Wednesday, February 18, 2026

FAREWELL, DOCTOR MADBLOOD (JERRY F. HARRELL)

Tidewater, Virginia embraced you as their emblematic, horror host and for good reason. 

You entered the WAVY-TV airwaves on a frightful bang way back in 1975 with Universal's classic, monster rally, House of Frankenstein. From there, you never let go, bringing the best and (sometimes) the worst in imagi-movies, buffering both sides of the coin with fun vignettes that kept your viewers wide awake with smiles, giggles and above all, crazy, good cheer.

It's important to note that, in addition to being an impassioned, Beatles fan (who stockpiled trivia on the lads like no other), you made an important impression on several horror hosts who came in your wake, including Sally the Zombie Cheerleader, aka Nicole M. King, Penny Dreadful, aka Danielle Gelehrter, and the inimitable Mr. (Erik) Lobo, which speaks volumes, considering their renowned stature.   

For those who experienced your benefaction, Mr. Harrell, you'll never be forgotten, living on through your fans' memories, and indeed, you've given them a ton to treasure. 

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, FREDDY (2026) FROM UNCLE MIKE

 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

TASTE THE BLOOD OF DRACULA: A CLASSIC MONSTERS OF THE MOVIES TRIBUTE

Nige Burton & Jamie Jones, through Classic Monsters of the Movies, honors one of Hammer Studios' most interesting sequels: Taste the Blood of Dracula.

Directed by newcomer Peter (Countess Dracula/Hands of the Ripper/The Devil Within Her) Sasdy and written by Hammer veteran John Elder (aka Tony/Anthony Hinds), Taste bleeds with style (thanks in substantial part to cinematographer Arthur Grant), so much so that some Hammerheads rank the 1970 chapter right alongside the studio's vampiric breakthrough, (Horror of) Dracula

As Burton and Jones explain, Christopher Lee was reluctant to revive his Count, and early on, the script catered to a surrogate to replace him (rather in the vein of Brides of Dracula's Baron Meinster), that being Ralph (Horror of Frankenstein/Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde/Lust for a Vampire/The Devil Within Her) Bates' Lord Courtley. Bates' character does, in fact, dominate the first phase of the dark exploit, but he's later made a vessel from which the Dracula manifests. 

The authors detail how Elder's script switched antagonists, while maintaining its Faustian theme, centering on a Hellfire Club knockoff. The setup, therefore, is different than other Hammer/Dracula movies. Taste's club-of-debauchery twist is unexpected, and though Lee may have been wary (and weary) of Hammer's tried-and-true formula (reinstated by Warner Bros-Seven Arts' insistence), this submission established a memorable, guilt-ridden parable. 

The cast helps, of course (its members detailed by pleasing, pictorial bios), headlined by the always regal Lee (who donned, for a portion of this movie, consuming-red contacts to emphasis his ravenous resurrection), and Bates enacts Courtley's immoralist with chilling condescension. They are accompanied by Linda (Blood on Satan's Claw/Madhouse/House on Straw Hill) Hayden; Martin (Titanic 1997/Eragon/The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo) Jarvis; Anthony (Vampire Circus/Young Sherlock Holmes/Sherlock Holmes Returns/Raiders of the Lost Ark) Corlan; Ilsa (A Hard Day's Night/Dr. Terror's House of Horrors/Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade) Blair; Geoffrey (The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh/Cromwell/Doomwatch) Keen; Michael (The Brides of Dracula/Dracula Has Risen from the Grave/Scars of Dracula) Ripper; Peter (Wallis & Gromit/Last of the Summer Wine/A Night to Remember) Sallis; John (Captain Kronos/Plague of the Zombies/Doomsday) Carson; Roy (Scrooge 1970/The Three/Four Musketeers) Kinnear; Madeline (The Vampire Lovers/Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell/Live and Let Die) Smith; Russell (The Brave Don't Cry/Doctor Who: "The Robots of Death") Hunter; ... and Gwen (Never Take Sweets from a Stranger/Fall of the House of Usher 1950) Watford: indeed, as classy an ensemble as any Hammer production could deliver. 

The Classic Monsters "Ultimate Edition" is all the more impactful for its scrumptious stills and publicity imagery, tied by Burton & Jones' "Quotable Quotes" and revealing trivia. 

Please Note: Supplies of Classic Monsters' first-run printing for the Taste the Blood of Dracula are now low, so move fast while they last.

https://www.classic-monsters.com/shop/product/taste-the-blood-of-dracula-1970-ultimate-guide-magazine/

TERRIFIC TEAM-UP IMAGE: PLANET OF THE APES MODELS

 

Monday, February 16, 2026

GOODBYE, ROBERT DUVALL

There's no debate that you were (and shall remain) one of the cinematic titans, whether filtered through Tom Hagen in The Godfather saga, Lt. Colonel Bill Kilgore in Apocalypse Now, Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird, Mac Sledge in Tender Mercies, General Robert E. Lee in Gods and Generals, the titular Great Santini, the titular Ike (President and general), the titular Stalin (dictatorial monster supreme), the titular (and suppressed) THX 1138, or your acclaimed, guest appearances on The Twilight Zone (in "Miniature"), The Outer Limits (in "The Chameleon" and "The Inheritors") and The Fugitive (in "Never Wave Goodbye" and "Brass Ring"). 

And there's a mountain more among the theatrical/epic-miniseries front: The Conversation, Falling Down, John Q, True Grit (1969), Open Range, Broken Trail, Lawman, Lonesome Dove, Joe Kidd, The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid, Rambling Rose, Sling Blade, BullittThe Detective, Countdown (1968), Deep Impact, The 6th Day, The Handmaid's Tale (1990), Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978), Phenomenon, The Pale Blue Eye, Seven Days in Utopia, Breakout, The Betsy, Days of Thunder, Gone in 60 Seconds, 12 Mighty Orphans, Thank You for Smoking, The Revolutionary, Badge 373, The Pursuit of D.B. Cooper, The Seven-Per-Cent Solution (as Dr. John Watson), The Judge, The Outfit, The Natural, The Rain People, Lady Ice, The Eagle Has Landed, Jack Reacher (2012), The Chase, Hustle, Nightmare in the Sun, A Night in Old Mexico, We Own the NightGet Low, Four Christmases, M*A*S*H, The Greatest, The Killer Elite (1975), Wrestling Ernest Hemingway, Hemingway and Gellhorn, The Terry Fox Story, The Gingerbread Man, Tomorrow, Lucky You, A Shot at Glory, True Confessions, The Paper, Newsies, The Judge, Hotel Colonial, Something to Talk About, The Apostle, A Civil Action, A Shot at Glory, Kicking and Screaming, Secondhand Lions, The Courtship of Eddie's Father (1963), Colors, Convicts, The Stars Fell on Henrietta, The Scarlet Letter (1994), A Show of Force, The Man Who Captured Eichmann, Captain Newman M.D., Guys and Dolls, Widows, Casting By, In Dubious Battle, A Family Thing (as producer), Assassination Tango (as director) and Wild Horses (as writer and director).

On the small screen (along with the aforementioned Twilight Zone, Outer Limits and Fugitive), you appeared on Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, The Time Tunnel, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Kraft Suspense Theatre, T.H.E. Cat, Route 66, The Defenders, Shannon, Naked City, Cain's Hundred, The Mod Squad, The Wild Wild West, Cimarron Trail, The Virginian, Shane, Stony Brooke, The Untouchables, The F.B.I., The Felony Squad, Arrest and Trial, Hawk, Combat!, Saturday Night Live and American Experience (as the narrator for "The Carter Family: Will the Circle Be Unbroken"). 

Indeed, no one would argue that you were a phenomenal performer, Mr. Duvall, but you were also a man of staunch principle, who stood by his beliefs, no matter what the myopic mob demanded. That makes you a hero even beyond your cinematic efforts: something that few (whether in the creative field or beyond it) could ever exhibit or expound. 

PINUP TIME: ALLISON HAYES AT 50 FT

 

RAVENWOOD WILL RETURN

This morning a gym mate asked me if any additional, Airship 27 editions of Ravenwood, Stepson of Mystery were in the works. Well, a Volume #6 is, indeed, in the pipeline, with four stories completed for such, including one by me. 

My contribution is called "Of Man and Mongoose" and centers on a disguised, vengeful "crusader," whom Ravenwood must investigate. This revenge-ridden yarn was inspired by the John Steed/Avengers episodes I grew up with, in particular "The Winged Avenger," my favorite of the series. 

The volume needs to be illustrated and for now, no artists have been assigned, whether for interiors or the cover. Once this is taken care of, all should move fast from that point.

In the meantime, the previous, Airship 27 releases are available for purchase, including the two in which I'm featured, Vol #4 & #5.

Why not warm up for Vol #6's release by (re)visiting those that came before? One can do so at

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=ravenwood+stepson+of+mystery&crid=35GKGJZBKBUIM&sprefix=ravenwood+stepson+of+mystery%2Caps%2C152&ref=nb_sb_noss