About Me

Evans, GA, United States
Tim McLean is a movie fan whose tastes lean toward older films and horror classics. He has well over 1000 movies in his personal library. His favorite actors are Bela Lugosi and Robert Duvall.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

House On Haunted Hill

As another Halloween season is regrettably drawing to a close, I'd like to mention another of my favorite movies from my favorite time of year. This movie gave me the first scare I can remember from a horror flick. House On Haunted Hill was the second in a series of fright films made by Producer-Director William Castle from the late 1950s to the mid-1960s. Twin opening monologues, one by Vincent Price and the other by Elisha Cook, Jr. (in a role very different from his turn in The Maltese Falcon) are excellent mood setters. Frederick Loren (Price) is a millionaire who promises five people (all of whom need the money) $10,000 each if they can survive a night of being locked inside a supposedly haunted mansion. He is married to his fourth wife, Annabelle (Carol Ohmart), a gold digger who doesn't seem to be concerned that his three previous wives all died under mysterious circumstances. As it turns out, they both try to use the house as a cover to murder the other. In the process, they nearly frighten to death one of the guests, Nora Manning (Carolyn Craig). While this film probably works better in a theater than television, it is a good fright all the same. The highlight scene for me comes early on in the film when Nora is crouching down in a darkened storage room. As she rises, she shines her candle in the face of Mrs. Slydes, the old blind wife of the caretaker. Trust me, Mrs. Slydes is a lot scarier and uglier than Margaret Hamilton in The Wizard of Oz
could ever hope to be. Mrs. Slydes is played by Leona Anderson, the sister of the real-life Broncho Billy who, as Gilbert Anderson, appears in 1903's The Great Train Robbery, one of  the first commercially produced motion pictures in history. If you've never seen this great film by Willam Castle, you are missing out. Among his other notable films are Macabre, 13 Ghosts, and The Haunting. He was loosely portrayed by John Goodman in 1993's Matinee.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Coy Watson, Sr

Coy Watson, Sr was one of filmmaking's pioneers as an actor, stuntman, animal wrangler, director, and most notably, special effects technician for several studios, the majority of the time with Mack Sennett's Keystone Studios. Born James Caughey Watson on April 14, 1890, in Belleville, Ontario, Canada, he moved with his family to Edendale, a community in northwest Los Angeles in 1895. Edendale was the first movie colony on the west coast with four studios-Norberg, Bison, Keystone, and Selig (the first permanent movie studio in
California, established in 1909)-operated there in the early part of the 20th century in kind of a Hollywood before there was a Hollywood. Its heyday lasted less than a decade, however, due to a lack of real estate for a rapidly increasing industry. By the mid-teens, all but Mack Sennett and his Keystone Studios had relocated ten miles west to Hollywood. Coy Watson got his start in the movie business in an unexpected manner. In 1911, after spending most of a day breaking a horse, he was standing on the street talking with two other cowboys when a man approached them, told them he worked for Selig Studios and asked them if they wanted to appear in a movie. The offer was $1 per day per actor and $2 for horses. Watson hired out three of his own horses and himself. In those days, actors supplied their own horses and gear and some of the early cowboy stars he worked with included Buck Jones, Hoot Gibson, and Tom Mix. Being a cowboy actor was dangerous work, as Watson would later find out. In 1913, while making Logan of the U.S.A., he was thrown from his horse and trampled. He suffered a broken arm and shoulder and was laid up for three weeks. Being a trouper, he went back in front of the camera as soon as he was able. However, he began to spend more time behind the scenes, learning the movie business and in the process, becoming one of the first prop men and special effects experts. His accomplishments included being the first to use piano wire to suspend actors and objects in mid-air and the first wrangler to work with exotic wild animals. For all of his accomplishments, he is best known for being the father of nine children, all of whom were child actors. The Watson family lived literally next door to Keystone so whenever a child was needed for a role, the studios would simply go to the Watson home and pick one out. Between Coy Sr and his children, the Watsons appeared in over a thousand movies. This led them to be dubbed "The First Family of Hollywood." Coy Watson, Sr passed away in 1968. On April 22, 1999, the Watson family received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6674 Hollywood Blvd, near the intersection of Las Palmas and Hollywood. There is an
excellent biography of Coy Watson, Jr on the market entitled "The Keystone Kid: Tales of Early Hollywood"
that makes for great reading.

Friday, October 15, 2010

The Return of the Vampire

"Your fate is to be what you are, as mine is to be what I am."
                                            -Dr. Armand Tesla (Bela Lugosi)
                                              The Return of the Vampire (1943)

The previous line is from one of my favorite horror movies of all time. I try to make sure I watch it at least once every October. Besides being entertaining, it is notable that it is one of the few films that Bela Lugosi made where he actually portrayed a vampire. This gem from Columbia also went against several of the tried and true bloodsucking legends in that the chief vampire hunter was a woman, he went after a little girl and an adult man, and he turned his human slave into a werewolf. This werewolf was unusual in that he spoke perfect english and didn't kill anyone. This movie is also unusual in that he was staked in the first part of the film and not with a wooden stake but a metal spike. As a lot of studios did during WWII, they gave a it a war background to help boost ticket sales (the story began at the end of WWI and leapt forward in time to 1941 for the second part. Stock footage of fighter planes was used as well.) and the London blitz played a pivotal part in resurrecting the vampire. As I said before, it is one my favorite horror films and is very entertaining. My heroes at TCM usually schedule it each October. Also there is a brief comic moment with two graveyard workers, one of whom is played by Billy Bevan, a contract player for Mack Sennett Studios during the 1920s. All in all its a great film and I  could think of a lot worse ways to spend an hour and a half.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Where Have All of the Theaters Gone?

Growing up in my hometown of Augusta, GA, during the 1960s and '70s, I remember there being nine movie theatres. Three downtown (one of which showed soft-core porn), two in the suburbs, and four drive-ins. The nearest drive-in is now 60 miles away in Monetta, SC, none of the three downtown functions as a movie house now, and the two in the suburbs are gone. All nine went under. In their places we now have three, all of them in the suburbs. Two of them are first run houses and the other a subsequent run house. Granted, the two first-runs have multiple screens and only one from my childhood had more than one screen and then just two. In addition, four other theaters have opened and closed in my lifetime. That gives Augusta a loss of thirteen theaters over the last 40-odd years. Quite a difference from the golden age of Hollywood. In 1941 there were approximately 17000 theaters in America in 8500 cities with 10.5 million seats. There were 49 cities with a population of  200,000 and up and they contained 20% of all theaters, one-third of all seats, and generated two-thirds of all ticket sales. Today there are less than 6000 theaters remaining. The factors of general television, the supreme court decision forcing the studios to divest themselves of their theater chains (at one time Paramount Studios alone owned over 1200 theatres) and the resulting reduction in new movies being made, home video (videotape and DVDs), pay television and new technology allowing us to watch movies on our computers have all done their part in this. Will we see a further reduction? I don't think so. I think the market has shaken itself out enough to where we are at a static situation. Simply put, we will see very few new theaters but also very few going out of business. People still need date nights and cheap entertainment and for the movie geeks there is no substitute for the theater experience.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

FIRST POST

This is the very first post to this blog. I am using it to mainly play around and edit things to look the way I want them to.