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The Perfect Gift For Any Film Geek To Get This Valentine’s Day, Birthday or Fan Fest

“Ad Nauseam: Newsprint Nightmares from the 1980s”  (fall 2018)
“Ad Astra: 20 Years of Newspaper Ads For Sci-fi & Fantasy Films” (fall 2019)
“Ad Nauseam Newsprint Nightmares from the 1990s & 2000s” (fall 2019)
“Ad Nauseam: Newsprint Nightmares from the 1970s and 1980s”(fall 2021)

Author: Michael Gingold

Publisher: 1984 Publishing

Growing up in the 1970s and ‘80s, author/collector Michael Gingold became obsessed with horror movies and other genre films. This love led him to become a Fangoria writer and then its editor for nearly 30 years, as well as a Rue Morgue" contributor. He made that magazine the leading chronicle of all things horror/supernatural and more covering film, television and books for decades.

Before all that, he took his scissors to local newspapers, collecting countless ads for these movies. Gingold first began reproducing newspaper ads for ‘80s horror films in the pages of his Xerox fanzine Scareaphanalia, which he wrote and self-published for nearly a decade. While still in college, he began contributing capsule reviews to the annual book Movies on TV and Videocassette, and later did the same for The Blockbuster Video Guide. He also wrote full-length reviews for CineBooks’ annual The Motion Picture Guide, many of which now appear at the TV Guide on-line movie database.

So, when the 50-something hooked out with Matthew Chojnacki from 1984 Publishing, a genre book publisher, they organized a museum-worth of these ads as a visual history and graphic narrative of every kind of horror film, flick and movie.


Now, hundreds of pages of film ads from the last four decades (since the ’70s), these ads are spread throughout various editions. And the latest also includes a new foreword by legendary director Joe Dante.

First came Ad Nauseam: Newsprint Nightmares from the 1980s, which has more than 600 ads packed in the updated version. Rare alternate ad art for film franchises such as HalloweenFriday the 13thA Nightmare on Elm StreetChild’s PlayJawsThe Texas Chain Saw Massacre, and The Exorcist can be found in there. This book revels in oddities including Invasion of the Blood FarmersThe Incredible Torture ShowPsycho from TexasDracula Blows His CoolZombie Island Massacre and many more.

This year-by-year deep dive into the Gingold archive led to Ad Nauseam: Newsprint Nightmares from the 1970s and 1980s, which was issued with more than 450 ads. Within these pages is the art for such films as Gremlins, The Blob remake, and many horror franchises. Gingold then compiled Ad Nauseam Newsprint Nightmares from the 1990s & 2000s out of his collection of newsprint notices from those decades.

mike gThere are more than 500 striking ads for the big-budget gothics of the early and mid-'90s (Bram Stoker's Dracula, Interview with the Vampire), the slasher-film revival (“Scream,” I Know What You Did Last SummerHalloween: H20), gruesome franchises (SawFinal Destination), remakes (The Texas Chainsaw MassacreDawn of the DeadThe Ring), found-footage films (The Blair Witch ProjectParanormal Activity) and so on. This volume also includes unforgettable critic quotes of the time, fascinating facts about the films' releases, and insightful commentary.


Besides horror films, Gingold also collected newspaper advertisements for the science fiction and fantasy releases that stoked his passion as a genre fan. So he developed Ad Astra: 20 Years of Newspaper Ads for Sci-Fi & Fantasy Films, another year-by-year look at the movies that shaped many childhoods in the '80s and '90s.

Inside this 270-page book, images for films such as Star Trek to Starship TroopersThe Dark Crystal to Dark CityBlade Runner are all here. There’s alternate artwork for such favorite films, where you can learn the fascinating behind-the-scenes stories of their marketing campaigns, and read the most entertaining and unexpected quotes from reviewers at the time.

In addition to 1984 Publishing’s Ad Nauseam and Ad Astra books, Gingold has authored The FrightFest Guide to Monster Movies (FAB Press) and Shark Movie Mania (Rue Morgue). He’s also contributed to Yuletide Terror: Christmas Horror on Film and Television (Spectacular Optical). Beside books, his screenplays include Shadow: Dead Riot for Fever DreamsLeeches! for Rapid Heart Pictures and the upcoming Damnation for director Dante Tomaselli. He has served on juries for festivals including Montreal’s Fantasia, The Boston Underground Film Festival and the Ithaca International Fantastic Film Festival.

Gingold recently answered questions by email as to his passion that he now shares with the fan world.

Q: How long have you been collecting?

MG: I began collecting the ads in 1979, which was a fortunate year to start, since both horror and science fiction were booming in the wake of Halloween and Star Wars.  1979 was the year of Alien, Dawn of the Dead, The Amityville HorrorPhantasm and a lot more, and at that point, horror films that might have previously played only in drive-ins and 42nd Street grind houses started getting wider releases in the New York area, making their way into suburban theaters It was an exciting time to be a young horror fan, even if it was a little while before I could actually start seeing the movies in theaters! I kept collecting the ads right up through the mid-2010s, when newspaper advertising for movies pretty much died out.

Q: How do you store it?

MG: I kept the ads in file folders and large manila envelopes, carefully noting on them what titles were inside. Storing them that way took up a lot less room than keeping them in scrapbooks! Also, putting the ads in scrapbooks would have meant taping or gluing them, which might have led to damage if I took them out later. Maybe I somehow knew I'd be putting them to greater use someday!

Q: When did you realize you had a world-class collection?

MG: I guess it was around the late 1990s, with the rise of the Internet and people starting to run ads from their collections online. I realized I had compiled the ads for pretty much every horror film that got theatrical release -- at least, in the New York area -- for the past two decades, and started thinking a book might be a cool idea. And the title of that book was obvious--that came to me right away. I just kept on collecting, hoping I could find a taker for the book someday.

Q: How did you organize it?

MG: My publisher Matthew Chojnacki and I decided we should organize the book chronologically, year by year, so readers could see the progression of both the genre and the way it was advertised over the years.  With the addition of Ad Nauseam II, and now with the expanded version of the first book, you can see how horror and its promotion evolved over a 40-year period.

Q: What are your favorites?

MG: There are so many that it's hard to pick a favorite, but I do especially like a couple of reissue ads from the '80s that had a humorous spin to them. In 1981, The Blob and Son of Blob were rereleased on a double bill, not long after "Who Shot J.R.?" mania had swept the country. Since Larry Hagman, who played J.R. on Dallas, directed Son of Blob, it was described in that ad as "The Movie J.R. Shot"!  Then there's a midnight-show ad for Night of The Living Dead paired with "A different kind of violence" — Three Stooges shorts!

Q: What films were great but had bad ads?

MG: Evil Dead II is a good example; the image of a skull with eyes is a really generic and half-hearted way to sell one of the great over-the-top horror movies of all time.

Q: What films were bad but had great ads?

adnas lowMG: Too many to count! That's part of the history of horror-film advertising. Movies where the ads promised more and/or better stuff than the films themselves delivered. And then there were some that were outright lies. One notorious example is Screamers, where the ad proclaimed, "Be Warned: You will actually see a man turned inside-out." Well, be warned: You won't!

Q: What ones are you looking for?

MG: These days, as part of my work writing and creating video featurettes about classic genre movies, I sometimes seek out horror-movie ads from outside the New York area, using on-line archives. Since I grew up and went to college in and around New York City, that's where the ads in the books came from, but frequently, especially in the '70s and '80s, movies would be released with different titles and campaigns in various cities across the U.S., and some films wouldn't play in New York at all.

One case in point: an interview I did with Gary Sherman about his involvement in John Huston's Phobia recently ran in Delirium magazine, and I was able to find an ad for what I believe was its only U.S. theatrical play, in Kansas City. There's another movie for which I'm writing liner notes for an upcoming Blu-ray — can't reveal what it is at the moment—where the ads were different in practically every city where it was released.

Q: Where do you hope this collection will go to be archived?

MG: At this point, I don't have plans to exhibit the ads any further; the books are so well-designed and packaged that they're kind of the ultimate showcase for them.  I did make a tentative attempt to get a gallery show tied to the first publication of “Ad Nauseam,” but it never came together. What I have been hoping all along is that other collectors might come up with enough ads to put together books on comedy movies, or action movies. There were a lot of great ads in those genres too.  So far it hasn't happened, but I'm still hoping.

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