CREATURE WITH THE ATOM BRAIN
B&W, 1955, 69 mins. 10 secs.
Directed by Edward L. Cahn
Starring Richard Denning, Angela Stevens, S. John Launer, Michael Granger, Gregory Gaye
Arrow Video (Blu-ray) (US/UK RA/RB HD) / WS (1.85:1) (16:9), Sony (DVD) (US R1 NTSC)

THE WEREWOLF
B&W, 1956, 79 mins. 32 secs.
Directed by Fred F. Sears
Starring Don Megowan, Joyce Holden, Eleanore Tanin, Steve Ritch
Arrow Video (Blu-ray) (US/UK RA/RB HD), Umbrella (Blu-ray) (Australia R0 HD) / WS (1.85:1) (16:9), Sony (DVD) (US R1 NTSC)

ZOMBIES OF MORA TAU
B&W, 1957, 69 mins. 4 secs.
Directed by Edward L. Cahn
Starring Gregg Palmer, Allison Hayes, Autumn Russell, Marjorie Eaton
Arrow Video (Blu-ray) (US/UK RA/RB HD) / WS (1.78:1) (16:9), Sony (DVD) (US R1 NTSC)

THE GIANT CLAW
B&W, 1957, 74 mins. 11 secs.
Directed by Fred F. Sears
Starring Jeff Morrow, Mara Corday, Morris Ankrum
Arrow Video (Blu-ray) (US/UK RA/RB HD) / WS (1.78:1) (16:9), Umbrella (Blu-ray) (Australia R0 HD), Sony, Mill Creek (DVD) (US R1 NTSC)


A producer since the early sound era, Sam Katzman may be best known in cult movie circles for his money-making drive-in movies (Teen-Age Crime Wave, Don't Knock the Rock, Riot on Sunset Strip) and his gritty noir films with William Castle like The Houston Story. A familiar face at Columbia Pictures off and on over the years, he also churned out a quartet of Creature with the Aom Brainmonster movies in the '50s designed to ride the wave of atomic age terror films that were packed Creature with the Aom Brainin teenagers from coast to coast. Cheaply made and devoid of any A-list stars, these films still made an impression on audiences who often lumped them in mentally with the flood of AIP movies that were making a killing at the same time.

One of no less than fourteen films in 1955 with Katzman's involvement as a producer in some capacity was Creature with the Atom Brain, one of the many variations inspired by real-life stories coming from South America about escaped Nazis continuing nefarious experiments under phony new identities. Of course, this concept was prime fodder for monster movies ranging from the notorious (They Saved Hitler's Brain) to the almost respectable (The Boys from Brazil). In this case the screenplay was dreamed up by none other than Curt Siodmak (brother of director Robert Siodmak), with the film coming out in between his work on Donovan's Brain (based on his own novel) and Earth vs. the Flying Saucers. Here the fun starts when a gun-wielding shady mobster named Jim is attacked in his home by a scarred-headed lug who busts through the window and hauls the criminal off into the night. The bullets fired from his goons don't faze the attacker, who's being remotely controlled from a lab and ordered to "come back home." The money-strapped, ex-Nazi Dr. Steigg (Gaye) has taken funding from vengeful ousted mobster Frank Buchanan (Granger) to use his technology for nefarious means, which involves both of them slapping on radiation suits and crawling through a tube to work on the titular "creatures," which here means reanimated dead guys Creature with the Aom Brainwith fresh surgery scars on their foreheads. Now it's up to forensic specialist Chet Walker (Denning) and cop Dave Harris (Launer) to crack the case before the growing army of the Creature with the Aom Brainundead completes Frank's kill list.

Though the material here is pure programmer pulp, Creature with the Atom Brain (which is quite different from what the title might lead you to expect) benefits from the boost of some studio gloss here and an intriguing twist on the mobsters-and-zombies idea that had been floating around in various forms at least since The Walking Dead. The actual atomic ingredient here is basically window dressing to fit in with the times more than anything else, instead delivering shuffling undead thrills including a pretty ambitious finale. Sony issued this on DVD in 2007 along with the rest of the films in this set as the two-disc Icons of Horror Collection: Sam Katzman, featuring a nice open matte transfer in keeping with Sony's mostly stellar standards. The 2021 Arrow Blu-ray fixes the framing with the correct 1.85:1 presentation looking much better composed, and the quality here is obviously even better with fine film grain and detail throughout. As with the other titles in the set, the LPCM English mono audio is also in perfect condition throughout and features optional English SDH subtitles. Russell Dyball contributes a new audio commentary that juggles plenty of production info (including notes on what was then the Columbia Ranch in Burbank before the studio pulled up and moved south in L.A.) with a more thorough sociological reading than you'd probably expect for a film called Creature with the Atom Brain, including context for the gender politics of the time especially when it comes to Chet's family life. He also goes quite a bit into director Edward L. Cahn, a longtime gun for hire who knew his way around a solid genre film with efforts like It! The Terror from Beyond Space, The She-Creature, Curse of the Faceless Man, and another film we'll get to shortly. The film can also be played with a video intro by the always knowledgeable Kim Newman (8m33s), who sketches in the details about Siodmak, the film's place in the zombie movie canon, and Katzman's contributions outside of Columbia. The big kahuna here extras-wise is "Sam Katzman: Before and Beyond the Cold War Creatures" (73m57s), essentially a massive master class on Katzman's life, career and key works by historian, critic, and legendary artist Stephen R. Bissette (in front of an "altar to Katzman") who shows off plenty of ephemera and chats extensively about pretty much every aspect about him you could possibly want to know. Also included are a condensed Super 8 version (19m27s) for home collectors which manages to cram in pretty much all the The Werewolfbig plot moments, an open matte theatrical trailer, The Werewolfand an image gallery.

Then we move on to disc two with the following year's The Werewolf, a vaguely science-flavored updating of conventions firmly established in the previous decade by Universal's The Wolf Man. Having already dabbled with lycanthropy in both The Return of the Vampire and Cry of the Werewolf in the '40s as well, Columbia gave it a snowy small town spin here with the tragic story of Duncan Marsh (Ritch), an amnesiac who stumbles into a town late at night as a narrator fills us in on the history of werewolves all around the world. An altercation outside a bar sends our distraught stranger into a violent frenzy tied to a monstrous affliction that's recently beset this once-normal family man, and several townspeople have to band together to track down the transforming killer who can't even remember his own crimes. Sheriff Jack Haines (Scream of the Wolf's Megowan) and his deputy, Ben (Lauter), head the investigation that becomes complicated very quickly with the arrival of two scientists at the heart of this deadly mystery.

Even more than the average 1950s genre film, The Werewolf feels like a Rorschach test through which audiences can spy a commentary on postwar feelings of displacement and trauma, the sudden onset of addition and mental illness, suppressed The Werewolfsexual orientation, distrust of scientists who had unleashed nuclear horrors, The Werewolfand the hostile treatment of outsiders by normal American communities. If that all sounds too heady, don't worry; this is also a fun werewolf movie in its own right with our tortured title character given the unique backdrop of snowy tourist favorite Big Bear in California. The dispensing of folklore-inspired werewolf rules here in place of unethical scientific meddling is not only appropriate for the time period but a harbinger of things to come like the following year's Blood of Dracula, which takes a similar approach with scientist-induced vampirism. This one has also been around on home video a lot including that Sony set, though the Arrow is easily the best of the lot with the film looking perfectly crisp even in the darkest night scenes. Lee Gambin, who knows his way around werewolf movies thanks to his book about the making of The Howling and his commentary on Return of the Vampire, offers a perceptive reading of the film here including thoughts on the film's approach to changing gender roles, the imagery used throughout to signify our werewolf's outsider status, and the atmosphere of paranoia, plus the history of werewolf cinema in general up to this point. Another intro by Newman (13m55s) focuses on Fred F. Sears here (including his much prolific work in westerns and the hit Rock Around the Clock) and the integration of classic monster tropes into 1950s atomic-age shockers. In "Beyond Window Dressing" (23m35s), critic Alexandra Heller-Nicholas narrates a visual essay about the female characters in these films including The Werewolf's action beginning with a woman who's "just one of the boys" and charting the variety of women populating the stories in a wide variety of personalities and plot functions. Of course, she really gets to dig into the gender politics of Atom Brain, the one that plays the most like a snapshot of '50s domestic attitudes. Also included here are the far less coherent Super 8 version (7m33s), the trailer, and an image gallery.

Zombies of Mora TauIf Atom Brain exploited the idea of Zombies of Mora Tauzombies without calling the out in the title, that situation is more than corrected with disc three featuring one of Katzman's most familiar titles, Zombies of Mora Tau. Here we get another genre twist with underwater undead, something that would be popularized much later with films like Zombie and Shock Waves, all wringing as much atmosphere as possible out of a studio-shot tropical horror adventure. The fun starts right away late at night as Jan (Russell) takes a cab to her mansion destination on the African coast only for the driver to blithely run over a shuffling man in the road. Her alarm is dismissed because, well, zombies are a bit of a nuisance in the area. She and her great-grandmother (Eaton) are set to play host to diver Jeff Clark (Palmer), who's been hired by the wealthy George Harrison (Ashley) and his sexpot wife, Mona (Attack of the 50-Foot Woman's Hayes) to swipe a fortune in diamonds stashed on a sunken ship. The problem, of course, is the zombies are the aquatic guards of the treasure, and it's only a matter of time before our good- and bad-hearted thieves alike run afoul of them.

Though extremely mild compared to the much scarier zombie films that would come in the wake of the following decade's Night of the Living Dead and Plague of the Zombies, this film (which brings back Cahn as director) gets a lot of mileage out of the sheer weirdness of its piracy plot and the Zombies of Mora Tausmoldering presence of Hayes, who completely dominates the camera Zombies of Mora Taueven when she's just standing around watching the other actors. This is easily the most traditionally Gothic horror film in the set as well, with its big spooky house, flickering candles, and nocturnal excursions beneath the waves giving it some nice ambiance for monster movie buffs. In addition to another top-notch transfer here with the proper matting, you get to play the film with a new Newman intro (7m35s) about the film's unique placement in the history of zombie cinema and the little quirks it offers for a theme that had largely been abandoned at this point since the days of Monogram programmers. Critic Kat Ellinger provides a new audio commentary for the feature itself, giving a packed academic reading for a film that nobody could've imagined possible a couple of decades ago. She gets to chew on a lot here including pre-Romero zombie films, the problem with identifying films as "B-pictures," Katzman's crank-em-out work ethic at the time, the impoverished state of '50s horror, the themes of class conflict and exploitation, and the Code-safe "saucy" elements that they managed to slip in, among many other subjects. Then it's visual essay time again as "Atomic Terror: Genre in Transformation" (19m48s) features critic Josh Hurtado dissecting the crossroads of science and traditional horror in these four films at the height of the atomic age, noting how attitudes of the time were a good opportunity to repackage the irrational with a more creative approach than was commonly recognized. Also included are the theatrical trailer (in the weakest condition of the four) and an image gallery.

Finally on disc four we get the most notorious film of the bunch, the adorably ludicrous The Giant Claw. Impossible The Giant Clawto forget The Giant Clawonce you've seen it, the film sports a crazed monster design for the ages that would be rivaled only by the later Night of the Lepus... so brace yourselves. During a survey near the North Pole, aeronautics engineer Mitch MacAfee (This Island Earth's Morrow) believes he's seen a flying saucer and instigates an aerial investigation that leads to one plane disappearing without a trace. When he and colleague Sally Caldwell (Tarantula's Corday) head back to the U.S., their flight is ambushed by a flying menace that causes them to sound the alarm to the military. Now realizing that they're facing a giant bird that could take out an entire city, the clock is ticking to stop it before the lives of thousands are put at risk.

Of course, any plot mechanics here take a back seat to the giant bird puppet whose talons inspired the film's title. There's a lot of Reptilicus-style charm here though when the beast attacks, and the actors give it their all in the best stone-faced movie monster tradition. It's certainly never boring (at least if you enjoy the '50s template of people swapping deliciously bizarre dialogue in meeting rooms), and like the others it packs enough into well under 90 minutes to keep you engaged -- especially if that involves things like blasting open gigantic bird eggs. The film even throws in a wild wrinkle by explaining the beast's origins through antimatter, a then-recent hot topic in the science community that nobody could have predicted would turn up here. The Giant ClawCharting the same path as the other films here from Sony DVD onward (plus a pit stop from Mill Creek in a budget Sci-Fi Classics set with 20 Million Miles to Earth, Mothra, and It Came from Beneath the Sea, and a no-frills Australian Blu-ray edition from Umbrella The Giant Clawwith The Werewolf), this one looks gorgeous here as well with no significant video or audio issues. Newman turns up one last time for a new video intro (12m27s) noting how the actors in this film were under the impression the special effects would be a tad more Harryhausen-worthy, the rumors about who exactly was responsible for the end product, and the film's unorthodox role in the giant monster rally at the time. A new audio commentary by critics Emma Westwood and Cerise Howard starts off with a flock of bird puns before mixing facts and humorous observations throughout, showing quite a bit of affection for this truly unique cinematic experience. In "Family Endangered!" (12m51s), critic Mike White studies the role of Cold War paranoia in the four Katzman films as a recurring factor involving the depictions of families under siege, the recurring theme of twisted science involving everything from radiation to covert serums, and older characters dispensing wisdom against potentially tragic quirks of fate. Also on hand are the rough quality and virtually incoherent Super 8 version (6m29s), the theatrical trailer (which proudly trumpets its creature right from the opening frames), and an image gallery. The set also comes with an illustrated 60-page book featuring new essays by Laura Drazin Boyes, Neil Mitchell, Barry Forshaw, Jon Towlson and Jackson Cooper, plus an 80-page art book with stills and artwork from each film and a new essay by Bissette, two double-sided posters showcasing the new artwork by Matt Griffin, and reversible sleeve options for each film.

Reviewed on September 20, 2021