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The Astro-Zombies was released in May 1968, at a runtime of 94 minutes. [1] ... The film was spoofed in 2016 by comedians Michael J. Nelson, Bill Corbett, ...
The Astro-Zombies: Directed by Ted V. Mikels. With Wendell Corey, John Carradine, Tom Pace, Joan Patrick. The Plan - to build a super human. How? By murdering innocent, convenient victims, and using various bits of them. The result? Creatures on the rampage.
- (2.8K)
- Horror, Sci-Fi
- Ted V. Mikels
- 1968-05-19
American horror punk band the Misfits recorded a song titled "Astro Zombies", released on their 1982 album Walk Among Us. The lyrics, by frontman Glenn Danzig, were written from the perspective of mad scientist Dr. DeMarco. [11] The film was spoofed in 2016 by comedians Michael J. Nelson, Bill Corbett, and Kevin Murphy for Rifftrax. [12]
Ted V. Mikels directs this unique B horror-thriller. For devilishly mad "astro-scientist" Dr. DeMarco (John Carradine), a typical day involves run-ins with reanimated corpses, bloodthirsty solar-powered killer robot zombies, Chinese communist spies and vicious Mexican secret agents.
The Astro Zombie is a man in a rubber mask. The leads try to keep a straight face while spouting ridiculous dialogue. The women scream a lot especially when the Astro Zombie tries to rip their clothes off. John Carradine bumbles around in his laboratory endlessly.
The Astro-Zombies ‒ sometimes known as The Astro Zombies (without the hyphenation), Space Zombies and The Space Vampires ‒ is a 1968 science fiction horror film starring John Carradine, Wendell Corey (in his final film appearance) and Tura Satana.
The Astro-Zombies is a 1968 B-Movie Sci-Fi Horror film directed by Ted V. Mikels, starring John Carradine and Wendell Corey in the latter's final film role. After being fired from a space agency, Mad Scientist DeMarco (Carradine) decides to unleash a race of atomic zombies upon humanity.