Monday, October 17, 2022

NEW OWNER OF FAMOUS MONSTERS!


Big news, Monster Kids -- looks like the venerable FAMOUS MONSTERS OF FILMLAND will once more be dragged out of its moldering coffin, dusted off, given a new face and hit the magazine racks sometime soon. You have to admit, FM has been passed around a little like a cheap date since Warren and FJA pulled the plug on it in 1983. The new owner is Cory Taylor. lead vocalist for the heavy metal band, Slipknot. Turns out the 42-year-old Mr. Taylor has been a life-long monster fanatic and he might have had his eyes on this deal for a long time. In any event, it will be interesting to see exactly what he plans to do with it, how it will look, etc. I'm hoping it becomes a regularly-published, affordably-priced 'zine. I just can't seem to open my wallet wide enough to cough up the twenty bucks for an issue of the recently-resurrected FANGORIA.

From ROLLING STONE:

WHEN COREY TAYLOR was five years old, Buck Rogers changed his life. If the Slipknot frontman hadn’t seen the 1979 film,Buck Rogers in the 25th Century, he never would have seen the trailer for John Carpenter’s genre-defining slasher flick, Halloween.

Taylor, now 48, still has total recall of the moment he first saw masked killer Michael Myers: “I can’t tell you one thing about the Buck Rogers movie, but I can remember everything about that trailer,” he says over Zoom, looking relaxed in a surprisingly brightly lit kitchen. “I can remember where my mom and I were sitting in the theater. I can remember what it smelled like. The preview was so fucking cool. It obviously explains the appeal of Slipknot for me.”

The trailer sparked Taylor’s lifelong obsession with horror movies. As he got older, he started buying every issue of Fangoria, Starlog, and the last few issues of the original run of Famous Monsters of Filmland, the pioneering fanzine that helped build the iconography of Frankenstein, actor Vincent Price, and homespun ghoulies like Vampirella. He eventually lost his magazine collection as his family moved around the country, but his love of horror zines endured.

Now Taylor doesn’t worry about missing issues. Earlier this year, he bought the rights to the Famous Monsters brand and will be relaunching the magazine, as well as using the name for making toys, producing films, and hosting festivals. Taylor announced his acquisition on Friday at Burbank, California’s Son of Monsterpalooza convention.

“Our job is to build a foundation to bring Famous Monsters into the modern age, while also honoring the legacy that came before,” he tells Rolling Stone. “It’s the whole reason that we were fans to begin with.” In addition to Famous Monsters, Taylor and his business partner, Eben McGarr (owner of Mad Monsters magazine and convention), also bought the rights to Captain Company (the Famous Monsters “store” that sold rubber masks and sea monkeys before becoming a real retail enterprise), and the life story of Famous Monsters founding editor Forrest Ackerman.

Taylor’s foremost goal with relaunching Famous Monsters is to reconnect the brand, which inspired everyone from Stephen King to punk band the Misfits, with horror fans. He doesn’t see Fangoria or any of the other fests that have emerged in the decades since Famous Monsters launched in 1958 as competition; he sees it as its own thing that can fit into the current horror ecosystem. “It was the first real place where we, as horror nerds, could feel safe and feel connected feel like we weren’t alone,” he says. “The internet has made it easy for us to connect, so I want to kind of make this another viable place for them to come.”

Step one for Taylor is digitizing every issue of Famous Monsters and making them available to read for free. After seeing DVDs containing PDFs of all the issues on Amazon, he figured the least he could do is save collectors some money. The title’s first issue, which came out in February 1958 and featured a blonde making eyes at Frankenstein’s creature, is the first installment available in the “Ack-Hives” (a play on Forrest Ackerman’s name).

Next, he wants to reestablish a Famous Monsters convention, where he hopes to pay tribute to Ackerman and founding publisher Jim Warren and celebrate the title’s history. “We do that by celebrating them at the conventions with special Famous Monsters setups, almost like a moving museum of sorts, trying to recreate the ‘Ackermansion’ in a weird way,” Taylor says. Finally, he plans to relaunch the magazine as an annual or biannual publication, using editorial concepts from past issues in new ways.

Where the original Famous Monsters venerated horror’s first golden age — Universal monsters like Dracula and the Creature From the Black Lagoon, as well as Lon Chaney’s legacy — Taylor hopes to use the magazine to trace horror’s evolution. “As a fan who has loved all of it, there’s no one corner of the genre that I subscribe to,” he says. “I can watch Karloff as the Mummy, or I can fucking root for Brendan Fraser in the remake that now seems like a classic in retrospect. There are things to celebrate, going all the way back and going all the way forward. We’ll be looking at the monsters that I grew up with, which is Jason, Michael Myers, Freddy, although as the modern-day versions of these Universal Monsters and portraying them and having people play with how they look or how they pertain to the past, as well.”

Taylor is also excited to make up monsters of his own. Citing Ackerman and Warren’s characters like Vampirella and Eerie, he’d like to create his own and turn them into toys, which the Captain Company would sell. He also plans to use the Famous Monsters brand as his studio for filmmaking. “I’ve been writing my own scripts now for the last five, six years. And I’m trying to get some of my stuff into production right now,” he says. “There’s a handful that are very, very close. So anything that I put out is instantly going to get the Famous Monsters logo on it, just to build that brand recognition.” He pauses a second. “I fucking hate that term ‘brand,’ but that’s what it is.”

His idea for a convention would be something that roams around from city to city and year to year “almost like the Super Bowl or WrestleMania.” He also hopes to launch a Famous Monsters cruise that blends music and horror. “I would perform,” he says. “I would get some of my friends who lean into that side of it. And really put something cool together.”

So why is Taylor so into horror? “There’s the obvious reasons,” he says. “There’s something cool about a scary movie; there’s something cool about a monster. There’s something cool about the underlying metaphor of ‘It doesn’t matter sometimes if you aren’t the strongest one, you can win and conquer your fears.'” For Taylor who survived abuse as a child, horror movies also give him hope. “It’s like, ‘Well, if they could get through that I can get through this,'” he says. “It makes you feel like you can be your own hero.”

Now Taylor just needs to channel his determination into making Famous Monsters all he believes it can be. “I’m terrified,” he says, “but I’m also fucking excited because you anything worth doing is worth going to the limit for it.”

The Press Release at the new Famous Monsters website:

BURBANK, CA (Oct 13, 2022) - For nearly 65 years, Famous Monsters of Filmland magazine has inspired generation after generation of artists, writers and filmmakers from Stephen King to Steven Spielberg. It remains the hallmark of horror and sci-fi.

Famous Monsters is back to entertain and inspire future generations! From print to film and everything in-between, we invite you to celebrate pop-culture, monsters and more with your fellow Monster Kids!

The Mad Scientists responsible for resurrecting this Monster are non other than Corey Taylor (CMFT,Stone Sour, Slipknot) and Eben McGarr (filmmaker, creator of Mad Monster). Two life-long Monster Kids, now the caretakers and owners of the definitive monster brand.

Aside from his well-known work in music, with Slipknot, Stone Sour and his solo work, Corey Taylor has also started carving out a name for himself in the horror world, with contributions including parts in various horror features like ‘Fear Clinic’ and ‘Bad Candy’, and lending his knowledge to horror documentaries such as ‘In Search Of Darkness’ pts 1, 2 and 3. He’s also involved in production with his first feature, ‘Zombie vs Ninja’, which he also co-wrote, in development.

Eben McGarr has over 30 years experience producing horror entertainment. In addition to being a writer and director, his company Mad Monster has pioneered innovative interactive horror experiences with some of the biggest names in the genre.

2 comments:

  1. I'm the same way. Probably if I analyzed the prices they'd be fair given time and inflation, but magazines feel out of reach these days to me. I pick them up and scan them, check the price and I don't find value for money. Maybe I'm just old.

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  2. Aw, you're not old, Rip -- just being sensible. It's hard enough to pay 10 bucks for a mag these days. I have honed down my purchases quite a bit in the last couple of years. I just don't see the cost/benefit in some titles. Others I stay loyal to as long as the content is something I really want to read.

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