Showing posts with label Caroline Munro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caroline Munro. Show all posts

Friday, October 11, 2024

The Cinematic Voyages Of Sinbad!





Ray Harryhausen was a dynamic film creator, but it was the work on Sinbad the Sailor in bright color and stunning "Dynarama" which made him something of a household name, at least in households which harbored at least one "Monster Kid" reared on Forry Ackerman's Famous Monsters of Filmland


I've seen The 7th Voyage of Sinbad many many times, but always in the context of the fact it's an important Ray Harryhausen movie. This time I was watching it as part of a long part of films drawn from the mythology of The Arabian Nights. So I have to say the story was more a focus than the techniques of filming for the very first time, which sadly should be the way one watches any movie.


I will assume everyone has seen this movie, so this is a spoiler rich overview. I've never been particularly warm to Kerwin Mathews as Sinbad, but this time his performance didn't annoy as much as it has in the past. I was more plugged into Sinbad as a character and frankly he's quite the piece of work. Head over heels in love with his Princess (Kathryn Grant) he puts everyone else around him at extreme risk and frankly their lives are less important to him than hers or his own.


Beyond the striking creations of the Cyclops and the Dragon, this movie offers up a fantastic villain in Torin Thatcher as Sokurah the Magician. His grasping for power is what motivates all the action in the movie and his schemes put all the characters into extreme danger, but it's readily evident he cares not a whit for anyone. Even his own personal safety is secondary to his getting and keeping power, particularly the magic lamp which will give him control of a very youthful-looking genie.


The scene pictured above of Kerwin Mathews at the wheel of his ship was mentioned in some of the extra material I watched and he said he was incredibly ill on the day this scene was shot and he stepped out of his sickbed for this one scene only. It has become a signature image for the movie thanks to the comic and the soundtrack album which both sport it as a cover.


Marvel adapted the story, combining in one vigorous image by Gil Kane and Joe Sinnott Sinbad, his Princess, the Cyclops and the deadly sword-swinging skeletons. 

(Kathryn Grant and an admirer.)

Years later the team of Schneer and Harryhausen struck again. 


The Golden Voyage of Sinbad from 1973 is a diamond in the rough when it comes to Sinbad lore. John Phillip Law is my favorite of the three Captains Sinbad who appeared in the Schneer-Harryhausen fantasy films. He feels like a rogue who could be a hero.


He comes across as more legitimate visually and tonally than does Kerwin Mathews and both of them are much better actors than the later Patrick Wayne. Teamed with the exotic and attractive Caroline Munro and you have a delightful pair of protagonists to watch as the adventures unfold.


The villain of this one is Prince Koura played wonderfully by Tom Baker. Reports say that his performance here convinced the Doctor Who folks to give him that gig which made him a superstar among fantasy fans. If he'd never been Who, he'd still have been one of the best villains in a Sinbad movie. The way his magical efforts keep draining him as the movie progresses is remarkable to watch. I was also struck by the loyalty his man has for him throughout the film, which never waivers. Koura must have some characteristic which instills such loyalty, making him a worthy opponent.


The battle with the goddess Kali is among my favorite Harryhausen moments in any of his films and works beautifully in this one. I think I might like it a little better than the famous skeleton fight from Jason and the Argonauts...a little. The Centuar and the Griffin are fine as they go, but lack the visual impact of earlier Harryhausen beasts like the Cyclops or the Hydra.



This movie got the full adaptation treatment from Mighty Marvel in two issues of the science fiction comic Worlds Unknown. Clearly the folks at Marvel saw potential in crossing over these stories with fans of Conan.

And for fans of the lovely dames here you go. First with other castmates and then by her lovely lonesome.


(Caroline Munro)

But Harryhausen and company were not finished. 


Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger is a diverting adventure tale with lots of delightful fantasy elements blended into it. It's hurt from the get-go by its lead Patrick Wayne. Sadly, Wayne is simply not up to the role and while perfectly handsome enough lacks the acting chops to hang with pros like Patrick Troughton and Margaret Whiting. Fortunately for Wayne he has relative novices alongside him such as pretty Taryn Power and a lovely up and coming Jane Seymour. Both are absolutely lovely to look at, but their acting in this vehicle at least is pretty indifferent.


On the Harryhausen special effects front, this is a movie with strengths and weaknesses, but mostly lost opportunities. The Minoton which dominates a lot of screen time marches all the way to the top fo the world with the villains but then gets crushed moments before a potentially awesome battle with the Troglodyte who ends up fighting a Sabretooth tiger instead. Why not have both. Harryhausen has said this movie was a bit of a rush job, in response to good ticket sales on The Golden Voyage several years before and frankly it shows.


The show even fails to my mind to make full use of such awe-inspiring sights as Petra which is only glimpsed in the early parts of the movie. Apparently none of the main actors went to the location and that really damages the sense of wonder which could have been achieved there.


The story itself seems a patch job, too similar in many respects to the earlier Golden Voyage. This is the only one of the three Sinbad movies I got to see in the theater and I remember being diverted by it at the time. But having seen the others, the deficiencies in this entry are sadly all too apparent.

But the ladies were beauteous! Behold!

(Jane Seymour)

(Taryn Power)



Marvel neglected to offer up any adaptation of this movie. It was left to the generically named "General Publishing" outfit to fill the bill with a version drawn by Ian Gibson. For more on the Sinbad adaptations check out this highly informative article "The Seven Comics of Sinbad" at Darkworlds Quarterly. 

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Friday, September 18, 2020

StarCrash!


Like many a young man in those long ago days of the 70's I developed a strong infatuation for the ravishing actress Caroline Munro. The raven-tressed lovely showed up in more than a few creature features from the folks at Hammer as the era of their dominance was closing out.

caroline munro | Explore Tumblr Posts and Blogs | Tumgir

She was in the last Dracula movie in which Christopher Lee portrayed the benighted Count and she was both damsel in distress and helper to Captain Kronos as he battled vampires in those mythical olden days in England. She popped up in Harryhausen's Golden Voyage of Sinbad and perhaps most famously for those not already in the Munro fan club tried to shoot up Roger Moore from a helicopter in The Spy Who Love Me. Invariably her charm shined through the screen as she flashed her tempting smile and somehow made her eyes twinkle. (How does she do that?)

Rare STARCRASH (1978) Publicity Stills | Caroline munro, Fiction movies,  Sci fi movies

So when she gets a starring gig as space outlaw "Stella Starr" in a low-budget Italian Star Wars knock off it's not an event to be ignored by her fans. StarCrash is an amazing and often silly mashup of a movie with sparkling effects and both delightful and clumsy scenes, as well as offering up to the whole wide world the one and the  only "The Hoff". Marjoe Gortner (not to be dismissed) gets the top billing in the movie, but we all know this is Munro's movie and add in an up and coming and devastatingly handsome (downright pretty really) David Hasselhoff and you might have a flick for the ages, or at least for the pretty people. The small role by Christopher Plummer is merely a garnish on an already heady feast. Joe Spinnell is aboard the train as the mustache-twisting villain to boot.


I'm sure I saw Star Crash when it was in theaters, but I equally certain I have not seen it since and so it faded from my memory. If anything I thought it was forgettable. Last year I picked up a DVD from Shout Factory which offered up not only the movie but incredibly copious commentaries from StarCrash "super fan" Stephan Romano. He gives us not just one, but two rich full commentaries on the movie focusing on different aspects of the movie. The DVD I have also has an insightful look into the special effects which were done with astounding creativity by Armando Valcauda with no budget and almost no studio.

(StarCrash's Guardian)

TALOS — THE FIRST ROBOT?. Talos, in 'Jason and the Argonauts'… | by Dr Karl  Shuker | Medium
(Harryhausen's Talos)

Whereas Star Wars was intentionally looking for a lived-in universe, StarCrash is attempting the most colorful one it can muster. It's a goofy movie that enjoys itself and offers many a love note to sci-fi flickers of earlier eras, especially those of Ray Harryhausen.


Luigi Cozzi ("Lewis Coates" on the posters) directed a delightful romp of a film that stands the test of time because it makes no attempt to be part of any particular time, it just wants to have a good time. It's weird, it's strange, but it grows on you like a warm fungus.

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Monday, August 26, 2019

Dojo Classics - Captain Kronos!


Captain Kronos - Vampire Hunter is a 1974 Hammer Films entry, in which they try to change up the status quo by focusing on a "charismatic" hero as opposed to a "fascinating" villain. Captain Kronos, a 16th Century former military officer is the man of the hour. He travels the countryside, aided and assisted by the hunchbacked Professor Grost, looking for vampire outbreaks. He then uses his outlandish ways and Samurai sword to dispatch the blood suckers when he comes across them. At least that's the theory.


In this first installment (it was intended apparently to be a series) the duo is joined by a lovely Gypsy girl and they go to a village which is preyed upon by vampires who kill with a kiss and suck the life essence (as opposed to just blood) from their victims, mostly young girls. An old army buddy who is the local doctor has sent for Kronos and they set about solving these crimes using all manner of peculiar and quaint methods.


As Hammer movies go this is an oddball for sure. It's Spaghetti western meets horror flick, and the blend is not always smooth. The action sequences can be clunky, as the swordplay looks a bit uneven in some scenes. The acting, much of it overdubbed, is stiff, and despite some clever visuals from time to time, it's a movie that fails to deliver much of a scare.


The movie is meant to be seen through the eyes of the Gypsy girl, but I think it forgets that sometimes and we lose track of her for some stretches. Also for all her physical beauty, Caroline Munro is not the most subtle actress all the time, and perhaps is not up to what is requested here. I think that is true of the hero Captain Kronos too played by Horst Janson, who has all his lines dubbed by some Brit.



On the other side of that John Carson turns in a credible job as the local and tragic Doctor and John Cater as Professor Grost is quite good.


There are some interesting settings, but for some reason, probably cost, not a single shot that I can remember happens at night. The omnipresent sunshine might be good for the western style, but it damages the ultimate effect of any horror offering. The director, who is also the writer, Brian Clemons, ends up with a movie which is neither fish nor fowl, and lacks the pace or budget to overcome its weaknesses.


All in all, Captain Kronos is a passably entertaining movie with some neat touches, but minus a true emotional core, or at least the personnel capable of communicating that. It was adapted (minus the approval of Clemons who indicates he owns the character) into comic form.


UPDATE: These many years later, I've seen the movie a few more times and as I read this review again, I think I was a bit unkind to the lovely Ms. Munro in regard her acting. There is an arch quality to this whole spectacle and that affected all the performances, hers included.

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Friday, August 23, 2019

Girls On Film - Caroline!


Caroline Munro might be my favorite of the all the myriad beauties who have graced the screen. Unlike so many others, she has dark luxurious hair and a penetrating stare. Her eyes are stunning and I despite her well-known reputation as a proper lady, I cannot remember a more hypnotizing come hither look.


Ms. Munro was in some of my favorite flicks too (because she's in them I reckon) such as The Golden  Voyage of Sinbad with its late era Harryhausen magic, and even then all eyes are on Carol. There was Captain Kronos, the Vampire Killer and a few other Hammer flicks even one in which she falls prey to Christiopher Lee's Dracula himself.


Most recently I fell in love all again with Munro in her starring role as Stella Starr in the Star Wars wannabe movie Star Crash. It's a crazy movie with a thousand moving parts, but most eyes most of the time are on Munro again.

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Wednesday, August 7, 2019

At The Earth's Core!


At The Earth's Core is a delightful romp of pure science fantasy. The classic tale by Edgar Rice Burroughs is well told in this John Dark produced and Kevin Connor directed effort. It follow's the previous year's offering of ERB wonder called Land The End of Time. But where as the previous movie has sought to reap as much reality as it could from the fantastic elements, this one dives head into a rich lush artificiality.


This movie felt like a modern reinvention of one of the classic ground-breaking Melies movies, particularly The Trip to the Moon. The hooplah as David Innes and Dr. Abner Perry strike out into the depths of the planet. There's no fifteen minute waste of getting to know you, it's a blast from the get-go and soon enough they find themselves in Pellucidar, a land where it is always day and man is merely one of the intelligent species seeking to dominate the environment. The momentum doesn't cease and we meet Dia and other Pellucidarians when David and Abner captured and taken to the city of the Mahars, the flying reptiles who seek to control Pellucidar.


Every scene in this movie was shot on a stage giving the whole affair an heightened artificial feeling, one which works for the elevated manner of the storytelling. With monsters created using the Suit-mation techniques I didn't find a thing in this movie that couldn't be recreated or approximated on the stage. This is a movie that never lets forget it's a fiction and that's just fine.

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