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The Thing with Two Heads was directed by Lee Frost, who has mostly made nudie and softcore pornographic films throughout his career, as well as the occasional genre foray like the horror nudie House on Bare Mountain (1962) and Witchcraft 70 (1970), a documentary exploiting the early 1970s occult fad. Lead actor Ray Milland had become a star in the 1940s with his Oscar-winning role in The Lost Weekend (1945) but his career had gradually faded throughout the 1960s into a host of B movie parts during which time he had become a regular in horror cinema. Millands co-star was footballer Rosey Grier, whose largest claim to fame at that point had been as the man who grabbed Bobby Kennedys assassin Sirhan Sirhan. After a brief acting career, Grier later became famous for his needlepoint and macramé and then as a Christian minister. The Thing with Two Heads jumps aboard the early 1970s fad for racially-themed films. In fact at its core The Thing with Two Heads is really a madcap combination of a two-headed transplant film and The Defiant Ones (1958), the acclaimed Stanley Kramer drama that featured Sidney Poitier and Tony Curtis as a black and a white man on the run from the law while chained together. The Thing with Two Heads received an instant bad movie reputation from the moment of its release. This probably says a good deal about how little some people actually see in films it is really hard to believe that The Thing with Two Heads could have been made without any of it being intended as tongue-in-cheek. Certainly if one looks at the film in the spirit it was clearly intended it is all rather entertaining. The heads are never convincing for anything other than medium angle Ray Millands head becomes a shoddy latex cast sitting on Rosey Griers shoulders, and in closeup the two actors have to conduct some amazing contortions to both fit into the same collar. By the last third of the film any pretence of seriousness is abandoned altogether and Lee Frost revels in a total silliness with the Thing entering a motorcycle race where it succeeds in winning. There is nothing more deliriously absurd than the sight of the two-headed Thing nonchalantly zooming about stunt-cycling, or the car chase with the Thing pursued around a field in circles by about a dozen cop cars. The ending hits a perfect note as the Black trio drive off into the night, conducting a Gospel rendition of Oh Happy Day. A young Rick Baker created a two-headed ape that gets loose in the early scenes in one hilarious moment it is captured after being found sitting in the middle of a supermarket aisle chewing on bananas.
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