Premium Only Content
 
			1958 Steve McQueen & a Town of Teenagers take on The BLOB
The Blob is a 1958 American science fiction horror film directed by Irvin S. Yeaworth Jr. from a screenplay by Theodore Simonson and Kate Phillips, based on an idea by Irving H. Millgate.[3] It stars Steve McQueen (in his first leading role) and Aneta Corsaut and co-stars Earl Rowe and Olin Howland.
The film concerns a carnivorous amoeboidal alien that crashes to Earth from outer space inside a meteorite, landing near the small communities of Phoenixville and Downingtown, Pennsylvania. It envelops living beings, growing larger, becoming redder in color and more aggressive, eventually becoming larger than a building.
The film's tongue-in-cheek title song, "The Blob" [Columbia 42150A], was written by Burt Bacharach and Mack David. It became a nationwide hit in the United States, peaking at #33 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart on November 9, 1958. It was recorded by a studio group who adopted the name The Five Blobs. (The vocals are all by singer Bernie Knee, overdubbing himself.) It is commonly misbelieved that Bacharach wrote the song with his famous songwriting partner, Hal David, but David's brother Mack wrote the lyrics
The Blob was distributed by Paramount Pictures as a double feature with I Married a Monster from Outer Space.
Paramount acquired The Blob for $300,000 from Jack Harris and spent another $300,000 promoting it. According to Tim Dirks, it was one of a wave of "cheap teen movies" for the drive-in market—"exploitative, cheap fare created especially for [young people] in a newly-established teen/drive-in genre".
Harris eventually bought back the rights from Paramount and Allied Artists Pictures Corporation, and reissued it as a double feature with his and Yeaworth's Dinosaurus! in 1964.
Beware! The Blob, a sequel directed by Larry Hagman, was released in 1972.[26] The same creature from the original—this time starting as a small specimen unearthed by a bulldozer crew in the Arctic—is brought back to suburban Los Angeles, where it escapes. Presented as a "horror comedy", the film was also released under the title Son of Blob in 1972. As this was Hagman's first feature film as director, home video releases used the tagline, "The Movie That J.R. Shot", a play on "Who shot J.R.?", the famous catchphrase about the near-demise of the character Hagman played in the television series Dallas.
- 	
				 LIVE LIVEThe Rabble Wrangler16 hours agoBattlefield 6 - RedSec with The Best in the West55 watching
- 	
				 37:53 37:53Donald Trump Jr.3 hours agoAmerican Dominance vs Dems' Delusion | TRIGGERED Ep.28713.5K47
- 	
				 1:14:57 1:14:57The White House5 hours agoPresident Trump and the First Lady Participate in Halloween at The White House11K15
- 	
				 1:05:02 1:05:02Candace Show Podcast3 hours agoBREAKING NEWS! The Egyptian Military Was In Provo On 9/10. | Candace Ep 25532.8K93
- 	
				 2:12:54 2:12:54Redacted News3 hours agoBREAKING! KASH PATEL'S FBI SHUTS DOWN CHARLIE KIRK ASSASSINATION FOREIGN INTEL PROBE BY JOE KENT107K85
- 	
				 1:12:37 1:12:37vivafrei4 hours agoTexas A.G, Sues J&J over Autism Claims! VIva Goes Honeybadger on Liberals! Hasan Piker & MORE!103K38
- 	
				 3:19:22 3:19:22Barry Cunningham5 hours agoPresident Trump Talks China | Mike Johnson Shutdown Day 30 | Reacting To JD Vance Questions At TPUSA35.7K13
- 	
				 LIVE LIVELFA TV22 hours agoLIVE & BREAKING NEWS! | THURSDAY 10/30/25811 watching
- 	
				 14:54 14:54The Kevin Trudeau Show Limitless1 day agoThe Hidden Force Running Your Life46.3K7
- 	
				 1:48:43 1:48:43freecastle7 hours agoTAKE UP YOUR CROSS- Do not be deceived: 'Bad company ruins good morals.10.7K4