Sunday, August 30, 2009

Brady Bunch Tivo Alerts!

Susan Olsen (better known as Cindy Brady) appeared on "The Today Show" on Monday morning to promote the new book 'Love to Love You Bradys: The Bizarre Story of The Brady Bunch Variety Hour!' In case you missed it, here's the clip:

video

On Tuesday morning, she'll appear on "Fox and Friends" on the Fox News Channel, then the book is being plugged on the syndicated "Inside Edition." Additional appearances on radio, television, the web and live book signings is available at the Love to Love You Bradys official site!





Let's hope Susan doesn't flip off anyone else on-screen...
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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Well, kiss off getting laid...


What happens when you take '70s singers The Hudson Brothers and drop them into an '80s horror spoof with Bud Cort (Harold & Maude), John Larroquette and Julie Newmar? You get Hysterical, a film that I remember virtually nothing about. This was requested, Eegah came through with a share, and I haven't had a chance to download and watch it yet. Although the film did get a DVD release, quite predictably, it's out of print and now being scalped. Here's the synopsis from imdb:

A burned out writer retreats to a northwest town called Hellview to write the great American novel. Unfortunately for him, the lighthouse he is renting is inhabited by the spirit of a woman who killed herself there one hundred years before and now wants him to replace her lost love, Captain Howdy. When Captain Howdy is resurrected, two daring adventure seekers are brought in to solve the case and find out the secret of the lighthouse.

Hysterical
DOWNLOAD
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Saturday, August 22, 2009

Let's get jinky with it!


Everyone who knows me knows that even as an adult, I'm still a fan of Scooby-Doo -- I credit the show with giving me my love for monsters and horror. That said, I wasn't much of a fan of the 2002 film. I dunno what in the world would possess them to turn "danger prone Daphne" into Buffy the Vampire Slayer, to cast Latino Freddie Prinze Jr. as a pasty blonde dude, to include an asinine farting contest and to transform an obnoxious sidekick into a super-villain. But there were four good things about the film: Matthew Lillard, Linda Cardellini, the production design and the music. Unfortunately, Cardellini's best scene didn't make the final cut and most of the music was never officially released...


So here we have a bootleg with David Newman's complete score for the film. I have no idea where this originated, but at one time, it was available on a bunch of blogs. Looks like the shares have dried up, so here it again -- thanks to whomever originally ripped and shared this!


Scooby-Doo
Score by David Newman

01. Luna Ghost
02. Van Crash
03. Fred and Velma/The Breakup
04. Don't Come Knocking
05. All You Can Eat
06. Scooby Kisses Fred
07. Mary Jane
08. Cat & Dog
09. Emil Explains It All
10. 10 Mondavarious Out Of Costume
11. Strong Man
12. Phone Call
13. Voodoo House
14. Castle Warning
15. Hamburgers
16. Outside the Castle
17. Inside the Castle, Part 1
18. Inside the Castle, Part 2
19. Safe at the Castle
20. Scooby and Shaggy Leave the Banquet
21. Daphne Finds The Demonritis
22. Fart Contest
23. Castle Alarm
24. Flashback Suspects/Demonritis
25. Nikoto Plays the Piano
26. Scrappy Doo
27. Daphne and Fred Enter
28. Attack at Dead Mike's
29. Demons Steal the Kids
30. Security Guard/Damaged Building
31. Fred Chases Shaggy and Scooby Doo
32. Mary Jane's True Colors
33. Possession and Repossession
34. Voodoo on the Beach
35. Shaggy's Inspiration Speech
36. Pre-Ritual Disaster
37. The Ritual Begins
38. Taking Scooby's Soul
39. Scooby's Soul is Saved
40. Song Overlay
41. Finale

DOWNLOAD LINKS:
MultiUpload, Sharebee

And as a bonus, Hayden offered up a rip of "(You're Just Too Good to Be True) Can't Take My Eyes Off of You," which was performed by Linda Cardellini but left off the soundtrack!

Can't Take My Eyes Off of You
DOWNLOAD LINK:
Mediafire


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And here's the tie-in book that my nephew bought me from his school's book fair. Yep, everyone knows I love Scooby!


This fluffy 50 page book includes interviews and stats on the cast, behind the scenes info, a trivia quiz, 80-some color photos and more!

Scooby Doo: The Complete Movie Scrapbook
DOWNLOAD LINKS:
Sharebee: PDF, ZIP, CBR
MultiUpload: PDF, ZIP, CBR
or
Gallery
or
Issuu


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Perhaps it's because of all of the inside jokes from the show, but surprisingly I liked Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed (despite some really horrible CGI), and I think it made me like the first film a tad bit more. Couldn't find this when I first did up this post, but thankfully, J. came through with a copy, so here it is! Thanks, J!

Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed
Complete Score by David Newman

01. Main Title
02. Mystery Inc./Museum Quartet
03. String Quartet
04. Patrick/Pterodactyl Bedlam
05. Scooby & Shaggy Make a Pact
06. Jeremiah Wickles Revealed
07. Wickles House Revealed
08. Search for Clues
09. Book of Monsters
10. Black Knight Revealed
11. Black Knight Fight/It's Randemonium
12. Outside the Faux Ghost
13. Whack a Mole
14. Wig Toss/Found Out
15. All the Costumes Are Gone/Patrick
16. Scooby & Shaggy Follow Jeremiah
17. Into the Wickles Mine
18. Scooby & Shaggy Discovered
19. Scooby
20. Monsters Attack
21. Velma Figures It Out
22. Talk of Heroes/Petro Chase
23. Enter Black Knight
24. Monster Challenges
25. Shrine to Jacobo
26. Monster of a Showdown
27. The Mine Wrap-Up

DOWNLOAD LINKS:


P.S. It never hurts to look for more Scooby Snacks!
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Friday, August 21, 2009

Disco Beaver from Outer Space!



If you've seen Mr. Mike's Mondo Video, The Groove Tube, Tunnelvision, or Loose Shoes, then you have some idea of what to expect from National Lampoon's Disco Beaver from Outer Space. The difference is, this one's better than any of the aforementioned. Following the early success of Saturday Night Live (simply titled Saturday Night in those days), there was an onslaught of coked out sketch comedy films and TV specials released including this one, which was made for HBO. The premise is pretty simple: A couple sits down for an evening of channel-surfing, and the programs they flip past on the TV are some of the most bizarre one could imagine!

There's Dragula, a gay vampire who turns straight guys into raging queens (this skit seems to be the inspiration for Curse of the Queerwolf), a schizo ventriloquist, confessions of a Perrier addict, an Oscar Wilde skit that's captioned for a then-modern American audience, an off-kilter country singer, commercials for people with chronic gas, plus plenty of other weirdness and depravity... and Lynn Redgrave (who probably fired her manager soon after)!



Regular visitors Eegah Inc asked for the special and Lord Shockedelic quickly came through with a copy. The picture quality's quite good, but the audio's pretty scratchy. Not that I'm complaining -- we're talking about a 30 year old special that's never had an official video release, after all! So if you like it, thank them... and if you hate it, blame them! Personally, I'm thanking them!

Disco Beaver from Outer Space
Download!

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Thursday, August 20, 2009

He kills people every day!

"It's Halloween, it's prom night, there's a psycho loose, so don't open the door, don't answer the phone, don't look in the attic, don't go to the bathroom, don't go into the ocean, and don't go into space 'cause no one can hear you scream."

It's been 13 years since the pumpkin headed lawnmower killer mowed down Mary's (Julia Duffy, Newhart, Designing Women) older sister Pam on the night of the Halloween Pumpkin Prom. Now as Mary prepares to attend the prom herself, the killer's back...

Years before Scary Movie, there was a short-lived craze of low-budget horror movie spoofs, aimed at a stoner, drive-in audience. Although Wacko isn't as clever as Student Bodies, as star-filled as Pandemonium, or as lovable as Zapped!, it does have its moments. Set at Alfred Hitchcock High School, the comedy's a mixed bag (most of the best gags are in the last half hour of the film), with countless references to Halloween, Psycho, The Omen, and Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and lesser references to everything from Welcome Back Kotter to West Side Story.

In addition to Duffy (who also starred in the memorable, multiply titled Night Warning around the same time), the film also stars Andrew Dice Clay as a Barbarino-ish superman with a schlong of steel, singer/voice actress extraordinaire E.G. Daily (One Dark Night) as one of Mary's closest friends, Anthony James (Burnt Offerings, Return From Witch Mountain) as a potential suspect, Jeff Altman (Pink Lady and Jeff, Nurses) as the religious whackjob vice principal, character actor Joe Don Baker as the cop, George Kennedy (Dallas) as Mary's pervert father, '60s sexpot Stella Stevens as her mother, and Mrs. Bates as herself. The film was released on DVD in Europe (though the discs are out of print) but never here in the USA... and it doesn't look like it's getting a release any time soon. EegahInc. generously offered up this rip from the '80s laserdisc (but bear in mind that it was released long before digital remastering). Thanks again, Eegah!

DOWNLOAD LINKS:
RapidShare

(You'll need to download all 8 parts to open the rar)

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Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Wanna see something REALLY scary?

Haven't done a "really scary" post in a while, but this one is certainly worthy of that title...

While searching for something completely unrelated on eBay, I stumbled on this "Wacko Jacko Halloween mask." Gotta say, I've seen a lot of frightening Halloween masks over the years, but this has to be THE scariest mask I've ever laid eyes on! And you too can frighten friends and strangers for only $29.99 plus shipping!

Of course, this cheap, paper variation, given away at this year's Comic Con, is pretty horrific in its own rite...

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Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Who do you think we are?


Quick non-movie share -- yet another Alice Cooper rarity. Here's the early acetate mixes of Cooper's 1981 album "Special Forces." Most of the songs are mixed slightly differently than they appear on the released version of the album (perhaps most instantly noticeable on "You Want It, You Got It"), and "Who Do You Think We Are" is closer to the single version than the album cut. Strangely, it doesn't include "Look at You Over There Ripping the Sawdust From My Teddy Bear," which was listed on the album cover and supposedly dropped at the last minute (I guess it wasn't so last minute after all). I downloaded this "years ago," though I haven't seen it anywhere since (and I don't remember where I got it!); thanks to whomever originally ripped and uploaded it!

Random pic of a nightmarish duo, circa 1984...

Alice Cooper
Special Forces (The Acetate Mixes)

01. Who Do You Think We Are?
02. Seven and Seven Is...
03. Prettiest Cop on the Block
04. Don't Talk Old to Me
05. Generation Landslide '81
06. Skeletons in the Closet
07. You Want It, You Got It
08. You Look Good in Rags
09. You're a Movie
10. Vicious Rumors

DOWNLOAD LINKS:
MultiUpload, Sharebee


PS: Lord Shockedelic pointed out that over at Power Pop Criminals, you can download the TV special! Alice Cooper in Paris was made for French TV, it features music videos from Special Forces, Flush the Fashion, plus a few earlier tunes, and it aired a grand total of once, never being officially seen outside of France. There's lots of copies of the special floating around, but most of them verge on unwatchable -- the print you can download there is complete and practically pristine. So head on over to Power Pop Criminals!
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Monday, August 17, 2009

Ol' Brown Ears Is Back!


35 years after their first TV special debuted and nearly 20 since the death of their creator, there's still a ginormous interest in The Muppets. But frustrating for fans, the various Muppet album releases seemed to go out of print in a heartbeat, and copies generally sell for astronomical prices on online sites (probably doesn't help that Muppet albums were geared towards kids -- who managed to wreck them, leaving less copies in circulation). This is one of the higher priced used Muppet albums...


Recorded by Jim Henson as his popular Rowlf the Dog character in 1984 (though he'd previously recorded many of these same songs for The Muppet Show), the recordings sat on the shelf until 1993 (three years after his death), when they were dusted off, fully orchestrated and finally released. Not my rip, this originated at the Cheeze Factory (before all of their old posts got wiped out). Thanks to the original uploader (cuz I sure can't afford to spend $100+ on a used CD!)

01. Lydia the Tattooed Lady
02. Eight Little Notes
03. I Never Harmed an Onion
04. Halfway Down the Stairs
05. Memory Lane
06. Cottleston Pie
07. It Ain't Easy Being Green
08. Carbon Paper
09. Garden Song
10. New York State of Mind
11. When
12. You and I and George
13. Wishing Song
14. Old Dog Trey
DOWNLOAD LINKS:
MultiUpload, Sharebee

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Sunday, August 16, 2009

Bring me the rage!


My Carrie site's currently fallen into disrepair and it's such a daunting task to update and re-up that I haven't wanted to screw with it. But I was asked for the soundtrack for The Rage: Carrie 2 last month (my computer died the following day), so here it finally is...


For those who missed the mega-flop (or tried to pretend it never existed), judging it on its own merits, it's not a bad film -- but it underwent countless production problems (filming was postponed for two years, the original director quit two weeks into principal photography), it was panned mostly because they had the audacity to make a sequel more than 20 years later ... and the Columbine High School massacre occurred a few weeks after the film's release (talk about bad timing!). That said, it did spend a while as a top rental on video... though one would hardly know that ten years later.


Rachel Lang (Emily Bergl, Happy Campers, Men in Trees) has had a rough life. At five, her wacko mother flipped out and was committed to the Arkham mental institution, so the girl was bounced into foster care. As a teenager, she's become hard-edged and cynical, with only one close friend, Lisa (Mena Suvari, American Beauty), and her dog, Walter, to keep her company. But when Lisa abruptly commits suicide after being used as a pawn in a high school sex game (based on the real-life 1993 Spur Posse incident) and Walter's life is put in jeopardy by a speeding truck full of pigs(!), Rachel's mind begins to snap. Seeing traces of Carrie White in the teen, guidance counselor Sue Snell (Amy Irving, the only survivor of the massacre in the original Carrie) takes an interest in Rachel, who consistently pushes her away, just as the girl realizes jock Jessie (Jason London, To Wong Foo) isn't a chauvinist (ahem) pig like his buddies. Unfortunately, Jessie's friends have a problem with his budding relationship with outcast Rachel, so they set out to humiliate her....


Okay, so the plot's derivative and its ties to the original are clunky at best, but it's still a decent flick -- and better than most of the schlocky, self-referential teen horror flicks that followed in the wake of Scream. The actors are all charming and believable, director Katt Shea injected a phenomenal visual aesthetic into the film, it veers off on its own course with the sex game storyline -- and Sissy Spacek was impressed enough with the final cut that she signed off on letting them use her image in a few strategically placed Sue Snell flashbacks. Truthfully, I fully expected to hate Carrie 2 but I was pleasantly surprised that I didn't (unlike the 2002 Carrie remake, which I didn't instantly love). But anyway...


Here's a dual soundtrack share, all zipped up in one file. The now out of print soundtrack album was one of those annoying "music from and inspired by" albums -- meaning half of the songs on the disc weren't in the movie. I think I'm missing two songs from the film (and I couldn't find the exact recording of "God Bless the Child" that was used in the movie), but the rest are here. Also included is the unreleased score by Danny B Harvey (frontman for 13 Cats, a band who had two songs in the film that were omitted from the soundtrack CD).


The Rage: Carrie 2 Soundtrack

01. Crazy Little Voices - Ra
02. Quick, Painless and Easy - Ivy
03. Ressurection - Fear Factory
04. Year of the Summer - Paradise Lost
05. Low Down - 10 Watt Mary
06. Looking Down the Barrel - 5x Down
07. Die with Me - Type O Negative
08. Keep Sleeping - 16 Volt
09. Dark Love - Kate Schrock
10. Laughter Lines - Sack
11. The Slower I Go - LAX
12. Sleep - Trailer Park Pam
13. Spark Somebody Up - Budda Monk
BONUS TRACKS
14. 13 Cats - 13 Cats
15. Teddy Boy King Fu Weapon - 13 Cats
16. Far Behind - The Hippos
17. What's Fair - Razed in Black
18. My Wonderful Friend - Transmutator
19. Comes Love - Billie Holliday
20. God Bless the Child - Billie Holliday
21. God Bless the Child (78 version) - Billie Holiday

The Rage: Carrie 2 (Unreleased) Score
by Danny B. Harvey
01. Main Titles
02. Lisa's Dead
03. Rachel Looks at Pictures
04. Moving Cup
05. Scare Tactic
06. Terrorize
07. The Old School
08. Rachel's First Time
09. Grounded
10. Sneaky Sue
11. Rachel Goes Crazy
12. Mark Drowns
13. The Devil's In You
14. Tracey Gets It
15. Rachel Believes in Jesse
16. Jesse Catches Fire
17. Jesse's Dream
18. Jesse Wakes Up
19. Walter's Tune

DOWNLOAD LINKS:
MultiUpload, Sharebee

Unpleasant dreams!
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Saturday, August 15, 2009

A Very Brady Screwup!


Amazon.com is pretty notorious for their shipping mistakes -- but in this instance, it's advantageous. "Love to Love You Bradys," the new tell-all coffee table book about the legendary Brady Bunch Variety Hour by Ted Nichelson, Susan Olsen (aka Cindy Brady) and Lisa Sutton was slated to hit shelves on September 1st. Apparently they hit the amazon warehouse early, because they're shipping copies already!


Tina Turner, Milton Berle & The Brady Bunch (with Fake Jan!)... what a combo!


In these You Tube interviews, conducted by Chris Mann (who wrote "Come and Knock On Our Door: A Hers and Hers and His Guide to Three's Company" -- another great book, by the way), Susan Olsen talks about the book, the variety show, Maureen McCormack's drug problems, her closeted TV dad, knowing Michael Jackson, meeting Farrah Fawcett on the variety show, Eve Plumb's reluctance to appear in Brady reunions, and Precious Paws, her animal charity.









And this is the thoroughly bizarre, "retarded Christopher Columbus" skit that Susan Olsen referred to in the first part of her interview...



And in case you missed 'em, ALL of the songs from the 9 episodes of the show are available for download -- click here and scroll down for the numerous related posts!
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Friday, August 14, 2009

How did you die, Joseph?


1980's The Changeling is sort of a curio. Although the film was successful, it doesn't have the prestige of, say, Burnt Offerings or The Amityville Horror. Genre buffs are quick to cite it as one of the creepiest haunted house movies ever made, but they rarely mention that the creepy moments are few, most of the dialogue is utterly preposterous and the pacing is more than a little askew. This doesn't strike me as the type of film that George C. Scott would choose to star in, yet there he is. And then there's the fact that the plot veers off in a bizarre direction, which includes a political coverup... But perhaps the strangest part of all is the film was scored by three different composers.


Okay, so the plot is this: John Russell (Scott) loses his wife and daughter in a freak accident. Soon after, he moves into a lavish mansion that's been abandoned for 12 years (I never quite understood the logic of a lonely widower moving into a monstrous mansion, but anyway...) and falls for the realtor (a bit too quickly after his wife's sudden demise). Shortly after taking up residence in his new digs, John begins being taunted by the ghost of a young boy that once lived in the mansion, who now wants John to solve the mystery of his murder.


Sound familiar? Yep, the plot's been done a million times, frequently better... and The Ring and The Others each rehashed some of the film's smaller elements. The actors did manage to elevate the dialogue a bit, but never out of hoky b-movie territory (seriously, Ernest Borgnine's cornball dialogue in The Devil's Rain is more convincing!). Where the movie succeeds -- and succeeds well -- is in the atmosphere. Director Peter Medak very effectively created a sense of foreboding in the mansion, the flashbacks of the boy's murder are truly shocking, even by today's standards (those scenes alone are undoubtedly what garnered the film an R rating), and the visuals are greatly enhanced with the music by the film's trio of composers. So though the movie's far from perfect, it does remain a memorable entry in the haunted house horror movie sub-genre.


Okay shut up, Vince, and get on with the share... I was asked for this, so here it is, the soundtrack for The Changeling, with music by Rick Wilkins, Kenneth Wannberg & Howard Blake. This is the long belated 2001 single disc release (the subsequent 2007 2-disc release boasted an additional 13 unused/alternate tracks).



01. Main Title
02. The First Look
03. First Chill
04. Music Box Theme for Piano
05. Country Ride
06. Bathtub Reflections
07. Secret Door
08. The Attic
09. Music Box Theme
10. The Ball
11. The Seance
12. The Killing
13. Carmichael Reflects/On the Floor
14. Face on the Bedroom Floor
15. Chain Reaction
16. The Doors
17. Mirror, Mirror on the Wall
18. The Attic Calls Claire
19. Resolution
20. End Title
21. The Seance - Alternate Version
22. Carmichael's Demise
23. Piano Solos
24. End Titles - Alternate Version


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Thursday, August 13, 2009

But you STILL have Rhoda...


If you stumble onto a post here right after I've published it, there's a 98% chance that it'll have gone through at least one rewrite by the next day. Although I'm unquestionably a long-winded perfectionist, sometimes additional things are shared and/or brought to my attention after I write up a post. The latter's the case with yesterday's share of The Bad Seed, which now includes script excerpts of the deleted scenes and an original slick ad for the film (wow, thanks again, Wade!), a link to an amusing Bad Seed song that an anonymous visitor pointed out, and an additional write-up for the little-seen related film, Tommorow, the World! (which I didn't initially think to mention...). So if you're a fan of the film who saw the big post yesterday, give it another look today!

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Wednesday, August 12, 2009

I hit him with my shoes!


I don't feel a lick of guilt for loving bad movies, but if I did, I'd certainly cite the 1956 camp masterpiece The Bad Seed as a "guilty pleasure." So what's spoiled little Rhoda Penmark (Patty McCormack, The Ropers) to do when her classmate wins an award that he doesn't deserve? Use her shoes as deadly weapons! And what's her mother (Nancy Kelly, sister of Maverick star Jack Kelly) to do when she realizes that her seemingly perfect 10 year old daughter is responsible for the death of a classmate -- and possibly others? Freak out, prattle on incessantly, smash her hands on the table and attempt suicide!

"Who killed my sister, the wicked witch of the east? Was it you?"

And what's the distraught mother (Eileen Heckart, Butterflies Are Free, The 5 Mrs. Buchanans) of the murdered classmate to do? Get drunk and make a fool of herself! (After all, "It's a pleasure to stay drunk when your little boy's been killed!") And what's a scummy handyman (perennial bit player Henry Jones) to do when he finally realizes the young girl he's been endlessly teasing is actually a killer? Take a nap next to an incinerator on a highly flammable bed made of straw (seems logical to me)! And what's a nosy landlady (Evelyn Varden) to do about this homicidal little brat? Vehemently defend the little bitch and lavish her with gifts! And what would I give young Rhoda for a basket of kisses? I'd give her a basket of hugs!

Pedophiles of the world, beware!

Based on William March's novel (which first posed the question, "Is criminal behavior an inherited trait?"), The Bad Seed debuted on the Broadway stage in 1954, where it quickly was established as a hit. Director Mervyn LeRoy was so taken with the stage version that he retained the bulk of the cast and changed very little of the dialogue and staging for the film. This certainly explains why the movie is the over the top campfest that it is -- the actors had fine-tuned their roles on the stage during more than 300 performances and, although it was being committed to film, they still played it as though there were a live audience watching.

Hi, I'm Rhoda. Wanna play?

Despite its unshakable theatrical roots, the film version was a hit and (as is always the case) it was remade for TV in the '80s with David Carradine and Lynn Redgrave (that version is so tediously dull, it verges on unwatchable) -- and essentially it was remade again in 1993 with Macaulay Culkin as The Good Son (which was infinitely better than the '80s remake) -- plus it's been ripped-off, spoofed and referenced endlessly. And then there were two follow-ups....

For the record that's "TUCK you in." Sorta looks like a different word.

In 1995, The Bad Seed was followed by the first of two no-budget, would-be sequels. Although they couldn't use the name Rhoda Penmark, they brought in star Patty McCormack to essentially play the same character, all grown up as Mommy. This time, the deadly shoe's on the other foot, with a young girl realizing her prim and proper mother is a homicidal maniac. Co-starring b-movie queen Brinke Stevens and Jason Miller (Father Karras from The Exorcist), Mommy's not bad for a little indie shot on a shoestring in Iowa --but most of the locals obviously weren't actors, it only occasionally veers into all-out camp, and since the audience is on the joke, there's not as much suspense as there should be. However, the sequel, Mommy 2: Mommy's Day, was much better. Mommy's Day finds McCormack being rehabilitated and released from prison, only to be the prime suspect in another string of murders... that she may or may not have committed. Mommy 2 is sort of The Bad Seed's take on Psycho II, and it's pretty effective. But back to the original '56 classic...

LeRoy was born in a barn...

Years ago when I posted an Alex North compilation, I expressed annoyance that there were only a few tracks on it from The Bad Seed. Recently a visitor named Wade stumbled on that post and offered up a 320 rip of the complete soundtrack for the film, taken from a long out of print German CD release. Upon listening to it and hearing a track that's not in the film, finally something else made sense...

Deleted scene!

Originally, immediately following the opening credits, the camera zoomed in on the home of the Penmarks, and found Christine thrashing around in bed, awakening from a nightmare. She and Kenneth get up for a glass of milk, and to check in on their sleeping daughter, Rhoda -- and the camera lingers for a moment on one of Rhoda's treasures that's referred to later in the film. The photo from this scene, pictured above, appeared on one of the film's lobby cards, and the soundtrack album includes a track called "The Dream," which scored this lengthy scene. I have no idea if the scene was ever screened, but it was removed from the final cut of the film, along with a few minor snippets of dialogue and a couple scenes that took place at the Fern Dayschool picnic...

"Nobody likes me, it's all my fault..."

In addition to providing the soundtrack album, Wade was kind enough to provide scans of several pages of the shooting script for the film, featuring the scenes that didn't make it into the final print of the movie...


The Bad Seed deleted scenes - Script Excerpts
DOWNLOAD LINKS:
PDF, Gallery

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Am I the only one who passionately hates the original poster art?

Alex North
The Bad Seed Soundtrack

01. The Bad Seed (Main Titles)
02. The Dream
03. No More Children
04. The Truth
05. Basket of Kisses
06. Confession
07. The Princess
08. The Locket
09. Identity
10. My Baby Sleep Well/The Medal/Rhoda's Death

DOWNLOAD LINKS:
MultiUpload, Sharebee

Also, if you're looking for Bad Seed music, an anonymous visitor pointed me to the hilarious related ditty "Leroy" by The Fibonaccis.
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As much as I detest the original poster art, I'm kind of taken with this beautiful slick ad for the film, which Wade also contributed...

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And as a post-script to this monstrous Bad Seed post...

Fans of The Bad Seed, I highly recommend seeking out a copy of the 1944 film Tomorrow, the World! A wartime propaganda film of sorts, the story revolves around Emil (Skip Homeier, who later portrayed Dr Sevrin, king of the space hippies, in Star Trek), a young Nazi boy who comes to live in America. Although he tries to pull the wool over everyone's eyes, most are quick to catch on to his devious ways. Unlike Rhoda, Emil's not truly evil, but he similarly thinks he's smarter than everyone and it's a lot of fun seeing him be nasty!


Tomorrow, the World! was also based on a play (starring Homeier) that pre-dates The Bad Seed by more than a decade, and it's difficult not to see some parallels in the stories and the campy performances of the young leads. Unfortunately, it barely got a sole VHS/DVD release -- which is now out of print, but it can still be found at online rental sites. For fans of The Bad Seed, it's certainly worth a look!

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