Creature of Destruction

Creature of Destruction
Written by Enrique Touceda
Directed by Larry Buchanan
Starring Les Tremayne, Pat Delaney
Music by Ronald Stein
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
Production
Producer(s) Larry Buchanan
Cinematography Robert C. Jessup
Running time 80 minutes
Production company(s) Azalea Pictures
Distributor American International Television
Budget Approx. $22,000[1]
Release
Original release 1967

Creature of Destruction is a 1967 American made-for-television film produced and directed by Larry Buchanan. It is an uncredited color remake of the 1956 movie The She Creature directed by Edward L. Cahn.

Plot summary

Suave, silver-haired stage hypnotist and self-proclaimed clairvoyant and expert on reincarnation Dr. Basso's experiments in hypnotic regression take his beloved beautiful blonde assistant/unwilling test subject Doreena back to a prehistoric past life as an amphibious humanoid 'Gill Monster'.[2]

Using the entranced Doreena to summon the physical manifestation of the hideous fish-faced creature out of the depths of a nearby lake, the tuxedo and top hat-clad Basso commands the savage she-beast to commit brutal murders, partially for revenge on a world which scoffed at his strange occult theories and unshakable belief that mindlessly destructive primeval monsters still lurk hidden deep within all of us, but mostly for the notoriety they bring his performances when he predicts the killings before they happen.

While detective Blake suspects the misanthropic mentalist is behind these horrible crimes, the only real evidence the police have to go on is a webbed footprint found at the first crime scene and a sketch of the creature based on a description from an eye witness who caught a glimpse of it after one of the murders, and they seem powerless to stop Basso's reign of terror.

Handsome young Air Force psychologist Captain Ted Dell, a respected scientist in the field of psychic research, gets involved in the case when his fiancee Lynn drags him to a party her father, retired business tycoon Sam Crane, is putting on for the rich guests at his Tanglewood Country Club and Resort where Basso is providing the entertainment. The cheerfully cynical Crane sees Basso as only another opportunity to con money out of a gullible public, but Ted becomes fascinated with the unhappy Doreena, the true source of Basso's paranormal power, and vows to free her from the unhealthy mental domination that the romantically obsessed Basso has her under.

With Ted's help, Doreena starts to gain the willpower to resist Basso, but not before the police confront the murderous million year old monstrosity down at a closed off beach, although their bullets have no effect on the indestructible creature. Angered at Ted's interference, Basso tries to kill him, but Doreena leaps in front of the gun and is shot instead, and her death causes the Gill Monster to fall to the ground and vanish back into the distant past. Heartbroken at losing the only person he has ever loved, Basso turns the gun on himself and commits suicide.

Cast

Production

The film was one of a series of extremely low-budget 16mm color remakes Larry Buchanan produced and directed for AIP (American International Pictures) via his Dallas-based Azalea Pictures[3] and was shot entirely in and around the Tanglewood Lodge[4] at Lake Texoma on the Texas-Oklahoma border.[5]

Because of the movie's bargain basement budget, Buchanan could not afford anything as ornately bizarre and iconic as Paul Blaisdell's design for the original She Creature, so his Gill Monster costume, created by Dallas advertising executive turned makeup effects artist Jack Bennett, consisted of an ill-fitting and only slightly modified green rubber wetsuit and a cheap-looking fanged and finned, ping pong ball-eyed fish mask which Buchanan later reused as a briefly seen cave-dwelling dinosaur in his 1969 film 'It's Alive!'.[1]

Aron Kincaid made the film as part of an out-of-court settlement with AIP. He filmed for two weeks to meet his contractual obligations then left to return home. Buchanan was upset as he still had three days of scenes for Kincaid to do. He accompanied him in the cab to the airport, taping the rest of his dialog in the back seat.[6]

In addition to playing one of the creature's victims, Texas Rockabilly singer Scotty McKay (a/k/a Max K. Libscomb, 1940-1971) performed three songs in the movie including Here Comes Batman, his tribute to the popular TV series.[7]

The quote that begins and ends most prints of the movie, "There is no monster in the world ... so treacherous as man", is attributed to the 16th century French Renaissance writer Michel de Montaigne.

Merchandise

In 2014 the Japanese company Target Earth announced a Creature of Destruction vinyl action figure as part of their Hangyonin/Merman series along with figures for Horror of Party Beach and The Beach Girls and the Monster.[8]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Palmer, Randy: Paul Blaisdell, Monster Maker: A Biography of the B Movie Makeup and Special Effects Artist, McFarland & Company, ISBN 0786440996, ISBN 978-0786440993, pp.244-246
  2. Buchanan, Larry: It Came From Hunger: Confessions of a Cinema Schlockmeister, McFarland & Company, ISBN 078640194X, ISBN 978-0786401949 p117-118
  3. Goodsell, Greg, "The Weird and Wacky World of Larry Buchanan", Filmfax, No. 38 April/May 1993 p 64
  4. http://tanglewoodresort.com/
  5. Buchanan, Larry: It Came From Hunger: Confessions of a Cinema Schlockmeister, McFarland & Company, ISBN 078640194X, ISBN 978-0786401949 p108
  6. Mark McGee, Faster and Furiouser: The Revised and Fattened Fable of American International Pictures, McFarland, 1996 p238-239
  7. http://www.rockabilly.nl/references/messages/scotty_mckay.htm
  8. http://lowbrownie.com/third-target-earth-hangyonin-release-by-target-earth/
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