Episodes 80/94
USA, 1983/84 Director: Larry Thomas Writers: Cassandra Peterson, Larry Thomas Starring: Cassandra Peterson Genre: Horror, Comedy, Television Running Time: 200 minutes Distributor: Shout! Factory Website: Buy it here
Watching a bad movie by yourself is not an ideal situation. There’s no one to appreciate your snide comments or keep you awake, so it’s a little weird when your girlfriend comes home to find you muttering to yourself in a semi-conscious state halfway through The Phantom Creeps. Thankfully, Shout! Factory has made select episodes of horror hostess Elvira’s old Movie Macabre TV show available, in case the hankering to waste your life watching for boom mikes in crap B-movies strikes you while your one friend is at work. So while your girlfriend might be no more pleased to find you muttering to a vamped-up Type O Negative groupie during the commercial breaks of a early-eighties broadcast of horror film Monstroid, you can at least pretend that you’re being social. This two-DVD set features episodes 80 and 94, Blue Sunshine and Monstroid, films so good and bad, respectively, that they even out to an exactly average set, balancing perfectly on a fulcrum point of quality. Cassandra Peterson’s Elvira character is a deliberately bubble-headed goth, a black magic Barbie, and while that limits the jokes she makes to the sort of thing you’d hear in a Malibu mall, it’s a consistent theme that makes the films all the more enjoyable. Both films are presented in their entirety, and with Elvira's interruptions.
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USA, 1979
Director: Kenneth Halford, Herbert L. Strock (uncredited)
Writer: Kenneth Halford, Walter Roeber Schmidt, Garland Scott, Herbert L. Strock
Producers: Kenneth Hartford, Garland Scott
Cast: James Mitchum, John Carradine, Anthony Eisley, Stella Calle
Genre: Horror
Running Time: 98 minutes
The other film in this set also has a surprising number of competent performances, but the film itself is so ridiculous even that can’t help to save it. And not only is it stupid, it’s also colossally boring, like having a conversation about tires with a guy who flunked high school. Monstroid, which for some reason is titled Monster in the credits and most posters, is about a lake monster terrorizing a local village and slowing down production in an American-owned cement plant. Well, perhaps “terrorizing” is too strong of a word. Granted, these people live near a cement plant, which couldn’t be more soul-crushingly boring if it were manufacturing the parts of slide-rules that don’t have numbers, so they might be easily startled. But the monster doesn’t really do much until about halfway through the movie, when it eats a couple of fishermen so drunk they forget to speak Spanish, and when it finally shows itself towards the end, it looks like Fin Fang Foom with a moustache. The film stars legendary B-movie actor John Carradine, who somehow looks even more tired than usual, going through the paces as only a man trying to earn enough to pay his phone bill can. What's perhaps most notable about this film is that the burst of profanity from the factory owner proves that these releases are uncensored, despite Elvira's tame humor. Speaking of her asides, they're inspired as always, and her skits feature recurring character the Breather, an unpleasantly oily fellow who makes PG versions of obscene phone calls, and a fake interview segment featuring clips from the film.
Rating: 8 on 10