Trashfiend Disposable horror fare of the 1960s & 1970s Volume One Scott Stine www.headpress.com Table of Contents Up from the Depths • Preface Articles The Darker Side of Soul Cinema: The Creature Features of Black Cinema The Ghouls Go West: The Horror Westerns of William Beaudine Pat Boyette’s & Dungeon of Harrow The Mad, Mad, Mad Monsters of Rankin & Bass Blood on the Canvas: The Art of the Belgian Window Card Those Marvelous Monsters: A Look at Marvel Comics’ Horror Magazines Digesting The Haunt of Horror Cut Down to Size: The Golden Age of Horror Digest Magazines Monsters on Parade: Shriek! The Monster Horror Magazine Warren’s Hastily Erected House Of Horror Reel Monsters: Collecting 8mm Horror Films Wally Wood’s Mars Attacks! Monsterabilia Sleepless in Seattle: Up all Night with Nightmare Theatre Interviews Cal Bolder: The Boy Toy of Frankenstein’s Daughter Dredging Crater Lake with Richard Cardella John Stanley’s Nightmare in Blood The Twisted Tales of Bruce Jones Keeping an Eye on The Count: Chuck Lindenberg, camera one Sweeping up after The Count: Dave Drui, floor director Film Reviews It’s Only a Movie It’s Only a Black Horror Movie Billy the Kid vs Dracula (1965) & Jesse James Meets Frankenstein’s Daughter (1965) The Crater Lake Monster (1977) Nightmare in Blood (1975) Dungeon of Harrow (1962) Mad Monster Party? (1967) & Mad, Mad, Mad Monsters (1972) Appendix Pat Boyette: selected horror comic checklist (1966–79) Bruce Jones: selected horror magazine checklist (1968–79) The Haunt of Horror digest index (1973) Marvel monster magazine checklist (1964–79) Marvel monster magazine artist & writer index (1964–79) Horror fiction digest checklist (1960–79) Shriek! magazine index (1965–67) Warren’s House of Horror (1978) Mars Attacks! trading cards checklist (1962) Wally Wood: horror comics & magazines checklist (1950–79) Sources Acknowledgements About the Author Index Trashfiend publication information I N SPRING OF 2002, I self published the first issue of Trashfiend under my Stigmata Press imprint, a forty eight page tribute to ‘Horror & Exploitation Fare from the 1960s & 1970s.’ With a modest print run of 2,000 copies, and sporting an underexposed but garish full color cover, Trashfiend picked up where its predecessor GICK! left off the previous year. Although far more comprehensive than the earlier incarnation, the primary thing that set Trashfiend apart was its unwavering devotion to media that left the greatest impression on me as a child. I had grown tired of more recent fare, which had become evident in the gradual decline of post 1980 coverage in GICK! (When I did review such films, I rarely had anything good to say about them… unless, of course, they were throwbacks to the stuff that made up the cinematic soundtrack of my youth.) If any incarnation of the magazine were to survive, I had to be inspired by or at least marginally interested in the material covered within its pages. Even if many of the films and comics I wrote about were, well, trash, at least it was trash that was near and dear to my heart. In the editorial that kicked off the first issue of Trashfiend, I made a sincere but ultimately feeble attempt to explain the main impetus behind the magazine’s conception: nostalgia. But it wasn’t until I was wrapping up this book that I found myself one step closer to truly understanding the great cosmic force that makes the crustiest curmudgeons shuck their catch-all bah, humbug’s and sigh in fond remembrance of days past. I was in the midst of writing the piece that closes this book, ‘Sleeplessness in Seattle,’ when I found myself caught up in something more than casual reminiscence. I was trying desperately to save a part of my childhood that, unlike many of the things covered in this book, was slipping through the cracks of popular history. With an unprecedented urgency, I was soon consumed by the need to archive every scrap of data and trivia about this childhood obsession that I could unearth. My previous efforts to preserve all things vintage horror paled in comparison to the machinations that drove my most recent obsession. I had discovered my grail, my ark of the covenant… even if friends and family alike thought it high time I purchase a one-way ticket to the bughouse, I felt justified. As adults, we rarely experience the awe we took for granted as children. As we grow older, we gradually become more desperate to relive such moments, and we find that only through the very things that sparked our collective imaginations as children can we even come close to this now-elusive wonderment. For me, and probably many of the people reading this, it was monsters and everything devoted to them: films, comics, toys, movie magazines, what have you. That, of course, is a goodly part of what Trashfiend entails. But this beast has a particularly dark underbelly: stained and matted nether regions sullied by its need to wallow in the blood and the muck. As some of us grew up, the unattainable ‘mature’ horrors that our impressionable minds were mostly spared became our newfound sirens, our need to seek out their forbidden pleasures fueled by the very fact they were once taboo. Anything that hid behind an R rating, or was placed on the top shelf of the magazine rack beyond our adolescent reach, had to be something special. As horror fans, we were always looking for something new to shock our jaded sensibilities, so it was our very nature to grasp at things concerned adults did not want us to see. After seeing these examples of Rick Baker’s effects work for The Incredible Melting Man (1977), this film capped my Top Ten Most Wanted list for years. Starlog #11 (January 1978) Starlog Communications Most of the things considered taboo in our society are labeled as such because they appeal to our basest nature, and they are often summed up with the lowest common denominators of sex and violence. Despite the fact these distasteful subjects are the cornerstones of American entertainment, they bear a stigma that forces respectable producers and publishers to peddle their wares in a more socially acceptable fashion lest they be compared to tapeworms or other unsavory parasites that inhabit one’s lower intestinal tract. Due to its inextricable ties with these taboos, the horror genre has always shared this stigma, but never more so than during the sixties and seventies when —excuse the mixed metaphor—it pushed the envelope and exploited the inability of weary censors to assert any real control over the breached floodgates. And since the entrepreneurs who capitalized on the growing market for titillation and bloodshed produced their lurid product as cheaply as humanly possible, much of it was and is viewed as ‘trash’ by the general consensus. Although I would be hard pressed to consider Warren Publications or the writings of Robert Bloch and Leslie Whitten as garbage, the fact that they are horror automatically relegates them to the position of disposable entertainment in the eyes of many
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