The Beast Box (Bride of the Gorilla / Bella Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla / The Beach Girls and the Monster ) (1952)
Average customer rating: Not rated
    The Beast Box (Bride of the Gorilla / Bella Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla / The Beach Girls and the Monster ) (1952)
    Starring: Beast Box
    Manufacturer: Image Entertainment
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

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    ASIN: B000A59Q1O
    Release Date: 2005-09-06

    Description

    No man, woman or teenager is safe with these gigantic fiends on the loose! First, scaly creatures from the depths rise in THE BEACH GIRLS AND THE GORILLA and the Monster to attack a bunch of party-happy hipsters trying to catch a few waves, turning their hopping shindig into a beach blanket scream-o! Then newly married plantation owner Raymond Burr finds wedded bliss turning into the ultimate domestic nightmare when a voodoo curse turns him into a savage beast, leaving his poor confused spouse a RIDE OF THE GORILLA! Finally, nightclub comedians Duke and Sammy plummet from the air and land on an island where humans are being transformed into big, raucous apes in the wild monster comedy BELA LUGOSI MEETS A BROOKLYN GORILLA. This collection of three king-sized hits packs in too much fun for just one disc!
    The Beach Girls and the Monster/The Brain From Planet Arous
    Average customer rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    • Sleep through the first one, Watch the Brain
    The Beach Girls and the Monster/The Brain From Planet Arous
    Starring: Image 2pak
    Manufacturer: Image Entertainment
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

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    ASIN: B0000TAZ74
    Release Date: 2003-12-30

    Customer Reviews:

    2 out of 5 stars Sleep through the first one, Watch the Brain.......2006-11-10

    Ho hum I watched the Beach Girls and the Monster and I, yes I who love old Sci Fi classics and campy movies can't remember much. Terrible, but not terrible in a good way like "The Brain from Planet Arous" which is a must have for collectors of the old campy, drive-in or Sci Fi movies. Yes you can really see the string on the brain towards the end of the film. So, 2 stars since the beach girls are worth 0 and the brain is worth 4.
    The Beach Girls and the Monster
    Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    • Monster???
    • 3andahaff
    • It's no Creature from the Black Lagoon; nice DVD though!
    • Five star sedative
    • Monster From the Surf
    The Beach Girls and the Monster
    Starring: Clyde Adler , Sue Casey , Dale Davis (II) , Elaine DuPont , and Walker Edmiston
    Manufacturer: Image Entertainment
    ProductGroup: DVD
    Binding: DVD

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    5. The Unearthly The Unearthly

    ASIN: B0000648YE
    Release Date: 2002-05-07

    Description

    At California's Malibu Beach, you'll find everything: hot, hunky, sun-bronzed surfers; bikini-clad chicks stacked to Pasadena; rock n' rollers; beatniks; booze; beer and something else--a hideous reptilian monster with a hunger for bitchin' babes. Dance to the rockin' tunes "Monster in the Surf" and "More Than Wanting You." Chill to the ghastly monster as it stalks its prey. Thrill as the surf-studs ride the big ones in a drive-in '60s romp that will scare the yell out of you! Great fun.

    Customer Reviews:

    2 out of 5 stars Monster???.......2007-06-27

    I purchased this DVD in memorium of Walker Edmiston in light of his recent death. He was a great man and actor and I thought it would be nice to have something of his work on film. The film also has an interesting history (google it for fun.) I realized that this film was low budget and that monsters had evolved little as of the 1960's, but I hoped that would result in comedy. Such was not the case. I'm not really sure why anyone would want to buy this DVD. I was hoping for 'it's so awful it's funny.' However I found little humor in the shallow plot and dancing beach girls. The title of the film pretty much sums it up: "The Beach Girls and the Monster." If you're hoping for more you'll be sadly disappointed.

    3 out of 5 stars 3andahaff.......2006-02-20

    Here's a fun little flick to lighten your spirits. Lots of booty shaking beach chix, dancing and singing, and surfing stock footage. A monster is lurking around the beach and killing those no-good deliquent surfer teens. The whole "monster" concept of the film actually seems like it was thrown in as an afterthought coz most of the film seems to be about a guy wanting to hang out on the beach and be a surfer dude while his dad wants him to get serious and become a marine biologist. Throw in a cheating wife and gimpy roomate and what we got here is a surfin soap opera with an occasional monster attack. The same surf song seems to be played throughout the whole film. When the monster attacks we're treated to a peppy jazz tune that sounds alot like Dave Brubeck's song, "Take Five". Look at the cover of this dvd. That's exactly what you get with this film.

    4 out of 5 stars It's no Creature from the Black Lagoon; nice DVD though!.......2002-08-17

    For some reason, American International Pictures never properly exploited the huge potential crossover appeal of their highly successful beach party and horror genres (witness the tepid Ghost in the Invisible Bikini). Attempting to fill this void, kiddie-show producers Edward Janis and Joan Gardner concocted this mildly enjoyable, very low-budget beach/horror item (fondly remembered as Monster from the Surf on TV). The story is primarily a dysfunctional-family melodrama: it seems oceanographer dad (Jon Hall) is losing his grip because son Richard (Arnold Lessing, looking rather more than teenaged) is being distracted from his studies by the surf and sand set, and also apparently because frustrated, shrewish wife Vicki (Sue Casey) is stepping out on him. Meanwhile, an alleged "sea monster" is bumping off errant teens (the minute a stray couple heads down the shore you know they're toast). The production is 'enhanced' somewhat by the participation of puppeteer/voice artist/sculptor Walker Edmiston (who plays the crippled sculptor Mark, wrote the song "Monster in the Surf," and sculpted the creature's head) and more so by surfing photographer Dale Davis, who supplied some nice footage of hot-dogging tube action. Also on the upside: BG&TM offers probably the largest chunk of halfway-decent instrumental surf music to make it onto a movie screen during the craze years (Dick Dale, The Pyramids, et al. were usually not allowed to play their best [instrumental] stuff in the Beach Party movies). The main title theme, repeated throughout the film (minus the horrendous opening vocals), and a "spooky" reverb guitar-and-sax theme actually hold up pretty well today. No musical group is credited so apparently these and the vaguely Brubeckian cocktail/spy-jazz cues are courtesy of Frank Sinatra Jr. (yes, THAT Frank Sinatra Jr.) The movie also generates a modicum of sleazy Adults Only ambience, mostly thanks to Ms. Casey, whose cold-eyed, acid-tongued demeanor begs comparison with Meg Myles in Satan in High Heels, Tura Satana in Faster Pussycat, and other definitive "bad girl" performances. And trash film junkies will have fun snickering at the Edwoodian dialogue ("I still believe that a human clawed that girl to death, not a fish, no matter how big"); ultra-chintzy, overlit monster suit; and some of the least convincing rear-projection driving scenes ever committed to film (check the size and trajectory of some of those following/passing vehicles!). Unfortunately, the homely beach girls, lacklustre party scenes, and cringeworthy vocal numbers and 'blackout' jokes cause one to reflect only on how brilliantly these elements were handled by William Asher in the AIP series. Cult status or no, "More Than Wanting You" is just lame, and the singing hand puppet is, well, a singing hand puppet. According to several of the principals, the film was actually directed 'by committee' and it shows. The writing, performances, editing, and continuity are consistently amateurish (watch the white MG transform into a different auto as it heads over the cliff in the finale); plot points are telegraphed by obvious, heavy-handed dialogue; and nominal director and star Jon Hall (looking puffy and bug-eyed) overacts wildly throughout. Hard to believe he was once the debonair ladies' man romancing Maria Montez on-screen. SF/horror fans will groan at the cop-out ending and the entire picture will most likely disappoint straights expecting an actual Good Movie. However, Beach Girls and the Monster does offer a sizable chunk of cheese for low-budget schlock aficionados to snack on. Makes a great double bill with Horror of Party Beach (still MIA on DVD).
    Yet another fine Image/Wade Williams presentation, Beach Girls is offered here in probably the definitive DVD edition. The source print has been transferred in anamorphic widescreen, matted at 1.85:1, and other than some light speckling and blemishing, and sporadic, barely noticeable lining it looks great, with generally excellent brightness, contrast, sharpness, and shadow/highlight detail (limited at times by the quality of the original cinematography). The full-frame BG&TM trailer looks a little dupey but still very good, with only some light speckling apparent, and the usual five bonus WW Collection trailers are included in a cookie. The disc also features an extensive gallery of stills, on-set candids, and advertising art (some of the photos are in color), and an underwhelming eight-page extract from the original script in Adobe PDF format. The Dolby Digital 1.0 mono sound is clear and full, the main menu is nicely animated, and there are informative liner notes by Tom Weaver in the keep case. One of the nicer packages in the Image/Williams series. Three stars for the movie, five for the DVD, equals four overall.

    5 out of 5 stars Five star sedative.......2002-08-07

    This movie used to play periodically on late Saturday night Philadelphia TV in the 60s. My family and I must have watched it at least a dozen times without ever seeing the end. It got to be a real joke. We used to watch for it in the listings, and every time it would play we would gather together in front of the tube resolving to stick it through to the end, only to fall asleep once again. Twenty years later I finally got to see the end, but I won't ruin it for you.

    3 out of 5 stars Monster From the Surf.......2002-07-08

    Monster From the Surf was this movies original title, I think it still is. I was shocked to know they changed it's name because I have been searching for this everywhere. Well I would not reccomend this to anyone no matter what type of movies you like. As a classic horror fan I was dissapointed to see this, they spend half the movie showing people surfing LITERALLY, watch for yourself it's actually almost half the whole movie showing clips of people surfing, looks like they stole the footage from somewhere, and to watch the whole movie and find out theres no monster but a guy in a suit was a huge dissapointment as well, I do love the design of the monster though. Horny directors try to get [rearend] shots of the gals in this flick and even breast close-ups while the girls are dancing! I mean come on, how horny do you have to be to sneak something up like that. There is no nudity in this film or much violence, if you want to call the "monsters" attacks violence. Theres not much I can say, just a jealous father getting his revenge whatever it may be, personally I don't care. But if your into collecting strange movies like me then I suggest you get it,. otherwise forget about it.

    DVD:

    1. The British Horror Collection (Tower of Evil / Inseminoid / Horror Hospital / Curse of the Voodoo)
    2. The Deadly Spawn
    3. The Devil and Daniel Johnston
    4. The Fantastic Films of Ray Harryhausen - Legendary Monster Series (Jason and the Argonauts / The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad / The Golden Voyage of Sinbad / Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger / The 3 Worlds of Gulliver)
    5. The Fantastic Films of Ray Harryhausen - Legendary Monster Series (Jason and the Argonauts / The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad / The Golden Voyage of Sinbad / Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger / The 3 Worlds of Gulliver)
    6. The Hideous Sun Demon
    7. The Iceman Interviews
    8. The Late Great Planet Earth
    9. The Lawnmower Man (New Line Platinum Series)
    10. The Lost Continent

    DVD

    DVD