| Halloween Horrorthon, Spooky
Double Features
More all night terror & Halloween events at
the Aero Theatre!

Its that delightful time of the year again -- autumn leaves fall from the
trees, the time between dusk and dawn lasts a lot longer and sudden cool breezes catch you
unaware on lonely streets, raising the hairs on the back of your neck. There will also be
goblins and ghosts, zombies and beasties at large in our neighborhood -- and we dont
mean Hollywood Boulevard! Theyll be cavorting up on the big screen in Hammer horror
masterpieces (HORROR OF DRACULA, BRIDES OF DRACULA, CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF and
THE GORGON), Hollywood Golden Age classics (both the 1941 and Pre-Code 1931 version
of DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE) and, last but not least, for the very first time at the
Egyptian, a Dusk-to-Dawn Horrorthon on Halloween night, including SANTA SANGRE
(directed by Alejandro "EL TOPO" Jodorowsky), gore-malicious PIECES (in a
brand new 35mm print!), Italian sleaze-horror classic ATOM AGE VAMPIRE, José
Larraz British/Spanish giallo co-production SCREAM
AND DIE!,
René Cardonas loopy NIGHT OF THE BLOODY APES and the jaw-dropping Italian
gorefest BURIAL GROUND. Help us celebrate All Hallows Eve in suitably
ghoulish fashion! Enter to win frightening favorite DVDs throughout the weekend,
courtesy of Fox Home Entertainments www.wedareyoutowatch.com,
Warner Bros. and MGM.
Artwork courtesy of Midnight Palace.

Thursday, October 30 - 7:30 PM
Hammer Peter Cushing/Terence Fisher Double Feature:
HORROR OF DRACULA, 1958, Warner
Bros., 82 min. Director Terence Fisher and screenwriter Jimmy
Sangsters stripped-to-the-basics, expertly paced take on Bram Stokers popular
bloodsucker remains one of the most satisfying, just plain exciting gothic horror films
ever made. From Christopher Lees revelatory, broodingly romantic performance
as Dracula (introducing a sexual frisson to the proceedings) to Fishers masterful
direction, from Peter Cushings Professor Van Helsing to Jack Ashers
atmosphere-drenched cinematography and James Bernards superb score, this is
perfection. One of Hammers most enduring masterpieces! More on
this film | trailer
THE BRIDES OF DRACULA,
1960, Universal, 85 min. Dir. Terence Fisher. When Christopher Lee temporarily
balked at getting typecast as the undead count, Hammer had to create a new bloodsucking
villain, Baron Meinster (David Peel), for its second Dracula installment. Chained
in his castle lair by his conflicted mother (Martita Hunt), the Baron is
unwittingly released by a stranded French schoolteacher, Marianne (Yvonne Monlaur),
and proceeds to wreak havoc amongst the local female population. Luckily, Marianne is
rescued by traveling vampire hunter Professor Van Helsing (Peter Cushing) and the
battle of good and evil begins in earnest. A rip-roaring tall tale and one of
Hammers most rewarding vampire pictures. IMDB | Trailer
Friday, October 31 - 7:30 PM
DUSK-TO-DAWN HORRORTHON
Take refuge from the Halloween insanity out on Hollywood Boulevard in the cozy
Egyptian, seeing a sextet of mind-numbing, brain-frying grindhouse horror favorites!
SANTA SANGRE, 1989, MGM Repertory, 123 min. Director Alejandro
Jodorowsky used this long-awaited return to the big screen (after cult faves EL TOPO
and THE HOLY MOUNTAIN) to conjure up a feverish nightmare of gaudy, surreal images -- some
sacred, some profane and many just plain shocking. Coming on like Ken Russell during THE
DEVILS era, he fashions a dreamlike odyssey of an emotionally scarred youth
(Alejandros son, Alex Jodorowsky) still suffering from the sight of the
bloody battle to the death of his carnival showman father (Guy Stockwell) and
mother (Blanca Guerra). Imagine Fellini and Bunuel dropping acid together to remake
PSYCHO in backwater Mexican slums with nods to old Universal horror as well as masked
Mexican wrestling (!) and 70s Euro giallo films, and youll get an idea
of the wonderful strangeness on display. Produced by Dario Argentos brother,
Claudio."
a wild kaleidoscope of images and outrages, a collision between
Freud and Fellini. It contains blood and glory, saints and circuses, and unspeakable
secrets of the night." - Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times NOT ON DVD IMDB
| Review | Trailer
New 35mm Print! PIECES (MIL GRITOS TIENE LA NOCHE), 1982, Grindhouse Releasing,
89 min. Dir. Juan Piquer Simon. In this infamous grindhouse thriller, a young boy
with twisted ideas about sexuality due to his overly prudish mother, grows into a serial
killer on a rampage, collecting body parts to assemble his jigsaw puzzle of the ideal
woman. Christopher George (TVs "Rat Patrol") is the hardboiled cop
on his trail in a bizarre college town. Filmmaker Simon keeps the absurd number of red
herrings coming at breakneck speed. Adding to the strange quality of the film
its set in Boston but was shot in Puerto Rico! With Paul Smith (MIDNIGHT
EXPRESS). More on
this film | IMDB
SCREAM
AND DIE!,
1973, Grindhouse Releasing, 96 min. A scary, atmospheric chiller about a psycho sex killer
directed by José Ramon Larraz (VAMPYRES) and marketed in America as THE HOUSE THAT
VANISHED (in a bid to lure LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT fans). But this British/Spanish
co-production has more in common with the Italian giallo thrillers of the era
(Note: The killer sports black leather gloves and there loads of red herrings!). Model Andrea
Allan and her shady boyfriend break into a house in the woods. When the owner
unexpectedly returns, the two uninvited guests hide in a closet and end up witnessing a
murder though they never see the killers face. Allan escapes into the forest,
hides in a junkyard and returns to her flat in the morning, only to find her beau missing.
Soon, several unusual people enter her life, including a bizarre downstairs neighbor who
raises pigeons and an artistic young man (Karl Lanchbury) who makes masks.
Allans fears are confirmed when her roommate is the next to die
"Larraz
is a talented Spanish director whos mostly known by American film audiences as the
man behind the erotic horror film VAMPYRES
well worth a look if you
enjoy unusual European thrillers."Kimberly Lindbergs, Cinebeats NOT ON DVD More
on this film
ATOM AGE VAMPIRE (SEDDOK,
LEREDE DI SATANA), 1960, Holland Releasing, 87 min. Dir. Anton Giulio Majano.
This variation on Franjus EYES WITHOUT A FACE still remains one of the most gonzo
versions ever perpetrated on an unsuspecting audience. An obsessed scientist (Alberto
Lupo) bent on restoring the beauty of a scarred, runaway stripper (Suzanne Loret)
with skin grafts and radiation therapy, periodically transforms himself into a hideous
monster to kill women to retrieve the pituitary glands required for the treatment. This
essential Italian sleaze-horror classic has only been available in seriously-cut-for-TV
prints for decades, missing big chunks of footage. Weve got the original American
theatrical release version. More on this film | trailer
NIGHT OF THE BLOODY APES (LA
HORRIPLANTE BESTIA HUMANA), 1969, Grindhouse Releasing, 83 min. Veteran Mexican genre
director René Cardona remakes his earlier DOCTOR OF DOOM in color with added gore
and nudity. A doctor desperate to save his dying son gives him an ape heart transplant,
with periodic transformations into a brutish simian killer as the unintended consequence.
Throw in a slow-witted cop (Armando Silvestre) and his girlfriend -- a female
wrestler (Norma Lazareno) conscience-stricken after accidentally putting her
opponent in a coma -- and you have the ingredients for mucho entertaining drive-in fare. "
All
of this adds up to top entertainment
certainly deserves its reputation as a must-see
film for all fans of trash and exploitation cinema. Unencumbered by any semblance of sense
or good taste, it stands as one of the best and wildest examples of early Mexican
horror
" - James Mudge, BeyondHollywood.com 1969
Review | trailer
| Imdb
BURIAL GROUND, 1981, Grindhouse
Releasing, 85 min. Dir. Andrea Bianchi. An archeology professor invites friends
down to his villa for the weekend. While awaiting their arrival, he visits a nearby
Etruscan tomb, not guessing that he will be the catalyst for a mass resurrection of the
ancient undead. Bourgeois couples become zombie fodder almost from the time they arrive,
amping up the gruesome gore factor like few other Italian zombie films. A laugh-out-loud,
so-bad-its-good lollapalooza of politically incorrect guts-and-grue that is best
viewed with an audience to be fully appreciated. With Karin Well, Gianluigi Chirizzi and
Peter Bark as the weird, incestuous manchild, Michael. (This original print is
slightly faded.) More
on this film Plus great classic horror trailers
between the films, one free popcorn per patron, Monster Energy Drink, costume contest,
giveaways and other surprises! Enter to win frightening favorite
DVDs throughout the weekend, courtesy of Fox Home Entertainments www.wedareyoutowatch.com, Warner Bros. and
MGM.10% off coupons for nearby Mels Drive-In
(open 24 hours) available to hungry patrons. Special ticket prices: General $15;
Senior/Students: $12; Members: $10.
Saturday, November 1 - 7:30 PM
Hammer Horror Terence Fisher Double Feature:
THE CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF, 1961,
Universal, 93 min. Director Terence Fishers atmospheric thriller not only has
the distinction of being Oliver Reeds first leading role, but also Hammer
Studios only werewolf film. And a chillingly fine werewolf film it is, with cursed
Reed the offspring born on Christmas Day to a mute servant girl (Yvonne Romain)
raped by a bestial beggar (Richard Wordsworth) in the dungeons of the sadistic
Marques Siniestro (deliciously depraved Anthony Dawson). Kindly Don Alfredo (Clifford
Evans) raises Reed in a good home, but when the sensitive young man reaches puberty
and his desires are thwarted, the result is a frenzy of bloody carnage. More on this
film | trailer
New 35mm Print! THE GORGON, 1964, Sony Repertory, 83 min. One of
director Terence Fishers most eerie and underrated masterworks focuses on a
German village haunted by Megara, the still potent spirit of the gorgon of Greek
mythology, bent on transforming all those who gaze upon her into figures of stone. Local
doctor Peter Cushing is engineering a cover-up to protect someone (perhaps his
beautiful assistant, Barbara Shelley?). Returning Richard Pasco, whose
brother and father were petrified to death, wants to get to the bottom of the mystery, but
gets sidetracked when he falls for Shelley. Soon, desperate Pasco sends for his prickly,
sarcastic mentor (Christopher Lee) who proceeds to track down the monster. Filled
with a chilling ambience, it remains one of the most dreamlike of Hammer films. More on this film
DAYLIGHT SAVINGS TIME ENDS TONIGHT! SET BACK YOUR CLOCKS!
Sunday, November 2 - 7:30 PM
Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde Double Feature:
DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE, 1941, Warner Bros., 114 min. If
not for the classic status of this Robert Louis Stevenson story, its doubtful either
MGM boss Louis B. Mayer or the Hays censorship office ever would have let it be
released. Its almost as daring as the Pre-Code 1931 version and, in subtle ways, it
goes even farther out on a limb. The erotic chemistry between Spencer Tracy (as the
good Jekyll and his brutish doppelganger) and Ingrid Bergman (as Ivy, the doomed
barmaid) is frighteningly intense. Mr. Hydes emotionally abusive treatment of the
vulnerable girl is the most convincing depiction of a sadomasochistic relationship put on
screen in mainstream motion pictures until the 1970s. Likewise, Tracys insistence on
a minimal amount of make-up in the early Jekyll/Hyde transformations brings a welcome
realism to the story. Performances by Tracy, Bergman, Lana Turner as Jekylls
upper-crust fiancée and Donald Crisp as her prudish father are among their best.
Director Victor Fleming (GONE WITH THE WIND) evokes a gas lit Victorian London and
cooks up one of the trippiest, most surreal dream sequences of the 40s this side of
SPELLBOUND. IMDB
Pre-Code Horror! DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE, 1931, Warner Bros., 97 min. Although
its not as nuanced as the later Tracy version, many people prefer this Pre-Code
shocker. Fredric March won a Best Actor Oscar for his performance, going way over
the top with facial tics and bestial mannerisms in his Hyde persona, coming off like an
urbane, simian werewolf with the gift of speech! Miriam Hopkins is the unfortunate
barmaid Ivy, and Rose Hobart is Muriel, Dr. Jekylls devoted fiancée.
Director Rouben Mamoulian and cinematographer Karl Struss make revolutionary use of
the camera, doing things way ahead of their time in movement, point of view and editing,
endowing many sequences with a fluid feel in what is essentially a set-bound piece. The
characters of Muriel (Beatrix in the Tracy version) and her father did not appear in
Stevensons original story, but were invented later by playwright T. R. Sullivan in
an 1887 stage adaptation. IMDB |