Blood Feast continued playing drive-ins and specialty theaters throughout the 1970s (and beyond). Below is a sampling of advertisements for the film's latter-day bookings.
We start things off with this phenomenal quadruple bill from the
Elyria Chronicle Telegram, April 16, 1971, where two H.G. Lewis flicks follow George Romero's
Night of the Living Dead (Pennsylvania), and what is likely a slightly misspelled listing for Lewis' former partner David Friedman's
She Freak (1967). Plus, free gas (likely for your in-car heater)!
Next up, from the October 2, 1973, edition of the
Albuquerque Journal, an even bigger Halloween-themed event with three Lewis films, the West Virginia-lensed
Teenage Strangler, a bonus Al Adamson biker film, and whoever the heck Nightmare Alice is. Free pass if you stay for the entire show? I'll take that challenge.
This February 2, 1974, advertisement from the
Coshocton Tribune (Ohio) is a tad more serious, and opts for some new artwork (probably to keep patrons from realizing they were about to see two ten-year-old films).
Next, Doctor Kiss over at the
Classic Horror Film Board posted this ad from the Elgin Cinema in New York from December 1971, which touts
Blood Feast as "the worst film ever made," quite a few years before
Plan 9 From Outer Space took the title. The Elgin was founded by producer/distributor Ben Barenholtz in 1968, and is credited as the birthplace of the "Midnight Movie" format -- so
Blood Feast graced its screens not too long after the theater's sold-out run of
El Topo.
Finally, from
Fred Adelman's scan collection, comes this New York ad from the 1980s, again touting
Blood Feast's "worst film" bona fides, this time presented by
Sleazoid Express publisher Bill Landis.
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