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Post by lowtacks86 on Jul 7, 2021 1:46:27 GMT
The Creeping Terror. Some people might say "Manos: Hands of Fate" but that one is just tediously dull and doesn't have the same charm as say Plan 9.
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Post by kolchak92 on Jul 7, 2021 1:48:15 GMT
The Superman serials from 1948 and 1950 had a strong Ed Wood feel to them, at least I thought so.
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Post by politicidal on Jul 7, 2021 1:53:27 GMT
Maybe The Giant Claw or From Hell It Came (both 1957).
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Post by ck100 on Jul 7, 2021 1:57:01 GMT
The Room.
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Post by Prime etc. on Jul 7, 2021 2:21:04 GMT
The Beast of Yucca Flats
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Post by lowtacks86 on Jul 7, 2021 2:26:46 GMT
I forgot about that one, that one actually featured Ed Wood alumni Tor Johnson
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Post by Captain Spencer on Jul 7, 2021 2:33:09 GMT
Track Of The Moon Beast
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Post by TheGoodMan19 on Jul 7, 2021 8:01:30 GMT
They Saved Hitler's Brain
Even had a Ed Wood-esque super blunder. A German World War II staff car. With New York license plates.
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Post by phantomparticle on Jul 7, 2021 8:41:26 GMT
Wood's movies were technically as good as everyone else's. The photographic imagery in Plan 9 is sharp and the sound is crisp and clear. He simply had no talent as a writer and director even when he was able to hire a few decent actors like Lugosi and Gregory Walcott.
The Unearthly with John Carradine and Allison Hayes probably comes closest to being an Ed Wood type production with a larger budget and coherent script. It is done on a single set (house interior and surrounding garden), features Tor Johnson and is occasionally amusing. No incomprehensible dialogue (Pull the String!) or angora sweaters in this one, however.
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mgmarshall
Junior Member
@mgmarshall
Posts: 2,174
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Post by mgmarshall on Jul 7, 2021 8:47:47 GMT
Al Adamson is basically Ed Wood in color.
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Post by Vits on Jul 7, 2021 15:21:24 GMT
Would it be cheating to say ED WOOD (1994)?
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