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First B movie experience

Started by Susan, May 18, 2005, 10:01:10 PM

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Susan

Kind of along the lines of first horror I was thinking back to the first b-movies i saw.

Naturally i can't remember that kind of thing but i DO remember two specific movies from my very early childhood (under age of 6) that stand out from the rest...and always pop in my head before all others. I guess they left more of an impression on me.

ATTACK OF THE KILLER TOMATOES - my parents had this on VHS, with alot of other b-movies like Flash Gordon, Godzilla vs the Sea Monster and Barbarella. We had a large collection due to living overseas they had friends in the states who would record stuff on blank tapes and mail them to us. So each tape had about 3 movies and they never knew what they were getting. Lucky for me most of the films they wouldn't watch i would. Something about this movie in particular was always a litle nightmarish, borderline silly but maybe that's where i developed a severe phobia to any commercial with food that talks

ZAAT! - Thankfully someone pointed out this movie as a possible memory from my early childhood, i'm positive i saw it on tv when i was about 3 or 4, which was circa 1977. I haven't seen it since in all these years. And yet i would love to just because i want to see if certain scenes play out like i remember them, i have no idea why but this boat scene sticks out in my head with a woman. I hate boats and large bodies of water. I'm beginning to think my early exposures to bad movies have shaped my adult fears...lol


BeyondTheGrave

My  grandmother was into B-movies and we has quite a collection. She liked Godzilla as much as I did. I think the first Godzilla movie I saw was Godzilla Vs Mechgodzilla. She was also into Zombie flicks and she had Day of the Dead. So it either one of those.

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You can’t give it, you can't buy it, and you just don't get it!-Aeon Flux
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Dr. Kobb

OMG!  That has got to be the coolest Granny on Earth, rich!

Reminds me of one of my first b-movie epiphanies:

We were on a family vacation up to Colorado, visiting Grandparents.  One night, I got to stay up past the usual bedtime, hanging out with my weird, antisocial, mysterious, artistic uncle(who was many years older than me, and looked like Roy Orbison with his slickback hair and dark shades).  We sat up and watched Toho monster movies like "Destroy All Monsters" for awhile that night.  Sortova turning point for young Dr. Kobb, there...

ToyMan

one of my earliest memories is seeing "twilight zone: the movie" at a drive-in with my parents. also remember seeing "pirahna" and "dawn of the dead" when i was a youngster.

odinn7

As far as I can remember, my first B movies were Godzilla and King Kong movies. I used to love watching these things and for a while, they would play them on Saturdays and me and some friends would gather around the tv to watch.

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You're not the Devil...You're practice.

AndyC

Hard to say. I had older siblings, so the movies were always around. If there was a Godzilla movie or cheesy old flying saucer movie on, my brother would be watching it. And a lot of that stuff made cheap TV filler, so it was often available on Sunday afternoons.

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Mr_Vindictive

I'd have to say that first really really bad film that I recall seeing as a child was "Heartbeeps".  I just remember small pieces of the film, but that's my first memory of a really bad flick.

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"The greatest medicine in the world is human laughter. And the worst medicine is zombie laughter." -- Jack Handey

A bald man named Savalas visited me last night in a dream.  I think it was a Telly vision.

Ed

My first B movie was the DiLaurentis King Kong.  A friend of my dad's took all the kids to the theatre.   Of course, I didn;t KNOW it was going to be a life long thing.  Later in life, I discovered MST3K and was totally hooked.
-Ed

Diablo44.

Channel 5 in New York/New Jersey used to show Kung Fu movies every Saturday afternoon, and Channel 11 WPIX was always good for a Godzilla movie. I can remember being in my first house in NJ, I was about 6 years old, and watching Godzilla vs. the Smog Monster and King Kong vs. Godzilla. My first "in theater" b-movie experience was Clash of the Titans, when it came out in 1981.

Rob
The KO Picture Show

h.p. Love

My early years were cable-free back in the late 70s and early 80s and I didn't really get that made-for-tv movies could be good-bad. I remember watching the Captain America movie. My first cinema bad movies that I remember were along the lines of Troll, Trick or Treat, etc. But my first experience of conciously watching bad movies for fun would be watching USA Up All Night back when they used to show some crazy stuff and a lot of the Three Stooges.

MrWarmHands

One of my friends older brothers, when we were 10, showed us "Chopper Chicks in Zombie Town"....
Awesome film , all those lovely, feisty ladies in leather.
And some of the worst zombies I have ever seen. Then we ate cake.


Rombles

This probably wasn't my first B movie experience, but it certainly got me hooked....

When I was 14 or 15, we had just moved to a new town, where the local TV station was on a frequency that you could pick up on an FM radio. Late one Friday night they had the John Carpenter classic "The Fog" on.  I didn't watch it. I was in bed, in the dark, listening to it on my tiny little battery-powered radio. It was terrifying.  Well, it SOUNDED terrifying, at least.

I am pretty sure that that was the point where I got interested in the cinematically unusual and obscure.

ToyMan

i had a great aunt who lived next door to a drive-in, and you could get the audio over the radio.

Susan

It's funny that Godzilla has come up alot, i guess kids today have only seen the new godzilla version if they've seen godzilla at all. Shame. Nothing beat the rubber suit stomping on little tokyo. But he had the coolest roar in movie history! Does anyone know what sound effect was used to make it?


Wence

I think that the first movie that made me realize my fetish for bad taste/trash/crap movies was:
"Shaolin Master and the Kid" (1984), probably one of the first real MartialArts-Movies.