A trailer a day keeps the Boogeyman away The Omega Man (1971)

THE OMEGA MAN 1971

Charlton Heston plays Army doctor Robert Neville, a lone man living in post apocalyptic solitary urban confinement amidst a burned out Los Angeles, Foraging for supplies by day, and fending off a siege of mutated vampiric survivors by night.

Neville crusades to hold onto his humanity while struggling to create a cure for the plague that wiped out most of the human race.The film is pure 70s driven cautionary tale with a fantastic cast and some great nail biting scenes. One of my favorites from the decade!

Based on the novel ‘I Am Legend’ by Richard Matheson and directed by Boris Sagal  (The man responsible for Rod Serling’s (TV series Pilot)"“ Night Gallery (1969) (segment “The Cemetery”) a favorite piece of television horror for me!

Anthony Zerbe plays Matthias the cult leader of the plague ridden remnants of civilization, who’s fanatical quest to conquer Neville and make him one of them is chilling.

The film also stars the wonderful Rosalind Cash as Lisa, Neville’s potential ‘Eve’ in the new garden of Eden he desperately tries to create, if he can perfect the anti-dote to the plague in time! Neville is framed as a Jesus figure at the end of the film.

Matheson’s story had been screened in the 1964 starring Vincent Price as Dr. Robert Morgan. The Last Man on Earth  is powerfully evocative and unnerving, and holds up as a great bit of visual story telling even today.

Vincent Price in The Last Man On Earth based on Matheson’s I Am Legend

“Pray for the last man alive. Because he’s not alone.”

Happy Trailers-MonsterGirl

A trailer a day keeps the Boogeyman away! Young Frankenstein (1974)

Young Frankenstein 1974

Mel Brooksbrilliant Gothic farce about the legend of Dr Frankenstein, with a humorous spin on it that only Brooks could do! I’m sure Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley is smiling down upon Brooks and Wilder’s adaptation of her iconic contribution to literature, culture and film!

Starring some of THE funniest people in the world, Gene Wilder, Madeline Kahn, Teri Garr, Peter Boyle, Marty Feldman, Chloris Leachman, Kenneth Mars. and Gene Hackman

Some great quotes!

Frau Blücher: Would the doctor care for a… brandy before retiring?
Dr. Frederick Frankenstein: No. Thank you.
Frau Blücher: [suggestively] Some varm milk… perhaps?
Dr. Frederick Frankenstein: No… thank you very much. No thanks.
Frau Blücher: [suggestively] Ovaltine?
Dr. Frederick Frankenstein: NOTHING! Thank you! I’m a little – tired!
Frau Blücher: Then I vill say… goodnight, Herr Doctor.
Dr. Frederick Frankenstein: Goodnight, Frau Blücher.
[horses whinny]
Inga: Werewolf!
Dr. Frederick Frankenstein: Werewolf?
Igor: There.
Dr. Frederick Frankenstein: What?
Igor: There, wolf. There, castle.
Dr. Frederick Frankenstein: Why are you talking that way?
Igor: I thought you wanted to.
Dr. Frederick Frankenstein: No, I don’t want to.
Igor: [shrugs] Suit yourself. I’m easy.

And…No it’s not the music from the sinister prairie dog on YouTube silly, it’s the real thing!

 

Happy Trailers-MonsterGirl

A trailer a day keeps the Boogeyman away! Play Misty For Me (1971)

Play Misty For Me 1971

Dave has a brief fling with a sexy fan who calls his radio program and asks him to “Play Misty For Me” Unfortunately this one-night stand between a savvy playboy disc jockey and an obsessed female fan turns into a nightmarish game of cat and mouse.

Spirally toward a deadly climax once a woman enters the picture.

The story is by Jo Heims, (You’ll Like My Mother 1972, Nightmare in Badham County 1976 and uncredited for Dirty Harry 1971).

Directed and starring that guy with the satin-toned whispering voice, Clint Eastwood, as Dave, Jessica Walter as the psychotically iconic Evelyn Draper, and Donna Mills as Dave’s love interest, Tobie.

Also starring John Larch as Sgt. McCallum.

Original soundtrack by Dee Barton and great use of Roberta Flack’s timeless song The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face. Predating Adrian Lyne’s Fatal Attraction, Walter’s portrayal of an obsessive psychopath is absolutely stunning. Truly one of the most memorable thrillers in film history!

“The scream you hear may be your own!”

“… an invitation to terror…”

Happy Trailers – MonsterGirl

A trailer a day keeps the Boogeyman away! The Devil’s Rain (1975)

The Devil’s Rain 1975

Director Robert Fuest creates an atmosphere of nihilism and dread in this classic 70s horror film starring the brawny brow Ernest Borgnine as Jonathon Corbis/Satan, Eddie Albert as Dr. Sam Richards, Ida Lupino as Mrs. Preston, William Shatner as Mark Preston, Keenan Wynn as Sheriff Owens, Tom Skerritt as Tom Preston, Joan Prather as Julie Preston, Woody Chambliss as John and a young John Travolta as Danny.

Set in the American rural landscape a group of Satanists create a legion of eyeless followers who worship a goat-headed devil, and threaten to banish all who disobey to dwell inside a large blown glass bottle, amidst perpetual rain of the woes and tortures of hell upon them. This ‘rain’ has the ability to melt its victims as if they were made out of Play-Doh!

The Preston family has been broken apart by the cult, some of the remaining family members go on a mission to destroy the cult and force their way directly into the pits of this hellish nightmare to wreak revenge upon Mr Goat Head and his legion of empty eye socket devotees.

Perhaps considered laughable at the time, I saw the theatrical release at my local drive-in on Long Island, and am not afraid to admit that  I was scared shitless by the images of the no-eyed victims. Even John Revolta who had just come off the Welcome Back Kotter craze appeared truly terrifying to me at the time. Still does for different reasons not mentioned here…

I just love this film, for its unique, and utterly creepy manifest, with its great cast and an unforgiving campiness that makes it memorable and fun to watch. Borgnine has a streak of sardonic charm in many of his acting roles, so seeing him don the goat horns and the fiendish snout is precious!

“There have been films about earthquakes, airplane disasters, and blazing infernos but there has never been anything like… The Devil’s Rain”

“The 300-year-old search to damn mankind is over…and the towering terror of the devil on earth is now unleashed!”

Happy Trailers-‘come in out of the rain’-MonsterGirl

A trailer a day keeps the Boogeyman away! The Reincarnation of Peter Proud (1975)

The Reincarnation of Peter Proud (1975)

Featuring the Original Music by Composer Jerry Goldsmith

I see this is going to be yet another casualty of the remake syndrome that our film culture suffers from. Due out in 2013. Don’t get me wrong, there are certain films that can be faithfully re-imagined by the right director/screenwriter and it could add an element of tribute with a contemporary twist that feeds the palate nicely. Perhaps this will be one of them…we’ll see. For now, let’s say that it… won’t have Margot Kidder, Michael Sarrazin, or the heavenly Jennifer O’Neill. All three actors, 70s staples, and fine performers, are engrossing to watch. Sarrazin

(They Shoot Horses Don’t They 1969, Frankenstein, The True Story 1973 The Gumball Rally 1976) has always struck me as a quasi-urbane/ feral cat, sophisticated yet wildly sexy and untamed.Especially with his deeply fluid eyes. And I do LOVE cats!

Yes, I had a huge crush on Michael Sarrazin…I mean look at those lips!

College professor Peter Proud starts to have flashbacks and reoccurring dreams from a previous life. He begins to become drawn to a place that he has never been before yet is so hauntingly and disturbingly familiar. Leaving his girlfriend Nora played by the sexy Cornelia Sharpe behind, he goes on a personal mission to find the truth…

Driven by the cosmic forces that surround his destiny, Peter meets up with his wife Marcia Curtis (Margot Kidder) from his past incarnation. Some how Marcia recognizes in Peter very unique characteristics that are startling to that of her dead husband, Jeff.

Eerily at times, even the sound of Peter’s voice seems to be that of Jeff’s. The film adds a twist of irony and a strain of incestuous actuality when Peter becomes romantically drawn to Ann Curtis played by Jennifer O’Neill, the daughter of Jeff and Marcia. Peter’s daughter from a past life…

Recognizing the implications of the nature of Peter and Ann’s relationship, the anxious and melancholy Mrs. Curtis tries to keep the two young lovers away from each other. But…what is the secret behind the death of Jeff Curtis? And what will happen to Peter in the end?

The film is a soft-core 70s journey into, the psycho-sexual and an indulgence into mysticism. The preoccupation of the 70s with reincarnation and past lives emerging. Peter Proud is a truly, gripping, haunting film directed seamlessly by J. Lee Thompson (The Guns of Navarone 1961, Cape Fear 1962, Eye of the Devil 1966) and written by Max Ehrlich

One of the superb elements of this fine supernatural suspense/horror film is the musical contribution by legendary composer Jerry Goldsmith.

Goldsmith’s original soundtrack adds such a powerfully indelible layer to the film that makes it for me one of the most memorable films from the 1970s.

Not only is Jerry Goldsmith ONE of my all-time favorite composers, but he has also had a profound effect on me in terms of inspiration growing up as a young singer/songwriter.

Here, in this film, his work is perhaps one of THE MOST beautifully poignant and heart-wrenching pieces of music I’ve ever heard. A transcendent solemnity and delicately exquisite introspective journey of the soul through longing, silence, and eventually an eternal unknowing that lingers….

I could not find a proper theatrical trailer of The Reincarnation of Peter Proud 1975 anywhere, but I still felt it significant to highlight the film’s score as it does set the tone for Peter’s self-awareness, his journey back in time, and toward re-encountering his true self.

So here is a little something from the film. I hope you watch this version before you go and see the re-make slated for 2013.

Happy Trailers MonsterGirl (JoGabriel)

A trailer a day keeps the Boogeyman away! Doctor Death: Seeker of Souls 1973

Doctor Death Seeker of Souls 1973

Dr. Death is television and film actor John Considine who plays the let’s say… ultra-exuberant Doctor.

He’s a thousand-year-old magician who has mastered the art of soul transference. Throughout the film, you’ll hear him exclaiming “Enter that body” as animated as Richard Simmons giving exercise instructions! Filmed at Aldrich Studios, Los Angeles, California. Released in Oct 1973.

In his red satin shirt, Considine would make an excellent SATAN!!!!!!!!

Because of Dr.Death’s power to transplant the soul of one body to another, he is able to possess ANY BODY he wants! 

This exquisitely schlocky film was directed by Eddie Saeta who had been assistant director on such memorable films as Brian’s Song 1971, This Property Condemned 1966, and 20 Million Miles to Earth 1957! Also of interesting note the legendary music producer Berry Gordy not only helped finance the film but directed one of the sequences where Dr. Death is trying to convince a spirit to enter the wife’s body.

The film also stars Barry Coe, Cheryl Miller, Stewart Moss, and Florence Marly

I saw this film years ago on a large box of decrepit VHS tape that I purchased from one of those Indie Video Store bin sales. Actually, I still have that VHS and will probably break it out this weekend and watch it again just to hear him say “Enter that body” It tickled me so much the first time around. I can’t believe how awful it seemed and yet how compelled I was to watch this film. Considine is an interesting actor, but perhaps this time it won’t be as much fun, I”ll let you know!

John Considine from an episode of The Fugitive Season 1

John Considine in The Late Show 1977

Considine is an actor who you’d recognize from numerous television episodes, usually playing a scoundrel, a skunk, or a failed man, but he is always a memorable character, and Dr. Death is perfect for him!

2023-UPDATE: in 202o I had the greatest time meeting Considine at the Chiller Theater Expo in New Jersey. We had a good laugh about his role in Doctor Death, and how people can’t resist quoting the lines from the film to him. Also… he was wearing ALL RED! Even his jaunty cap was red. I thoroughly enjoyed chatting with him, about his days working in television, in particular, what a lovely actor Martin Landau was. Here’s to you Doctor Death!

So If you want to join me this weekend, make some popcorn and laugh your ass off, while saying to yourself, er…hey wait…that’s sort of cool, you’ll scratch your head and won’t be sorry for the 87 minutes it takes. Please LET ME KNOW!

“These Women Have Just Seen Their Doctor.”

Happy Trailers and Enter That Body! MonsterGirl!

A trailer a day keeps the Boogeyman Away! The Pink Angels 1972

The Pink Angels (1972)

Very low-budget gay biker flick – “six rough and tumble motorcyclists meet at the side of an empty highway to plan their adventurous excursion cycling to Los Angeles” …

Directed by Larry G. Brown (The Psychopath 1975) and written by Margaret McPherson. Michael Pataki (Dracula’s Dog, Grave of the Vampire 1974) and Dan Haggerty play bikers! Stars John Alderman as Michael and Tom Basham as David, Robert Biheller as Henry, and Bruce Kimball as Arnold

“The roughest, meanest pack of bikers to come down the road since…the boys in the band!”

“Catch the Pink Angels … if you can!”

Before Priscilla Queen of the Desert!

“What the hell is this?”

“That’s a Maiden Form and it’s mine, now give it back to me!”

“Faggotts ???? !!!!!”

“I love you.”

“What!”

Oh what funzie wunzies!!!!! Tootles Folks! MonsterGirl

A trailer a day keeps the Boogeyman away! ABC Movie of the Week special promo

If you’re like me and remember fondly looking forward to the offerings of The ABC Movie of the Week, which was a feast of great 70s directors, writers, film stars and character actors. Stories of mystery, suspense and often the supernatural. Even a few ground breaking stories that featured taboo narratives for it’s day. Here’s a little taste of yesterday…!

ABC Movie of the Week featuring clips from

Run Simon Run 1970

Women In Chains 1972

Ida Lupino revising her role as yet another psychotic iron maiden warden of a women’s prison!

And No One Could Save Her 1973

The Longest Night 1972

Duel 1971


Snatched 1973

Howard Duff and Christopher George in 1973s Snatched

Divorce His Divorce Hers 1973

Happy Trailers MonsterGirl

A Trailer a day keeps the Boogeyman away! Don’t Be Afraid of The Dark 1973

This is one of my all time favorite Movie of the Week offerings from the 70s starring Kim Darby who inherits a family house with husband Jim Hutton and becomes taunted by little demons who live in the darkness and want her to stay with them forever! Directed by John Newland

“Something like this little ferocious animal grabbed at my dress”

“We want you…we want you…we want you…we want you…”

Happy Trailers! MonsterGirl

A Trailer a day keeps the Boogeyman away! Magic (1978)

Nothing is creepier than ventriloquists and their faithful dummies. Here is director Richard Attenborough’s taut thriller starring the ever brilliant Anthony Hopkins as Corky Withers and the voice of Fats his ruthless wooden pal, the sexy Ann -Margret and the always wonderfully droll Burgess Meredith. Based on the novel by William Goldman

A ventriloquist is at the mercy of his vicious dummy while he tries to renew a romance with his high school sweetheart.

“A Terrifying love story!”

Happy Trailers! MonsterGirl