live-action Scooby-Doo episode.Interestingly, its Wiki entry notes, "The film was made specifically as the second feature for an American double bill with Horrors of the Black Museum." So there was no chance it would be on the same bill with one of the Bowery Boys' haunted house flicks.
Here's the trailer. It actually looks pretty good!
Last up is The Giant Behemoth (1959) a British-American monster film. The 'giant behemoth' (is there any other kind?) is a dinosaur, created by way of the usual nuclear radiation. The live action scenes were all shot in Great Britain, but the stop-motion animation of the monster was done in Los Angeles.Here's the trailer. Note how when the creature emits radiation, it is accompanied by a goofy sound.
I'm pretty sure that I didn't see these three films at the drive -in, but I did see THE HEADLESS GHOST and HORRORS OF THE BLACK MUSEUM at the Dreamland the following year, and THE GIANT BEHEMOTH was a Ghoulardi regular.
ReplyDeleteThe binoculars scene still gets me; as I understand, there's an actual pair of spiked binoculars in the Black Museum at Scotland Yard, used in a murder.
HypnoVision = Odorama?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VnvYhhd4tSU
I'm with you on the needle and binocular stuff. Reminds me of Monty Python and their "Crunchy Frog" candies.
I love all these old horror films.At least they tried with what they had available at the time.The campy nature just adds charm to the movie.Whereas with todays CGI technology you can still see that the special effects are fake and are even amplified because everybody today is trying so hard not to look fake that it actually makes the effects look even more fake.And todays movies don't age very well in my opinion.For all the hundreds of millions of dollars that Hollywood wastes on movies,little $20-$30,000 movies like the above will have me in my seat every time.
ReplyDeleteA trailer of Halloween cheese...
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/MljLipQMImk?feature=shared