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The Sci & Horror B-movies of Yesteryear
Osnome | 6-7-09 | poster

Posted on 06/08/2009 10:56:33 PM PDT by Osnome

I like the b-movies of the 1950's and 1960's the best.

Little or no foul language, not too much violence, and the wacky cheesy monsters they created. Today it is all femminazi superbimbos in charge, tons of CGI effects, and they are all produced in Canada :-Z

Last night I watched a sci-fi flick from 1962 called: Journey To The Seventh Planet, that had some really hokey monsters- one of which was a one-eyed dinosaur creature with rat-like features and big three fingered claws. This film was created by the same team that made ANGREY RED PLANET of 1959. Ib Melchior wrote that flick and this one and many others. Ever see 'Planet Of The Vampires' 1965 by Mario Bava? That film was inspiration for ALIEN.


TOPICS: Heated Discussion
KEYWORDS: monsters; movies
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To: Osnome

On the east coast it would have been Zacharly. Bulliagee!


21 posted on 06/08/2009 11:29:26 PM PDT by Always Independent
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To: Osnome
Does anybody remember The Crawling Eye and X the Unknown? Those two left me sleepless for days....
22 posted on 06/08/2009 11:30:43 PM PDT by kittykat77
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To: DemforBush

>>The original War of the Worlds (no link, sorry);

and The Incredible Shrinking Man (not really a monster movie, but I liked the battle with the house spider)
<<

Around thirty years ago they made a spoof remake of that film called ‘The Incredible Shrinking Woman’ that had a lot of toilet humor.

Richard Matheson wrote ‘Incredible Shrinking Man’- I think.

I wonder if he is still alive- he was when that Will Smith vehicle I AM LEGEND


23 posted on 06/08/2009 11:33:38 PM PDT by Osnome (Moderation in all things)
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To: Osnome
Anything from Hammer films used to scare the sheet out of me as a kid.


24 posted on 06/08/2009 11:33:49 PM PDT by Snurple (VEGETARIAN, OLD INDIAN WORD FOR BAD HUNTER.)
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To: Osnome

The Crawling Eye with Forest Tucker. The Brits made some good ones too! The Giant Behemoth. One om my favs!


25 posted on 06/08/2009 11:34:35 PM PDT by Always Independent
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To: kittykat77

I remember the former very well but not the latter.

Was not ‘X’ a British flick?


26 posted on 06/08/2009 11:34:38 PM PDT by Osnome (Moderation in all things)
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To: Osnome

Are you referring to The man from Planet X?


27 posted on 06/08/2009 11:35:43 PM PDT by Always Independent
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To: Always Independent

In Chicago it would have been Goulardi


28 posted on 06/08/2009 11:36:56 PM PDT by Osnome (Moderation in all things)
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To: Snurple

>>Anything from Hammer films used to scare the sheet out of me as a kid.<<

DON’T FORGET -AMICUS-

They made some good ones too.


29 posted on 06/08/2009 11:38:38 PM PDT by Osnome (Moderation in all things)
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To: Osnome

Zacharly was cool, he always had these funny bogus experiments. His greeting was Bullilagee! We had chiller theater every saturday night on tv.


30 posted on 06/08/2009 11:38:52 PM PDT by Always Independent
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To: Always Independent

No, I mean X’ The Unknown~

some protoplasm from a deep crevace rises with radiation.

Man From Planet X was British too.
I thought it was boring.
Never have seen Devil Girl From Mars, I wonder if I can get it from NetFlix...


31 posted on 06/08/2009 11:41:01 PM PDT by Osnome (Moderation in all things)
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To: Darkwolf377

Really, you were not scared by the Rat-Bat-Lobster-Spider monster?

Then again when I saw that flick years later I thought it was cute.


32 posted on 06/08/2009 11:42:44 PM PDT by Osnome (Moderation in all things)
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To: Always Independent

I think Goulardi blew up toy soldiers and his motto was
“stay sick”


33 posted on 06/08/2009 11:44:49 PM PDT by Osnome (Moderation in all things)
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To: Osnome

I know the movie. A mudddy looking sludge. The man from Planet X was made in the 30s.


34 posted on 06/08/2009 11:45:35 PM PDT by Always Independent
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To: Osnome

How can we forget “Attack Of The Crab Monsters”!

JJ61


35 posted on 06/08/2009 11:48:27 PM PDT by JerseyJohn61 (Better Late Than Never.......sometimes over lapping is worth the effort....)
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To: Osnome
Really, you were not scared by the Rat-Bat-Lobster-Spider monster?

It did have a Samuel Becket-like existential dreadfulness, I'll grant you. But being stuck in that rocket with that bore of a "comic relief" was worse.

36 posted on 06/08/2009 11:53:17 PM PDT by Darkwolf377
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To: Darkwolf377
>>I'll grant you. But being stuck in that rocket with that bore of a “comic relief” was worse. <<

The bore? You mean that fat crewman who loved his sonic gun?
Was it not a relief when he got absorbed and dissolved by the giant martian amoeba?

They used that very same scene in Journey To The Seventh Planet- in some editions.
The edition I got from NetFlix cut that shot out.

37 posted on 06/08/2009 11:59:51 PM PDT by Osnome (Moderation in all things)
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To: Osnome
Good memory! Yes, it's all about a radioactive mud creature that terrorizes a Scottish village.
38 posted on 06/09/2009 12:01:51 AM PDT by kittykat77
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To: Always Independent

>>
The man from Planet X was made in the 30s.<<

Dead wrong!
The Man From Planet X was made in the 1950’s...
It is as simple as that....


39 posted on 06/09/2009 12:03:00 AM PDT by Osnome (Moderation in all things)
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To: Osnome
http://www.diet-smith.ca/Earth_vs_the_Flying_Saucers_DVD.jpg

40 posted on 06/09/2009 12:06:39 AM PDT by wolficatZ (Divestment from oppressive leftist dogma.)
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