Cult Camp Classics Vol. 1: Sci-Fi Thrillers: DVD Review (2007)
Featured are 1959's "The Giant Behemoth," in which London comes under attack by a huge palaeosaurus who gets zapped by radiation (natch) and goes on a tear. Next up is another behemoth, 1958's "Attack of the 50-Foot Woman," which is about as pre-feminist as it gets.
But nothing in this set--which just gives and gives and gives--compares to the worldwide fear Zsa Zsa Gabor ignited in 1958 when she co-starred in "Queen of Outer Space," the sci-fi disaster that cast Eva's sister as the only rational woman on the planet Venus. (So much for typecasting.)
With Zsa Zsa unable--or unwilling--to conceal her Hungarian accent, the movie became sci-fi for the Eastern bloc, a ripe piece of trashovitch that suggested horror in its purest form.
One of the better new releases.
Grade: A-
October 17, 2010 at 10:47 AM
I am doing research for my college paper, thanks for your excellent points, now I am acting on a sudden impulse.
- Kris