Ever heard the name Sam Katzman? If you don't know it, you should and soon will. Sony is releasing another of their ICON OF HORROR sets this time spotlighting the work of Sam Katzman. Here are all the details:
LEGENDARY
B-MOVIE PRODUCER
SAM
KATZMAN
IS
SONY’S LATEST “ICON OF HORROR”
Four
Beloved Sci-Fi/Horror Flicks from the 1950’s
Make
Their DVD Debut for Halloween on October 16
Set
Includes THE
GIANT CLAW, ZOMBIES OF MORA TOU
CREATURE
WITH THE ATOM BRAIN & THE WEREWOLF
______________________________________________________
Culver
City, CA (August 6, 2007) – Sam Katzman, the amazingly
prolific and successful, if sometimes derided, producer who churned
out over 200 B-movies and serials over a four-decade-plus career,
finally gets a little respect via The Sam Katzman Collection,
the latest entry in Sony Pictures Home Entertainment’s “Icons of
Horror” DVD series. The two-disc set will be released Oct. 16th
at SRP $24.95.
The
four features in the set are all making their DVD debut, and two have
never been released in any video format. The highlight may be The
Giant Claw, the infamous 1957 sci-fi thriller about a giant
bird from outer space that chows down on people and planes; it stars
genre veterans Jeff Morrow, Mara Corday and Morris Ankrum and is
directed by Fred F. Sears. Another fan favorite is the
self-explanatory Zombies Of Mora Tau (1957), also
directed by Sears. It stars the 50’ Woman herself, Allison Hayes,
and was written by blacklisted screenwriter Bernard Gordon (whose
name has been restored for the packaging) under the name Raymond T.
Marcus.
The
new-to-video titles include Creature With The Atom Brain
(1955), written by the legendary horror/sci-fi writer Curt Siodmak
and directed by Edward L. Cahn. It stars Richard Denning in a
fast-paced gangsters-meet-reanimated-corpses tale. Cahn also directed
The Werewolf (1956), an Atomic Age chiller about a man
(Steven Ritch) who becomes the victim of a worthy scientific
experiment gone horribly wrong.
Sony
Pictures consultant Michael Schlesinger, who is supervising the
collection, notes, “People like to make fun of Katzman’s films,
but they’re generally quite well made, given their budgets and
schedules, and remain entertaining today. The Werewolf,
in particular, generates real poignancy in Ritch’s plight; it’s
not at all a standard wolfman movie. And the only thing wrong with
Giant Claw is the hokey bird itself; had Ray
Harryhausen done the effects, it would be considered a minor classic
today. That Sam had the sense to hire great writers like Siodmak and
Gordon proves he took these things very seriously, no matter how
far-fetched their premises may be. And that goes for directors as
well—Sears used a bubble machine to simulate an underwater oxygen
tank in Zombies; that shows a level of ingenuity many
quickie filmmakers lack.”
The
set also includes the original trailers for all four features, plus
bonus trailers, as well as Chapter 2 of Katzman’s 1951 serial
version of Mysterious Island, directed by the renowned
Spencer Gordon Bennet. Rounding out the package are a pair of
“scary” shorts: a 1959 Mr. Magoo cartoon, Terror Faces
Magoo, and an extremely rare two-reel comedy from
1936, Midnight Blunders, starring Tom Kennedy and Monte
Collins as a pair of bumbling detectives who cross paths with a
Frankenstein-ish monster.
Why
Chapter 2 and not 1? Explains Schlesinger: “The first chapter is
all exposition and frankly not very exciting. I thought it would be
better to get right to the action. And in any event, it opens with a
recap, plus everyone already knows the story from the 1961
Harryhausen version or the Jules Verne novel.”
Born
in New York City on July 7th, 1901, Katzman entered the movies in
1914 as a prop boy, and slowly worked his way up the ladder to
production manager by 1933. The following year, he became a
producer, a position he enjoyed until his death in 1973. (He also
directed a few films in 1937). Though his pictures were almost
always low-budget, he did sometimes land stars as big as Elvis
Presley, Lucille Ball, Bela Lugosi, Gene Barry and Dana Andrews, as
well as such music icons as Louis Armstrong, Johnny Cash, Little
Richard and Roy Orbison. And while this is the first SPHE release to
bear his name, four of his early rock-‘n’-roll time capsules
debuted on Sony DVDs earlier this year: Rock Around The Clock
and Don’t Knock The Rock,Twist Around The Clock and Don’t Knock
The Twist. and their 1960s
remakes,
The
Sam Katzman Collection carries a list price of $24.95. All
four features are presented in glorious black-and-white and their
original 1.85:1 theatrical aspect ratio. The films are unrated, but
are all suitable for family viewing.