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The Spider (1958) Pressbook

Movies with spiders always creep me out. Originally titled Earth vs. the Spider, after The Fly successfully buzzed theaters, AIP honchos decided to shorten the title to The Spider. Now that would have made a nice midnight double bill showing, don't you think? The poster art shows more verve than the movie, but it's still enjoyable: big spiders and small towns always work well together.

Download The Spider Pressbook (viewable in a comic book reader app)

The Spider Pressbook 001

Mad Monsters No. 6, 1963

Charlton Publications joined in the monster magazine mash with Mad Monsters, providing lots of pictures, a little text, and fun monsterkid merchandise to covet. So much to be ordered! So little allowance money to stretch and stretch and stretch. In this issue Queen of Outer Space still looks awful, Boris Karloff is the Man of a Million Horrors, Coffin Capers provides a tidbit of humor, and a Black Zoo Party provides an historical glimpse at movie promotion back in the day. 

Comic book reader version:  Download Mad Monsters Issue 6

More cool magazines from Zombos' Closet.

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The House with Laughing Windows (1976)
An Overlooked Giallo

The House With Laughing Windows - 3

Zombos Says: Very Good

This review was written for the upcoming Unsung Horrors, an anthology of horror movies you should watch, written by the fiends at We Belong Dead magazine. The book should be available at the end of this month.

 

The House with Laughing Windows (La casa dale finestre che ridono) is a neglected giallo.

Directed by Pupi Avati with music composed by Amedeo Tommasi, and a screenplay by Avati, Gianni Cavina, Antonio Avati, and Maurizio Costanzo, you would be hard pressed to find much written about this slowly building suspense movie, shot in Lido degli Scacchi, in the Ferrara province of the Emilia-Romagna region in Northern Italy. Yet, with its mounting dread, a longstanding mystery in a way-too-quiet town where tourists are never seen, and an undercurrent of old evils that may still be walking around, there should be more attention paid to this little gem of terror that builds to a deliberately arguable climax.

The opening credits hint at the madness and horror that have transpired in the town where Stefano (Lino Capolicchio) arrives by ferry. He is greeted by the short Mayor Solmi (Bob Tonelli) and the taller Coppola (Gianni Cavina), providing an odd contrast as the two wait near a red car for his ferry to dock. He has come to restore a fresco in the local church, a painting depicting the martyring of St. Sebastian, at the request of a very nervous friend who is conducting water tests for the mayor.

With a budget that needed to stay lean, Avati uses his camera wisely. There are no flourishy or overtly stylized frames, but three instances, each involving Stefano, are worth noting. Two involve seeing Stefano through an open door, with him standing in the light of the room, but darkness outside that room. This impresses by implying he is surrounded by the unknown and the unseen, a strong foreshadowing element created by his position within the room, the open doorway, and the darkness leading to the camera watching him from a distance.

The third instance is either an aberration of the camera lens or a brilliant toss-away, which, either way, comes at the right moment in the movie to show the uneasiness slowly mounting in Stefano, and the shaky hold he has on the unknown and unseen that is closing in around him. As he slowly walks up a narrow stairway, the camera appears to remain immobile as the walls jiggle around Stefano’s ascent. Perhaps a camera anomaly due to the need for a handheld camera in such a tight space, or maybe it is an artifact from duping the film to DVD. A discussion on IMDb is not conclusive. You will need to decide for yourself. However it happened, it still leaves a strong impression.

The stairway leads Stefano to a large, mostly empty room, where Legnani, the painter who committed suicide, who tortured and murdered local villagers in the pursuit of his madness, mixed his palette with paints and blood. The painter was aided by his two sisters, who shared in and inflamed his insanity. All this ties to the fresco in the church that Stefano is restoring, and as he slowly uncovers more and more of the painting, he begins to delve deeper into the life and death of Legnani and the secret of the house with laughing windows. The priest in the church is non-committal: he can take or leave the restoration. But why? The assistant to the priest is an oddball who does nasty things and is allowed to. But why? Stefano’s nervous friend, who involved him in the restoration, is desperate to tell him something important about the painting, but will he be able to since no one else wants Stefano to know?

Sound and silence help build the mystery and the sense of foreboding throughout the movie. An old wire recorder comes to life as power fuses are blown. The recording is Legnani’s voice describing his ecstasy experienced through the agony of others and his visions from tortured madness. The effect is as chilling and telling as the recordings heard in The Exorcist and The Evil Dead. Threatening phone calls are made to Stefano, warning him to give up and get out; deep-voiced, throaty calls that mean business. And Tommasi’s score provides the convincing atmosphere of danger and oppressiveness, while the silence of townspeople and the quiet countryside establishes a sense of collusion and indifference.

Coppola, bothered by his conscience, decides to help Stefano. How long both of them will live to find the answers is questionable. While the body count is low and people are not murdered in the usual graphic giallo style, House with the Laughing Windows compensates and goes one better, by relying on the slow burn, the unsettling painter of agony’s legacy, and a twisted ending that leaves you with hope or despair, depending on how you want to paint this picture.

 

Lost Sounds and Soundtracks. Pupi Avati's "The House with the Laughing Windows"

Castle of Frankenstein No. 6, 1965

Lon Chaney Jr's monstrous creations, The Munsters, and Christopher Lee kick off the 6th issue of Castle of Frankenstein. A timely article on Alfred Hitchcock (for me, that is: I had just watched the documentary, Hitchcock/Truffaut, and I'm reading the splendid book) is to die for, and a nostalgic look at Horror on the Air and those wonderful radio shows makes this a solid reading experience.

(This copy courtesy of Professor Kinema.) Here's the comic book reader version:  Download Castle of Frankenstein Issue 6

Castle of Frankenstein Issue 6

Fantastic Monsters of the Films
Vol.1 Issue 1, 1962

Here's a treat courtesy of Professor Kinema (Jim Knüsch). We were discussing The Beast with a Million Eyes and he brought along Fantastic Monsters of the Films Issue 1, which has an article on the puppet creature (with only two eyes) Paul Blaisdell created for Roger Corman's movie. Great use of color and with a lively layout, Fantastic Monsters magazine was a feast for the eyes of monsterkids everywhere. Here's the comic reader version if you're so inclined:  Download Fantastic Monsters of the Movies 1

Fantastic monsters 1

The Town That Dreaded Sundown (1976)
Movie Pressbook

One of the earliest slasher movies (two years later, Halloween would establish the modus operandi of slashers), The Town that Dreaded Sundown is disturbing because it's based on a real-life serial killer who was never caught. Stalking victims in 1946 Texarkana, the Phantom Killer, as he (or she) was dubbed by the press, would attack eight people, killing 5. For a good documentary on the Phantom Killer, and other real-life sources for urban legends, see Killer Legends, a documentary directed by Joshua Zeman (Cropsey, 2009). And here's the comic book reader version of the pressbook:  Download Town Dreaded Sundown.

Town dreaded sundown pressbook

Doctor Mabuse Mexican Lobby Card

A pretty as a painting Mexican lobby card for La Venganza Del Doctor Mabuse (Dr. M schlägt zu, The Vengeance of Doctor Mabuse, 1972). A fascinating criminal mastermind that borrows much from pulp villains. This cinema entry for the evil doctor is directed by Jess Franco. (Note that 'Jak' Taylor should be 'Jack' Taylor.) Jerry Lacy (Dark Shadows) starred as the nefarious criminal in a 2013 independent entry directed by Ansel Faraj.

Doctor mabuse mexican lobby card

Pressbook: The Night the World Exploded (1957)

I included the double bill sheet with this pressbook for The Night the World Exploded. I can't say I'd hold much hope for it being a good movie, since it was paired with The Giant Claw. And disaster movies on a budget just don't provide the oomph big budget disaster movies do. Pretty good idea, though, of having "Element 112" blowing things up as it's exposed to air. 

Pressbook night world exploded 1

Newsy Stuff: Brooklyn Film Festival 2015

BFFHere's a news release from Withoutabox regarding the Brooklyn Film Festival…

BROOKLYN FILM FESTIVAL Brooklyn, New York – USA May 29 to June 7, 2015

In the Spotlight today is the 18th Annual Brooklyn Film Festival (BFF), touted by Wall Street Journal as "One of Brooklyn's most enduring cultural staples," and named by MovieMaker Magazine as one of "50 Film Festivals Worth the Entry Fee" in 2014. Hosting filmmakers from around the world, BFF is a mecca for many artists ready to captivate audiences with their storytelling perspective. Many of the filmmakers in the festival are first or second time directors, who are creating challenging, visionary work.

As one of the oldest and most respected festivals in New York City the opportunities to excel are abundant. Submissions are accepted across six categories: Narrative Feature, Documentary Feature, Short Narrative, Experimental, Animation, and Short Documentary.

The Brooklyn Film Festival offers over $50,000 USD in awards and prizes to filmmakers, with the support of industry-related sponsors like Panavision NY, Abelcine, Xeno Lights, Media Services, Film Friends, Mik Cribben Steady-Cam, Cinecall Soundtracks, and Windmill Studios.

Additionally, BFF takes pride in honoring great work both in front of and behind the camera. Each year, certificate awards are presented to the festival's Best New Director, Best Producer, Best Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Editing, Best Actor & Actress, and more. Many BFF alumni have gone on to successful theatrical runs, to be broadcast on HBO, PBS, and P.O.V., and to be nominated for Oscar and BAFTA awards. BFF has helped launch several American and international independent projects to public acclaim, including recent award winners like Battle For Brooklyn (Oscar shortlist, 2012), Old Dog(MOMA theatrical release, 2013), Brooklyn Castle (POV broadcast, 2013), Gut Renovation(Film Forum theatrical release, 2013), and CaveDigger (Oscar Nomination, 2014).

 

UPCOMING DEADLINE February 14, 2015 – Regular Deadline View submission details

MISSION AND OBJECTIVE BFF provides a forum for the advancement of public interest in films and in the independent production of films in Brooklyn.

MORE ABOUT THE FESTIVAL Unfolding in Williamsburg, Brooklyn – the epicenter of New York's robust film, art, and music scene – BFF offers its visitors a wide range of networking opportunities and parties, as they mix and mingle with distributors, theater owners, executives, and producers from New York's film world.

This year the event will also offer additional screenings in Greenpoint, Bushwick, and DUMBO expanding its reach in Brooklyn's local arts communities. In each competitive category, films will be selected for recognition with an Audience Award, a Spirit Award, and a Best Film Award, maximizing opportunities for terrific talent to be championed on a high-profile platform, with the winning films in each category given a one-week theatrical run in New York City.

Brooklyn Film Festival invites filmmakers ready to launch – check out the official call for entries.