Richard E. Cunha Movies
Richard E. Cunha was a cinematographer and director who achieved some renown at the end of the 1950s for a series of low-budget horror and science fiction movies. Born in Hawaii, Cunha served in the U.S. Army-Air Force during World War II in a newsreel unit, where he was trained as a motion picture photographer. During the postwar years, he organized his own company, making industrial films and early television commercials. His earliest feature work was as a cinematographer on Red Rock Outlaw (1950), a low-budget Western made by Elmer Clifton during the late '40s. In the mid-'50s, Cunha and producer Arthur A. Jacobs formed Screencraft Enterprises, a production house for TV commercials. In 1957, they moved into low-budget film production, as well, with an economically produced sci-fi horror thriller aimed at the booming B-movie market. Cunha's first movie, with the working title "The Diablo Giant" (a better name than the one they finally used, Giant From the Unknown) was a fascinating tale of suspended animation and a resurrected conquistador terrorizing modern Californians. Cunha also shot and edited the film utilizing the skills that he had acquired doing low-budget commercials, doing his close-ups simultaneously by panning between actors in a scene and, in effect, editing most of his shots in the camera. The resulting film, although displaying low production values, had a visceral energy to go with its intriguing story and benefited from a surprisingly strong cast -- including Ed Kemmer, Morris Ankrum, Sally Fraser, Bob Steele, and Buddy Baer in the title role -- and these factors made it stand out amid the world of shoestring horror productions.Giant From the Unknown was sold to Astor Pictures for distribution on condition that Cunha and Jacobs deliver a second film to go out with it. That was how Cunha moved to his next production, the slightly more ambitious She Demons, a jungle/shipwreck adventure movie involving unrepentant escaped Nazis, volcanoes, and sinister experiments. Cunha made two more films in a similar vein, Frankenstein's Daughter and Missile to the Moon, the latter a remake of Astor's own Cat Women of the Moon under the auspices of producer Marc Frederick, which also went out together to drive-ins and smaller neighborhood theaters. There they delighted younger audiences through early 1959, and then took on a separate life on television for decades to follow. Although the last two of these productions were marred by cheap special effects and deficiencies in the make-up department, they had a logic (sort of) and a charm all their own that endeared them to many baby boomers. Cunha later directed The Girl in Room 13 (1961), a joint U.S./Brazilian feature, and then returned to work as a photographer on Bloodlust that same year, an unofficial adaptation of Richard Connell's The Most Dangerous Game directed and written by Ralph Brooke, and co-starring a young Robert Reed and future off-Broadway producer Gene Persson. In addition, he made the low-budget thriller The Silent Witness (1962). During the mid-'60s, he also served as cinematographer on the television series Branded, starring Chuck Connors, in tandem with Lester Shorr. He remains a beloved figure to "psychotronic" film fans for the quartet of low-budget horror movies that he made from 1957-1958 for Astor Pictures. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
The eponymous best friends are Jesse (Richard Hatch) and Pat (Doug Chapin). Buxom Kathy Suzanne Benton swivels into the scene, sorely testing Jesse and Pat's friendship. The film should not be confused with the 1982 Burt Reynolds vehicle of the same title. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Richard Hatch, Susanne Benton, (more)
A teenage boy, the son of a recently widowed policeman's wife, accidentally witnesses a wrestler killing his girl friend in a domestic dispute involving a robbery he just committed on her behalf. The boy had been delivering papers at the time and when the wrestler, who has a weak heart, finds out he begins searching for him. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
In this Brazilian detective movie, a gringo gumshoe stalks a murderer. His investigations reveal a ring of counterfeiters. To catch them all, he engineers an ingenious double-cross. Justice prevails. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Green cheese? Men in the Moon? Nah, everyone knows that the moon is really populated by beautiful women wearing silk underwear and spiked heels. They are ruled by an evil temptress and share the moon with giant rock men and an enormous spider. Honest. Just watch this campy remake of Cat Women of the Moon and see for yourself. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Frankenstein's Daughter, a low-budget American horror movie badly directed by Richard E. Cunha, is another in a series of poorly made adaptations of Mary Shelley's classic horror novel. Here, the original Dr. Frankenstein's grandson, Oliver Frankenstein (Donald Murphy), now living in Los Angeles, creates a female version of the Monster from sweet teenage girl, Trudy (Sandra Knight) who then goes on a killing rampage. This thriller, with poor production values and bad sets, has some intentional humor, but little real horror. Also released as She Monster of the Night, Frankenstein's Daughter was featured in It Came from Hollywood, an amusing and loving tribute to horror films and their makers. Also, lovers of trivia should note that Sandra Knight, who plays Trudy, would later become the wife of actor Jack Nicholson. ~ Linda Rasmussen, All Movie Guide
Irish McCalla, the statuesque heroine of TV's Sheena Queen of the Jungle, heads the cast of She Demons. Shipwrecked on a volcanic island, spoiled heiress Jerrie Turner (McCalla) and explorers Fred (Tod Griffin) and Sammy (Victor Sen Yung) fall into the clutches of unreconstructed Nazi scientist Osler (Rudolph Anders). Experimenting exclusively on beautiful, busty women, Osler hopes to create a race of super-persons, infusing his subjects with a powerful element known only as Character X. Fred and Sammy race against time to save Jerrie from becoming another of Osler's hideously mutated victims. She Demons is another triumph from director Richard Cunha, whose science-fiction quickies of the 1950s are among the worst films ever made. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Irish McCalla, Tod Griffin, (more)
In Richard Cunha's Giant from the Unknown, scientists come upon a petrified lizard in the California Mountains. The lizard revives, proving the theory of suspended animation. Excitedly, scientist Wayne Brooks (Ed Kemmer) begins searching for a legendary Spanish giant called Vargas, who disappeared in the region 500 years earlier and who also may be in a suspended-animation state. Brooks discovers all too soon that his instincts a correct: a bolt of lightning releases Vargas (Buddy Baer) from his centuries-long slumber, whereupon the big brute goes on a homicidal rampage. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Ed Kemmer, Sally Fraser, (more)















