Canadian William Shatner in the 1965 film
Incubus, spoken entirely in the artficially constructed "universal language" of Esperanto!
This movie is entirely about Satanism and black magic rituals and mayhem:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=AW7AuyIwN2AOne year later Shatner began playing the role of Capt. Kirk (sounds like the Scottish and German words for "church") on Star Trek, and in 1968 he did The Transformed Man. Star Trek episodes featured a Lennon-doubling Charlie Brill in a Beatles suit as a Klingon spy with appearance altered to look human, and two episodes with an actor named William Campbell, the name of the double said to be the imposter of Paul McCartney acc. to rumors of 1969.
"
Subscribe
Unsubscribe gringer345
June 06, 2009
William Shatner stars as Marc, a soldier of pure heart who has just returned home injured from war. He becomes the target of Kia (Allyson Ames), a beautiful female demon, who has become bored with taking the lives of corrupt men. Kia sets out to seduce Marc, but ends up falling in love, angering her sister demon and forcing her to summon the Incubus to wreak revenge.
Lenguage: Esperanto
Subtitle: english "
Milos Milos (Serbian: Miloš Miloševiæ) (July 1, 1941 – January 30, 1966) was a Hollywood actor, a
stunt double and bodyguard of actor Alain Delon.[edit] Early days
In the 1950s Milos Milosevic and his friend Stevan Markovic were involved in a streetfight in Belgrade[1]. They met Alain Delon, who was filming a movie in Belgrade. Delon hired Milos Milos and Stevan Markovic as bodyguards, and Milos later moved to Hollywood, California. There he meet gangster Nikola Milinkovich. Milinkovich gave Milos $200,000 to fight for him in streetfights, from which Nikola benefited $2,000,000.
[edit] Hollywood
As a young Hollywood actor Milos is best known for his performance as a Soviet naval officer in the 1966 comedy The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming
and for his titular role in the 1965 Esperanto horror movie, Incubus.
[edit] Death
In 1965, Barbara Ann Thomason (stage name Carolyn Mitchell) began an affair with Milos. The two were found dead in [Judy Garland's former movie partner-]Mickey Rooney's Los Angeles house in 1966. The American official inquiry stated that Milos had shot Thomason with Rooney's chrome-plated .38 caliber revolver and then committed suicide.[citation needed]The official inquiry provoked rumors and doubts that they were actually both murdered in revenge for having an affair[2][3].
[edit] External links
Milos Milos at the Internet Movie Database
Salon.com Curse of the "Incubus" [edit] References
^ Savkovic, Dusan, Zagrljaj Pariza, 1986., p. 43.
^ Savkovic, Dusan, Zagrljaj Pariza, 1986., p. 43.
^ Lopusina, Marko, Ubij bliznjeg svog, 1997., p. 16.
Retrieved from "
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milos_Milos"Categories: American film actors | Murder-suicide | 1941 births | 1966 deaths | Serbian people | Serbian actors | Actors who committed suicide
Hidden categories: Articles needing additional references from August 2007 | Articles containing Serbian language text | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from August 2007
Curse of the "Incubus"
In the obscure '60s art-horror film, William Shatner is terrorized by murderous sea creatures. What happened off-screen was worse.- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Cara Jepsen
May 3, 2000 | The story of "Incubus," the 1960s cult horror film, is bad enough. It's about a beautiful succubus who lures corrupt men to the sea, where she steps on their heads -- and drowns them.
Finding that almost too easy, she decides to seduce a morally upright soldier. But they fall in love. Her succubus sister summons their leader, the Incubus, from his underground lair. He gets back at the soldier by violating his virginal sister and then tries to murder him.
And if that doesn't put the chill in your bones, it gets worse: "Incubus" stars William Shatner. And the whole thing is done in Esperanto.
"Incubus," directed by "The Outer Limits" creator Leslie Stevens, made a minor splash on the underground film scene right after its release in 1966. Few know, however, that the real-life story of the film and its aftermath rivals the on-screen horror. Murder, suicide and kidnapping, for a start. And the movie itself, decades later, seemed to have vanished from the face of the earth.
"Who knows if there's a curse or not," says Tony Taylor, the movie�s producer, "but a lot of stuff happened to a lot of people."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
"Incubus" is set in a small village during a lunar eclipse and shot in black and white, which gives it a timeless, otherworldly atmosphere. It was filmed by cinematographer Conrad Hall, who remembers the Big Sur, Calif., setting as "a windswept forest of eucalyptus trees with gnarled limbs that looked like monsters frowning down on you." (Hall, who won an Oscar for his work on "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," took home another in March for "American Beauty.")
"Incubus" is the only known film in which the characters speak entirely in Esperanto -- the made-up universal language created in 1887 by Ludovic Zamenhof using characteristics from a variety of the world's languages. (The film was subtitled in English.) "I never liked the idea of seeing World War II movies where the Germans and Japanese characters spoke English," explains Taylor. "I thought the idea of having devils and demons speak English was a similar thing. Also, we thought it would help get us into the art houses."
The thought of watching a stiff, pre-"Star Trek" Shatner speaking a fake language with spooky music in the background may sound like hell on earth. In fact, the film is engaging, and has more in common with Ingmar Bergman than Wes Craven.
Hall's inventive cinematography, the Esperanto dialogue and the rough-hewn setting work together to give the film a timeless, otherworldly quality. (The village where it's set is called Nomen Tuum -- "An Unknown Time.")
Its brief but thorough examination of purity and corruption is also clever, particularly when the young succubus is complaining to her older sister that she�d prefer more challenging work. "I'm weary of luring evil, ugly souls into the pit," she says. "They'll find their own way down to the sewers of hell."
The older sister replies, deadpan, "When wheat ripens, someone has to harvest it."
Then there's the scene where the Incubus tries to lure his wayward succubus away from Shatner at the entrance to the church. When she makes the sign of the cross in defense, the Incubus suddenly becomes an extraordinarily ugly, screaming black goat who commences to ravish her.
But nothing audiences saw on the screen approached the horrors that would be visited on its makers in the time after its release.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The film was invited to several film festivals, which gave it rave reviews. The program for the 1966 San Francisco Film Festival of that year describes the scene in which the Incubus emerges from underground as "one of the most splendid pieces of horror since the late James Whale conceived the idea of Frankenstein�s electronic monster." But all the producers could notice were the gruesome fates that befell their comrades.
The Incubus -- a lumbering, craggy-faced giant -- was played by Milos Milos, a buff actor from Belgrade, Yugoslavia, who'd spent some time as a stand-in for decadent French superstar Alain Delon. At the time, he was dating Barbara Ann Thompson Rooney, Mickey Rooney�s estranged fifth wife. In 1966, Milos murdered her, and then shot himself.
In the film, Shatner's virginal sister, whom the Incubus violates, was played by Ann Atmar, a sometime girlie-magazine model. She committed suicide a few weeks after the film wrapped up.
A few years after the film was released, the daughter of the woman who played the elder sister succubus, Eloise Hardt, was kidnapped from her Los Angeles driveway and murdered. Her body was discovered a few weeks later in the Hollywood Hills.
Next page | Sharon Tate attended the premiereBoth US military intellgence colonel daughter-SHARON TATE (wife or CIA media shill ROMAN POLANSKI) and ALLYSON AMES (last name is French for "souls"!) hail from DALLAS, TEXAS, center of the Bushes/CIA/White Russian Nazis linkage, and of course the locus of their fascist coup on November 22, 1963, in Dallas, the JFK-Murder City.
A look at Allyson Ames' imdb below shows steady, high profile acting roles in TV up until her starring role in the movie
Incubus in 1965. After that, at the age of 24, she seems to have simply disappeared from the media map, despite her marriage to a bigwig TV/movie director, the son of a Pentagon Admiral, LESLIE STEPHENS (they divorced in December 1966).
Looking at her face, voice, height and what can be inferred of her shape body beneath the long, covering garments of
"Kia" ("Chaya") in
Incubus , it seems quite possible to me that she became Fia Pharrow, when the real Mia Farrow disappeared and was imposter-replaced in the 1965-1966 period.
"Kia" in
Incubus is not quite a doppleganger of Mia Farrow, but with a little plastic surgery magic, voila, Allyson Ames would be a "natural"....
www.astro.ufl.edu/~bruno/Movies/alice.jpgALLYSON AMESOverview
Date of Birth:Dallas, Texas, USA more
Trivia:Second wife of Leslie Stevens.
STARmeter: Up 54% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
NewsDesk:Dark Sky Announces 'Simon, King of the Witches' on DVD
(From Bloody-Disgusting.com. 24 March 2008, 12:00 PM, PDT)
IMDb Resume:Do you represent Allyson Ames? Add a resume and photos to this page with IMDb Resume.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Actress:
1970s
1960s
The Man in the Glass Booth (1975) .... Alita Poe
... aka Robert Shaw's The Man in the Glass Booth (Australia: DVD box title)
Simon, King of the Witches (1971) .... Olivia Gebhart
... aka Simon, King of the Warlocks
"Honey West" .... Ida Bering (1 episode, 1966)
- King of the Mountain (1966) TV episode .... Ida Bering
The Collector (1965) (uncredited) .... First Victim
... aka The Butterfly Collector (UK)
"Perry Mason" .... Rita Jasper (1 episode, 1965)
-
The Case of the Mischievous Doll (1965) TV episode .... Rita Jasper
Incubus (1965) .... Kia The Disorderly Orderly (1964) (uncredited)
"Burke's Law" .... Blonde Southern Girl / ... (3 episodes, 1963-1964)
... aka "Amos Burke, Secret Agent" (USA: new title)
- Who Killed 711? (1964) TV episode .... Gal in Lobby
- Who Killed Molly? (1964) TV episode .... Miss Halsey, 1st Landlady
- Who Killed Mr. X? (1963) TV episode .... Blonde Southern Girl
"Hazel" .... Secretary (1 episode, 1964)
- The Flagpole (1964) TV episode .... Secretary
"Wagon Train" .... Julie (1 episode, 1964)
... aka "Major Adams, Trail Master"
- The Race Town Story (1964) TV episode .... Julie
A House Is Not a Home (1964) .... Gwen
"The Outer Limits" ....
Arndis Pollard / ... (2 episodes, 1963-1964)
- Production and Decay of Strange Particles (1964) TV episode ....
Arndis Pollard
- The Galaxy Being (1963) TV episode .... Loreen
"Gunsmoke" .... Clara Cassidy (1 episode, 1964)
... aka "Gun Law" (UK)
... aka "Marshal Dillon" (USA: rerun title)
- The Kite (1964) TV episode .... Clara Cassidy
4 for Texas (1963) (uncredited) .... Bit part
The Wheeler Dealers (1963) (uncredited)
... aka Separate Beds (UK)
Rampage (1963) (uncredited)
"The Dick Powell Show" (1 episode, 1963)
... aka "The Dick Powell Theatre" (USA: new title)
- Tissue of Hate (1963) TV episode
"77 Sunset Strip" .... Cindy (1 episode, 1963)
- Crashout (1963) TV episode .... Cindy
"Stoney Burke" .... Nancy (1 episode, 1963)
- King of the Hill (1963) TV episode .... Nancy
"The Virginian" .... Vivian Gates (1 episode, 1963)
... aka "The Men from Shiloh" (USA: new title)
- The Exiles (1963) TV episode .... Vivian Gates
"Surfside 6" .... Lydia (1 episode, 1962)
- The Neutral Corner (1962) TV episode .... Lydia
The Phantom Planet (1961) .... Juror
"Maverick" .... Lou Ann (1 episode, 1961)
- Three Queens Full (1961) TV episode .... Lou Ann
Too Late Blues (1961) (uncredited)
"Checkmate" (1 episode, 1961)
- The Paper Killer (1961) TV episode
Director:
You Are So Going to Hell! (2004) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sponsored Links (What's This?)
Tickling Leo
ticklingleothemovie.net * Stony Brook Film Fest 2009 Winner - Best Feature, in theaters & DVD 9/4