Friday, November 13, 2009
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Monday, November 9, 2009
The Hitch-Hiker
These three actors are transfixing in one of those noirs that gets out of city limits and into our collective thoughts. Talman is disturbing as an original serial killer. The “good guys,” the hostages with families at home in Arizona, are not where they are supposed to be because they were planning on slipping down to Mexico to enjoy the prostitutes. Their desire to escape their suburban middle class lives is contrasted with Talman’s criminal freedom, a freedom doomed by being hunted by society. Who is worse off? Who lives more intelligently? Who is really sane? The device of Talman’s bad eye, which doesn’t close even when he’s sleeping, is distinct.1953, directed by Ida Lupino
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Friday, November 6, 2009
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Two Wongs
As for the two movies in question, both directed by the gifted William Nigh, both are very entertaining and much of that value is due to other players as well as Nigh's ability to create palpable comic strip atmosphere on the thread of a shoe string.
In The Mysterious Mr. Wong, Lugosi is seemingly mild mannered shopkeeper by day, but by early evening to night, depending when he gets off work, he is avidly pursuing relics known as the Coins of Confucious. This of course reminds us of our own lives as collectors with day jobs, though presumably none of us murder for it. Wallace Ford is the hardnosed, nosy, nasal-voiced reporter in pursuit of the story he smells as bodies start to pile up in Chinatown. He gets a lot of the best lines, and plays it with flair as he also purses the affections of office girl Arline Judge. One very clever shot is of the two of them in a tight frame with a third wheel, another suitor that Ford schemes to get rid of. We are looking at the three full on as they sit at a lunch counter. It's a simple shot but just think how impossible telling a story that way would have been just ten years earlier in the silent era, never mind before film. Eventually Ford and Judge come upon a secret passageway in the back of Wong's shop, natch, leading to cobwebs, one-liners, and the thrilling conclusion. This recalls to me how, as a youngster, I felt it was inevitable that I would end up in a similar adventure with various girls I had crushes on. No doubt I was at least in part under the influence of the climactic cave scenes in Tom Sawyer. And suddenly now I'm recalling a M*A*S*H episode where Hawkeye is looking into the back of a patient's throat and says he can still still see Becky and Tom wandering around back there. In many ways, that patient's throat is my mind.

Be that as it may, and it may, we then come to Karloff's Mr. Wong movies, and this one in particular. This series mixed together the Asian sleuth genre with the girl reporter genre, ie Torchy Blane, to what I think is great effect. In this particular one, the blonde girl reporter's intrepidness is able to save Wong's life, as he is embroiled in the mysterious murder (of course it's mysterious, wouldn't be much of a movie without that), of a Chinese princess, leading to much skulking around in beautiful fog. Ah, fog, nature's secret passageway. Well, um, except for caves.
Karloff is charming as Wong, but it is really Marjorie Reynolds, and Grant Withers as her hardnosed cop antagonist/love interest that puts this one over.
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Proto Disney Teen Noir Hamlet: Strange Illusion
1945, directed by Edgar G. UlmerUlmer has a permanent place in horror and noir history for The Black Cat and Detour respectively. But his lesser known Strange Illusion has much to recommend it, including a mixture of noir conventions with bizarre dream sequences and a plot involving teens trying to foil crooks that foreshadows such future Disney teen adventure masterworks as The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes. The lead is played by James Lydon, surely the forties' precursor of Tommy Kirk. Lydon is perhaps best known as the Young Man in Love character in The Time of Your Life. The plot of this movie is Hamlet-esque, as Lydon is bothered by a dream that tells him that the man his mother is now involved with was the killer of his father. One advantage the Melancholy Dane never had in his pursuit of the king's true killer was a crack team of teen sleuths and one kindly older doctor. Strangely, another actor that Lydon retroactively reminds me of is James Franco in the similar role of Harry Osborn of the Spider-man movies. The look of glazed obsessiveness as a son pursues the true killer of his father is similar, and I got to wonder if Franco looked at this film, perhaps at director Sam Raimi's request or suggestion. Certainly much of the style of the Spidey films, from acting to scoring, channels forties movies.
Special mention should got to Jimmy Clark, as the friend of Lydon's character. With spunky good humour he steals every scene he's in and is unfortunately absent a lot of the time, as Lydon goes undercover at a mental institution. One of the many factors that makes this film interesting is hearing some teen lingo of the forties as teen culture was only beginning to exist. It would still be a few years until the appearances of Catcher in the Rye and films like The Wild One and Rebel Without a Cause.
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Come Out To Play
A&M Records, 1979This record is a stone cold lava lamper, a fitting addition to any cat's collection for the groovy theme music and score composed by Barry De Vorzon as well as most of the other tunes, including an epic song performed by Joe Walsh called In the City, which is definitely I tune I want to hear when emerging from a subway at the crack of dawn. The only tune I could never get with is the cover of "Nowhere to Run", but even the original is one of those Motown moments I couldn't quite get with. What does work for me is the last tune, "Last of an Ancient Breed", credited to Desmond Child, which sets the tone for much of the closing credits songs of eighties action movies.
Also present are some sound bites from this classic flick, but some may be disappointed that "Can...you...dig it?" is not included; however, its other most quoted line, "Warriors!...come out to plaaaay!" is, with sound effects of those ominous bottles clanging together. Wow, that guy must have had tiny fingers.
Monday, November 2, 2009
Reason # 12,386 Why 1966 is the Coolest Year on Record
Sunday, November 1, 2009
Doomed Delambre
The only problem I have with this movie is really a strength, in that there is something so genuinely tragic about it. It sort of goes beyond those movies where you just watch as a monster is created and sit back and enjoy the ensuing craziness.Occasionally there are movies , the ones that come to mind are Black Christmas and Devils Rejects, where I end up feeling more for the victims than normal in a horror film. You get a sense of Dr. Delambre having made such a terrible, irreversible mistake. He had high ideals but was too ambitious, did not proceed with due caution. It's another one of those fifties sci-fi movies, like Invasion of the Body Snatchers, that tells much about the anxieties of people living in the middle of the twentieth century. The Fly goes beyond sci-fi to express a universal human theme. As Cormac McCarthy put it, "Doomed enterprises divide lives forever into the then and the now."
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Friday, October 30, 2009
...And Now a Word From One of Our Patron Saints and Founding Fathers, Jimmy Drake aka Nervous Norvus

Lest we ever forget the non-rallying cry of Hepcat Hermits in every Groovy Pad around this great sub-culture of ours: "Be Zorch, Daddio, Go Ape!" is the word! We all must strive for the Nervous Norvus level of Dementia. Well, we're actually probably all there already or we wouldn't be on this page! So good for us! Let's keep it that way! Thanks to the man codenamed watchinshadows for posting this classic with a montage of the things that HH-ers live for.
Thursday, October 29, 2009
BORGNIIIIIIIIINE!!!
The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn't exist. The second greatest was transforming Ernest Borgnine into a goat-man.If you like, I mean really like, lots of melting faces in a movie that's full of potential sound clips for a Rob Zombie album, this is the one for you. For some reason, on a lot of the materials related to the film Tom Skerritt gets completely jerked. He's responsible for much of the action but hardly gets mentioned. He definitely gets more screen time than John Travolta, who makes his film debut but may be hard to recognize under lots of flesh coloured wax and a neat, short hairstyle unbecoming of a Sweathog.
Shatner Shatners it up as only he can. Borgnine is almost having too much gleeful fun as the high priest of a group of Satanists, so much fun that I'm a little worried about him. When he utters an incantation and the thunder cracks, and suddenly he has a kooky-looking Borgnine goathead, that's when you know you got what you came for.
1975, directed by Robert Fuest
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Beards in Space: Legion of Super-Heroes #306
No, that isn't the head of a sixties GI Joe action figure floating in space, it's Star Boy in his newish costume. He always knew he'd be one of the glitterati.In case you were wondering what Star Boy did with his old costume, the splash page of "Born Under A Lucky Star" shows us that he cut off the sleeves and turned it into a casual T-shirt, thus anticipating the "Casual Age" of comics we are currently still in.
Well, this issue gets off to an interesting start as Star Boy, aka Thom Kallor, sits around complaining about his "bad luck" to Wildfire. Kind of insensitive of him, since Wildfire is a former human, now just energy contained in a suit, whereas Star Boy's current "huge problem" is that his gorgeous, always scantily clad girlfriend Dream Girl is a bit distracted by her duties as Legion leader and not paying enough attention to him. So Thom's hoping that the new election, which we now join in progress, sees her opponent Ultra Boy win so Thom can go back to his grueling schedule of cuddling, which may or may not necessitate shaving.
By the way, I do like the beard, I'm just chafing. Even if it means a 19 year old can grown more facial hair than me. Not that I mind, I hate shaving what I do have. And there's the rub. I don't really have enough to grow a proper looking beard, so that option isn't open to me.
But enough about me, even if it is in keeping with this issue's theme of self-absorption. Fortunately for LoSH fans, in comics self-absorption means flashbacks, and this story's chock full of doozies in that they are drawn by none other than Silver Age Legion artist Curt Swan. Swan, in between the framing narrative illustrated by then current LoSH artist Keith Giffen, gets a chance to retell and expand upon some Silver Age classics: Thom's origin, his first meeting and falling in puppy love with DG; his accidental killing of an assailant that led to his expulsion from the Legion and his subsequent joining of the Legion of Substitute Heroes. There's a wonderful splash page of the Subs, including a bouffant-adorned Night Girl kayoing an opponent. Finally, the thrilling tale of Star Boy and Dream Girl going undercover as Sir Prize and Miss Terious, perhaps not the best-chosen code names for an incognito assignment, but hey; the 2960's were a crazy time for everybody. And the scheme led to Thom getting back into the real Legion. So long, losers! I kid, the Subs rock.
In the end, good fortune visits Star Boy as Dream Girl is not re-elected, with surprise write-in candidate Element Lad winning. So it's no doubt back to the cuddling. Yes, politics makes strange beardfellows.
That ish came out in 1983, the next year Madonna released this song. Coincidence or conspiracy?
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Monday, October 26, 2009
House of Several Weirdos: Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks, 1974
Who among us can truly say we haven't been out robbing graves at night in the company of a lascivious dwarf? The dwarf in question played by none other than Michael Dunn, probably one of the finest actors among the little people, beloved to audiences for his roles in such films as Ship of Fools. He is perhaps best known for his immortal Dr. Loveless on Wild Wild West, a show which I have only recently begun to watch thanks to Hepcat Honey Numero Uno giving me season 2 DVD's.This is a movie for any of us who have ever found ourselves living in a house full of weirdos. It serves up full helpings of fun freakishness, with not only a Frankenstein monster named Goliath, but also a caveman named Ook. It is marred only by some unpleasantness that is not surprising in a seventies European horror movie. Dunn is a good enough actor that as sadistic as his character is, he also conveys some real pathos, which is a fancy way of saying I can't resist his puppy dog eyes.
Sunday, October 25, 2009
The Time Travelers
It's always the best to turn on the TV and see an amazing film starting. Such was the case today, as I switched on Silver Screen classics in time to see this 1964 wonder beginning. A very tight hour and twenty minutes, of time travel, mutants, androids, a rocket ship and a special appearance by Forrest J Ackerman.Three scientists and one maintenance man in a lab, which is apparently moments away from a funding cut, switch on an experimental time viewer, which turns out to be a time portal, natch. Some bumbling by the wacky maintenance man, and soon all are trapped in the 2071, where we learn that a nuclear war has meant a virtual ceasing of all human advancement, particularly in the area of women's hairstyles.
Its a sixties sci fi visual feast, including beautiful effects which maintain their power to amaze. The androids are wonderfully creepy. Some nice twists in the plot, little character development to clutter up the proceedings, and there's an interesting subtext of futuristic free love.
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Friday, October 23, 2009
Most Other Bands Suck Compared To Gravy Train!!!!
Every so often you come upon a band that when you hear them it feels like you've had a void in your head waiting for that music to come along and fill it.Void, meet Gravy Train!!!!
They're like a napalm enema for pretentious boring indie music. Sorry for the graphic image but I'm afraid in this case it is absolutely necessary.
Some of their songs are shockingly filthy, but the sort of filthy shock that zaps the listener to attention. Some songs are plain silly. All are fun. And underneath many is a subtle emotional core, as in "Burger Baby" in which lead singer Chunx, in a deceptively humourous manner, reveals struggles with weight gain and food addiction, or in "Jody" where the devilishly handsome Hunx talks about a new love in his life. Gravy Train!!!! is for those of us who feel most indie music that is trying to be intelligent and emotionally compelling is actually tediously beating its listeners over the head with the artlessly overt whining of spoiled kids. In GT the spoiledness is acknowledged and garishly satirized. The personas of the band, particularly of Hunx and Chunx, are so aggressive in their flamboyance it becomes genuinely poignant. That perhaps is the real art of a band that never comes off as artistic but which is so smooth in its creativity you don't notice it. Possibly the best comparison is the Beastie Boys on Licenced To Ill, but GT is its own thing.
Hunx has apparently branched off in another act called Hunx and his Punx with a similar sound and similarly deceptively simple, clever lyrics. I enjoy the twist ending of this song. I can safely say this is my favourite gay romance video, though under normal circumstances I don't need to see a guy wearing sexy tights. Not that there's anything wrong with that, I just happen to enjoy our possibly arbitrary but nevertheless fun culturally assigned costumes. But I'll let Hunx off the hook because he's awesome, I dig the rest of his clothes and I love the amazing CGI animals at the beginning. My kind of effects!
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Harrison Ford's "American Out of His Element" Trilogy Part One: WITNESS
Having slammed my idol Harrison's latest movie in the last entry, I feel I must now redeem myself, or at least use it as an excuse to rave about some of his underrated films. Well, the first one we'll be looking at is hardly underrated, having gotten HF an Oscar nomination, quite remarkable for a guy just coming off the success of two major popcorn franchises. Having appeared the previous year in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom as the invincible archaeologist, it is a comment on his own versatility and the popular audience's occasional intellectual flexibility - yes, the film industry is certainly a social laboratory - that Witness, perhaps the most realistic cop thriller ever made, and one in which HF plays a highly vulnerable police officer, could gain acceptance.
As I've often said, the word "realistic" gets thrown around a lot these days to describe any film or work where characters don't use magic or have special powers, and sometimes even supernatural stories are considered "realistic" if, say, characters talk on cell phones or we are given some other reminder of the mundane world with which we identify. Witness however unfolds much more like a police case gone wrong might conceivably happen in our world. We are not given a shootout with bullets flying everywhere and a hero miraculously escaping and managing to kill every one of his assailants. We are shown a confrontation between the hero and one man in which the hero is shot, leading to his wound becoming more serious and his convalescing on the brink of death for days. Then at the end he again does not confront an army, instead a mere three men. He nails one by having the much greater upper hand, he successfully gets the drop on the second, and then the third loses his nerve. Ford's survival is plausible.
Don't get me wrong. There's no one who enjoys fantastical entertainment more than I. And yes, I understand that some obey a kind of telegraphed internal logic which makes them more convincing. I get that. But if you want to talk about a cop drama where it is actually believable in almost every sense, Witness is the one. Bullit might stand up to that acid test, but even The French Connection starts to look pretty splashy, though what film buff would want to live without that great chase scene? Not I.
That's just an opening to the main topic, this being the first in HF's "American Out of His Element" Trilogy, of which The Mosquito Coast and Frantic comprise the remaining parts. Witness comes at that theme from a good introductory slant, in terms of the character Ford is playing. John Book's values are as simple and straightforward as his name. He goes through life somewhat unconsciously, in the sense that he has received the sense of what is right and wrong from his upbringing, presumably, and enacts those values as best he can within the police force, probably without much reflection. His tragic flaw, in fact, ends up being a certain qualified optimism about the other police officers. When he discovers that another cop, played menacingly by Danny Glover, is corrupt, he is not very surprised, but he does not for a moment suspect the same corruption in his mentor and friend, a superior officer who it turns out is the plot's ringleader.
Despite his basic optimism, Book is quite familiar with the sleazier side of urban America. He has street smarts. He realizes all is not paradise, but clearly feels his own actions on American soil can help to solve the problems, in contrast with Allie Fox of The Mosquito Coast who will feel it's hopeless. That is why, when the action of the story brings him to a small Amish village where he must hide out, Angel and the Badman-style, we can sense he would like to leave the idyllic calm to go back to his urban life, such as it is. He takes the bad of the USA with the good.
Witness is a wonderful movie, but not flawless. I am always puzzled by the scene early on when Book grabs a suspect and, for identification purposes, pushes his face against the window of the car where the "witness" Lukas Haas is sitting in clear view of the suspect. I choose to believe the window is more tinted than it appears and Haas is not visible from the outside. I also never need the portions where Ford and Amish girl Kelly McGillis are finally unable to resist the compelling passion of their passionate desires and run passionately into each others' passionate embrace. It would be the same, and a possibly better, movie without that scene. Much more interesting to me is the earlier scene where Book gets the radio in his car working and they dance to a Sam Cooke song which lyrically works as an anthem for Book's basic nature. I am more intrigued by the fact that this Amish woman catches heat from Jan Rubes' authoritarian father figure for simply dancing to music; after that, the idea that premarital sex is also forbidden is not exactly a barn burner. But speaking of barns, the other classic scene is the barn raising, which gives us an idea of how the Amish community cooperates; and in which Book likely begins to see a side of the village that he, much to his surprise, can identify with. He likes things that work, but lurking behind this idyll is the fact that no community on this earth is truly safe, as the climax will demonstrate. It is a great strength of Witness that it neither condemns nor idealizes the Amish way of life, but takes a very balanced approach.
On a final note, I have read elsewhere it cited as a flaw that the boy Samuel does not appear to react much to having witnessed a murder. I reject this as being a flaw, because his seeming lack of a reaction is likely due, at least in part, to his restrained Amish conditioning. Someone raised in more conventional Western society would understandably go into histrionics, but how can we say how someone who can not even really understand what murder is would react? Many children are known to go blank, outwardly, after witnessing this type of event. The problems surface years later. It is difficult to say what he goes through internally, but to me, when he is shown first of all being intrigued by Book's gun, and then his chilling confession to Jan Rubes about how he would like to punish bad men, it is demonstrated that he has gone through a process. He is quite disturbed, he just doesn't show it through most of the film.
The last shot is of Book's car driving over a hill, out of the Amish village, back to America as he knows it. All three films in the trilogy will end with a similar scene, a vehicle taking its traumatized occupants back to familiarity.
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Ugh, Here's Why I Avoid Legit Movies
To mangle the old David Spade chestnut, I DID NOT like this movie better the first time, when it was called Crash, but I still disliked this one almost as much as that other intelligence mocker. I watched this because Harrison Ford is my favourite actor, but unfortunately the combined heroism of Han Solo and Indiana Jones could never save this PC pastiche that fell out of the hackneyed tree and hit every cliche on the way down. HF hasn't had to contend with such on the nose dialogue since Jedi's "I hope she's all right", but unfortunately this is much less fun. This is just a calculated equation of guilt trips. It doesn't make unlikeable characters sympathetic to just show them looking sad. This fiasco's beaten that technique to a bloody pulp by about the 30 minute mark, which already feels like four hours. I do hope Harrison finds that one (or several) last great character role(s), but this unfortunately was not it, even though he did what he could with it. Only other good thing is Ray Liotta's performance, even if his script might as well be, "Hi, I'm an evil man who uses his position with the immigration department to have sex with nubile Australians, but really I'm just sad and misunderstood." Not Ray's fault, though. Hopefully soon he'll also start getting roles as good as his voiceover for Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, my all time favourite video game.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Kirby Klassiks
"There came a time when the old gods died!"There is something so bizarrely, wonderfully eloquent about these opening words of the Fourth World saga's flagship title, something that sums up the condition of our culture in the twentieth century. We had lost the old beliefs. There is also something hopeful about the exclamation point. Somehow, recognizing the death of old gods as a crisis situation, worthy of exclamation, seems more proactive than a more passive period would have been. This is not an admission of despair and defeat, but a call to life, a call to activity, a rekindling. Already by the end of the sentence we are looking ahead to how to fix the situation. With the old gods dead, new gods are needed. Or really, perhaps the old gods again in new forms. Finnegans wake.
"No more glorious sight has ever greeted any eyes than that of New Genesis."
Friday, October 9, 2009
Funked Up Funk

Wanna funk up your Groovy Pad, cat? Look no further than this collection of weird wild sounds from The In Sound which collects some of the jazziest funk and some avante garde jazz. It's the real deal, Neil. This ain't no wack attack, Jack!
Getting us off to a groovy start is Gary Burton's "Vibrafinger". Also featured on the first side is Sun Ra, surely jazz' answer to Jack Kirby, whose experimental cosmic cool sounds right at home here. On my copy the tracks have been listed incorrectly on the sleeve, so that the first side ends with Freddie Hubbard's surreal "This Is Combat I Know", German cabaret on acid with an anti war message. Side two kicks off with Yusef Luteef's "Raymond Winchester" (listed as the last track of the first side), with a swaying background against which is set some bizarrely whining horns going into some straightforward fuzzed out funk guitar that only seems to be lulling us into complacency so we'll be taken once again by the whining horns. It calls to mind some of Kool & The Gang's more experimental stuff. This along with the next cut, Charles Lloyd's "Sorcery", may be my favourite cuts on the record. The latter crosses Superfly-style chase music with Sonny Rollins-style expressionism for a very soulful and fun musical ride.
Track Three on side two may be my least favourite. Not that the music is bad, it just seems fairly pedestrian after what has preceded it. Possibly the compilers figured we needed a break. It is Black Heat's "Check It All Out", which is a proto rap funk break over which are shouted lyrics of seventies social commentary, so general that in fact they end up sounding completely current, ie The president's responsible for all that is bad, prices increasing, jobs decreasing, we are using up the earth's resources, etc. Music to read Dennis O'Neil's Green Lantern/Green Arrow by.
They saved one of the weirdest for the last. Freddie Hubbard (again) with "Threnody For Sharon Tate", a tuneless tune over which are spoken lines that sound like they're sound bites from a European Satansploitation film. Which is just my speed. I might have to track down more Freddie Hubbard.
What we end up with is something that sounds like the soundtrack of the ultimate psychedelic exploitation movie of the late sixties/early seventies, the era that the tracks are from. Like if Jess Franco and Jack Hill went on a binge and made a movie together. We are left only able to imagine the unimaginable movie this sound track would go with.
Next time you have a Groovy Lady over at your Soul Shack, cat, lay this platter on down and see if the chick digs. If she bolts, she is not that groovy and it was not meant to be.
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
The Hepcat Hermit Predicts...
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Reason #456,679 Why 1966 Is the Coolest Year on Record
Harrison Ford's first screen appearance...with Coburn!!!
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
The Abyss Was a TOTAL RIPOFF Of This Ad
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Monday, September 21, 2009
Sunday, September 20, 2009
It's Gear, It Is
After the Marvel mayhem of last week, it's time for a return to solemnity with DC Showcase # 69, which offers us a sobering look at the many ways in which vacuous people attempt to fill their shallow lives, not realizing that their shallow lives can never be filled because of how deep the despair is inside all that shallowness. How that's possible, I have no idea. Maybe it involves some kind of emotional space warp or existential pocket universe.The Maniaks are a group of young minstrels who may appear on the surface to be having lighthearted fun, but are in the fact each of them walking desperate cries for help.
First, we open with one of the members, Flip, standing on the ledge of a building. As police try to dissuade him from jumping, he is so distraught that he is unable to admit that it is a suicide threat, and makes the claim that he is merely taking a walk on the ledge. This sort of transference is common among people desperate for any kind of relief from despair. They want the other people to notice their pain, not to have to point it out themselves.
We then meet other members of the band, such as Jangles. He is so empty and devoid of a sense of identity that he has become expert at doing impressions, to such a degree he can even alter his head to look like a dog's head or a giant firecracker. He wants to be anything besides himself. Pack Rat, the drummer, may be emotionally the most healthy of the band, as he has learned to let out his frustrations when he "pounds skins".
Silver Shannon is the band's lead singer, and possibly the most troubled, singing a song in which she blankly repeats "I'm going down the road feeling bad cause I got me a pebble in my shoe", lyrics that would make Nico seem perky by comparison. Most of the plot of this issue involves her attempts to fill the yawning chasm in her soul with worldly possessions, even convincing herself to marry a man for his wealth. We are shown his many possessions, none of which can satisfy Silver, so deep is the yawning chasm of unhappiness within her shallow soul, and so shallow are her values that make her deeply unhappy. As she says, "What good is happiness? It can't buy money!"
A dark, disturbing look at the disenfranchised youth of the late sixties and their increasing disassociation and disaffection. All the vices brought on by existential pain are explored here, including womanizing, gambling, and using slang. Highly recommended for its sharp observations about twentieth century alienation, but afterward you might want to perk yourself up with a nice lighthearted Ingmar Bergman movie.
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Stuff White & Nerdy People Hate:
CREATORS NOT OWNING THE RIGHTS TO THEIR OWN CREATION AND CREATORS OWNING THE RIGHTS TO THEIR OWN CREATION."Ooh, I just hate how Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster were SCREWED out of the rights to Superman so the company could then allow other creators to work on Jerry and Joe's creation, and give them very little money for it. Only the original creator should work on his own creation...The only thing that burns me up more is how George Lucas GREEDILY holds onto the rights of Star Wars, his own creation, and will not allow other creators to work on it, except with his own approval, and makes huge profits from it. Oooh!"
Friday, September 18, 2009
What The...?!
This has unofficially evolved into Marvel week at HH, so we now close it out with some praise of the new comic Strange Tales, sort of a Marvel version of DC's Bizarro World, in which indie authors and artists get to have some fun at the expense of company characters.From the opening shot, in which the Watcher is peeping on She-Hulk in the shower, we know it's going to be good. There's a lot of variety, but no surprise my two favourites were Paul Pope's Inhumans story and Peter Bagge's Hulk story, the latter of which is actually continuing through the three issues of Strange Tales.
Pope's Inhumans story involves the team dog Lockjaw, who is able to teleport but does not possess opposable thumbs, thus making it difficult for him to open a can of gourmet dog food that Medusa and the rest of the gang bought for him. Every time they are about to open it for him, they are called away to fight another menace, including Psycho-Man - who refers to himself as "He who is called Psycho-Man." Ah, I love that stuff. I've always wanted to refer to myself that way, and often do in my head. Lockjaw eventually finds a novel way to open the can. Pope did the cover of this ish as well, which includes some of the most visually arresting Marvel characters, such as Dr. Strange's squeeze Clea, who has possibly the funkiest hairdo in all comic-dom, and Beta Ray Bill, who is somehow an alien, a horse, and another Thor all in one.
Bagge's Hulk story has a wonderful premise. As Bruce Banner, he meets a female scientific colleague who is dignified and intelligent. As Hulk, he meets a biker chick who is skanky and trashy. Misunderstandings are sure to ensue, and I'm looking forward to future installments.
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Look At Mr. Lee: Still The Man
Who'da thunk it? Stan Lee still writes a regular Spider-man comic strip. Not only that, but it's good and fun, the best Spidey stuff I've read in years, and it is being published in current issues of Comic Shop News. It's illustrated by Stan's younger brother,Larry Lieber (Stan's real name is Stanley Martin Lieber). Lieber the Younger draws in a smooth style in that middle area between cartoony and realistic like past masters such as Kurt Schaffenberger and Ramona Fradon (and more currently, Amanda Conner). Another thing that is noteworthy about the current strips is they involve a Peter Parker married to Mary Jane, a situation that I've never before seen work as well. The current storyline involves some hijinks as Peter and Mary Jane try to keep Wolverine from finding out his identity. There is a technical flaw in this whole idea, as Wolverine possesses a sniffer that should immediately recognize that Peter and Spidey are one and the same (if memory serves that's how Wolvie discovered the identity in comic book continuity - "Scents don't lie - that kid's Spider-man!"), but that aside (and it's always possible Logan already knows and is just having some fun at Spidey's expense), it's fun to read Lee's version of Wolverine, especially when he refers to Mary Jane as a desperate housewife, haha! On a sentimental note, I also like that Lieber draws Peter with wavey hair a la John Romita, Sr.'s version from the seventies. It's more realisitic, since anyone's hair would get wavey from being in a sweaty mask for hours on end! But seriously, it just looks more like how I picture Peter Parker (picked a peck of etc.). Obviously because I grew up (in a manner of speaking) with the John Senior version, for me I recognize the guy when he's got a couple forehead curls pointing at each other (I may or may not have, at about age twelve, tried to force my hair to do that in emulation of Peter, you'll never get me to confess).
So I recommend the strips, they're fun and funny in a Silver Age way and best of all free at most comic stores with the purchase of something else, they run six to an issue of CSN, in full colour -it's a heck of a bargain.

Hmmm, he can call her "Honey" in public but not lift his mask to half mast? Sooo unrealistic!
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Hepcat Hermit Conspiracy Theories
Donny & Marie are clearly time travellers, as this stunning new(ish) photograph proves. Or perhaps sorcerers. Or from space. Or all three. Monday, September 14, 2009
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Friday, September 11, 2009
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Hal Jordan
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Hepcat Hermit Movie Reviews: Wild Women of Wongo
Do ya like scantily clad cavegirls with fifties hairdos?Do ya like catfights?
Do ya like parrots making kooky asides?
Do ya dig crazy ceremonial dances?
Do ya like cavemen wearing inexplicable white wigs?
Do ya like caveman-talk represented by awesomely stilted English?
Do ya dig all these things? Well do ya?
Do ya? Do ya???
Just wondering.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Doubly Cast: Annette O'Toole
And now part 2 of our ongoing series, part one is here.Today we honour Mrs. Lenny, for having portrayed two of the most pivotal roles in all Superman-dom. First she was Lana Lang in the cult classic Superman III, a role she was enthusiastic about because she always favoured the underdog girls in any of comics' great love triangles. Lana is perhaps the Betty of the Lois-Lana-Superman triangle, though Lana's personality has historically been elastic. In the seventies she was out-Loising Lois as a conniver. But Annette's portrayal was pure sweetie-pie.
By itself this would have been enough to cement her as an icon of Superman fandom, but then she went on to be Ma Kent to Bo Hazard's Pa Kent in Smallville. Producers of the show, when considering her for the part, were amazed by her knowledge of Kryptonian lore. Annette is a super fangirl from way back.
Monday, September 7, 2009
"The Perfect Man!": Creation of the Humanoids
Wow, this no-budget 1962 film is stunning. It looks like a b-film, and it is, but the concepts involved are quite interesting and challenging. Watching it reminds me a lot of what I always pictured when reading classic "hard" SF. People in futuristic rooms sort of standing there, uttering perfectly formed speeches about interesting ideas. Just one of the things going on in the film is that, in the future world where androids are commonplace, a woman has elected to live in "rapport" with one of them, a sort of marriage. Kinky!Someone on IMDB wrote this movie is "Better than Star Wars!" I wouldn't go that far. It's always handy to invoke the name of Star Wars to get some attention. They are two quite different movies. This movie could certainly be seen as the missing link between Metropolis and Blade Runner. Reputedly COTH was Andy Warhol's favourite movie.
"The Perfect Man!"
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Haney-tastic Classic

Eclipso's first words in this tale, right on the splash page, are "Ha! Ha! Ha! Flee, you puny fools!" That's how you know it's gonna be good.
Bob Haney is one of the most fun comic writer of all time, and this tale, from House of Secrets #81, supports that theory in spades.
Dr. Bruce Gordon, Eclipso's good half, completes "Operation Big Boy", going with the theory that if you can't beat 'em, create a giant version of 'em to beat 'em for you. He does just that, but the plan backfires, natch, when Eclipso is able to turn his "Maxi-Me" to evil, because good is dumb. Now Eclipso is able to strike fear, as well as possibly some amusement, though fearful amusement, with the sight of himself riding on the shoulder of his giant double.
Eclipso's a simple guy, and has always believed four giants are better than one, so he uses his moonstone gem to release three prehistoric giants that were caught in stone...or something. Rampages ensue and a good time is had by all.
With art by Jack Sparling.
Saturday, September 5, 2009
If The Aliens Are Watching Our TV Drama Shows...
Friday, September 4, 2009
Ursula Davis

Now, I'm not one of those people who constantly call attention to all the little known facts. Partly because it's alternately annoying or pathetic when people do that and try to make everyone else feel inferior, but mostly because when people do this they are really only calling attention to the fact that they know a lot of things that most people can get through life perfectly fine without knowing. Or to put it more simply, people who know all the trivia are probably trivial. However, I do like to do what I can to bring some recognition to people or things that in some way have made my life as a patron of esoterica more enjoyable.
This is Ursula Davis, whose mug has popped up in several films I have enjoyed in the past few months. She generally appears in Italian made movies of the sixties. The three I have seen her in so far have been Kong Island, Crypt of the Vampire and An Angel For Satan. Her list of film credits is fairly short, but then so is Tura Satana's. Quality, not quantity. She seems to always play the nice girl who is contrasted with a femme fatale. Here she is in what may be her greatest film, Kong Island, appearing at about 1:20. Kong Island weaves together a plot involving a mad scientist, mercenaries, gorillas who are radio controlled, a jungle girl, big sixties hairdos, dancing, a muscle man with glittering teeth, and of course Ursula. Unfortunately there are no midgets, but it's still a masterpiece in the Dementia Squad canon.
















