
Famous Monsters Forryever
@fm_forryever
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Alec 💀 Collector 💀 Fan 💀 Seller 💀 Lifelong collector & fan. Music addict. "Dying to Keep the Memory of Famous Monsters of Filmland Alive!"
@famous_monsters_forryever
Joined August 2025
Puzzle over this bizarre one-eyed enigma from Famous Monsters of Filmland's landmark issue #100 (1973), part of the magazine's 100th anniversary celebration that revisited classic monsters with a fresh twist. This mystery photo, evoking cyclopean horrors, was likely a fan-teaser
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Rise from the crypt with Ingrid Pitt's seductive fanged grin as the vampiric Carla in Amicus' chilling anthology 'The House That Dripped Blood' (1971), emerging from her coffin in the "The Cloak" segment opposite Jon Pertwee! This British horror gem, directed by Peter Duffell and
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Capture the shock of transformation with Fredric March's ape-like Mr. Hyde in 'Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde' (1931), where his Oscar-winning performance drew from 'missing link' theories for a primal, pre-Code savagery. Featured in Famous Monsters of Filmland, this surprised
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Welcome Zombie Zealots! Today we present Famous Monsters of Filmland #123 from March 1976, a special holiday issue with an amazing Ken Kelly painting on the cover depicting a gruesome "Face of Horror" from Hammer's chilling 'Plague of the Zombies' (1966)—Kelly's dynamic style
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Creature Crawl! 🐟 Dive into this eerie, glowing artwork inspired by Universal's 1954 3D terror 'Creature from the Black Lagoon,' where the amphibious Gill-man emerges from Amazonian depths to stalk a scientific expedition. Directed by Jack Arnold, the film blends sci-fi and
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It's Frankenstein Friday, and we're cranking up the voltage on 1942's *The Ghost of Frankenstein* trailer—this later clip unleashes the mayhem as Ygor (Bela Lugosi) conspires with the staggering Monster for a brain transplant that turns tragic, complete with lab explosions and
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Probe the synthetic horrors of 'Doctor X' (1932), the first horror film shot in two-tone Technicolor, where Lionel Atwill's mad scientist creates a moon cannibal killer—its color print thought lost until rediscovered in the 1970s. Directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Fay Wray,
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Today, Taking a Bite Of....starts the new year with a Famous Monsters of Filmland staple monthly department, Fang Mail! Specifically, the Fang Mail from issue #14 from October 1961. This cover is easily recognizable by the stunning #basilgogos portrait of #vincentprice from
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Vintage witches with jagged, handmade masks tower over a skeleton-child with a devil's head, their costumes dripping with a raw, terrifying craft that outdoes today’s versions. The black and white hue casts an ominous gloom, hinting at a cursed gathering. Which one haunts your
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Witness Henry Hull as Dr. Glendon in his frantic lab from 'Werewolf of London' (1935), the first cinematic werewolf tale where he experiments with artificial moonlight—makeup by Jack Pierce, toned down at Hull's request for a more human monster. Preceding 'The Wolf Man' by years,
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This vintage pair of pumpkin-head ghouls stands frozen, their roughly carved, homemade masks radiating a terror modern costumes can’t match. The black and white enhances their eerie stillness, like souls trapped in time. Dare you meet their gaze? Thanks for Looking!
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Step into the gothic allure with this captivating still of Andrée Melly as the vampirized Gina in Hammer's atmospheric 'The Brides of Dracula' (1960), her sly fanged smile hinting at the seductive terror awaiting! Directed by Terence Fisher, this Technicolor sequel to 'Horror of
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🌕🐺 Werewolf Wednesday howls again! Dive into this chilling and humorous clip from "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein" (1948), where Larry Talbot (Lon Chaney Jr.) desperately warns Chick (Bud Abbott) over the phone about the crates containing Dracula and Frankenstein's
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Meet Professor Gruebeard, Forrest J Ackerman's gruesome alter ego in Famous Monsters of Filmland, often featured in pun-filled columns and sketches as a bearded mad genius— a nod to 'grue' for gore. This rare sketch from vintage issues embodies FMOF's whimsical horror spirit,
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Famous Monsters of Filmland 84 from June 1971. Thanks for looking! 💀💀💀💀💀💀💀 #vintagehorrorcomic #horrorcollections #horrormagazines #horrormoviescene
#1990shorror #1980shorror #1970shorror #1960shorror #1950shorror #1940shorror
#1930shorror #1920shorror
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Dive into the eerie elegance of Vincent Price, the undisputed master of horror, with this reel showcasing classic stills from his iconic films! From the wax-masked horrors of "House of Wax" (1953), where Price plays a disfigured sculptor turning victims into exhibits, including a
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Lock eyes with the master of menace: Bela Lugosi as the hypnotic voodoo sorcerer Murder Legendre in the groundbreaking 1932 indie horror 'White Zombie'—widely regarded as the first feature-length zombie film! Lugosi's piercing, wide-eyed stare commands the screen as he turns
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🎥 Celebrate Movie Poster Monday with the haunting 1935 *Bride of Frankenstein* poster! Directed by James Whale and produced by Carl Laemmle Jr., this Universal gem features Boris Karloff as the Monster and Elsa Lanchester as the unforgettable Bride. The French title "La Fiancée
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Delve into the spine-tingling origins of monster mania with these iconic covers from the earliest issues of Famous Monsters of Filmland – the magazine that ignited a horror revolution in 1958! Swipe through: - Issue #1 (Feb 1958): Publisher James Warren himself donned a
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