Like most years since starting this blog, I had planned on doing on something special here for Halloween. But, as is so often the case these days, lack of time, and to a lesser degree, sucky health things, have conspired against me. So, instead of doing some elaborate and/or creative post, I find myself scrambling at the last minute for something to replace that with. The only thing that I can think of is to do what I did last year, which was to go through all of my scan folders (I have so much stuff waiting to be blogged about!) and pull out anything and everything that could possibly be interpreted as holiday appropriate.
I couldn't find as much as last year, but what I did find will have to do. My only solace is that at least a few of the cards in here are not the sort that one is likely to come across on the blogs very often.
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1980 Topps Weird Wheels #'s 27, 36, & 49 |
This is a set that I've only recently become sort of enamoured with. I've known of its existence for a long time, but had never really paid much attention to it until I came across some of them on COMC. After looking at some of the singles, I found myself unable to pass this trio of monster/spooky themed vehicles (and their drivers). I don't think the set sells for very much, so that may be in my future as well.
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1994 CARDZ Julie Bell #19 |
I'm too old for video games now, but there was a time way back when I could've been a called a "gamer"-- though, we didn't use that dumb term back then, thankfully. I, like a lot of kids, enjoyed horror themed games, this despite there not being very many such games at the time. One of the few exceptions during the early to mid 90's was the
Splatterhouse series. I never owned any of them myself, if only because I never actually saw any of them for sale anywhere. I did, however, rent the heck out of volumes 2 and 3 on the Genesis. Looking back, they really weren't all that great, and old me now thinks that such games shouldn't have been being played by kids, but as they say, "It is what it is", or in this case, "It was what it was". I couldn't imagine wasting any of my remaining time on these sort of games now, and while I do wish that I would've spent some of those youthful years more wisely, it is still a period of my life that I'd like to not forget; and finding a card like the one shown that represents the series is a good way to help me remember. It'd also serve as a reminder for time misspent; lest I ever start to slip back into my old less productive ways.
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1940 Bridgewater Film Stars 8th Series #18 |
Dorothy Lamour is best remembered for many things, horror not being one of them. That being said, she did appear in one of the
Creepshow 2 stories. I liked the first film as a kid (not as an adult though), but the sequel never did much for me.
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1993 Topps Jurassic Park #135 |
Despite some scary moments, I don't think anyone would classify Jurassic Park as a horror film. The picture's animatronic dinosaurs were created by Stan Winston (as on this card) though, and he himself was known for creating/designing many a scary thing throughout his career.
It's also scary to think how long it took me to get this card. It had been on my want list for years. One wouldn't think that a single card from a base set that came out in 1993 would be so hard to obtain, but this one proved to be quite elusive.
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1935 Gallaher Portraits of Famous Stars #44 |
Beetlejuice may not be a horror picture, but there's no shortage of Halloween-esque doings in the film. It was a small part, but Sylvia Sidney's role as Juno is very memorable. That's partly due to it being a good character, but even more so because Sylvia had been appearing in pictures for a lot of years by that point, and knew what to do when she was in front of camera.
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1974 Topps Monster Initial Stickers #NNO |
Artwork-wise, I've always thought this set looked like it should've been a Japanese release. I've never looked into it, so I wouldn't be at all surprised if the images were at the very least done by Japanese artists. All things Dracula and Godzilla were major staples of my childhood, which now makes this one of the more nostalgia-inducing cards in my collection.
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1950 Dutch Gum Series A Black & White #9 |
Barbara Hale is best known for her role as Della Street in
Perry Mason, and this card was gotten for my
Perry Mason collection, but the card itself works well for this post, as she also appeared in
The Giant Spider Invasion. It's been decades since I last saw that picture, but I did like it quite a bit as a kid.
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1995-96 TV Week #3 |
Depending on the episode,
The X-Files could very much be considered a horror show. Looking back, I personally think that many of the episodes would've held up better had they focused on horror more often. The scary standalone episodes are still very watchable, much more so than the jumbled story arc's that just kept getting more and more nonsensical with each passing season. Chris Carter was good at creating shows, but bad at knowing where to take them once he got them greenlit.
The photo on this card was originally used for a magazine cover, back when the show was the hottest thing around, and you couldn't go more than week without seeing our intrepid agents on the cover of some periodical. I remember those days quite vividly, though, at this point it feels like that was multiple lifetimes ago.
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1969 Globe Imports #NNO |
I grew up with the Universal Monsters. I wouldn't even want to guess how many times I've seen a couple of their flagship films. In some ways those were like security blanket for me as a kid. Depending on which day you asked me, I'd say that
The Wolfman is my favourite, but I could just as easily say
Dracula, too. Young me would have said
Creature from the Black Lagoon was his favourite, and would've had evidence to back it up to, as he wore out our VHS copy.
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1996 Fleer Metal Universe #84 |
Being surrounded by floating eyeballs would be pretty scary, right? Well, maybe a little less so were you to be wielding a baseball bat at the time.
This scan was kind of poopy, so I tried to go the photo route as well...
That's a tad better.
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1934 Godfrey Phillips Stars of the Screen #49 |
Frederic March ranks pretty high with me in terms of favourite actors. No matter how much time passes, and how many different versions are made, Fred's
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde will always be the best, and his portrayal of the title character(s) will forever stand amongst the better performances in a horror picture.
Normally I try to remember to scan the backs of any older cards I'm gonna show on here, but it appears that as far as the cards in this post go, I only did so for this one...
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1978 Wonder Bread Battlestar Galactica #12 |
Roy Thinnes starred in one of my all-time favourite television movies,
The Norliss Tapes. Like many of the 70's television movies, especially those of the horror variety,
Norliss was made as a pilot. Its creator, Dan Curtis, was shopping it, along with
Kolchak: The Night Stalker around at the same time.
Kolchak wound up getting the okay, while
Norliss faded into memory. Both shows were similarly themed, so there wasn't any chance of both of them being picked up.
Kolchak is my favourite show of all-time, but even so, I would've very much liked to have seen where a
Norliss series might've gone. I've often thought that if I were a writer, and one who was inclined to do fan fiction, that
Norliss would make for a wonderful series of books.
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1937 Sinclair Film Stars #16 |
Colin Clive does not have very many cards, so it feels like cause for celebration whenever I get one of them. He, of course, is best known for his portrayals of Henry Frankenstein in Universal's Frankenstein and its sequel, Bride of Frankenstein. It's hard to believe that all 19 of his films were made in span of just seven years. Having not been one of the actual Universal Monsters, I suspect that, had he not died so young, he would've easily shed any possible typecasting in the future.
Hopefully some of you will be doing something fun tonight, i.e. something holiday related. Me? I'll probably just be doing my usual boring old man stuff, i.e. nothing holiday related.
I remember Juno but didn't know anything about Sidney so I looked her up. She had an interesting career.
ReplyDeleteShe was quite accomplished.
DeleteA. This was totally a special post. Great job Jon!
ReplyDeleteB. Godzilla was a big part of my childhood too. One of my favorite toys when I was little was the Shogun Warrior Godzilla with the firing fist. It ranks up there with the Millenium Falcon toy.
C. That Boggs Metal card is very interesting. Back in the 90's... I probably didn't appreciate it as much as I do in 2024. I feel like these days cards are much more bland... so 90's cards stand out more.
D. Never saw The Norliss Tapes (or don't remember it), but I do remember Thinnes in that episode of Battlestar Galactica. That was one of my favorite TV shows as a kid.
It's nice of you to say that, but it would appear that most others didn't feel the same.
DeleteI never owned that one myself, but am very familiar with it. I imagine that that was many a kids favorite toy growing up. Play-wise, they aren't even comparable to the Shogun figure, but I got a couple of Yamakatsu figures for Christmas when I was maybe 4 or 5, which have since always held a special place in my heart. They ended up being the first toys that I put on display too, as they weren't really all that great for playing with.
Because the packs were more expensive at the time, I didn't really pay any attention to any of the Metal sets way back when, but a few of them have started to grow on me in recent years.
I liked Battlestar quite a bit as a kid too, though I was watching it in syndication at the time. I'm envious of you for getting to watch it in real time.
Ah...Princess Ardala (however you spell it). Happy Halloween.
ReplyDeleteThe crush of many a young boy.
DeleteThat Boggs is horrifying.
ReplyDeleteAs an arachnophobe, I doubt I would enjoy The Giant Spider Invasion.
Really like the pre-war non-sports cards; I've been getting more and more of them myself on COMC.
I believe that Albert Belle got an eyeball card in that set too.
DeleteYou also might not like it because of your age. A movie like that doesn't hold up very well for modern audiences.
I try to stick to subjects that I have some sort of connection with, but were I to be the sort who just buys anything pre-war simply because it's pre-war, than COMC would certainly be the place to get cheap cards.
I grew up on the Universal Monsters as well as the Godzilla and King Kong movies. Such a love for that genre. Always great watches and something very comfortable about them. The Wolfman is my favorite as well.
ReplyDeleteFor some of us, they are the proverbial "chicken soup for the soul".
Delete