Gilbert Gottfried's Amazing Colossal Podcast - The Worst Frankenstein Movies Ever Made Encore
Episode Date: October 23, 2023GGACP celebrates spooky season with this ENCORE of an entertaining mini-episode from 2018 as Gilbert and Frank run down (literally) the saddest and sorriest Frankenstein flicks ever to befoul the big ...screen. Also, Boris Karloff pays the rent, James Karen goes to Puerto Rico, Gilbert meets Samuel Z. Arkoff and James Lipton “interviews” Lon Chaney Jr. PLUS: Zsa Zsa Gabor! William “One Shot” Beaudine! A special appearance by Harold Lloyd Jr! And the mysterious death of Al Adamson! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Your teen requested a ride, but this time, not from you.
It's through their Uber Teen account.
It's an Uber account that allows your teen to request a ride under your supervision
with live trip tracking and highly rated drivers.
Add your teen to your Uber account today.
Planning for a summer road trip? Check.
Luggage? Check. Music? Check. planning for a summer road trip check luggage check music check snacks drinks and everything
we can win in a new game at circle k check with circle k's summer road trip game you can win over
a million delicious instant prizes and a grand prize of twenty five thousand dollars play at
games.circlek.com or at participating circle k stores
everybody wants to go to heaven, but nobody wants to die.
Oh, yeah!
Hey, Timmy.
This is I'm Gilbert Gottfried.
I'm here with Frank Sandopadre.
And this is Gilbert and Frank's amazing Colossal Obsession with crepe paper.
Oh, my God.
You really hit amazing and colossal, I'd say.
He's got such energy.
Suddenly, he's like shot out of a Roman candle.
When he turns to me to describe what's missing,
you can see it just takes the whole thing up.
He's like Sandy Duncan.
He's a ball of change.
He's a ball of energy.
The star-spangled girl.
Hi, Gilly.
Yes.
How are you?
Oh, you know.
Yeah.
You're looking well.
Yes.
Yes.
Paul Raybone is here.
We established that.
What are you this week?
Crepe paperless?
Crepe paperless.
Sorry, I was looking down at my notes.
Forgive me. We're going to do something different. Crepe paperless? Crepe paperless. Sorry, I was looking down at my notes.
Forgive me.
We're going to do something different.
Something a little bit out of the ordinary.
We're going to do a producer of the month, which we haven't done in a long time.
Oh, okay.
And I don't know whether I'm going to try to stump you with these or just talk to you about them. Yes.
Because this is a bit of a blind spot for me.
But I know that this is your sweet spot.
Oh.
This being the month of October,
one of our fans by the name of Sean Lou,
Sean Lou, L-O-U,
said,
Lou, Lou.
You say you saw the candle move.
You saw the candle move.
What was that great bit where he had to...
I must have gone back to vaudeville,
where they try to prove to Sidney Fields
that a loaf of bread is the mother of an airplane.
Do you remember this bit?
Am I crazy?
Do you remember this?
And the punchline ends up being
that necessity is the mother of invention,
that a loaf of bread is a necessity,
and the airplane is an invention. And he draws it on the wall of invention, that a loaf of bread is a necessity, and the airplane is an invention,
and he draws it on the wall
of Fields' boarding house
so that they can get out of their rent.
He bets him.
These are the kind of conversations
I'd have with Drew Friedman
at one in the morning.
He bets Mr. Fields
that if he can prove
that a loaf of bread
is the mother to an airplane,
he doesn't have to pay his rent that month.
This is the shit that pops into my head when you talk about Lou Costello.
Anyway, it's the month of October, and so this gentleman suggested something that's right up Gilbert's alley,
and that is the worst Frankenstein movies ever made.
Oh.
How about that?
Pretty good.
Paul's looking at me.
Now, Paul, you were not brought in on this earlier.
We've never met before.
Is that correct?
That's correct.
I'm doing it.
Well, there was...
I'm doing Kreskin.
Go ahead.
You got one off the top of your head?
There was Frankenstein's daughter.
That's on my list. Which had, what's his name, the silent screen, Harold Lloyd Jr.
That's right.
That's right.
Very good.
Special appearance by Harold Lloyd Jr.
How did you come up with that?
And surprisingly, he didn't follow it up with a big movie career.
No.
Yeah.
No.
No, Harold Lloyd Jr.
I want to see.
I printed some of these out. I want to see, I printed some of these out.
I want to see how many of these
you actually know.
And I heard with
Frankenstein's daughter
when the director didn't know
what the makeup people
were going to do
because he just, you know,
they got them as cheap as possible.
And when he saw how bad it was,
he started crying.
Is that true? Yeah yeah where did you see this
yeah because it looks like a guy first of all it doesn't look like a girl it was just
just scary okay but was it worse than jesse james meets frankenstein's dad was that with
john carradine no i don't think he's in that one. John Carradine met Dracula. He's Billy the Kid meets Dracula.
Billy the Kid meets Dracula.
That's right.
That's a whole other ball of wax.
Paul, do me a favor.
Look up who was in Jesse James meets Frankenstein's daughter,
made in 1966 by William One-Shot Bodine.
Oh, excellent.
And I think he's the guy that directed Bela Lugosi meets a Brooklyn Gorilla.
Right?
Same guy.
That's right.
Yeah, same guy.
With Sammy Petrillo and Duke Mitchell.
Carradine was in some awful thing from 1981 called Frankenstein Island.
I saw that.
You've seen that one, too.
I saw that.
Of course.
And there's, like, zombies walking around.
Yes, it was a remake of something called teenage
zombies yeah yeah yeah yeah and that was that was that was john carradine paying the rent a
major league mess yeah yeah yeah yeah i i just want to see if you know some of these titles
because some of these things are truly i remember in frankenstein's island they have the mad doctor and he's wearing an eye patch.
Of course.
And there are zombies
walking around growling
and the hero says to him,
how did you lose your eye?
And you go,
I think that's pretty obvious.
There are zombies here.
By the way,
what was the plot?
Because I have not seen Jesse James meets Frankenstein's daughter,
although I want to.
The Frankenstein monster does show up in Frankenstein Island.
He does.
It looks like a Halloween.
I understand the plot of this was that Jesse James is on the run
and he hides out in Frankenstein's castle.
Was that the premise?
Well, that was the, it's based on a true story.
Oh, really?
Oh, I see.
I see.
I see.
I didn't realize that.
Do you know, do any of these titles mean anything to you?
And Paul, you can chime in on any of these or just look any of them up.
Frankenstein Conquers the World.
That was Japanese.
Yes.
Yes. Frankenstein Conquers the World. That was Japanese. Yes, yes. I remember.
In fact, I think they used a picture from Frankenstein Conquers the World on one of the covers of Famous Monsters.
Incredible.
I got a little bit on Jesse James here.
Hit me.
I haven't stumped him yet, by the way.
He knows every one of these.
So Jesse James meets Frankenstein's daughter.
1966. The IMDb rating is 2.9 out of 10 right
it makes you want to watch it all it starts such a now jesse james of course was played by john
lupton of course he was and and dr maria frankenstein was played by narda onyx sounds
like some kind of mineral. Uh-huh.
And Cal Boulder played Hank, Tracy, and Igor.
Based on a true story, as Gilbert said.
Like out of Africa.
There's nobody here who seems remotely recognizable.
Oh, my God.
But, you know, he knew Frankenstein Island.
He knew Frankenstein Conquers the World was Japanese.
I don't even have the plot of that one.
Do I have the plot of that one? I can still see the picture in my mind from Frankenstein Conquers the World.
Okay, I'm going to try some of these other ones out on you.
This Japanese guy.
Yeah, and by the way, we'll invite our listeners.
If there's one we miss, we'll invite our listeners to write in or tweet us and tell us or post on Listener Society
and tell us what you think
the worst Frankenstein movie ever made was.
How about this?
Does this mean anything to you?
I'm going to go in reverse order here.
Nope, I'll go in chronological order.
Frankenstein meets the Space Monster?
Does that mean anything to you?
From 1965?
Oh, yes!
Wait!
Oh, wait! Guess who starred in it? James Car yes! Wait! Oh, yeah!
Guess who starred in it?
James Caron.
Look at this guy.
James Caron was in that.
He was the star.
James Caron was the star.
He was a sign.
I spoke to James Caron today.
You did?
How's he doing?
He called me.
He's doing good.
Oh, good.
It was great talking.
Good.
Yes!
He never signed a release form.
Good.
It was great talking.
Good.
Yes.
He never signed a release form.
James Caron was like the official or the scientist.
Yeah.
And it's an astronaut.
He goes into space.
And talk about like the worst special effects.
I'll give you the plot.
All the women on the planet Mars have died in an atomic war, except for Martian princess Marcuzon.
Marcuzon and her right-hand man, Dr. Nader,
decide they will travel to Earth and steal all the women on the planet in order to continue the Martian race,
and they shoot down a space capsule manned by the android astronaut Colonel Frank Saunders,
causing it to crash in Puerto Rico.
And that's... James Caron said they did film this in Puerto Rico. And that's... James Caron
said they did film this in
Puerto Rico. Correct. Yeah.
Frank's electronic brain and the left
half of his face are damaged
after encountering a ray gun.
Frank, now the Frankenstein
of the title, described by his
creator as an astro-robot without
a control system. So technically
this is not the frankenstein
monster okay i remember there's a scene there where it's supposed to be there's a press conference
with the astronaut and he breaks down and stops moving so they they couldn't even get the actor to just sit still so they they obviously freeze the film they just stop the film
it's so obvious stop the film no python and and my favorite thing is to avoid any suspicion yeah
that something crazy is going on that the astronaut's not moving. They make an announcement.
We'll be serving drinks in the other room.
And everyone goes, drinks?
Let's go.
Sounds like Ed Woodbad.
Yes.
Yeah.
I saw that one.
Of course you did.
In the United States, it was released on a double feature with Curse of the Voodoo.
The film tells the story of a facially damaged android who fights alien invaders despite the title.
I should have led with this.
Neither Dr. Frankenstein nor the Frankenstein monster appear anywhere in the film.
We have to get James back on just to talk about this.
The film was ranked number seven
in a DVD documentary
called The 50 Worst Movies Ever Made.
We definitely should give him a call.
We will.
How's he doing?
Is he in good spirits?
Yeah.
Is he lively?
Great.
Yeah, he's got the same voice.
Oh, I love that man.
Yeah.
Had you ever heard of this one, Paul?
No.
Can you,
this man next to me,
a Marvel or what?
I haven't stumped him yet. me, a Marvel or what? Yeah.
I haven't stumped him yet.
Okay, Gil.
Here's another one.
If it's a piece of shit,
I've seen it.
How about,
what was that one?
That was from 1965.
Okay, I'm not going in order.
I'm going all over the place.
I believe you talked about this one
on a previous show.
This was made in 1958,
but it's called Frankenstein 1970.
Boris Karloff.
Very good.
And it's,
and it's the,
the premise is
they're shooting
a horror movie
Correct.
in an old house
that they don't know
is the house
of Dr. Frankenstein.
Yes.
Yes.
Who was held
prisoner by the Nazis.
Correct.
Dr. Frankenstein. Did you know that Frankenstein became, was a prisoner of war? Yes. Who was held prisoner by the Nazis. Correct. Dr. Frankenstein.
Did you know that Frankenstein became, was a prisoner of war?
Yes.
Dr. Frankenstein.
Dr. Frankenstein.
Yes.
Made in 1958.
Dr. Frankenstein allows a TV crew to shoot a movie in his castle, and he uses the cash
to buy an atomic reactor.
Yeah.
I assume to exact revenge on the Nazis.
Yes.
Who tortured him.
Wow.
When the Baron,
the arrangement gives the Baron just enough money
to buy an atomic reactor,
which he uses to create a living being,
modeled after his own likeness.
When the Baron runs out of body parts for his work,
he proceeds to kill off members of the film crew.
Well, absolutely.
And even his faithful butler for more spare parts.
Boy, Karloff was just... Oh, oh yeah. This is heartbreaking. And even his faithful butler for more spare parts.
Boy, Karloff was just... Oh, oh yeah.
This is heartbreaking.
Give me a check.
Yeah, cut to the check.
And Karloff, I think in one part,
does a whole long speech
about this one Nazi
who used to yell at them.
And he goes,
and then they found him
with his tongue cut out.
Nicely done.
Yeah.
Nicely done.
After the reactor is shut down and the radiation falls to safe levels,
the monster's bandages are removed and an audio tape is played back
in which the Baron reveals that he had intended all along
for the monster to be a perpetuation of himself
because he was the last of the Frankenstein family line.stein family line and is this making any sense at all i think they were originally
gonna call this uh frankenstein 1963 but then they said well it's only like three years
technically five yeah like five years into the future. Technically five. Yeah, like five years into the future.
That's not so mysterious.
It was shot in black and white CinemaScope.
It was released theatrically on a double feature
with the Zsa Zsa Gabor film, Queen of Outer Space.
Oh.
How about that?
And I remember it begins with,
it looks like the Frankenstein monster's chasing someone, and then it goes, cut, and then you see it's...
Oh, it's the fake out.
Yeah.
So then you know it's a movie being made.
At least they were clever enough to do that.
The movie they were shooting at the beginning, they should have shot that movie.
Directed by a man who had a career, Howard Koch,
who was the producer of The Odd Couple,
The Manchurian Candidate, Airplane.
Howard W. Koch.
Everybody's got to start somewhere.
Felix!
Felix!
Frankenstein!
He was, Howard Koch had a big career.
Yeah.
We will return to Gilbert Gottfried's amazing Colossal Podcast after this.
Okay, we haven't stumped Gilbert yet.
Here's another one.
I fear we will not.
Does the title Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks mean anything to you?
The title?
Okay, the star is Rosanna Brasi as Captain Frankenstein.
You can't go wrong with a midget in a movie.
Not a midget.
Michael Dunn's in it.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, Michael Dunn's in it.
How did you know that?
So somewhere, Herve Villachez was going,
Why wasn't I in that movie?
Can I talk to my ancient Marty Rosenberg?
Hey, Marty, why wasn't I in Frankenstein and the Castle of Freaks
where I could have gotten more pussy than Tom Salik?
Tom Salik. Tom Salik.
Back this up a minute.
Why did you think
Rossano Brasi
was a midget?
Rossano Brasi?
With a name like that
he should be.
He was Catherine Hepburn's
love interest in Summertime.
The Italian actor.
Yeah, but they shot him
to look normal.
Right, right.
But without even...
They had him standing
on a soda box.
Without even knowing it,
you didn't even know
there was a dwarf
who got second billing.
The great Michael Dunn.
Who did Michael Dunn play
in what part?
Michael Dunn played Gens.
Gens.
I know, but that doesn't
tell us much.
He had to have a midget name. What, he had to have a midget name.
What?
He had to have a midget name.
Of course.
Like they couldn't name him Dave or Phil.
He had to have like...
Phil the midget?
Phil the midget.
Hey, could someone fill the midget, please?
Let me give you the plot of this one.
We're taking a break. We have to fill the midget please let me give you the plot of this one we're taking a break we have to fill the midget
you'll love this one paulie a neanderthal man is lynched by villagers and count frankenstein brings the monster back to life trying to avoid detection from the authorities and the locals his creation
escapes and wreaks havoc you know as it does yes they tend to do right i love this i found this
this gaff on imdb it's doing research on frankenstein's castle of freaks which was
italian oh yeah you can put through your usual slurs out there. I'm sure the director's name is like John Smith.
Well, here's what's interesting.
Italian film critic and historian Roberto Cutti
stated that the production details of this film
were shady, if not contradictory,
which includes the identity of the director of the film,
which is unknown.
Nobody would put their name on it.
Kind of like this episode.. Kind of like this episode.
Just kind of like this episode.
I just got a call from Standards.
They asked if we stop recording now
and burn the Macintosh
and anything related to this episode.
No more mentions?
There are different theories about who directed.
No one would take credit for Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks.
Was it producer Oscar Brazzi?
Cinematographer Mario Mancini?
Or Spanish actor Ramiro Olivares?
It sounds like character Chico would have been in.
Yeah, Barabelli.
Directed by Barabelli.
Ravelli the Iceman.
You know what?
I don't want any ice.
Hey, Rusty.
Hey, Rusty.
What do you got, Paul?
Well, there's just...
I probably should save these for a part two.
Oh, my throat hurts.
It just has similar movies to Castle of Freaks.
And there's like another eight or ten here that are just unbelievable.
The film was released in the U.S. under various titles,
including Terror Castle, The House of Freaks,
The Monsters of Dr. Frankenstein,
and finally Dr. Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks.
They not only had trouble with the director's name,
the movie's name was also a problem.
So, you know, you like to go slamming the Guinea director's name.
In this case, they evaded your ire
because nobody
would actually
take credit for it
I got another one here
do I have this one?
so this movie
had no witnesses
no witnesses
by the way
Frankenstein 1970
just to go back
was shot in 8 days
on a modest budget
and the film's the film's main set was barred from a 1958 movie called just to go back, was shot in eight days on a modest budget.
And the film's main set was barred from a 1958 movie
called Too Much Too Soon.
How about that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Good stuff.
Okay, here's a couple more.
Do these mean anything to you?
Lady Frankenstein.
Yes!
Joseph Cotton.
Lady Frankenstein
has Mickey Haggerty. You're right. Mickey Haggerty. Yes. Joseph Cotton. Lady Frankenstein has Mickey Haggerty.
You're right.
Mickey Haggerty.
Yes.
Hargitay.
Hargitay.
Mickey Hargitay.
Who is Mariska Hargitay's father.
Yeah, Jane Mansfield's ex-husband.
Yeah, and he's like a detective.
I don't know the plot of this one.
I'm going to have Paul look it up. It was Lady Frankenstein
and
one thing I will
have to give them
points for.
Yep.
There was nudity.
In Lady Frankenstein?
Yes.
There was nudity.
How about that?
I hope it wasn't Joseph Cotton.
Yeah.
Tell me the third actor
listed by the way,
Paul,
if you found it.
Yeah, I had it.
How do you
pronounce his name? The third actor listed under by the way, Paul, if you found it. Yeah, I had it. How do you pronounce his name?
The third actor listed under Mickey Hargitay and Joseph Cotton is Herbert F-U-X.
Herbert Fox.
Or Herbert Fuchs.
But how would you pronounce F-U-X?
Fuchs.
Fuchs?
Fuchs.
But he's not a Jewish fella.
Well, you like the guy. You like him, he's Jewish.'s not a Jewish fella You like the guy
You like him as Jewish fella
Gilbert has actually heard of Lady Frankenstein
I was
When I was working Vegas the last time
I went to the clothing place
I mean, you know, the costume girls
And I was doing my laundry there
In the room
And I was sitting in the chair And Lady Frankenstein Oh my god And I was doing my laundry there in the room. And I was sitting in the chair and Lady Frankenstein was on.
And I thought, this is such a treat.
There was nudity.
You live an active life.
And Mickey Hargitay.
And Mickey Hargitay.
Yeah.
So I think I went through so many screens here.
I think I have the right one.
71.
And you know something?
Mickey Hargitay, not a good actor.
No.
No.
No.
So Dr. Frankenstein is killed by a monster he created.
Yes.
His daughter and his lab assistant continue his experiments.
The two fall in love.
Of course.
Attempt to transplant Marshall's brain into the muscular body of a retarded servant, Stephen.
I wonder if this was up your alley.
And I think...
This is like Gilbert directed this.
I think Mickey Hargitay is doing,
trying to be a cool detective.
I see.
Like carrying a cane and polishing the handle.
He's Mike Hammer.
Yes, yes.
Okay, what else you got?
Do you know this one, Gil?
From 1957,
this stars somebody who was also featured in your act,
Wit Bissell.
Teenage Frankenstein. You got it.
Teenage Frankenstein.
I was a teenage Frankenstein.
And, I mean, the makeup looked like silly putty.
Yeah, well, this was an AIP special.
Oh, yes, yes.
This was an art call of beauty.
I don't even know where to begin.
Phyllis Coates is in it.
Lois Lane. Oh, wow.
She's still with us.
They have a...
Their one big line
in the movie is
Whit Bissell, as
Dr. Frankenstein says,
I know you have a civil tongue.
I sewed it there myself.
I love it.
Yes.
What was the Wit Bissell?
Was it Bessel?
Oh, Bessel, Bessel, Jacqueline Bissett, Ted Bessel.
Yeah, I have to think that.
In the Bessel story?
Yeah.
Yeah, you did that the first night I ever saw you on stage at the comic show.
Yes.
Which I'm guessing was 1980, 81?
And back then they were all dead.
Except for Jacqueline Bissett.
There was the Ted Bessel in the Georgie Jessel story.
We like Bessel, but only a Bessel, says the Jewish press.
Yeah, great stuff.
Gary Conway from Land of the Giants plays the monster.
That's right.
He's the monster.
And at one point, he kills a teenage boy, I love this line, and obtains his face.
I don't know what that means.
And he's wearing like a pretty boy muscle man t-shirt.
Uh-huh.
Even though he's got the Frankenstein makeup on.
So this was grade Z, Arkoff all the way.
Absolutely.
Nicholson and Arcoff.
Absolutely.
And Arcoff, yeah.
Boy, there is no stumping you
on this subject
of bad Frankenstein movies.
And I met Samuel Arcoff
years ago.
Oh, that's right.
Was it him that said
the crap was my idea?
Oh.
The shit was my idea?
What was it?
Yeah, because I think...
What was the story?
Roger Ebert after seeing that cue.
Cue, the Larry Cohen thing.
Yes.
He said of Michael Moriarty's performance,
it's a great method acting in a piece of dreck.
And now Arcoff proudly says, the dreck was my idea.
I love that. That is just great. King of the Zreck was my idea. I love that.
That is just great.
King of the Zs, Samuel Arkoff.
Okay, before I go out on the big one
that I know you'll know,
a couple other mentions.
A movie called Frankenstein General Hospital
from 1988.
No.
Well, our friend Leonard Maltin
called it the worst Frankenstein film
ever made in English.
And that's saying something.
Yes.
With the ones we just rattled off.
A movie that got a big release.
But that looks like it was trying to be funny.
I guess.
Which makes it worse.
I guess.
A movie that got a...
And I remember what happened was I was filming either a part in a movie or TV show, and the producer said, we have to take a break for a while.
You want us to go out and get you a book?
And I knew that Arcoff had a book out, and I said, can you get you the book, but our driver will take you to Samuel Arcoff's house
and he'll sign it for you.
You've told that story.
That's a great story.
And he signed it?
Yes, it was amazing.
That's a great story.
And I think he wrote in the book something like,
I don't know who you are,
but Guy said you're okay,
so that's fine with me.
I love it. How perfect would he have been for this podcast?
Here's a major Hollywood release
that was a terrible bomb.
The Bride with Sting.
Oh, yes! And Jennifer Beals
in 1985.
Oh, God.
I have not seen it.
Is it an attempt to remake The Bride of Frankenstein?
Kind of.
And there's a midget in it.
Of course.
Oh, is it Warwick Davis?
Who was the midget?
Maybe.
The guy from Legend?
Because the Frankenstein monster becomes friends with a midget.
Okay.
Paul, you're going to have to look that up.
Find that midget.
They joined the circus.
Right. So it's the
Frankenstein monster in
the circus. Yeah, Clancy Brown plays
the Frankenstein monster. Oh, wow!
We've got to get him on this show. Yeah, he's an interesting
guy from
Shawshank Redemption. What about these
hammer pictures? I know you're not a hammer guy,
but Curse of Frankenstein
with Christopher Lee.
And then there's two without Lee
that Cushing was in
called The Evil of Frankenstein
and Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed.
Oh, I remember I saw those
when I was a kid,
like on late night TV.
You're not a fan of those.
Never was.
I remember in one of the movies,
but it may have had Alan Bates.
Okay.
Where they accidentally,
it's such a grown ending,
they accidentally kill a kid,
accidentally kills the monster by pulling a lever that has acid in it
and it melts the monster.
It's like your old bit about the lever in the castle
that blows the castle
yeah
don't
I haven't seen
the bride
but I
for honorable
mention as far as
bad Frankenstein movies
I'd like to throw in
Mary Shelley's
Frankenstein
with De Niro
oh my god
as the monster
yeah
which temporarily
ended Kenneth Bronner's
movie career
yeah
that was like
he sounded like Jake LaMotta as Frankenstein.
Well, it's just the peril of casting such a contemporary actor as the Frankenstein monster.
You might as well make Pacino, you know, Igor.
What do you got on, what was the last one I gave you, Paul?
What, The Bride?
Yeah, well, no, we don't need to talk about The Bride.
I'm going to close with this.
And they tried to make it a big women's lib parable.
Yeah.
Like she wouldn't be ordered around by Dr. Frankenstein.
The makeup was impressive.
These are the ones I found.
I'm sure there are many, many other terrible Frankenstein movies,
but these are the ones that I found.
And we'll wrap with one I know you know,
directed by Al Adamson in 1971.
Oh, my, Frankenstein versus Dracula.
You got it.
Wait, it's the other way around.
Oh, Dracula versus Frankenstein.
Right.
Lon Chaney Jr.
Very good.
And J. Carol Nash.
Look at you.
And the monster was like Ziggoth Zaka.
It was something, a totally made-up name, like Zardo.
Really a guy like Jerry Levine.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, the Frankenstein monster in it, who's seven feet tall, he was actually, talk about Jews, he was an accountant.
He was like, hey, I think he was the accountant of Al Adamson.
It says like Ed Wood's chiropractor.
Yes, and he was getting a little annoyed doing the movie because it was tax season where he makes most of his money.
Good God. Did Chaney play a mute uh yeah groton yeah he was i mean cheney was like he he had been dead for 10 years while
he was filming 1971 and so yeah he played a mute called, like, yeah, Groton. Groton. Because when you're a midget or a monster, you have to have a name.
You know, it can't be Henry the Monster.
Or, of course, Phil the Midget.
Could someone fill the midget?
We're running behind schedule.
We need the midget film.
Here's where IMDB lets you down.
Yeah, what happened?
They're all headshots of the cast.
You can't tell who's the little one.
But there's the guy.
He's got a beard.
And they came up with this name like Zarkov Zarkov.
I saw it when I was looking at it today.
I think it's on Wikipedia, Paul.
Well, there's an actor who's named Xander Vorkoff.
That's it!
That's the guy.
Xander Vorkoff.
That's Dracula.
And, and,
I heard, like,
you know,
Cheney and J. Carol Nash
shared a room together.
Oh, it's so sad.
And it had been years
since they did
House of Frankenstein.
Does Fari Ackerman show up in this one?
Yes.
As Dr. Beaumont?
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
He shows up and he's killed by the monster.
That's great.
And this was a way to get it mentioned in Famous Monsters.
In Famous Monsters of Filmland.
Russ Tamblyn was in it.
Russ Tamblyn.
Yes.
That's right.
Yes.
We got to get Russ Tamblyn.
Because also.
Dara, book Russ Tamblyn.
Also, it was originally also going to be called, like, you know, motorcycle freaks.
Because it was a motorcycle picture.
That turned into a Dracula Frankenstein movie.
And then they got Cheney and J. Carol Nash, and they combined the two.
I have not seen you this excited in a long time.
Xander Vorkov.
And I heard that when Cheney and J. Carol Nash were sitting in the room together, Cheney said to J. Carol Nash,
Well, Jay, I guess we're going to be dead soon.
And J. Carol Nash
said shut up
Juan
that's a beautiful story
I saw that on Inside the Actor's Studio
beautiful
how do you know all this
if you could be anything
Mr. Nash
did he impress you Dar's sitting in there eating a
banana and shaking her head with
a sense of wonder. We've
secretly replaced Gilbert's usual coffee
with cocaine. Let's watch.
If
God does
exist,
what would
Jake Harrenas say to him?
What is Xander Zerkhoff's favorite curse word?
Oh, this was a fun one.
So thanks to Sean Liu.
Listener Sean Liu.
Gilbert had a field day.
Lon Chaney Jr., what is your favorite word?
We'll be dead soon.
He actually proposed, I dare say this,
I say this at great risk,
he actually, his idea was only,
was Frankenstein and Dracula movies the worst ever,
but I knew you would get so excited
and that you would have so much information
that I'd have to table Dracula for another day.
So the next time, we'll do worse Dracula movies.
Thank you, Sean Liu.
It shows how pathetic I am that most guys,
they could give you all the facts on baseball and football games,
and me, I'm this excited over Dracula versus Frankenstein.
You knew which one had a midget in it,
and what Cheney said to J. Carol Nash on his deathbed.
Well, I think I talked about it on the show.
Al Adamson.
Yeah, now gone.
Okay.
Al Adamson, the way he died.
Al Adamson, he was a shit producer.
And he wanted to have a swimming pool.
So he hired, are we ready?
A drifter to make the swimming pool for him.
Oh, I know this story.
You know, a drifter, when can that ever end badly?
It wasn't a member of the drifters.
It was an actual drifter.
No, it was a member of, what was that other team that said,
Good night, Irene.
What was that group that sang Good night, Irene? The Weavers.
Was it the Weavers?
The Weavers, yes.
It wasn't that a time.
Yes.
Okay.
So he hires a Drifter to make him a pool for cheap, and he makes the pool.
And then people are saying, friends of Al Adamson say, where's Al Adamson?
We're calling him.
We stopped by his house.
He's not here.
And so finally the police show up at Al Adamson's house and the pool has been plastered over.
And they found out that he did build the pool, killed Al Adamson, the drifter, and then closed up the pool.
And he told the police, well, Al Adamson changed his mind about having a pool.
And he wants me to.
What a story.
This is like Edgar Allan Poe here.
It really is.
Almost as good a death as, what's his name?
Dr. Cyclops?
Oh, yes.
Oh, my God.
Albert Decker.
Albert Decker.
Yes.
They're good.
They're right there, neck and neck.
Great, gruesome Hollywood death.
What was his in brief? brief oh he was killed by some
kind of hustler they found him hanging naked yeah in the shower bound and gagged with uh obscene
drawings and words written all over his body and the police ruled it a suicide.
A very talented suicide. Name one other podcast
that offers Al Adamson
being killed and buried alive
in his own swimming pool.
That's right.
We got to sign off.
Okay.
That was fun.
So this has been
Gilbert and Frank's
amazing colossal obsessions
with Igor-less Raybone. Swimming Igor-less Raybone.
Swimming pool-less Raybone.
See you next time.
Colossal Obsessions.
Colossal Obsessions.
Colossal Obsessions Colossal Obsessions