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Mad Monster Party

 
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Mad Monster Party

  • Director: Jules Bass
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Creature Film, Parody/Spoof
  • Themes: Werewolves, Mad Scientists, Mummies
  • Release Year: 1968
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 94 minutes

Plot

The only theatrical feature from Rankin/Bass -- the outfit behind countless animated holiday TV specials including Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and Frosty the Snowman -- this quaint and colorful production pays amusing homage to nearly every movie monster in Universal's catalog, even to the extent of recruiting Boris Karloff to supply the voice of Baron Von Frankenstein. The story begins as the aged Baron invites all members of the Worldwide Organization of Monsters to attend the unveiling of his ultimate creation, a potion capable of destroying all matter. Before the assembled guests -- including Count Dracula, The Wolf Man, The Mummy, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Invisible Man, and The Creature from the Black Lagoon -- Frankenstein announces his retirement as the group's leader and the selection of his successor: his bookish, allergy-ridden nephew Felix. Chaos ensues, as nearly every creep and creature on the list begins conspiring against each other in a bid for the coveted office, including the Baron's outrageously voluptuous assistant Francesca (whose very presence stretches the film's "G" rating). The "Animagic" technique of stop-motion puppets is a refreshing medium for the larger-than-life monsters, and the parade of horror movie put-ons should delight viewers of all ages. Though the original negative was believed lost to neglect after the film's poor box-office performance, a pristine print has resurfaced, much to the delight of devoted fans who first discovered this gem via Halloween TV airings. ~ Cavett Binion, All Movie Guide

Review

Although it barely registered a blip at the box office, Mad Monster Party? has developed a bit of a cult status, especially among fans of monster movies and animated films. (Tim Burton, for one, has cited it as an influence on his work.) Technically primitive by modern standards, the stop-motion “animagic” still has a peculiar and indefinable charm; while it is never really believable, it creates a reality of its own, so that even when a viewer laughs at the cruder moments, he still is drawn in by it. Of course, how willing a viewer is to go along with the process determines how much he enjoys Monster Party. It also helps to have a fondness for the bizarrely silly, as well as jokes that cause groans (many most likely contributed by co-scenarist Harvey Kurtzman, co-creator of Mad Magazine.). Fans of strong scripts (and especially of strong, well-motivated plots) should look elsewhere, as should fans of well-integrated musical numbers. The score is schlock, but it’s tremendously enjoyable schlock, and very much of its period; the title song (quite well sung by Ethel Ennis) has to be heard to be believed (although the varying sound quality makes hearing much of the film difficult). Despite all its flaws, Monster Party is oddly appealing; much credit must go to its tiny but well-used vocal cast, as well as to the sense of fun that pervades the film. This is one movie that is definitely greater than the sum of its parts. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide

Cast

Phyllis Diller - Frankenstein's Wife; Ethel Ennis; Gale Garnett; Boris Karloff - Baron Boris von Frankenstein; Allen Swift

Credit

Jules Bass - Director, Joseph E. Levine - Executive Producer, Jules Bass - Songwriter, Maury Laws - Songwriter, Arthur Rankin, Jr. - Producer, Forrest J. Ackerman - Screenwriter, Harvey Kurtzman - Screenwriter, Len Korobkin - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Frankenweenie; The Monster Squad; Saturday the 14th; Saturday the 14th Strikes Back; Transylvania 6-5000; The Nightmare Before Christmas; Van Helsing
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Mad Monster Party

Film poster
Directed by Jules Bass
Produced by Joseph E. Levine
Arthur Rankin Jr.
Larry Roemer
Written by Len Korobkin
Harvey Kurtzman
Arthur Rankin Jr.
Starring Boris Karloff
Allen Swift
Gale Garnett
Phyllis Diller
Ethel Ennis
Music by Maury Laws
Cinematography Tadahito Mochinaga
Distributed by Embassy Pictures (later StudioCanal)
Release date(s) March 8, 1967
Running time 94 min.
Country United States
Language English
Followed by Mad, Mad, Mad Monsters

Mad Monster Party is a 1967 American animated comedy film released by Embassy Pictures for Rankin/Bass Productions, Inc.

Contents

Plot

Baron von Frankenstein (voice of Boris Karloff) decides to retire, leaving the monster business to his nerdy nephew, Felix Flankin (Allen Swift). Frankenstein plans to announce his decision at a convention of monsters that includes his creature and the creature's more intelligent mate (Phyllis Diller), Frankenstein's seductive laboratory assistant Francesca (Gale Garnett) (resembling a caricature of Ginger Grant from Gilligan's Island, and playing the part of femme fatale), Dracula, the Werewolf, the Creature from the Black Lagoon, The Invisible Man, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde, The Mummy, It (a knock-off of King Kong), and many more. However when Felix proves to be an incompetent (and unsuitably kind-hearted) human, the monsters plot to eliminate him and gain control of Frankenstein's latest discovery: the secret of total destruction!

Cast

  • Boris Karloff as Baron Boris von Frankenstein
  • Allen Swift (name in the credits is misspelled as Alan Swift) as Yetch/Dracula/Felix Flankin/Invisible Man/Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde/Chef Mafia Machiavelli/Mr. Kronkite
  • Gale Garnett as Francesca
  • Phyllis Diller as the Monster's Mate
  • Ethel Ennis sings the opening song/score

Production

The film was created using Rankin/Bass' "Animagic" stop motion animation process. The process involved photographing figurines in still shots and re-positioning them after each shot, the same approach used in Art Clokey's Davey and Goliath and to create the giant ape in the original King Kong. In fact, a Kong-like creature makes a featured appearance in this film, although due to rights issues he is known only as "It." Rankin/Bass had created several stop motion productions before this, spurred by their first, the enormously successful television special Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer from 1964.

Classic monster movies were enjoying a resurgence in popularity in the late 1960s, and humorous monsters like The Addams Family and The Munsters were enormously popular. This campy film is a spoof of horror themes, complete with musical numbers and inside jokes appropriate for Halloween.

Mad Magazine creator Harvey Kurtzman penned the script (with another writer, Len Korobkin) and Mad artist Jack Davis designed many of the characters. Davis was a natural for the job, being famous both for his humor work and his monster stories in the pages of EC Comics. It has long been rumored that Forrest J. Ackerman had a hand in the script, but while the dialogue is rife with Famous Monsters of Filmland-like puns, Ackerman's involvement has never been confirmed and his name never appeared in the on-screen credits or in original promotion for the film at the time of its release. In fact, Rankin/Bass historian Rick Goldschmidt, in liner notes accompanying the Anchor Bay DVD release, denied Ackerman was ever involved, at the same time as the DVD packaging promoted Ackerman's name. Goldschmidt repeated this on this in a 2006 blog entry, based on his interviews with Korobkin, who claimed to have written the original screenplay which then was revised by Kurtzman, but never worked with Ackerman.[1]

Although mostly intended as a kids' picture, the film does feature some of Kurtzman's typically dark humor and a few mildly risqué jokes: Francesca falls over in one scene, and when Felix struggles to lift her she says, "I wanted you to know I'm no easy pick-up." In another scene, a character briefly has his head replaced with a cooked pig's ... and a "kids' picture" ending with a mushroom cloud would have been a bold move at the time.

The stop motion cute/ghastly look of the creatures in this film was very influential on Tim Burton's Vincent, The Nightmare Before Christmas and Corpse Bride; in particular, Burton creations strongly resemble the little monsters seen in the Stay One Step Ahead number.

In addition to the famous monsters seen in the film, Mad Monster Party also features several celebrity likenesses. Boris Karloff and Phyllis Diller's characters are both designed to look like the actors portraying them, while Baron Frankenstein's lackey, Yetch, is a physical and vocal caricature of Peter Lorre. Felix, on the other hand, strongly resembles James Stewart vocally but not physically. Additionally, as previously mentioned, Francesca was modelled after Ginger Grant, the voluptuous movie starlet character played by actress Tina Louise from the Gilligan's Island television series, while Dracula became the inspiration for the virtually identical looking The Count Muppets character a few years later on Sesame Street.

In 1972, Rankin/Bass produced a sequel of sorts, with the TV special Mad, Mad, Mad Monsters. This Halloween special featured many of the same monster characters, including an imitation of Karloff as the doctor (he died in 1969), although it presumably was not intended as a direct sequel since many of these characters perished at the end of Mad Monster Party. Mad, Mad, Mad Monsters was created using cel animation, rather than stop-motion. While Mad Monster Party still enjoys an ardent cult following, Mad, Mad, Mad Monsters has fallen into comparative obscurity.

Home video releases

2009 Special Edition DVD cover

The film has been available on video for years, first on original distributor Embassy Pictures' home entertainment unit, and then on other independent labels before StudioCanal acquired some rights to the film. Currently, Lionsgate distributes the movie on video under license from Studio Canal.

Before Lionsgate's current video release of Mad Monster Party, almost all video releases have been from 16 mm film and were of very poor color quality. The original film negative was water-damaged some years ago, but recently Sony Pictures Television (which now holds the television rights) unearthed an original 35 mm pristine print. This print was digitally remastered, and is the source for the current DVD issue and all subsequent television showings. Anchor Bay released the previous DVD on August 19, 2003, then re-released it on August 23, 2005 with additional features. On September 8, 2009, it was released as a "Special Edition" DVD by Lionsgate. The special features include a documentary including interviews with Rick Goldschmidt, Arthur Rankin, Jr., voice artist Allen Swift, storyboard artist Don Duga, musical director Maury Laws and others.

Soundtrack

CD cover

Although the opening credits identify Ethel Ennis as singing the opening theme song and, in the same frame, a soundtrack being available on RCA Victor, a commercially-released soundtrack was never produced in any format. In September 1998, Percepto released a CD of the soundtrack for the film. Most tracks are instrumentals. The exceptions are the artist-identified titles and the track, "Do the Mummy", which is performed by an unidentified, almost Beatles or Rolling Stones-sounding skeletal band.

  1. "The Baron"
  2. "Mad Monster Party" - Ethel Ennis
  3. "Waltz for a Witch"
  4. "Cocktails"
  5. "The Bash"
  6. "You're Different" - The Monster's Mate (Phyllis Diller)
  7. "Jungle Madness"
  8. "Our Time to Shine" - Francesca (Gale Garnett)
  9. "Mad Monster Party"
  10. "Do the Mummy" - Little Tibia and the Fibias
  11. "One Step Ahead" - Baron von Frankenstein and Company (Boris Karloff and Company)
  12. "The Baron Into Battle/Transylvania, All Hail/Pursuit/Requiem for a Loser"
  13. "Never Was a Love Like Mine" - Francesca (Gale Garnett)
  14. "Finale"

Remake

Warner Bros. is currently working on a remake of the film, possibly in CGI.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Rick Goldschmidt's Blogspot site. Are You Sure? December 27, 2006. Retrieved December 11, 2008.

External links


 
 
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