Poster Gallery
Genocide – War of the Insects (1968)

December 7th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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I know I’m one of the few who honestly appreciates director Kazui Nihonmatsu’s (The X From Outer Space) obscure find-the-bomb killer bug thriller, the unflinchingly nihilistic Konchu Daisenso – better known under its international title Genocide or translation War of the Insects.  The plot concerns an island hunt for a lost H-bomb that encounters a bizarre Commie project to train killer bugs and an even stranger effort by Holocaust survivor Kathy Horan (Goke: Body Snatcher From Hell) to destroy all humanity with them.  Turns out everyone is screwed anyway, as the bugs have a doomsday plot all their own…

No poster could ever effectively demonstrate the overarching oddity of this one, penned by Goke: Body Snatcher From Hell alums Kyuzo Kobayashi and Susumu Takaku, though this Mexican lobby card based on a variety of producer Shochiku Company’s own ad art certainly tries.  The artwork features giant bugs, explosions, a lecherous Caucasion and hottie Kathy Horan wielding a pistol while wearing a yellow bikini.  The outlandish text translates as follows:

More Exciting than The Naked Jungle! More Terrifying than Dracula and the Thrillers of Alfred Hitchcock!
The World is in peril… Humanity is on the verge of extermination in a last war… the Final War!
Huge Insects Invade the Earth!

The central still features Chico Lourant (the Wester Island native in Gamera vs. Jiger) as an American bomber pilot tied down and tortured by communist spies as vindictive Holocaust survivor Kathy Horan looks on.  It seems important to note that the giant insects promised by both this poster and Shochiku’s own trailer for the film never materialize, but the regularly-proportioned bees and wasps cause no end of mayhem all the same.

This is another Mexican lobby card I’m proud to have in my slowly growing collection, with ridiculous artwork and stunning colors.  Size: approximately 13″ x 16″  Title: La Invasion Destructora (roughly The Invasion of Destruction)  Company: Organizacion Apolo, S.A. and Centro Independiente de Peliculas, S.A.




Poster Gallery
Crack in the World (1965)

November 15th, 2010 | article by | No Comments »
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A well-meaning scientist on the brink of death leaves a legacy of world-wide calamity in Crack in the World, a Philip Yordan (Day of the Triffids) production released through Security Pictures and Paramount in 1965.  Starring real-life husband and wife acting duo Kieron Moore and Janette Scott as well as a late-career Dana Andrews (Night of the Demon, Where the Sidewalk Ends), this proto-disaster effort benefits from a talented cast and a welcome turn by Eugene Lourie (Gorgo) as director of special effects.  Andrew Marton (King Solomon’s Mines) directs, from a screenplay by Jon Manchip White and Julian Zimet.

I’ve been patiently waiting to get my hands on this audacious bit of studio advertising for a nice long while now, and some recent good luck at the auction block finally sent it my way.  An old-school one sheet in the defunct size of 27″ by 41″, this poster was just too big and too fragile for me to risk scanning it by hand – a real shame, as the shoddy digital camera photos don’t even begin to do it justice.  Aside from some fold separation and a tear on the right hand edge this is in great shape, with crisp, clean imagery and surprisingly little wear.  The usual pinholes aren’t even in evidence.

While the central illustration is awesome, what I like most about this poster are the comic-style action frames that let would-be audiences in on what they can expect from the film.  SEE daring magmanauts, the earth torn asunder and a buxom blonde scientist, too!




Poster Gallery
Prophecies of Nostradamus: Catastrophe 1999 (1974)

August 23rd, 2010 | article by | 1 Comment »
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Toho’s epic 1974 disaster-a-minute masterpiece needs no introduction to anyone familiar with this site, where our review of it remains one of our top-read month after month.  Directed by Toshio Masuda (Tokyo Blackout) and starring Tetsuro Tanba (Bohachi Boshido: Code of the Forgotten Eight), Toshio Kurosawa (Evil of Dracula), Kaoru Yumi (ESPY) and Yoko Tsukasa (Yojimbo), the film was pushed into production after the box office superstardom of 1973′s Submersion of Japan and took top honors in its release year of 1974.  Prophecies of Nostradamus: Catastrophe 1999 (original title, Nosutoradamusu no Daiyogen) remains a picture well ahead of its time in terms of concept, predating the nonsense mega-disaster hits of Roland Emmerich by several decades.

Though sold to me as a lobby card, this Mexican poster measures in at a considerably larger 16.5 x 21 inches.  Prophecies of Nostradamus: Catastrophe 1999 is another Toho effort produced with international distribution in mind, and included a lengthy English language sequence set in New Guinea, in which an investigative team goes out to hunt for one earlier lost only to discover that they have been reduced to a state of putrid living-death by a lingering radioactive fog.  This sequence would cause Toho considerable trouble shortly after release, when the shocking nature of both it and a late-film look into a post-apocalyptic future enraged advocates for survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.  The offending footage was subsequently cut from Japanese release prints, with Toho banning the picture from screenings entirely after its initial theatrical run.

Nevertheless, the film made a pretty penny in international markets and left an indelible impression on my young mind when it finally made its way to domestic television in the early ’80s in its truncated The Last Days of Planet Earth form.  This poster showcases one of the film’s most memorable moments, featuring two stills from the controversial New Guinea sequence.  The rest of the artwork, including a ship on a frozen sea, a Concorde SST, a desolate war-ravaged Earth and a chillingly reflected cityscape, are culled from the original Japanese one-sheet design.  The title translates to The End of the World: The Prophecies of Nostradamus Fulfilled! (El Fin del Mundo: ¡Las Profecias de Nostradamus se Cumplen!).




Poster Gallery
The Last War (Sekai Daisenso) 1961

August 17th, 2010 | article by | 1 Comment »
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I picked up this beauty just over a year ago and, finding myself with a bit of free time this morning, decided to scan it for your amusement.

This small Thai theatrical poster (it measures just 15 1/2 by 21 inches) for Toho’s The Last War dates back to 1962 and is a nice variation on the art produced by the studio for the film’s domestic release, showing an ominous red-saturated mushroom cloud looming over decimated Tokyo.  The artwork features Akira Takarada, Yuriko Hoshi, Nobuko Otawa and even the American actor who first pushes the button quite prominently, while top-billed Frankie Sakai is suspiciously absent.

Typical of Thai posters from this time period, the colors are bold and vibrant even if fine detail is lacking (as in the rather crude renditions of the Eiji Tsuburaya effects set pieces featured at the bottom).  The title conveniently appears in Thai, Japanese and English, lest anyone be confused as to what film they’re going to see.

The Last War was marketed broadly and was picked up for most international markets and was picked up by Brenco Pictures (along with Gorath and The Human Vapor) for theatrical release in the United States.  With the failure of the other two properties and the folding of Brenco itself The Last War never made it to US cinemas, and its considerably abbreviated English language edit remains one of the harder to find of Toho effects imports.