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Dario Argento

Unsane (1982) Tenebrae
A mystery writer is supected of murder when a series of killings occur just as he wrote about them in his new book. Starring John Saxon.

Mario Bava

Black Sabbath (1963)
A great trilogy of horror tales hosted by Boris Karloff. 'The Drop of Water' stars Jacqueline Pierreux as a nurse who steals a ring from a dead spiritualist (bad idea), 'The Telephone' stars Michele Mercier as a call girl plagued by harrasing phone calls from a man she sent to prison, 'The Wurdalak' (from Tolstoy) stars Karloff as an evil patriarch who feeds on blood. Boris also acts as host for all three segments.

Black Sunday (1960)
La Maschera del Demonio
a.k.a. The Demon's Mask, House of Fright, Revenge of the Vampire

Classic, atmospheric horror film features Barbara Steele (in her first starring role) as a witch burned at the stake. She returns on the night Satan walks the Earth and torments the descendants of those who killed her.

Blood and Black Lace (1964)
Beautiful fashion models are being killed by a monster with metalic claws. Who is responsible? This creepy thriller stars Cameron Mitchell and Eve Bartok.

Danger: Diabolik (1968)
John Phillip Law ('Barbarella') stars as a criminal mastermind in Bava's exciting action film. Adapted from a popular French comic strip and co-starring lovely Marisa Mell.

Hatchet for the Honeymoon (1969)
Bava's strange tale of an impotent bridegroom who goes nuts and starts hacking up gals in wedding gowns!

Hercules (1959)
Bava was Director of Photography on this sword & sandal classic. Featuring muscleman Steve Reeves in the title role and co-starring sexy Sylva Koscina.

Hercules in the Haunted World (1961)
Starring Reg Park and Christopher Lee. Directed by Bava.

House of Exorcism (1975) a.k.a. Lisa and the Devil
Bizarre film about a woman who finds herself in a house full of weirdos. Cast includes Elke Sommer, Telly Savalas and Robert Alda.

Kill, Baby, Kill (1966)
A young girl returns from the grave seeking revenge on the townspeople responsible for her death. With Erica Blanc and Fabienne Dali.

What! (1963) a.k.a. The Whip and the Body
Christopher Lee tortures Daliah Lavi, who takes revenge by killing him. Lee then returns from the dead and proceeds to whip her each night. A creepy Gothic thriller.

John Carradine

Billy the Kid vs. Dracula (1966)
The most feared outlaw in the West tries to go straight and start a family - too bad the gal he's marrying is Count Dracula's neice. With Harry Carey, Jr., Virginia Christine and Carradine as Dracula. Director William Beaudine's last film.

The Black Sleep (1956)
A mad scientist produces a serum that turns men into zombie-like creatures. Starring Basil Rathbone, Akim Tamiroff, Lon Chaney, Jr., Carradine, Bela Lugosi and Tor Johnson.

Bluebeard (1944)
Edgar G. Ulmer's engrossing account of a habitual strangler (Carradine) who lures women to his art studio and murders them. With Jean Parker and Iris Adrian. (Specify 1944 version when ordering.)

Cain's Cutthroats (1971)
Co-starring Scott Brady.

Captain Kidd (1945)
Charles Laughton plays the infamous pirate, shown plundering ships on the high seas. Also with Randolph Scott, Barabara Britton, Reginald owen, Gilbert Roland, Sheldon Leonard and Carradine.

Climax
'The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.' One hour television broadcast starring Carradine and Thomas Mitchell.

C-Man (1949)
Dean Jagger stars as a customs agent tracking down a murderer and a thief in this minor action classic. Carradine appears as an alchoholic fall guy.

The Cosmic Man (1958)
Carradine is an alien who journeys to Earth with a message of peace (a la 'The Day the Earth Stood Still') and gets the usual hostile reception. Also with Bruce Bennett.

Daniel Boone (1936)
Carradine co-stars with George O'Brien in this biography of the famed frontiersman. Also with Heather Angel and Ralph Forbes.

Death at Love House (1976)
A writer (Robert Wagner) is obsessed with a dead movie queen who may have been intimate with his father. Carradine co-stars with Kate Jackson, Slyvia Sidney, Joan Blondell, Dorothy Lamour and Marianna Hill. Filmed in the famed Harold Lloyd mansion.

Frankenstein Island (1981)
Jerry Warren's first horror film in fifteen years features many of his old stars. With Carradine, Cameron Mitchell, Robert Clarke, Andrew Duggan, Katherine Victor and Steve Brodie.

Frontier Marshall
Western adventure starring Randolph Scott, Cesar Romero and Carradine.

The Green Hornet
Carradine guests stars with Van Williams and Bruce Lee in the classic 1960s TV series. This tape features 'Alias the Scarf' (with Carradine and 'Hornet, Save Thyself.'

Hell Ship Mutiny (1957)
Carradine co-stars in this South Sea adventure with Jon Hall, Peter Lorre, Mike Mazurki, Roberta Haynes and Stanley Adams.

Incredible Petrified World (1957)
A crew exploring the ocean floor in a diving bell discovers a mysterious underground world. Also with Robert Clarke, Phyllis 'Lois Lane' Coates and Lloyd Nelson.

Invasion of the Animal People (1962)
a.k.a. Horror in the Midnight Sun
When a mysterious 'meteor' falls to Earth in Sweden, investigators discover that it was actually a spaceship. Also with Barbara Wilson and Robert Burton.

Isle of Forgotten Sins (1943) a.k.a. Monsoon
Deep sea divers battle a crooked sea captain for a fortune in gold. Starring Carradine, Sidney Toler and Gale Sondergard. Directed by Edgar G. Ulmer.

Kentucky Moonshine (1938)
The Ritz Brothers (in what many consider their best film) get on the radio by pretending to be a Hillbilly act! Also with Tony Martin (as the talent scout who 'discovers' them), Carradine and Slim Summerville

Man with the Synthetic Brain (1972)
a.k.a. Psycho a Go-Go, Blood of Ghastly Horror, Fiend with the Atomic Brain, The Love Maniac, The Fiend with the Electronic Brain
Join mad scientist Carradine as he hatches a gruesome series of brain transplant experiments. Also with Regina Carol, Kent Taylor and Tommy Kirk. Directed by Al Adamson.

Mr. Moto's Last Warning (1939)
Mr. Moto (Peter Lorre) battles sabotuers who plan to blow up the Suez Canal. Carradine plays a British agent. Also with George Sanders and Richard Cortez.

Terror in the Wax Museum (1973)
Murder mystery set in a spooky wax museum. Carradine co-stars with Ray Milland and Broderick Crawford (both Oscar winners!), plus Maurice Evans, Elsa Lanchester, Louis Hayward, Patrick Knowles and Shani Wallace from 'Oliver!'.

The Unearthly (1957)
The story of a scientist and his experiments with immortality. Co-starring the voluptuous Allison Hayes ('Attack of the 50 Ft. Woman'), with Sally Todd, Myron Healy and Tor Johnson.

Vampire Hookers (1979)
'Blood isn't all they suck!' Vampire Carradine sends his sexy henchwomen to bring strong young studs back to his castle.

Waterfront (1944)
Nazi agents Carradine and J. Carrol Naish terrorize WWII San Francisco in this espionage thriller from PRC.

Wizard of Mars (1964)
Astronauts land on Mars, only to discover an Oz-like world ruled by wizard John Carradine. Also with Roger Gentry and Vic McGee.

Lon Chaney, Jr.

The Big Chase (1954)
Policeman Glenn Langen ('The Amazing Colossal Man') turns down a dangerous assignment even though it means more pay. He's concerned that he'll be killed and his pregnant wife (Adele Jergens) will have to raise their soon-to-be-born child all by herself. Things don't work out according to plan however, and soon he's risking his neck on another deadly case. Chaney co-stars as a thief.

Bird of Paradise (1932)
Playboy Joel McCrea journeys to a south sea island where he falls for beautiful princess Dolores Del Rio. McCrea's friends try to discourage him from marrying a 'foreigner' and the island people are none too happy about the romance either. The scenery is gorgeous, and so is Del Rio in her skimpy outfits. Lon (billed as 'Creighton Chaney') co-stars.

The Black Pirates (1954)
Murderous buccaneers prey on the West Indies in this historical drama. Chaney co-stars with Robert Clarke, Anthony Dexter and Alfonso Bedoya (the 'stinking badges' bandit from 'Treasure of the Sierra Madre').

The Black Sleep (1956)
A mad scientist produces a serum that turns men into zombie-like creatures. Starring Basil Rathbone, Akim Tamiroff, Chaney, John Carradine, Bela Lugosi and Tor Johnson.

Bride of the Gorilla (1951)
A plantation foreman (Raymond Burr) is transformed into an ape. Chaney co-stars with Tom Conway and sexy Barbara Payton (as the plantation owner's restless wife). Directed by Curt Siodmak.

The Devil's Messenger (1961)
A series of stories about damnation featuring John Crawford, Karen Kadler and Chaney as Satan himself.

Face of the Screaming Werewolf (1958)
Chaney's last appearance in werewolf make-up. From Jerry Warren.

The Female Bunch (1969)
Violent exploitation film shot at Charles Manson's Spahn Ranch (for just the right atmosphere). Chaney co-stars with Russ Tamblyn and a bevy of gorgeous female crooks. For torture/bondage fans.

Fireball Jungle (1968)
Chaney co-stars in this color stock car epic. Features lots of auto crashes as mobsters move in on the racing circuit.

The Indestructible Man (1956)
An executed killer (Chaney) returns from the grave and seeks revenge on the gang members who betrayed him.

The Last Frontier (1932) Part One
Twelve chapter serial starring Chaney

The Last Frontier (1932) Part Two

The Last Frontier
Chaney stars in this feature version of the classic western serial.

Lucky Devils (1933)
Action packed behind-the-scenes look at Hollywood stuntmen. Featuring Bill Boyd, William Gargan, Bruce Cabot, Roscoe Ates and Lon Chaney, Jr. (billed as Creighton Chaney).

Manfish (1956)
A group of men travel to the Caribbean in search of treasure in this variation of Poe's 'The Gold Bug.' Starring Chaney and Victor Jory.

My Favorite Brunette (1947)
This Bob Hope vehicle is an excellent blend of crime and comedy. Hope plays a baby photographer whose dream of becoming a private eye comes true when Dorothy Lamour mistakes him for an investigator. But the going gets rough when a gang of crooks (led by Peter Lorre) enters the picture. Chaney plays one of Lorre's henchman - a big dope who continually cracks walnuts open in the crook of his arm.

Overland Mail (1944) Part One
Chaney stars in this 15 chapter serial.

Overland Mail (1944) Part Two

Riders of Death Valley (1941) Part One
Western thrills with Chaney, Dick Foran, Leo Carillo, Charles Bickford and Guinn Williams. 15 chapters.

Riders of Death Valley (1941) Part Two

Sixteen Fathoms Deep (1934)
Starring Chaney, Sally O'Neil and George Regas. Specify 1934 version.

Sixteen Fathoms Deep (1948)
Starring Chaney, Arthur Lake and Lloyd Bridges. Specify 1948 version.

Spider Baby (1964)
a.k.a. The Liver Eaters
This creepy black comedy features Chaney as a chauffeur who looks after a demented family. Also starring Carol Ohmart and Sid Haig. Loaded with cool weirdness, Lon even provides vocals on the great opening song.

The Three Musketeers (1933) Part One
Lon (billed as Creighton Chaney) co-stars with John Wayne, Raymond Hatton and Noah Beery, Jr. in this 12 chapter serial.

The Three Musketeers (1933) Part Two

Undersea Kingdom (1936) Part One
Chaney co-stars with Ray 'Crash' Corrigan in this 12 chapter adventure serial.

Undersea Kingdom (1936) Part Two

Lon Chaney, Sr.

Flesh and Blood (1922)
Chaney plays a lawyer who's been unjustly imprisoned for years. He escapes, only to find that his wife is dead. When he visits his daughter in disguise, he learns that she's in love with the son of his sworn enemy. Also with Noah Beery and Edith Roberts. Silent.

The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923)
Chaney stars as Quasimodo, the deformed bell-ringer who falls in love with a dancing girl (Patsy Ruth Miller) in medieval Paris. A big budget treatment of the Hugo classic. Silent.

Outside the Law (1921)
Lon plays two roles in this silent crime drama; a kindhearted Chinaman and the evil Black Mike Sylva, a criminal who's as bad as his name implies. Produced, written and directed by Tod Browning, with Priscilla Dean and Ralph Lewis. This was a 'lost' film until a print surfaced in Wisconsin about ten years ago. Silent.

The Penalty (1920)
Chaney plays a madman whose legs were amputated by mistake years before. In his bitterness, he sets out to gain revenge on all of society. Also with Claire Adams and Ethel Gray Terry. Silent.

Phantom of the Opera (1925)
Chaney plays an embittered composer who roams the catacombs beneath the Paris Opera House. A silent classic that still provides plenty of chills. Remade many times without improvement, it is often cited as Chaney's best film. Silent.

Shadows (1922)
Chaney stars as a dying Chinaman who converts to Christianity to help out a friend (Harrison Ford) who's threatened with blackmail.

The Shock (1923)
An evil crime queen sends gunman Chaney to a small town to expose a crooked banker. Lon falls for the man's daughter and goes straight - causing the femme fatale to swear her revenge on all parties concerned. Produced by Carl Laemmle for Universal. Silent.

Tell It to the Marines (1926)
Chaney stars (without make-up) as a tough sergeant with a heart of gold. Action, thrills and romance - co-starring William Haines, Eleanor Boardman and Warner Oland as a Chinese bandit. Silent.

The Trap (1922)
When Alan Hale steals Chaney's sweetheart, Lon frames him for a crime and takes Hale's son. Upon his release from prison, Hale comes looking for Chaney - who has devised a fiendish trap in order to keep the boy. Silent.

West of Zanzibar (1928)
Chaney plays a crippled jungle lord who makes it his twisted life's work to turn the daughter of an enemy into a prostitute. He pays a terrible price in exacting his revenge. Directed by Tod Browning. Also with Lionel Barrymore, Warner Baxter and Mary Nolan. Silent.

Roger Corman

Atlas (1961)
Corman shot this Olympian epic in Greece with Michael Forest and Barboura Morris

Beast From Haunted Cave (1960)
A criminal gang on the lam is forced to do battle with a giant spider-like monster in this sci-fi thriller. Shot in South Dakota by director Monte Hellman.

Beast of the Yellow Night (1974)
A demented Satan worshipper assimilates the soul of each of his murder victims. 'They returned from the dead to stalk human prey!' Rated R.

A Bucket of Blood (1959)
This horror/comedy has a deserved cult following. The story concerns a murderous beatnik artist (Dick Miller) who turns his victims into statues. Also with Bert Convy (as a murder victim).

Creature from the Haunted Sea (1961)
Criminal Anthony Carbone offers to help loyalists flee a war-torn Caribbean island. He proceeds to steal their money and killthem - blaming their deaths on a sea monster. The authorities don't buy it until a real monster shows up. Also with Besty Jones-Moreland and Edward Wain (same cast as his 'Last Woman on Earth').

The Day the World Ended (1956)
Seven survivors of WWIII (including gangster Mike Connors and his moll Adele Jergens) struggle to adapt to a dangerous new world. Also starring Richard Denning, Raymond Hatton and Jonathan Haze.

Dementia 13 (1963)
Francis Ford Coppola directed this atmospheric tale of an axe murderer on the loose in an Irish castle. Starring William Campbell and Luana Anders (Night Tide). A cult favorite.

The Fast and the Furious (1954)
Starring John Ireland (who also directed) as a man falsely accused of murder. He commandeers Dorothy Malone's car and heads for the border. Also with Iris Adrian and Bruno Ve Sota

Gunslinger (1956)
When her lawman husband is gunned down, Beverly Garland puts on the tightest slacks she can find and takes over as town marshall. Evil saloon gal Allison Hayes ('Attack of the 50 Ft. Woman') hires John Ireland to gun Garland down - but instead he ends up falling for her.

Last Woman on Earth (1960)
An end-of-the world epic starring Betsy Jones-Moreland in the title role. One of the men battling for her attentions is screenwriter/actor Ed Wain (Robert Towne), who later gained fame with hits such as 'Shampoo,' 'The Last Detail' and 'Chinatown.'

Little Shop of Horrors (1960)
Horror/comedy (remade in 1986) about a man-eating plant and its' eccentric owner. Jonathan Haze and Mel Welles star, with young Jack Nicholson as a masochistic dental patient. 'Feeeed me!

Machine Gun Kelly (1957)
Charles Bronson stars in this fictionalized screen biography of the notoriuos, henpecked outlaw. Also with Susan Cabot and Morey Amsterdam.

Monster from the Ocean Floor (1954)
This early effort - produced by Corman and directed by Wyott Ordung (who also appears as 'Pablo') stars Anne Kimball as a vacationer who discovers a mysterious sea creature. Also with Stuart Wade and Jack Hayes.

Night of the Blood Beast (1958)
Ed Nelson, Angela Greene, Georgianna Carter and Tyler McVey star in this sci-fi shocker about a spaceship that returns to Earth with a dead astronaut. An alien uses his corpse to try and repopulate his own dying planet, but the folks on Earth don't take kindly to his methods. This one was actually produced by Roger's brother Gene. Directed by Bernard Kowalski.

Shame (1961)
a.k.a. The Intruder, I Hate Your Guts
Young William Shatner stars in this provocative film about bigotry and prejudice. Shatner arrives in a southern town that will soon be integrating it's schools. He does all he can to stir up racial animosity among the citizenry.

She-Gods of Shark Reef (1956)
Escaped convict Don Durant finds himself shipwrecked on an island inhabited by beautiful pearl divers. His companion (Bill Cord) saves a native girl from being sacrificed while Durant plots to steal the pearls. Loaded with gorgeous native dolls.

Ski Troop Attack (1960)
During a bitter winter battle, five G.I.s find themselves behind enemy lines in Corman's WWII drama. With Michael Forest, Frank Wolff, Wally Campo and Richard Sinatra.

Swamp Women (1956)
Policewoman Carole Matthews goes undercover at a southern women's prison to learn the whereabouts of some stolen jewels. The gang members escape, taking hostage Mike Connors along as they go after their goods. Also with Beverly Garland and Marie Windsor.

The Terror (1963)
Infamous quickie cranked out using sets from The Raven. Features that pictures' star (Boris Karloff) along with AIP regulars Dick Miller, Jonathan Haze and Jack Nicholson. (Nicholson's wife Sandra Knight also appears.) Young directors who worked on the project included Francis Ford Coppola, Monte Hellman and Peter Bogdanovich.

Track of the Vampire (1966) a.k.a. Bloodbath
A Yugoslavian vampire picture with new footage added. Starring William Campbell, Sandra Knight, Lori Saunders and Jonathan Haze. Executive producer Corman replaced director Jack Hill with feminist filmmaker Stephanie Rothman. It may not be the greatest film ever made, but there sure are a lot of beautiful women in it!

The Undead (1957)
A starnge experiment sends a hooker (Pamela Duncan) back to the Middle Ages, where's she's assumed to be a witch. Co-starring Richard Garland and lots of bosomy babes.

Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women (1968)
Legendary Corman film made up of footage from a Russian sci-fi film combined with new footage of Mamie Van Doren shot by young Peter Bogdanovich.

The Wasp Woman (1959)
A cosmetic queen (Susan Cabot) uses a special bee-derived salve to prevent aging, not anticipating the hideous side effects. Also with Anthony Eisley. Produced and directed by Corman.

Peter Cushing

The Blood Beast Terror (1967)
a.k.a. The Vampire-Beast Craves Blood
A mad scientist learns that his daughter has the ability to turn into a giant, blood sucking moth. Cushing plays the detective assigned to solve the gory murders she is committing.

Daleks - Invasion Earth 2150 B.C. (1966)
Cushing stars as Dr. Who, seen here thwarting an alien plan to hijack Earth and use it as a spaceship.

Dr. Who and the Daleks (1965)
Dr. Who (Cushing) and his daugters battle the evil Daleks.

Horror Express (1973)
a.k.a. Panic on the Trans-Siberian Express
Starring Cushing, Christopher Lee and Telly Savalas. A frozen monster returns to life while being transported across turn-of-the-century Asia.

Island of Terror (1967)
Hammer horror master Terence Fisher directed this terror/sci-fi thriller about rapidly multiplying silicon creatures that have decimated the population of an Irish isle. Great cast includes Cushing and Edward Judd.

Land of the Minotaur (1976)
a.k.a. The Devil's Men
A cult sacrifices females to their half-man, half-bull god. Starring Cushing and Donald Pleasance. Music by Brian Eno.

Legend of the Seven Golden Vampires (1974) a.k.a. Dracula nd the Seven Golden Vampires
Cushing locates a group of vampires in a Chinese cemetery. Co-produced by Hammer Films and the Shaw Brothers, which explains the horror/Kung Fu combination. Cast also includes Julie Ege.

Satanic Rites of Dracula (1973)
a.k.a. Count Dracula and His Vampire Bride, Dracula is Dead and Well and Living in London
Cushing stars as a descendant of Professor Van Helsing who is out to destroy Count Dracula (Lee in his last appearance as the infamous vampire). Rated R.

Jess Franco

The Awful Dr. Orloff (1962)
A demented surgeon uses pieces of various women in an attempt to refurbish his disfigured daughter. S&M shocker stars Howard Vernon, Diana Lorys and Perla Crystal.

Castle of Fu Manchu (1968)
The diabolical Fu Manchu Christopher Lee) continues his mad experiments in his castle near Istanbul. Also with Richard Greene and Maria Perschy.

The Diabolical Dr. Z (1966)
The daughter of a mad scientist uses a secret device to gain control of a sexy singing star. A sado-sexual thriller with Mabel Karr and Howard Vernon.

Future Women (1975)
A beautiful woman plots to take over the world with her sexy all-woman army. George Sanders and Shirley Eaton star in this bizarre Franco film.

Greta Haus Ohne Manner
Dyanne ('Ilsa') Thorne stars in this brutal women-in-prison film. Lots of nudity, torture and other violence. English subtitles. Adults only.

Oasis of the Zombies (1981)
Nazi soldiers are slaughtered in the North African desert only to return to 'life' years later. Their worm-ridden and rotting bodies rise up from the grave. Powered by their undead souls, they lust after blood and tear the flesh from any who venture near!

Tor Johnson

Beast of Yucca Flats (1961)
Low budget horror pic (with political overtones) about a scientist turned into a monster by radiation. Also features some rare early sixties nudity. Tor's last film.

The Black Sleep (1956)
A mad scientist produces a serum that turns men into zombie-like creatures. Starring Basil Rathbone, Akim Tamiroff, Lon Chaney, Jr., John Carradine, Bela Lugosi and Tor.

Bride of the Monster (1955)
A fine companion piece to Ed Wood's later film 'Plan Nine From Outer Space.' This is the one where Bela Lugosi struggles with the unmoving prop octopus - Tor plays Lobo the manservant. Also with Dolores Fuller and Paul Marco.

Night of the Ghouls (1959)
Kenne Dunne (in a role originally slated for Bela Lugosi) stars as the phony spiritualist 'Dr. Acula' in this followup to 'Plan Nine From Outer Space.' Johnson once again plays Lobo.

Plan 9 From Outer Space (1959)
a.k.a. Grave Robbers From Outer Space
A rare speaking part for Tor! He has a few lines (as Inspector Clay) before being turned into the lumbering, openmouthed goon we know so well. He lurks around the graveyard with Vampira and gets to carry the films' female lead when she faints. Also starring Bela Lugosi (for a couple minutes, anyway) - plus Dudley Manlove and Joanna Lee. Introduced and narrated by 1950's TV 'psychic' Criswell.

The Unearthly (1957)
The story of a scientist and his experiments with immortality. While not an Ed Wood film, Tor still plays a character named Lobo. Co-stars John Carradine, Myron Healy ('Gangbusters') and the voluptuous Allison Hayes ('Attack of the 50 Ft. Woman'). Produced and directed by Brooke L. Peters, who also gave the world 'Anatomy of a Psycho.'

Boris Karloff

The Ape (1940)
Mad doctor Karloff dresses in a simian disguise, murders people and uses their spinal fluid for cure a crippled girl.

Behind That Curtain (1929)
Warner Baxter stars in this clever mystery that also happened to be Karloff's first talkie. And look for E.L. Parks as a detective you may recognize, Charlie Chan!

The Bells (1926)
This silent thriller features a pre-stardom Karloff as a mysterious hypnotist. Also with Lionel Barrymore.

Black Sabbath (1963)
A great trilogy of horror tales from Mario Bava (Black Sunday). 'The Drop of Water' stars Jacqueline Pierreux as a nurse who steals a ring from a dead spiritualist (bad idea), 'The Telephone' stars Michele Mercier as a call girl plagued by harrasing phone calls from a man she sent to prison, 'The Wurdalak' (from Tolstoy) stars Karloff as an evil patriarch who feeds on blood. Boris also acts as host for all three segments.

British Intelligence (1940)
Karloff plays the butler (and suspected spy) of a cabinet official in WWII England.

The Criminal Code (1931)
Howard Hawks melodrama starring Walter Huston and Constance Cummings. Karloff shines as a convict named Ned Galloway.

Destination Nightmare (1958)
Four horror stories - hosted by and featuring Karloff - from a proposed UK television series. Co-starring Patrick Macnee. See also 'The Veil.'

Dick Tracy Meets Gruesome (1947)
Karloff stars as the villianous Gruesome, who uses a special gas (that freezes people in time) to rob banks. With Ralph Byrd as Tracy and Anne Gwen as Tess Trueheart.

Doomed to Die (1940)
Master sleuth Mr. Wong (Karloff) tracks the killer of a shipping tycoon and uncovers a fortune in contraband. Also with Grant Winters and Marjorie Reynolds.

Emperor's Nightingale (1951)
Animated film from Czechoslovakia. Narrated by Karloff.

The Fatal Hour (1940)
Detective Mr. Wong (Karloff) investigates the death of a cop. From Monogram.

The Fear Chamber (1968)
Karloff (in one of his final efforts) stars as a scientist studying a strange creature with a taste for human blood.

Frankenstein 1970 (1958)
Karloff revives the famous monster in his spooky castle. Also with Tom Duggan and Jana Lund. Directed by Howard Koch.

The Ghoul (1933)
A professor returns from the dead, courtesy of an ancient Egyptian gem. Also with Cedric Hardwicke and Ralph Richardson.

House of Evil (1968)
This story of a torture chamber was Boris' last film work - he died shortly after completing his scenes.

The House of Rothchild (1934)
Outstanding historical biography of the notable family of financiers. Starring George Arliss, Karloff, Loretta Young, Robert Young, C. Aubrey Smith, Noel Madison and Reginald Owen.

Isle of the Dead (1945)
Karloff journeys to a Greek island to visit his wife's grave, only to find it's been dug up and the body missing. In searching for her remains, he discovers local legends about grave robbing vampires. This creepy thriller was directed by Mark Robson and produced by Val Lewton.

King of the Kongo (1929) Part One
G-Man Larry Trent battles a gang of ivory poachers in this Mascot serial. Look for an appearance by Karloff.

King of the Kongo (1929) Part Two

King of the Wild (1931) Part One
Karloff co-stars with Walter Miller in this 12 chapter adventure serial set in India.

King of the Wild (1931) Part One

Mr. Wong, Detective (1938)
Karloff's first portrayal of the oriental sleuth was in this clever murder mystery from Monogram.

Mr. Wong in Chinatown (1939)
When an oriental princess is murdered in Chinatown, Mr. Wong (Karloff) is called in to investigate. Also with Grant Withers and Marjorie Reynolds.

Mystery of Mr. Wong (1939)
Second film in the seies. Here the oriental detective investigates murder surrounding a stolen sapphire. Also with Morgan Wallace and Grant Withers.

Sabaka (1955) a.k.a. The Hindu
Karloff stars with Reginald Denny and Victor Jory in this adventure film about a religious cult in India.

Sinister Invasion (1971) a.k.a. Strange Invasion
A scientist (Karloff) develops a device that harnesses the power of a radioactive element. Aliens soon arrive and disguise themselves as humans in an effort to destroy the potential weapon.

The Snake People (1971)
Karloff stars a a plantation owner on an island terrorized by a snake cult. Victims are turned into zombies during their mysterious ceremonies. Released three years after Boris' death.

The Terror (1963)

Infamous quickie cranked out by Roger Corman using the set of 'The Raven.' Featuring that pictures' star (Karloff) along with AIP regulars Dick Miller, Jonathan Haze and Jack Nicholson.

The Veil (1958)
Four horror stories hosted by and featuring Karloff - from a proposed UK television series. Also with Patrick Macnee. See also 'Destination Nightmare.'

You'll Find Out (1940)
Kay Kyser and his band spend the night in a haunted house. Karloff co-stars with Bela Lugosi and Peter Lorre. Also with Dennis O'Keefe and Ish Kabibble.

Christopher Lee

Alias John Preston (1956)
Lee plays a man tormented by nightmares in this interesting psychological thriller. Also with Betta St. John. Produced by the Danziger brothers.

Beat Girl (1960)
a.k.a. Wild for Kicks
Lee plays a sleazy stripclub owner in this sensational JD import from England. Rock star Adam Faith appears in the film and sings several numbers. Also with sexy Noell Adam. Highly recommended.

Blood Demon (1967)
a.k.a. The Torture Chamber of Dr. Sadism
The weird story of Count Regula (Lee), who has been beheaded and dismembered for killing virgins. His faithful servant puts him back together and the fun continues. Also with Lex Barker and Karin Dor.

Blood Fiend (1967)
a.k.a. Theatre of Death
Lee plays a theatre director suspected in a series of vampire-inspired murders. Set in Paris, with Lelia Goldoni and Jenny Till.

Castle of Fu Manchu (1968)
The diabolical Fu Manchu (Lee) continues his mad experiments in his castle near Istanbul. Also with Richard Greene and Maria Perschy.

Castle of the Living Dead (1964)
A traveling circus troupe stops at Lee's castle, not knowing he has a habit of mummifying his guests. Donald Sutherland's film debut.

Circus of Fear (1967) a.k.a. Psycho-Circus
Lee plays a scarred animal tamer in this murder mystery from AIP. Also with Klaus Kinski and Suzy Kendall.

Hands of Orlac (1961)
Lee appears as a murderous magician named Nero in this remake of Mad Love. Mel Ferrer stars as the demented pianist with transplanted hands.

Hercules in the Haunted World (1961)
Lee co-stars with Reg Park in this sword and sandal epic directed by Mario Bava.

Horror Express (1973)
a.k.a. Panic on the Trans-Siberian Express
Starring Lee, Telly Savalas and Peter Cushing. A frozen monster returns to life while being transported across turn-of-the-century Asia.

Horror Hotel (1960)
Scary occult picture features Lee as an expert on witchcraft. A college girl journeys to a strange village, where she encounters several deadly surprises a la 'Psycho,' which was released the same year. Also starring Venetia Stevenson, Patricia Jessell and Betta St. John.

Julius Caesar (1970)
Lee co-stars with Charlton Heston, John Gielgud, Jason Robards, Robert Vaughn, Richard Chamberlain and Diana Rigg.

The Keeper (1975)
A madman uses hypnotism in his attempt at world domination. Also starring Sally Gray.

Kiss and Kill (1968) a.k.a. Blood of Fu Manchu
Fu Manchu (Lee) treats ten beautiful women with a deady poison and sends them off to kiss ten world leaders.

One Step Beyond VOLUME 1
'Message from Clara' with Barbara Baxley and 'The Sorcerer' with Christopher Lee (two half hour TV episodes on one tape).

Satanic Rites of Dracula (1973)
a.k.a. Count Dracula and His Vampire Bride, Dracula is Dead and Well and Living in London
Lee's last appearance as Count Dracula also features Peter Cushing as a descendant of Professor Van Helsing who is out to destroy the infamous vampire. Rated R.

Scott of the Antarctic (1948)
Lee co-stars with John Mills, Derek Bond, Kenneth Moore and James Robertson Justice in this realistic depiction of the ill-fated 1912 British expedition to the south pole.

Scream of Fear (1961) a.k.a. Taste of Fear
Terrific mystery drama from Hammer Films. When wheelchair-bound Susan Strasberg visits her father's Riviera resort and comes to beilieve that the people there are plotting to drive her crazy. Lee co-stars with Ann Todd. Loaded with intruiging plot twists.

Uncle Was a Vampire (1959) Tempi Duri Per I
Horror/comedy features Lee as a vampire who puts the bite on his cousin. Also starring the luscious Sylva Koscina.

What! (1963) a.k.a. The Whip and the Body
Lee tortures Daliah Lavi, who takes revenge by killing him. Lee then returns from the dead and proceeds to whip her each night. A creepy Gothic thriller from Mario Bava.

Peter Lorre

Beat the Devil (1953)
Terrific black comedy from director John Huston (who co-scripted with Truman Capote). A sleazy group of 'businessmen' (Humphrey Bogart, Lorre, Robert Morley, Ivor Barnard and Marco Tulli) try to take over a parcel of African land that they believe contains uranium. Bogart and his wife (Gina Lollobrigida) meet another strange couple (Jennifer Jones and and Edward Underdown) who are not what they appear to be. In fact - nothing in this picture is what it seems, and that's half the charm. A finacial failure when it was first released, the film has since developed a deserved cult following.

The Chase (1946)
Great action feature with mobster Lorre going after Robert Cummings, who has skipped town with a gangster's wife.

Climax
'The Fifth Wheel.' One hour television broadcast with Lorre, Bonita Granville and James Gleason.

Climax
'A Promise to Murder.' One hour television broadcast with Lorre, Louis Hayward and Ann Harding.

The Face Behind the Mask (1945)
One of the all time great B pictures - featuring Lorre as a mild mannered immigrant who turns to crime as a last resort (he's been badly burned and is so repulsive looking that no one will give him a job). Also with Evelyn Keyes, Don Beddoe, John Tyrell and George E. Stone.

Hell Ship Mutiny (1957)
Lorre co-stars in this South Sea adventure with Jon Hall, John Carradine, Mike Mazurki, Roberta Haynes and Stanley Adams.

M (1931)
Lorre plays a pathetic child murderer (the role that made him a star) hunted by the police and the Berlin underworld in this gripping drama from Fritz Lang.

The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934)
Lorre co-stars with Leslie Banks in this vintage Alfred Hitchcock thriller about a couple who witness a political murder.

Mr. Moto's Last Warning (1939)
Mr. Moto (Lorre) battles sabotuers who plan to blow up the Suez Canal. Also with John Carradine and George Sanders.

My Favorite Brunette (1947)
Excellent blend of crime and comedy is one of Bob Hope's best pictures. He plays a baby photographer whose dream of becoming a private eye comes true when Dorothy Lamour mistakes him for an investigator. Bob does his best to solve her case, but the going gets rough when a gang of crooks (led by Lorre) enters the picture. Also starring Lon Chaney, Jr. and featuring cameo appeances by Alan Ladd and Bing Crosby. A real laugh riot.

Quicksand (1950)
Mechanic Mickey Rooney falls for sleazy Jeanne Cagney (sister of James), a blonde goldigger who insists he spend a bundle on her. Mickey foolishly tosses over his loyal girlfriend and begins a life of crime to support his new romance. Atmospheric film noir also features Lorre in a great role as a despicable arcade operator. Recommended viewing for all fans of great crime drama.

Secret Agent (1936)
This fascinating Hitchcock thriller features Lorre as a maniacal killer. His amazing, hyperactive performance is often attributted to the morphine addiction he suffered at the time. The fine cast also includes John Gielgud, Lili Palmer and Robert Young.

You'll Find Out (1940)
Kay Kyser and his band spend the night in a haunted house. Lorre co-stars with Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi. Also with Dennis O'Keefe and Ish Kabibble.

Bela Lugosi

The Ape Man (1943) a.k.a. Lock Your Doors
Mad scientist Lugosi turns into an ape-like creature, then searches for a formula to return to normal. The mixture involves draing the spinal fluid from various murder victims. Also with Wallace Ford, Louise Curry, Wheeler Oakman, Minerva Urecal and Ralph Littlefield.

Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla (1952)
a.k.a. The Boys From Brooklyn
William 'One Shot' Beaudine's camp classic about a team of Martin and Lewis impersonators (Duke Mitchell and Sammy Petrillo) who show up the island of a mad scientist (Lugosi). Really something!

Black Dragons (1942)
Lugosi plays a Nazi doctor who disguises Japanese soldiers so they can pass as Americans. Also with Joan Barklay, Clayton Moore and Robert Frazer.

The Black Sleep (1956)
A mad scientist produces a serum that turns men into zombie-like creatures. Starring Basil Rathbone, Akim Tamiroff, Lon Chaney, Jr., John Carradine, Lugosi and Tor Johnson.

Bowery at Midnight (1942)
A truly weird thriller which features Lugosi using a rescue mission as a front for his evil activities. His murder victims are buried in a basement,where they are returned to life by a drug addict/doctor. Also starring Tom Neal and Wanda McKay.

Bride of the Monster (1955)
This Ed Wood classic is a fine companion piece to his later 'Plan Nine From Outer Space.' This is the one where Lugosi struggles with the unmoving prop octopus. Also with Tor Johnson, Dolores Fuller and Paul Marco.

Broadminded (1931)
Joe E. Brown is hired to chaperone a wild playboy in this Warner's comedy. With Lugosi as Thelma Todd's charming South American escort. Directed by Mervyn LeRoy.

Chandu on the Magic Isle
Feature version of the serial 'Return of Chandu.'

The Corpse Vanishes (1942)
Creepy tale of a mad doctor (Lugosi) who kidnaps young brides and uses their bodily fluids to rejuvinate an aging countess. Also with Luana Walters, Joan Barclay, Angelo Rossetti and Tristam Coffin.

The Death Kiss (1933)
A film studio provides the setting for this murder mystery about an actor killed on a set. With 'Dracula' veterans Lugosi, David Manners and Edward Van Sloane.

The Devil Bat (1941)
Lugosi stars as a mad scientist who kills his enemies by giving them a special shaving lotion that attracts a giant bat he's developed. Co-starring Dave ('Reefer Madness') O'Brien. Great visuals.

Genius at Work (1946)
Radio detectives Wally Brown and Alan Carney track down criminal Lionel Atwill (in his last film role). Lugosi co-stars in this crime-comedy.

Ghosts on the Loose (1943)
a.k.a. The East Side Kids Meet Bela Lugosi
The kids battle a gang of Nazi spies led by Lugosi. Watch for Ava Gardner in an early role. Directed by William Beaudine.

The Gorilla (1939)
The Ritz Brothers and Lugosi star in this third version of the famous mystery comedy. Also with Aita Louise and Lionel Atwill.

The Human Monster (1940) a.k.a. Dark Eyes of London
Creepy Monogram thriller has many shocking scenes. Lugosi (in one of his best performances) plays a doctor who preys on patients at a home for the blind - killing them for their insurance money, then tossing their bodies into the Thames.

I Changed My Sex (1953)
a.k.a. Glen or Glenda, I Led Two Lives
Lugosi appears (in an unspecified capacity) in Ed Wood's notorious autobiographical expose on transvestism. Also with Dolores Fuller and Lyle Talbot. Continues to amaze audiences.

Invisible Ghost (1941)
Gentle physician Lugosi, believing his wife dead, turns into a murderous maniac when he sees her alive.

Murder by Television (1935)
Bela stars in a dual role in this tale of a TV inventor murdered on the air.

Mysterious Mr. Wong (1935)
Lugosi stars as a murderous criminal mastermind after a cache of coins that will give him unlimited power. Also with Wallace Ford and Arline Judge.

Night of Terror (1933)
An unknown killer methodically slays a household full of people. Lugosi stars with Sally Blaine, Wallace Ford, George Meeker and Tully Marshall.

One Body Too Many (1944)
Lugosi is the creepy-looking butler in a strange house. Bumbling insurance salesman Jack Haley shows up to sell a policy (to a corpse, no less!) and gets caught up in all sorts of macabre nonsense.

The Phantom Creeps (1939) Part One
Lugosi stars as the power-mad Dr. Zorka in this 12 chapter serial.

The Phantom Creeps (1939) Part Two

The Phantom Ship (1935)
a.k.a. Mystery of the Mary Celeste, Secrets of the Mary Celeste
The crew of a 19th Century ship mysteriously disappears. Based on a true maritime event. Lugosi plays a one armed sailor named Lorenzen.

Plan 9 From Outer Space (1959)
a.k.a. Grave Robbers From Outer Space
Called 'the worst film ever made' - Ed Wood's signature film is in a class by itself. Lugosi appears for only a couple of minutes (having died years before the picture was released) leaving Tor Johnson, Dudley Manlove and Vampira to commit the 'unspeakable horrors' that transpire. Narrated by Wood's pal Criswell, a 1950's 'psychic.'

Postal Inspector (1936)
Government investigator Ricrado Cortez tries to nail shady nightclub owner Lugosi. From Universal.

The Return of Chandu (1934) Part One
Lugosi stars as the mysterious conjurer in this 12 chapter serial.

The Return of Chandu (1934) Part Two

Return of the Vampire (1944)
Lugosi's first stint as a vampire since 'Dracula' thirteen years earlier. WWII bombs release him from the grave and he again walks the earth in search of blood.

Scared to Death (1947)
Lugosi's lone color film is this story of a woman's death - told in flashbacks and narrated by the dead girl herself. Featuring George Zucco, with Angelo Rossitto as a creepy dwarf. Action takes place in a sanitarium.

Shadow of Chinatown (1936) Part One
A mad scientist (Lugosi) terrorizes Chinatown in this creepy mystery serial. Also with Herman Brix.

Shadow of Chinatown (1936) Part Two

Shadow of Chinatown
Feature version of the serial (above).

S.O.S. Coast Guard (1937) Part One
Lugosi stars as a demented inventor and Ralph Byrd as the Coast Guard officer out to stop him in this exciting serial.

S.O.S. Coast Guard (1937) Part Two

Spooks Run Wild (1941)
When their pal is wounded by a graveyard caretaker, Huntz Hall, Leo Gorcey ahouse (big mistake). Produced by Sam Katzman.

Vampire Over London (1951)
a.k.a. Old Mother Riley Meets the Vampire
Lugosi plays a lunatic who's convinced he's a vampire in this seldom screened (in the U.S.) horror/comedy.

The Whispering Shadow (1933) Part One
Police battle 'The Shadow' and his death ray in this 12 chapter serial. Lugosi co-stars with Henry B. Walthall.

The Whispering Shadow (1933) Part One

White Zombie (1932)
First and best of the zombie films, this independent release is loaded with chills and atmosphere. A man sees zombies headed his way and asks Lugosi who they are - Lugosi's reply: 'For you, they are the angels of death!' Also with Robert Frazer and Madge Bellamy. Film has a well deserved cult following.

Women of All Nations (1931)
Lugosi's first film after 'Dracula' was this amusing comedy from Fox. WWI vet Victor McLaglen saves his friendly rival (Edmund Lowe) when Lowe's female bathhouse is raided.

You'll Find Out (1940)
Kay Kyser and his band spend the night in a haunted house. Lugosi co-stars with Boris Karloff and Peter Lorre. Also with Dennis O'Keefe and Ish Kabibble.

Paul Naschy

Curse of the Devil (1973) Retorno De Walpulgis
R rated horror film about a man turned into a werewolf by a beautiful woman, as was his conquistador forefather.

Dracula's Great Love (1972)
a.k.a. Vampire Playgirls, Cemetery Girls, Dracula's Virgin Lovers
The evil count preys on a group of beautiful travelers who stop at his castle to rest. A drive-in favorite throughout the 1970's. Rated R for nudity and violence.

Dracula vs. Frankenstein (1970) Assignment Terror
An alien (Michael Rennie) nurses ailing werewolf Naschy back to health - along with Frankenstein's monster and the Mummy. Rennie also finds time to create, as he puts it: 'A group of beautiful women who will blindly obey my orders.' Also starring Craig Hull and Karin Dor.

Dr. Jekyll Y El Hombre Lobo (1971)
Story of a wolfman (Naschy) seeking a cure from a mad doctor. Also starring Jack Taylor. Rated R.

Fury of the Wolfman (1970) La Furia Del Hombre Lobo
Naschy's second portrayal of a werewolf. Argentinian beauty Perla Cristal co-stars as a doctor. Rated R.

Horror Rises from the Tomb (1972)
El Espanto Surge De La Tumba - The ancient castle of a demented knight is the sight of numerous atrocities. Also starring Vic Winner. Rated R.

Vengeance of the Zombies (1972) La Rebelion De Las Muertas
Starring Naschy and Vic Winner. Zombies torment a British woman in India. Rated R for nudity and violence.

The Werewolf vs. the Vampire Woman (1970)
a.k.a. Blood Moon, Noche De Walpulgis
Spanish versions of the classic monsters do battle. With Patty Shepard. Rated R.

Vincent Price

The Baron of Arizona (1950)
Price stars as a ruthless land grabber with designs on 19th Century Arizona. Directed by cult icon Fuller.

The Bat (1959)
Price stars with Agnes Moorehead in this remake of the classic stage play about a mysterious intruder on the loose in a spooky house. Directed by Crane Wilbur ('He Walked by Night') for Allied Artists. See also 'The Bat' (1926) and 'The Bat Whispers.'

House of 1,000 Dolls (1967)
With a nightclub magic act as a front, Price and Martha Hyer lure innocent girls into a deadly white slave racket. Also with George Nader and Maria Rohm.

House of Wax (1953)
Price owns a wax museum where the exhibits look all too 'real.' Doesn't that figure look just like the girl who was murdered recently? Also with Phyllis Kirk, Carolyn Jones and Charles Bronson (in one of his first outings).

House on Haunted Hill (1958)
Millionaire Price offers prize money to a group of people - provided they can spend the night in a creepy mansion. A gem directed by William Castle.

The Last Man on Earth (1964)
Price finds himself alone in a city of ghoulish vampires. This atmospheric thriller was clearly the inspiration for 'Night of the Living Dead' several years later.

Service Deluxe (1938)
Charlie Ruggles hires Constance Bennett to look after his hapless nephew (Price in his film debut) in this comedy drama from Universal. Also with Mischa Auer and Frank Coughlan, Jr.

Shock (1946)
A woman is killed by her psychologist husband (Price) and his nurse, but the crime is witnessed by a neighbor woman. The doctor sets out to save himself by 'proving' the witness is crazy. Price's first starring role.

Vincent Price on TV:

Adventures in Paradise
'The Color of Venom' (one hour).

Climax
'Night of Execution' with Price, Nina Foch and Dick Foran (one hour).

Ford Theatre
'The House Always Wins' starring Dick Powell (and a cameo by Jack Benny plus 'The Left Fist of David' starring Price and Peter Lorre (one hour).

Hollywood Half Hour / Star and the Story
'Dream Job' with Price / 'The Blue Landscape' with Peter Lorre

Masquerade Party and Pantomime Quiz
Ethel Merman and Price.

Red Skelton Show
Featuring Chester Morris, Veda Ann Borg and Price.

Tod Slaughter

Crimes at the Dark House (1940)

The Crimes of Stephen Hawk (1936)

The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (1939)

Face at the Window (1939)

The Hooded Terror (1938)

Murder in the Red Barn (1935)

Never Too Late to Mend (1936)

Sexton Blake and the Hooded Terror (1938)

Barbara Steele

An Angel for Satan (1966) Un Angelo per Satan
Barbara plays a dual role in this dreamy Italian production from Camillo Mastrocinque; a perverse woman-child and the spirit that possesses her. (Sorry, no subtitles.)

Black Sunday (1960)
La Maschera del Demonio a.k.a. The Demon's Mask, House of Fright, Revenge of the Vampire
Classic, atmospheric horror film features Steele (in her first starring role) as a witch burned at the stake. She returns on the night Satan walks the Earth and torments the descendants of those who killed her.

Castle of Blood (1964)
La Danza Macabra a.k.a. Castle of Terror, Dimensions in Death, The Long Night of Terror
A poet agrees to spend the night in a haunted house. A spooky thriller directed by Antonio Margheriti, who later remade it as Web of the Spider. From the ads: 'The living and dead change places in an orgy of terror!'

The Ghost (1963) Lo Spettro - a.k.a. The Spectre
With the help of her lover, Barbara plots to kill her husband, who then returns to drive her insane. This great mix of crime and horror is the sequel to The Horrible Dr. Hitchcock. Ricardo Freda again directs (using the name Robert Hampton).

The Horrible Dr. Hitchcock (1962)
L'Orribile Segreto del Dr. Hitchcock
a.k.a. Raptus, The Terrible Dr. Hitchcock, The Terrible Secret of Dr. Hitchcock

A sinister doctor injects his wife with a solution and buries her alive in his castle, returning years later with his new bride (Steele). Creepy Gothic horror from Ricardo Freda.

The Long Hair of Death (1964)
In this classic revenge tale Barabara offers herself to a corrupt judge in an attempt to free a woman accused of being a witch. Set in the late 15th Century.

The Monocle (1964)
Barbara stars with Paul Meurisse in this French comedy/thriller about the sabotage of nuclear research projects.

Nightmare Castle (1964)
Amanti d'Oltretomba
a.k.a. The Faceless Monster, Lovers Beyond the Tomb, Night of the Doomed

Another dual role for Barbara. As a dark haired temptress she's caught with a lover by her jealous husband and tortured, as the blonde innocent she is driven insane and possesed by the spirit of her dead half-sister.

The She Beast (1965)
La Sorella di Santana
a.k.a. Revenge of the Blood Beast, Satan's Sister

A witch killed by Transylvanian villagers returns from the dead two hundred years later and inhabits the body of a woman (Steele) who has just been in a car accident in the area. Directed by Michael Reeves ('The Conquerer Worm').

Terror Creatures From the Grave (1966)
Cinque Tombe per un Medium
a.k.a. Five Graves for a Medium

Steele is the unfaithful wife of a doctor who returns on the anniversary of his death, summoning medieval, plague-infested zombies from beneath the Earth to destroy his enemies. Steele fans will be happy to hear that Barbara has both a bathing scene and a sex scene.

Terror of Dr. Hitchcock (1962)
Longer British version of The Horrible Dr. Hitchcock.

Bruno Ve Sota

Attack of the Giant Leeches (1959)
Ve Sota plays the henpecked husband of lucious (and unfaithful) Yvette Vickers.

A Bucket of Blood (1959)
Bruno appears as an art connisseur in this classic Roger Corman horror-comedy.

The Choppers (1961)
Ve Sota co-stars as a crooked junkyard owner in Arch Hall's JD epic. Featuring Arch Hall, Jr.

Creature of the Walking Dead (1965)
Ve Sota plays a police inspector in this creepy production.

Daughter of Horror (1955) a.k.a. Dementia
A troubled young woman cuts off the hand of her murder victim in this dreamy fantasy. Co-starring Adrienne Barrett and narrated by Ed McMahon, a film credit he lated denied. Quite a unique film.

The Devil's Hand (1962)
Starring Robert Alda and Linda Christian. Ve Sota appears as one of the devil worshippers.

The Fast and the Furious (1954)
Starring John Ireland (who also directed) as a man falsely accused of murder. He commandeers Dorothy Malone's car and heads for the border. Ve Sota appears as a truck driver. Produced by Roger Corman.

Gunslinger (1956)
Beverly Garland stars as a woman who becomes Marshall when her husband is killed. Evil saloon gal Allison Hayes (Attack of the 50 Ft. Woman) hires John Ireland to gun Garland down - instead he ends up falling for her. VeSota appears long enough to catch a bullet.

Invasion of the Star Creatures (1962)
If you watched TV in the 1960s, chances are you saw this weird story of two inept soldiers who run up against a bevy of sexy Amazon invaders. Directed by VeSota (he also makes a brief appearance) and starring Robert Ball and Frankie Ray.

Night Tide (1961)
Bruno shows up briefly in this Dennis Hopper film about a sailor and a mysterious mermaid.

The Wasp Woman (1959)
Ve Sota appears as a night watchman in this Roger Corman sci-fi production.

Wild World of Batwoman (1966)
Ve Sota appears briefly in Jerry Warren's schlock classic about sexy female superheroes.

More Horror Films

The Atomic Brain (1964) a.k.a. Monstrosity
A wealthy but aging woman (Marjorie Eaton) hires scientist Frank Gerstle to place her brain in the body of a young, attractive woman. The doctor kidnaps three beauties to experiment on, and two of them become murderous zombies. He puts a cat brain (!) in the third woman's skull and she turns into a deadly feline. Must be seen to be believed.

Attack of the Giant Leeches (1959)
Swamp creatures with a taste for human flesh populate this sci-fi release from Roger Corman's brother Gene. Starring Bruno Ve Sota and the always sexy Yvette Vickers (Playboy's Miss July, 1959) as his trampy wife. Yvette spends much of the movie driving Bruno nuts as she tauntingly applies lotion to her shapely legs, rebuffs his attempts at affection, flirts with customers and carries on an illicit affair with his best friend.

Beach Girls and the Monster (1964)
a.k.a. Surf Terror
Screen idol John Hall ended his thirteen year retirement to direct and star in this lurid tale of an oceanographer who dresses as a monster to terrorzie rock 'n' roll crazed teens.

The Black Scorpion (1957)
While investigating a volcano in Mexico, geologist Richard Denning discovers a nest of monstrous scorpions.

The Black Sleep (1956)
A mad scientist produces a serum that turns men into zombie-like creatures. Starring Basil Rathbone, Akim Tamiroff, Lon Chaney, Jr., John Carradine, Bela Lugosi and Tor Johnson.

The Black Torment (1965)
Gothic horror tale about a man whose wife has committed suicide. He remarries, but finds himself accused of rape and threatened by an ugly, bloodthirsty mob.

The Blancheville Monster (1963)
Joan Hills, Richard Davis

Blood Demon (1967)
a.k.a. The Torture Chamber of Dr. Sadism
Christopher Lee stars in this weird story about a count who has been beheaded and dismembered for killing virgins. His faithful servant puts him back together and the fun continues. Also with Lex Barker and Karin Dor.

Bloodlust (1959)
Low budget version of 'The Most Dangerous Game' features Wilton Graff as a mad doctor who hunts down teenagers for sport. Also with a pre- 'Brady Bunch' Robert Reed.

Blood Mania (1971)
Sleazy horror opus about a demented woman who sets out to murder her abortion doctor father so she can claim her inheritance. Starring Peter Carpenter, Maria De Aragon, Reagan Wilson, Vicki Peters and Alex Rocco. Rated R.

Bloody Pit of Horror (1966)
Mickey Hargitay ('Mr. Jayne Mansfield') stars as the Crimson Executioner, a Marquis de Sade-inspired kook who tortures a group of beautiful models who've shown up at his castle for a photo session. Not for kids or the squeamish.

The Blood Suckers (1971)
Vampire film set on the island of Hydra. Starring Peter Cushing and Patrick MacNee. Not to be confused with the horrible 1967 film of the same name. Rated R.

Boarding House (1982)
A cursed house provides the setting for this horror opus from Paragon Classics. Starring Alexandra Day and Jonema.

The Brain That Wouldn't Die (1959)
Herb (Jason) Evers is a surgeon whose horrible driving causes his fiancee's decapitation. He keeps her head alive in a pan while searching for a suitable replacement body. Meanwhile, the head goes nuts and releases a monster made earlier by the doctor, resulting in a bloody rampage. Movies just don't come any better than this. Completely Uncut!

A Bucket of Blood (1959)
Roger Corman's horror/comedy has a deserved cult following. The story concerns a murderous beatnik artist (Dick Miller) who turns his victims into statues. Watch for Bert Convy in a small role.

Carnival of Souls (1962)
Herk Harvey shot most of this film in Lawrence, Kansas - and the picture has since become a cult classic. The eerie story concerns a church organist (Candace Hilligoss) who 'survives' a car crash that kills several others. She returns to life, suffering the unwanted advances of her neighbor while she tries to accept her fate. Harvey also appears as a ghoul.

Chamber of Horrors (1941) a.k.a. The Door with Seven Locks
Leslie Banks (The Most Dangerous Game) plays a mad scientist who tortures various heirs to a mysterious fortune, thereby eliminating them as claimants. Also with Lili Palmer (Devil in Silk).

Condemned to Live (1935)
A married couple escapes a tribe of savages and lands in the New World. Unfortunately, the pregnant wife was bitten by a vampire bat and women start turning up murdered and drained of blood. Starring Ralph Morgan, Maxine Doyle and Mischa Auer.

Countess Dracula (1972)
A countess uses blood to stay eternally young. Starring Ingrid Pitt, Nigel Green, Peter Jeffrey and Leslie-Anne Down.

Craze (1973)
London antique store owner Jack Palance is the self-styled head of an occult group that sacrifices women during their strange rituals. It's no surprise that local police keep finding the bodies of murdered women dumped around the countryside. Also with Diana Dors, Suzy Kendall, Trevor Howard and Dame Edith Evans.

The Crater Lake Monster (1977)
A sleeping dinosaur awakens when a giant meteor slams into crater lake. With Kacey Cobb and Glenn Roberts.

The Crawling Hand (1963)
A student turns into a deranged killer after being possessed by the severed hand of an astronaut killed in space. Starring Peter Breck, Allison Hayes and a pre-'Gilligan' Alan Hale, Jr.

Creature from Black Lake (1976)
Two college students try to locate a 'Bigfoot' type creature in the Louisiana backwoods. Starring screen vets Jack Elam and Dub Taylor.

Creature of Destruction (1967)
A hypnotist (Les Tremayne) and his beautiful assistant use a strange and deadly monster to predict the future.

Creature of the Walking Dead (1965)
A mad scientist brings a man back from the grave, only to learn he needs human blood to survive. With Rock Madison and Bruno Ve Sota.

The Creature's Revenge (1971) Brain of Blood
Mad scientist Kent Taylor conducts a bloody series of brain transplants while his dwarf assistant (Angelo Rossitto) pokes at chained women. Directed by Al Adamson. Co-starring Reed Hadley, John Bloom, Grant Williams, Vicki Volante, Regina Carroll and Zandor Vorkov.

Crypt of Horror (1963)
A count begins to suspect his daughter of being a reincarnated witch who has vowed to destroy the family. Starring Christopher Lee and Ursula Davis.

Crypt of the Living Dead (1973)
Actor Ray Danton directed this horror tale set on Vampire Island. Starring Andrew Prince, Patty Sheppard and Mark Damon.

Curse of Bigfoot (1972)
A hairy monster guards an Indian burial ground. Starring Bob Clymire and Jan Swihart.

Curse of the Crying Woman (1961)
Ludicrous Mexican horror film starring Rosita Arenas and Abel Salazar. Dubbed into English.

Curse of the Swamp Creature (1966)
Mad scientist misadventures from Larry Buchanan. Starring John Agar, Francine York and Jeff Alexander.

Curucu, Beast of the Amazon (1956)
Beverly Garland journeys to the South American jungle in search of a cure for cancer. There she meets and falls in love with a plantation owner (John Bromfield) who's native employees are being frightened away by a mysterious monster. Directed by Curt Siodmak.

Daughter of Dr. Jekyll (1957)
Edgar G. Ulmer directed this weird horror film that combines elements of the Robert Louis Stevenson tale with vampires and werewolves. Cast includes John Agar and Gloria Talbot.

Daughter of Horror (1955) a.k.a. Dementia
A troubled young woman cuts off the hand of her murder victim in this dreamy fantasy. Co-starring Adrienne Barrett and narrated by Ed McMahon, a film credit he lated denied. Quite a unique film.

Daughters of Darkness (1971)
(Le Rouge aux Levres) - Arty lesbian vampire film from Europe. A mysterious countess (Delphine Seyrig) and her beautiful lover (Andrea Rau) seduce a young couple they meet at a fancy seaside resort. Rated R.

Dead Men Walk (1943)
George Zucco plays brothers (one good, one evil) in this vampire film from PRC. Also with Mary Carlisle, Robert Strange and Dwight Frye as the hunchbacked assistant. Directed by Sam Newfield.

Dead of Night (1946)
Five tales of the supernatural are woven together in this classic British thriller. 'The Ventriloquist's Dummy,' 'The Christmas Story,' 'The Linking Story,' 'The Hearse Driver,' 'The Golfing Story' and 'The Haunted Mirror.' Starring Michael Redgrave. Not for the faint-hearted!

Death at Love House (1976)
A writer is obsessed with a dead movie queen who may have been intimate with his father. Starring Robert Wagner, Kate Jackson, Slyvia Sidney, Joan Blondell, Dorothy Lamour, Marianna Hill and John Carradine. Filmed in the famed Harold Lloyd mansion.

Death Curse of Tartu (1967)
A group of archaeology students disturb the grave of an ancient witch doctor, who returns to Earth in various forms (snake, alligator, zombie, etc.) to kill all those involved. From William Grefe ('The Hooked Generation').

The Devil's Commandment (1956)
Seminal horror erotica from Ricardo Freda and Mario Bava. Local virgins provide the blood that keeps an aging countess looking good.

The Devil's Daughter (1939)
Voodoo exploitation from Sack Amusement Enterprises. Starring Nina Mae McKinney and 'an all-star colored cast.'

The Devil's Hand (1961)
Beautiful Linda Christian, Robert Alda (Alan's dad) and Neil Hamilton (Batman's Commissioner Gordon) star in this Satanic cult shocker.

The Devil's Partner (1958)
An aging Satan worshipper (Edwin Nelson) dies and returns home as his younger self. Townspeople then learn he is continuing the same sorts of rites and evil spells that he practiced previously. 'Half man, half beast - he sold his soul...for PASSION!'

Devil Times Five (1974)
a.k.a. The Horrible House on the Hill, People Toys
Five teens escape from an insane asylum and take over a mountain retreat. Starring Gene Nelson, Sorrell Booke and 1970s heart-throb Leif Garrett. Rated R.

Devil Woman (1976)
Drive-In classic features a snake-headed woman who wreaks vengeance on the villagers who killed her family. With Divina Valencia. Rated R for nudity and Kung Fu violence.

The Diabolical Dr. Z (1966)
European sex/horror classic with Mabel Karr seeking revenge against the doctors she feels killed her father. She uses thought-control on a sexy nightclub performer (Estella Blain) whose long fingernails Karr intends to use as murder weapons! Lots of beautiful women appear in this weirdly erotic thriller.

Diary of an Erotic Murderess (1975)
Sex kitten Marissa Meli charms millionaire Richard Conte and his hapless son, resulting in tragedy all around.

The Disembodied (1957)
Voodoo horrors with Paul Burke and Allison Hayes ('Attack of the 50 Ft. Woman'). Directed by 'Dragnet' veteran Walter Grauman.

Doctor of Doom (1962)
Mexican wrestling-horror film starring Lorena Velazquez. A mad scientist plants a gorilla brain into a man's head, then puts one in the head of a female wrestler. Dubbed into English.

The Dracula Saga (1972)
A descendant of the evil count returns to claim his legacy. With Tina Sainz. Contains nudity.

Dracula vs. Frankenstein (1970) a.k.a. Assignment Terror
An alien (Michael Rennie) nurses ailing werewolf Paul Naschy back to health - along with Frankenstein's monster and the Mummy. Rennie also finds time to create, as he puts it: 'A group of beautiful women who will blindly obey my orders.' Also starring Craig Hull and Karin Dor.

Dr. Blood's Coffin (1961)
A mad doctor (Keiron Moore) delights in transplanting the heart of a 'worthless' human into one more 'valuable.' Meanwhile, his nurse (Hazel Court) finds herself in the middle of a romantic triangle that includes the doctor and a revived corpse!

Dr. Orloff's Monster (1964)
A mad scientist enlists a murderous robot to do his bidding. This was the first of many sequels to 'The Awful Dr. Orloff.' Features Agnes Spaak and Jose Rubio.

Embryo (1976)
a.k.a. Created to KillHorror and death result when a woman and a dog are grown outside of the womb. Starring Rock Hudson and Diane Ladd.

The Eyes of the Mummy (1918) Die Augen Der Mumie Ma
Silent film directed by Ernst Lubitsch.

Face of Terror (1959)
A doctor transforms a scarred woman into a beauty - too bad she's an escaped maniac! Starring Fernando Rey.

The Fiendish Ghouls (1961)
a.k.a. Mania, Psycho Killers, The Flesh and the Fiends
Two murderers supply a sleazy doctor with 'fresh' bodies. Starring Peter Cushing and Donald Pleasence.

Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks (1973)
Frankenstein (Rossano Brazzi) works on his creation while his dwarf assistant (Michael Dunn) peeks at naked women.

Frankenstein's Daughter (1958)
A descendant of the famed doctor creates a new monster from a teenage girl's corpse. With Sandra Knight (Mrs. Jack Nicholson) and Harold Lloyd, Jr.

From Hell It Came (1957)
A tree monster rises from a south sea grave and terrorizes the locals. Starring Tod Andrews, Tina Carver, Linda Watkins and Gregg Palmer.

Ghosts of Hanley House (1968)
Creepy haunted house picture shot in Texas. With Barbara Chase. Loaded with atmosphere, intentional and otherwise.

Giant from the Unknown (1958)
Giant Conquistidor (Buddy Baer) is brought back to life and goes on a bloody rampage. Starring Edward Kemmer, Sally Fraser and Bob Steele. From the producer of the 'Planet of the Apes' series.

The Great Alligator (1980)
A giant reptile threatens the guests at an exclusive African resort. Starring Mel Ferrer and Barbara Bach.

Hands of a Stranger (1962)
Starring Joan Harvey and Irish ('Sheena') McCalla. A pair of murderous severed hands are attached to the handless arms of an injured pianist.

Hatchet for the Honeymoon (1969)
Mario Bava's strange tale of an impotent bridegroom who goes nuts and starts hacking up gals in wedding gowns!

The Head (1959)
French star Michel Simon ('Panique') slums in this lurid film, which amounts to the German version of 'The Brain That Wouldn't Die.' Scientist Horst Frank is a scientist who grafts the body of a stripper onto another woman, then immediately starts hitting on her!

Hideous Sun Demon (1959)
a.k.a. Blood on His Lips, The Sun Demon, Terror from the Sun
Robert Clarke produced, directed and starred in this wild story of a man who turns into a scaly reptile when his skin is exposed to sunlight. Nan Peterson co-stars as a sexy lounge singer who momentarily falls for him. A TV favorite throughout the 'sixties.

Hollywood Horror House (1968)
a.k.a. Savage Intruder
Strange independent shocker featuring a cast of Tinsletown veterans, including Gale Sondergaard, Miriam Hopkins and Joe Besser.

The Hooker Cult Murders (1973) a.k.a. The Pyx
When a call girl (Karen Black) is murdered, cop Christopher Plummer investigates and finds a satanic cult. Nice blend of horror, sci-fi and mystery.

Horror and Science Fiction Prevues VOLUME 1
'Creature from the Black Lagoon,' 'Night of the Living Dead,' ,Flash Gordon,' 'Frankenstein Meets the Wolfman,' 'Dracula,' 'King Kong' and many more.

Horror and Science Fiction Prevues VOLUME 2
'Forbidden Planet,' 'Them,' 'Things to Come,' 'War of the Worlds,' 'The Voyage of Sinbad' and many more.

Horror and Science Fiction Prevues VOLUME 3
'Horrors of the Black Museum,' 'Texas Chainsaw Massacre,' 'The Omen,' 'Carrie,' 'Dracula - Prince of Darkness' and many more.

The Horror Chamber of Dr. Faustus (1962)
a.k.a. Eyes Without a Face
A plastic surgeon (Pierre Brasseur) becomes obsessed with recreating the original face of his recently disfigured daughter. He kidnaps girls who resemble her, and removes their faces in a demented attempt to restore his daughter's beauty.

Horror Express (1973)
a.k.a. Panic on the Trans-Siberian Express
Starring Christopher Lee, Telly Savalas and Peter Cushing. A frozen monster returns to life while being transported across turn-of-the-century Asia.

Horror Hotel (1960)
Scary occult picture features Christopher Lee as an expert on witchcraft. A college girl journeys to a strange village, where she encounters several deadly surprises a la Psycho, which was released the same year. Also starring Venetia Stevenson, Patricia Jessell and Betta St. John. Two versions available - please specify Wide Screen or Pan & Scan.

The Horror of Party Beach (1964)
Legendary turkey about a batch of scaly monsters who show up after radioactive waste is dumped into the ocean.

Horror Planet (1982) a.k.a. Inseminoid
Bloody tale of deadly alien creatures on the loose. Starring Judy Geeson and Jennifer Ashley.

The House in Marsh Road (1960)
A haunted house is the setting for this fine British murder mystery starring Tony Wright and Patricia Dainton.

House of Insane Women (1974)
a.k.a. Exorcism's Daughter
Eerie European entry in the Exorcist-inspired film cycle. With Amelia Gade.

Humanoids from the Deep (1980)
Mutant sea creatures come ashore and terrorize the local population by raping women (after tearing off their tops of course) and commiting other foul deeds. Doug McClure and Vic Morrow head the cast. No one forgets the ending once they've seen it. Rated R.

I Bury the Living (1958)
Interesting story of a graveyard and its' caretaker (Richard Boone). On a map of the cemetary, Boone uses white pins to mark empty (but sold) plots and black pins to mark occupied graves. When the pins are switched, owners of the gravesights begin dying and the deceased occupants return from the dead. A well-made psychological thriller.

I Eat Your Skin (1971)
a.k.a. Voodoo Blood Bath, Zombie
Horror 'classic' from Del Tenney. Starring William Joyce and Heather Hewitt.

Invasion of the Blood Farmers (1972)
Low, low budget horrors from the same guy who wrote 'Shriek of the Mutilated.' From the ads: 'Don't eat before you see this show and you'll have nothing to lose!'

Invasion of the Vampires (1961)
Low budget Mexican horrors with Erna Martha Bauman (dubbed into English).

Island of Terror (1967)
Hammer horror master Terence Fisher directed this terror/sci-fi thriller about rapidly multiplying silicon creatures that have decimated the population of an Irish isle. Great cast includes Peter Cushing and Edward Judd.

It Happened at Nightmare Inn (1973) a.k.a. Nightmare Hotel
Low budget shocker about a woman who kills guests who've checked into her hotel. With Judy Geeson.

I Walked with a Zombie (1943)
Acclaimed Val Lewton thriller with Tom Conway, James Ellison and Frances Dee.

Jack the Ripper (1959)
An American detective teams up with Scotland Yard to hunt down London's notorious prostitute killer. This effective thriller has many gruesome touches, including a graphic end sequence. Just as scary as when we first saw it on television in the 1960's.

Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter (1966)
Daughter of the legendary doctor continues his experiments in the Old West. When she turns Jesse James' pal into a monster, the famous outlaw is not amused. Featuring Jim Davis and directed by William 'One Shot' Beaudine.

The Keeper (1975)
A madman uses hypnotism in his attempt at world domination. Starring Christopher Lee and Sally Gray.

Kill, Baby, Kill (1966)
A young girl returns from the grave seeking revenge on the townspeople responsible for her death. With Erica Blanc and Fabienne Dali.

The Killer Shrews (1959)
James Best and Ken Curtis (Festus from TV's 'Gunsmoke') star in this story of a pack of giant, man-eating rodents terrorizing the local populace.

King of the Zombies (1941)
A Nazi sympathizer creates an army of the undead. Starring Dick Purcell, Joan Woodbury and Mantan Mooreland.

Lady Frankenstein (1971)
Thirty years after Citizen Kane, Joseph Cotten starred in this European sex-horror flick from Mel Welles ('Little Shop of Horrors'). Cotton plays Baron Frankenstein, whose daughter creates a monster of her own. Rated R.

Macabre (1958)
Murderous horror tale starring William Prince, Jim Backus, Christine White and Jacqueline Scott. Director William Castle offered insurance policies for audience members in case they died of fright.

The Mad Monster (1942)
George Zucco turns Glenn Strange into a monster by injecting him with wolf blood.

Manbeast (1956)
Rock Madison and Virginia Maynor star in this story of the search for the Abominable Snowman.

Man Eater of Hydra (1968)
Island of the Doomed
A demented botanist (Cameron Mitchell) develops a man-eating plant. Directed by Mel Welles.

Maniac (1934)
Dwain Esper's immortal sleaze-fest is the forerunner of today's trash cinema. See a cat's eye being eaten, women fighting with syringes, a mad rapist and more.

The Manster (1959)
A reporter is transformed into a hideous monster after receiving an injection from a mad scientist. With Jane Hylton and various Japanese babes.

Man with Two Lives (1942)
A young man injured in a car accident is restored to life using the 'soul' of a criminal. Starring Edward Norris.

Mill of the Stone Women (1963)
a.k.a. The Horrible Stone Women
An art student (Pierre Brice) studies a strange Dutch carosel (with women instead of horses!) and learns its' deadly secret. From Pieter Van Weigen's weird short story and featuring great location photography. Also with Wolfgang Preiss and Scilla Gabel.

The Monster Maker (1944)
J. Carroll Naish injects germs into Ralph Morgan, hoping that subsequently curing him will impress the woman he loves (Wanda McKay). Also with Glenn Strange.

Monster From Green Hell (1957)
Jim Davis and Barbara Turner star in this strange tale of a 'mammoth monster that terroized the Earth!' Set in Africa.

Monsters Crash the Pajama Party (1965)
Teens stumble upon a crazed scientist in the middle of series of strange experiments. During screenings, actors ran into the audience and 'terrified' theatre patrons. With Don Brandon

The Monster Walks (1932)
A killer ape roams through a mysterious house. Nice B picture starring Rex Lease and Mischa Auer.

The Most Dangerous Game (1932)
A madman hunts human beings on his own private island. This classic film influenced California's infamous Zodiac killer. Starring Joel McRea, Fay Wray, Robert Armstrong and Leslie Banks.

Murder Mansion (1970)
Travelers are confronted by a macabre mistress and her ghostly friends when they stop at a spooky old house. Starring Analia Gade and Evelyn Stewart.

The Naked Witch (1964)
A student doing research into the occult digs up the body of a witch and brings her back to life. The witch shows her gratitude by continuing a reign of terror she started years before. 'She had the body of a goddess...but within her raged the fires of Hell!' Directed by Larry Buchanan.

The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave (1971)
A demented playboy lures strippers and other beautiful women to his mansion and tortures them in his dungeon. This R-rated drive-in classic has plenty of nudity and bloodletting. Adults only.

The Night Has Eyes (1942) a.k.a. Terror House
Two schoolteachers on holiday (Joyce Howard and Tucker McGuire) search the region where their friend disappeared a year before. A storm forces them to seek refuge in the home a disturbed veteran (James Mason) whom they come to suspect as the killer. This moody thriller horrified audiences all over England.

Night of the Living Dead (1968)
The cult classic that started a new cycle of horror films. Bodies emerge from their graves and walk the Earth, attacking humans and eating their flesh.

Night of the Sorcerers (1973)
Lorena Tower and Jack Taylor star in this Spanish horror film. Evil jungle natives decapitate white women, who then return from the dead as sexy ghouls.

Night Tide (1961)
Engaging fantasy about a mermaid and the sailor (Dennis Hopper) who becomes obsessed with her. Gavin Muir and Luana Anders (Dementia 13) co-star.

Oasis of the Zombies (1981)
Nazi soldiers are slaughtered in the North African desert only to return to 'life' years later. Their worm ridden and rotting bodies rise up from the grave. Powered by their undead souls, they lust after blood and tear the flesh from any who venture near!

Old Mother Riley's Ghosts (1941)
Mrs. Riley battles spies and spooks in this charming horror/comedy. Starring Arthur Lucan, Sebastian Cabot and Kitty McShane.

Phantom from 10,000 Leagues (1956)
Horror/sci-fi from Samuel Z. Arkoff and James H. Nicholson (one of their first efforts) is the story of a man-eating sea monster. With Kent Taylor and Cathy Downs ('The Flaming Urge').

The Pharaoh's Curse (1957)
Members of an archaeological party are killed off one by one after they desecrate a holy site. Starring Mark Dana, Ziva Rodann and Ben Wright.

Portrait in Terror (1965)
Another weird film from director Jack ('Spider Baby') Hill. This one concerns a demented hit man (Patrcik Magee) and a demented artist (William Campbell). Psychotronic's Michael Weldon recommends it for its 'impressive chase scene' 'murders' and 'sex.'

Prehistoric Women (1950)
Color adventure film matches sexy Amazons against a variety of monsters. With Allan Nixon and Laurette Luez. So bad you're sure to enjoy it.

Psycho-Mania (1963)
Del Tenney's 'adults only' horror film about sex murders at a girl's school is actually quite good. This Psycho-inspired production features early appearances by James Farentino, Sylvia Miles and Dick Van Patten.

The Red House (1947)
A demented farmer (Edward G. Robinson) is haunted by his past crimes in this terrific mixture of gothic horror and film noir, which boasts fine acting and a unique, moody quality. Co-starring Judith Anderson, Lon McCallister, Julie London and Rory Calhoun. Highly recommended.

Revolt of the Zombies (1936)
During WWI, the French develop an army of zombies. When the war ends, the order is given to find all og\f the undead and destroy them. Easier said than done. Starring Dean Jagger and Dorothy Stone.

Ring of Terror (1962)
When a group of college boys discover that their otherwise brave pal is afraid of dead bodies, they arrange an initiation whereby he must remove the ring from a corpse. Starring George Mather and Joseph Conway.

Satanic (1969)
An aged woman drinks a special serum that turns her young again, but at what cost? With Madge Kabopka.

The Screaming Skull (1958)
Producers offered free burial sevice for those who died of fright while watching this supernatural shocker. With John Hudson and Peggy Webber.

Scream of the Demon Lover (1971)
R-rated Euro-horror about a deformed killer with 'hot fire consuming his body as he lusts for revenge.'

Scream of the Wolf (1974)
An adventure writer (Peter Graves) stalks a murderous creature. Also with Clint Walker, Jo Ann Pflug, Philip Carey, Don Megowan and Brian Richards.

She Demons (1959)
Irish McCalla (TV's Sheena of the Jungle) stars in this bizarre story of a Nazi criminal who turns native cuties into hideous monsters (albeit well built ones). Also with Todd Griffin and Victor Sen Yung (Charlie Chan's Number one son).

She Wolf of London (1946)
Werewolf mystery featuring June Lockhart (!), Don Porter and Lloyd Corrigan.

Shriek of the Mutilated (1974)
College kids in search of the great white Yeti (Abominable Snowman/Bigfoot) run into a variety of grisly deaths. With Tawm Ellis ('Cat Women of the Moon') and featuring the hit song 'Popcorn' by Hot Butter.

Sinthia: The Devil's Doll (1970)
This weird horror-murder-sex flick from Ray Dennis Steckler features a young girl with demonic dreams. Rated R (loaded with sex and nudity).

The Slime People (1963)
Prehistoric monsters are awakened by atomic test blasts and take over L.A. Starring Robert Hutton, Susan Hart and Les Tremayne.

Snowbeast (1977)
A mysterious creature murders unsuspecting skiers at a winter resort. Starring Bo Svenson, Yvette Mimieux, Clint Walker, Robert Logan and Sylvia Sidney.

The Snow Creature (1954)
Another monster tale from Billy Wilder's brother Lee - this time featuring an abominable snowman who terrorizes L.A. With Paul Langton and Teru Shimada.

Sound of Horror (1966)
An expedition to mysterious island turns up a murderous dinosaur. Starring James Philbrook, Ingrid Pitt ('Countess Dracula') and Arturo Fernandez.

Sweet Sound of Death (1965)
A man dreams of his lover's death - only to see it come true.

The Tell-Tale Heart (1962)
a.k.a. The Hidden Room of 1,000 Horrors
Laurence Payne stars in this creepy version of Edgar Allen Poe's famous horror story. Also with Adrienne Corri. Produced in Great Britain by the Danziger brothers ('Jigsaw,' 'Devil Girl from Mars').

Terror in the Haunted House (1958)
a.k.a. My World Dies Screaming
Gerald Mohr takes his wife Cathy O'Donnell back to the house where (as a young girl) she witnessed a shocking axe murder. Creepy psychological horrors from Howco.

Terror is a Man (1959)
An all-American cast appears in this Phillipine horror production about a mad scientist (Francis Lederer) who transforms a panther into a man. Inspired by 'Island of Lost Souls' and starring Richard Derr ('When Worlds Collide').

Tomb of the Undead (1972)
Convicts are turned into zombies and begin preying on the living. Starring Duncan McLeod.

Tormented (1960)
When musician Richard Carlson kills his mistress (the voluptuous Juli Reding), her sexy ghost proceeds to make his life (and wedding) a living Hell. An enjoyable supernatural horror pic from Bert I. Gordon ('The Amazing Colassal Man').

Tower of Screaming Virgins (1968)
European sex/costume drama about a murderous countess who tortures and kills young men after having sex with them. Based loosely on the works of Dumas. Great photography and production values. Rated R.

Track of the Vampire (1966) a.k.a. Bloodbath
A Yugoslavian vampire picture with new footage added. Starring William Campbell, Sandra Knight, Lori Saunders and Jonathan Haze. Executive producer Roger Corman replaced director Jack Hill with feminist filmmaker Stephanie Rothman. It may not be the greatest film ever made, but there sure are a lot of beautiful women in it!

The Undying Monster (1942)
Scotland Yard inspector James Ellison helps heiress Heather Angel locate the bodies of her murdered family members (her brother is a werewolf). Also with John Howard and Charles McGraw.

The Unnatural (1952)
Creepy German film about a scientist (Erich von Stroheim) who uses artificial insemination to create a woman (Hildegarde Neff). Tragedy results since she was 'born outside the laws of God and man.'

The Vampire Bat (1933)
Strange horror film from tiny Majestic Studios, using actors and sets borrowed from Universal. The story is about a series of deaths believed caused by vampires - the great cast includes Lionel Atwill, Fay Wray, Melvyn Douglas, Robert Frazer, Lionel Belmore and Dwight Frye.

Vampire Hookers (1979)
'Blood isn't all they suck!' Vampire John Carradine sends his sexy henchwomen to bring strong young studs back to his castle.

The Vampire's Ghost (1945)
John Abbott stars as a 400 year old vampire-zombie who preys on the inhabitants of West Africa. Also with Charles Gordon, Peggy Stewart and Grant Withers.

Vampire's Night Orgy (1973)
a.k.a. Orgy of the Vampires
A group of tourists ends up in a town filled with vampires. With Jack Taylor and Charo Soriano. Directed by Leon Klimovsky (Werewolf vs. the Vampire Woman, Dr. Jekyll and the Wolfman).

Vampyr (1932) a.k.a. Castle of Doom
Carl Theodore Dryer's classic chiller is renowned for it's stylized use of light, shadow and inventive camerawork. Julian West plays a young man who travels to a mysterious European village and meets with a series of terrifying, dreamlike encounters.

Voodoo Woman (1957)
A beautiful woman (Marla English) is transformed into a monster in this weird thriller. Also starring Mike Connors and Tom Conway.

Web of the Spider (1970)
a.k.a. In the Grip of the Spider, Dracula and the Castle of Blood, And Comes the Dawn...But Red
A man accepts a bet that he can't spend the night in a haunted house. Based on Edgar Allan Poe's 'Danse Macabre.' With Klaus Kinski (as Poe) and Tony Franciosa. A remake of Castle of Blood.

Werewolf in a Girl's Dormitory (1961)
a.k.a. The Ghoul in School
Carl Schell (brother of Maximillian) plays a teacher at a school for wayward girls that is tormented by the local wolfman.

Witchcraft Through the Ages (1922) a.k.a. Haxan
Classic silent-era examination of the occult is still the last word on the subject. Contains early film nudity, strange rituals, torture and other assorted shocking sequences that still jolt viewers.

The Witch's Curse (1963)
A Scottish shepherd (muscleman Kirk Norris) tries to thwart a curse placed on his village by a witch who was burned at the stake. Italian horror picture also stars Helene Chanel and Andrea Bosic.

Witches Mountain (1972)
Mexican horror

World of the Vampires
Mexican horror with Maurico Garces.

Wrestling Women vs. the Aztec Mummy (1964)
Bizarre Mexican horrors with Lorena Velazquez (dubbed into English).

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Ronnie Cramer's Motorcycle Web Index
http://sepnet.com/cycle/index.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/art.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/bmw.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/books.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/bsa.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/buell.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/clothing.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/clubs.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/dealers.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/ducati.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/enfield.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/events.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/harley.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/homepgs.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/honda.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/indian.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/insuranc.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/kawasaki.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/legal.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/magazine.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/misc.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/motoguzz.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/newsmail.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/norton.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/other.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/parts.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/racing.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/safety.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/sidecars.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/sitelist.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/sponsor.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/sturgis.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/submit.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/suzuki.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/tours.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/triumph.htm | http://sepnet.com/cycle/yamaha.htm

12 inch GI Joes For Sale
http://sepnet.com/gijoe/index.htm

Ronnie Cramer's Personal Page
http://sepnet.com/rc/index.htm

Cramer.org
http://cramer.org/index.htm

Art by Ronnie Cramer
http://cramer.org/art/index.htm | http://cramer.org/art/2coaches.htm | http://cramer.org/art/2jeweler.htm | http://cramer.org/art/3teens.htm | http://cramer.org/art/4pillars.htm | http://cramer.org/art/9mellen.htm | http://cramer.org/art/1587.htm | http://cramer.org/art/abstract.htm | http://cramer.org/art/acrylics.htm | http://cramer.org/art/alley.htm | http://cramer.org/art/animals.htm | http://cramer.org/art/another.htm | http://cramer.org/art/apple.htm | http://cramer.org/art/arthusa.htm | http://cramer.org/art/arizona.htm | http://cramer.org/art/around.htm | http://cramer.org/art/athens.htm | http://cramer.org/art/backstre.htm | http://cramer.org/art/barrett.htm | http://cramer.org/art/barstow.htm | http://cramer.org/art/basket.htm | http://cramer.org/art/bathwate.htm | http://cramer.org/art/betterda.htm | http://cramer.org/art/between.htm | http://cramer.org/art/bird.htm | http://cramer.org/art/blondsan.htm | http://cramer.org/art/blueblaz.htm | http://cramer.org/art/bluedoor.htm | http://cramer.org/art/bluestep.htm | http://cramer.org/art/boardwal.htm | http://cramer.org/art/bobcat.htm | http://cramer.org/art/booksand.htm | http://cramer.org/art/boston.htm | http://cramer.org/art/bowery.htm | http://cramer.org/art/boxing.htm | http://cramer.org/art/browns.htm | http://cramer.org/art/buchtel.htm | http://cramer.org/art/buddies.htm | http://cramer.org/art/burlesque.htm | http://cramer.org/art/busstop.htm | http://cramer.org/art/carpet.htm | http://cramer.org/art/cbgb.htm | http://cramer.org/art/ceres.htm | http://cramer.org/art/charles.htm | http://cramer.org/art/collage.htm | http://cramer.org/art/cones.htm | http://cramer.org/art/coney.htm | http://cramer.org/art/cornervi.htm | http://cramer.org/art/corral.htm | http://cramer.org/art/cripes.htm | http://cramer.org/art/crown.htm | http://cramer.org/art/cycles.htm | http://cramer.org/art/davies.htm | http://cramer.org/art/deathrow.htm | http://cramer.org/art/decision.htm | http://cramer.org/art/demo1.htm | http://cramer.org/art/demo2.htm | http://cramer.org/art/demo3.htm | http://cramer.org/art/demo4.htm | http://cramer.org/art/demo5.htm | http://cramer.org/art/demo6.htm | http://cramer.org/art/demo.htm | http://cramer.org/art/denim_b.htm | http://cramer.org/art/denim_sm.htm | http://cramer.org/art/denver.htm | http://cramer.org/art/dodge.htm | http://cramer.org/art/dollymad.htm | http://cramer.org/art/dutch2.htm |http://cramer.org/art/dutch3.htm | http://cramer.org/art/dutchboy.htm | http://cramer.org/art/east43rd.htm | http://cramer.org/art/electron.htm | http://cramer.org/art/eleph-a.htm | http://cramer.org/art/epworth.htm | http://cramer.org/art/eros.htm | http://cramer.org/art/ewfoods.htm | http://cramer.org/art/figure1.htm | http://cramer.org/art/figure2.htm | http://cramer.org/art/figure3.htm | http://cramer.org/art/figure4.htm | http://cramer.org/art/figures.htm | http://cramer.org/art/film_r.htm | http://cramer.org/art/flowers.htm | http://cramer.org/art/foodmart.htm | http://cramer.org/art/forher.htm | http://cramer.org/art/for-rent.htm | http://cramer.org/art/frolic.htm | http://cramer.org/art/gas-food.htm | http://cramer.org/art/geary.htm | http://cramer.org/art/greenwom.htm | http://cramer.org/art/griffs.htm | http://cramer.org/art/guitar.htm | http://cramer.org/art/helpus.htm | http://cramer.org/art/highvolt.htm | http://cramer.org/art/hollyw.htm | http://cramer.org/art/homework.htm | http://cramer.org/art/iliff.htm | http://cramer.org/art/iliketob.htm | http://cramer.org/art/ilvicino.htm | http://cramer.org/art/install.htm | http://cramer.org/art/ironhead.htm | http://cramer.org/art/island.htm | http://cramer.org/art/je_deli.htm | http://cramer.org/art/jessica.htm | http://cramer.org/art/jewelry.htm | http://cramer.org/art/juno.htm | http://cramer.org/art/karenfxr.htm | http://cramer.org/art/kc.htm | http://cramer.org/art/lalashoe.htm | http://cramer.org/art/lapapers.htm | http://cramer.org/art/larkin.htm | http://cramer.org/art/laspalma.htm | http://cramer.org/art/lasvegas.htm | http://cramer.org/art/lesley.htm | http://cramer.org/art/lilypond.htm | http://cramer.org/art/links.htm | http://cramer.org/art/lion.htm | http://cramer.org/art/lounging.htm | http://cramer.org/art/malish.htm | http://cramer.org/art/midcity.htm | http://cramer.org/art/mirror.htm | http://cramer.org/art/monkey.htm | http://cramer.org/art/monument.htm | http://cramer.org/art/moregear.htm | http://cramer.org/art/moreusa.htm | http://cramer.org/art/multiple.htm | http://cramer.org/art/newstand.htm | http://cramer.org/art/newyork.htm | http://cramer.org/art/north604.htm | http://cramer.org/art/north_g.htm | http://cramer.org/art/number8.htm | http://cramer.org/art/ofarrell.htm | http://cramer.org/art/omaha.htm | http://cramer.org/art/order.htm | http://cramer.org/art/other.htm | http://cramer.org/art/packing.htm | http://cramer.org/art/pagefour.htm | http://cramer.org/art/park.htm | http://cramer.org/art/parrot.htm | http://cramer.org/art/pastels.htm | http://cramer.org/art/pear.htm | http://cramer.org/art/pecan.htm | http://cramer.org/art/photan.htm | http://cramer.org/art/photogra.htm | http://cramer.org/art/pinkfloyd.htm | http://cramer.org/art/pinkp.htm | http://cramer.org/art/post.htm | http://cramer.org/art/purplexl.htm | http://cramer.org/art/rainonbr.htm | http://cramer.org/art/rcx4.htm | http://cramer.org/art/rhino.htm | http://cramer.org/art/salem.htm | http://cramer.org/art/sanfran.htm | http://cramer.org/art/santafe3.htm | http://cramer.org/art/santafe.htm | http://cramer.org/art/sarah.htm | http://cramer.org/art/sarahx4.htm | http://cramer.org/art/seated_w.htm | http://cramer.org/art/selfish.htm | http://cramer.org/art/seven.htm | http://cramer.org/art/singer.htm | http://cramer.org/art/sjoseph.htm | http://cramer.org/art/skidmor2.htm | http://cramer.org/art/slincoln.htm | http://cramer.org/art/soccer.htm | http://cramer.org/art/soggy.htm | http://cramer.org/art/sparky2.htm | http://cramer.org/art/sparky.htm | http://cramer.org/art/stop.htm | http://cramer.org/art/subway.htm | http://cramer.org/art/sunlight.htm | http://cramer.org/art/thatmaid.htm | http://cramer.org/art/themis.htm | http://cramer.org/art/thesight.htm | http://cramer.org/art/thirstye.htm | http://cramer.org/art/thisjob.htm | http://cramer.org/art/thisman.htm | http://cramer.org/art/towers.htm | http://cramer.org/art/truck.htm | http://cramer.org/art/tunnel3.htm | http://cramer.org/art/uphill.htm | http://cramer.org/art/vogue.htm | http://cramer.org/art/waiting.htm | http://cramer.org/art/walgreen.htm | http://cramer.org/art/walking.htm | http://cramer.org/art/washfxr.htm | http://cramer.org/art/watson.htm | http://cramer.org/art/wax.htm | http://cramer.org/art/white_bl.htm | http://cramer.org/art/woman.htm | http://cramer.org/art/wyeth.htm | http://cramer.org/art/yesmadam.htm

Music by Ronnie Cramer
http://cramer.org/music/index.htm

Ronnie Cramer Art/Music/Film Chronology
http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/ | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/index.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/default.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1982.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1983.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1984.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1985.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1986.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1987.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1988.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1989.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1990.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1991.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1992.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1993.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1994.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1995.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1996.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1997.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1998.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/1999.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/2000.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/2001.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/2002.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/2003.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/2004.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/2005.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/2006.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/2007.htm | http://ronnie.cramer.net/trends/2008.htm

TVideo.com
http://tvideo.com/ | http://tvideo.com/index.htm | http://tvideo.com/a.htm | http://tvideo.com/b.htm | http://tvideo.com/c.htm | http://tvideo.com/d.htm | http://tvideo.com/e.htm | http://tvideo.com/f.htm | http://tvideo.com/g.htm | http://tvideo.com/h.htm | http://tvideo.com/i.htm | http://tvideo.com/j.htm | http://tvideo.com/k.htm | http://tvideo.com/l.htm | http://tvideo.com/m.htm | http://tvideo.com/n.htm | http://tvideo.com/o.htm | http://tvideo.com/p.htm | http://tvideo.com/q.htm | http://tvideo.com/r.htm | http://tvideo.com/s.htm | http://tvideo.com/t.htm | http://tvideo.com/u.htm | http://tvideo.com/v.htm | http://tvideo.com/w.htm | http://tvideo.com/x.htm | http://tvideo.com/y.htm | http://tvideo.com/z.htm | http://tvideo.com/animated.htm | http://tvideo.com/biker.htm | http://tvideo.com/black.htm | http://tvideo.com/comedy.htm | http://tvideo.com/crime.htm | http://tvideo.com/doc.htm | http://tvideo.com/drama.htm | http://tvideo.com/exploit.htm | http://tvideo.com/foreign.htm | http://tvideo.com/horror.htm | http://tvideo.com/drive_in.htm | http://tvideo.com/musicals.htm | http://tvideo.com/order.htm | http://tvideo.com/scifi.htm | http://tvideo.com/serials.htm | http://tvideo.com/silent.htm | http://tvideo.com/sports.htm | http://tvideo.com/sword.htm | http://tvideo.com/tv.htm | http://tvideo.com/others.htm | http://tvideo.com/war.htm | http://tvideo.com/western.htm

Ronnie Cramer's MySpace Page
http://myspace.com/rc303

Ronnie Cramer's MySpace Music Page
http://myspace.com/ronniecrameraudio