Long ago, during the Before Times, I was listening to a Torture Cinema episode of the Skiffy and Fanty Podcast wherein one of the hosts made a snarky comment about James Horner's score for the 1983 science-fiction/fantasy mash-up Krull. This person commented that significant portions of Horner's score for Krull were repurposed sections of his score for Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
Ghoulies, Ghosties, and Long-Leggedy Beasties
Just the ramblings, observations, and memories of a Gen X Horror Geek.
Monday, February 10, 2025
Battle Beyond the Stars (1980) - Soundtrack Collection
Long ago, during the Before Times, I was listening to a Torture Cinema episode of the Skiffy and Fanty Podcast wherein one of the hosts made a snarky comment about James Horner's score for the 1983 science-fiction/fantasy mash-up Krull. This person commented that significant portions of Horner's score for Krull were repurposed sections of his score for Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
Jaws by Peter Benchley - Newspaper Ad
![]() |
San Francisco Examiner - February 10, 1974 |
Before the movie there was the novel. Producer David Brown once said that if he and Richard Zanuck had stopped to think through the budgetary logistics of actually making a movie adaptation of Jaws, they might never have done so.
I tried and tried to read the novel, having seen and loved the movie, but just kept bouncing off it. It would not be until late 1980, or maybe even early 1981, that I would manage to get through the entire book, from start to finish.
The movie was better. Much, much better.
Sunday, February 9, 2025
Saturday, February 8, 2025
Companion (2025) - Movie Review
"Iris, wake up."
Although I saw Companion on opening day, I wanted to let my thoughts about the film settle and marinate in my mind for a bit. During this time I saw all manner of reactions and critiques of both the film and its marketing campaign.
Friday, February 7, 2025
The Batman (2022) - Soundtrack Collection
Michael Giacchino's score for The Batman captures and embodies the film's brooding gothic-noir vibe perfectly. There are, at least, three separate themes at play in his score. First is the dark and brooding theme for Batman himself. Second is the creepy and almost lullaby like theme for the Riddler. Third is the slinking, slithering theme for Catwoman.
The Skull (1965) - Newspaper Ad
Despite my growing up on a semi-regular diet of assorted Hammer and Amicus films broadcast on television, coupled with my burning through all the Robert Bloch novels and short stories I could get my hands on in the late 80s and early 90s, a viewing of The Skull has eluded me.
The source material for the film was a short story by Bloch titled The Skull of the Marquis de Sade, which was first published in the September 1945 edition of Weird Tales. While I have read the story twice - first in Final Reckonings, the first volume of The Complete Stories of Robert Bloch, and again in the 1963 anthology Bogey Men - I have zero recall of it.
The Skull was first released on a double-bill with The Mad Executioners, a German 'Krimi' film from 1963. It appears to be one of a very few to receive wide distribution in the United States. If the IMDB is to be believed, that is.
Thursday, February 6, 2025
Wednesday, February 5, 2025
Batman Forever (1995) - Soundtrack Collection
I have only seen snippets and sections of Batman Forever (1995), not the complete movie, from beginning to end.
Welcome Home Brother Charles (1975) - Oakland Tribune - Tuesday, May 18, 1976
While I do remember seeing the ads for Jamaa Fanaka's Penitentiary, I did not learn of this earlier offering from the writer-director until much later in life. Welcome Home Brother Charles is about an angry black man that kills people with his ginormous and sentient penis.
Of course I would like to see it, one day. I might even try to watch it back-to-back with Frank Henenlotter's Bad Biology, which I also still need to see.
Tuesday, February 4, 2025
A is for Alien by Charles Gould - Book Review
Honest to mythical-god, I thought this book was an online gag. But it turns out that A is for Alien is a for real Little Golden Book.
Monday, February 3, 2025
Batman Returns (1992) - Soundtrack Collection
For those potential visitors that might be wondering why there is a hole punched in the upper righthand corner of this CD booklet. This was a promotional copy of the soundtrack the store I was working at received and I was allowed to keep.
Like the soundtrack that precedes it in this catalogue sequence, there was a expanded re-issue released that I passed on getting. Again, I am satisfied with this album presentation and do not feel compelled to get an upgrade of it. That might change, but it also might not.
Alien (1979) - Trading Card #15
Jones turned out to be the most contentious character in Alien. If my memory of all the behind-the-scenes and making-of articles, magazines, and books I have read, coupled with all the documentaries and bonus features that I have watched, is correct, it was Walter Hill that added Jones to the screenplay.
Yog: Monster from Space [aka Space Amoeba, aka Gezora, Ganime, Kameba: Kessen! Nankai no daikaijĂ»] (1970) - Newspaper Ad
![]() |
Oakland Tribune - August 3, 1971 |
I saw a portion of Yog: Monster from Space at the Southshore Cinema, but not all of it. For whatever reason I thought it would be cool to run home, tell my mom about the giant octopus scene, and then run back to watch the rest of the movie.
Yeah, that is not how reality works, obviously. I wasted a good hour and a half, minimum, running back and forth, when I should have just stayed in the theater and watched the entire movie. So it goes.
I really need to catch up with this one.
Friday, January 31, 2025
Batman (1989) - Soundtrack Collection
While there have been expanded re-issues and special editions of Danny Elfman's iconic score for Tim Burton's Batman, I have passed on every opportunity to purchase an upgraded variation of this original soundtrack, which I purchased way back in 1989. I am quite satisfied with what I have, thank you very much.
The Hills Have Eyes (1977) - Newspaper Ad
![]() |
Oakland Tribune - Sunday, September 4, 1977 |
Ah, yes. Yet another ad that both fascinated and terrified me, back in the days of my childhood. Although I had no idea who Michael Berryman was at the time, his unique visage glaring out at me from this ad made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up.
On the lower left hand portion of this ad, you will see a listing for the Coliseum drive-in. This was our family's preferred drive-in, because of its proximity to home. I think we were seeing Star Wars, but this was playing on the neighboring screen and I kept looking over to see if anything scary and forbidden to my ten-year-old eyes might be glimpsed.
I do remember seeing the trailer attack scene and the film's ending, but the context and meaning of those silent scenes were incomprehensible to me, of course.
That would change in 1984, when The Hills Have Eyes was broadcast on one of the English language channels in Hong Kong. I recorded the broadcast and, for the next few years, that version of the film was the one I became familiar with.
Turns out that version had an alternate ending. In the domestic theatrical release the film ends with a shot looking up on the exhausted and exhilarated Doug (Martin Speer), after he has finished violently stabbing Mars (Lance Gordon) to death.
The televised version dissolves from that to a long shot of Bobby (Robert Houston) and Ruby (Janis Blythe) walking together toward a staggering Doug. Bobby is then shown introducing Ruby to Doug, it is here the film fades from this somewhat bucolic image of potential healing and the end credits begin.
I had no idea this was not how The Hills Have Eyes ended until I showed this version to a friend. Seeing it left him slack jawed and flabbergasted.
This alternate ending does help to explain how and why Bobby and Ruby are married in the shoddy misfire that was The Hills Have Eyes Part II.
Wednesday, January 29, 2025
Basic Instinct (1992) - Soundtrack Collection
As good as Jerry Goldsmith's score for Basic Instinct is, and it is very good, it is not the music I most associate with the film. That would be Blue by LaTour, because of its being put to excellent use in the film's trailer. That is what I first 'hear' whenever I am wont to think about Basic Instinct. Which is not all that often, truth be told.
After having worked together with excellent results on the 1991 science-fiction action-adventure Total Recall, director Paul Verhoeven and composer Jerry Goldsmith joined forces for 1992's Basic Instinct. While the creation of the main theme for the former went rather smoothly, the journey to creating the main theme for Basic Instinct turned out to be a frustrating and challenging one.
"Jerry felt the movie needed a 'heart' that would elevate it," Verhoeven shares in the liner notes. "But when he started to play music in his studio, I disagreed with it... I didn't want...a romantic heart, because the movie is too harsh and cold-blooded [for] that."
Goldsmith took it in stride, though. After a piece of music eventually caught Verhoeven's ear and was placed under a scene featuring an intimate conversation between femme fatale Catherine Tramell (Sharon Stone) and troubled detective Nick Curran (Michael Douglas), the film's elusive main theme was discovered at last.
"In a flash, it became clear to Jerry what the score should be," Verhoeven explains. "From then on, he could write the score in one run, and we were sailing with the wind."
Goldsmith's main theme is not an overtly romantic one, as requested. Instead it is a haunting and almost hypnotic one. The liner notes describe it invoking "the feeling of being mesmerized." Which is accurate.
While most of the score plays under dialogue and sex scenes, there are a few moments that allowed for Goldsmith to display his gift for propulsive and brassy action composition. This occurs during an over-the-top sequence involving a bit of reckless driving on a winding Northern California highway.
As good as the music for the scene is, the way it plays out always struck me as being ridiculous to the point of self-parody. It is probably intentional, but I nonetheless wince at the melodramatic goofiness of the scene whenever I see it.
But that viewing experience memory does not hamper my listening experience whenever I play this expanded edition soundtrack. The music remains an icy delight to this day.
The Brood (1979) - Newspaper Ad
![]() |
Oakland Tribune - August 1, 1979 |
This is one of those kindertrauma ads I remember scaring the daylights out me, back in the day. I also might have seen a couple of television ads for it, but cannot be too sure about that. August 1979 would be some 46 years ago, at time of writing.
Monday, January 27, 2025
Bad Dreams (1988) - Soundtrack Collection
This is one from Varèse Sarabande’s LP to CD series.
Underworld: Awakening (2012) - Newspaper Ad
![]() |
San Francisco Examiner - Friday, January 27, 2012 |
Underworld: Awakening is one of two films in the Underworld franchise that I have seen. The first one was 2009's Underworld: Rise of the Lycans, which appears to have been a prequel film fleshing out the backstory of the first film and all its subsequent sequels.
Neither film grabbed enough of my interest to compel me to check out the other entries, to see what I was missing out on. The only reason I did see Underworld: Awakening was because a friend-of-a-friend of ours, at the time, did not want to go the movies alone. Since I am a Monster Guy, I was willing to sit through watered down vampires fighting watered down werewolves. I was not all that engaged, but I was not bored, either.
Perhaps if I were to approach the franchise not as horror, but as action film oriented Urban Fantasy adventures, I might get the stick out of my muddy backside and enjoy the Underworld films for what they are. Frothy entertainments.
Maybe. But then, maybe not.