zc

Raiders of Ghost City (1944) Pressbook

Here’s another great pressbook courtesy of Joe Dante and Charlie Largent (Trailers From Hell).  This file copy of Raiders of Ghost City pressbook contains a typed, on onion paper, breakdown of the cost for 6000 pressbooks. It rounds to 20 cents per book, with printing and artwork costing the most. Presumably the cost of producing the pressbooks was offset by the sales of promotional material (see the ad mats and showmanship pages) for the theaters promoting the serial.

ComicRack reader version: Download Raiders of Ghost City Pressbook

Raid more pressbooks from Zombos’ Closet.

Raiders of Ghost City Pressbook001

A Night in the Lonesome October
Book Review

62005While reading Roger Zelazny's A Night in the Lonesome October I kept wondering how it could be made into a movie. The challenge is not so much the talking dog, cat, bat, or rat (they are demon sidekicks, of course), but how Zelazny let their dialogues provide the main flow of the story. The reader needs to rely on the dog named Snuff, and his powers of observation, because he is the one narrating what is happening each day of October, leading up to the eventful battle royale that will take place on Halloween; but his owner is Jack the Ripper, so there is some question as to his sense of good versus evil nose sniffing to be sure.

That pending battle, with the apocalyptic tendencies, will  be waged by the openers and the closers. The openers are more the bad players and the closers are more the good players, but since Saucy Jack, along with Snuff, are on the good players side, using the term "good" requires some stretching. Count Dracula is also in the game, but no one really knows which side he'll be on when push comes to shove as those slimy, multi-tentacled monstrosities, looking for a new footfold into our dimension, make their move on Halloween night. And so the game begins in this Victorian period piece, played over each day, with each demon sidekick doing a lot of the legwork, trying to figure out who will be an opener or a closer, and how the lines of power are being drawn in the neighborhood. As the maneuverings for power take place, Sherlock Holmes (referred to as the Great Detective), dons disguise and guile to reveal the mystery emanating from the deadly game. Even Larry Talbot, the Wolf Man, puts down all fours, providing assistance to Snuff. What part Talbot will play at the end can go a tail wag either way, but he proves invaluable to Snuff. If Lon Chaney Jr. keeps popping into your head as you read, you will already know how Talbot will play it. 

Snuff is rather stiff-lipped and steely pawed and clever at gaining information while strategically sharing it. Mostly with Graymalk the cat as the two strike up an unlikely alliance. Each helps the other out of bad spots as the days move closer to the eventful night. Zelazny keeps his words and paragraphs stiff-lipped too, and there is a prim tempo to each chapter; one chapter for each day in October, with the first one putting the reader imediately into the story with little fanfare. 

Interesting little tidbits of the uncanny wind up in odd places. There's Jack's monsters trapped in a mirror and furniture, always looking to escape; a human sacrifice is chained, awaiting her doom; a tour of a Lovecraftian dreamscape where ancient beings wait patiently to walk the earth again, and murder most fowl when the going gets rough. Zelazny writes it all as matter of factly as possible, with close calls, bodies turning up, and the tools of the dark arts trade slowly revealing themselves. His economy of words creates a magical opening all by itself, wherein the reader can infer much and imbue each player in this great game, either good or bad,  with feelings and intentions, even if that player crawls, flys, howls or walks on two legs by night. His description of Dracula's actions, merely a few drops of blood worth, is more chilling than any of the recent Universal endeavors for the ruddy Count. Perhaps Universal should look into doing the movie version? This would make quite a monster rally indeed for the big screen.

Undersea Kingdom (1936)
Rerelease Pressbook

Here’s the rerelease, 1949, pressbook for Undersea Kingdom. This and Phantom Empire are on my top favorites list for movie serials (Mystery Science Theater 3000 be damned!). Watching guys running around in their shorts must have been pretty thrilling for audiences back then. I still want a few Volkites and definitely a Juggernaut to drive them around in. Interesting that the Reflector Plate gizmo showed up on Star Trek’s Mirror, Mirror episode, but with a more deadly function. The Volkite robot became the go to automaton for Republic as it showed up in later serials. Wikipedia has an unusually extensive article on Undersea Kingdom, listing the re-shot cheats used in the movie. Cheats were cliffhangers that often fudged what happened at the end of the last episode with new shots of the “previous” action that changes what the audience had seen. Pretty cheeky if you ask me. So is the use of technology like rayguns and robots, while still using swords and catapults to fight with. One of the pleasures of watching these fantastic serials is to see how creative the wardrobe and prop departments were with a tight budget.

ComicRack reader version: Download Undersea Kingdom Pressbook

See more cheeky pressbooks from Zombos’ Closet.

Undersea Kingdom Pressbook001

Rhythm of the Islands (1943) Pressbook

Here’s another pressbook courtesy of Joe Dante and Charles Largent (Trailers from Hell). Acquanetta, known by all monsterkids as the exotic and wild jungle woman, appears in her first credited role in Rhythm of the Islands. Later she would go ape for Universal and swing with Tarzan in Tarzan and the Leopard Woman. I will also note that Jane Frazee makes an appearance in this movie too, because…fans of The Honeymooners will recall TV or Not TV, where Ralph and Norton pool their money together to buy a television set. Bad idea from the start, but Ralph mentions Jane Frazee for a laugh as the two of them squabble over who gets to watch what. My favorite episode for sure.

ComicRack reader version: Download Rhythm of the Islands Pressbook

See more exotic pressbooks from Zombos’ Closet.

Rythm of the Islands Pressbook001

Bulldog Drummond in Africa (1938)
Pressbook

Bulldog Drummond heads to Morocco in this thirteenth outing in a whopping twenty-five movie run. It’s a shame audiences are no longer thrilled by foreign intrigue themes with their spys and mysteries of foreign locales. I’m sure to theater audiences in the 1930s through the 1940s, it must have been thrilling to think about other countries and cultures. Now, of course, politics, easier global travel, and the Internet pretty much take the mystery and intrigue out of it.

ComicRack reader version: Download Bulldog Drummond in Africa Pressbook

Explore more pressbooks from Zombos’ Closet.

Bulldog Drummond in Africa Pressbook001

Witches Tales Vol.1, Issue 9
December 1969

How could any self-respecting monsterkid pass up on such a cover? Of course, once snatched from the magazine rack, one would need to be vary careful around one’s mom and employ subterfuge and guile to keep such a magazine carefully hidden. Just saying. I learned my lesson with Vampirella No. 1. My mom outsmarted me THAT time. She threatened to dial up Warren Publications and organize all manner of mayhem against them. No telling what she would have done if she saw this issue of Witches Tales. Speaking of witch (hey, a pun!), this issue is gruesomely drawn and vile in its depictions of victims and sinners. Perfect!

ComicRack reader version: Download Witches Tales vol1 issue 9

See more bewitching magazines from Zombos’ Closet. 

Witches Tales vol1 issue 9_000001

River Gang (1945) Pressbook

Here’s another pressbook courtesy of director Joe Dante (Trailers from Hell).  What makes this one rather special is the inclusion of a cost sheet, typed on onion paper (you young whippersnappers can Google onion paper). The cost of 8000 pressbooks (six pages for this one) for this movie was a stiff .13 cents per pressbook (rounded off).

ComicRack reader version: Download River Gang Pressbook

See more cheap pressbooks from Zombos’ Closet.

River Gang Pressbook001

Phantom of the Paradise (1974) Pressbook

By the 1970s, pressbooks became rather dull affairs, usually black and white, and with an emphasis on poster art (for the newspapers) than pre-canned articles. This 8.5 x 14 inches pressbook shows all its pages, but I placed them out of order to move the poster pages toward the end. If you download the reader version, it will show the pressbook’s pages in their correct order. Phantom of the Paradise is one of those odd movies that, while fetching, doesn’t quite make sense, but just go with it for the rock horror opera aesthetics wrapped around a Faustian bargain and the dread of Dorian Gray. Of course the box office didn’t know what to do with it, at the time, but it’s now a cult movie and rightly so. Brian De Palma went wild with it and it has Paul Williams music. And that works for me.

ComicRack reader version: Download Phantom of the Paradise Pressbook

Don’t be a phantom, play more pressbooks from Zombos’ Closet.

Phantom of the Paradise Pressbook_000001

Lawrence of Arabia (1962)
1963 Release Pressbook

You can’t simply live by horror movies alone, no matter how much of a fan you are. There are so many movies that are beautiful, ugly, happy, sad, and just plain mind-expanding or my eyes! dreadful. That’s the wonder of cinema: you have the trashy to the sublime to the breathtaking; whether in the eye or the ear or the cadence of the story itself, it’s really filled with many emotions. Toward the breathtaking side of things there’s Lawrence of Arabia. This 1963 release pressbook for the movie, after it had won a box-full of Oscars, is breathtaking too, in its own way.

ComicRack reader version: Download Lawrence of Arabia Pressbook

See more breathtaking pressbooks from Zombos’ Closet.

Lawrence of Arabia Pressbook001

Appointment with Murder (1948) Pressbook

Interesting to note that this low budget movie does get a nicely produced pressbook to promote it. I like the mustachioed clock with the skull pendulum. It’s an odd little embellishment that, while not exactly well placed, does hint of pressing danger. I’ve not seen the John Calvert Falcon movies, three in all, but this pressbook does wet my appetite to see this one. My favorite series is Boston Blackie with Chester Morris. I’ve yet to come across any of those pressbooks. But it is only a matter of time.

ComicRack reader version: Download Appointment with Murder Pressbook

Make more appointments with pressbooks from Zombos’ Closet.

Appointment with Murder Pressbook_000001

Buck Jones in White Eagle (1941) Pressbook

Wasn’t it great knowing the good guys from the bad guys? The early Westerns always kept it simple. Perhaps too simple. By the time they rolled around to television, we expected everything to be wrapped up nice and neat by the end, even with the commercials. Buck Jones starred in the 1932 movie, White Eagle, and followed his role into this serial, the eight from Columbia. From Ron Backer’s The Gripping Chapters, the Sound Movie Serial book: “There were apparently a lot of mountain lions roaming the Wild West, as can be seen in the cliffhanger to Chapter Ten of White Eagle (1941)…One lesson to be learned from many of these serials was how easy it was to dispose of a large ferocious beast with a very small knife.”

ComicRack reader version: Download Buck Jones White Eagle Serial Pressbook

See more soaring pressbooks from Zombos’ Closet.

Buck Jones White Eagle Serial Pressbook001