Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - 209. Kirk Hammett
Episode Date: May 28, 2018Metallica guitarist and Rock & Roll Hall of Famer Kirk Hammett visits the studio to discuss his lifelong love affair with horror films, his priceless collection of movie memorabilia, his sympathy f...or "misunderstood" monsters and the shared connection between horror fans and metal heads. Also, Karloff goes digital, Kirk meets Robert Crumb, Forrest Ackerman drives a hard bargain and Gilbert pens a fan letter to Lon Chaney Jr! PLUS: "White Zombie"! "It Conquered the World"! Maria Ouspenskaya returns! The art of Basil Gogos! And Horrible Herman, the Asiatic Insect! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi, this is Willie Tyler.
This is lester you're listening to
gilbert godfrey's amazing colossal podcast it is nice oh thank you thank you guys Hi, this is Gilbert Gottfried,
and this is Gilbert Gottfried's amazing, colossal podcast.
I'm here with my co-host, Frank Santopadre.
We're once again recording at Nutmeg with our engineer, Frank Ferdarosa.
Our guest this week is a musician, songwriter, a 2009 inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and the
lead guitarist of one of the most popular and influential bands in rock history, Metallica.
He's also co-writer of several of the band's signature hits, including Fade to Black, Master of Puppets, and Enter Sandman.
And he's been named one of Rolling Stone's 100 Greatest Rock Guitarists of All Time.
As a boy, he developed a keen interest in horror and science fiction movies, including the original Frankenstein, which led to a lifelong quest to acquire artifacts and memorabilia celebrating the movies he loved. In his 2012 part cover book, Too Much Horror Business, features more than 300 images of the vast collection of horror movie memorabilia he's amassed over the course of three decades, including toys, masks, models, artwork,
even original costumes worn by Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff. And his terrific follow-up book,
It's Alive, features dozens of horror and sci-fi movie posters from his personal collection, including rare posters from Frankenstein, fellow monster kid, and most importantly,
a man who shares our love of the black hat, Kirk Hammett.
Howdy.
Kirk, welcome.
Wow, that's quite an intro, Gilbert.
You're kind of making me blush there for a second.
The lengthy intros have become part of the show, Kirk.
Yeah, they double as an obituary.
Well, that's great.
Now I kind of get an example of how it might end up.
See, here's something I have a hard time putting together.
Because I remember people telling me, you should get Kirk Hammett on this show.
Yeah, lots of people.
From Metallica.
And I said, from Metallica?
Why?
From Metallica.
And I said, from Metallica?
Why?
And I thought, and they said, he's the biggest old monster movie freak there is.
His collection is insane.
And so how, you know, the world of hard rock and nerdy guys buying gay.
He straddles both
of those worlds. It's weird
because in your rock world, you get
laid. And I don't
think you do that in
getting one of
the electroids
that Glenn Strange wore.
Well, Glenn Strange turns women
on.
Yeah.
I started getting into the horror
thing from a very, very young
age. I mean, I
felt the draw,
the attraction when I was five years old.
And it was
when I had seen my very first horror movie,
which is Day of the Triffids.
And it never, never waned from that moment on,
from seeing that movie to right this second,
it's never waned.
I've always been attracted to this genre
because it just feels so fun, so great, and so comfortable, and so relatable.
And this is my very first love, the horror genre. And music came a lot later. So to tell you the
truth, this was my world that I lived in as a child.
It was just a complete world that I created for myself.
Reading all these comic books, reading all the monster magazines,
seeing the movies, you know, watching the Saturday night horror shows that are on TV.
Were you a Creature Features guy too, Kirk?
Bob Wilkins was my hero.
Oh, Bob Wilkins, right.
The local horror host.
Yep.
San Francisco.
On the east side, we had Zachary.
Zachary.
Well, you know Zachary.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Yeah, we lost him recently.
Yeah.
In fact, Zachary pretty much had the best description for the type of music I played.
And he called it
that plugged in music.
That plugged in music.
I love it.
To this day
that description is just close to my heart
because it's
very accurate actually.
It's apt.
I remember I grew up reading
Famous Monsters of Filmland
and I had two things that I bought from the magazine.
One, the Frankenstein poster.
Is that the poster that you still have in the house?
Yeah.
He's got it in the living room.
And in the magazine, they make it like they're sending Frankenstein to your home.
And then you go, it's a poster.
But it's in a frame in the living room now.
I kept it for years.
The other thing I have, also a complete ripoff,
was Herman the Asiatic Insect.
Now, this in the picture,
you see a little kid open a box
and an enormous monster
with fangs and claws
and tentacles leap out
and people are screaming in terror.
So I sent away for that.
And it's a little tiny box
about an inch long with a tiny stick in it.
Like an ice cream stick that has some fuzz glued on it and a rubber band for antennas.
And that's Herman the Asiatic.
Does that ring a bell with you, Kirk?
Absolutely.
Absolutely. Absolutely.
I remember seeing the ad in Captain Company.
And yeah, that ad, it was like you were sending away for like some genie in a bottle.
But it was, you know, horrible Herman in a box.
And I remember years later finally seeing one of those things and opening it up and thinking,
Oh my God,
horrible Herman.
You're so not horrible.
Did you do the sea monkey thing too?
Oh yeah.
I had numerous sea monkey adventures,
you know,
they always died on me,
you know,
the brine shrimp. Yeah. You're supposed to let them grow, you know, adventures. They always died on me.
The brine shrimp.
You're supposed to let them grow from Monday to
Friday, but by Wednesday,
mine would all be floating at the top of the water.
I don't know what went wrong.
And they didn't have crowns
or robes or
anything.
Like in the picture.
They didn't have a big throne
they sat in the picture. They didn't have a big throne, they said.
Exactly.
And faces.
I was expecting these things, you know,
to be swimming around with like totally human features and whatnot,
you know, being able to like look at me and interact.
You know, I remember seeing an ad,
and it wasn't in Famous Monst famous monsters but it was in some other
magazine and it said 12 foot tall monster from space 25 cents and i thought wow this is too good
to be true and so i sent my 25 cents in i remember like three months later this package came and it was a tube i was like what is this and i remember
opening it up and thinking poster i didn't i didn't order a poster and then unrolling it
and it's the picture of the 12 foot space monster they never told you that it was oh you know a a
poster i thought it was some like three-dimensional sort of figure.
But, you know, when you're seven and a half years old, eight years old, you know, you're expecting the world.
25 cents isn't bad for a poster, though.
Yeah.
One thing we've discussed on this show, but I don't think could be discussed enough.
They would advertise you could buy monkeys.
Oh, yeah, we talked about that with Joe Dante.
Yes.
And a totally crooked operation.
And when you got the package, I heard the monkeys,
there was no laws on the books maybe,
but the monkeys would be sent to these kids who were either,
and the monkey would either be dying or dead when it got to the kid's house.
Wow, so they actually did send a real live monkey.
That's what we hear.
Yes.
That's what we hear.
We had the director Joe Dante here, and he disputed it.
I've seen ads for it.
It's horrible.
Wow.
Yeah, I remember looking at a lot of that Captain Company stuff and thinking, wow, all this stuff is really cool.
But, you know, I grew up a poor kid, so, you know, I would always stare at the dom post magazines right you know oh yeah
masks i mean dom post masks and and think wow these are the greatest masks in the world but
how am i gonna afford 32.99 you know when it was a real struggle for me to just like come up with
50 cents to buy famous monsters you know every month or so
didn't your parents give you money for milk and and lunch and you would you would blow it on
at the comic book shop and on famous monsters and monster times and all that stuff
i would abstain from eating lunch oh geez that's how that's how dedicated he was. Wow. Yeah, yeah. But yeah, I grew up with a steady diet of famous monsters and Creepy Magazine, Eerie Magazine.
Eerie, sure.
Yes.
Eerie and Creepy.
All that stuff.
And then later on, Heavy Metal Magazine.
And I heard with the monster masks in the back of the magazine, they would actually apply makeup to the masks
to make them look better.
Yeah.
You know, I always kind of suspected
that they were too good looking to be true.
And, you know, if you see the masks nowadays,
you know, the actual ones,
you know, I could see how they would have augmented the masks themselves.
But one thing that they did do that none of the kids ever even knew about
is when they wore the mask in the pictures,
they put blackout around their eyes.
And so when a kid would get these masks
and put them on without the blackout, you know,
it was so obvious that they were wearing a mask
because you could see the flesh around the eyes coming through.
And it wasn't quite the same effect as it was
when you're looking at the picture in the magazine.
You were an outcast.
You call yourself an outcast kid, Kirk.
And you related to the monsters you felt.
And Gilbert, you've mentioned this on previous shows, that you felt sympathy.
Oh, yeah.
For the monsters.
And it was an emotion that you developed early by watching monster movies.
Because it was always like, well, Frankenstein's the most obvious.
He's a little kid.
He doesn't know about the world
and he just wants to be loved
and have friends
the wolfman's like adolescence
where your whole body is changing
and you're growing hair
and you're sounding different
and you don't know why this is happening
this is a theory he spent years developing
and then Dracula is what every guy wants to be and you don't know why this is happening. This is a theory he spent years developing, Kirk.
And then Dracula is what every guy wants to be.
Yeah, he's the cool guy. Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, I think you hit it on the spot on all of those.
I always liked the mummy too
because the mummy struggled with trying to communicate.
And he always was so slow and lumbering.
And, you know, it's amazing that he actually caught anyone because he moved so slow.
Yes, we've talked about that on the show.
But you didn't have a stage of life for the mummy.
I guess it was old age.
Yeah, I guess.
The mummy would be the...
Arthritic.
Yeah.
I find it interesting that you guys both had that moment,
that turning point moment where you felt such sympathy and compassion for the monster.
You were what, Kirk, five when you watched Frankenstein?
Five or six years old.
Six years old with your dad.
Yeah, and there was something that I could relate to just right off the bat.
there was something just that I could relate to just right off the bat,
you know,
this guy who just wants to be loved and he wants to understand, you know,
why he's there and he,
you know,
he's looking for the right father figure,
but he keeps on getting rejected,
you know,
from,
from the father figure and,
you know,
humanity as a whole.
And,
you know,
in a micro sort of way,
I kind of,
maybe I felt that as six, as a six and you know in a micro sort of way i kind of maybe i felt that as six as a six-year-old
but i definitely felt that later on growing up you know i felt socially kind of like awkward
you know and being a shy kid you know i just it's it was just it was just easy for me to relate to these characters
because they were stumbling through life with all these obstacles in front of them,
and that's how my own life felt.
Do you relate to that, Gil, being an introverted kid?
Oh, absolutely.
A withdrawn kid?
Absolutely.
Yeah, you always identify with the monster in those movies.
And the earliest monster movie I remember seeing is The Indestructible Man.
Ron Chaney, yeah.
And Robert Shane, who was the inspector on Superman.
Joe Flynn from McHale's Navy.
And Max Showalter.
Yeah.
And I didn't realize at the time that Chaney Jr. was scary for the wrong reasons at that point in his life.
He's
the world's biggest Lon Chaney Jr. fan,
Kirk.
I have a lot of
respect for Lon Chaney Jr. too, but
he eventually did
become that character in Mice and
Men.
Oh yeah, he's quite good in that.
Yeah.
It's crazy but yeah i i i particularly like like to launch any junior in the wolf man for me i mean that's just like his
his classic performance and i really like him as count alicar too oh yes yes great great i love Oh, yes. Yeah, it's great. Great. I love that movie so much.
We, I have a son, and my wife wanted to give him a middle name with an A in it from one of her relatives.
And I was pressuring her to name him Alucard.
I love that.
featuring her to name him Alucard.
I love that.
She didn't go along with it,
but I would have loved to have had a son named Count Alucard.
I would have loved that, too.
You got Max into horror movies pretty early.
Yes, yes.
He, I mean, when he was really little,
I would say, okay, who played Frankenstein?
He'd go, Boris Karloff.
And then the Wolfman, Lon Chaney Jr.
And then Bela Lugosi. You made sure he said Bela.
Yes, yes.
You have two sons, Kirk.
How old are your sons now?
How old are they now?
Nine and eleven.
And they're constantly asking me
when they can watch certain horror movies.
And I'm thinking,
how old was I when I watched this kind of movie?
And I always think, way too early.
And so they asked me,
when can I see Hellraiser dad and i'm thinking
hellraiser this kid's nine years old yeah that's intense i don't know if uh they need to be
seeing a movie about sexual satanic uh demons from hell maybe a little young 14 maybe and they're like how about 12 you could watch
them let them watch the let them watch the universal classics though oh yeah they they've
seen dracula frankenstein brighter frankenstein but their favorite and i'm not surprised is abin
costello meet frankenstein there you go i i love so much we've spoken a million times about that
on this show that's a great movie oh i love it
speaking of glenn strange yeah and you know i really like bella lugosi's performance in that
movie as well i mean he you can tell that he was so happy to be back playing count dracula that
you know every time he's on screen he just like he just just soaks it for so much atmosphere and vibe.
At least that's what I think.
And the funny...
Oh, go ahead.
And like you said, Glenn Strange, he made such a great monster.
I mean, his facial structure just really added so much to it.
Every nook and cranny in his face just really augmented the character a lot.
And the funny thing to me is like,
you know, they weren't using Lugosi
back around that time in regular horror films.
Was that 46?
Yeah.
Yeah, 46, 47, yeah.
And they used Carradine, who was terrific.
He's a great actor.
But, boy, when you see Lugosi in Abbott and Costello meet Frankenstein,
you go, this is what was missing from the other movies.
Absolutely.
I agree.
John Carradine, I think, is a great, amazing actor.
But I don't know why that decision was made.
And, you know, they should.
The thing about Bela Lugosi is that he was just so, so much himself.
Every time he walked out on screen, you were just like, there he is.
He's on screen. And he just dominated the on screen, you were just like, there he is, he's on screen.
And he just dominated the whole room, you know?
And I think that that kind of like held him back in the end, you know?
Especially with the Dracula role.
But I agree, you know, he should have been in all those movies.
House of Dracula, House of Frankenstein.
Yeah, he is what's missing.
He is what's missing from them, for sure.
Speaking of Abbott and Costello meet Frankenstein,
tell Gilbert, and it's in the book,
it's in too much horror business,
what you have.
You have the masks that Bud and Lou wore.
Yeah, you know the scene where they're about to go
to a Halloween costume ball?
Yeah, sure.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, and they put on two masks
paper mache masks one of them is of a werewolf another one is of like you know some like ghoulish
kind of like vampire looking character those were found about five or ten years ago and i saw them
in an auction and oh my god i couldn't believe that those things were still around
and I managed to acquire
them and so those made it into
the book and also
the
Wolfman head that's
in the book is also from Abbott and Costello
Meet Frankenstein and
it took a long time to
verify that but you know once
we were able to authenticate it,
that it was indeed from that movie,
I was very, very happy.
Because to have one prop from any of those Universal movies
is incredible.
To have two is great.
To have actually three pieces, I am in heaven.
They're great things to own.
I read an interview with you in Collectors Weekly, and this is interesting, Kirk.
And you said one of the ways that you acquire this stuff was to get in touch with people who worked on those universal films.
But are these heirs?
I mean, these people aren't alive.
How do you go digging for stuff like that?
Well, some of them were errors.
Some of them were relatives of the people who actually worked on this stuff and had this stuff.
I see.
A lot of it I got pre-internet, which is just like a lot of networking, just a lot of investigating, a lot of grilling people.
And I remember another moment where my son made me really proud when he was like two or something.
He was sitting in a coffee shop with my wife and he was staring at some guy sitting by himself in the corner.
staring at some guy sitting by himself in the corner and he he leans into my wife and he goes mommy that man looks like Lon Chaney Jr.
and I said that's my I don't need DNA testing. Perfect. I love that.
And now I had almost a full collection.
Frank and I were talking about the Aurora Monster models.
Yeah.
And I wanted to ask you, too, was that the first thing?
Was that the first item as a kid that you decided to start collecting?
Was that the gateway drug, so to speak?
It was the beginning. And it all started from me walking into the kitchen and there was my brother
and my cousin and they're painting, they had bought a Frankenstein model and they're painting
it and they're painting it all wrong. I said to them what are you doing frankenstein isn't purple and orange and yellow and green and you know i for years and years and
years i i couldn't understand what that was all about until i just realized that you know they're
on acid when they're painting this is like this is like 1968 or 1969 but when i saw the model i was like wow they're doing a
horrible job and i ran you know ran to my mom and like got some some uh you know what was it like
what were they like a dollar 25 or something like that yeah not much more money for my mom went to went to the store picked up a
aurora frankenstein model and built it and that was the beginning of the end really and i bought
that that that particular model and every one of those models at least six or seven times as a
child because i was constantly building them them, and either blowing them up with firecrackers,
setting them on fire,
or just doing something just absolutely destructive.
I was, and you know,
you know, I was just,
it was just what I did with my stuff.
You blew them up.
That's why, yeah,
that's why I don't have anything left from my childhood.
That's too bad.
Good thing you've had the scratch to replace them.
Yeah, exactly.
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It's Gilbert and Frank's Amazing Colossal Podcast!
Also, aside from the famous Wolfman, Frankenstein, all those,
I remember my mother, she went to the store,
and she bought me, they had two together,
and I guess it was cheaper.
They were, like, attached together,
and one of them was the witch that was
just great. Yeah. And
Bride of Frankenstein.
Yep.
That Bride of Frankenstein model
was outrageously cool
because the best
thing for me about that Bride of Frankenstein
model was there
was a tray on the table with a human
heart in it oh yes she's on the slab right right right right and how cool there was that other
whoa there was um forgotten prisoner right that was just yeah and And then there was the other one, the whatever they called it.
It was a box with different things to whatever the word is when you add to something.
They would have like little model rats or skulls.
Oh, accessories.
Accessories.
Right.
And you could. Yeah, the customizing kit. Oh, accessories. Accessories. Right. And you could...
Yeah, the customizing kit.
Yes, yes.
And you could paint them up
and put them on your models
that were already there.
Yeah.
And you had the glow in the dark ones, Kirk?
What do they call those?
The frightening lightning?
Yeah, they first came out
as the frightening lightning? Yeah, they first came out as the frightening lightning edition,
and then after that, they were just straight on, you know,
aurora glow-in-the-dark models.
And I love those, too, because, you know, for me,
it opened up a whole new way of destroying them,
which was in the dark.
So, Gil, you didn't blow yours up.
You would sit there and get the glue
and assemble and then painstakingly paint them?
You did all that?
I would, yeah.
I would glue them, paint them.
I'm impressed.
I even would, like, put paint in the eyes. I would get
a pin
and I'd put a little paint on it.
Fantastic. Yeah.
I read those things were so popular. I guess, what,
61, 62? I hope this is
true, that they were manufacturing them 24
hours a day to keep up
with demand.
I wouldn't
be surprised. I mean mean they had an amazing
run they're around for like a good what 12 15 years or something and without very much uh you
know alteration to the from from the original design and so i would say you know they they're
pretty successful and they're still pretty popular to this day.
And then I heard that someone bought the molds of the Aurora models and tried to put it out
themselves with the idiotic ad campaign rated X for excitement.
Wow.
I don't even remember that.
So parents were going, I can't give my kid a porn model, you know.
It hurt sales.
I had the King Kong.
Oh, I did too.
You had to paint the little Fay Wray that was in his hand, and I had the mummy.
They weren't glow-in-the-dark at first, right?
That was a future addition.
That was later.
Later.
Yeah, that was later.
God, what wonderful times.
I always hated, though, like in the model, they told you to paint Frankenstein green.
And when they make him look green in posters, because I think it's the makeup was green,
but that was so it would look gray on screen.
Exactly.
Let's talk.
Go ahead, Kirk.
There is a whole debate on that.
Should Frankenstein be green?
Should Frankenstein be ghostly pale?
Should Frankenstein be bluish, reddish?
Everyone has their preference.
Personally, I can understand why people would want their Frankenstein to be green
because that's just kind of like the popular sort of way to present him.
But I think it's more effective if he has more of a palish kind of ghostly,
palish, greenish, bluish kind of pallor rather than straight green.
Yeah.
That's how I am.
It was always interesting when the Munsters
went from black and white to color.
Yes.
To see what color they were going to be.
Yeah.
And then Herman was that sort of sickly green.
Yeah.
Not gray.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
I got to ask you about some of the other toys
because before you came on with us,
Gilbert and I were talking about
like the Wiggle-Ick bobbleheads
and we were looking at the pictures in the book.
And, I mean, it's so much fun.
And this is your first book, Too Much Horror Business.
But to go through those pictures, it's not only just fun to see the stuff, but it brings back memories that I haven't had, things I haven't thought about in 30 years.
And Gilbert and I were looking at the page where you have all the Wolfman stuff arranged together,
and he's remembering stuff he had.
Oh, I have a signed postcard of the Wolfman where it says Lon Chaney on it
because in Famous Monsters they once said, you know, Chaney Jr.'s not feeling well.
Here's an address.
And I sent him a get well card
and got back a, you know,
a little postcard of the Wolfman
with his signature on it.
That's the most amazing thing.
Wow.
He actually replied back.
Was it a stamp?
Or was it his actual signature?
No, it was an actual signature.
That's very cool.
Wow.
You know, I'd like to see that sometime.
Oh, anytime.
We'll make that happen.
If you're going to be in New York anytime soon,
we'll make that happen.
And I have a friend.
Sooner or later.
I have a friend who, when he was a kid,
he met Boris Karloff,
and he asked him for an autograph,
and Karloff said he would send him one.
And then Karloff died,
and the day after he died,
the autograph showed up at the kid's house, which is the ideal way to get a Boris Karloff.
Yeah, wow.
I love that.
That's an amazing story.
Wow.
That's crazy.
I know this guy who grew up in Beverly Hills, and his father was a famous entertainer.
And he was telling me for his 12th year birthday,
his parents got him early from school and said to him,
happy birthday, your present is in the kitchen.
And he walked into the kitchen and there sitting
at the table was boris karloff wow and this kid was a big he was a big monster fan and so he just
went he just lost his mind that is great wow yeah that is great how cool is that you you've gotten
to know sarah a little bit we had sarah on the show and i know she's worked with you in your festival.
Yeah, Sarah, she's such a lovely, lovely, lovely lady. We love her.
And she's so sweet and just so nice to be with.
And the great thing is that she's very patient
when you ask her a million questions about her father.
Yes.
Like really open and willing, and I love that about her. She is. I love when we had her on the show, and i love that about her she is i love when we
had her on the show and i love that she described halloween and christmas as her dad's busy season
because of the grinch yeah i just want to say too before we move on from this and that book
and we'll plug it again at the end kirk and our fans uh you know the people that listen to the
show are obsessed about the same stuff we're obsessed with.
Oh, well, we had on, because I was demanding to have her on the show.
Oh, he'll love this.
Janet Ann Gallo.
Oh, wow.
Yes.
She knows who she is.
You don't even have to tell them.
Wow.
That's fantastic.
Yeah, we dug her up. We found her.
The little girl.
Well, you know, I'm going to have to, like, find's fantastic. Yeah, we dug her up. We found her. The little girl. Well, you know, I'm going to have to find that episode.
Yeah, the little girl from Ghost of Frankenstein.
We'll put you in touch.
She's quite chatty.
We had Ron Chaney here.
We had Ron Chaney's grandson, Ron Chaney Jr.'s grandson,
and we had Vincent Price's daughter, Victoria.
And Bela Jr.
And we had Bela Jrr who obviously you also know
wow tell gilbert and this before we jump we jump ahead i just want to say this book with these
wonderful toys the fright factory thing maker i mean the stuff that was bringing back the memories
for me so we want our listeners to find your book um too much horror business the great garlu which
gilbert and i remember the oh yes the marks toy and the and the squirt guns but but one thing i do want to mention is you had those outer spaceman color
form figures which i've been looking for my whole life the color form aliens i you know i told my
wife she said this can't even be real you you must have dreamt them and we went on ebay and there they were almost impossible to find in the original packaging you found them yeah i got those uh
pre-internet and uh before the internet you were able to like just kind of like network and track
stuff down and then i would say and i call this the golden age of the internet, between 1998 and 2001, it seems like everyone just wanted to just empty out their attics on eBay because there was so much great stuff that just became available in that three-year period on eBay. Stuff that no one even
knew what was worth. You could get deals, really. And I got a few of those Colorform figures from
eBay, but the ones that are in the package, I got those pre-internet, and those are pretty hard to
find. Very hard to find. I had all of those as a kid, and yeah, they got destroyed as well.
They all got burnt up they burned
them up i would kill to get my hands on them you know what i'm talking about gilbert the color
forms they were men from each different planet yes there was a the venus had plastic wings in
his back i do remember that a squid man octopus kind of deal from neptune and just wonderful the
little martin the mars guy was a little green man.
Those really bring back special memories.
I remember with the Aurora, in the instructions it said,
for best results, use Aurora glue.
And I remember as a kid, I said, oh, even then I knew that was bullshit.
And an advertisement.
You know, like their glue is different than the others.
Well, also, you were an insider because your dad sold models in his hardware store.
Oh, oh, well, this is it.
He sold one model.
Back then, snorting glue became all the rage with the kids.
So a law was passed.
Yeah, I remember. Yeah, you couldn't buy glue unless you were buying a model.
And so my father, he worked in a hardware store.
He owned a hardware store.
He had a little crappy airplane model.
And every day, kids would come in.
He'd sell them the airplane model and glue.
And then he'd count to five, go outside, and in the trash would be the airplane model. And he'd take it in, and he sold that one model like about 100 times.
Wow, amazing.
Yeah.
Yeah, I remember that time, and I remember my mom saying,
you know, there's all these kids out there that are sniffing this glue.
You're not doing any of that, Kirk.
I'm thinking, why would I want to smell this stuff?
It already smells so bad already.
Why would I want more of it?
You grew up in a drug culture.
You grew up in the San Francisco area, and everybody was doing something.
Let me tell you, you know,
the one thing that people forget about the whole hippie thing, you know, they remember
the long hair, they remember the
tie-dye stuff, they remember the free
love, you know, they remember
the women not wearing, you know, bras.
But what they don't recall
about the whole hippie
thing is none of them wore
shoes. None of them. shoes none of them as a child i would
see hippies everywhere they were all barefoot and it drove me crazy because you know even as a kid
i had a thing about clean feet all these hippies had the dirtiest feet all the time. And like, I wasn't having any of it.
Yeah.
It's an interesting part of your bio and your history
that you escaped to the comic book store
to get away from your parents' hippie friends.
Yeah, they were everywhere.
Really?
I could remember my brother bringing me
to a Grateful Dead free concert in golden gate park
and i remember looking around seeing a lot of people with their faces painted you know with
flowers and and you know animals and just thinking i want to be at that comic book store reading
we got a question later about the comic book store that a listener sent in.
And now they make the models.
Somewhere along the way, they changed it where they make the models now
where it's for specific movies.
Like the Wolfman model is different than the Frankenstein meets the Wolfman model.
I didn't even know they were still making them.
Yeah, I've seen it in these hobby shops where you look.
Well, there's a lot of people.
Yeah, a lot of independent people who make just about every sort of universal character that's out there.
Yeah, it's like you look at the Frankenstein
and you go, okay, that's a Karloff, that's
a Chaney, that's the
Lugosi one. They mold
the face.
Yeah, yeah. It's
great. I mean, nowadays people
are so
wrapped up in the individual
characters and all
the details that it just makes for a better characters and all the details.
It just makes for a better product, and I love it.
I still buy Monster models to this day, resin kits.
I don't have the time to put them together. I hire someone else, but once I get that finished kit,
it goes up on my shelf, and I'm loving it.
That's so cool.
Don't you wish they still published the Monster Times
and Fari Ackerman's magazine?
All that stuff, you know.
Wouldn't it be a better world?
Oh, you know, absolutely.
I loved the Monster Times
and I loved that it was in a newspaper format.
Oh, yeah.
Now, you must have visited Ackerman.
Yeah, did you go to the Ackerman Mansion?
Yeah, I went to the Ackerman. Yeah, did you go to the Ackerman Mansion? Yeah, I went to the
Ackerman Mansion a few times.
I had a little bit of
a relationship with Fori.
He knew me as the
musician guy who's always asking
him about his
painting and his artwork
because I
love the
magazine covers and I have the original paintings, a number of them.
Oh, the Go-Go stuff.
Yeah, the Go-Go's paintings.
And that all started by just going over to the Acker Mansion
and just kind of like hearing that Foray needed money
and just kind of innocently saying,
hey, Foray, do you want to sell that
that painting up
right there you know famous monsters number
21 and him saying
hmm
let me
think about that
$100,000 Kirk i'm like what he goes ha ha ha i'll take it for two grand
or you can have it for two grand and like i'll take it for two grand wow which was back in the
80s kind of like you know relatively you know large amount of money for like 1988 1989 for
for a piece of original art that was when the original
art market for that kind of stuff wasn't even like even developed yet yeah how much is it worth now
i have no idea because you know uh those go-go's paintings when they come into my my collection
i hang on to them and I don't let them go.
And, you know, I just think that they're just like the ultimate
and they're an important part of the collection
because Basil Gogos, as a standalone artist,
I thought was brilliant.
And we just lost him a few months ago.
Yeah, unfortunately.
Then wasn't there that other artist, think franzetta oh frank frizzetta
frank yeah yeah yeah yeah he was just like he's gone too you know yeah he's frank frizzetta he's
like norman rockwell to me he's the the anti-norman rockwell which i just love about him but yeah you know the Gogos paintings and
the famous monsters
paintings that I have
are real important to me
because it puts
you know it puts that
aspect of it you know
Basil Gogos' personal vision
it shines a light on that which
you know is I think
important the overall The overall horror fandom, horror genre.
His artwork was what attracted me to famous monsters as a kid.
Those outrageous covers that just jumped out at you.
And they're just so striking.
And to see those paintings in person, they're just that much more striking. I've never seen one in person. Have you, Gil? No. striking and to see those paintings in person they're just that much more
striking i've never seen one in person have you gil those go-go's paintings the covers the old
covers yeah yeah my uh my uh you have to see you have to come see the collection
on the in the next museum opening it will be a there will be a new opening that's coming soon
i can't really talk about it.
Okay.
It'll be actually close to you guys.
Oh, really?
East Coast.
Yeah.
Good.
We'll make a pilgrimage, Kirk.
And you just have to see these paintings
because if you're into famous monsters of film,
man, they'll just knock you out.
And, you know, Basil Gokas' process was amazing
because a lot of the times he was just working
from black and white stills.
And you look at these paintings
and they're just like in full, livid color.
Yeah, can't wait to see them.
Striking color.
Did he work in acrylics or are they oils?
I believe that, you know,
I believe they worked at both.
A lot of his later paintings
have a lot of texture to it.
I see.
I want to say acrylic,
but, you know, a lot of his earlier stuff
doesn't have as much texture,
so maybe it was watercolor.
I'd love to see those live.
Oh, absolutely.
Since you brought up Lugosi,
Gilbert and I were just talking about White Zombie.
First of all, you'll also have to tell us how you acquired those, unless it's a secret, how the two costumes came into your possession.
And just to reiterate for our listeners, you have Bela's costume from White Zombie, where he was the evil voodoo master, which a movie Gilbert and I were just talking about.
That is a very disturbing film.
But you also have Karloff's costume from The Black Cat.
I was able to acquire both pieces in auction.
But what really, really just kind of surprised me was just one day I was just paging through this one auction catalog.
And just right in the corner with very little fanfare,
it just mentioned Boris Karloff's outfit for The Black Cat.
And when I read that, I was like, what?
This can't be.
I mean, that movie was made over 80 years ago.
And I looked at the outfit and I got a magnifying glass out
and looked at the buttons.
And then I got a still from the black hat
with the costume in question.
I got a microscope out, a magnifying glass.
And I looked at the buttons and the buttons matched up.
Wow.
And so I thought to myself,
wow,
this is the real deal.
And I can't believe it.
And I made it my,
my goal to acquire it.
And I did.
And how wild.
Yeah.
The black cat is probably in my top three universal horror movies.
I love Frankenstein.
I love Dracula.
Yeah, the black cat's on another planet.
It's surreal.
It really is.
We recommend it all the time to our listeners, and we will again.
It's amazing.
It's like usually the universal monsters were in an old castle or something.
And in the Black Cat, it's all like Art Deco.
Yeah.
It's very strange.
And not only that, there's an overabundance of psychological stuff.
Yes.
Pedophilia is touched upon.
Satanism.
Necrophilia.
A lot of weird things.
It's pre-code.
It must be a pre-code movie
for them to have gotten all that stuff in there.
Yes, it is.
Yeah.
And what's funny is usually my big complaint with movies is I'm constantly seeing a scene and something where I go, oh, that makes no sense.
Or they wouldn't, people wouldn't react that way.
The black cat makes zero sense.
You don't mind it.
From beginning to end.
Right.
And I don't care.
I love the fact that it's insane
it's wonderful and it's so atmospheric for as insane as it is it also has a weird sense of
realism to it you know it's it's crazy and and black comedy yeah yeah and and for me, Karloff is just so great.
The way he looks, the way he speaks, all his mannerisms.
I mean, you know that his character was based after Aleister Crowley.
And the necklace that he wears around his neck
is kind of a variation of Aleister Crowley's signature.
Interesting trivia.
Yeah, yeah.
And, you know, I love that aspect about it because no one was making films with that sort of content back then.
No, films about Satanism.
Yeah. And, you know, in my mind sometimes,
you know,
I wonder what it would be like
to remake that movie
but not change the script at all.
Just modernize it.
Just, you know,
and basically have the same storyline.
It would be incredible.
By Karloff's bed,
there's a digital clock.
I never noticed that. Yes, there's a digital clock. I never noticed that.
Yes, there is.
That's so interesting.
Yeah.
You know, and White Zombie, by the way, and Gilbert and I were talking about it,
not as kinky a movie as The Black Cat, but really unsettling and weird in its own way.
And every time I see those zombie workers in the sugar mill it's so disturbing oh yeah it's so
terrifying it's like the granddaddy of the zombie film yes and he's great and i didn't know this
until i started doing the research on you kirk i didn't know that jack pierce did legosi's makeup
yeah he did for that movie yeah and and some of the sets are are the uh they're dracula sets as
well and uh you know the the great thing about about white zombie is the silence yes yes there
are moments when it was just it's just so quiet but it it's just so heavy in atmosphere and vibe,
and I just love that.
It's the kind of character you want Lugosi to play.
Yes.
Just a guy with no soul, no moral center whatsoever.
He's a human monster.
Yeah, just dark and just foreboding
and just not afraid of any sort of like consequence at all.
Yeah.
And just, and the name itself, Murder Legendar.
Yeah, it's great.
And the black cat has its tongue in its cheek a little bit.
Yeah.
It's got a little bit of a sense of humor,
but white zombie is as serious as a heart attack.
Yeah.
He's just a creep.
But I heard Legosi
was not happy with White
Zombie or maybe
he... Interesting. That's what I heard.
That's what I heard too. I heard he wasn't...
I guess what
had happened was it was made by these
two brothers, the Halperin brothers.
And I think at one point
he wasn't satisfied
with maybe the dialogue or something.
That's what I had heard.
But I mean, you know, in that movie, every bit of dialogue that he speaks, it's just so effective.
So I don't know what he's talking about.
I mean, you know, every time he speaks, you're like hanging on every word.
I wonder why he wasn't happy with it.
Yeah.
He comes off rather well in it.
Absolutely.
I think.
Absolutely.
Oh, I remember in The Black Cat, there's one part where a bag is falling from the overhead compartment on the train and the girl screams
and they
say something like, oh, I thought
I'd be crushed.
Oh no, she goes, oh,
I was frightened.
And Lugosi goes,
better to be frightened
than
crushed.
I always love when he throws the scissors off camera.
Yes.
And you hear the cat.
Yes, they stab a cat. Yes, that's right.
Stabs a cat.
It's such a sick movie.
Yeah.
And also Lugosi, where he really, and people forget this,
because they always say, oh, well, he could only play Dracula.
When he was Igor, it was totally different than anything he had ever done.
And he's good again.
Yeah.
Yeah, you know, I have to say, you know, when he played Igor,
for me, it kind of, you know, it was as emphatic as playing the Frankenstein monster.
Yeah, he owned it.
I really felt sympathy for Igor.
And what really killed me was the scene where he's playing the flute, and all of a sudden the monster comes.
I mean how
how touching
is that? Yes. Oh yeah.
It's a touching moment. Yeah.
He finds those moments in that one.
And Lugosi finds the
comedy in Igor.
There's like some parts that
are just really funny. The way
he delivers the lines.
I just love it when they said,
Oh, they tried to hang Igor, but they failed.
Oh, yes.
They hang me.
The big broken neck.
They hang me because I rob graves.
They say.
Yes, exactly.
You hit it
we will return
to Gilbert Gottfried's
amazing colossal podcast
after this
two other movies
that I found
in the research
that you like
that are near and dear
to our hearts
are the incredible
two-headed transplant
oh yes
the thing with two heads
I love them
which we're very fond of.
How great is Bruce Dern?
We had him on the show. We had him here. We asked him about it. I love it.
He has a great sense of humor about it.
How great is Rosie Greer?
And Ray Moland.
Yeah.
That was a genre that came and went.
Two heads on a body
was a genre. It and went. Two heads on a body was a genre.
It was so obvious, too, that Ray Moland is just resting his chin on Rosie Greer's shoulder.
And that's the two-headed monster.
It seemed like a good idea at the time.
The white bigot was dying and the black soul brother needed time to prove his innocence.
More power to you, brother.
I want to transplant my head on a healthy body.
I think I like to donate my body to science after all.
So they transplanted the white head onto the black body.
Who would have suspected that neither would care for the idea too much?
What are you guys doing to me?
Shut up.
Where's the rest of you?
We are joined together temporarily.
I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall when they were filming that.
Absolutely.
Absolutely. And they were filming that. Absolutely. Absolutely.
And they're both good.
Casey Kasem's in, I think Casey Kasem's in The Thing with Two Heads.
Yep.
Yeah, that's right.
He is.
He shows up in that.
And then the Rosie Greer Ray Milan monster escapes the police on a motorcycle.
Yes. Yes.
Kirk, real quick, I got a couple of questions from fans.
We do this thing called Grill the Guest.
And these are quick questions.
Bjorn Nesheim, he says,
Kirk used to hang out at the first all-comic book store in the United States,
which was the San Francisco Comic Book Company.
Does he have a story about the late owner gary arlington yeah one time i uh something happened i had like a um i don't know i i i guess i didn't eat breakfast one day and i
was looking at some comic books and just like literally just like passed out and knocked over a whole stack of
comic books.
And because you were,
because you weren't eating your lunch,
you were spending your lunch money.
Yeah,
exactly.
Exactly.
You know,
it was,
it was connected.
Yeah.
And,
uh,
the next thing I knew,
I woke up and I was at,
at,
at,
uh, St. Luke's hospital in San Francisco in like, in, in, uh, the next thing I knew I woke up and I was at, at, at, uh, St. Luke's hospital
in San Francisco in like, in, in, uh, in the emergency ward on a bed.
And there was Gary right next to me and looked at him.
I said, I said, what happened?
He said, you passed out.
You knocked over a big old stack of old comic books that we had just bought.
And, and we, we thought you were like dying on us
so i rushed you i got you in my volkswagen and i drove you over to the hospital and here we are now
and i looked at him and i thought wow you're just kind of like i thought to myself wow you're just
like my dad but even cooler that's a nice story. That's a nice story about him.
We lost Gary too recently.
And the best part about it is that, you know, as I was there,
he had some comic books for me to look at.
He's like, here, here.
These just came in.
I was like, really?
You're actually giving me some comic books to read?
It was amazing.
Gil, where did you buy your comic books?
Locally?
Oh, yeah.
In Brooklyn?
Yeah, well, the comic books you could buy anywhere.
There was no comic book store in those days.
Yeah, there were like magazine stands, drug stores.
You know, the old comic rack in the drug store.
Candy stores.
Yeah, the circular rack.
All that stuff.
Yeah.
And when I was at Gary's store often,
I could remember seeing a whole range of characters going through there.
But the one I remember the most was Robert Crumb.
Oh, you met Robert Crumb.
That's right.
Well, you know, I just kind of stayed out of his way
because for me, I wore glasses as a kid,
but his glasses just took the cake.
And his glasses were so thick.
And like, you know,
that's what made me really remember him was his glasses and the way he spoke.
And I knew that he was an underground artist.
And so I just, I stayed out of his way
because he was a little intimidating for me
as, you know, a little kid.
Yeah, a legend, sure.
Yeah, but he came into
the store quite a lot him and gary were very close and i remember a newsstands would have comic books
and monster magazines and also you know what i love about the old posters yeah let's talk about
the poster book is that well like there's it conquered the earth, which is a crappy movie with the phoniest looking monster ever.
Is that with Beulah?
Oh, it conquered the world.
Yeah, yes.
Conquered the world.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And, of course, they always had these lines in it.
Of course, they always had these lines in it. First, there's a sexy girl lying there in a nightgown that she probably never wore in the movie.
And that shows a lot of skin.
And the blurb is, it made men prisoners and women slaves.
So everything was sex.
You know, they'd show a monster
and nothing could control its desires.
Yeah, yeah, amazing.
All those posters, you know,
it seems like in the 50s,
the women were either in, like,
bathing suits or slips. Yes, there's a lot of that. Yeah, yeah, like in the 50s, the women were either in, like, bathing suits or slips.
Yes.
There's a lot of that.
Yeah.
Yeah, especially in the Cold War stuff.
Yeah.
But those, I have to tell you, the Universal, did you mark, Gilbert marked the book.
Those Universal posters, the French and the Argentinian, are they the Frankenstein posters?
Those are fascinating.
Are they the only ones of their kind left amazing yeah those are the
only known examples that have survived the double double panel are they called yeah you know world
war ii did a real number on on movie posters both here in the united states and obviously in europe
but in in the united states when the war Europe. But in the United States,
when the war effort was going,
they had these things called paper drives,
which was basically people driving through town
and recycling paper.
And those recycling trucks would stop
at the movie poster exchanges,
which were where a lot of these posters would live.
They were like poster libraries.
And the poster exchanges would just come out with huge stacks
and just throw them onto the paper trucks and drive off with them.
And so that's why there isn't a large amount of movie posters
that have survived.
And so a lot of these posters,
they're the only ones that have been discovered and found and so the french double
panels are pretty unique in that you know when they're they're they're they're pre-world war ii
and and they they have managed to survive all this time and you know to you know people didn't
really ever think about hanging on to this stuff in the first place.
So, I mean, just the fact that it just didn't get thrown into the trash is just a remarkable thing.
Yeah, I'm going to show Gilbert.
And this is the reason I don't like Hitler.
That's one reason.
Yeah, me too.
He really put a damper on German cinema.
I mean, they were doing really good with Nosferatu and Metropolis
and, you know, Cabinet, Dr. Caligari.
Oh, yeah, they all had to get out of the country.
Yeah, you know.
Well, it's funny.
In the Cabinet of Dr. Caligari,
they offered both of them a chance to live comfortably in Germany if they'd make
propaganda films for the Nazis.
And so Werner Krauss, he decided to stay in Germany and make propaganda.
That's right.
Propaganda.
Conrad Veidt escaped to America where he was most famous playing the German officer in Casablanca.
He was very anti-Nazi.
Yes.
So was Karl Freund.
Karl Freund was also kicked out of Germany,
and he worked on The Mummy and Edgar Ulmer, too.
Edgar Ulmer.
Yeah, who did The Black Cat.
Carl Freund later in his career wound up
being the director of photography on I Love Lucy.
Isn't that
interesting? From
The Mummy to I Love Lucy.
Because they had to work.
And Jack Pierce
was the makeup artist
in Mr. Ed. That's right.
Really?
Yeah.
Toward the end, yeah.
These are the ones we were talking about, the Argentinian poster.
These are great.
And the French poster, James Whale's name is misspelled on the French poster,
which I guess adds to the value of it.
Well, it was a later addition.
If you look at that poster, the original director, Robert Flory,
who actually wanted Bela Lugosi to play the monster,
he gets a credit on that poster.
But what had happened is Carl Laemmle,
for some reason or another, I can't remember,
wanted James Whale on the project.
And so Robert Flory got replaced by James Whale.
And James Whale was the one who saw Boris Karloff
eating in the Universal cafeteria
and said,
you're the guy to play the monster.
And history was made.
Yes, absolutely.
Yeah, the French double panel posters,
I,
I like a lot because,
you know,
graphically,
they kind of have a different perspective than,
than a lot of the American posters,
you know,
it just kind of like,
they just look kind of like,
you know,
I don't know,
more colloquial.
Was one of the Frankenstein posters found in an abandoned movie house in Canada?
Do I have that right?
In a projection room?
Yeah, it was a walled-off projection booth.
And it was, I guess, a projection booth that people knew were there,
projection booth that people knew were there
but I guess
there was no reason for them to
tear down the wall or
look inside this empty
room until just recently
someone tore down
the wall, stepped inside
and right there on the
wall was a Frankenstein 3
sheet. Amazing.
How incredible is that? I mean, right there on the wall was a Frankenstein three sheet. Amazing. Amazing.
How incredible is that?
I mean, I wish something like that would happen to me.
I was telling Gilbert, it's fascinating.
And equally fascinating is the story of where the mummy poster turned up
when the guy was remodeling his house.
Yeah, you know, it's amazing
because I have movie posters that have been found in New Zealand,
in Iran, in Sweden, just all over the place.
And these are American posters.
They're American issue.
I have a whole slew of half sheets that were were found underneath a floor
in new zealand it's fascinating my yeah the mummy three sheet that i have uh was founded sweden of
all places and that's that's just strange to me because Sweden had their own movie poster production house.
They printed and designed their own movie posters.
And I've seen the original Swedish movie poster to The Mummy.
So for Sweden to have an American poster and a three-sheet, it almost seems like a mistake.
They got sent this poster by accident,
and they threw it in a corner and just forgot about it
until it was found decades later,
and I managed to acquire it.
It's crazy because this stuff,
you never know where it's going to come from.
One of the sad things I was saying to Gilbert, too,
is a lot of times in those days,
the artists didn't sign their work, and they were anonymous you didn't know in some cases
in some cases you do but in some cases in many cases nobody knew who was painting these things
just just studio artists you know grunts people who were grinding out a check yeah
yeah and to me it's just a it, it's a real shame, you know,
because these people
had no idea
just how much
their artwork meant to people.
You know, I have a feeling that,
you know,
it was just another gig for them,
you know,
just like, you know, break it out, get it done, and move on to the next thing.
I got to ask you a music question, Kirk.
You said anybody who plays or listens to heavy metal music understands horror films.
Because it's the same shades of dark and light.
Yeah, it's the same elements.
It's the same group of emotions. it's the same sort of emotional dynamics uh you know it's it's it's the building of of tension and releasing it it's
you know it's the the energy that that that that that that you feel that's you know maybe at the
same sort of a pulse as a racing heart.
When you went into audition for Metallica,
the bass player was reading a Lovecraft story
and you had an instant connection?
You said, these guys, I'm simpatico with these guys?
Yeah, I remember when I flew out to audition for Metallica,
I remember arriving, shaking hands with the guys, going into the
room and playing music for two or three hours and then coming out going, wow, that was kind of
mind-blowing. And then just taking a moment and sitting down and looking around and then seeing Cliff Burton with his head in a Call of Cthulhu Dungeons and Dragons rule book.
I instantly said, hey, I have that book.
I know that game, Call of Cthulhu.
And he looked at me and said, yeah, HP Lovecraft, man.
And I said, yeah, I know HP Lovecraft.
I love him.
He goes, I do too.
And then he said, I love zombies. And I said, yeah, I know H.P. Lovecraft. I love him. He goes, I do too. And then he said, I love zombies.
And I said, I do too.
And that's the whole Night of the Living Dead,
Dawn of the Dead, Day of the Dead sort of like tribute.
And I knew I had found a kindred soul.
You knew you belonged with that group.
Yeah, yeah.
That's a great story.
I got just one more question about Metallica.
This is from my sister-in-law's boyfriend.
Beg me to ask this.
Can you recall, he loves Injustice for All.
This is from Brendan Brown.
Can you recall any of the thought process,
and this is a tough tough probably something that needs a
long answer but maybe you can give me a short one any of the thought process that led that led to
the sound the special sounds on injustice for all because the record redefined metal recording in
his opinion uh special in quotation marks you know it's really funny because uh when we were recording that album
james or the guitar player went for a very unique sort of of guitar sound and you know
lars wanted uh his drums to sound like very dry and up front as well and you know those two unique sounds put together created a sort of
tonal palette where that uh when you added more bass frequencies it just kind of muddied up the
the mix and so as a result of that you can't really hear our bass player very much uh you know uh as you know as that album you know turned out
the way it turned out you know we we thought we made a really kind of like you know unique and
different album that sounded nothing like the previous you know our previous three albums and you know unbeknownst to us um you know i guess that uh that uh people
have used the sound of that album as a template for their own albums and i didn't even realize
this until someone brought it up to my attention only about 10 or 15 years ago you know we just
thought that we just looked at it as kind of like a sonic experiment to try for one album,
but it wasn't anything that we were going to hang our hats on
for the next two or three decades.
It was more kind of like a place where our heads are at sonically.
And as a result of it, a lot of people really liked the way that album sounds.
People really like the way that album sounds.
You know, in retrospect, I admire our audacity at trying something so different. But, you know, our next album kind of filled in for what we were missing from Injustice for All.
I see.
And so I'll just put it that way.
That's interesting.
But yeah, but like I said,
a lot of people really, really are attracted
to the sound of that album.
And there's nothing really...
It's not a warm sounding album
it's really up front and in your face
and it's hard to get away from
when you listen to it loud
he's going to love that answer
and I have to say Enter Sandman
is a piece of work that
sounds very much
like it was written by people who
embrace horror
who understand it
yeah
let's just say the darker side of life people who embrace horror. Who understand it. Yeah.
Yeah. Or let's just say the darker side of life.
That's more
inclusive. Very, very much so.
Gil, you want to ask him
about Dwight Frye?
Oh, yes.
Who died young on a bus.
One of the all-time greats.
Yeah, I think. On a bus? He died on a bus one of the all time greats yeah I think
on a bus?
he died on a bus
he had a heart attack
I think they had it listed in the paper
as tool maker
Dwight Fry
they didn't even have him
like as an actor
and he
it was so funny
he started out big, like Frankenstein, Bride of Frankenstein, Dracula.
Yep.
And then he started just popping up like in the horror sequels,
like he'd be like one of the villagers.
Yeah.
Yeah, so like an extra
or something. Yeah, yeah. It's a strange
short career he had. Yeah, and I
heard he was supposed to be
a very skilled song and dance
man. I didn't know that. Yeah.
How interesting.
Yeah, I heard that he came out
of theater and Broadway.
I gotta look that up. He did that
whole circuit and then and then
yeah it just became an actor but you know you're right i mean when i think about dwight fry i can't
really think about i can't really like think of any movies past like 1936 1937 that he was in no
maybe it wasn't even like some monogram stuff? Maybe like the vampire bat or something?
He may have,
yeah.
I can't picture Renfield breaking into song.
But I have to say,
you know,
he went for me.
He was a large part of that movie Dracula.
I mean,
his portrayal of Renfield was brilliant.
And you know,
the scene I'm talking about
when he is discovered on the ship
and he's glaring at the people.
Brilliant.
Absolutely brilliant.
All right, Kirk.
In the time we have left,
we're going to give you one wild card.
These are three movies we've talked about on this show,
and we'd love you to comment about them,
and you could pick one or comment on all three.
The Tingler, Freaks, or Island of Lost Souls.
How about all three?
Okay.
Okay, so I remember when I first saw The Tingler on television,
and I was just so disappointed that I wasn't seeing it
in a movie theater with that tingling sensation
because I'd read all about it.
Oh, right, with the wired seats.
And famous monsters.
Yeah, yeah.
And when I actually had seen it,
I was just thinking, wow,
I wish I would have been in the theater
and actually had experienced it the way that the makers wanted the viewer to experience it.
But you know what's interesting about the Tingler is they mentioned LSD in it.
That's correct.
Oh, yeah.
Yes.
And by the way, Bob Burns was one of those guys wiring those seats.
Oh, wow. Which he those seats. Oh, wow.
Which he told us.
Oh, really?
They were airplane motors.
The things that made the chairs vibrate.
Wow, amazing.
So yeah, they're talking about LSD.
So I'm just wondering,
could it be some weird, like, you know, MK Ultra, you know, propaganda, sort of like weird kind of like drug CIA, FBI thing that was connected to this movie?
Probably not.
And, of course, the greatest scene, they're in a movie theater and the picture goes out.
And the picture goes out and Vincent Price frantically informs the audience,
scream, scream for your lives.
The genius youth in the theater.
Scream for your lives.
And then it immediately goes to, we now resume our film.
Did you ever hear a better Vincent Price than that, Kirk?
That's really good.
That's really great.
Real quick, give us something on Island of Lost Souls,
which Gilbert loves.
Well, yeah, I love when Bela Lugosi's screaming about the House of Pain and
are we not men?
Yes. And, you know, it's creepy. And whenever he and, are we not men? Yes.
It's creepy.
And whenever he screams,
are we not men these days?
I want to scream back,
no, we are Devo.
D-E-V-O.
That's right, they co-opted that.
Yes.
The House of Pain.
They made us in the House of pain. They made us in the house
of pain.
Not men,
not beasts,
things.
That's perfect.
Wow. That's really, really
great. You have it down. Doesn't he have it down?
Yeah, and you know,
I really believe,
again, you know, Lugosi steals that film.
Oh, he does.
For myself.
He does.
And what is the law?
Not to spill blood.
That is the law.
And I heard that, I think Charles Lawton based his performance of the mad doctor on his dentist.
I've heard that too.
Yeah.
Oh, really?
That's weird.
Wow.
I'm glad that dentist is probably not around anymore.
And freaks.
Yeah.
Give us one comment or one insight on freaks.
Well, you know, one of the last scenes when uh when they're uh when all the
freaks are out and it's raining and you know it's rainier is is is doing his hobble you know that's
the guy without the arms and legs yeah he's hobbling from side to side with a razor in his
mouth oh my god that was just like the ultimate for me that movie's ahead of its time don't you
think oh yeah the audiences weren't ready for that oh absolutely not and i remember i yeah
that was one of the movies i picked when i was on with robert osborne that's right and
it it's one of those movies where even if there's not a scary thing happening,
you're still a little scared.
It has you on edge the whole time.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
And I was just in constant marvel anytime any of the freak characters came on screen.
I mean, it's just like, you know, I was just like just blown away by the fact that those are real people
and they're not really even acting.
And, oh, the ending.
Number one, they make the woman into a half chicken.
Yeah.
And I heard that was a chicken suit that Lon Chaney Sr. built
he was planning a movie
good trivia
and
what they cut out of the movie
was that
the strong man
at the end is singing
soprano
so it means that the freaks castrated him.
Wow.
Wow.
I wonder if that footage still exists.
It might.
That to me, I was glad they didn't keep that in because I want the freaks to be a little sympathetic.
A little bit.
And if they cut a guy's dick off, I
can't really root for them.
That's crossing a line for you?
Yeah. So, we'll tell our
listeners to check out the Black Cat,
White Zombie, Freaks,
and Island of Lost Souls, if they
haven't by now. And The Wolfman.
And, of course, The Wolfman, 200
episodes in. By the way, he does a great
Maria Ouspenskaya and
you can't forget the thing with two heads and the thing with two heads oh that's right
maria usbenskaya i was the only kid who could imitate listen to this yeah yes she was she was She was amazing, by the way. Yes. The way you walk is thorny through no fault of your own.
But as the rain enters the soil, the river enters the stream.
So tears go on to a predestined end.
Find peace for a
moment, my son.
Wow.
I wish our listeners could
see the look on Kirk's face.
I'm just thinking,
you know, if I would have known you, Gilbert,
as a kid, you know,
I think we would have probably been
inseparable.
Did you,
did you really want to know another kid who was doing Maria Ospenskaya
impressions?
Well,
I,
I would just,
let me just go on to say that,
you know,
I,
I,
as a kid and I,
I'm,
I'm sure that,
you know,
all his horror fans could relate.
I spent so much time imitating Frankenstein,
the mummy, Dracula,
the wolf man.
Who didn't get the
ace bandages and start wrapping their
hands in their hands?
And start dragging your
foot behind you.
Yeah, yeah.
And so, I mean,
I just, yeah. Well, I wish you guys had known each other as kids
but that's one of the great things about this show kirk is that we get to meet the other monster
kids we get to identify them yeah and and bring them in so any anything to plug what's coming up
you guys are on tour well i well i just want to say that you know i i left out something about
you know the black cat costume is that once i finally did, did acquire it, the first thing I did was put it on and
it actually fit me around the house.
That's cool.
For like an hour, just pretending I was Boris Karloff in the black cat.
So that's fantastic.
How did it fit?
It actually fit me, which was crazy because I'm 5'7".
I know Karloff was maybe 5'10", 5'11".
But I always knew that he was a slim guy, too.
I was able to put it on and walk around without busting any seams or anything like that.
So I was happy.
So if we make a pilgrimage out to the house,
you're going to let Gilbert try on the
Karloff costume? The black hat?
I'll break out the tape measure
and measure his waist really quick to make sure
that it's compatible.
And then we'll go for there.
Let me plug the books.
Too Much Horror Business, which is fantastic.
You will lose days looking at it.
It's on Amazon.
Also, it's in bookstores.
Please patronize bookstores.
Also, It's Alive, which we have here.
Classic horror and sci-fi movie posters from the Kirk Hammett Collection,
which Gilbert is absolutely fascinated by.
Oh, yes.
And I'm going to let him take it home and play with it.
I beg your pardon uh what i usually go home and play with it what what's going on with the with
touring the exhibit and and and your yearly festival and anything else you want to put out
there well the the collection just finished a really great run at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem and that's wrapped up now
and uh we're getting ready to do another show on the east coast uh when uh we finalize everything
then I can actually tell you where it's going to be yeah but it is going to be on the East Coast. And then it's going to go to a few other museums.
And so we have a pretty busy schedule as far as the museum exhibits
and the collection are concerned.
It's going to run until like 2020.
And this is like three or four different places.
So hopefully it'll come to a place close to you guys because it will be on the east east coast we
gotta get there we gotta go see those go-go paintings in in uh in person and one day i'll
have to show you my lon chaney jr autograph oh totally would love to to see that and you know
just get together and like uh do some imitations and impressions.
In all your travels, Kirk, and you've been pursuing this a long time,
did you ever meet anybody who did Maria Ouspenskaya?
It is a first.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
I have a friend on the East Coast
who does a pretty good
Igor
I asked him to do Elena Vertigo
but he wouldn't do it
that's funny you don't even do that one
so hey
Elena Vertigo guys
come on who is she
oh she was in the Wolfman
she just died.
She died last year.
Yes, she did.
Wasn't she in House of Frankenstein?
Exactly, yes.
Very good.
She was in House of Frankenstein.
And J. Carol Nash is in love with her.
Yes.
Elena Verdugo was also Marcus Welby's nurse on Marcus Welby MD.
Yes.
And didn't she also sell coffee?
I don't know about that.
She was in those coffee commercials.
That might have been Mrs. Olsen.
But her family, at one point,
her family owned like half of the land
that Universal Studios is on.
Wow.
Way, way back in the day,
her family was, I guess, they had a way back in the day. Her family was,
I guess they had a huge ranch
in that area. Well, Kirk, when you're
this way, either with the band or
by yourself, you know, we'll do another one of these.
We can talk about Val Luton.
We'd love to. We didn't get into The Black Sleep
and we could do a six-hour show
with you because you're one of those guys. Yes.
I love The Black Sleep, by the way.
And again, John Carradine
I thought was just
such a great, great actor.
He could play anything
and he was so convincing.
And Tor is in that one, right? Tor Johnson.
Tor Johnson, Janie Junior.
I've never seen it. Shame on me.
I've got to catch up to The Black Sleep.
And when you watch Carradine,
each time I watch him, I go,
see, it was funny because both Carradine and Cheney Jr. were both in that.
And Lon Cheney Jr. seemed like a miserable drunk,
a depressed, angry drunk,
whereas Carradine seems like the happiest drunk
on the planet.
He seems blasted most of the
time. He's got a body of work
that guy. Oh my god.
When you saw
him later on, he did a lot
of cameos in the 70s
and whatnot.
He always seemed like he was
so happy to be in
those cameo positions.
I think he's in, is it
The Howling?
Yes.
He's great
in The Howling because he looks like
he's playing himself.
And he's the only one
and I couldn't believe they didn't
have the rest of them there like Genie and Karloff. He's the only one, and I couldn't believe they didn't have the rest of them there, like Chaney and Karloff.
He's the only one of the horror stars who pops up in the Munsters.
Yes, he's Mr. Gateman.
Yeah.
The head of the funeral director.
That's right.
He was Herman Munster's boss.
Yes.
That's right.
That's right.
And for a second, he's in Brighter Frankenstein.
Yes, he is.
He's one of the hunters that discovers the monster with the hermit.
Lincoln, you miss him.
Yes, it's the monster.
Yeah, he's wonderful.
We could do seven hours talking to you about this stuff, Kirk.
It's fun.
I hope you had fun.
Well, let's consider this, you know, episode one.
Absolutely.
Oh, absolutely.
Absolutely.
Gilbert's going to plug the book one last time.
Okay.
It's alive.
Classic horror sci-fi movie posters from the Kurt Hammett collection.
It is absorbing, and just great to see those posters.
And now I guess I do the wrap up. You do the wrap up.
Well this is Gilbert
Godfrey. This has been Gilbert
Godfrey's amazing
colossal podcast with my
co-host Frank
Santopadre and
we've been talking to a guy
who is a member of
Metallica but much more important, he's an old monster movie freak.
Kirk Hammond.
Kirk, do you know a book called Heavy Metal Movies?
Heavy Metal Movies.
It's a book you'll like.
We're going to send it.
It's written by one of our staffers, Mike McPadden.
We're going to send you a copy.
You'll love it.
Oh, thank you so much.
It sounds like I will.
It's something right up your alley.
And this was fun.
Our listeners have been saying, get Kirk Hammett, and we got you, and we're happy we did.
Okay.
I'm really, really glad that I had this chance to sit and talk to you two fine gentlemen
about what
means the most in life.
I hope that we can
take it up again and
maybe we'll solve
the Earth's problems
with our next
conversation. Well, let us know when you're this way
and we'll call it part one. Definitely.
Thanks, Kirk. Thank you.
Alright, thank you guys. Thank you so much. We'll call it part one. Definitely. Thanks, Kirk. Thank you. All right. Thank you, guys.
Thank you so much.
We'll see you. See you. Swing with one eye open
Gripping your pillow tight
X-ray light
And tonight
Take my hand
Rock to never, never land
Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast Rock to Never Never Land by John Beach. Special thanks to Paul Rayburn, John Murray, John Fotiadis,
and Nutmeg Creative.
Especially Sam Giovonco
and Daniel Farrell
for their assistance. We'll see you next time.