The Snow Queen
Merry Christmas, Stormy readers! Today we dispense with the usual news reports, political chatter and social commentary, except for a few yuletide roasts.
Instead we present the original Russian animated feature known as Snezhnaya Koroleva, or The Snow Queen. Released in 1957, it runs with the original music and Russian dialogue, translated into English subtitles. Cartoonist Lev Atamanov wrote and directed it, adapting Hans Christian Andersen’s original story.
This adventure, which serves as the basis for the movie Frozen, sometimes airs on television on New Year’s Day, but we consider it the perfect treat for Christmas. There are some dark passages, so you might think twice before showing it to little tykes, although most children aged 8 and above can follow and enjoy it.
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And, as an added treat, here is Ballerina on the Boat, a 1969 short also by Atamanov, with music by Alfred Schnittke. In keeping with the dance theme, everything is conveyed through movement and the characters’ expressions, rather than dialogue.
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Today’s Trillion $ Movie, Dark Star, was the debut feature for two filmmakers who later became Hollywood heavyweights — director John (Halloween) Carpenter and screenwriter Dan (Alien) O’Bannon. This bizarre, low-budget sci-fi comedy from 1974 has amassed a well-deserved cult reputation over the years. Never has a beach ball appeared so ominous on the big screen!


Today’s Trillion Dollar Movie is the 1933 horror thriller The Secret of the Blue Room. If you like stories about haunted houses full of secret passageways and plagued by longstanding curses, give this one a try. The picture is a staple of that genre, first released by Universal Pictures and remade at least twice by that same studio as The Missing Guest and The Murder in the Blue Room.

All this month, we’re saluting the Kaiju, the giant monster movies of Japan. In case you’re thinking we’re unpatriotic, today’s Trillion Dollar Movie is the all-American-made Tarantula. This 1955 release from Universal Pictures wasn’t the first big bug thriller to come out of Hollywood. That honor belongs to Them!, the 1954 Warner Brothers’ hit that turned loose an army of giant, atomic-mutated ants in the deserts of New Mexico.
Later today, we’ll be launching a new, month-long series — Know Your Monster — celebrating Japan’s fantastic movie monsters. Each day through March, we’ll present a clip introducing a new monster wreaking havoc and destruction, often upon Tokyo, but sometimes on a global scale. To kick off this series in style, today’s Trillion Dollar Movie revolves around the granddaddy of all Japanese movie monsters, Godzilla or Gojira. Our feature is Godzilla Against Mechagodzilla, the 14th movie in the Godzilla franchise, released in Japan in 1974 and three years later in the United States. It’s one of the better Godzilla sequels, popular enough that it spun off its own sequel (The Terror of Mechagodzilla) and a couple of remakes.
