.

.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

The Price is Right!

Right for a trip into

The Video Vault of Mora Tau!

that is!






It's a whole week dedicated to the "Vincentennial" - actor Vincent Price's 100th birthday celebration, Friday, May 27th, 2011!


Let's check out the man in action - with some primo video clippos!


The man was everywhere, it seems, so there are a lot of clips to choose from - I think we'll try a couple of longer ones and supplement them with some shorter bits. Actually, you know what, there's so much good stuff available, I'm going to load this post up!


 Let's start off with a terrific interview segment on the British show Wogan from 1982 - Terry Wogan interviews Vincent Price:












Let's join VP for one of his myriad sendups of his horror film stature:






ps - Vincent Price was not really known for playing vampires...but all in good fun!






Here's Vincent - a short film by Tim Burton - about a boy who's just like us: we all love Vincent Price! I think you'll find the voice of the narrator...familiar...









To me, one of the most fascinating endeavors Vincent Price got involved with was his Vincent Price collection of art, sold through Sears and Roebuck. I know this post is supposed to be video clips - but this collection was so unique - I want to devote a little more time and space to it. Here's a description of the program, straight from the Sears and Roebuck archives:



In 1962, art was not really new to Sears. As early as 1895, Sears offered oil paintings at prices of 90 cents and up. The services of many distinguished artists, such as Andrew Loomis, McClelland Barclay and Norman Rockwell had designed covers for the Sears catalog. Yet, company executives observed that except for a few major cities, fine art was virtually inaccessible to the general public.

    Sears set out to end this isolation by merchandising art throughout the country, in a presentation from which pictures could be readily purchased to enrich American homes. Vincent Price was approached to take charge of this program. Price, although well-known by the public as an actor, was also known in the international art world as a collector, lecturer, former gallery-owner and connoisseur who spent a dozen years studying art at Yale, the University of London and other art centers abroad.


    Price was given complete authority to acquire any works he considered worthy of selection. He searched throughout the world for fine art to offer through Sears. He bought whole collections and even commissioned artists, including Salvador Dali, to do works specifically for this program.

    At first, the idea of a large merchandising organization, such as Sears, maintaining a serious, top-quality art collection met with skepticism. But the public - and the artists themselves - soon learned that Sears would not compromise with good taste or artistic quality.

    On October 6, 1962, the first exhibit and sale of "The Vincent Price Collection of Fine Art" took place in a Sears store in Denver, Colo. Original works of the great masters - Rembrandt, Chagall, Picasso, Whistler and more - as well as those of the best contemporary artists at the time were offered for sale in this first exhibit and throughout the program's existence.

    Items ranged in selling price from $10 to $3,000. Sears customers could also purchase items on an installment plan for as little as $5 down and $5 a month. Each work in the program was guaranteed as an original work of quality, just as Sears offered quality guarantees on its lawnmowers and TVs. The program was an instant success. So many pictures were snatched up the first day that an emergency shipment had to be flown in lest the walls be bare the next day.

    The program expanded in the weeks that followed, adding exhibits in 10 additional Sears stores including Hartford, Conn., Harrisburg, Penn., San Diego, Calif., Evansville, Ind., Madison, Wis., and Oklahoma City, Okla. After the successful exhibition and sale of these first 1,500 pieces, the program was expanded nationwide to all of Sears stores throughout the country, bringing original works of fine art to the American public in unprecedented quantity and quality.

    Works from the collection were also offered for sale through a special catalog in 1963 and 1964. In 1966, the Sears Vincent Price Gallery of Fine Art was opened in Chicago, Ill., providing a mass audience for talented, but less well-known, young artists. The collection also held temporary exhibits in several hundred communities throughout the country and permanent galleries operated in several cities.

    By 1971, when the program ended, more than 50,000 pieces of fine art passed through a constantly changing collection into American homes and offices.



Here then is a segment from a film produced to introduce the Sears employees to the art collection, hosted by the man himself. Yes, it's a little over 10 minutes long - but you can always skip it if time is an issue. But it's a fascinating look at Vincent Price minus any of the horror trappings or campy comedy - here's a serious look at a devoted art connoisseur, trying to impart his love of the subject to others.








A couple more clips - we're still going to be under a half hour in total - even if you watch them all (I'm not counting your reading time). But you know - you don't get many chances to celebrate someone's centennial, so what the hey!





Here's Vinnie in one of his most fun roles - as the Batman villain Egghead, here teamed with co-villain Olga Queen of the Cossacks (Anne Baxter). In this shortest clip I could find, the villains are facing third season bonus Bathero Batgirl, but no Dynamic Duo.











And lastly, we'll keep the lights on in the blog with a commercial sponsor - in this case Polaroid, along with their spokesman - you know who - and their extraordinary new VHS cassette...take it away, Mr. Price!










Maybe this will be a post you can keep coming back to - check out a clip or two at a time! In any case, hope no one's been scared off, and til next post, you Can Poke Me With A Fork, Cause I Am Outta Here!

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

The Price of Eggs in China!

What does that title have to do with, er, well, the Price of Eggs in China?







Sounds a little random to me. Especially since we are celebrating a whole week dedicated to the "Vincentennial" - actor Vincent Price's 100th birthday celebration, Friday, May 27th, 2011!



Wait a minute...did I say random? Oh, then it must mean it's time for a big steaming pot of...


Random Stew!


Only, maybe not so random since we're sticking to our Birthday Boy as a subject this time out!

And who knows, we might find side dishes to go with our stew, too!









Art was very important to Mr. Price, so let's take a look at a nice piece courtesy artist Rob Kelly:









    In 1979, ABC was doing very well with the Saturday night combo of The Love Boat and Fantasy Island. This was obviously a long time ago in a land far far away - I mean, can you imagine Saturday night network TV ratings meaning something?
     Anyhoo, NBC and CBS both responded with shows of their own, and interestingly, both of the pretender shows revolved around trains. NBC's show is going to get chatted about in one of these random round-ups soon - but the CBS effort fits right in to tonight's theme - since it starred Vincent Price!




Time Express did the one thing NBC's show did not - it tried to mash The Love Boat and Fantasy Island into one show! Vincent Price and his lovely real-life wife Coral Browne played Jason and Margaret Winters, the mysterious hosts of a fantastic train that allowed passengers to travel back in time to a critical moment in their lives.


It was hinted that everyone working on the Time Express was something other than strictly human, including the other regulars (Woodrow Parfrey, William Phipps, and James Reynolds). Here's a full cast shot:


I did not see the show when it aired - I started to tune in the first one for Vincent Price, but when I realized it was going to be like Fantasy Island - and that the Prices would disappear after an introductory scene - just like Mr. Roarke - I checked out. Of course, like the Love Boat, each week the train would be loaded with familiar faces - guest stars included Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara; James MacArthur; Richard Masur; Morgan Fairchild; Lyle Waggoner; Lee Meriweather; Marcia Strassman; John Beck; and Steve Kanaly. And that was just in four episodes!

Four episodes, because sadly, despite what seems like a fun if derivative premise and the Prices as hosts, the show only managed to get four episodes on the air - almost exactly 32 years ago this month - before low ratings meant the Express had run out of Time.



Thankfully Mr. Price had other irons in the fire...





Remember these?







That's the ad I saw in several comic books across several months....I never owned one of these sets - I am intrigued by it now - as it appears the drying apparatus was a glass jar you mounted over a light bulb! I actually used a form of The Shrinker to torture some of my army men and "guys." ("Guys" being my name for my...action figures, you filthy thing! But never dolls! Never!)







Actually, seeing all those apples has made me a mite peckish...let's see what else might be cooking to go along with them and the Chinese Chicken...











And after we eat we can sit down to a nice board game. What do we have in the way of a classic game with an added Western theme and perhaps a great character actor on the box?





Yeah, that looks like fun! Sadly, this was another game I did not own, nor did I know anyone who did, so I never got to play it. *sigh*








After a meal and game time we have to clean up. Of course, I'm sure Mr. Price will help...













This has been a fun blog post - wish I could commemorate it with a picture...especially if it was in 3-D!




Yep, because apparently "No" was not a word that often passed Vincent Price's lips, he even starred in a demonstration video for a new 3-D camera - that produced the effect in a lenticular format. I was going to try to define lenticular here, but wow, that's complicated - suffice to say - it's the kind of picture often used (even today) on the front of home video movie covers to give either a 3-D effect or a morph between two images effect.






In any case, we always wrap these Random Stew posts up with a little cheesecake dessert - but we won't lose the theme, even if this was a little less random than usual...


Valli Kemp as Vulnavia, and Vincent Price as Dr. Anton Phibes
Dr. Phibes Rises Again (1972)



And with that - Scene! Til next time, you Can Poke Me With A Fork, Cause I Am Outta Here!



Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Price Wotta House!


It's a whole week dedicated to the "Vincentennial" - actor Vincent Price's 100th birthday celebration, Friday, May 27th, 2011!





Foto Frenzy Presents: House on Haunted Hill (Allied Artists, 1959)





I like a lot of William Castle's movies. I think this is my favorite.











The House. Ennis-Brown House - 2655 Glendower Avenue,
Los Angeles, California. Stalk away!










The Man. Vincent Price. Here he plays Frederick Loren, who rents a haunted

house for one of his wife's crazy parties. Only maybe his agenda goes deeper

than that...









The simplest of plots: spend a night in a haunted house, take home $10,000. And look,

in addition to Vincent Price, you get Elisha Cook, Jr and Richard Long too!










No one has ever hated my caption font more.



 








Nora prepares to bite the hand that feels her.










Annabelle should have taken more calcium - she might have
ended up with a better bone destiny.








Turns out the wife was right: Fred was stringing her along...


This movie has fallen into the public domain and so can be found on any number of bargain DVDs, usually for a buck. I can't guarantee you'll get a pristine transfer, and the print might be kind of beat up; but I think the scratches and pops add to the charm, and what do you want for a dollar? Blu-Ray with commentary? In any case, that means there's no reason not to see this flick at any time, so check it out!






Til next we meet, you Can Poke Me With A Fork, Cause I Am Outta Here!

Monday, May 23, 2011

The Price of Doing Business!

Maniacal Movie Poster Monday #18!




It's a whole week dedicated to the "Vincentennial" - actor Vincent Price's 100th birthday celebration, Friday, May 27th, 2011!



One of the ways business is done in the entertainment industry is the selling of the product...

...did someone say Movie Posters? 



Let's take a look at some Vincent Price posters across the decades of his long career...


Let's start in the 1940's...


The Invisible Man Returns  (Universal Studios, 1940)






Only his fourth movie!




Let's jump ahead 20+ years...to the 1960's...



The Masque of the Red Death  (American International, 1964)






One of his best, in Roger Corman's 'Poe Cycle.'



and then let's do another 20+ year jump...to the 1980's...




The Great Mouse Detective  (Walt Disney Productions, 1986)
 
 
 
Disney didn't promote their voice artists back in the day - but that's Vinnie's villainous character Professor Ratigan center stage bottom. Price took great joy in this one.
 
 
 
And that will wrap up more fun with Vincent Price! Until next post, you Can Poke Me With A Fork, Cause I Am Outta Here!

Sunday, May 22, 2011

The Price of Fame!

Getting that Tingler feeling all over...






It's a whole week dedicated to the "Vincentennial" - actor Vincent Price's 100th birthday celebration, Friday, May 27th, 2011!


We'll let Buddha Man take this one!






The Tingler (Columbia Pictures, 1959) Vincent Price stars in his second William Castle movie, and as usual, the flick is a fun little thriller. Vinnie plays Dr. Warren Chapin, a dedicated researcher with an earnest young assistant (Darryl Hickman - Sharky's Machine), a venomous wife, and a really wild line of research - what is it that snaps peoples spines when they die of fright? Eventually, he discovers that all of the pent up fright energy in the body causes a microscopic creature he calls the Tingler that resides in everyone's spinal area to grow uncontrollably in proportion to the level of fear, and the nasty wormlike creature eventually grows large enough to use its pincers to crumple up your backbone like a matchstick.

Man, that is one ugly necktie Vincent Price is wearing...
The only way to escape the Tingler is to SCREAM - as that releases the energy that the creature is growing from and shrinks it back to miscroscopic size. This crazy bit of sci-fi is then blended into an even more eclectic plot involving the evil Mrs Chapin; a nebbishy little man who owns a movie theater with his deaf mute wife; and several scary sequences that don't make a lick of sense but are cool as heck to watch. Castle's gimmick for this flick was to have the action come to its climax in that movie theater, so he could have the film you're watching "break" and Vincent Price's voice hammer at you from the darkened theater to "Scream! Scream for your lives!" To insure you might want to go along with the idea, several seats in the theater were wired up to "tingle" the viewer's backside as though the worm monster was working on their spine! Incredible! The other really cool sequence in the black and white movie involves a bathtub full of blood - look at this shot from the scene:

 
 
Is that just awesome or what? This may be less of a family flick than some of the other Castle movies, what with bathtubs full of blood, axe murderers, and a big scary worm crawling around, but it is a jammin' little flick, highly recommended to those so inclined! Check this one out!




And with that I wish a Happy 100th birthday to Mr. Vincent Price! And always remember...no mere mortal can resist...the evil of...the Thriller!

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Saturday Night at the Movies! 5/21/11

Who cares what picture we see?


Well, Vincent Price will be having his "Vincentennial" 100th birthday on Friday, May 27th, 2011, so let's suppose he would and check out something with him in it...oh yes, one of my faves...














One of the last great horror characters from the old school, before the 80's brought us the Slasher Brigade - Dr. Anton Phibes murdered his way through two movies in the early 70's with Price in the role twice. There was talk from that point forward of a third film, but it never got off the ground. (I've actually noodled around with the idea of writing a relaunch screenplay for the character myself...of course, Mr. Price is gone, but I have a pretty good idea who could take over the role - if he wouldn't mind playing another horror icon character...that's all I'm saying about that - can't afford to give away all my good ideas!)
    This film is wonderfully mounted, thanks to director Robert Fuest; dripping with Art Deco excess and played out with a wink and a grin by all the terrific British cast. If you like your Guignol Grand, this might be the movie for you, and it sits ready to watch (backed with its sequel on the same disc!) at any time...like even tonight, if you care to stop by!

I think we'll see if we can keep the Vincent Price theme going this week...so til next post, you Can Poke Me With A Fork, Cause I Am Outta Here!

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

The Video Vault of Mora Tau! 5/18/11

Let's see what we can get up to probing the shelves of the Video Vault for an entertaining clip or two (or three)....





Let's get random! How about a little Benny Hill?







And a little SCTV?









And we'll pay the bills with a commercial - along with some familiar faces!












Til next post, you Can Poke Me With A Fork, Cause I Am Outta Here!