MT VOID 07/29/16 -- Vol. 35, No. 5, Whole Number 1921

MT VOID 07/29/16 -- Vol. 35, No. 5, Whole Number 1921

@@@@@ @   @ @@@@@    @     @ @@@@@@@   @       @  @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@
  @   @   @ @        @ @ @ @    @       @     @   @   @   @   @  @
  @   @@@@@ @@@@     @  @  @    @        @   @    @   @   @   @   @
  @   @   @ @        @     @    @         @ @     @   @   @   @  @
  @   @   @ @@@@@    @     @    @          @      @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society 07/29/16 -- Vol. 35, No. 5, Whole Number 1921

Table of Contents

      Co-Editor: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net Co-Editor: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net Back issues at http://leepers.us/mtvoid/back_issues.htm All material is copyrighted by author unless otherwise noted. All comments sent or posted will be assumed authorized for inclusion unless otherwise noted. To subscribe, send mail to mtvoid-subscribe@yahoogroups.com To unsubscribe, send mail to mtvoid-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com

Science Fiction (and Other) Discussion Groups, Films, Lectures, etc. (NJ):

August 11: EX MACHINA (2015) and short story "Helen O'Loy" (1938) 
	by Lester del Rey (), 
	Middletown (NJ) Public Library, 5:30PM
August 25: TWELVE YEARS A SLAVE by Solomon Northup, Old Bridge (NJ) 
	Public Library, 7PM
September 22: "In Hiding [Children of the Atom]" by Wilmar 
	H. Shiras and "The Big Front Yard" by Clifford D. Simak 
	(both in SCIENCE FICTION HALL OF FAME 2B), Old Bridge (NJ) 
	Public Library, 7PM
October 27: TBD, 	Old Bridge (NJ) Public Library, 7PM
November 17: "Rogue Moon" by Algis Budrys and "The Moon Moth" by 
	Jack Vance (both in SCIENCE FICTION HALL OF FAME 2B), 
	Old Bridge (NJ) Public Library, 7PM
December 22(?): TBD, Old Bridge (NJ) Public Library, 7PM 

Garden State Spec. Fiction Writers Lectures (subject to change):

September 10: Ellen Datlow, The State of Horror, Old Bridge (NJ) 
	Public Library, 12N
October 1: Ken Altabef, Adventures in Publishing, Old Bridge (NJ) 
	Public Library, 12N
November 5: David Sklar, Character Dreaming, Old Bridge (NJ) 
	Public Library, 12N

Northern New Jersey events are listed at:


http://www.sfsnnj.com/news.html

Encores (comments by Mark R. Leeper):

I was listening to a recording of a concert. I looked at the play list and they had included an encore at the end. I tell you this whole system make me a little bit sick. You probably have lived your whole life with the Myth of Encores. You probably never gave it a second thought.

THE MYTH: At the end of a concert performance the audience shows its love and appreciation for the performer who is so overwhelmed by the adoration he performs more for the audience.

Bah!

THE TRUTH: The performer is ready and willing to cut his performance short, cheat the audience, and go home early. And if he does not get enough appreciation out of that audience that is exactly what he intends to do. [-mrl]


My Picks for Turner Classic Movies for August (comments by Mark R. Leeper):

Another month. More picks to choose. These are films I might recommend coming up on TCM. (All times listed are Eastern Time Zone.) There were few films shown in August that were obvious choices to recommend. Turner will make up for it in October, when they have a load of films for genre fans. But that is still two months off.

I particularly like films from director Carol Reed--that's a man, by the way--who made several good suspense films with a hard, sharp edge. A somewhat rare film, but one I enjoy a great deal is Carol Reed's OUTCAST OF THE ISLANDS (1951), directed by Carol Reed and based on a story by Joseph Conrad. Trevor Howard rarely played a villain. He was usually good as a decent and intelligent Englishman (as he did playing Major Calloway in Reed's THE THIRD MAN) or at worst a starchy, hidebound member of the upper crust. Not so this time. Here he is almost a joy to watch as the totally reprehensible Peter Willems who uses and ruins everybody he touches. He is the snake set loose in paradise in OUTCAST OF THE ISLANDS. Willems is caught stealing from his shipping company in Singapore. The thief runs into a ship captain (played by Ralph Richardson) an old friend who had more or less adopted Willem as a 12-year-old. Willem convinces the captain that he was committing suicide and he once again needs the captain's help. The captain gives Willems a chance to start over, taking the scoundrel, more spider than human, to a trading post on a paradise island. The captain little guesses what damage the unscrupulous Willems will do. Most of Carol Reed's films are visually impressive and John Wilcox's crisp cinematography is a study of the Far Eastern setting all by itself. The film was shot on location in Sri Lanka and at Shepperton Studios in England. [Saturday, August 13, 10:00 AM]

The first Hollywood film to be shot in Germany after the end of World War II was 1948's THE SEARCH directed by Fred Zinneman (HIGH NOON, A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS). The Russian invasion and attack on Germany has left the country and particularly Berlin a pile of rubble. The destitute lived in the ruins of buildings. Among them was a young Czech boy, Karel (played by Ivan Jandl), sifts through the debris looking for a mother whose very face he has forgotten. It is unlikely any of his family had survived the concentration camp. An American Army engineer, Steve, sees the homeless boy, catches him, and tries to hold on to the boy and take care of him for a few days. Steve plays the role with a very naturalistic style. After the film was released Zinneman got fan mail saying that the Army soldier should be an actor as soon as the army releases him. In fact, the "soldier" already was an actor. This was Montgomery Clift in his very first screen role. Later that year Clift would play opposite John Wayne in the classic western Howard Hawkes' RED RIVER. THE SEARCH will be shown Saturday, August 6 at 4:00 PM. In fact, every film from 6:00 AM Saturday to 6:00 AM Sunday will star or feature Montgomery Clift. Included will be RED RIVER at 8 PM.

Edward G. Robinson gets a full 24 hours devoted to his films also. Starting Monday, August 1st every film from 6:00 AM Monday to 6:00 AM Tuesday will star or feature Robinson. One of his films will be one of Warner Brothers classic gangster films, LITTLE CAESAR (1931). Robinson plays Cesare Enrico Bandello, called Rico Bandello. He works his way up from being a petty thug to being one of the kings of crime, much like Al Capone did. This was the film that put Robinson on the map. LITTLE CAESAR plays at 7:30 AM. This was the Warners' first gangster film, and Robinson was the first actor associated with gangster roles. He would soon be joined by James Cagney and a little later by Humphrey Bogart. Robinson played the most vicious of killers, though he himself was afraid of guns. When he had to shoot a gun he would close his eyes and the camera would catch him. To avoid having him close his eyes they were taped open with cellophane tape. Rico's best friend Joe Massara is played by Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. The film is based on a novel written by WR Burnett. He would write the stories for SCARFACE (1932), HIGH SIERRA (1941), THE ASPHALT JUNGLE (1949), and THE GREAT ESCAPE (1963).

Best film of the month? Well, I guess I would choose CASABLANCA (1942). There must be some reason so many people love this film. Play it again, Turner. [Saturday, August 20 at 2:00 PM]

[-mrl]


Turner Classic Movies Halloween Line-Up Is Huge (comments by Mark R. Leeper):

Turner Classic Movies has announced their schedule for October. I always like to check out what they are running for the month of Halloween. Over the last few years I have been a little bothered in that they were running very little that was really obscure. This year they have semi-rarities films like HOUSE and GOKE, BODY SNATCHER FROM HELL. Turner also has all of the standard horror films they show on Halloween with Universal and Hammer films. The folks at TCM have also apparently made Christopher Lee the actor of the month and they have a load of his lesser-known films. I point out some non-horror films with Christopher Lee. Then there are Val Lewton films. For films of interest to fans of SF, horror, and fantasy film, I get a count of 156 films. Real fans of horror films might be advised to clear some space on their DVRs. I have never seen a Halloween line-up for any network as full and complete as this one.

The list is at the end of this issue of the MT VOID. You can check broadcast times at http://tinyurl.com/oct-mrl. [-mrl]


Simulating Chemical Reactions with a Computer (comments by Gregory Frederick):

Google has taken the first step to simulating chemical reactions with a computer. To do this though you will need a quantum computer with totally new software.

See http://tinyurl.com/void-yahoo-simulate-chemical. [-gf]


THE FIFTH SEASON by N. K. Jemisin (copyright 2015 Orbit, Hachette Audio, 512pp, 15 hours 31 minutes, ISBN-10: 0316229296, ISBN-13: 978-0316229296, ASIN: B012H8111O, narrated by Robin Miles) (excerpt from the Duel Fish Codices: an audiobook review by Joe Karpierz):

Over the nearly forty years I've been writing book reviews (on and off, but mostly on these days), an author has never ticked me off. Ever. I've been unhappy with any number of novels I've read, but I've never been upset with a writer up until now. (By the way, before all of you get yourself into a potential tizzy over that statement and may be reading into it, please keep reading the review. Please.).

N. K. Jemisin has succeeded in ticking me off.

Why? Oh, a couple of reasons. First (and this statement comes with me not yet having finished reading SEVENEVES, but I'm not even halfway through that beast and I think I can make the following statement with much certainty), I think that for the first time in all the years that I've voted for the Hugos, I will be placing a book that's not clearly science fiction in the top spot on my ballot. To be fair, it's not clear this book is fantasy either, so maybe I'm cheating with that statement a bit. In fact, come to think of it, I'm looking at the top two spots on my ballot not being clear-cut science fiction, but I digress. The second reason is that as THE FIFTH SEASON is the first book in a series that may not be science fiction, I'm anxiously awaiting book two.

The last thing I need is yet another series in which to get behind. I mean really: Cixin Liu, John Scalzi, Mira Grant, Charles Stross, and (yes, I know, but you all know how I am by now) Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson all have books out that I'm waiting to read. Oh, I forgot Lois McMaster Bujold. So now I add Jemisin to the list. She's in good company.

The thing about reviewing this book is that it's, well, *difficult* to review this book without giving away too much--but I'll try anyway. The story takes place on a planet that has one very large continent, the Stillness. The continent is unstable in that there is an abundance of faults which cause earthquakes, or shakes as they are called, to happen frequently. Periodically, a major disaster occurs which sends the planet into what is called a "season", which is difficult to describe other than they send the planet and its inhabitants into a long period of suffering of one form or another. There is a class of people called orogenes, who have the ability to control the power of the earth and stone and other things. They are powerful people, who if not trained can cause severe damage all around them. Thus, training is held in the Fulcrum, where orogenes learn to use and focus their power. Orogenes are generally shunned because of what they can do; they frighten people. There is another class of folks called the Guardians, who watch over, guide, and in fact can control orogenes. An orogene never says "no" to his or her Guardian. They are supposed to be protectors, but they do frighten the orogenes.

The story follows the timelines of three female characters: the young Damaya, who is taken from the family that shuns her because she is an orogene by a Guardian to the Fulcrum for her education; Syenite, a "four-ringer" (think of the rings as levels in your favorite role-playing game) who goes on an assignment with ten- ringer (the maximum you can be) Alabaster whose baby she is ordered to have in an attempt to generate another high-powered orogene; and Essun, a mysterious woman who is trying to find her husband who has stolen their daughter and run away after killing their son. Each of them discover things about themselves and the world they live in that disturbs them, and their stories converge in a way that is surprising and, I think, satisfying.

In addition to Jemisin allowing her characters to go on a journey of discovery via terrific story-telling and characterization, she allows the reader to go on a similar journey of discovery about the Stillness and the planet it exists on. As the story develops, it's very clear that the society we are reading about at one point was advanced to some degree; there is talk of electricity and concrete roads, for example. There is, in fact, evidence of technology all through the story, including the mechanism by which the orogenes use their power and how the Guardians are created. There are universities which all types of sciences. And yet, there seems to be evidence of magic; just what are the stone eaters and how do they fit in to the overall story? What are those strange obelisks that the orogenes seem to attract?

This is without question one of the best books of 2015, and in my opinion the best novel that is on the Hugo ballot. And if you ever wanted to read a killer sentence that ends a book, read this one. But please, please, please read the rest of the book first, as reading the last sentence without reading the rest of the book will spoil everything (I will admit to having deduced, in an "ah hah" moment, what was implied by the last sentence sometime before I got to it, but the impact was still tremendous).

Robin Miles was an absolutely fantastic narrator. While she isn't the best at voicing different characters, her reading style, inserting emotion, inflection, and tonality (that may not make sense here, but I can't think of another word to convey what I'm thinking) were outstanding. I look forward to her reading the next book in the series.

That second book? THE OBELISK GATE? Yeah, that will be out at MidAmericon 2 in Kansas City next month. Thanks, Ms. Jemisin. Now I'm even more behind in my reading. [-jak]


SUN CHOKE (film review by Mark R. Leeper):

Warning: this film contains nudity, sex, and violence.

CAPSULE: A young woman is held prisoner in a fancy house while she goes through what seems to be some sort of a de-programming. She tests the tight limits on her freedom and plans how to escape to the outer world. Intercut with her present situation, we see moments in Janie's past that slowly give clues to how the situation we are seeing came about. As time goes by the restrictions on Janie are first loosened and then again tightened. The pace is a little slow, but writer/director Ben Cresciman holds our attention. Rating: +2 (-4 to +4) or 7/10

Some mystery films are "who-done-it's." SUN CHOKE is a mystery, but it is more a "what's-going-on." We see through the eyes of Janie (played by Sarah Hagan), fogged as her vision is. Janie is being kept prisoner in a very nice upscale home, but she is being put through what appears to be some sort of involuntary psychological testing and a deprogramming. We know not for what.

The home that is Jamie's prison is sterile and decorated entirely in white in all the rooms. The more time that Janie spends there the more she is determined to escape, and she does not mind dirtying those bright white walls a little along the way. Jamie's revolt will lift her from this tidy, colorless background to a place considerably more primal.

Janie's life is ruled over with quiet, well-ordered menace from her therapist Irma (actually unnamed until the final credits). Irma (icily played by Barbara Crampton) administers tests to Janie and psychoanalyzes her. The patient does not have a moment of real freedom. Irma is sort of a New Age Nurse Ratched, so she and Jamie have an adversarial relationship. Part of her regimen is feeding Janie what look to be brightly colored but uninviting concoctions from the blender--all part of some holistic treatment including forced Yoga exercises and silly looking psychological tests. The younger woman is compliant, but there are signs she will not be for long. Part of Janie's rebellion is her revolt against the overly pristine environment in which she is imprisoned. When the time comes, Janie is allowed out of the house by herself. There she is fascinated by nature with its color and even with earthworms covered with dirt itself.

Something attracts Janie about one woman in particular she sees. Janie becomes fascinated just to drive around and watch this other women, Savannah (Sara Malakul Lane). The house just shouts Los Angeles hills, though we are never told where the story takes place. Ben Cresciman writes and directs his own film. The first half of the film goes slowly, giving out a clue here and one there for why what is happening is happening. Mathew Rudenberg provides some disorienting effects showing psychological conditions in the cinematography.

Not all questions that the script raises will be answered, nor do they need to be. We are given only hints of the back-story, but the viewer is free to connect the dots any way he likes. This is a short film at 83 minutes, but it is intense images are strong and will stick with the viewer. I rate it a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale or 7/10. The film will be released to general theaters on August 5.

Film Credits: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3395582/combined

What others are saying: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/sun_choke/?search=sun%20choke

[-mrl]


"The Stellar Legion" and Military Science Fiction (letters of comment by Philip Chee and Keith F. Lynch):

In response to Evelyn's comments on "The Stellar Legion" in the 07/22/16 issue of the MT VOID, Philip Chee writes:

I read an excerpt [of "The Stellar Legion"] on Google books. Sounds like a precursor to the MilSF sub genre. I don't read much MilSF so I don't know how popular the FFL-in-space sub-sub-genre is but I have vague memories of "Alien Legion"[1]. Any other examples?

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alien_Legion

[-pc]

Keith Lynch responds:

Does the Janissaries series by Jerry Pournelle count? Of course it's based on a different piece of history, but the same general principle. [-kfl]


Church Invitations, TERRORISM, and THE GIRL WITH ALL THE GIFTS (letter of comment by John Purcell):

In response to Mark's comments on church invitations in the 07/22/16 issue of the MT VOID, John Purcell writes:

I would think that most churches and religions have an open door policy. Unless, of course, you are after a job interview, then appointments help. [-jp]

In response to Mark's comments on terrorism in the same issue, John writes:

Mark's comments about terrorism are sobering, and I agree with much of what he says. Any weapon can be destructive if used with such an intent; after all, automobile deaths per year in America tend to approach the number of American soldiers killed during the entire Vietnam War; annual gun deaths in this country run well into the thousands as well. Terrorism is definitely a growing problem, especially if something as apparently benign as a delivery truck driving down a street could suddenly be transformed into an instrument of death. We can no longer assume that we are "safe" no matter where we are. Can vigilance and extraordinary security measures deter such acts of terrorism? Possible, but they will never remove the threat. Somehow we simply must accept this as the new norm of planetary society. It all is quite maddening, but life must go on. We will muddle through, it guess. [-jp]

Mark responds:

The scary thing about the terrorism is that is it not run like an army with a command center in a given place (e.g. Berlin). It is run a like a decentralized resistance. It is very hard to stop a resistance. Even if ISIS wanted to call the resistance off, I don't see how they could do it. A resistance keeps fighting as long as there is something to resist. An attack like the attack in Nice could be one guy seeing an opening and making a spur of the moment decision. [-mrl]

And in response to Joe Karpierz's review of THE GIRL WITH ALL THE GIFTS, John writes: Okay, I will have to hit the local library for THE GIRL WITH ALL THE GIFTS (sounds good), and I will have to keep my eyes open for NUTS!; I love a good documentary. A couple books I recently checked out of the library are A KNIGHT OF THE SEVEN KINGDOMS by George R.R. Martin (Young Adult fantasy and derring-do in Westeros, set a century before the GAME OF THRONES tales) and another alternate history yarn involving baseball, magic and the American dream, called THE BOOK OF DANIEL by Harry Turtledove. Both are very enjoyable books, and I'm glad I had to renew my library card that day. It was a worthwhile trip. [-jp]


This Week's Reading (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper):

CLOSE TO SHORE by Michael Capuzzo (ISBN 978-0-7679-0414-8) is a book detailing the 1916 shark attacks in New Jersey, including two in Matawan Creek, just two or three miles from our house. But more than that, it is a picture of life in 1916. Capuzzo describes in detail the homes and lifestyles of people of that time, the rise of the Jersey Shore as a destination, the changing attitudes toward "ocean bathing" (swimming), the state of the knowledge of medicine, what was known then about sharks, what is known now about sharks, and so on. Alas, the one thing missing is an index. Given how easy it is to generate an index of at least the names and places mentioned in a book these days, there is really no excuse for omitting one.

As an example of his style (and of the sort of thing covered) consider this ObSF reference: "Dr. Vansant was astonished to read that many Americans were disappointed in [Professor William Curtis] Farabee's expedition [to British Guiana]. It was a great age of exploration, when Peary reached for the North Pole, and many believed Farabee had set out to find "the lost world" of Jurassic dinosaurs on a remote Amazonian plateau discovered by the British Professor Challenger in 1912. Dr. Vansant was mystified that the average man didn't seem to understand that both the Jurassic dinosaur and Professor Challenger were fictions in Arthur Conan Doyle's 1912 bestseller THE LOST WORLD. Indeed Dr. Vansant was frequently struck by the ignorance of the public in scientific matters."

Some of what Capuzzo writes about ties in with a lot what I've been reading about animal intelligence. For example, "As it swam and grew, the shark adapted and learned by experience, but the ability to reason, suggested some experts, was beyond it. 'Reasoning implies the ability to integrate experience, forethought, rationality, learning ... into a complex decision-making process,' ichthyologist George Burgess of the University of Florida's Museum of Natural History says. 'Sharks, like most animals, simply react in predetermined ways that, from an evolutionary standpoint, are clearly effective--or else they wouldn't be here any longer!" Well, maybe yes, and maybe no. (I will have more to say about animal intelligence next week, when I comment on Franz de Waal's ARE WE SMART ENOUGH TO KNOW HOW SMART ANIMALS ARE?)

Lest anyone think that New Jersey was a liberal, Northern state, Capuzzo reports that in Asbury Park, "the St. Claire was advertising for 'colored waitresses,' [and] the Surf House for 'two experienced white chambermaids.'"

Capuzzo says that in the 1960s and 1970s scientists "began ... to accept the fact that there are no documented cases of an orca ever killing a man." There are such cases, of course, the first being in 1981, but Capuzzo is often sloppy with his tenses and probably meant that there were none in the 1960s and 1970s. There are even now, though, no documented cases of *wild* orcas killing a human.

All in all, this is an enthralling history of the New Jersey shark attacks of 1916.

As part of the centenary commemoration, several films were shown in Matawan. The Matawan-Aberdeen Public Library showed 12 DAYS OF TERROR, a made-for-TV "docudrama" about the attacks, strong on drama, but weak on docu. In order to satisfy the Aristotelian unities or some such, it put the first two attacks on the same beach in the (fictional) town of Gladwyn, which was within easy bicycling distance of Matawan. In actual fact, the attacks were in Beach Haven and Spring Lake, at least an hour's drive by car away. now. The narrator is a fictional character present at all the attacks, there is a love triangle, Van Sant's family is shown (inaccurately) on the beach during the first attack, he dies on a couch instead of on the hotel manager's desk, the second victim is an American lifeguard rather than the Swiss bellhop, and one victim dies on the train instead of in the hospital. At least it gets the names of the victims and some of their stories correct. Also, the love triangle introduces a motivation for Stanley Fisher that diminishes his bravery by making him concerned about how he is seen by his fiancee and her previous boyfriend.

The Matawan Historical Society showed BLOOD IN THE WATER, a film made for the Discovery Channel. It was much more a re-creation than 12 DAYS OF TERROR, and was also more accurate. (One inaccuracy was that Charles Bruder in the film lacked the Swiss accent the real Bruder would have had.) The Library said at the beginning of their showing of 12 DAYS OF TERROR that it was the most "Hollywood" of the films made, but they chose it rather than showing the same film the Historical Society was showing.)

Particular thanks to Jeanette Walker, a long-time MT VOID subscriber, who was one of the organizers of the centenary

[I would have run this during the centenary, but the comments on the Retro Hugo finalists were more time-critical, even though those works were also an anniversary observance--in their case, the 75th.]

[-ecl]


Appendix: TCM October Films of Interest to SF/Horror/Fantasy Fans

You can check broadcast times at http://tinyurl.com/oct-mrl.

ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET FRANKENSTEIN (1948)
ABOMINABLE DR. PHIBES, THE (1971)
ALIAS JOHN PRESTON (1956 w Christopher Lee)
ANGEL ON MY SHOULDER (1946)
AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS (1956)
ATLANTIS, THE LOST CONTINENT (1960)
BABY, THE (1973)
BEDLAM (1946)
BITTER VICTORY (1957 w Christopher Lee)
BLACK CAT, THE (1934)
BLACK CATS AND BROOMSTICKS (1955)
BLACK SABBATH (1964)
BLACK SCORPION, THE (1957)
BLOB, THE (1958)
BLOOD AND BLACK LACE (1964)
BODY SNATCHER, THE (1945)
BOWERY BOYS MEET THE MONSTERS, THE (1954)
BOWERY TO BAGHDAD (1955)
BRAIN THAT WOULDN'T DIE, THE (1962)
BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1935)
BRIDES OF FU MANCHU, THE (1966)
CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI, THE (1920)
CAPTAIN HORATIO HORNBLOWER (1951 w Christopher Lee)
CAPTAIN SINDBAD (1963)
CARNIVAL OF SOULS (1962)
CASTLE OF FU MANCHU, THE (1968)
CAT AND THE CANARY, THE (1939)
CAT PEOPLE (1942)
COCKLESHELL HEROES, THE (1956)
COLOSSUS OF RHODES, THE (1961)
CREEPING FLESH, THE (1972)
CRIMSON PIRATE, THE (1952)
CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN, THE (1957)
CURSE OF THE CAT PEOPLE, THE (1944)
DEAD OF NIGHT (1945)
DEAD RINGER (1964)
DETOUR (1945)
DEVIL BAT, THE (1940)
DEVIL'S BRIDE, THE (1968)
DEVIL-DOLL, THE (1936)
DEVIL-SHIP PIRATES, THE (1963)
DIABOLIQUE (1955)
DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE (1920)
DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE (1932)
DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE (1941)
DRACULA (1931)
DRACULA A.D. 1972 (1972)
DRACULA HAS RISEN FROM THE GRAVE (1969)
DRACULA, PRINCE OF DARKNESS (1965)
EARTH VS. THE FLYING SAUCERS (1956)
EYES WITHOUT A FACE (1959)
FACE OF FU MANCHU, THE (1965)
FAIL-SAFE (1964)
FEARLESS VAMPIRE KILLERS, THE (1966)
FOUR MUSKETEERS, THE (1975, w Christopher Lee)
FRANKENSTEIN (1931)
FRANKENSTEIN CREATED WOMAN (1967)
FRANKENSTEIN MEETS THE WOLF MAN (1943)
FRANKENSTEIN MUST BE DESTROYED! (1970)
GABRIEL OVER THE WHITE HOUSE (1933)
GASLIGHT (1944)
GHOST OF FRANKENSTEIN, THE (1942)
GHOSTS ON THE LOOSE (1943)
GOKE, BODY SNATCHER FROM HELL (1968)
GORGON, THE (1964)
GREEN MANSIONS (1959)
HAUNTING, THE (1963)
HAXAN: WITCHCRAFT THROUGH THE AGES (1922)
HEAVEN CAN WAIT (1943)
HERCULES, SAMSON & ULYSSES (1963)
HILLBILLYS IN A HAUNTED HOUSE (1967)
HORROR EXPRESS (1972)
HORROR HOTEL (1960)
HORROR OF DRACULA (1958)
HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES, THE (1959)
HOUSE (1977)
HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1944)
HOUSE OF WAX (1953)
HOUSE ON HAUNTED HILL (1958)
HOUSE THAT DRIPPED BLOOD, THE (1970)
HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME, THE (1939)
I WALKED WITH A ZOMBIE (1943)
ICE PIRATES, THE (1984)
INNOCENTS, THE (1961)
INVISIBLE MAN, THE (1933)
ISLAND OF LOST SOULS (1933)
ISLE OF THE DEAD (1945)
IT'S ALIVE (1974)
JAWS (1975)
JAWS 2 (1978)
JAWS 3 (1982)
JINNAH (1998 w Christopher Lee)
JULIET OF THE SPIRITS (1965)
KILLER SHREWS, THE (1959)
KURUTTA IPPEIJI (1926)
LEOPARD MAN, THE (1943)
LOGAN'S RUN (1975)
LORD OF THE RINGS: THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING, THE (2001)
MACABRE (1958)
MAD LOVE (1935)
MARK OF THE VAMPIRE (1935)
MASTER MINDS (1949)
MONSTER, THE (1925)
MOULIN ROUGE (1953, w Christopher Lee)
MUMMY, THE (1932)
MUMMY, THE (1959)
NOSFERATU (1922)
NOTHING BUT THE NIGHT (1972)
OBLONG BOX, THE (1969)
PENALTY, THE (1920)
PHANTOM CARRIAGE, THE (1922)
PHANTOM OF THE OPERA, THE (1925)
PHANTOM OF THE RUE MORGUE (1954)
PIRATES OF BLOOD RIVER, THE (1961)
PIT AND THE PENDULUM (1961)
PRIVATE LIFE OF SHERLOCK HOLMES, THE (1970)
RASPUTIN, THE MAD MONK (1966)
REVENGE OF FRANKENSTEIN, THE (1958)
ROBOT VS. THE AZTEC MUMMY, THE (1965)
SATAN BUG, THE (1965)
SCARS OF DRACULA, THE (1970)
SCREAM AND SCREAM AGAIN (1970)
SCREAM OF FEAR (1961)
SEVEN DAYS IN MAY (1964)
SEVENTH VICTIM, THE (1943)
SHE (1965)
SON OF FRANKENSTEIN (1939)
SOYLENT GREEN (1973)
SPOOK BUSTERS (1946)
SPOOK CHASERS (1957)
SPOOKS RUN WILD (1941)
TALE OF TWO CITIES, A (1958 w Christopher Lee)
TASTE THE BLOOD OF DRACULA (1970)
TERROR OF THE TONGS, THE (1961)
THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD, THE (1951)
THREE MUSKETEERS, THE (1973)
THX 1138 (1971)
TIME AFTER TIME (1979)
TIME BANDITS (1981)
TIME MACHINE, THE (1960)
TINGLER, THE (1959)
TO THE DEVIL, A DAUGHTER (1976)
TOPPER (1937)
TOWN THAT DREADED SUNDOWN, THE (1977)
TWO FACES OF DR. JEKYLL, THE (1961)
UNHOLY THREE (1925)
UNINVITED, THE (1944)
UNKNOWN, THE (1927)
VENGEANCE OF FU MANCHU, THE (1967)
VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED (1961)
WARRIORS, THE (1955, w Christopher Lee)
WIZARD OF OZ, THE (1925)
WOLF MAN, THE (1941)
WOMAN IN WHITE, THE (1948)
X FROM OUTER SPACE, THE (1967)
YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN (1974)


                                          Mark Leeper
                                          mleeper@optonline.net
Quote of the Week:
          There's no better feeling in the world than a warm pizza 
          box on your lap. 
                                          --Kevin James 
Tweet

Go to our home page