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Konga is a 1961 Eastmancolor monster film directed by John Lemont and starring Michael Gough, Margo Johns and Austin Trevor. [2] It was written by Herman Cohen and Aben Kandel. It was the basis for a comic book series published by Charlton Comics and initially drawn by Steve Ditko (prior to Ditko's co-creation of Spider-Man) in the 1960s. [3]
Konga: John Lemont: Michael Gough, Margo Johns, Jess Conrad: United Kingdom United States [9] The Mask: Julian Roffman: Paul Stevens, Claudette Nevins, Anne Collings: Canada [10] Mr. Sardonicus: William Castle: Guy Rolfe, Audrey Dalton, Oscar Homolka: United States [11] The Pit and the Pendulum: Roger Corman: Vincent Price, John Kerr, Barbara ...
The film cost about $100,000 to make, but earned more than $2 million. ... cast in the lead role for I Was a Teenage Werewolf. ... Konga (1961) Black Zoo (1963 ...
Gordon was born 16 January 1941 [1] in Cambridge, in England.Her father was a doctor and her mother a make-up artist who worked for Max Factor.After being photographed by chance at the Queens Ice Rink, Bayswater, for the cover of the magazine Lilliput, she was signed to a five-year contract with film agent Bill Watts and played a harem girl in the Bernard Bresslaw film I Only Arsked!
1961: Title Director Cast Country Subgenre/Notes Atlantis, the Lost Continent: George Pal: Sal Ponti, Joyce Taylor, John Dall: United States: Adventure The Absent-Minded Professor: Robert Stevenson: Fred MacMurray, Nancy Olson: United States: Comedy Family Sport Battle of the Worlds (a.k.a. Il pianeta degli uomini spenti) Antonio Margheriti
Konga is a Swedish locality. Konga may also refer to: Garuda Contingent, the Indonesian peacekeeping contingent; Konga.com, a Nigerian company that launched in 2012; Konga, a 1961 British science fiction film; King Konga/Konga the Barbarian, early stage names for professional wrestler The Barbarian (born 1958)
[5] [6] [7] Pacific Rim, a film featuring giant mecha battling with kaiju, was released in 2013, and the following year Legendary reinterpreted Godzilla for a new generation of audiences in the series' 30th film. The first Japanese film in the Godzilla series after a ten year long hiatus, Shin Godzilla, premiered in Japan in July 2016.
The film stars Vincent Price, Charles Bronson and Henry Hull and was directed by William Witney and produced by Samuel Z. Arkoff, Anthony Carras (who also edited) and James H. Nicholson. American International Pictures released the film as a double feature with a gorilla movie titled Konga.