Wild Guitar


3:15 pm - 5:00 pm, Today on WOFT Nostalgia Network (8.5)

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About this Broadcast
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A rock 'n' roller on the crest of fame gets exploited by a music czar, but he and his brother scheme a way out.

1962 English Stereo
Drama Music Cult Classic Comedy

Cast & Crew
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Arch Hall Jr. (Actor) .. Bud Eagle
Cash Flagg (Actor) .. Steak
Nancy Czar (Actor) .. Vickie Wills
Ray Dennis Steckler (Actor) .. Steak
Marie Denn (Actor) .. Marge
Bob Crumb (Actor)
Bill Lloyd (Actor)
Hal Kenton (Actor)
Jonathan Karle (Actor) .. Kidnapper
Al Scott (Actor) .. Ted Eagle
Virginia Broderick (Actor) .. Daisy
Paul Voorhees (Actor) .. Hal Kenton
Rick Dennis (Actor) .. Stage Manager
Tony Flynn (Actor)

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Arch Hall Jr. (Actor) .. Bud Eagle
William Watters (Actor)
Cash Flagg (Actor) .. Steak
Born: January 25, 1938
Died: January 07, 2009
Trivia: Cult director Ray Dennis Steckler has spent his career making a series of low-budget horror and exploitation films that range in quality from surrealistic and imaginative to as downright dull as another family's home movies. Born in Reading, PA, in 1939, Steckler learned about film photography during a hitch in the Army, and relocated to Los Angeles after the service to begin his career. He labored backstage on television productions (an amusing anecdote concerns the time Steckler was fired from Alfred Hitchcock Presents for almost beaning the titular star with an A-frame) before getting his first professional motion picture cinematography experience on Timothy Carey's maddening The World's Greatest Sinner. Shortly thereafter, Steckler joined forces with producer Arch Hall Sr., who allowed him his first shot at directing with the campy rock & roll story Wild Guitar. That film also saw the debut of Steckler's thespian alter ego, acting under the nom de plume Cash Flagg (a name he would continue to use for onscreen appearances for several years). Cash Flagg was the star of Steckler's most famous production, 1963's The Incredibly Strange Creatures That Stopped Living and Became Mixed-Up Zombies. Though frequently confusing and certainly bizarre, the film (billed as "the first monster musical") had a surreal vision and unique energy that is enjoyed to this day by cult and horror movie fans. It also featured the cinematography of Laszlo Kovacs and future Oscar winner Vilmos Zsigmond, both of whom cut their teeth on many low-budget productions. It also featured Steckler's wife, Carolyn Brandt, who would figure prominently in many of his future films. Though hampered by budgets that never exceeded five figures (and were often considerably lower), Steckler's pictures from the mid-'60s further cemented his cult status, especially the serial killer saga The Thrill Killers and the utterly strange Batman spoof Rat Pfink a Boo-Boo. Steckler was also known to re-release his older films under garish new titles with a ridiculous gimmick known as "Hallucinogenic Hypno-vision," which required ushers (and sometimes Steckler himself) to run up and down the theater aisles wearing monster masks in an effort to "terrify" the audience. As the new decade dawned, Steckler moved to Las Vegas and continued to work in the exploitation realm, though his budgets sank even lower and his films became even more confusing, and worse, often dull, relying on stock footage and over-dubbed dialogue to explain what was happening onscreen. 1971's Blood Shack (aka The Chooper) was a plodding haunted house story that Steckler was forced to add pointless rodeo footage to when distributors complained it was too short for a feature film; it was later re-released on video in its original form in perhaps the first instance of a director's cut that is actually shorter than the theatrical version. At this point, Steckler began using pseudonyms for his direction (including Wolfgang Schmidt, Cindy Lou Sutters, and Sven Christian), especially once he got involved with hardcore pornography. Steckler's endeavors in this illicit genre are suitably loopy, proven by titles like The Mad Love Life of a Horny Vampire and Sexorcist Devil. The director's fortunes continued to sink through the '70s, and reportedly Steckler decided to test his worth at one point by leaving a pile of prints of his films, clearly labeled, on the corner of Hollywood and Vine. An hour later he returned, and no one had bothered to steal them. In later years, Steckler ran a video store in Las Vegas (Mascot Video) and enjoyed his cult reputation, kept alive by releases of many of his films on Sinister Cinema and Something Weird Video.
Nancy Czar (Actor) .. Vickie Wills
Ray Dennis Steckler (Actor) .. Steak
Marie Denn (Actor) .. Marge
Bob Crumb (Actor)
Bill Lloyd (Actor)
Mike Kannon (Actor)
Hal Kenton (Actor)
Jonathan Karle (Actor) .. Kidnapper
Arch Hall Sr. (Actor)
Born: December 21, 1908
Died: April 28, 1978
Trivia: B-movie actor/writer/producer/director Arch Hall Sr. reportedly assumed his onscreen moniker after staring at a hallway with an arch. A graduate of the University of South Dakota, Hall became a radio writer-actor and did a stint as a pilot in the Army Air Force prior to entering films as a bit player around 1938. His near-legendary exploits were later satirized by writer-producer Jack Webb in The Last Time I Saw Archie (1961), a service comedy starring Robert Mitchum in the title role. Hall himself went on to produce, write, and/or direct such low-budget classics as The Choppers (1961), Eegah! (1962), Wild Guitar (1962), and Deadwood '76 (1965), often under the pseudonyms of Nicholas Merriwether or William Waters. His son, Arch Hall Jr. (born 1945), co-wrote and played leading roles in many of the films. Hall's little misadventures were released by his own company, Fairway Productions, located in Burbank, CA. His death was attributed to a heart attack.
Al Scott (Actor) .. Ted Eagle
Carolyn Brandt (Actor)
Virginia Broderick (Actor) .. Daisy
Paul Voorhees (Actor) .. Hal Kenton
Rick Dennis (Actor) .. Stage Manager
Tony Flynn (Actor)
Carol Flynn (Actor)

Before / After
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