THE HIDEOUS
MOVIE REVIEW |
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You Support This Site When You Buy My Books E.C. McMullen Jr. PERPETUAL BULLET "'Some People' ... may be the standout story in the book." - John Grant, Infinityplus E.C. McMullen Jr. WILLOW BLUE "'Willow Blue' will burrow under your skin and stay there long after you've put the book down." - Jeffrey Reddick, Creator of FINAL DESTINATION IN OTHER BOOKS E.C. McMullen Jr.'s short story CEDO LOOKED LIKE PEOPLE in the anthology FEAR THE REAPER "This Ray Bradbury-esque is one of the most memorable and one of the more original stories I've read in a long time." - Steve Isaak, Goodreads HORROR 201: The Silver Scream Filmmaker's Guidebook featuring RAY BRADBURY, JOHN CARPENTER, WES CRAVEN, TOM HOLLAND, E.C. McMULLEN Jr., GEORGE A. ROMERO, and many more. Extensively quoted in PHANTASM EXHUMED The Unauthorized Companion Robert S. Rhine's SATAN'S 3-RING CIRCUS OF HELL Forward by GAHAN WILSON & FEO AMANTE. Featuring comics by ALEX PARDEE, WILLIAM STOUT, STEVE BISSETTE, FRANK DIETZ, JIM SMITH, FRANK FORTE, ERIC PIGORS, MIKE SOSNOWSKI, OMAHA PEREZ, DAVID HARTMAN, STEVEN MANNION, and more! And In CINEMA E.C. McMullen Jr. Head Production Designer MINE GAMES (Starring: JOSEPH CROSS, BRIANA EVIGAN, ALEX MERAZ) Dept. head Special Effects Make-Up (SFX MUA) A SIERRA NEVADA GUNFIGHT (MICHAEL MADSEN & JOHN SAVAGE). Production Designer UNIVERSAL DEAD (DOUG JONES, D.B. SWEENEY, GARY GRAHAM) Art Director THE CRUSADER (COLIN CUNNINGHAM, GARY GRAHAM) |
Word of advice to any future directors out there: never put a word like "hideous" in your title. It's just too tempting for movie reviewers to use it against you. THE HIDEOUS SUN DEMON was directed by Tom Boutross (THE LEGEND OF BOGGY CREEK, THE TOWN THAT DREADED SUNDOWN) and Robert Clarke, and was written by Mr. Clarke, Phil Hiner, Donald R. Hoag (THE TELL-TALE HEART) and E.S. Seely Jr. And let me just mention that a staff of writers like this usually does not bode well. On the other hand the opening is fairly well done. We see an alarm going off at Atomic Research, Inc. and a man being carried by stretcher to an ambulance. The ambulance rushes him to a nearby hospital where we find he is research scientist Dr. Gilbert McKenna (played by writer/director Robert Clarke, wearing yet another hat). Gil has received a large dose of radiation and his condition is critical.
Or so it seems at first. But when Gil's colleagues, Ann Russell (Patricia Manning) and Dr. Frederick Buckell (Patrick Whyte: THE MOLE PEOPLE) arrive they're told by Dr. Stern (Robert Garry) that Gil seems fine. No radiation burns or other effects, in spite of receiving a large dose of a new "radiation from space" recently discovered by a satellite. Frederick volunteers a bit too much information and implies that the accident happened because Gil was hung over. Gil is kept in the hospital for observation but he feels okay. A nurse brings him up on the hospital's sun deck to catch some rays and it doesn't take long for a transformation to occur. The sun turns Gil into a horrible ... reptilian-looking ... something or other. Gil manages to run back inside the hospital and even though he frightens a lot of people no one is hurt. Cut to Dr. Stern providing a long exposition intermission as he explains to Ann and Frederick what has happened. He goes on at some length about how clearly Gil has "evolved" backwards into a lizard man. This radiation exposure has re-wound Gil's clock and as proof he mentions that a baby in the womb goes through all the stages of evolution, including a reptilian stage. Finally, the very thorough Dr. Stern puts on a short slide show meant to demonstrate similar radiation effects. He shows a slide of a spider and says, "This used to be a grasshopper. Well, you get the idea." Yeah, doc. I get the idea. Time for a !!!SCIENCE MOMENT!!!: Continued at SCIENCE MOMENT/HideousSunDemon
Once he's out of the sun Gil becomes human again. He goes home with strict orders to stay out of the sun (duh!) and proceeds to drink himself stupid (Imagine telling this story at the AA meeting!). Ann and Frederick try to comfort the distraught part-time lizard man but Gil still leaves the house and starts hanging out at a local dive bar where he has his eye on a well-endowed piano player named Trudy (Nan Peterson). Will Gil's out of control drinking make him careless about the sun? Will he run afoul of Trudy's jealous boyfriend? Will you ever care enough to actually watch this movie? My guess is no, which is one of many reasons why I give it one negative shriek girl.
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