Them! and Skullduggery: The Bridge to Johor

Posted by: Loren Coleman on July 13th, 2006

Sometimes I start one place, go down a side road, end up elsewhere, and find my way back to say goodbye.

Ed Blackburn

The 1950s-1960s movie and television character actor Christian Drake, who played Trooper Ed Blackburn in the classic 1954 film Them!, has died at the age of 82. Is it a coincidence that I just flipped on my television to catch the last hour of this movie on cable? Bizarre!

Them

The film Them! was directed by Gordon Douglas, who would later be the director for Skullduggery, a fascinating 1970 cryptozoology film about the Tropi (pictured below), bipedal hairy hominoids, which are so-called "missing links" living in the jungles of New Guinea.

Skullduggery

The studio promoted the plot as being about what happens when an "expedition into the interior of Papua New Guinea comes across a tribe of ape-like people who may or may not be ancestors of early man."

Considering the focus in the last couple of years has been on the Flores Hobbits and the Malaysian Johor Mawas, Hominid, or Bigfoot, this film serves as a historic visual curiosity. I am in awe at how ineffective the Tropi creations for the movie were. Beautiful Asian actors were employed and hair stuck on their bodies (directly and indirectly). Frankly, there’s nothing too Johor Hominid about them. No interpretative sketches are needed. These are hominological movie bipeds at their most lame.

Skullduggery is also a rather unbelievable film in content, which ranges from environmentalist conspiracy rants about the military-industrial complex to an incredible courtroom finale involving the Black Panthers. The film’s expedition is lead by a character named "Douglas Temple," played by none other than Burt Reynolds.

The story seems to contain elements from the real but shadowy life of OSS-operative and cryptozoology-aware Tom Slick. Slick headed a 1950s expedition to New Guinea to look for unknown hominids or maybe even Amazons. The movie’s plot was reportedly based on the novel Ye Shall Know Them by the French novelist Vercoeur. Vercoeur was allegedly the pseudonym for former Indochinese intelligence services agent Pierre Boulle, who wrote The Bridge on the River Kwai (1952) and Planet of the Apes (1963). One does measure a circle, beginning anywhere.

So, back to Drake and his monster movie.

Them!, Warner Brothers’ highest grossing film of 1954, is recalled as the first modern American motion picture to have "monsters" generated by mutations due to nuclear activity. Tests of nuclear bombs in the New Mexico proving grounds are found to be the source of sightings and killings caused by giant ants in the desert. In the beginning of the movie, the usual scenario occurs where local residents begin to have some extraordinary encounters that are not believed by the authorities. Even a sinister government coverup is shown, with an eyewitness not being released from a mental hospital to keep him quiet. In the end, of course, the oridinary folks are correct, and something bizarre comes to a head underneath Los Angeles.

Them

This movie created science fiction film motifs that live on in modern cinema (e.g. Alien, AVP, Evolution, Terminator 2) and on television (e.g. The X-Files, Surface) through the use of storm tunnels, flame-throwers, top-secret files, and frightening monsters caused by human atomic mistakes.

Them! included significant actors, such as James Arness and James Whitmore. The movie also has appearances by the future soon-to-be-discovered Davy Crockett, actor Fess Parker playing a confused eyewitness ( "Alan Crotty") who reports some winged giant ants as flying saucers. Look closely and you will see a youthful not-yet-Spock Leonard Nimoy as an Air Force sergeant. They both were billed lower than Christian Drake.

So today, a tip of the hat to Drake, who appeared in Them!, and a salute to his passage to a place that will always be perhaps a little more exotic for him than for most.

Them

The following is the LA published obituary.

WILLIAMSBURG – Christian Drake passed away July 9, 2006, in Williamsburg. He was born Dec. 11, 1923, in Elmont, Va. At the age of 6, his family moved to southern California where he lived until 1992 when he returned to Virginia, residing in Kingsmill.

He is survived by his wife of 48 years, Peggy, and his four children; Ron of Seattle, Wash., Christian Drake II of Boise, Idaho, Dannye Drake Ivey of Vienna, Va., and Morgan Drake of Chula Vista, Calif.; six grandchildren; two sisters; and many nieces and nephews. His special loves were his two grandsons, Kevin (14) and Brad (11) Ivey of Vienna.

Christian served with the Marine Raiders in World War II. Always a Marine, he was proud of his service behind Japanese lines on Guadalcanal where he was wounded and returned to the United States, spending a year in various hospitals.

After his return, he was discovered and signed to a contract at RKO Studios. He spent many years in the movie and television industry, being in over 110 movies and television shows. In 1954, he co-starred in a television series, "Sheena: Queen of the Jungle," where he played Bob the White Hunter, spending almost a year in Mexico filming. He also starred in "Forever My Love," the first film made in Japan with an American, living in Japan for a year.

In 1958, he entered the real estate profession, in time owning 11 offices on the Palos Verdes Peninsula, retiring in 1990. He was proudest of his family and his Marine Raiders. "Semper Fi."

Visitation will be at Nelsen Funeral Home, 3785 Strawberry Plains Road, Williamsburg on Thursday, July 13, from 7 to 8:30 p.m. A private burial service will take place at a family burial site in Ashland, Va. Nelsen Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Thanks to Rusty at Einsiders.com

Them

Loren Coleman About Loren Coleman
Loren Coleman is one of the world’s leading cryptozoologists, some say “the” leading living cryptozoologist. Certainly, he is acknowledged as the current living American researcher and writer who has most popularized cryptozoology in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Starting his fieldwork and investigations in 1960, after traveling and trekking extensively in pursuit of cryptozoological mysteries, Coleman began writing to share his experiences in 1969. An honorary member of Ivan T. Sanderson’s Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained in the 1970s, Coleman has been bestowed with similar honorary memberships of the North Idaho College Cryptozoology Club in 1983, and in subsequent years, that of the British Columbia Scientific Cryptozoology Club, CryptoSafari International, and other international organizations. He was also a Life Member and Benefactor of the International Society of Cryptozoology (now-defunct). Loren Coleman’s daily blog, as a member of the Cryptomundo Team, served as an ongoing avenue of communication for the ever-growing body of cryptozoo news from 2005 through 2013. He returned as an infrequent contributor beginning Halloween week of 2015. Coleman is the founder in 2003, and current director of the International Cryptozoology Museum in Portland, Maine.


11 Responses to “Them! and Skullduggery: The Bridge to Johor”

  1. Drat responds:

    Man! THEM scared the crap out of me when I was little. Remember the ants throwing the skeleton of the cop out of the ant-mountain with it’s hat and gun-belt still on? hahaha!

    Great stuff, the passing of a classic actor.

  2. Jeremy_Wells responds:

    All I can say is… if more Bigfoot reports were of creatures that looked like the two actresses in the still from Skullduggery, we’d see a LOT more expeditions to look for them…

  3. gaygaruda responds:

    OMG x 24. I’m pretty sure– though I am speaking from limited experience differentiating faux hairy hominids– that you’re looking at an ACTOR and an ACTRESS…

    mothy

  4. One Eyed Cat responds:

    As far as I know I’ve never seen these films. How Creature Feature missed them I do not know.

    Thank you

  5. twblack responds:

    My Prayers to the family.

  6. shumway10973 responds:

    hey, maybe Skullduggery has something there. could it be that the “missing link” is missing only because the conventional scientists are looking for the fossils rather than the living thing? Why not? Who was it that said our ancestors had to die out? After all, they said the coelanthis (fish fossil suppose to be the between of fish and land animals) was extict, but was found alive. Maybe these creatures like big foot and such are living fossils and lost cousins or something. I wish I could see them! I don’t have cable and not too many video stores carry stuff that old.

  7. One Eyed Cat responds:

    Acting is a craft and I like to give credic where credic is due

  8. Jeremy_Wells responds:

    you know, I wondered for a second if the taller one on the left might be an actor, but I see mammaries on that one too…
    either way, those are two good looking monsters…

  9. sbdance responds:

    http://www.themakeupgallery.info/fantasy/hominid/skull.htm

  10. sschaper responds:

    That movie also borrowed that court scene from _Little Fuzzy_, the classic SF novel.

  11. MrInspector responds:

    Man! I must have seen this movie a thousand times and never noticed Leonard Nimoy! So much for my amazing powers of observation.

Sorry. Comments have been closed.

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