April 17, 2026 View Online
movie monsters
Big Screen Beasties
Monster books about movie monsters are a tiny niche within a niche, a precariously endangered species since the dawn of the internet.
But first...

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This Week's Posts
MovieMonstersAylesA1
Warriors of the Galaxy (1983)
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This week, books on movie monsters, a genre killed pretty thoroughly by internet research tools like IMDB and Wikipedia. Back in the ’70s and ’80s, though, books like these (and magazines like Famous Monsters of Filmland) kept interest alive in old monster movies. Remember, there were no VCRs, no streaming services. If a movie didn’t get re-run as the The CBS Late Movie or in a revival theater, it was practically as if it didn’t exist. I am reminded how a lawyer faced difficulty in trying to screen The Blob in the early ’60s as part of a copyright infringement case involving Joseph Payne Brennan’s story “Slime;” I don’t think they ever did manage to see it before going before a judge.

Monsters from the Movies (1972), by Thomas G. Aylesworth and part of Lippincott’s Weird and Horrible Library, is a little different from most. It’s not content to be a mere catalog of monster movies. Rather, it’s interested in sussing out the connections between the movies and the original folklore and literature. Thus we get the story of the Lake Geneva storytelling contest between Byron and the Shelleys, as well as a primer on Paracelsus’ homunculus before delving into Frankenstein’s legacy on the big screen. A brief history of mesmerism is prelude to The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, the large body of undead folklore precedes discussion of Dracula, The Mummy and zombie films. And so on. The first chapter is a quick history of horror films, the last a potpourri of more monstrous monsters, like Godzilla and the Creature from the Black Lagoon. A meaty filmography and lots and lots of black and white still rounds things out. One of the photos has the caption “[…] in the film the scene was a lot more convincing.” Which is one of the most endearing lines I’ve ever read in a book on film.

There are a couple different editions of the book, but I think this one has the best cover, by Robert Quackenbush (probably best known for the children’s book Henry’s Awful Mistake). I’m a sucker for loosey goosey pen with a limited color palette.

MovieMonstersAylesA2
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Great Monsters of the Movies (1973)
Look at what they've taken from us.
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Movie Monsters (1975)
Another catalog of movies for pre-internet kids to pine to watch.
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Space Monsters (1977)
Aliens? No: Space Monsters!
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Creatures from Lost Worlds (1979)
Ah. yes, noted monster movie for children, It’s Hot in Paradise.
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Ninjas
2026-04-17 10.28.52

I continue to exist in my latter-day ninja phase. Is this a mid-life crisis? I dunno, could be. Better than buying a sports car if it is.

Rob Walsh's soundtrack for Revenge of the Ninja (1985) is, to my knowledge, the only ninja movie soundtrack from the classic period to be issued for sale, let alone on vinyl. It's a great one, full of crunchy, uncomplicated synths with the occasional bit of Japanese phrasing. "Ninja Power" and "Ninja Raiders" are stand-outs. You can check out most of it on YouTube. But maybe just watch the movie and have your mind blown.

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