The Astro-Zombies | Canibuk
Here is what goes best in the world and underground space for the kind of art that has something interesting to say and deserves to be discovered, appreciated and / or redeemed. If you want to stay informed robinsons place manila about festivals, concerts, shows, launches and exhibitions taking place at underground world, interested in independent film, and curious sounds extreme, erotic art, miscellaneous fetishes, bitching good drinks, vegetarian cooking, comics, redemption cultural, zines, film B, anarchy, libertarian thought, atheism and critical sense of humor, follow Canibuk, the blog that has megalomania as a slogan!
"The Astro-Zombies" (or "Space Zombies" or "The Space Vampires", 1968, 91 min.) Ted V. Mikels. With: Tura Satana, John Carradine, Wendell Corey, Tom Pace, Joan Patrick and more a bunch of strangers.
The plot of "The Astro-Zombies" is almost nonexistent: A scientist, after he is fired from the American space agency, decides to create monsters with parts of bodies of innocent victims. Logical that the creatures will flee and ready high confusion (sorry, could not resist). After the opening credits that are shown in the pictures of toy robots walking from one side to the other, we can expect nothing more than a confusing plot. But as the director goes by the name of Ted V. Mikels (here with a hand in the production and script of actor Wayne Rogers of the TV series "M * A * S * H *") know that this is a delicious no nonsense budget completely Mongolian where nothing works, with horrific interpretations, rough editing, technical work amateur (the lighting of the film is extremely poorly made), horrible makeup and a lack of priceless robinsons place manila logic that transforms robinsons place manila the film into an object of worship for its absolute badness.
Ted V. Mikels, born in 1929 with the actual name of Theodore Mikacevich, is a director of the category of Ed Wood, HG Lewis, Doris Wishman and Ray Dennis Steckler, who always filmed without any money and a profit with their films, which enabled the purchase of a house in Glendale, California, where he still lives with a harem of women. He began his artistic career working in theater and soon after left for the lucrative film production bums market American drive-ins. It was also a smart producer who, imitating William Castle always had promotional gimmicks such as ambulances and hot nurses to the public that could go wrong in view of his films (only if getting sick with anger by the lovely chinelagem!).
His first feature was "Strike Me Deadly" (1963) where a park ranger and his wife witness a murder and are held captive in a remote robinsons place manila cabin. "The Black Klansman" (1966), a saga about racial intolerance which masquerades as a black and white joins a group of hillbillies of the Ku Klux Klan to avenge the death of his daughter in an attack that this group performed in church the girl attended, was an attempt to film more serious of Mikels. After "The Astro-Zombies," Mikels performed the classic "The robinsons place manila Corpse Grinders" (1971, currently in pre-production the third part of the series), a small number of dementia on a factory cat food that for face the crisis, decides to start making their ration with corpses local cemetery. Ted then made a series of films where the titles promised much more than was seen on screen, such as "Blood Orgy of the She-Devils" (1972), about the dark world of witchcraft; "The Doll Squad" (1973), trasheira action poorly filmed with a cast of beauties that included Tura Satana, Francine York and Todd and Lisa "Ten Violent Women" (1982), his insight into the world of horny female prisons in WIP bad / fun.
As producer Ted V. Mikels made several good films, especially the brilliant "The Worm Eaters" (1977) of hilarious manic Herb Robins, a legendary classic movie bad taste where many people eat worms in ice cream, pies and dogs hot with big smiles on their faces and the inspired "Children Should not Play With Dead Things" (1973) dual Alam Ormsby and Bob Clark (who later became rich and famous with the teen series "Porky's"), where the budget was so short that the extras who played the zombies in the film went on strike to find that the food that was served to them was actually arranged trashed a restaurant nearby. In 2002 Mikels filmed the sequel to "The Astro-Zombies" entitled "Mark of the Astro-Zombies", starring an aging (and Gordona) Tura Satana, but still owns a great sense of mood. There are also sequels "Astro Zombies: M3 - Cl
Here is what goes best in the world and underground space for the kind of art that has something interesting to say and deserves to be discovered, appreciated and / or redeemed. If you want to stay informed robinsons place manila about festivals, concerts, shows, launches and exhibitions taking place at underground world, interested in independent film, and curious sounds extreme, erotic art, miscellaneous fetishes, bitching good drinks, vegetarian cooking, comics, redemption cultural, zines, film B, anarchy, libertarian thought, atheism and critical sense of humor, follow Canibuk, the blog that has megalomania as a slogan!
"The Astro-Zombies" (or "Space Zombies" or "The Space Vampires", 1968, 91 min.) Ted V. Mikels. With: Tura Satana, John Carradine, Wendell Corey, Tom Pace, Joan Patrick and more a bunch of strangers.
The plot of "The Astro-Zombies" is almost nonexistent: A scientist, after he is fired from the American space agency, decides to create monsters with parts of bodies of innocent victims. Logical that the creatures will flee and ready high confusion (sorry, could not resist). After the opening credits that are shown in the pictures of toy robots walking from one side to the other, we can expect nothing more than a confusing plot. But as the director goes by the name of Ted V. Mikels (here with a hand in the production and script of actor Wayne Rogers of the TV series "M * A * S * H *") know that this is a delicious no nonsense budget completely Mongolian where nothing works, with horrific interpretations, rough editing, technical work amateur (the lighting of the film is extremely poorly made), horrible makeup and a lack of priceless robinsons place manila logic that transforms robinsons place manila the film into an object of worship for its absolute badness.
Ted V. Mikels, born in 1929 with the actual name of Theodore Mikacevich, is a director of the category of Ed Wood, HG Lewis, Doris Wishman and Ray Dennis Steckler, who always filmed without any money and a profit with their films, which enabled the purchase of a house in Glendale, California, where he still lives with a harem of women. He began his artistic career working in theater and soon after left for the lucrative film production bums market American drive-ins. It was also a smart producer who, imitating William Castle always had promotional gimmicks such as ambulances and hot nurses to the public that could go wrong in view of his films (only if getting sick with anger by the lovely chinelagem!).
His first feature was "Strike Me Deadly" (1963) where a park ranger and his wife witness a murder and are held captive in a remote robinsons place manila cabin. "The Black Klansman" (1966), a saga about racial intolerance which masquerades as a black and white joins a group of hillbillies of the Ku Klux Klan to avenge the death of his daughter in an attack that this group performed in church the girl attended, was an attempt to film more serious of Mikels. After "The Astro-Zombies," Mikels performed the classic "The robinsons place manila Corpse Grinders" (1971, currently in pre-production the third part of the series), a small number of dementia on a factory cat food that for face the crisis, decides to start making their ration with corpses local cemetery. Ted then made a series of films where the titles promised much more than was seen on screen, such as "Blood Orgy of the She-Devils" (1972), about the dark world of witchcraft; "The Doll Squad" (1973), trasheira action poorly filmed with a cast of beauties that included Tura Satana, Francine York and Todd and Lisa "Ten Violent Women" (1982), his insight into the world of horny female prisons in WIP bad / fun.
As producer Ted V. Mikels made several good films, especially the brilliant "The Worm Eaters" (1977) of hilarious manic Herb Robins, a legendary classic movie bad taste where many people eat worms in ice cream, pies and dogs hot with big smiles on their faces and the inspired "Children Should not Play With Dead Things" (1973) dual Alam Ormsby and Bob Clark (who later became rich and famous with the teen series "Porky's"), where the budget was so short that the extras who played the zombies in the film went on strike to find that the food that was served to them was actually arranged trashed a restaurant nearby. In 2002 Mikels filmed the sequel to "The Astro-Zombies" entitled "Mark of the Astro-Zombies", starring an aging (and Gordona) Tura Satana, but still owns a great sense of mood. There are also sequels "Astro Zombies: M3 - Cl
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