I was fortunate to have Sara Waugh share part of her magnificent Vincent Price collection with me recently, and she graciously agreed to let me share it here as well. Sara, btw, is cousin to Robert Taylor, who shared a series of Vincent memorabilia here a couple years back for the Vincentennial celebration. She has quite the collection of original memorabilia from Price films too.
First up, from 1938, this original pressbook from TOWER OF LONDON
Dr. Gangrene's Cinetarium airs Saturday Nights at 9pm central on Nashville NECAT Arts CH9. It is also simulcast on the NECAT Roku channel (search for Necat). Or click to watch below.
Tuesday, June 24
Tuesday, June 17
The Fantastic Films of Vincent Price - Episode 1
The debut episode of my new online series is now live - Episode 1 of The Fantastic Films of Vincent Price - where I'm taking a chronological look at every film of Vincent Price's long career, starting with his first - Service de Luxe, in 1938. Along the way I'll touch on them all, and spotlight his horror, fantasy, sic-fi, and mystery films. Should be a fun trip - hope you'll join me!
Saturday, June 7
Free Comic Book DayShoot, 2014
For FREE COMIC BOOK DAY my director Cameron McCasland and I dropped by Rick's Comic City, in Donelson, TN. The place was packed and we shot a little footage asking folks what comic book they'd most like to see made into a movie. Their answers were pretty interesting!
Check it out! Excelsior!!
Check it out! Excelsior!!
Wednesday, June 4
WONDERFEST 2014 Roundup!
The 25th annual Wonderfest http://wonderfest.com/
convention took place this past weekend, May 31st-June 1st,
and I’m happy to report it was a rousing good time!
Held annually in Louisville, KY, Wonderfest is THE premiere hobby expo in the country, with a main emphasis on model making. A giant ballroom is filled each year with hand-built models, from both kits and of the custom variety, all beautifully crafted and meticulously painted. These are entered into a huge contest with prizes in a number of categories and divisions. Top prize wins the MOST AMAZING MODEL award - sponsored appropriately enough by AMAZING FIGURE MODELER MAGAZINE http://www.amazingmodeler.com/ - and a cash prize of $300!
Held annually in Louisville, KY, Wonderfest is THE premiere hobby expo in the country, with a main emphasis on model making. A giant ballroom is filled each year with hand-built models, from both kits and of the custom variety, all beautifully crafted and meticulously painted. These are entered into a huge contest with prizes in a number of categories and divisions. Top prize wins the MOST AMAZING MODEL award - sponsored appropriately enough by AMAZING FIGURE MODELER MAGAZINE http://www.amazingmodeler.com/ - and a cash prize of $300!
Here’s the full list of categories:
Senior Division
1. SF / Fantasy Figures (includes robots)
2. Horror Figures
3. Vehicles
4. Super Heroes & Super Villains
5. Mecha (mobile suits)
6. Anime Figures
7. Dinosaurs
8. Kaiju (giant monsters)
9. Props *NEW*
10. Dioramas
11. Humor & Super Deformed
12. Original Sculpt / Scratchbuilt (any subject)
1. SF / Fantasy Figures (includes robots)
2. Horror Figures
3. Vehicles
4. Super Heroes & Super Villains
5. Mecha (mobile suits)
6. Anime Figures
7. Dinosaurs
8. Kaiju (giant monsters)
9. Props *NEW*
10. Dioramas
11. Humor & Super Deformed
12. Original Sculpt / Scratchbuilt (any subject)
Teen Division
Includes all categories listed above; for modelers age 13-19.
Junior Division
Includes all categories listed above; for modelers age 12 and under.
Includes all categories listed above; for modelers age 12 and under.
Wonderfest began in 1990 as a little show in a single room
with no guests, and has since grown like the blob into a massive event that
completely fills the Crowne Plaza Hotel (formerly the Executive West Hotel), packed
with vendors, guests, artists and attendees. It is usually held over Memorial
Day weekend, but this year’s show moved back a week to the first weekend in
June. Wonderfest has traditionally brought in a variety of guests from the makeup
and special effects field, and this year was no exception. This actually makes
a lot of sense when you consider special effects and models go hand-in-hand, dating
back to the time-honored tradition of stop-motion pioneers like Willis O’Brien
and Ray Harryhausen (a guest in 1996 and 2003).
This year’s guests included Production Designer/Director Joe
Alves (JAWS, CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KINDS, ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK); Model
and Makeup FX expert Carol Bauman (STAR WARS PREQUELS, TRANSFORMERS 2, PIRATES
OF THE CARIBBEAN); Designer/illustrator Rick Sternbach (STAR TREK THE MOTION
PICTURE, THE LAST STARFIGHTER); Makeup artist John Goodwin (CSI, CSI NEW YORK,
JOHN CARPENTER’S THE THING); Director Robert Tinnell (FRANKENSTEIN AND ME,
BELIEVE), and many more – see the full list here: http://wonderfest.com/upcoming-show/guests
I arrived Saturday morning and made my way to my table in
Dealer’s Room B – the show has grown so much in recent years that a second
dealer’s room has been set up for many artists and vendors. Throughout the day
I enjoyed chatting with old friends and fans that I haven’t seen in years,
especially as I didn’t make the show in 2013. That was an especially rough year
for me and I took some time off for personal reasons and to kind of regroup a
bit. But it was good to be back and see familiar faces and new ones alike. My Director Cameron McCasland and his fiancee Jamie Easterland joined us later in the day, too, and spent a good deal of time at the table as well, giving my son Luke and I a chance to roam the convention somewhat.
David Colton, organizer of the annual Rondo Awards, stopped
by the table and asked if I would speak on behalf of Penny Dreadful and Garou
at the awards ceremony. Garou was given a special Rondo Award this year, the
PURE OF HEART AWARD, and I was honored to say a few words on their behalf. For
those who may have missed the news, Garou was the sidekick of horror host Penny
Dreadful and her real-life husband, Magoo Gelehrter. He unfortunately passed
away earlier this year of cancer, at the too-young age of 51. Everybody who
ever met Magoo, or his alter-ego Garou, loved the guy, and it was a real blow
to the horror community to lose someone so kind and genuine.
After the awards I caught the premiere screening of Robert Tinnel’s new documentary THAT $#!% WILL ROT YOUR BRAIN. It traces the history of the monster-kid explosion of memorabilia and merchandising that flooded the market in the 60s and 70s, focusing on the magazines, toys, and movies that shaped the impressionable young minds of generations of kids (many of who were in attendance in that packed theater). It's chock full of interviewees that include many famous faces talking about their love of horror movies and memorabilia. Robert spoke briefly before the film, and explained that it was still very much a work in progress, but he and his team of editors and fellow filmmakers needed some fresh perspective on it. The crowd loved it, despite it very much being a work-print, with black slugs in place where video clips would be inserted, and an unfinished third act to the film. Once it is completed, edited, and polished this is going to be one amazing documentary, and I’m glad Robert allowed the folks at Wonderfest to see it.
After the documentary was the annual Wonderfest late-show, hosted by yours truly. This was the 9th live show I’ve hosted there, and something I’m pretty proud of. Over the years we’ve hosted a slew of great films, including:
2004
- THE SHE CREATURE
2005 - GHOSTBUSTERS/MAJOR MARS
2006 - THE TINGLER
2007 - MONSTER ON THE CAMPUS
2008 - ROBOT MONSTER
2010 - IT CONQUERED THE WORLD
2011 - THE DREADFUL HALLOWGREEN SPECIAL
2012 - MEGAFORCE
As
mentioned before, I didn’t attend Wonderfest in 2013, so there was no show that
year, and in 2009 I missed because my oldest son was graduating from High
school that same weekend. This year, however, the show was a GO!, and the
evening’s fright flick was the 1973 classic schlockfest GODZILLA VS. MEGALON. I was fortunate enough
to catch that one in the theater as a kid, and remember loving it back then.
This time around was no exception. That is one fun film, and the convention
billed the show as DR. GANGRENE’S KAIJU SMACKDOWN! Perfect! We dedicated the
show to Garou right before having the crowd recite the mandatory Dr. Gangrene’s
Horror Movie Maniac Code of Horror.
Every
year I try to make the live shows something a little bit special, and this year
I was thrilled to have John Goodwin and Beau Kealin to add to the festivities!
John is a master makeup artist who works professionally in Hollywood on such
shows as CSI as well as in feature-films like MEN IN BLACK and THE THING. He
held a makeup exhibition earlier in the day where he had made up Beau Kealin as
a Wolf Man. Beau is a Louisville resident, Wonderfest staff member, and Indy
filmmaker, (and a helluva creative guy). In addition to the Wolf Man makeup
John also brought along a Frankenstein’s Monster makeup and made himself up
too, as IGORSTEIN – the monster from FRANKENSTEIN VS THE WOLFMAN that has had
Igor’s brain transplanted into it. So just how exactly, you might ask, do two
classic Universal monsters fit into a kaiju film?Well, I simply told the audience that this film was all about monsters fighting, and that while I didn’t have any beasts of the giant Japanese variety, Wonderfest is all about classic monsters, and I did have a special guest or two on hand. The theater was packed, and the crowd loved seeing these two classic monsters square off against one another. We also had some crowd participation sing-a-long, with a karaoke version of the Jet Jaguar theme song from the film, and I gave away DVDs and t-shirts – all in all it was a really fun show.
Doc Gangrene's Director Cameron McCasland posing with the monsters
Jamie meets the monsters!
I also want to thank a few folks in particular for allowing us to appear as guests again this year and for providing a stage to play on. First and foremost is the crew and staff of Wonderfest that work so hard all weekend long to make it run smoothly, especially CEO Dave Hodge, COO Melinda Angstrom, Guest Coordinator Beau Kealin, and Programming Director Dave Conover. They are four of the nicest people you’ll ever meet, and Dave in particular has always gone above and beyond to make Doc Gangrene and company feel right at home. I have to give a gigantic Godzilla sized shout-out to the tech crew, which is always especially awesome. Over the years I’ve made life a little difficult for that crew with some complicated setups at the live shows - but every time, without fail, the tech crew came through and made it happen, and this year it was Robert Gilmore to the rescue, rounding up additional DVD players and sticking around personally throughout the show to ensure that everything went smoothly. Thanks again Robert!
Beau
Kealin and John Goodwin are both amazingly talented and so fun to work with. I
remember my favorite show we ever did, The Tingler, John appeared as a fellow
mad scientist named Dr. Princent Vice, and did a spot-on imitation of Vincent
Price in the process! So much fun. We missed working with our good buddy Bob
Burns, who has been a staple of the late shows since we started them. Here’s
hoping he can make it back out some future shows.
To
everyone who stopped by the table and came to the late show – my Gangrenous
thanks! You are all awesome. The very best part about going to shows like this
is meeting all the great people and making lifelong friends. In that regard,
mission accomplished. Superduper thanks to J. Sorrels for the hospitality and being such a great friend, and Cameron McCasland for being the best creative partner a guy could ask for.
So here’s to Wonderfest and hopefully many more years of good times and monstrous movies!!
So here’s to Wonderfest and hopefully many more years of good times and monstrous movies!!
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