US
11 MIN READ TIME

YOUR LETTERS AND EMAILS

MESSAGES FROM BEYOND

We love Close Encounters with our readers so drop us a letter at 29 Cheyham Way, South Cheam, Surrey SM2 7HX or an e-mail at editor@thedarksidemagazine.com and you have a good chance of seeing your own name in print

Hi there Allan, Because of these really difficult times, and the fact is I am still self-isolating from Covid (as I am highly vulnerable) I was fortunate enough to pick up issue 44 of Infinity magazine lately, and it is good to know that it is still going on. Issue 44 was really interesting, and thank you very much for showing a picture of the Dinky Toys Armoured Command Car in your Messages from Beyond section. Back in 1977, I had purchased one of these from a now sadly defunct shop in Tewkesbury, called Toycraft (ah well, those were the days). And unfortunately, it became lost in later years, because, without my permission someone I used to know took it to his home and whilst this was happening without my knowledge, somebody attacked him and it was badly damaged. I will never forgive him for that (it was one of my nicest toys) and I hope that he is reading this and remembers it too!

I certainly enjoyed reading about the Subbuteo table football game, Allan, and I have to admit that I would have liked one of those too -but it never happened. Then again, those were the days before the arrival of the home microcomputer during the 1980s. I also liked the article about Billy Bunter and honestly did not know that the BBC had done a series about him during the 50s and early 60s.

Your articles about One Million Years BC and the War of the Worlds musical were great too, but can I please just address a few quibbles in those? To start with, the real live footage of lizards that appeared in When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth (beautifully photographed by the unfortunately named Dick Bush) actually came from Irwin Allen’s The Lost World (1960), courtesy of LB Abbot and Emil Kosa Jnr (although dear old Willis O’Brien is also credited in that film as Effects Technician). Additionally, towards the end, a small amount of footage from George Pal’s When Worlds Collide (1951), is included. I know because I have seen both of those films and recognised the footage. What’s more, the dinosaur that (bizarrely!) fosters former Playboy magazine veteran Victoria Vetri is not a Megalosaurus. In fact, I don’t think it resembles any known species of dinosaur but is just a made up one, like the Rhedosaurus from The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (1953).

Read the complete article and many more in this issue of Infinity Magazine
Purchase options below
If you own the issue, Login to read the full article now.
Single Digital Issue Issue 47
 
$3.99 / issue
This issue and other back issues are not included in a new subscription. Subscriptions include the latest regular issue and new issues released during your subscription. Infinity Magazine
Annual Digital Subscription $24.99 billed annually
Save
52%
$1.92 / issue

This article is from...


View Issues
Infinity Magazine
Issue 47
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


IN THIS ISSUE
THE MAGAZINE OF THE MACABRE AND FANTASTIC!
FROM THE PUBLISHERS OF INFINITY 100 years ago
REGULARS
RADIO DAYS: TUNING IN TO A 1960s CHILDHOOD
As you must all know by now, one
INFINITY NEWS
The Infinity team bring you news on your favourite TV shows and movie franchises, including a fine book on Escape From New York and more sad losses in the showbiz world
INFINITY REVIEWS
Anton van Beek, David Gelmini and James Whittington take a critical look at the latest sci-fi and fantasy cinema, Blu-ray and album releases…
GHOULISH PUBLISHING -A SUPERB LIBRARY OF HORROR AND FANTASY BOOKS
If you love reading The Dark Side and
IN THE NEXT OUT-OF-THIS-WORLD ISSUE OF INFINITY
Remember Nostradamus? French geezer, knocked around in the
FEATURES
D.I.Y MAGAZINES
In the days before the internet, fanzines were at the heart of pop culture. Richard Molesworth looks back at some of the most memorable British genre efforts…
GET A LITTLE ACTION IN!
Saturday night’s alright for fighting, but back in the 80s the action started at teatime, as Mark Timbs recalls...
FAILURE TO LAUNCH
Greg Kulon revisits Capricorn One (1978), the cult American thriller in which a reporter discovers that a supposed Mars landing by a crewed mission to the planet has been faked via a conspiracy involving the government and, under duress, the crew themselves
‘ONLY THE GODS SEE EVERYTHING...’
But Ray Milland’s scientist is closing in on the Gods as The Man With the X-Ray Eyes. Allan Bryce sees through the making of Roger Corman’s 1963 sci-fi favourite
ULTRA Q
The most expensive television series in Japan at the time, Ultra Q (1965-1967) cost nearly three times as much as the average Japanese television show. It also featured dozens of times as many weird monsters, as Michael Coldwell recalls…
MOLESWORTH’S MUSINGS
Richard recalls the happy movie nights of BBC 2 Horror Double Bills and Alex Cox’s Moviedrome and wonders why we don’t see such programming these days…
A HIP AND HAPPENING NUTCASE!
Robert Ross looks back at the short but spectacular career of zany DJ and comedian Maurice James Christopher Cole, better known as Kenny Everett. And of course he does so in the best possible taste
BARRY NORMAN A LIFE IN PICTURES
Scott Newell celebrates the life of Barry Norman, the popular British film critic and television personality who really knew his onions -especially the pickled ones!
GREEN IS NOT ALWAYS GOOD
In Harry Harrison’s futuristic set-in 2022 sci-fi novel Make Room! Make Room! Soylent Green is made of soybeans and lentils. In the film Soylent Green it’s a whole new recipe, people. As Simon Hooper explains
Back To The Past
Pat Jankiewicz talks to director Jeannot Szwarc about how he and Richard Matheson created Somewhere in Time -a timeless time travel classic…
Chat
X
Pocketmags Support