William Grefé | HE CAME FROM THE SWAMP

grefe swamp

STARBURST caught up with exploitation legend William Grefé to talk about his career, which is celebrated with the Arrow Video release He Came From the Swamp: The William Grefé Collection

STARBURST: Did you ever think that people would still be enjoying your films 50 years plus later?

William Grefé: No, not really. When we made those films, they went in the local drive-ins. The sad part about all of this is the laboratories threw away a lot of stuff. For example, I met someone at one of the film festivals up in New York, he called me about three four years later, he said, ‘Listen, I was going by the LOX laboratory and they were throwing all these big cans in a dumpster. I crawled in and I found The Naked Zoo – which is the Rita Hayworth movie – are you interested?’ I said sure! He said, ‘I don’t want anything, just pay the freight’. So I sent him a check for $70, and that’s the way I got The Naked Zoo, which is insane. What really makes me sad as well, I did Impulse – that William Shatner movie. They threw the negative away. So we are in the process of trying to put together the best existing prints. It’s so interesting now that Arrow is putting out all the seven films on Blu-ray. I mean this is a big unbelievable that people are getting in touch all the world.

How did you get started in the film industry?

Well, ever since I was a kid, I love the movies. When I was like 11 years old, I wrote a play. I was in grammar school, and I wrote a script and we performed at the school. My script, which I directed at 11 years old! Anyway, I used to go up to New York to visit my aunt in Long Island. And back then, on 42nd Street, they had maybe a dozen theatres that played three feature films for 25 cents. I would just go over in the morning and I lived in the theatres. After high school, I did Summer Stock in Woodstock, New York, which later became quite the famous Cape Town Woodstock. I was in the Summer Stock at The Maverick Theatre with a guy named Lee Marvin. Anyway, I guess I’d seen too many John Wayne movies and I joined up for the Korean War. And when I got out, I got married.

After I got married, I said boy this acting is not too secure. My wife got pregnant, so I joined the Miami fire department and I was a fireman. When I was at the fire department, you have a lot of spare time because we worked 24 hours on and 48 off. So I ended up writing screenplays. And I wrote probably five or six screenplays – I had the rejection slips to prove I wrote them anyway! I finally sold one called The Checkered Flag, which was about automobile racing up at Sebring. I took a 30-day vacation from the fire department, and they bought me on set for rewrites. The director ended up having a nervous breakdown the first day. All of the investors panicked. Back then in Florida, there were absolutely no directors. The film business there was in its infancy. So they said we got to get a director from California. The cameraman said ‘look, by the time the guy gets here, the races will be over – what the hell, make the writer the director’. So they drafted me at one in the morning to direct the movie. I knew zilch about the mechanics of it, so the cameraman sort of carried me through. Fortunately, the movie made money.

You were pretty much the person who invented the Miami film scene…

Well, Florida, actually, yeah. Orlando was nothing because Disney wasn’t there at that time. When Castro took over Cuba, all of the Cuban film community fled Havana and they came to Miami. My sister spoke fluent Spanish, so I found all these Spanish filmmakers and Julio Chávez, who became my director of photography – he probably did at least 10 of my films. There was only one mixing facility in Florida. So I went to them and told them I have a limited budget. The place closed at five o’clock, so I asked if I could mix my film at night. And so the guy said I can give you my mixer, Henry Lopez, who was the office boy. Henry is like 18 years old. So we would stay up all night till nine in the morning. It took two weeks to mix the film.

Was it true that you made Death Curse of Tartu in seven days?

Yeah, the way that came about was I had directed Sting of Death, and back then, all of the various drive-ins always wanted to horror movies as a package. The distributor had a stake in the film, but he couldn’t find another horror movie. So he said the magic word – if I could get a horror movie, he would finance it. This was like December; back then, making movies took forever. He said ‘the only monkey I’ll put on your back is I’ve got to have the movie April 15th’, because that’s when all the drive in theatres open up after the winter. I wasn’t about to turn the deal down, so I said no problem. I had to start shooting immediately, so I stayed up all night, and I wrote Death Curse of Tartu in one day. I shot the film in seven days, and of all the films I’ve made, Death Curse of Tartu will not die, it keeps coming back to life.

You also followed the lead of Willard, the famous rat film, by making Stanley, how did that come about?

I had become president of Ivan Tors Studio, which was the studio that did Flipper and Gentle Ben, and all those series. So I was the executive in charge but I loved independence, so in my contract, I was allowed to make one film independently from the studio, but I had to give them first crack. So I was out in Los Angeles on their business, and I pick up Variety and it says ‘Willard – biggest grossing independent film’. And I thought, boy, animal horror movies – that’s the next trend. You see, if you jump on a bandwagon, you’ve got to be the second guy out, maybe the third, and you’ll make money. If you’re a fifth or sixth guy, you won’t make money. So, I don’t know what I ate that night, but I went to sleep and I dreamt Stanley. I went by Crown International, a studio that had handled one of my films, The Wild Rebels. The distributor was an old crusty guy named Red Jacobs, and so I said I’ve got a great idea for a movie. ‘Okay, leave me the screenplay, I’ll read it over the weekend’. I said I don’t have a screenplay. He said, ‘Well, give me the synopsis then’. I don’t have a synopsis. ‘Get the hell out of my office!’ [Laughs] He smoked these big Havana cigars that were about a foot long and I reached out and grabbed one. ‘Put that back!’ I said, look, calm down, bring in Mark Tenser – who was the vice president – and Paul Joseph – publicity – and let me tell you the story. I told him the story. And afterwards he said, ‘how much will you make this movie for?’ I said $125,000, we shook on it and when you shook hands with him, it was better than any written contract. He said ‘I’m only gonna put one monkey on your back, Grefé, I’ve got to have it April 15th’. [Laughs]

Anyway, I was taking the red eye back from Los Angeles to Miami. So I thought, ‘What can I do? I’ve got to start shooting next week. And I thought, Gary Crutcher, the writer. Gary was a pill-popper, he was a druggie with uppers and downers, so I told him to meet me at LA airport. So I sat down with a yellow pad and I wrote down all the characters and the story. This was a Friday night, and I said, ‘Gary, I got to have a screenplay Monday morning in Miami’. Back then, there were no faxes or emails, so Sunday night, he had to put it on the red eye plane to pick it up at the airport. So Gary just popped the pill and rolled it like a day and a half. That’s the way Stanley came about. The last thing on Stanley, we opened in Los Angeles, against the most expensive, biggest film Hollywood had that year, called The Godfather. The Godfather in Los Angeles took $181 thousand. Stanley pulls  $175 thousand. We’re only $6000 under The Godfather.

That’s something to be very proud of! You actually had the jump on Steven Spielberg with Mako: Jaws of Death, because you had already written that, is that right?

Yeah, but I couldn’t get arrested! Nobody was interested. Then, when Universal came out with Jaws, every major magazine, Time Magazine, Life, everything was shark, shark, shark. So my phone rang off the hook with distributors and people that I’d shown the story to them. So I wasn’t stealing Jaws, I rode on the publicity of Jaws.

He Came From the Swamp: The William Grefé Collection is out now from Arrow Video.

Five Films to Check Out on Horror Channel This Week – 301120

horror 301120

To save you getting lockdown blues, we’re going to be giving you our picks of what to watch on Horror Channel each week. Here are some of our favourites this week:

Tuesday December 1st, 6pm – Star Trek: The Original Series S1 Ep22 (1967)

A memorable and much-loved episode of classic Trek, Space Seed introduces the character who would play a big part in the story later on, Khan Noonien Singh (Ricardo Montalbán).

Wednesday December 2nd, 9pm – Child’s Play 2 (1990)

The second outing for Chucky (Brad Dourif) is as bloody and terrifying as the first. Alex Vincent returns as Andy Barclay, now with foster parents and the subject of the malicious toy’s plot to possess his young body.

Friday December 4th, 9pm – Resident Evil: Extinction (2016)

The third of the video game adaptations has Russell Mulcahy (Highlander) at the helm and sees Milla Jovovich’s Alice in the deserts of the Southwestern USA attempting to evade all kinds of dangers, not least the Umbrella Corporation, who are still working on their Alice clones.

Saturday December 5th, 10.50pm – Summer Camp (2015)

While we’re used to camp-based films being stalk-and-slash affairs, this one takes the Cabin Fever route and has counsellors fall prey to a demonic disease that turns victims into rage-filled animals.

Sunday December 6th, 9pm – Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1994)

Kenneth Branagh directs this big budget adaptation of the classic novel. Branagh takes the role of the doctor who experiments with creating life from sew-together pieces of cadavers. Robert De Niro makes an imposing creature, and it’s arguably the most faithful film version to date.

Tune into Horror Channel on Sky 317, Virgin 149, Freeview 68, Freesat 138.

[ENDED] Win THE DOCTORS DVD Bundle

win doctor bundle

The final entries in the Koch Media series The Doctors are available now, and we are giving one lucky reader a chance to own a DVD bundle featuring the  set!

THE DOCTORS: THE PETER DAVISON YEARS

The latest addition to the series is the definitive set of interviews with the team who brought the Peter Davison era of Doctor Who to life!

These documentaries are the best in-depth interviews ever undertaken with:

  • Janet Fielding (Tegan)
  • Sarah Sutton (Nyssa)
  • Matthew Waterhouse (Adric)
  • Mark Strickson (Turlough)
  • Anthony Ainley (The Third Master)
  • Plus two more special productions featuring Peter Davison and his assistants at 1980s Doctor Who conventions!

Presented by Robert Dick and ‘voice of the Daleks’ Nicholas Briggs, and including special introductions by presenter Robert Dick and producer Keith Barnfather.

The Doctors: Peter Davison and the rest of The Doctors series are out now.

To be in with a chance of winning the complete set of 8 double-disc DVDs, just enter below!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Terms & Conditions:
STARBURST does not accept any responsibility for late or lost entries due to the Internet or email problems. Proof of sending is not proof of receipt. Entrants must supply full details as required on the competition page, and comply with all rules to be eligible for the prizes. No responsibility is accepted for ineligible entries or entries made fraudulently. Unless otherwise stated, the Competition is not open to employees of: (a) the Company; and (b) any third party appointed by the Company to organise and/or manage the Competition; and (c) the Competition sponsor(s). This competition is a game promoted STARBURST. STARBURST’s decision is final in every situation and no correspondence will be entered into. STARBURST reserves the right to cancel the competition at any stage, if deemed necessary in its opinion, and if circumstances arise outside of its control. Entrants must be UK residents and 18 or over. Entrants will be deemed to have accepted these rules and to agree to be bound by them when entering this competition. The winners will be drawn at random from all the correct entries, and only they will be contacted personally. Prize must be taken as stated and cannot be deferred. There will be no cash alternatives. STARBURST routinely adds the email addresses of competition entrants to the regular newsletter, in order to keep entrants informed of upcoming competition opportunities. Details of how to unsubscribe are contained within each newsletter. All information held by STARBURST will not be disclosed to any third parties

STARBURST’s D&D Christmas Guide 2020

D&D Christmas Guide

Dungeons and Dragons players are notoriously difficult to buy gifts for. After all, when someone’s hobby is ‘being everyone else in an entire world’, it can make getting gifts for the Dungeon Master, Paladin or Warlock in your life a little daunting.

We’ve pulled together a list of some our favourite Dungeons and Dragons related things that we think might make a good gift. Alternately, you can check out the official holiday guide here.

First off, the easiest and simplest solution to what to get a gamer as a gift is dice. More dice is always good. If you want to go for the deluxe option, Wizards of the Coast produce a number of boxed sets that include all the dice you need to play the game in a handy box so when you roll the dice they don’t spring off the table and get stolen by the cat. The official ones include a Avernus/Baldurs Gate set, a Sword Coast/Elf Inspired set and a rather lovely set inspired by Icewind Dale, which has a very useful map if you’re playing that campaign.

If you have a more modest budget, then UK companies such as DnDice and Beholder’s Gaze do ‘dice boosters’. These are lucky dip bags with a full set of dice in them. Beholder’s Gaze are also currently having a sale if you’re on a budget but want to pick the dice you’re after.

Of course, dice are nice, but they are also plenty of dice based accessories for you to carry your dice and roll them and so on. Dakota Irish will do you wooden dice vaults, dice trays and so on. Beautifully crafted stuff. Alternately, if you have wads of cash and don’t mind paying for imports, you could try US based Wyrmwood Gaming, who pretty much invented wooden gaming gear. They do official D&D merch and are responsible for the lovely table and kit on hit D&D live-stream, Critical Role.

Speaking of which, the Critical Role team have book out called The World Of Critical Role: The History Behind The Epic Fantasy. It’s a comprehensive companion to the series and an ideal present for a fan. It’s even got Matthew Mercer looking all moody on the front cover. Fans of the show would also appreciate D&D release The Explorers Guide To Wildemont, an official sourcebook that features the lands from Critical Role. Those looking for something a little less serious might want to consider The Ginny Di Natural 21 Calendar. Ginny is a cosplayer who is heavily inspired by both Critical Role and Dungeons and Dragons.

Swinging back to actual Dungeons and Dragons content, those still getting into the hobby may appreciate either the D&D Starter Set or The D&D Essentials Kit. The starter kit is a large box with an adventure, dice and basic rules. The adventure is absolutely fantastic. The Essentials Kit is a similar sort of thing; a slightly shorter adventure but you get a very basic DM’s screen and flash cards to go along with it. Both are great introductions to the hobby, and you may also want to get a more robust Dungeon Master’s Screen, such as the Wilderness Kit. The most important book you’ll need to play D&D though is The Players Handbook, and it’s a good place to start. The other core books are The Dungeon Master’s Guide and Monster Manual. If you’re feeling rich all three can be found as part of a boxed gift set. If you’re feeling very, very wealthy take a look at Beadle and Grimms luxury editions, full of unique collectable items from the world of Dungeon and Dragons.

Those who love books but hate bookshelves (or prefer to travel digitally) should check out online service DNDBeyond. It’s got all the books you need available digitally plus utilities and the like to make the game easier to run. Ideal if you run your games via Web conferencing software.

They are an absolute pile of additional books for the game, of course. Actual adventures such as Baldur’s Gate: Descent in Avernus and Icewind Dale: Rime of The Frost Maiden are comprehensive campaigns likely to delight players and Dungeon Masters alike. There’s also the Greek-Myth themed adventure setting Mythic Odyssey’s of Theros, which is more a campaign setting than a single story. The latest ‘rule book’ for D&D is called Tasha’s Cauldron of Everything. It’s not a core book but it’s jammed full with fun options to spice up a game.

Speaking of spice, and moving on to books that aren’t about the game rules, there’s Heroes Feast, a cookbook. It’s been quite fun to watch various people in the D&D community use this book to delight their gaming groups (like breaking bread, D&D is very much a social activity). We understand that Dungeon Master to the stars Paul Foxcroft makes a mean Halfling Chilli. They are plenty of other fun spin-off D&D books as well. The 2021 D&D Annual is the sort of book that has a maze puzzle and a wordsearch in it but it’s also a great snapshot of the state of the hobby right now. The Young Adventurer’s Collection on the other hand is a set of books that tell you all about the monsters, creatures, heroes and other things in the D&D world, but it’s rules light. Ideal for young minds.

Another option for the adventuring shopper are models. You don’t need miniatures to play D&D but they do add to the fun. Wizkids are the official producer of D&D models, and they produce both pre-painted and unpainted models as well as scenery. Their Icons of The Realms provide all sorts of creatures from all sorts of settings. They also do specific big models such as The Purple Wyrm and The Hydra. They also produce dungeon and setting scenery such as the Warlock Dungeons Tiles, which let gamers recreate the dungeons they’re fighting in on the table. If you really want to impress though, Wizkids also do Dragon heads on trophy plaques. No wonder Dragons are endangered.

If you are not in the mood to play a full D&D campaign, but still want to have some quick fun round the table, they are offical D&D card games. Dungeon Mayhem is a cartoonish romp with additional expansions and there’s also The Great Dalmuti, a more tradtional card game with a D&D style theme.
Over-all, D&D is big right now and you are spoilt for choice when it comes to gifts this Christmas.

D.B. Sweeney | FIRE IN THE SKY

db sweeney

1993 cult sci-fi biopic Fire in the Sky told the story of Travis Walton, who claimed in his book The Walton Experience that he had been abducted by aliens. Actor D.B. Sweeney played the film version of Walton and the movie is set to be released on Blu-ray for the first time by Via-Vision’s Imprint label. We caught up with him to have a quick chat about the role…

STARBURST: How did you approach the role of Travis Walton?

D.B. Sweeney: I thought it was a strong setup in the script. It was a great opportunity for me to do something that hadn’t really been done before in terms of making zero gravity believable.

Can you tell us a little bit about what it was like filming Fire in the Sky?

It was like two movies really. The great time in Oregon with James Garner, Robert Patrick, and Peter Berg filming everything outside the spaceship. Then the second movie was just me and Rob at Industrial Light and Magic with their incredible team doing the alien sequences. Both movies were fun but a lot of long hours.

There’s a moment in the film where the character is covered in a rubber-type material, what was that like?

ILM had so many cool ideas and setups that it made it really easy for me to buy in as an actor that we could pull it off. Really creative, cool dudes trying to make some magic.

What was the most difficult part of the role?

The weightless sequences required me to be in a harness on wires, hung upside down for long periods of time. That was hard on the body even though I had trained hard to be fit for it

What do you think you’d do if you were abducted by aliens? Is there anything in particular you’d want to ask them?

I think I would tell them how much I enjoyed their gentle cousin in E.T. and hope they took the hint.

What’s next for you?

I have a film called Haymaker about to drop and then The Manson Brothers Midnight Zombie Massacre, which is really fun. And my short film Two Dum Micks co-starring Sean Astin has won over 60 film festival awards and is still going strong on that circuit! You can check it out at twodummicks.com.

Fire in the Sky gets its worldwide Blu-ray debut on December 30th from Australian label Imprint.

Marvel’s Challenge in the Age of the Franchise

As of late April 2020, the Marvel Cinematic Universe is the most profitable film franchise in history. Bringing in more than $22.5 billion at the box office, this means more than Harry Potter, James Bond, and even Star Wars. While the idea of franchising is hardly new, this unprecedented success has set the stage like never before. Combined with the growing success of media in other mediums one thing becomes clear, the age of the unavoidable franchise is here. The only question is, how will companies best take advantage of franchise potential?

Focus or Freedom

One of the biggest benefits of franchises comes the possibilities of cross-medium potential. In the Marvel example, the films grew from comic books, but this starting point only acted as a base. Comics, while long popular in certain communities, don’t have the mass-market appeal that films have. This has led to the MCU becoming far more popular than the comics, with many enormous fans never once having picked up a comic book.

This creates a tricky situation, however, on where the rest of Marvel’s franchise efforts want to place their attention. Their films have raised awareness of their properties to new heights, but this might have resulted in undue confidence. For a better illustration of this in action, we could turn to gaming.

Adapting to the Medium

On the 14th of August, 2020, the action role-playing game Marvel’s Avengers released on the PlayStation, Xbox, and PC platforms. In development for years, the game was estimated to have cost somewhere in the range of $170-$190 million according to Comic Book. Enormous hope was placed on the game, bolstered by the success of the MCU.

Yet three months after launch, the game sold only around 60% of what it needed. Despite being developed as a title user would keep playing, TheGamer notes that the amount of players has dropped to that below of many old games, which is concerning, to say the least.

 

Essentially, the answer comes from a misunderstanding of another medium. Marvel expected too much from goodwill, and not enough from the quality of their gameplay. The game cost too much to make, it cost too much to play, and it didn’t hold interest for what it was. Consider examples on the other side of the spectrum. In video games, probably the best relevant illustration of success is from the Arkham series of Batman games. While these costs as much to buy as Marvel’s Avengers, they weren’t so much leveraging name recognition alone, with the unique Arkham gameplay going on to set new standards on its own.

On the other side of the equation, we have franchise titles like those on online casinos. If you visit Space Casino, games like the Jumanji slot perform extremely well among their collection of other slots, table, and live casino games. In this case, success was found through not overextending, by focussing on giving players exactly what they want while not demanding too much from them. Success doesn’t come from the brand name alone, but by producing a product of high quality that stands alone, such as with this slot and many other crossover slot games.

Trying for Balance

As Marvel and so many other franchises have shown, success in a franchise means using name recognition as only the first step. The films are popular because they take inspiration where they can but ultimately rely on the quality of the writing, acting, and directing. Therein lies the challenge of building a franchise, knowing where to find the balance. So, will Marvel get back on track following their film success and game failure? It might be some time before we know, but at least they should now have a better idea of what not to do

Five Films to Check Out on Horror Channel This Week – 231120

To save you getting lockdown blues, we’re going to be giving you our picks of what to watch on Horror Channel each week. Here’s some of our favourites this week:

Wednesday November 25th, 10.50pm – Maniac (2012)

Franck Khalfoun’s remake of the gloriously sleazy 1980 classic is an impressive effort. Starring Elijah Wood as the mannequin and scalp obsessed loner is filmed entirely from the killer’s point of view. This heightens the tension and makes the viewer complicit with the crimes. Unmissable.

Thursday November 26th, 9pm – Serenity (2005)

When the TV series Firefly was cancelled, there was rightfully an outcry from fans. Creator Joss Whedon has always looked after the fans, however, and we got this fun continuation of the story as a big budget feature film. Join Nathan Fillion, Alan Tudyk and all the crew on another adventure!

Friday November 27th, 9pm – Cell (2016)

John Cusack and Samuel L. Jackson star in this adaptation of the Stephen King novel. The premise – that a signal broadcast over mobile phone networks turns people into crazed murderers – probably isn’t as outlandish as it sounds, especially considering all we’ve been through this year!

Saturday November 28th, 9pm – Deliver Us From Evil (2014)

Based on the ‘true events’ covered in the book Beware the Night by Ralph Sarchie and Lisa Collier Cool, this was director Scott Derrickson’s follow-up to the massive horror hit Sinister. Eric Bana plays Sarchie, a cop who teams up with a Spanish priest (played by Édgar Ramírez) to fight the forces of evil. The always brilliant Sean Harris is the possessed soul in desperate need of an exorcism.

Sunday November 29th, 10.45pm – Howl (2015)

Director Paul Hyett knows how to pull off low budget scares. Set on an overnight train that becomes derailed, the passengers have more to fear than stale sandwiches and overpriced beer as they come under attack from a pack of werewolves. Expect things to get hairy!

Tune into Horror Channel on Sky 317, Virgin 149, Freeview 68, Freesat 138.

[ENDED] Win a TRAIN TO BUSAN: PENINSULA Bundle!

frightfest october

To celebrate the release of TRAIN TO BUSAN: PENINSULA – coming Nov 23rd on digital followed by a Nov 30th Blu-ray, DVD, SteelBook drop – we’ve teamed up with our friends at STUDIOCANAL to give one lucky reader the bumper bundle pictured below!

busan

To be in with a chance of winning, just answer the following question:

What type of monsters are the main antagonists in the TRAIN TO BUSAN series?

A) People who leave their bags on empty seats forcing you to stand awkwardly in that bit by the doors.

B) The folk whose job it is to announce your train has been delayed by another fifty flippin’ minutes.

C) Zombies

Email your answer labelled ‘Train to Busan’ to [email protected] to arrive before 11:59pm on December 7th.

For more on TRAIN TO BUSAN: PENINSULA, read on:

Four years after South Korea’s total decimation in TRAIN TO BUSAN, the zombie outbreak thriller that captivated audiences worldwide, acclaimed director Yeon Sang-ho brings us PENINSULA, the next nail-biting chapter in his post-apocalyptic world. Jung-seok (Gang Dong-won), a soldier who previously escaped the diseased wasteland, relives the horror when assigned to a covert operation on the quarantined peninsula with two simple objectives: retrieve and survive. When his team unexpectedly stumbles upon survivors, their lives will depend on whether the best—or worst—of human nature prevails in the direst of circumstances.

[ENDED] WIN a MOTHRA/Ishirō Honda Blu-ray Bundle

mothra win

We’ve teamed up with Eureka! Entertainment to bring one lucky reader a chance to win two great new releases: MOTHRA and ISHIRŌ HONDA DOUBLE FEATURE: THE H-MAN & BATTLE IN OUTER SPACE. Read on for more info!

Mothra, Ishirō Honda’s stunningly inventive monster adventure-fantasy, is available on home video for the first time in the UK. The Blu-ray is out now as part of The Masters of Cinema Series in a Limited Edition set of only 3000 copies, featuring a Hardbound Case, 60-page Perfect Bound Collector’s Book & Reversible Poster.

One of the most iconic Japanese kaiju, Mothra has appeared in over a dozen feature films. Presented here is her debut, a gloriously vibrant piece of filmmaking that forever changed how kaiju eiga would be produced in Japan.

Following reports of human life on Infant Island, the supposedly deserted site of atomic bomb tests, an international expedition to the heavily-radiated island discovers a native tribe and tiny twin female fairies called “Shobijin” who guard a sacred egg. The overzealous expedition leader kidnaps the Shobijin to exhibit in a Tokyo stage show but soon they summon their protector, hatching the egg and releasing a giant caterpillar. When Mothra arrives in Japan and transforms into her final form, the nation and its people face their destruction.

Ishirō Honda Double Feature: The H-Man & Battle in Outer Space are two classics of Japanese sci-fi cinema, on Blu-ray for the first time on home video in the UK. Out now as part of The Masters of Cinema Series, featuring a Limited Edition O-Card Slipcase (First Print Run of 2000 copies only].

In Tokyo, a mysterious radioactive liquid is dissolving people into slimy, sentient, seemingly indestructible, blobs of destruction! Part-Japanese gangster noir, part-gooey body melting horror, The H-Man (Bijo to Ekitai-ningen – ‘Beauty and the Liquid People’) is one of the most unique sci-fi films of the 1950s.

A series of mysterious catastrophes sweep the globe, causing the world’s scientists to conclude that beings from another planet are attacking Earth, and the world must unite to defend itself in a gigantic battle in outer space! With wonderful special effects sequences by Eiji Tsuburaya (Godzilla, Ultraman), and a rousing score by Akira Ifukube (Godzilla), Battle in Outer Space is a glorious sci-fi extravaganza.

To be in with a chance of winning, just answer this question:

What classic kaiju film did Ishirō Honda also direct?

A) Godzilla

B) Godzuki

C) God Only Knows

 

Email your answer labelled ‘Mothra’ to [email protected] to arrive no later than 11.59pm on November 29th.

 

You can buy Mothra here  and Ishirō Honda Double Feature: The H-Man & Battle in Outer Space here.

 

mothra win

Terms & Conditions:
STARBURST does not accept any responsibility for late or lost entries due to the Internet or email problems. Proof of sending is not proof of receipt. Entrants must supply full details as required on the competition page, and comply with all rules to be eligible for the prizes. No responsibility is accepted for ineligible entries or entries made fraudulently. Unless otherwise stated, the Competition is not open to employees of: (a) the Company; and (b) any third party appointed by the Company to organise and/or manage the Competition; and (c) the Competition sponsor(s). This competition is a game promoted STARBURST. STARBURST’s decision is final in every situation and no correspondence will be entered into. STARBURST reserves the right to cancel the competition at any stage, if deemed necessary in its opinion, and if circumstances arise outside of its control. Entrants must be UK residents and 18 or over. Entrants will be deemed to have accepted these rules and to agree to be bound by them when entering this competition. The winners will be drawn at random from all the correct entries, and only they will be contacted personally. Prize must be taken as stated and cannot be deferred. There will be no cash alternatives. STARBURST routinely adds the email addresses of competition entrants to the regular newsletter, in order to keep entrants informed of upcoming competition opportunities. Details of how to unsubscribe are contained within each newsletter. All information held by STARBURST will not be disclosed to any third parties

Short and to the Point – BFI Flipside’s SHORT SHARP SHOCKS

Short films have become a popular staple of film festivals but SHORT SHARP SHOCKS, the 41st release from BFI Flipside, shows us that the format has been used for much more commercial means previously…

The new collection, Short Sharp Shocks, released by BFI Flipside – which deals with releasing British movies that have been neglected; the seedier, more sleazy films that tend to interest us more than the populist classics – features seven shorts that have been lovingly restored and transferred in HD. They range from experimental narrative works to straight-faced ghost story recitals. In the latter category, they are practically quaint by today’s standards. Lock Your Door and The Reformation of St Jules were both made in 1949 and are perfect examples of fire-side ghost tales. They are told, with no narrative cutaways, by the writer Algernon Blackwood. His stories, particularly The Wendigo, are still be adapted today and at the time he would tell his tales on the radio and television. These two filmed versions would have Blackwood recollecting from his parlour. The effect is like sitting down with a great grandfather. He appears awkward in front of the camera, but this adds to the eeriness. The stories are not those of surprise or horror, but more quiet apprehension with notions of the uncanny. It’s hard to imagine a modern audience getting much out of them at the local Odeon, but no doubt at the time they would be enough to send some shivers down the spine.

Another stagey-but-brilliant inclusion is the 1953 version of The Tell-Tale Heart. Edgar Allan Poe’s story has been brought to the screen many times and suits the short form. Directed by J.B. Williams, it has the great Stanley Baker asking us: “Why would you say that I am mad?” Poe’s prose is presented as a monologue and works perfectly as such here, with Baker showing the promise that his career proved.

The collection also contains some shorts presented as traditional narrative tales. Death Was a Passenger and Portrait of a Matador (both 1958) are two intriguing stories directed by Theodore Zichy, who was perhaps better known as an actor, appearing in Powell and Pressburger’s The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943). The former has ‘know-his-face’ actor Terrence Alexander recounting a lucky escape he had while trying to escape the Nazis on a train at the start of WWII. The latter is a more genre-friendly affair in which an artist is tormented by the arrival of a portrait he painted a year earlier – that of a bullfighter. The subject hated it and was killed in the ring soon after, and the artist is convinced the canvas bears a curse.

The release features a brace of shorts that are more akin to the ones that we recall seeing in the flea pits. Twenty-Nine (1969) sees a man (Goodbye Gemini’s Alexis Kanner) awaken in a strange apartment, unaware of what had occurred the previous night. Trying to put the pieces of his fractured memory together – and keep his wife from finding out whatever it was. Like an episode of Tales of the Unexpected, this has a lovely little twist, and a surprising appearance from George and Mildred’s Yootha Joyce, as well as giving us a small glimpse of Soho in the sixties. The Sex Victims (1973) has a modern-day Lady Godiva (Felicity Devonshire) leading a trucker astray only to have him and his friend (Alun Armstrong) come to a sticky end. The Lake (1978) is an atmospheric tale in which a couple (Gene Foad and Julie Peasgood) enjoy a picnic in the grounds of a farmhouse, where previously the owner had killed his family and livestock. It was written and directed by Lindsey C. Vickers, who was an assistant director on several later Hammer movies, and it’s a beautifully shot, eerie tale. Finally, there’s The Errand (1980), which follows a soldier tasked with retrieving a message and coming off worse for it. This one has significant genre credentials as it was written by David McGillivray, best known for his screenplays directed by Pete Walker and Norman J. Warren. A keen eye might be able to spot FrightFest supremo Alan Jones, too.

The popularity of the feature-length double bill, and then the abandoning of the continuous performances at cinemas spelt the end of the short as a theatrical treat. As mentioned, they now tend to only get festival-only screenings before being released to YouTube and the like. It’s becoming increasingly popular to repackage them into anthology features, which at least gives them more exposure.

Acknowledgements and thanks are given to Vic Pratt from BFI Flipside for providing insight when putting this feature together.

BFI Flipside’s SHORT SHARP SHOCKS hits Blu-ray on November 23rd and is reviewed here.