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Kronos and She Devil Radio Spots

Kronos movie scene
The scientists get a look inside Kronos in this matte shot showing the internal antenna.

From Granny C…

My cousin Agatha recently sent me a bat-mail, telling me how much she is enjoying my series of radio spots on giant monsters. She told me she knew of one more giant monster from one of her favorite science fiction movies and wondered if I might consider including it.  I asked her which one and she said, “That giant colossus of metal, that energy-sucking ravager of planets…Kronos!”

Well, I suppose one could categorize Kronos as a giant monster of sorts, although not of skin and bones. But, it did cause a high level of terror among the populace, and a lot of anguish for the scientists tasked to find a way to destroy it. The theme was familiar, only this time the “monster” was a one hundred feet tall – and growing – giant made of metal. This was before Mogera of The Mysterians, Mechani-Kong of King Kong Escapes or Mechagodzilla.

Released in 1957, Kronos is acclaimed by fans as being a pretty good sci-fi thriller, with interesting visual effects. Most fans get a kick out of seeing Kronos stomping its way through the countryside with that creepy squeaking sound effect of its movement. Jeff Morrow, George O’Hanlon (the future voice of George Jetson), and Barbara Lawrence headline the cast with familiars John Emery and Morris Ankrum. It is interesting to see the wall-sized, tape-driven computer named S.U.S.I.E. How far we’ve come in 67 years!

Mari Blanchard as She Devil 1957
Mari Blanchard as She Devil

The spots featured here are part of a double feature with She Devil, starring Mari Blanchard, Jack Kelly and Albert Dekker. It’s a quaint little story about a scientist (Kelly) who creates a serum based on the recuperative abilities of a fruit fly and uses it to cure injured animals. When he and his partner (Dekker) try it on a dying woman, she makes a miraculous recovery. As to be expected, serious side-effects occur, transforming her into a diabolical she-devil who will stop at nothing to fulfill her desires. She is able to regenerate any wound and even change the color of her hair at will. It is up to the two scientists to figure out a way to stop her.

Of the two, Kronos was the better movie, with top visuals blending a model Kronos with cartoon animation of its onslaught, trampling everything beneath its pounding feet. She Devil uses the old red make-up/red-blue filter effect to accomplish some nifty transformation scenes.

So, from 1957, for cousin Agatha and you, here’s Kronos…..and She Devil to assail you with 20, 30, and 60 second radio spots.

 

 

Newspaper ad for Kronos and She Devil movie double bill
Newspaper ad for Kronos and She Devil movie double bill.
Kronos waiting on the beach
Kronos, as we first see it, standing silently on the beach, awaiting instructions from a mind-controlled John Emery.
She Devil Mari Blanchard with leopard
The she-devil with a leopard that has also been healed, and its color changed, by the rejuvenation serum. The leopard scratches her arm, but she is able to instantly heal herself. This is the only connection in the film to the growls that symbolize the she-devil on the radio spots and to the black leopard pictured in newspaper ads.

Do you have any radio spots you would like to share? Contact Granny (Gary Fox) at [email protected].

Female Jungle and
The Oklahoma Woman 1956
Double Bill Pressbook

American Releasing Corporation eventually became American International Pictures (AIP), which specialized in double bill bookings. This double bill pressbook is for Female Jungle and The Oklahoma Woman. Two separate folded sheets for each movie were put into the folded cover sheet, with the emphasis on newspaper ads touting sex appeal to entice movie-goers. For Female Jungle, it was “Jayne Mansfield…sex on the rocks” and for The Oklahoma Woman it was “a whip-wielding she-devil.” Clearly, young teen men were the target audience. Touch Connors (don’t touch that) starred in The Oklahoma Woman. Connors (no relation to Chuck Connors) eventually came to his senses and renamed himself as Mike Connors (who you may know as Mannix from the television series). The publicity campaign was a no-brainer (actually brainless) with “Put up a big front with Jayne” selling the woman-on-the-floor-holding-desperately-onto-the-leg-of-a-guy theme, and the promise of the Queen of the Outlaws cat-fighting with her female rival and cracking that whip (on guys, ouch) theme.

Roger Corman already had The Oklahoma Woman, which cost $60,000 dollars, ready to go. They just needed a second movie to complete the double bill and did so with the $49,000 Female Jungle, a Burt Kaiser written and produced effort. Female Jungle was shot in six days. According to IMDb, Mansfield was paid $150 dollars for her role in the movie, which was expanded after a serious incident kept Kathleen Crowley from continuing in her lead role.  Lawrence Tierney and John Carradine also appeared in this one.

Female Jungle and Oklahoma Woman double bill pressbook

Island of the Doomed 1967
Mexican Lobby Card

This La Isla de la Muerte Mexican lobby card is big, coming in at 17 by 24.5 inches. I have a fondness for Mexican lobby cards that have an illustration mimicked in the inset photo (or is it vice versa?).  Baron von Weser (I’d pronounce it vun-weeeeeezer for dramatic effect) keeps people-eating plants on his island in this Allied Artists Pictures production. AAP was a subsidiary of Monogram Pictures. Cameron Mitchell played the baron. Mel Welles (another name that trips off the tongue) directed. He also did Little Shoppe of Horrors and Lady Frankenstein. Mitchell’s voice was dubbed for the English version. Go figure.

la isla de la muerte mexican lobby card
Island of the Doomed 1967 Mexican Lobby Card

I, the Jury (1953) Pressbook

The first Mickey Spillane novel became the first movie too. I, the Jury was filmed for 3D, but by the time it hit theater screens, the short-lived 3D craze of the 1950s was waning, so most first and second run houses showed the movie in standard 2D. Harry Essex adapted the novel (his writing credits include Creature From the Black Lagoon, Kansas City Confidential, It Came From Outer Space, and, okay, Octaman–hey, no one’s perfect).

David J. Hogan in his Film Noir FAQ doesn’t give much love to the movie, but he does point out the action scenes were well handled and that Spillane came from a comic writer background, which could explain why his character, Mike Hammer, is so super macho. Unfortunately, Biff Elliot was a poor choice to play Hammer and drags down the movie. So, dare I say it, he didn’t nail the Hammer. Trekkers know him as Schmitter from the Devil in the Dark episode of the original Star Trek. He also did episodes for Alfred Hitchcock Presents and some horrors, the Navy vs. the Night Monsters and Blood Bath. I’d like to see those on Svengooli.

The pressbook is a big deal at 16 pages. One of these days I’ll figure out the psychology behind the choice of colors used in pressbooks as it doesn’t match the one used in film colors. The color used in this pressbook doesn’t quite match to the violence and grittiness in Mike Hammer. What do you think? One last note: this pressbook must have gone a round with Hammer as two unnecessary cuts ruin two pictures.

Mickey Spillane I the Jury Pressbook 1953

Three on a Ticket (1947) Pressbook

A dying man walks into detective Michael Shayne’s office, holding onto a baggage ticket. The story unfolds from there. With Hugh Beaumont (Leave It to Beaver) as Shayne, the story is more poached than hard-boiled, but this PRC production is directed by Sam Newfield, one busy beaver to be sure as he was prolific and completed 250 feature movies beginning in the silent age and up to 1958. He also directed a lot more too, including training films, shorts, industrial films, and for television. He directed The Terror of Tiny Town 1938, an all small-person novelty western that’s best seen during a midnight show.

Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC) was a Poverty Row outfit but they had their own small studio. Sam Newfield directed so many of their movies he used two other names to make it look like PRC had more directors. Mostly producing B movies, the studio did the usual fare including westerns, horrors, and assorted action dramas. The Devil Bat and The Devil Bat’s Daughter were hits for PRC as well as many other films, and the classic noir, Detour, was also produced by the studio. They even had their own version of the Bowery Boys (Dead End Kids) called the Gas House Kids with Billy Halop. Halop’s career peetered out due to personal problems and his aging (no more playing Tommy), but he did have a resurgence in the 1970s with television’s All in the Family, where he played in ten episodes.

Three on a Ticket 1947 movie pressbook

Godzilla vs. The Smog Monster
Radio Spots!

Godzilla vs the Smog Monster movie posterCough… cough…wow…the air quality is especially bad today.  If only something could be done…

That’s exactly what the producers were considering when they were looking for their next Godzilla project. Pollution was bad everywhere in Japan as various factories continued to spew their by-products into bodies of water and into the atmosphere. People were getting sick on a grand scale.

In the original Gojira (1954), Godzilla represented the dangers of atomic experimentation. Now, seventeen years later, Toho decided that Godzilla should tackle a new threat to humanity: world-wide pollution.

Godzilla vs. Hedorah was produced in 1971, and introduced a new menace: an alien which arrived on earth on a comet and fed on pollution, growing larger the more he ate. He could change shape, from a sea creature, to a land animal, to a flying stingray-looking thing. As a land animal, he could spew out acidic sludge and shoot a red laser from his eye, and as a flying creature, he could emit toxic exhaust.

The producers wanted a “darker” Godzilla movie in keeping with the dangers of pollution. Visuals were often graphic as victims of the “smog monster” were left sick, disfigured or dissolved.  Unlike before, dead bodies were often seen scattered about the landscape.

When Godzilla met Hedorah in the final battle, he seemed to have met his match. Blinded in one eye by the acidic sludge, it was only with the help of massive electrical discharge machines designed by the movie’s scientist that he was able to help dehydrate the monster and the world was saved. Or was it? …

The Three Musketeers (1948) Pressbook
Advertising

Here’s The Three Musketeers pressbook portion that covered advertising. “The Three Musketeers was an extremely personal project for [Gene] Kelly for two reasons” (from the TCM article on the movie). “The first was the fact that he was recreating the character (D’Artagnan) played by his favorite star (Douglas Fairbanks) in his favorite movie (the 1921 version of The Three Musketeers). Kelly was later quoted in Tony Thomas’ The Films of Gene Kelly: Song and Dance saying “I loved playing this part. As a boy I idolized Fairbanks, Sr. and I raised myself to be a gymnast.” The second reason is that Kelly was hoping his performance in The Three Musketeers would convince MGM to let him do a musical version of Edmond Rostand’s Cyrano De Bergerac.. Regardless of his energetic performance in The Three Musketeers, the studio brass wouldn’t go for a musical Cyrano even though Kelly pestered them for years about it.”

The TCM article goes on to say how much June Allyson disliked playing the period piece. Lana Turner also had issues with her role as it was not a starring one. After a brief suspension by MGM and a rewrite of her character, she did eventually acquiesce.

Three Musketeers 1948 pressbook

Radio Patrol (1937) Pressbook

Universal Pictures’ Radio Patrol was taken from the newspaper comic strip of the same name. The strip, created by Charles Schmidt (artist) and Eddie Sullivan (a real-life crime reporter), picked up steam when William Randolph Hearst wanted something added to his King Features Syndicate to compete against the popular Dick Tracy comic strip. Radio Patrol was also adapted for radio, a comic book, and a Big Little book (a thick, pocket-sized, hard-covered book with text and page illustrations). The 12-chapter serial was directed by Ford Beebe (Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe, The Invisible Man’s Revenge, and lots of jungle pictures) and Clifford Smith (The Adventures of Frank Merriwell).

From the Files of Jerry Blake:

Radio Patrol features many sloppy-looking but energetic fights–brawls that have the lack of staging and wild-looking blows common to most 1930s serials, but also feature some good punches and some nice flips and leaps (as in the Chapter Eight office fight). However, almost all the fistfight scenes are marred by one recurring flaw–directors Ford Beebe and Cliff Smith’s decision to shoot all the fight-scene close-ups of star Grant Withers against the same backdrop (a cement steel-mill wall with the shadow of a ladder in this background); when these shots of Withers are inserted into fights that take place in locations other than the steel mill (apartments, sidewalks, etc.) they have a jarring effect on the viewer–particularly since these mismatched close-ups provide the only glimpses of Withers during the fight scenes; the star’s stunt double Eddie Parker stands in for both medium and long shots, with Beebe and Smith taking few pains to hide the switch.

Radio patrol serial movie pressbook

Monsters and Heroes Issue 6
Flash Gordon

One of the cool happenings of the comics scene in the 1960s and 1970s was the rekindling of interest and love for the movie serial, a weekly episodic adventure showing at your local cinema. Serials ran from 1912 (What Happened to Mary?) until 1956 (Blazing the Overland Trail). Each episode would end in a cliffhanger, an OMG scene involving a thrilling impending death along the lines of how the hell will he (usually a man) survive going off that cliff in a car, or jump out of the crashing airplane without a parachute, or not breathe his last (from toxic gas or rising water or lack of air ), or escape the insidious torture device, or avoid being crushed by (something big), or catch onto something as he falls off a building, and so on.

Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers were my favorite serials. Both had ray guns, death beams (Star Wars, anyone?), spaceships, robots, weird aliens, merciless evil adversaries, wild monsters, and sultry princesses and damsels in distress, and men and women in tights. One magazine that devoted pages to the appreciation of serials was Larry Ivie’s Monsters and Heroes. In issue 6 (1969 and only 35 cents!), he covered Flash Gordon. Here’s the article.

Heroes-and-Monsters-issue-6-Flash-Gordon

War of the Gargantuas
and Monster Zero
Double Bill Radio Spots!

The mayhem continues, courtesy of Granny…

Monster Zero fight scene between the big O and Godzilla and Rodan
The stars of Monster Zero (1970)

After the success of Frankenstein Conquers the World, Toho began a sequel.  Hailed as one of the best kaiju movies, War of the Gargantuas (1966) sought to continue the Frankenstein storyline, developed to involve not one but two Frankensteins in combat with each other. The movie played on the good vs. evil theme, and was especially emotional since the brother giants were at odds with each other due to their opposing natures and thus drew sympathy from audiences despite their horrific appearance.

In the original Japanese movie, Sanda, the brown gargantua, was believed to be the Frankenstein from Frankenstein Conquers the World, although in flashbacks this young Frankenstein bore little resemblance to the feral boy found in the original movie. The green gargantua, Gaira, was believed to be Sanda’s cell offshoot. They were both referred to as “Frankenstein”  until given their names. When the movie was dubbed for American audiences, all references to Frankenstein were removed and the giants simply called gargantuas. The movie was well received by fans. The special effects are top notch and the miniatures well constructed. The final battle of the two gargantuas in Tokyo and around Tokyo Bay is especially awe inspiring.

The two radio spots featured here showcase the battle of these giants as well as the awesome spectacle of the twin feature, Invasion of Astro Monster (1965), released in America as Monster Zero (1970). Developed as a sequel to Ghidrah the Three-Headed MonsterMonster Zero depicts Godzilla and Rodan teaming up to fight King Ghidorah, known as Monster Zero, at the request of aliens from Planet X who seek Earth’s help to fight him off. As might be expected, the aliens turn out to be deceivers who want to take over the earth by mind controlling the three monsters. Their plot fails, they are defeated, and Godzilla and Rodan must team up to protect Earth from King Ghidorah.

The miniatures, the split-screen shots and the fight scenes are impressive. Altogether, this was a double feature not to be missed! So, sit back and listen as these two double-feature radio spots showcase all the action these movies brought to the big screen in 1970!

 

Eiji Tsuburaya, center, with Yu Sekida as Sanda, left, and Haruo Nakajima as Gaira, getting ready to film the all-out fight scene in War of the Gargantuas (1966)
Eiji Tsuburaya, center, with Yu Sekida as Sanda, left, and Haruo Nakajima as Gaira, getting ready to film the all-out fight scene in War of the Gargantuas (1966)
Yu Sekida and Haruo Nakajima take a break in the miniature tank
Yu Sekida and Haruo Nakajima take a break in the miniature tank
Masaki Shinohara, Haruo Nakajima, and Shoichi Hirose pose with their costume creations
Masaki Shinohara, Haruo Nakajima, and Shoichi Hirose pose with their costume creations
Excellent composite shot of Gaira approaching Tokyo Airport
Excellent composite shot of Gaira approaching Tokyo Airport
One of the impressive split-screen shots in Monster Zero
One of the impressive split-screen shots in Monster Zero
War of Godzilla and Monster Zero Movie Poster
War of Godzilla and Monster Zero Movie Poster

 

Do you have any radio spots you would like to share? Contact Granny (Gary Fox) at [email protected].

Tom Mix No Man’s Gold (1926) Pressbook

At a saddle-sized 18 by 21.5 inches, this pressbook rides the range in style. Tom Mix came from a rodeo background and was rough and tumble onscreen, providing the action and thrills that made westerns so appealing to young audiences. He also toured with the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus. The west of Tom Mix was the contemporary one for his time, with the occasional automobile riding the range along with the horses.

A surviving print of this film was found buried on a chicken farm in what was then known as Czechoslovakia in 1966. Many silent movies had been lost by their studios due to ignorance of their historical importance and to calamities from improper storage or fires, a cultural loss for all of us.

Tom Mix No Man's Gold movie pressbook.