Folks it's the end of the year and that means it's time to look back at the movies we've watched on #Monsterdon this year.
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Folks it's the end of the year and that means it's time to look back at the movies we've watched on #Monsterdon this year. This is gonna be a long thread, so feel free to mute it if you want.
After we're done looking back, I'll ask for nominations for which film we watched this year was the Best, the Worst, and the Most Fun Monsterdon movie! So let's get started

(also I'm doing this by the seat of my pants, so have some patience :P) #Monsterdon
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(also I'm doing this by the seat of my pants, so have some patience :P) #Monsterdon
First movie of 2025 was DEVIL GIRL FROM MARS (1954)! A female alien from Mars lands on Earth seeking a man with which to repopulate her homeland! Unfortunately she lands in the Scottish moors, so her only real options are a bunch of unpleasant peasants. Unpleasants?
Never mind the fact that she could’ve put an ad in the paper and had free choice of every subby dude from Dallas to Vladivostok, she decides to demonstrate Martian superiority and take a boozy criminal instead. And then her ship unceremoniously explodes. Huh. Anyway most of the film’s taken up by some of the least interesting romance subplots ever put to film, but the Martian lady is so compelling that it’s hard to hate this film. I’d follow you to any planet, Romulan babe

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First movie of 2025 was DEVIL GIRL FROM MARS (1954)! A female alien from Mars lands on Earth seeking a man with which to repopulate her homeland! Unfortunately she lands in the Scottish moors, so her only real options are a bunch of unpleasant peasants. Unpleasants?
Never mind the fact that she could’ve put an ad in the paper and had free choice of every subby dude from Dallas to Vladivostok, she decides to demonstrate Martian superiority and take a boozy criminal instead. And then her ship unceremoniously explodes. Huh. Anyway most of the film’s taken up by some of the least interesting romance subplots ever put to film, but the Martian lady is so compelling that it’s hard to hate this film. I’d follow you to any planet, Romulan babe

Number two was BATTLE BEYOND THE STARS (1980). One of the more competent Star Wars knockoffs, Monsterdon repeat offender Roger Corman serves up a scifi flick with some *seriously* psychosexual starship designs.
The film also features a sprawling cast full of some very silly characters -- the Texan space trucker with the belt-mounted booze dispenser that makes it look like he’s pissing in a glass and then drinking it is a real winner -- but Robert Vaughn as Gelt kind of steals the show. Overall it’s surprisingly solid and a lot of fun.
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Number two was BATTLE BEYOND THE STARS (1980). One of the more competent Star Wars knockoffs, Monsterdon repeat offender Roger Corman serves up a scifi flick with some *seriously* psychosexual starship designs.
The film also features a sprawling cast full of some very silly characters -- the Texan space trucker with the belt-mounted booze dispenser that makes it look like he’s pissing in a glass and then drinking it is a real winner -- but Robert Vaughn as Gelt kind of steals the show. Overall it’s surprisingly solid and a lot of fun.
Third, INVASION OF THE BEE GIRLS (1971)!
What is it about the 1970s that every film to come out of the decade was coated in a thin layer of grease? And IotBG is one of the greasier, featuring no less than four sex scenes in the first twenty minutes and a fairly graphic rape scene in the back nine.
The goofy “women genetically crossed with bees need sex to live” plot would be embarrassing enough on its own, but combined with the cavalier attitude towards sexual violence the plot makes for a pretty gross flick. Definitely needed a shower after this one.
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Third, INVASION OF THE BEE GIRLS (1971)!
What is it about the 1970s that every film to come out of the decade was coated in a thin layer of grease? And IotBG is one of the greasier, featuring no less than four sex scenes in the first twenty minutes and a fairly graphic rape scene in the back nine.
The goofy “women genetically crossed with bees need sex to live” plot would be embarrassing enough on its own, but combined with the cavalier attitude towards sexual violence the plot makes for a pretty gross flick. Definitely needed a shower after this one.
Four, PIRANHA (1978)!
If there’s one thing I’ve learned about Hollywood from #Monsterdon, it’s that the industry will latch onto anything that hits and make and re-make (and re-re-remake) that one film under different names until the concept is as flat as six-month-old roadkill. Which is a long-winded way of saying Pirhana is just Jaws again. I think we watched, what, four or five different versions of Jaws this year?
Pirhana does have some decent chemistry between the leads, at least, and the Pollution Saves the Day ending is funny if nothing else. But overall, I thought it was pretty uninspired.
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Four, PIRANHA (1978)!
If there’s one thing I’ve learned about Hollywood from #Monsterdon, it’s that the industry will latch onto anything that hits and make and re-make (and re-re-remake) that one film under different names until the concept is as flat as six-month-old roadkill. Which is a long-winded way of saying Pirhana is just Jaws again. I think we watched, what, four or five different versions of Jaws this year?
Pirhana does have some decent chemistry between the leads, at least, and the Pollution Saves the Day ending is funny if nothing else. But overall, I thought it was pretty uninspired.
Hoo boy, number five is INVASION OF THE STAR CREATURES (1962). Woof. This one gets my vote for Worst Movie of the Year. Maybe in the whole of #Monsterdon. It’s like... You know when your Grandpa tries to tell you a joke, but because it was a joke from eighty years ago it’s simultaneously incomprehensible, inane, and offensive? Yeah, that’s Invasion of the Star Creatures. Except this movie is 80 minutes long. It’s a hideously racist, offensively sexist, cringe-inducingly embarrassing attempt at a film that, if you were feeling charitable, you might describe as a satisfactory ipecac.
The best thing I can say about it is that its sad attempts at slapstick made me appreciate even the racist Looney Tunes cartoons, because at least those have SOME redeeming features.
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Hoo boy, number five is INVASION OF THE STAR CREATURES (1962). Woof. This one gets my vote for Worst Movie of the Year. Maybe in the whole of #Monsterdon. It’s like... You know when your Grandpa tries to tell you a joke, but because it was a joke from eighty years ago it’s simultaneously incomprehensible, inane, and offensive? Yeah, that’s Invasion of the Star Creatures. Except this movie is 80 minutes long. It’s a hideously racist, offensively sexist, cringe-inducingly embarrassing attempt at a film that, if you were feeling charitable, you might describe as a satisfactory ipecac.
The best thing I can say about it is that its sad attempts at slapstick made me appreciate even the racist Looney Tunes cartoons, because at least those have SOME redeeming features.
Six, MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE (1987).
Hey, it’s Tom Paris! Kind of surprisingly good in a hammy kind of way, I think of this film the same way I think of the Transformers movie -- it’s an hour-and-a-half toy ad, but it’s a FUN hour-and-a-half toy ad. Frank Langella as Skeletor is BY FAR the best thing about this film, chewing scenery like a real champ. But once again the Goth chick is my favorite of the cast, I think Evil Lyn should team up with Nyah, the titular Devil Girl from Mars, and terrorize the galaxy. It’d be a blast

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Six, MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE (1987).
Hey, it’s Tom Paris! Kind of surprisingly good in a hammy kind of way, I think of this film the same way I think of the Transformers movie -- it’s an hour-and-a-half toy ad, but it’s a FUN hour-and-a-half toy ad. Frank Langella as Skeletor is BY FAR the best thing about this film, chewing scenery like a real champ. But once again the Goth chick is my favorite of the cast, I think Evil Lyn should team up with Nyah, the titular Devil Girl from Mars, and terrorize the galaxy. It’d be a blast

Seven, THE GORGON (1964)! It’s hard to hate Hammer Films flicks. They had such a talent for finding beautiful locations for pretty people to take their shirts off in.
The Gorgon is actually a vampire movie without a vampire, which is bad enough, but its real sin is that it changes protagonists no less than four times. The worst one is the THIRD protagonist, who actively calls in the FOURTH protagonist to take his place and then DOESN’T LEAVE. So the last half hour of the film you’ve got a character just flapping around loose! Ah well, at least the Gorgon is well-designed, wish we got to see more of her.
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Seven, THE GORGON (1964)! It’s hard to hate Hammer Films flicks. They had such a talent for finding beautiful locations for pretty people to take their shirts off in.
The Gorgon is actually a vampire movie without a vampire, which is bad enough, but its real sin is that it changes protagonists no less than four times. The worst one is the THIRD protagonist, who actively calls in the FOURTH protagonist to take his place and then DOESN’T LEAVE. So the last half hour of the film you’ve got a character just flapping around loose! Ah well, at least the Gorgon is well-designed, wish we got to see more of her.
Eight, FROGS (1972)! Jaws, but it’s amphibians!
Okay, actually this film pisses me off. Because generally speaking when a monster film is TITLED after something, you expect that thing to be the primary antagonist of the film! Which is in fact NOT the case with Frogs (1972)! Only one person in the whole film is actually SUGGESTED to be killed by frogs, all the others die to actual predators or, like, falling face-first into pesticides or poor trigger discipline! If this film had followed proper monster movie title convention it would be called Common Household Accidents (1972)! Fuck off!
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Eight, FROGS (1972)! Jaws, but it’s amphibians!
Okay, actually this film pisses me off. Because generally speaking when a monster film is TITLED after something, you expect that thing to be the primary antagonist of the film! Which is in fact NOT the case with Frogs (1972)! Only one person in the whole film is actually SUGGESTED to be killed by frogs, all the others die to actual predators or, like, falling face-first into pesticides or poor trigger discipline! If this film had followed proper monster movie title convention it would be called Common Household Accidents (1972)! Fuck off!
Nine, C.H.U.D. (1984). Eh, a reasonably competent tale of radioactive waste mutants, I appreciated that they used actual on-location shots of cramped subway nooks and crannies. Shame the monsters were just vampires, but goopy. Ah well, at least they ate a lot of cops.
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Nine, C.H.U.D. (1984). Eh, a reasonably competent tale of radioactive waste mutants, I appreciated that they used actual on-location shots of cramped subway nooks and crannies. Shame the monsters were just vampires, but goopy. Ah well, at least they ate a lot of cops.
Ten, CRITTERS (1986). A ripoff of Gremlins, but a decent one. The main kid's kind of annoying and the humor is mostly of the gross-out kind, but the special effects are great and the plot's far more coherent than most of the movies we watch. And you get to see Neelix get eaten alive by Tribbles, which is well worth the price of admission

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Ten, CRITTERS (1986). A ripoff of Gremlins, but a decent one. The main kid's kind of annoying and the humor is mostly of the gross-out kind, but the special effects are great and the plot's far more coherent than most of the movies we watch. And you get to see Neelix get eaten alive by Tribbles, which is well worth the price of admission

Eleven, YETI: GIANT OF THE 20TH CENTURY (1977).
I've mentioned before that movies from the '70s feel kinda greasy? This one is the floor mat from a Denny's. The one under the fry vats. Eeeeeeugh. Yeti nipples and fishbones used as combs and an underaged girl being pursued by MULTIPLE adult men BLEUGH.
Also, due to some odd cultural things, the movie was FILMED in Italian, DUBBED into English, and then shown with ITALIAN SUBTITLES
KILL ME.
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Eleven, YETI: GIANT OF THE 20TH CENTURY (1977).
I've mentioned before that movies from the '70s feel kinda greasy? This one is the floor mat from a Denny's. The one under the fry vats. Eeeeeeugh. Yeti nipples and fishbones used as combs and an underaged girl being pursued by MULTIPLE adult men BLEUGH.
Also, due to some odd cultural things, the movie was FILMED in Italian, DUBBED into English, and then shown with ITALIAN SUBTITLES
KILL ME.
Twelve, CRITTERS 2: THE MAIN COURSE (1988). I actually kinda liked the sequel better than the original. The alien Bounty Hunters felt like better fleshed-out characters and Charlie got a good ending to his plotline.
...Or at least he SHOULD HAVE, but they randomly revived him at the end credits with one of the stupidest plot twists known to man >_> Dropped the damn ball at the finish line <_<
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Twelve, CRITTERS 2: THE MAIN COURSE (1988). I actually kinda liked the sequel better than the original. The alien Bounty Hunters felt like better fleshed-out characters and Charlie got a good ending to his plotline.
...Or at least he SHOULD HAVE, but they randomly revived him at the end credits with one of the stupidest plot twists known to man >_> Dropped the damn ball at the finish line <_<
Number thirteen is... Uh. THE CAT GIRL (1957), oh yeah. This one didn't make much of an impression, most of the film's about weird and annoying love triangles until the main character somehow gets cursed by a random panther. And then gets hit by a car.
Actually that last bit is the interesting part of the film, the main dude hits The Cat Girl with his car to save his woman and the cops basically go, "Oh, that's okay, you're rich and white. You get a freebie. Good night, doc!" Bleh.
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Number thirteen is... Uh. THE CAT GIRL (1957), oh yeah. This one didn't make much of an impression, most of the film's about weird and annoying love triangles until the main character somehow gets cursed by a random panther. And then gets hit by a car.
Actually that last bit is the interesting part of the film, the main dude hits The Cat Girl with his car to save his woman and the cops basically go, "Oh, that's okay, you're rich and white. You get a freebie. Good night, doc!" Bleh.
Number 14 is LASERBLAST (1977)! Sometimes a film will show you a character getting beaten up and bashed around and generally mistreated so that it can get you feeling some sympathy for a character that will later do some heinous things, but Laserblast kind of blows it. Like, yes, this kid has kind of a tough life, but he’s also not in control of the alien weapon that later takes over his body, soooooo you’re kind of just watching this slightly pathetic teenager have his already shitty life blown nine ways to hell for an hour and a half.
And then he gets shot by an extraterrestrial bounty hunter, which I guess is supposed to be ironic or something? I dunno, Laserblast felt like one of those films that had *heard* of having an underlying theme but didn’t quite understand what one was or how use it.
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Number 14 is LASERBLAST (1977)! Sometimes a film will show you a character getting beaten up and bashed around and generally mistreated so that it can get you feeling some sympathy for a character that will later do some heinous things, but Laserblast kind of blows it. Like, yes, this kid has kind of a tough life, but he’s also not in control of the alien weapon that later takes over his body, soooooo you’re kind of just watching this slightly pathetic teenager have his already shitty life blown nine ways to hell for an hour and a half.
And then he gets shot by an extraterrestrial bounty hunter, which I guess is supposed to be ironic or something? I dunno, Laserblast felt like one of those films that had *heard* of having an underlying theme but didn’t quite understand what one was or how use it.
Number 15, KRULL (1983)! Actually a really well-produced film with some excellent special effects. Its biggest issues mostly stem from having a plotline that mostly consists of random things happening one after the other. Eh, it's no Willow, at least, but I felt like you could've cut out half the "Thing Happens On The Road" events and lost nothing at all.
Oh, also this is the movie where evil is destroyed by the power of heterosexual marriage, for whatever that's worth.
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Number 15, KRULL (1983)! Actually a really well-produced film with some excellent special effects. Its biggest issues mostly stem from having a plotline that mostly consists of random things happening one after the other. Eh, it's no Willow, at least, but I felt like you could've cut out half the "Thing Happens On The Road" events and lost nothing at all.
Oh, also this is the movie where evil is destroyed by the power of heterosexual marriage, for whatever that's worth.
Number 16, FIRST MEN IN THE MOON (1964)! Aaah yes, the based sort-of-kind-of on an HG Wells thing. A down-on-his-luck financier funds a mad scientist's attempt to build the world's first spaceship. He, the financier, and the financier's much-lied-to fiancee then get bounced up to the moon where they spend an hour or so indulging all in the imperial impulses you would expect of 19th century Englishmen. They literally destroy the civilization they find with disease and the movie just kinda shrugs and ends on a note of "Well, that happened."
Eh, at least it's got Ray Harryhausen animation. That was good

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Number 16, FIRST MEN IN THE MOON (1964)! Aaah yes, the based sort-of-kind-of on an HG Wells thing. A down-on-his-luck financier funds a mad scientist's attempt to build the world's first spaceship. He, the financier, and the financier's much-lied-to fiancee then get bounced up to the moon where they spend an hour or so indulging all in the imperial impulses you would expect of 19th century Englishmen. They literally destroy the civilization they find with disease and the movie just kinda shrugs and ends on a note of "Well, that happened."
Eh, at least it's got Ray Harryhausen animation. That was good

Seventeen, THE BAT PEOPLE (1974)! The OTHER thing about greasy ‘70s movies is how often they’ll have extended relationship subplots that are literally just two straight people pointlessly bickering on film.
The Bat People features a bat biologist slowly going insane of a version of rabies that turns you into an anthropomorphic bat, but most of the movie is actually him arguing with his fiancee. Oh, and then once he’s too far gone with Rabid Bat-itis to continue his duties as protagonist, his fiancee takes over and gets sexually assaulted by a be-moustached sheriff, because that’s literally the only plot greasy ‘70s flicks ever give to women. Anyway, at least the cop dies in the end, that’s thoughtful.
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Seventeen, THE BAT PEOPLE (1974)! The OTHER thing about greasy ‘70s movies is how often they’ll have extended relationship subplots that are literally just two straight people pointlessly bickering on film.
The Bat People features a bat biologist slowly going insane of a version of rabies that turns you into an anthropomorphic bat, but most of the movie is actually him arguing with his fiancee. Oh, and then once he’s too far gone with Rabid Bat-itis to continue his duties as protagonist, his fiancee takes over and gets sexually assaulted by a be-moustached sheriff, because that’s literally the only plot greasy ‘70s flicks ever give to women. Anyway, at least the cop dies in the end, that’s thoughtful.
Number 18, THE GATE (1987)! In which some teenagers accidentally summon Satan through a hole in their lawn. It's kind of like if Don't Tell Mom The Babysitter's Dead featured Satan instead of a babysitter.
Anyway, this one of those actually-pretty-solid films we get occasionally, it's easy to see why it's a cult favorite. I do think the plot had some issues here and there, but honestly that's kind of fun, too. Nothing keeps a film in your mind like filling plot holes with pet theories

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Number 18, THE GATE (1987)! In which some teenagers accidentally summon Satan through a hole in their lawn. It's kind of like if Don't Tell Mom The Babysitter's Dead featured Satan instead of a babysitter.
Anyway, this one of those actually-pretty-solid films we get occasionally, it's easy to see why it's a cult favorite. I do think the plot had some issues here and there, but honestly that's kind of fun, too. Nothing keeps a film in your mind like filling plot holes with pet theories

Ooo, what're we on, nineteen? That's SLUGS (1988).
One of the few #Monsterdon movies to genuinely gross me out. The slugs themselves are pretty whatever, but the scene with the slug in the lettuce definitely haunts me.
Anyway, this is another one of those films where every character openly loathes every other character. Which is a nice time-saver, we don’t have to waste time worrying about one beloved character getting offed, we can just cheer as the cast gets progressively thinned out.