Saturday, September 13, 2025

HORROR MOVIE COMBO POSTERS


The double-feature has long gone the way of the Dodo. Gone are the days of the drive-in two-fer's (including a cartoon or two for the kiddies before they dozed off in the back seat under their bankies) and also gone are the day where, for a buck or two you could go down to the local theater, watch a double-bill and stuff yourself with popcorn and a soda. And sometimes one could spend hours watching special screenings of multiple films for the same price. When it came to horror films, the double-features were often cheapies or exploitationers, and the better productions were many times paired with considerably less than stellar also-rans. 

Here's a few samples of the posters from those days gone by.
















8 comments:

  1. Growing up in a small town in the late 60's early 70's with a movie theater, meant new release movies arrived almost a year later. These double and triple features are what we feasted on. Biker flicks included.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I grew up in Los Angeles so we got just about everything that came through, although I didn't really come to appreciate how fortunate that was until some years later.

    ReplyDelete
  3. One of my favourite 'combo' ads coupled I Drink Your Blood with I Eat Your Skin (both 1971). Ghastly gastronomy.

    The old-fashioned format of main feature plus support meant we avoided the lazy two-hour movies we get now, but instead often two tightly-edited 80-minute thrill-rides. Better value for money -- and a guaranteed toilet break.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Crazed hippies and zombies -- a delectable combination to satisfy any fan of exploitation films, I'd say.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I thought I'd seen most vintage horror movies, but there are a number of titles here I'm unfamiliar with. Finally got around to seeing Half-Human, that's a weird but fascinating movie.

    ReplyDelete
  6. It was. Similarly, I liked another Japanese/American production, The Manster, that came out a few years later.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Like the original US release of Gojira, both of those were Japanese movies re-edited by a US studio, with new footage added.

      Delete
  7. And directed by Ishiro "Gojira" Honda to boot.

    ReplyDelete

Greetings, monster lover! Thank you for leaving a comment at WORLD OF MONSTERS!.

NOTICE! Comments containing advertising or hyperlinks that take readers off this page will be deleted. Comments for posts older than five (5) days are moderated.