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Monster a Go-Go
Monster a Go-Go
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Monster a Go-Go!
Original theatrical release poster
Directed by
Written bySheldon Seymour
Screenplay by
  • Bill Rebane
  • Jeff Smith
  • Dok Stanford
Produced by
StarringHenry Hite
Narrated by
  • Herschell Gordon Lewis (uncredited)
  • Bill Rebane (uncredited)
CinematographyFrank Pfeiffer
Production
companies
B.I. & L. Releasing Corp.[1]
Distributed byB.I. & L. Releasing Corp.
Release date
  • July 1965 (1965-07)
Running time
68 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Monster a Go-Go! is a 1965 American science-fiction horror film directed by Bill Rebane and Herschell Gordon Lewis (who remained uncredited in association with this film). The film is considered to be one of the worst films ever made.

Plot

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The plot concerns an American astronaut, Frank Douglas, who mysteriously disappears from his spacecraft as it parachutes to Earth. The policemen in one scene inspect the landing site of Douglas's capsule and notice a burned patch, only to dismiss it as a prank. The vanished astronaut is apparently replaced by or turned into a large, radioactive, humanoid monster. This is revealed when it comes into the scene and kills off Dr. Logan. A team of scientists and military men also attempts to capture the monster – and at one point succeed and imprison it in the lab, only to have it escape. Neither the capture nor the escape is ever shown, and both are simply mentioned by the narrator.

At the end of the film, the scientists corner the monster in a sewer under Chicago, but the monster suddenly disappears. The scientists receive a telegram stating that Douglas is in fact alive and well, having been rescued in the North Atlantic, perhaps implying the monster was an alien impersonating Douglas. The narrator provides the film's infamous closing narration:

As if a switch had been turned, as if an eye had been blinked, as if some phantom force in the universe had made a move eons beyond our comprehension, suddenly, there was no trail! There was no giant, no monster, no thing called "Douglas" to be followed. There was nothing in the tunnel but the puzzled men of courage, who suddenly found themselves alone with shadows and darkness! With the telegram, one cloud lifts, and another descends. Astronaut Frank Douglas, rescued, alive, well, and of normal size, some 8,000 miles away in a lifeboat, with no memory of where he has been, or how he was separated from his capsule! Then who, or what, has landed here? Is it here yet? Or has the cosmic switch been pulled? Case in point: The line between science fiction and science fact is microscopically thin! You have witnessed the line being shaved even thinner! But is the menace with us? Or is the monster gone?

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

The film had an unusual production history.[2] Director Rebane ran out of money while making the film. Herschell Gordon Lewis, who needed a second film to show with his own feature, Moonshine Mountain, bought the film, added a few extra scenes, included some new dialogue, and then released it, creating an odd, disjointed film with little continuity. Rebane had abandoned the film in 1961; Lewis did not finish the film until 1965, so he was unable to gather all of the original cast, resulting in almost half the characters disappearing midway through the film to be replaced by other characters who fill most of the same roles. One of the actors Lewis was able to rehire had dramatically changed his look in the intervening years, necessitating his playing the brother of the original character. At one point, when a phone supposedly rings, the sound effect is obviously a person making a noise with his mouth.[3]

Release and reception

[edit]

Critical reception has been predominantly negative, with the film regarded as being one of the all-time worst.

Allmovie gave the film a negative review, calling it "an incoherent concoction brewed solely to fill space on a double bill"[4] while TV Guide panned the film, calling it "garbage".[5]

Dennis Schwartz from Ozus' World Movie Reviews gave the film a negative review. In his review of the film, Schwartz called it "One of the most incoherent films ever made because the plot line can't be explained rationally nor are the characters clearly defined."[6] When reviewing the film, Horror News.net also noted the reason behind its negative reputation: "The film itself falls into the 'worst' category with not only a lethargic presentation but with its odd-pieced editing style. Some scenes pop in out of nowhere that really don't seem to have much to do with the previous scene. Others are typical conversation scenes that are just edited back and forth in a haphazard way. I think the film stands better as a piece to be mocked and laughed at than as a real piece of important cinema. In fact, you may find humor in just those elements alone that make the experience one to look for mistakes, continuity errors and ridiculous logic at times. Why they felt the need that it needed some hipster dance scenes thrown in to sell more tickets is beyond me. But the result is so odd that it also deserves a laugh. It's classic B-grade miss mash that only has appeal in its disjointed effort."[7]

The film's original director, Bill Rebane, released a "Special Collector's Edition" with commentary and other extras on Synergy Entertainment on October 19, 2010.[8]

Monster a Go-Go! was released with Psyched by the 4-D Witch as a DVD double feature by Something Weird Video.[9]

Mystery Science Theater 3000

[edit]

The film was featured in episode #421 of the satirical film-riffing television series Mystery Science Theater 3000, airing for the first time on Comedy Central on January 9, 1993, alongside the short Circus on Ice.[10] Writer Paul Chaplin called Monster a Go-Go "officially the worst movie" the show had featured, as of Season 7. The movie's lack of focus also forced the writers for the first time to explicitly decide not to have any of the episode's host segments have anything to do with the movie.[11]

Writer Jim Vorel ranked the episode #119 (out of 197 total MST3K episodes) in his ranking of episodes from the series's first 12 seasons. Vorel agrees with those who call Monster a Go-Go "one of the worst films ever made." The quality of the episode, Vorel argues, is dragged down by the "overwhelming pain" of the movie, calling it "pieced-together dreck" with a "horrendous audio track."[12]

The MST3K version of the film was released by Rhino Home Video[13] as part of the Mystery Science Theater 3000 Collection, vol. 8 DVD set. It was re-released by Shout Factory on November 15, 2018. The other episodes in the four-disc set include Hobgoblins (episode #907), The Phantom Planet (episode #902), and The Dead Talk Back (episode #603).[14]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Monster a Go-Go is a American co-directed by and , centering on the investigation of a crash-landing in that unleashes a towering, radiation-mutated monster responsible for a series of mysterious deaths. The story follows Colonel Steve Connors (Phil Morton) and his team as they track the creature, revealed to be Frank Douglas (), who was transformed during re-entry, culminating in a sudden and anticlimactic resolution where the monster inexplicably vanishes into the lake. With a runtime of 70 minutes, the film features a minimal cast including , George Perry, and Lois Brooks, and is characterized by its amateurish effects, disjointed narrative, and extensive use of and narration to pad the runtime. The film's troubled production began in 1961 when Wisconsin-based filmmaker Bill Rebane started shooting it under the working title Terror at Halfday, but financial difficulties left it unfinished after about two-thirds of the footage was captured. In 1965, exploitation cinema pioneer Herschell Gordon Lewis acquired the incomplete reels for $8,000, added new scenes, a frame story with scientists, and voiceover narration, then released it through his company Crown International Pictures. Credited writers include Rebane, Jeff Smith, and Dok Stanford, with Lewis also handling production duties under the pseudonym Sheldon Seymour. Renowned for its ineptitude, Monster a Go-Go holds a 1.8/10 rating on from over 10,000 user votes and is frequently cited among the worst films ever produced, often compared to . It gained cult status through its 1993 episode on , where the hosts' riffing highlighted its absurdities, including the bizarre narration and the infamous abrupt ending. Despite its poor critical reception, the film exemplifies low-budget 1960s sci-fi horror and the collaborative efforts of independent filmmakers like Rebane and Lewis in the exploitation genre.

Synopsis

Plot

The film opens with a narration describing the launch of Frank Douglas into , where contact is suddenly lost with his capsule. The vehicle crashes near the Space Agency Astrophysical Laboratories outside , and Colonel Steve Connors leads the search, discovering the capsule empty but surrounded by signs of intense , including scorched grass and a shriveled, mangled body of a helicopter pilot who approached the site. Scientists Dr. Nora Kramer and Carl inform Ruth, a woman connected to Douglas, of his disappearance, while initial investigations reveal high levels of emanating from the crash area, prompting fears of a hazardous entity. Soon after, reports emerge of a towering, 10-foot-tall radioactive monster terrorizing the suburbs, killing victims by draining their bodily fluids and leaving them shriveled. The creature, believed by investigators to be Douglas mutated by cosmic into a 400-pound behemoth, attacks a young couple at a secluded make-out spot and later slays Dr. Henry Logan, who ventures alone to the crash site with a . Military forces, coordinated by Connors, and a team of scientists including Dr. Brent pursue the monster through the countryside and into the city, using s to track its trail and planning to subdue it with tranquilizer guns. Key chase sequences include the monster evading capture by plunging into a backyard during a nighttime pursuit, escaping through sewers beneath the city streets amid of soldiers and emergency vehicles, and briefly cornered in an before vanishing into the night. The narrative builds to a climactic sewer confrontation where the military closes in, but the monster inexplicably disappears without any direct battle or explanation. In an abrupt twist delivered via voiceover narration, a telegram from reveals that Frank Douglas was rescued alive, well, and of normal size in the , 8,000 miles from the crash site, with no recollection of the events. This leaves the monster's origin, purpose, and existence entirely unresolved, rendering the preceding terror nonsensical and without closure.

Cast

The principal cast of Monster a Go-Go (1965) consisted primarily of lesser-known actors drawn from local and regional theater scenes, reflecting the film's low-budget origins and the production's challenges in attracting established talent. portrayed Frank Douglas, the astronaut who transforms into the titular monster; at 7 feet 6¾ inches tall, Hite's imposing stature made him ideally suited for the physically demanding role, though his was severely limited to brief appearances due to the film's rushed . A former vaudevillian often billed as one of the world's tallest men, Hite brought a unique physical presence to the character but had few other credits beyond this project. June Travis played Ruth Logan, a supporting character serving as a concerned civilian figure amid the escalating crisis. Travis, who had built a career in B-movies during the 1930s opposite action leads like Ronald Reagan and Dick Foran, largely retired from acting after 1938 but returned sporadically for minor roles, including this one. Her involvement marked a rare late-career appearance in the horror genre. Phil Morton led as Colonel Steve Connors, the military officer coordinating the response to the monster's rampage. Morton, a Chicago-area performer with a background in local theater and limited screen work, delivered a straightforward portrayal suited to the film's straightforward narrative demands. His role highlighted the production's reliance on regional talent. In the scientific ensemble, Peter M. Thompson appeared as Dr. Chris Manning, the primary researcher investigating the astronaut's disappearance and its monstrous aftermath. Thompson accumulated a string of minor credits in 1940s and 1950s films and television, including supporting parts in Westerns like Santa Fe (1951) and episodes of The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, but remained an obscure figure in Hollywood. Rork Stevens took on the role of Dr. Ted Arnold, another key scientist collaborating on the crisis response. Stevens' performance was his sole documented screen credit, underscoring the film's assembly of highly obscure actors for these technical roles. The supporting cast included George Perry as Dr. Brent, Lois Brooks (possibly as Dr. Nora Kramer, though her specific role remains unconfirmed in production records), and Robert Simons as Dr. Henry Logan. Uncredited narration was provided by director Bill Rebane as the film's omniscient voiceover and Herschell Gordon Lewis as a radio announcer, additions made during Lewis's completion of the project. Due to the incomplete nature of the original footage and subsequent recasting without reshoots, some characters exhibit inconsistencies, such as Dr. Chris Manning being replaced by Dr. Brent and references to Dr. Henry Logan shifting to his brother Dr. Conrad Logan (also played by Perry in some scenes).

Production

Development

Monster a Go-Go originated in 1961 as the directorial debut of Wisconsin filmmaker Bill Rebane, who sought to capitalize on the era's popularity of low-budget science fiction films targeting the drive-in theater market. Inspired by classic Hollywood sci-fi and his own training in Germany, Rebane envisioned a cohesive story about a mutated astronaut terrorizing a city, initially titled Terror at Halfday. The screenplay received writing credits from Sheldon Seymour (a ), Bill Rebane, Jeff Smith, and Dok Stanford, with the basic outline centering on an exposed to during a space mission, transforming into a towering monster upon his return to . Rebane contributed to the script's development, aiming for a with a clear plot and resolution, though the original document has since been lost. Initial funding came from local Wisconsin investors, allowing Rebane to establish the production company B.I. & L. Releasing Corp. to oversee the project. However, with an allocated of around $60,000, faced immediate constraints, as union regulations in the industry quickly depleted resources. Rebane, inexperienced in feature filmmaking, partially self-financed the effort to push forward, but this led to ongoing limitations from the outset. hurdles included securing shooting locations in and its suburbs, where access proved challenging amid financial uncertainty. Casting also presented issues, particularly finding a tall to portray the script's giant monster; Rebane ultimately selected 7-foot-6-inch for the role to meet the character's physical demands. These early obstacles contributed to delays that impacted the subsequent filming phase.

Filming

Principal photography for Monster a Go-Go, originally titled Terror at Halfday, began in 1961 and resumed in 1963 in the area under director . The production utilized a mix of urban and subterranean settings, including nighttime scenes in Chicago's Loop district with police cooperation for authenticity, and the climactic sewer confrontation filmed in the city's underground street grid south of the . Exteriors were primarily shot later in the non-union phase to complete the outdoor chases and other sequences. The shoot faced severe logistical hurdles due to a limited $60,000 budget, which was rapidly depleted by union requirements during the initial phase, restricting effective filming to approximately one week and only about two hours per day after equipment setup. was handled by Frank Pfeiffer, employing basic black-and-white techniques suited to the low-budget constraints, resulting in stilted visuals with minimal for night exteriors. Rebane, working with a largely non-professional non-union for the remaining exteriors, adopted an amateur directing style emphasizing a straightforward sci-fi narrative for drive-in audiences, prioritizing story cohesion over polished execution, which led to rushed takes amid ongoing revisions. On-set challenges compounded the tight schedule, including the abrupt departure of actor Peter Thompson after just six days due to time constraints and actor availability issues as cast members dropped out and were replaced. The rudimentary monster effects relied on 7-foot-6-inch performer in a simple costume consisting of industrial coveralls, , and minimal lumpy-face makeup to portray the spacesuit-clad creature, reflecting the production's resource limitations. These factors contributed to incomplete by the end of the under-two-week principal shoot, with Rebane's focus on action sequences often curtailed by the hasty pace.

Post-production

Following the incomplete principal photography that began in 1961 and resumed in 1963, production on Monster a Go-Go stalled when director exhausted his funding, leaving approximately two hours of silent footage unfinished for four years. In 1965, , renowned for his gore films such as , acquired the incomplete project for $8,000 to serve as a second feature paired with his Moonshine Mountain. Under the pseudonym Sheldon Seymour, Lewis completed the film by adding roughly 23 minutes of new footage, including a few interior scenes with new characters, as well as voiceovers and narration to bridge gaps in the narrative. The editing process resulted in significant continuity issues due to the integration of Rebane's original material with additions, such as abrupt time jumps of two months, unexplained cast changes (e.g., George Perry playing both Dr. Logan and his brother in later scenes), inconsistent character ranks and relationships, and day-for-night shots that mismatched the intended timeline. Lewis also altered the climax, discarding Rebane's planned happy resolution involving an in favor of an unresolved ending where the monster inexplicably vanishes and the is revealed to have never transformed, prioritizing a hasty wrap-up over coherence. For , Lewis incorporated stock music featuring rhythms and spastic organ tracks for tension, alongside radio-style announcements and extensive delivered in an overwrought, expository style to compensate for the silent original footage and advance the plot. These elements, combined with echoey voiceovers and ambient noises like barking dogs, contributed to the film's disjointed audio. Lewis provided uncredited narration himself and served as producer, focusing on a quick release that set the final runtime at 69 minutes without further polish.

Release

Initial release

Monster a Go-Go premiered in July 1965 through B.I. & L. Releasing Corp., an independent distributor associated with filmmaker , who had acquired and completed the unfinished project to pair it with his own Moonshine Mountain as a double bill. The was marketed as a low-budget science-fiction horror featuring intense monster chases and a towering creature, with promotional posters and taglines highlighting the absurdity of a 10-foot-tall monster emerging from a small , such as "The picture that comes complete with a 10-foot-tall monster to give you the wim-wams!" Advertising was constrained by the production's limited budget, relying primarily on basic one-sheets and local promotions aimed at exploitation audiences. Box office performance was negligible, with the film achieving only minimal earnings through regional distribution in Midwestern markets rather than a wide national rollout, reflecting its status as a bottom-of-the-bill B-movie. Running 68 minutes in black-and-white 35mm format, Monster a Go-Go was typically screened at drive-in theaters and inner-city venues as part of double or triple bills with other low-budget genre fare. Early screenings focused on the area and surrounding Midwest regions, such as , with no international release occurring at the time.

Home media and re-releases

Following its initial theatrical run, Monster a Go-Go became available on starting with releases in the late 1980s and early 1990s through budget labels, though these were often of poor quality due to the film's original low-budget production elements. A notable milestone came with the 2010 special collector's edition DVD, released on October 19 by Synergy Entertainment to mark the film's 45th anniversary; this edition included an audio commentary track featuring interviewer Corey Udler and producer , along with bonus features like interviews and a trailer, presented in the original full-frame aspect ratio. The film's visibility surged after its feature in episode #421, which aired on January 9, 1993, and led to dedicated home media tie-ins. Rhino Home Video included the riffed version in The Mystery Science Theater 3000 Collection, Volume 8 DVD set, released on November 8, 2005, as part of a four-episode compilation. Shout! Factory later reissued this content in Mystery Science Theater 3000: Volume VIII on November 27, 2018, maintaining the original Rhino packaging and extras for collectors. By the 2020s, Monster a Go-Go appeared in Blu-ray collections, such as Arrow Video's Weird : The Bill Rebane Collection, a six-film set released on May 25, 2021, which presented the movie in high definition but noted mediocre video and audio quality stemming from the source materials' limitations. No major theatrical revivals have occurred, with accessibility shifting to digital formats. The film, believed to be in the due to lapsed copyright renewal, is freely available on streaming platforms including (full original cut) and (MST3K version) as of 2025, facilitating widespread online viewing without licensing barriers. Preservation challenges persist from the original 1965 production's rudimentary elements, such as inconsistent sound recording and grainy black-and-white footage, resulting in varying transfer qualities across home media releases—from the soft, artifact-heavy 2010 DVD to the sharper but still flawed 2021 Blu-ray.

Reception and legacy

Critical reception

Upon its release in 1965, Monster a Go-Go garnered minimal critical notice, largely due to its regional distribution and low-budget origins, with contemporary coverage in Chicago-area media limited to brief mentions of producer Herschell Gordon Lewis's involvement rather than substantive analysis. By the late 1970s, however, the film had earned a reputation as a prime example of cinematic failure, included in Harry and Michael Medved's The Fifty Worst Films of All Time (1978) for its amateurish qualities and narrative disarray. Critics have consistently highlighted the film's technical shortcomings, including poor editing that exacerbates plot holes—such as the unexplained connection between the missing astronaut and the rampaging creature—and substandard that renders echoey and unnatural. The monster itself receives scant , appearing only sporadically in brief, underwhelming sequences that fail to build tension or fulfill genre expectations. The abrupt ending, in which the creature vanishes without resolution, has drawn particular scorn for underscoring the film's overall incoherence. Aggregate ratings reflect this disdain, with IMDb users assigning an average score of 1.8 out of 10 based on over 10,000 votes, and Rotten Tomatoes reporting a 5% approval rating from audiences. While overwhelmingly panned, a few observers have noted rare positive aspects, such as unintentional humor arising from its low-budget charm and mismatched stylistic elements contributed by directors and Lewis. Film historians in 1980s B-movie analyses, including Michael Weldon's The Psychotronic Encyclopedia of Film (1983), have labeled Monster a Go-Go a quintessential failed sci-fi endeavor, emblematic of the era's ambitious but under-resourced genre efforts that prioritized exploitation over coherence.

Cultural impact

Monster a Go-Go gained notoriety as a prime example of "so-bad-it's-good" cinema, particularly through its feature on Mystery Science Theater 3000 (MST3K) in season 4, episode 21, which aired on January 9, 1993. The episode's riffs highlight the film's absurdity, including its disjointed narrative and abrupt ending, with the cast struggling to find humor in its minimalistic monster presence. MST3K writer Paul Chaplin described it as "officially the worst movie we ever did," underscoring the production team's view of its ineptitude. The film has been frequently cited in discussions of the worst movies ever made, earning a reputation for its technical flaws and lack of coherent storytelling. Some critics and enthusiasts label it among the most incompetent horror films, with its low-budget effects and narration exemplifying 1960s exploitation pitfalls. This has contributed to its status as a in bad movie circles, where it is celebrated for evoking unintentional comedy rather than genuine scares. Its extends to podcasts and books dedicated to subpar cinema, such as the Stinker Madness podcast, which explores films like this as exemplars of cinematic failure, and detailed analyses in works like Bill Rebane's Monster A-Go-Go Decoded, which examines its production history. As a symbol of low-budget horror shortcomings, it represents the excesses and limitations of regional filmmaking. The movie's influence is evident in parodies that mimic its sparse monster action and illogical plot twists, often referenced in bad film retrospectives. This accessibility has amplified its legacy in digital bad movie communities. In broader context, Monster a Go-Go exemplifies the pitfalls of the collaboration between director Bill Rebane and Herschell Gordon Lewis, who completed the unfinished project to pair it with one of his gore films. Lewis's later career in splatter cinema, including Blood Feast, has overshadowed this earlier effort, highlighting the uneven partnership.

References

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