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Jokes (1979– )
Forgotten
4 April 2006
This sketch comedy came and went rather quickly and was critically drubbed at the time. Probably in accord with that, I remember only one segment, featuring a Christopher Lee-like vampire Count attempting to woo a victim at a typical Aussie backyard barbecue, being taken for a gatecrashing "wog" by the ocker hosts, wrathfully displaying his power over lightning and storm, and being repelled accidentally by brandished cruciform BBQ implements. I think that's about as inspired as it got. The cast, encompassing talented thesps like Noni Hazlehurst and Chris Haywood, had nothing to apologise for so who to blame? I would not mind a second, up-to-date viewing but this seems unlikely. Perhaps Australia's shortest-lived show of its type until LET LOOSE LIVE flashed through the Seven Network in 2005.
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10/10
essential monster comedy
4 January 2005
Top ten. Desert Island Disc. Universal's best-ever monster rally. Bud and Lou are at the top of their game, even Mrs Costello Snr said so. You get Bela Lugosi as Dracula for only the second and final time in his career. Lugosi is a joy; he plays Dracula as more suave, more sinister, and more disarmingly fatherly, than his continental goof-ball 1931 interpretation. Lon Chaney Jr on the other hand plays Larry Talbot as a TOTAL goof-ball, finally gone around the bend from the stress of his monstrous double-life; muttering dire warnings about imminent moon-rises that he then totally fails to heed; making anonymous life-or-death demands of clueless Lou via transatlantic phone call; fronting up to his nemesis Dracula at last, after pursuing him across continents, only to wilt shamefacedly before the Count's minor-league mind-games. Glen Strange looks great in the new streamlined makeup (alas for Jack Pierce, however) and has a thousand per cent more to do as the Frankenstein Monster, than in both his earlier 'cameo' appearances in the 'HOUSE OF' movies put together. The score is marvelous and director Barton keeps things moving at a cracking good pace. And what a straight man is Bud Abbott! He even gets to play a few lines with genuine drama here, once he realises Lou really isn't delusional. Highly recommended for Universal Monster fans, A&C fans, and movie fans in general.
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The Evil Touch (1973–1974)
Rose-Coloured Glasses
12 April 2004
I too have fond memories of this show though I recall its budgetary limitations being obvious even by then-contemporary standards.

The lake monster in DEAR BELOVED MONSTER looked like a briefly-glimpsed head of cabbage. But then so did the 'revelatory' 1970s photos from the underwater camera at Loch Ness.

One interesting episode was A GAME OF HEARTS. Darren McGavin plays a heart surgeon who takes a heart from a not-quite-dead donor. He then starts getting chilling phone calls from the dead man. The final scenes have him fleeing through a deserted house with his undead tormentor in pursuit. It was shot in very NIGHT STALKERish style.... substitute the donor, with a black and bloody hole in his chest, with Barry Atwater and you're pretty much there. And the character's name? Gabor Skorzeny. The vampire's name in the NIGHT STALKER TV movie? Janos Skorzeny! Hmmmm..... well imitation is the sincerest form of flattery I guess.

I would certainly endorse another look at THE EVIL TOUCH.
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