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Daughter of Horror (1955)

The best in B science fictions movies, drive-in classics, psychotronic weirdness and more. A free raffle before the feature include some very cool, very strange science fiction prizes including figurines, posters, books, cards, VHS movies and more for that inner science fiction enthusiast in us all.Sponsored by Savage Henry MagazineScrap HumboldtPhantom Wave Records, Daisy Drygoods,Vintage AvengerTin Can MailmanThe Clothing DockMEAT Clown Buttons, and more.

A.K.A. Dementia.

An entirely unique and utterly bizarre rediscovery, John J. Parker’s Dementia is a 1950s-style foray into the mind of psycho-sexual madness. Set entirely in a nocturnal twilight zone that blends dream imagery with the cinematic stylings of film noir, Dementia follows the tormented existence of a young woman haunted by the horrors of her youth, which transformed her into a stiletto-wielding, man-hating beatnik. Accompanied by George Antheil’s sci-fi score, the camera follows a “Gamin” (Adrienne Barrett) on a surreal sleepwalk through B-Movie hell, populated by prostitutes, pimps and would-be molesters — all photographed by William Thompson (Plan 9 From Outer Space, Manic, Glen or Glenda?). Two years after its original release, a narration track of foreboding psychobabble (diabolically spoken by Ed McMahon) was added to Dementia, some controversial scenes were cut, and the title was changed to the more sensational Daughter Of Horror. ~ Amazon.

 

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