Thursday, June 25, 2026

SCARY MONSTERS #141: MONSTER MEMORIES (SHOCKING SCENES & MACABRE MOMENTS)

Scary Monsters #141 is a special "Monster Memories (Shocking Scenes and Macabre Moments)" issue, ornamented by Scott Jackson's front-cover rendering of Christopher Lee from Dracula Has Risen from the Grave, in addition to the artist's creepy, back-cover collage featuring several of our favorite fiends and bodacious beasts.

Inside one will find a sentimental salute on the late, great, gorilla-man/collector Bob Burns; a visit with Dr. Serizawa, Godzilla's diligent destroyer; retrospectives on Godzilla vs the Thing (Mothra), The Changeling (1980) and The Norliss Tapes; Jekyll/Hyde movies; werewolf movies, sorcery movies; lighthouses in monster movies; monster collectibles from the 2000s; the malpracticing Three Stooges; the therapeutic powers of Dark Shadows; hefty rundowns on imagi-movies' most memorable scenes; horror fiction by Robert Statzar; plus Cam Hayden's ever chuckle-filled Roomies from the Tomb

Scary Monsters offers an eclectic blend of what monster kids desire, and Issue #141 exceeds its commitment to please a hundredfold. 

Purchase Scary Monsters #141: Monster Memories at 

https://www.mymoviemonsters.com/store.php/mymoviemonsters/pd10984331/scary_monsters_141__monster_memories_summer_edition_now_shipping#images

 

TERRIFIC TEAM-UP IMAGE: ELVIS MEETS FRANKENSTEIN (JAILHOUSE & CURSE)

 

I SAW SUPERGIRL (2026)

Supergirl, directed by Craig (Cruella) Gillespie and scripted by Ana (The Vampire Diaries) Nogeira, is part of producer James Gunn's WB/DC, revisionist track, and I forced myself to tackle it somewhat in the dark, since I'd heard that its Kara Zor-El star, Millie Alcott, said certain "weird, weird" things about it and didn't wish the content to get distracted by such. (A similar situation spoiled Gunn's Superman and Matt Shakman's Fantastic Four: First Steps for me.) So, did my blinders-on approach do the trick? Ah, maybe, but not really.  

I mean, the movie isn't by any stretch substandard, but there's nothing extraordinary about it, either. It's just sort of there, using a Mad Max: Fury Road/Furiosa ambiance, though it never catches the roar-of-the-engine intensity of those entries (and for some viewers, the sporadic, dystopic turf may seem off-kilter for Supergirl, even under Gunn's much publicized redesign). The balance is viable at best, maybe even flat on occasion, and as I once said in regard to Marvel movies (i.e. Captain Marvel/The Marvels), the same goes for DC: Big-budget mediocrity shouldn't be the norm.  

The story depicts our rambunctious Supergirl assisting Eve Ridley's incensed, alien girl, Ruthye Marye Knoll, who seeks revenge on Matthias Schoenaert's Kurgan-like, female-trafficking Krem of the Yellow Hills, who's killed the poor girl's family, led by her famous, sword-making father, Ferdinand Kingsley's Elias. Krem has also poisoned Krypto, thus sealing Kara's commitment to Ruthye's cause and embedding a western flavor similar to Sam Raimi's The Quick and the Dead (and to a lesser degree, Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven) and then, of course, the referenced Mad Max movies come into play, which are westerns in disguise, and well, you see where this is going on the atmospheric front. 

David Corenswet's Superman enters to bridge the vengeful proceedings, which includes a lovely, how-they-met insert, and lo and behold, we also get Jason Momoa's scene-stealing, galactic-biker bounty hunter, Lobo, who interacts with Kara in pinch moments. However, despite his cowboy fortitude, the impact comes and goes, returning matters to the task at hand, where, alas, it evades the unbridled outrage and angst it needs to soar. 

That's not the movie's most blaring misstep, though (and nope, it's not Kara's smartass attitude, for she does remain forthright for most of the yarn). It's the reinstated reminder that Jor-El and Lara sent Kal-El to Earth, not to guide its people, but to conquer them. (For Supergirl, Kara's parents, played by Kromhultz and Emily Beecham, affirm the intent via an Argo City flashback). 

This altering additive didn't please me in Superman 2025, and Supergirl 2026 is no different. If the Jor-El/Lara gimmick isn't a Brainiac ruse (as some hoped and claimed it would be and maybe, just maybe, could still be), I despise it all the more. (I realize this startling stunt may seem hip within today's political scene, where even a blubbery Nazi can gain political fame in Maine, but the family disruption is way too jarring for Superman/Supergirl's established scheme and employed for no other cause than to reinvent the wheel, or so it seems. At any rate, it sure as hell doesn't prompt a purposeful, comparative point as in Michael Sarnoski's The Death of Robin Hood or for that matter, David Yarovesky's Brightburn, a demented, dark-side Superman, coproduced by Gunn.) So, what's next, a prequel set prior to dad and mom goosestepping little Kal-El to his stellar pod? Yeah, Earth's radical constituency would applaud that, I bet. 

Oh, well, there's not much more I wish to say about this one, beyond the fact that, though it has a decent premise, a tried-and-true, revenge component, groovy music, cool creatures and a strong, mean climax, its ponderous padding weighs it down. In other words, it should have been a whole lot better, and its a super-damn shame that it's not. 🦸  

FOR THE FUN OF IT:

 

MR. LOBO'S CINEMA INSOMNIA: BROOKLYN GORILLA'S FINAL CUT THIS SATURDAY

 

Mr. Lobo's Cinema Insomnia 25th Anniversary is upon us, and our gracious host is presenting one of the greatest, "misunderstood" movies of all time: Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla (aka The Boys From Brooklyn), in what stands as the episode's final, not-seen-before, approved cut! The 1952 oddity will manifest this Saturday Night (June 27) on Twitch, OSI74/Roku and Amazon Fire, with a preshow starting at 10pm. (BTW: The historic contents will be available, as well, on an illustrious, collectible Blu-ray, which one can preorder at https://www.osi74.com/.)

When I was a wee lad and discovered Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla, I mistook Sammy Petrillo for Jerry Lewis and thought that Duke Mitchell was an alternate costar before Dean Martin came along. Of course, I was wrong, but being that I couldn't read the time, let alone research the matter, I just went with the flow, nurturing my misconception. 

Directed by William (Ghost Chasers) Beaudine and written by Tim (Dead Men Tell) Ryan, the plot pits Petrillo and Mitchell, who portray "themselves," against Lugosi's mad scientist, Dr. Zabor, who wants to implant Mitchell's brain into a gorilla on Kola Kola Island. The headlining duo is chased by lusty, native women (Muriel Landers and Charlita), with Ramona the Chimp layering on much of the mush, as she falls for Petrillo who's happy to ape Lewis throughout every speck of the calamity. Honey-voiced Mitchell cuts in to share his breezy tunes, as Lugosi dons his supreme, sinister form. 

Despite the fact that Lewis wished to seize the flick (i.e. stomp it into oblivion), Brooklyn Gorilla managed to make the prevalent, UHF rounds, and because of its surreal nature, it now inspires further, misunderstood fun, thanks to Mr. Lobo, who parenthesizes it with Lewis-loving, MDA Labor Day Telethon, parody skits, joined by Sally the Zombie Cheerleader, Dr. Sphincter, Countess Bloodsugar (Jessie Seeherman), Dark Sarcasma (Penny Dreadful in disguise!), Dr. Sarcofiguy (John Dimes), the Horsen Milken (Reel 7) Girl and her nifty puppet, Professor Shrimply, good ol' Kogarilla, good ol' Romana and the pugnacious, Petrillo impersonator, Gary Blemish (who, if one can believe the audacity, pitches a Birth of a Nation rock opera), plus a number of surprise guests and fan greetings. To embellish this prolific succession, there are time-warping, nostalgic segments that cover Mr. Lobo's vast, informative career. That's right. This one leaps all over the place to ensure one's utmost, wraparound pleasure.  

It should go without saying that Mr. Lobo's Cinema Insomnia Presents Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla will go down as a wild winner; so make it a point to be part of the untamed hijinks this monumental, Saturday night!

FOR THE FUN OF IT:

 

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

RICK "SPINE" MOUNTFORT'S MOTOR MONSTERS AND HOT ROD HELLIONS COLORING BOOK

Rick "Spine" Mountfort's illustrations hold the magical means to deliver one to a simpler period when monsters weren't the real-life fiends who now dominate the scene, but rather make-believe examples of oddities, misfits and rebels. 

Mountfort's 25 Years of Spine-tingling Artwork celebrated such specimens (see November 2022 post), and now, he gives his fans another nostalgic angle, cut from the Ed "Big Daddy" Roth cloth: Motor Monsters and Hot Rod Hellions ... and color it if you want to book

That's right. It's an honest-to-gosh coloring book or if one so chooses, a 117-page, black-and-white gallery to enchant the eyes, with the fun-filled sort of wild weirdness that brightened so many of our childhoods. 

Some of the featured characters are inspired by legendary favorites, such as the Frankenstein Monster, the Bride of Frankenstein, the Wolfman, the Mummy, Dracula and (by jingo) Al Lewis' Grandpa, but others are original, bulbous-headed specimens who slobber, sneer and steer, with fearsome fangs, clutching claws and big, buggy eyes. 

Of special note: Mountfort's Barfo the Clown is among the manic menagerie, and there's even a comic strip dedicated to him inside, spotlighting his revved-up looniness. 

Do yourself a favor and order this one. It'll not only race you back in time, but (in keeping with its artistic mastermind) tingle your spine

https://www.amazon.com/Motor-Monsters-Hot-Rod-Hellions/dp/B0H1WCL4SG