Gothic Terror Buried Beneath 80's Camp_part 02
>> Sunday, September 11, 2011
A John Bolton Pin up from House Of Hammer Magazine for The Monster Club movie[1980.] |
The Monster Club's rock 'n roll nightclub narrative framing device had it's share of memorable moments, such as the New Wave bands performing the campy Monster Club music and a stripper who takes it all off...right down to the skeleton. These segments make the movie fun, but were not the part that really grabbed my imagination.
The Shadmock displays his gentle innocence. |
The first story, entitled "The Shadmock" showcased lush period settings, striking costume design, and Gothic atmosphere reminiscent of classic Hammer Films. Based on the short story written by the late British horror writer R. Chetwynd-Hayes, featuring a hybrid-monster with a diabolical whistle. The tale begins with the monstrous mogul hiring a new assistant, Angela, to help catalog his possessions. The tension mounts to an awful ending for the young woman, as she reluctantly agrees to help her crooked boyfriend swindle The Shadmock out of his fortune.
Shadow and foreshadowing in The Shadmock's garden. |
The art from the comic book adaption has its own appeal.
John Bolton's art on the comics version of the Lost In Town. |
The Monster Club's final tale concerns an American film
director who stumbles into a mysterious 17th century village populated by Ghouls. The antique illustrations used as part
of the plot were my first exposure to the incredible art of John Bolton,
a fact that I didn't realize until several years later. The art was
equally frightening and fascinating; it burrowed its way into my brain as these were easily the best ink
drawings I'd seen.
I remembered this scene vividly from 25 years ago.
My early influences were gleaned
from great novels, classics, The Twilight Zone and a host of
other shows in the same vein. If course it all started with the Universal monster flicks replayed
on PBS. These were all transformed by my outlandish imagination into
something more than vivid. It's hard to experience some of the source
material the same way now, but the memories are as potent as ever.
The Monster Club has been released at least 3 times on DVD; it's still fun to watch my own copy from time to time.
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