The Astro-Zombies
1968 film by Ted V. Mikels
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Astro-Zombies is a 1968 American science fiction horror film written, directed and produced by Ted V. Mikels, and starring John Carradine, Wendell Corey, and Tura Satana.[1]
| The Astro-Zombies | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Ted V. Mikels |
| Screenplay by |
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| Produced by | Ted V. Mikels |
| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Robert Maxwell |
| Edited by | Art Names |
| Music by | Nico Karaski |
Production companies |
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Release date |
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Running time | 94 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $37,000 |
| Box office | $3 million+ (unconfirmed) |
Plot
Having been fired by the space agency, a disgruntled scientist creates superhuman monsters from the body parts of murder victims. The creatures eventually escape and go on a killing spree, attracting the attention of both an international spy ring and the CIA.
Cast
- Wendell Corey as Holman
- John Carradine as Dr. DeMarco
- Tom Pace as Eric Porter
- Joan Patrick as Janine Norwalk
- Tura Satana as Satana
- Rafael Campos as Juan
- Joseph Hoover as Chuck Edwards
- Victor Izay as Dr. Petrovich
- William Bagdad as Franchot
- Vincent Barbi as Tyros
- Vic Lance as the chauffeur
- Egon Sirany as Sergio Demozhenin
- Rod Wilmoth as Astro-Zombie #1 / Astro Zombie #2
Production
Mikels said he started writing it when he made his first film, Strike Me Deadly.[2]
Produced by Ram Ltd. and Ted V. Mikels Film Production, The Astro-Zombies was filmed on a low budget of $37,000, with $3,000 of the budget used to pay Carradine.[1][3] The film would be Mikels' last collaboration with Wayne M. Rogers (of later M*A*S*H fame), who also co-wrote and co-produced the film.[1][4][5] Scenes were shot at the residence of Peter Falk, a friend of Rogers that was to be featured in a cameo that Mikels cut because of being "too funny".[6]
Mikels remembers it as "a very easy shoot. I shot half of it myself because I only had money for a crew for two weeks, so I spent two weeks shooting all the stuff around town, all the chases and all that".[2]
The score was written by Nico Karaski, cinematography was handled by Robert Maxwell and editing by Art Names.[1]
Release and reception
The Astro-Zombies was released in May 1968, at a runtime of 94 minutes.[1]
Variety wrote: "There's almost nothing good to say for this horror scifier ... The scifi aspects don't enthrall and the thrill aspects don't shock".[7] Author and film critic Leonard Maltin awarded the film the lowest possible rating of "Bomb", calling it "yet another nominee for worst picture of all time".[8] On his website Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings, Dave Sindelar called the film "wretched", criticizing the film's messy plot and "talky/dull" scenes.[9] TV Guide called the film "one of the all-time worst sci-fi pictures".[10]
In a retrospective review, David Cornelius of eFilmCritic.com gave the film 1 out of 5 stars, calling it the worst film ever made, and criticized the film's acting, its "painful-to-the-eyes production values", and the film's absence of reason.[11]
Sequels
Nearly 40 years after the film's release, Mikels would direct three low-budget sequels starting with 2004's Mark of the Astro-Zombies, 2010's Astro-Zombies M3: Cloned, and 2012's Astro-Zombies M4: Invaders from Cyberspace. Tura Satana would return for the second and third films prior to her death in 2011.
Influence
American horror punk band the Misfits recorded a song titled "Astro Zombies", released on their 1982 album Walk Among Us. The lyrics, by frontman Glenn Danzig, were written from the perspective of mad scientist Dr. DeMarco.[12] The film was riffed in 2016 by comedians Michael J. Nelson, Bill Corbett, and Kevin Murphy for Rifftrax.[13]