Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. CHICAGO — Bert I. Gordon, who died earlier this spring at 100, was the absolute worst filmmaker who ever lived. Or so some might ...
Bert I. Gordon, whose mutant monster movies featured giant rats, huge grasshoppers, oversized chickens and 30-foot teenagers, died Wednesday in Los Angeles. He was 100. Gordon’s death was confirmed to ...
His initials spelled “BIG” and that’s what Bert I. Gordon did. From big spiders and big ants to big locusts and big people, Gordon put them all on the screen in a series of entertaining creature ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Bert I. Gordon, an American filmmaker whose low-budget creature features brought super-sized monsters to drive-in cinemas in the ...
Army Air Forces veteran Bert I. Gordon wrote and directed dozens of science fiction movies on a shoestring budget, many of them featuring once-famous movie stars in the waning days of their careers.
Bert I. Gordon, who unleashed a parade of cinematic horrors as the filmmaker behind Atomic Age movies about mutant ants, 60-foot giants, rampaging grasshoppers and a bloodthirsty spider that proved ...
Bert I. Gordon, an American filmmaker and sci-fi director known for his low-budget monster movies in the 1950s and ’60s, died in Los Angeles on Wednesday. He was 100. His daughter, Patricia Gordon, ...
Bert I. Gordon, who died earlier this spring at 100, was the absolute worst filmmaker who ever lived. Or so some might argue. You’ve heard Ed Wood was the worst. Or Roger Corman. Or maybe Michael Bay.