5. Creature From The Haunted Sea (1961)
4. Sting Of Death (1965)
My most recent discovery was found simply because I ordered a movie called Death Curse Of Tartu about a vengeful Native American zombie shapeshifter and this film was on the same disc. I never knew there was a movie about a mutant jellyfish man nor did I know that there was a Neil Sedaka song called "Do The Jellyfish", but Sting Of Death proves they both exist. Watching 36 year old "college students" get stung, poisoned and slaughtered is always a plus in my book even if the monster looks like a guy in an everyday basic wetsuit with a mylar balloon on his head.
3. The Giant Claw (1957)
Because of it’s giant close ups and it’s constant ridicule this is perhaps the most iconic monster on the list (of course I am using the term iconic very loosely here). The special effects with the planes and the creature itself are below par at best. However, the story about some French Canadian legend connected to a turkey vulture from outer space is VERY original. I remember first seeing this when I was in my early 20s and it sparked in me something my mother used to tell me about. She used to mention the constant nightmares she had as a child about a giant bird coming over this hill and attacking her. She never had any run in with birds to cause this fear and eventually we connected this film, which she would have seen in theaters, to at least the visual aspect of her horrific memory. Proof that one person’s joke can be another person’s nightmare.
2. The Horror Of Party Beach (1964)
Listed by some as a “zombie” movie these aren’t like any zombies anyone else has ever created. I suppose corpses (well skeletons anyway) turning into lizard like people with their arms outstretched due to chemical waste would clear the technical requirement for a zombie. Whatever they are technically supposed to be, the look of these creatures is fascinating. The costumes are great, the black looking blood from the victims is even better and the zombies meeting their end via sodium looks very reminiscent to old Georges Méliès special effects which is probably not an homage as much as it is a sign that the budget was small. After all they had to pay that crappy band to play all those awful songs and that doesn't come cheap. In case you couldn't tell by the photo above, these are the aforementioned lizards with hot dogs in their mouths.
1. The Creeping Terror (1964)
Like the movie listed above, I discovered this one thanks to watching Mystery Science Theater 3000 when I was in college up in Greeley, Colorado. I loved the lampooning of this inept film but like an Ed Wood classic, the ineptitude made the movie charming. The creature creation is the wackiest thing ever witnessed in cinematic history but I applaud the filmmaker for that. No one except for a complete loon could envision an alien like this. A giant carpet with tubes and vegetation coming out of it that slumbers around swallowing up people looked just great. The director was obviously carrying out some mild sort of perversion through his analogy of “eating” women and making sure to give us a close up of their stockings and garters as they are being swallowed. The narration is a result of the director losing, destroying or simply not recording dialogue in many scenes, but I think that this helps make the film stand out as if it's almost trying to be a documentary. The film and the story behind it are so interesting that in 2014 they made a movie about this movie...now that's just cool.
This is a great list. I love black and white monsters that look like actors in suits. Have you seen The She-Creature (1956)? I think she would fit in with your picks. This movie was on TV several times when I was a kid and I could never figure out how the plot was supposed to work--something about hypnosis--but the monster design was great, and just a little risqué.
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