Saturday, February 5, 2022

THE SAINT - "Sibao" (1965)

 
This week's Sainturdy Night Special is brought to you in part by the law firm of Dewey, Cheatham, & Howe, where you're sure to get a fair shake whether you're innocent or not. For all services unlawful or illegal, they're the guys to turn to!

Roger Moore is the angelic Simon Templar, and Simon Templar is "The Saint."

So what the Hell is a Sibao you ask? Well, besides being the name of this Episode 21 from the third season of "The Saint," it's also the name of a beautiful woman!

For some reason. stories about voodoo in the country of Haiti seem to be a lot more believable that say, something about some white guy swinging through the trees in Africa.

 

"Sibao" opens in a bar in Haiti, with voodoo drums, and this guy doing his voodoo dance.

He wears a simple skull face masque, but it's pretty effective in the Creepy Department!

Then, POOF! He disappears into thin air right in front of everybody. Pretty cool trick, but is it really a trick, or is it voodoo?

The patrons of the club are pretty impressed.

 
Simon Templar, who just happens to be sitting at one of the tables is pretty impressed himself.

This is the lovely Sibao as played by Jeanne Roland. Jeanne might only have 15 credits to her name, but most of them are good ones, besides "The Saint," she appeared in four other crucial 60's TV shows where they needed an exotic looking woman that included "Secret Agent," "The Avengers," "The Baron," and "Man With A Camera." On the big screen, she was in "The Curse Of The Mummy's Tomb," "Casino Royale," and "You Only Live Twice."

Simon Templar's pals are Nicholas (The Night My Number Came Up) Stuart as Atherton Lee, and Jerry (Lolita) Stovin as Tony Kreiger.
Atherton is cool, but Tony is a real dick. It's hard to imagine that Simon Templar would have much to do with a guy like him.

Tony even turns into a bigger jerk the more he drinks, and he drinks a lot!

Tony is being such an ass, he's really starting to attract the attention of some of the local guys! He was even annoying me!

John Carson is some weird cat named Theron Netlord. Theron thinks he's a big shot, and he's forcing Sibao into marrying him. With a name like Netlord, I can see how a person could get pretty full of himself, especially these days!

John had a long and varied career, that ranged from "Blood Beast From Outer Space" to "Poirot." When I said varied, I meant it.
 
Jerkface Tony pushed too many people's buttons, including Netlord's, and when leaving the bar, his brakes fail miserably. Not only does he die when he hits this tree, but on the way here, he uncontrollably hit Sibao and her brother. Sibao gets a big cut on her leg, and is okay, but her brother dies, and now there's going to be a need to have a big voodoo ceremony!

Turns out Tony wasn't really Tony, but instead was this guy named David Grant, and he wasn't really drunk, but was in Haiti doing some investigating. It was all a show.
 

Netlord decides to serve up some free lunch at the wedding with himself on the menu.
 
Voodoo?
Can Simon Templar figure it all out?
You're just going to have to decide that on your own, and HERE's the place to do it! 
And you can either thank The Lord, or thank The Lord! 

Friday, February 4, 2022

THE THREE STOOGES In "3 Dumb Clucks" - 1937

Here's a fun little episode from our favorite guys, this time their rich father is dumping the Stooges' mom for a young blonde, and they must do something about it, even though they are all in prison at the time...

The prison guard tells the boys they got mail.

It's from their mom, it looks like their old man has fallen for a younger woman, and she needs her boys to escape and go stop their dad from doing what he's about to do...

Curly starts using a hacksaw on some bars and the guard wants to know what the noise is. Curly tells him, termites!

That didn't work, so Curly drills holes in the wall while Moe pretends to be shaving with an electric razor to distract the guard.

When the guard leaves, the boys crawl through the hole in the wall, and hightail it out of there to their pops' place...

In the meantime, Pops' new gal, Daisy, is there talking about their wedding plans. The main thing she wants is for him to shave off his sideburns because they make her sneeze.

Daisy leaves and the boys show up, they want to know what's up with him dumping their mom for a younger woman.

Pops puts the hurt on the boys with one good slap across their faces. He then gives them a big wad of cash and tells them to go get nice clothes for the wedding.

As it turns out, Daisy is the sister of Chopper, and with the help of their henchman, well, they plan on stealing Pops' money after the wedding!

By chance, Daisy almost runs over the boys after they come out of the clothing store, dressed in  their fancy new duds. She sees Curly and thinks it's Pops, thinking he shaved off his sideburns. The boys pile into the car and it's off to Chopper's place for the wedding ceremony.

At Chopper's place, Larry and Moe mix some drinks for the occasion.

Then the boys hear chopper and his pal talk about how to get rid of Pops. Shooting him is too noisy, so they decide to throw him out a window, from the 14th floor!

Curly is trying to escape from Chopper and his pal, he runs into the room, sees the two, turns around and runs away.

Pops shows up in the elevator without his sideburns, confusing the two crooks because they just saw him run down the stairs in the opposite direction! This goes on for awhile. Curly was actually injured when the guys pushed back into the elevator, required some stitches in his scalp.

Anyway, the boys go to the patio trying to find a way out of the madhouse.

The boys decide to climb the flagpole but Chopper and his pal take the pin out of the housing that holds the pole in place, My legs get weak whenever I watch this stuff.

Chopper cuts the rope the boys are holding on to, and they plummet to the ground below!

Luckily, some awnings soften their fall and they land on their dad, and they drag him back to their mom! Odd how things can work out...

Wednesday, February 2, 2022

NINE DECADES OF ALICE IN WÜNDERBAR LAND (1903 - 1985)

Well, it's 2-2-22, and it's Groundhog Day to boot, so here's something worthy of a date like that! Ring the bell Deputy Dog cause it's time for another Weird Ass Wednesday in The Dungeon.
Every once in a while you can stump the internet. I've looked for a number of things or people over the years and still not gotten any answers, but I was really surprised that I could find no reference anywhere to a book I found in our public library back in the 1960's. The title was "Alice In Wünderbar Land" and was written in what I would call German Pigeon English. We just thought that "Alice In Wonderful Land" was hilarious. With Tabonga as my witness, I swear it's true.

 
 There have been so many versions of "Alice In Wonderland" made over the years, there was at least one every decade since the 1900's, and I guess it just proves that if a story is good enough, it never gets old.
So here you go, starting with this silent version from 1903 with May Clark as Alice.

This 1915 version had Viola Savoy as Alice. She was only fifteen at the time, made one more film, and retired.

Out of all the early versions, I think this one is more stunning than the rest.

This is the kind of scene I'm talking about.
Almost all the versions of Alice seen here can be seen for real on youTube, and this one is worth the effort!

This 1923 Disney version had Virginia Davis as Alice, a little girl who visits an animation studio, but it wasn't called "Alice In Wonderland," but instead was titled "Alice's Wonderland."

"Alice's Wonderland" was followed by fourteen more shorts featuring Alice in stories like "Alice's Spooky Adventure," and "Alice Cans The Cannibals."

In 1931, Ruth Gilbert got her turn at being Alice in one of the stranger versions. This was the first of five acting credits for Ruth up to 1954. She came back in 1992 to be in the movie "Me Myself and I."
A much more produced and well known version of "Alice In Wonderland" came out in 1933 with Charlotte Henry as Alice, and Cary Grant as Mock Turtle.

This rabbit creeps me out, and Alice is pretty creepy herself!

This 1949 production included odd stop-action animation, and had Carol Marsh as Alice.

Nine years later, Carol would be one of Hammer's first female vampires as Lucy Holmwood in "Horror Of Dracula."

1951 brought us probably the most famous version of "Alice In Wonderland," the animated Disney classic with a ten year old Kathryn Beaumont doing the voice of Alice. 
 
 
Kathryn was also the model for the animated Alice, and she was the voice of Wendy in "Peter Pan" too.

This TV movie musical version from 1966 was actually titled "Alice Through The Looking Glass," and not "Alice In Wonderland," but we'll count it anyway. There was also another "Alice In Wonderland" that was a British production made in 1966 that had Anne-Marie Mallik as Alice.

Judi Rolin was Alice in this feature and some of the rest of the cast included Jimmy Durante, Agnes Moorehead, Jack Palance, and the Smothers Brothers.
 
In 1976, it started getting really weird for Alice, and somebody decided it was a good idea to do a movie called "Alice In Wonderland: An X-Rated Musical Fantasy."

This version starred Kristine (Meatballs) DeBell as Alice.

After that, there's just more and more and more, but I'm going to end it with this 1985 TV movie that had Natalie Gregory in the lead role. Natalie has 26 credits to her name, but hasn't appeared on TV or in films since 2013. Last update on IMDB was 1995, and it said that she was studying to get a degree in physics. That might have something to do with it.

Or maybe it had something to do with being in a movie with Telly Savalas as The Cheshire Cat, that would do it to me! Any Questions??

Monster Music

Monster Music
AAARRGGHHH!!!! Ya'll Come On Back Now, Y'Hear??