User:Kaiju No. 14/Sandbox/The Black Scorpion: Difference between revisions

From Wikizilla, the kaiju encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 109: Line 109:
===Bibliography===
===Bibliography===
*{{cite book|last=Bogue|first=Mike|title=Apocalypse Then: American and Japanese Atomic Cinema, 1951-1967|date=31 August 2017|publisher=McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers|isbn=978-1476668413}}
*{{cite book|last=Bogue|first=Mike|title=Apocalypse Then: American and Japanese Atomic Cinema, 1951-1967|date=31 August 2017|publisher=McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers|isbn=978-1476668413}}
*{{cite magazine|editor-last=Bryce|editor-first=Allan|title=Teaching the World to Sting... The Black Scorpion|chapter=He'll Get You Scared Stiff!|magazine=Infinity|issue=48|date=May 2022|publisher=Ghoulish Publishing|issn=2514-3654|ref={{harvid|Bryce|2022}}}}
*{{cite magazine|editor-last=Bryce|editor-first=Allan|title=Teaching the World to Sting... ''The Black Scorpion''|chapter=He'll Get You Scared Stiff|magazine=Infinity|issue=48|date=May 2022|publisher=Ghoulish Publishing|issn=2514-3654|ref={{harvid|Bryce|2022}}}}
{{Kaiju Movies}}
{{Kaiju Movies}}
{{Comments}}
{{Comments}}

Revision as of 20:11, 2 June 2023

Article.png
Image gallery for Kaiju No. 14/Sandbox/The Black Scorpion
Credits for Kaiju No. 14/Sandbox/The Black Scorpion
Kaiju No. 14/Sandbox/The Black Scorpion soundtrack


The Black Scorpion
The American poster for The Black Scorpion
Alternate titles
Flagicon Japan.png Black Scorpion (1958)
See alternate titles
Directed by Edward Ludwig
Producer Jack Dietz, Frank Melford
Written by Robert Blees, David Duncan,
Paul Yawitz (story)
Music by Paul Sawtell
Production company Amex Productions, Frank Melford-Jack Dietz Productions[1]
Distributor Warner Bros.
Rating X
Running time 88 minutesUS
(1 hour, 28 minutes)
108 minutes
(1 hour, 48 minutes)
Aspect ratio 1.85:1 (intended ratio),
1.37:1 (negative ratio)
Rate this film!
3.33
(3 votes)

MosuGoji sandbox.png This page is a sandbox.
Sandboxed pages are unfinished and not yet approved.
Information found here may be unpolished or unverified.
For the monsters, see Giant scorpions.
Every horror you've seen on the screen grows pale beside the horror of "The Black Scorpion"
„ 

— Tagline

The Black Scorpion is a 1957 giant monster horror film co-produced by Amex Productions and Frank Melford-Jack Dietz Productions.[1] Warner Bros. released it to American theaters on October 11, 1957.

Plot

X no sunglasses.PNG “I knew that『plot』wasn't up to much.”
This plot synopsis is missing or incomplete.
Please help by editing this section.

To be added.

Staff

Main article: The Black Scorpion/Credits.

Staff role on the left, staff member's name on the right.

  • Directed by   Edward Ludwig
  • Written by   Robert Blees, David Duncan
  • Produced by   Jack Dietz, Frank Melford
  • Music by   Paul Sawtell
  • Cinematography by   Lionel Lindon
  • Edited by   Richard Van Enger
  • Assistant directors   Jaime Contreras, Ray Heinz
  • Special effects by   Willis O'Brien
  • Visual effects by   Pete Peterson, Ralph Hammeras
  • Puppet creator   Wah Chang
  • Sound effects by   Mandine Rogne

Cast

Actor's name on the left, character played on the right.

  • Carlos Múzquiz   as   Dr. Velasco
  • Fanny Schiller   as   Mara Corday
  • Teresa Alvarez   as   Mario Navarro
  • Juanito   as   Pedro Galván
  • Father Delgado   as   Roberto Contreras
  • Ángel Di Stefani   as   Military Man
  • Jaime González Quiñones   as   Boy in San Lorenzo
  • Leonor Gómez   as   Villager
  • Bob Johnson   as   Narrator / Radio Newscaster / Police Radio Dispatcher / Public Address Announcer
  • Margarito Luna   as   Crane operator
  • Héctor Mateos   as   Military Man
  • José L. Murillo   as   Military Man
  • Manuel Sánchez Navarro   as   Victor Steven
  • Isabel Vázquez 'La Chichimeca'   as   Villager
  • Enrique Zambrano   as   Cayetano, lineman killed in truck
  • Pascual García Peña   as   José de la Cruz
  • Fanny Schiller   as   Florentina
  • Arturo Martínez   as   Major Cosio
  • Quintín Bulnes   as   Lineman killed on pole
  • José Chávez   as   Train conductor

Appearances

Monsters

Production

[2]

Gallery

Main article: The Black Scorpion/Gallery.

Soundtrack

Main article: The Black Scorpion (Soundtrack).

Alternate titles

  • Black Scorpion (American VHS title; Siyah akrep; Turkey; Musta skorpioni; Finland; 黒い蠍 Kuroisasori, Japan)

Theatrical releases

  • United States - October 11, 1957
  • Japan - January 15, 1958  [view poster]Japanese poster
  • Finland - March 14, 1958
  • Sweden - December 1, 1958
  • Denmark - January 26, 1959
  • United Kingdom - February 23, 1959  [view poster]British poster
  • Italy  [view poster]Italian poster
  • Australia  [view poster]Australian poster
  • French Belgium  [view poster]French poster

Reception

Harrison's Reports voluntarily gave The Black Scorpion a mixed review in September 1957, rating it acceptable for its stop-motion and special effects on the monsters, but having reservations about its unexceptional character storytelling.[3]

Video releases

Warner Home Video VHS (1993)

  • Tapes: 2
  • Audio: English
  • Notes: Released on December 13, 1993

Warner Home Video DVD (2006)

  • Discs: 1
  • Audio: English
  • Subtitles: English, Japanese
  • Notes: Aspect ratio is 1.37:1.

Shout! Factory DVD (2014) [Mystery Science Theater 3000 Volume XXX]

  • Region: 1
  • Discs: 4
  • Audio: English
  • Subtitles: English
  • Special features: Stinger of Death: Making The Black Scorpion, Writer of Gor: The Novels of John Norman, Director of Gor: On Set with John "Bud" Cardos, Producer of Gor: Adventures with Harry Alan Towers, Shock to the System: Creating The Projected Man, extended trailer for "The Frank" music video, four mini-posters by Steve Vance
  • Notes: Packaged with Outlaw (of Gor) (1988), The Projected Man (1966), and It Lives by Night (1974).

Warner Archive Collection Blu-ray (2018)

  • Region: N/A
  • Discs: 1
  • Audio: English (DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 Mono)
  • Subtitles: English (SDH)
  • Notes: Aspect ratio is 1.78:1.

Videos

Trailers

The Black Scorpion trailer

Trivia

  • The miniatures used for the trapdoor spider, the giant tentacled insect and the giant spider, briefly seen in the film, are reportedly reused models of some of the creatures from the Lost Spider Pit Sequence, a lost and deleted scene from the original 1933 King Kong film. However, in the book Ray Harryhausen: An Animated Life, Ray Harryhausen noted that many models used in King Kong were still in storage at RKO in the 1950s, by which time many of them had decayed. Biographers have disputed whether O'Brien actually saved any of his models.
  • Concept artist and television writer William Stout revealed in a 2021 video interview that the main inspiration for Ts-eh-GO and the Mutant Scorpions from Godzilla: The Series were the titular monsters from the The Black Scorpion, Stout himself an admitted fan of stop-motion effect artist Willis O'Brien and his various creature creations.[4]

References

This is a list of references for Kaiju No. 14/Sandbox/The Black Scorpion. These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Bogue 2017, p. 164.
  2. Bryce 2022, pp. 24–31
  3. "Harrison's Reports, September 21, 1957, page 151" (PDF).
  4. https://youtu.be/tECzlxgnItc

Bibliography

  • Bogue, Mike (31 August 2017). Apocalypse Then: American and Japanese Atomic Cinema, 1951-1967. McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. ISBN 978-1476668413.
  • Bryce, Allan, ed. (May 2022). "Teaching the World to Sting... The Black Scorpion". Infinity. No. 48. Ghoulish Publishing. ISSN 2514-3654. |chapter= ignored (help)CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)

Comments

Showing 0 comments. When commenting, please remain respectful of other users, stay on topic, and avoid role-playing and excessive punctuation. Comments which violate these guidelines may be removed by administrators.

Loading comments...