Herbert L. Strock

It Came from the Lake Monstroid: It Came from the Lake King Kung Fu Devil's Messenger The Crawling Hand Donovan's Brain

Born: 01/13/1918 Boston, MA
Decades Active:
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Biography: A horror director of the late '50s and early '60s, Boston-born Herbert L. Strock created a string of fondly remembered sci-fi thrillers and horror shockers during the heyday of low-budget chillers. Strock entered the movie business shooting newsreels for Fox Movietone News. Following service during WWII, he returned to the movie business as an editor, initially at MGM and later at Hal Roach Studios, where he also directed some early filmed television, including episodes of Sky King. He was working at Roach when independent producer Ivan Tors brought in his production of a film called The Magnetic Monster. Tors hired Strock as the editor on the movie and, when director Curt Siodmak quit the picture in a dispute with the producer, Tors engaged Strock as the director. The film's star (and co-producer) Richard Carlson was so pleased with Strock's work, that he arranged to hire him as the editor of his next feature, Riders to the Stars, and to direct the scenes in which Carlson -- who was also directing the movie -- appeared onscreen. Ironically, Strock had impressed two producers sufficiently to get bumped up to the director's chair (and into the directors guild) in two successive feature films, yet hadn't gotten credited as director for either one. His first directorial credit came with the sci-fi/espionage chiller Gog (1954), one of a handful of color science fiction films of its era, which was also shot in 3-D (although only released flat). The film was filled with striking images of both murder and mechanically based mayhem, but also of scientific devices at work; it was a success at the time and has become something of a cult classic along the lines of The Fly and This Island Earth (and some scholars and enthusiasts still talk about retrieving the 3-D elements to get it released in that format).


DVDs that Herbert L. Strock worked on "behind the scenes"...

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