2/18/2023 0 Comments Bella lugosi tor johnsonI used to rent these from a long gone local video store that carried all sorts of exotic, rare movies on VHS and laserdisc (great foreign titles, too). “Night of the Ghouls” was ‘rescued’ from a film lab in the 1980s (the destitute Wood couldn’t afford the lab fees) by bad film mogul Wade Williams. I later sought some of Wood’s other films, including “Bride of the Monster” (1955), “Glen or Glenda?” (1953) and even a pseudo-sequel to “Bride of the Monster” called “Night of the Ghouls” (1959). I still remember renting “Plan Nine From Outer Space” (1956) on laserdisc back in the mid 1980s and just about crying with laughter. was already well-known to me in 1994, because I’d long been a devotee of crappy cinema. ![]() ![]() Wood Jr.’s “Bride of the Monster” (1955) this was the closest Ed Wood ever made to a ‘mainstream’ movie… and it’s still bat-s#!t crazy. “I just want to tell stories…” The real-life Tor Johnson and Bela Lugosi on the set of Edward D.
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