
There are few things in life that I love more than old books and I’ve tried to hang onto just about every book that I’ve ever bought or been given as a gift. Since I’m currently in the process of moving and trying to sort out a lifetime’s worth of stuff that I’ve managed to amass over the years, I’ve been unearthing some of my old childhood books. Some of these books are old horror film books such as the aptly named Monster Movie Game book.
Monster Movie Game was written by Bay Area horror film host John Stanley along with Mal Whyte. It was originally published in 1974 and I’m not exactly sure how I ended up with a copy of it, but I think it might have been sold to kids at my school a few years after it’s initial release (’76 or ‘77) through the Scholastic Book Club. Whatever the case may be, I’ve managed to keep my copy of the Monster Movie Game book for many years and it’s undoubtedly one of the first film related books that I owned. Monster Movie Game is a very slim paperback with only 64 pages, but it’s jam-packed with lots of questions and answers about various monster movies and illustrated with great black and white photos.

The cover of the Monster Movie Game book terrified me when I was a kid. It features a large photo from King Kong (1933) of the giant ape holding a frightened Fay Wray while he fights off a large pterodactyl dinosaur. Some of my earliest nightmares involved giant monsters like King Kong as well as ferocious dinosaurs so I suspect that the book’s cover is to blame for many of my bad dreams. Thankfully I didn’t let my fear of King Kong on the book’s cover deter me from savoring every one of its 64 pages. I spent countless hours staring at the photos it contained and ruminating over the questions it asked of its readers. The book introduced me to many movie monsters that I was unfamiliar with at the time such as the frightening She Creature from the 1956 film of the same name and it also featured many of favorite monsters like the Wolfman as portrayed by Oliver Reed in Hammer’s Curse of the Werewolf (1961).
After coming across my old copy of the Monster Movie Game book recently I thought it would be fun to share a few pages from it complete with my wrong answers and misspelled words. Occasionally I did manage to correctly identify a photo or film title, but for the most part my answers were always wrong. But you can’t blame a nine year old kid for trying! My spelling hasn’t improved much, but I definitely know more about monster movies now and I’m sure I have the Monster Movie Game book to partly thank for that.

I’m terribly sad to report that my favorite Horror Host Bob Wilkins passed away at the age of 76 on January 7th due to complications from his long battle with Alzheimer’s disease. No other person besides my father has influenced and shaped the way I view movies as much as Bob Wilkins. Bob will be greatly missed by myself and his legion of devoted Bay Area fans.
I wrote a long and deeply personal tribute to Bob two years ago that you can read here.
My well wishes go out to his close friends and family who are mourning his passing. Cheers, Bob!
Recommended Links:
- Bob Wilkins Official Site
- San Francisco Chronicle’s obituary for Bob Wilkins
- August Ragone has posted a great tribute to Bob at his blog The Good, the Bad and the Godzilla

If you’ve read my brief About Me bio, you may have noticed that I talk about my father a lot. My dad is responsible for turning me into a cinema junkie. He loved movies and passed that love on to me when I was just a very young and impressionable kid. What I haven’t mentioned is that my dad and I didn’t have much time together because his life was cut short by a drunk driver when I was only eight years old.
Eight years may not seem very long, but by the time I was eight I already knew the names of all the major stars in Universal and Hammer horror films thanks to my dad. He also taught me to appreciate great TV shows like The Avengers, the original Star Trek and The Wild Wild West, which he watched religiously. We saw many classic monster movies, disaster flicks and low-budget science fiction films together at the local drive-in and on our tiny black & white TV at home.
After my dad was killed unexpectedly my world turned upside down. My mom moved my younger brother and myself to the San Francisco Bay Area to be near her family and I didn’t have anyone to watch horror movies with me anymore. I desperately missed having my dad sitting next to me on our couch in front of the TV every Saturday. He used to be able to answer any question I had about how to kill a vampire or a werewolf, and he loved making jokes while the movies were on so we would laugh together a lot at the bad makeup or terrible acting found in some low-budget films. He was also there to hold my hand if I got too frightened by a movie and tell me everything would be fine and that the horror on the screen was all just “movie magic.”

After my father died, the films I loved watching took on new meaning for me and for a short while I was too frightened by the very real horrors I had experienced to enjoy the scary movies I had grown to love.
That all changed when I discovered Bob Wilkins’ fantastic Creature Features show on television. Bob Wilkins was the Bay Area’s premiere horror host in the seventies and he had a great sense of humor about the movies he showed. He played lots of terrific films, but he also played lots of terribly fun B-movies and he often opened his show by reminding viewers that there were probably better movies being shown on other channels.
In some ways watching movies with Bob Wilkins was almost like watching them with my dad. Unlike many other horror hosts Bob didn’t dress-up in any costumes and he would casually sit in his rocking chair smoking a huge cigar while cracking lots of jokes about the movies he was playing. Bob couldn’t hold my hand when the movies got really scary, but I could rely on him to make me giggle during the next commercial break and remind me that I was only watching “movie magic.”
Bob’s Creature Feature show had one of the best theme songs ever that ended with the great line, “The creatures gonna get ya tonight!” which somehow manged to scare me silly when I was a kid. The song was really funky and very ’70s, and you can enjoy it yourself by checking out the original Creature Features opening, which Bob posted himself on Youtube:
Bob Wilkins taught me that no matter how bad a movie was, you could still find things to enjoy about it. At the very least, the worst movies he showed were often filled with lots of unintentional laughs that he seemed to enjoy pointing out. His way of looking at low-budget films helped shape the way I saw them and he made me appreciate movies that most film critics would probably find intolerable.
On Creature Features Bob often interviewed great celebrity guests like Christopher Lee, Ray Harryhausen, George Romero, Leonard Nimoy and Forest J. Ackerman. These interesting interviews with the people behind the movies and TV shows I loved gave me a whole new appreciation for what I was watching. Thanks to Bob’s show I started understanding what directors did and how special effects worked. Creature Features was always lots of fun to watch, but I almost always learned something new from watching the show as well.
After the huge success of Star Wars, Bob Wilkins created the fantastic Captain Cosmic show in 1977, which I also watched regularly when I was a kid. On Captain Cosmic Bob would dress up in a poorly fitting superhero costume and introduce a parade of Japanese science fiction movies and television shows with his trusty Wonder Robot 2T2. Thanks to Captain Cosmic I was shown great shows like Ultraman, Johnny Sokko & His Flying Robot, Starblazers and Thunderbirds. You can watch the original opening of the Captain Cosmic show on YouTube which Bob has also posted:
Sadly for Bob Wilkins’ Bay Area fans, he decided to retire early and he left Creature Features and Captain Cosmic in 1979. The Captain Cosmic show came to an abrupt end, but John Stanley took over hosting duties for Creature Features until the show was finally canceled in 1984. I also really liked John Stanley and appreciated his own take on movies even though it was probably hard trying to fill Bob Wilkins’ shoes. I continued to enjoy many great movies with John Stanley as my host.
The golden age of horror hosts may be over, but they are remembered fondly by fans like myself who grew up with them and were introduced to countless movies thanks to their entertaining shows.
While Cinebeats will be celebrating its first birthday this month, Bob Wilkins will be celebrating his 75th Birthday On April 11th and his family and friends are asking for his fans to send in their Birthday Wishes. Bob’s health has deteriorated due to Alzheimer’s disease, but he still attends fan gatherings whenever he can.

- Bob Wilkins Official Website




