
Sign up today! https://creaturefeatures.tv/list/
It will make Tangella quite happy if you join and you’ll also get insider news from Creature Features as well as information on upcoming episodes and other fun stuff. Join today! It’s free!

Sign up today! https://creaturefeatures.tv/list/
It will make Tangella quite happy if you join and you’ll also get insider news from Creature Features as well as information on upcoming episodes and other fun stuff. Join today! It’s free!

We’ll be joined by the cleverly creative Matt Forristal of Gashly Tentacles. He and his company makes those fantastic fanged plushies you often see on Tangella’s lap. He’ll tell us how he found himself in this fun trade and how he makes his fabulous beasts.

Spend an evening in Seattle with the gang from the Poulter Mansion as they take in “The Night Strangler” from 1973. Starring Darrin McGavin, Jo Ann Pflug and Simon Oakland; this fun frolic finds Kochak in the rainiest city chasing down a strangler that may well be a bit more than he seems.

Tangella has a peculiar habit of placing items upon poor Livingston’s head.

Sign up today! https://creaturefeatures.tv/list/
It will make Tangella quite happy if you join and you’ll also get insider news from Creature Features as well as information on upcoming episodes and other fun stuff. Join today! It’s free!

It will be a wild steampunk weekend as we are joined by show promoter Michele Edler to chat about her Steamtopia conventions. She’ll talk about the latest and greatest in the steampunk genre as Tangella prances about in her own Edwardian outfit.

We’ll always stay on YouTube and keep delivering the show there for free, but changes in the erratic and temperamental YouTube algorithm makes sustaining production costs from only the revenue we receive from YouTube advertising impossible. The good news is, with only 1500 new subscribers, we would no longer be reliant on YouTube ad revenue and could continue producing the show regardless of what the algorithm does.

We have another oldie but goodie for you this weekend: “The Norliss Tapes” from 1973. The story revolves around David Norliss, an investigator of the occult, who mysteriously disappears. This film was initially intended as a pilot for a series, but never made the cut.

We’ll be pulling an old prune out of the pantry this weekend when we watch “The Giant Claw” from 1957. This is that fairly decent monster film with the ridiculous bird monster that looks like Beaky Buzzard from Bugs Bunny. If you’ve seen it, it’s worth another watch.

We have a few months until Halloween, but it’s never too early to talk about pumpkin carving. And our guest this weekend could easily be the Michelangelo of the gourd-craft. For joining us this time will be artist James Hall. He’s appeared on HGTV’s “Pumpkin Wars” as well as on “Outrageous Pumpkins” on the Food Network.
Our friends Kathy Coleman and Wesley Eure have started a YouTube podcast channel. Give them some love and subscribe to their new venture!

Our mailbox has recently been filled to the brim with people asking us for more old robot movies. Not movies about old robots, mind you, but old movies with robots. And while our budget doesn’t yet have the girth to bring you something truly stupendous like Robby the Robot prancing about on a forbidden planet, we do have something from two years prior to that which just might fit the bill: “Tobor the Great” from 1954.

Michael Douglas hasn’t done many films lately. But one he did do in 1972 will air on Creature Features this very weekend and we’ll treat it as if it is new and still-fabulous: “When Michael Calls” is a classic. Starring the affore-mentioned Michael, with Ben Gazzara and Elizabeth Ashley; it centers around a dead kid that won’t stop playing with the darn telephone.

Crowhaven Productions is excited to introduce the “Crowhaven Store,” a special new place where you can find rare and unique items from our TV show “Creature Features.” We’re clearing out some space, and in the process, we’re giving valued viewers a chance to own some cool pieces of the show’s history.

Everyone likes a good vampire film. Except Livingston. But he usually sits out on the movies anyways. But we think we have a vampire film you’ve probably never seen prior: “Nightmare in Blood” from 1977. Get ready for a walk down memory lane to the roaring 70’s because this film is the epitome of every horror film from that wonderful decade.