Killer B Cinema Presents: Attack of the Giant Leeches!

August 7, 2026

August 7, 2026

$5 to $8

SeeScape, 347 Keele Street, Toronto

Website

Events Description

 

On August 7th, 2026, join us for the true creature of summer classic, Attack of the Giant Leeches!

In the Florida Everglades, people begin disappearing. The locals assume they are just alligator attacks, but it’s actually a colony of giant, blood-sucking leeches lurking beneath the swamp. A determined game warden sets out to stop the monsters before they attack the entire town, while everyone else stubbornly refuses to believe him. A classic 1950s sci-fi B-film made on a budget that barely covered the monster costumes, you’ll never look at garbage bags the same way again.
Attack of the Giant Leeches (originally titled The Giant Leeches) is an independently made 1959 black-and-white science fiction-horror film produced by Gene Corman and directed by Bernard L. Kowalski. It stars Ken Clark, the incredibly sexy Yvette Vickers, Bruno VeSota, and Jan Shepard. Leo Gordon wrote the screenplay. The film was released on October 1, 1959, by American International Pictures. In some areas, Leeches played on a double bill with the 1960 Roger Corman film House of Usher.

Attack of the Giant Leeches was one of a spate of “creature features” produced during the 1950s in response to Cold War fears; a character in the film speculates that the leeches have been mutated to giant size by atomic radiation from nearby Cape Canaveral.

Info about See-Scape:
Our movies will be shown on the second floor! There are two bars available in See-Scape. The bar on the second floor is open during our event and is cash-only. Debit/Credit purchases are available on the main floor.

Who is it for?

Adults

HOW MUCH

Tickets : $5 advanced/$8 at door

How to get tickets?

Buy online

At the door: $8 at the door. Cash only.

WHEN & WHERE

 

Date:

Friday, August 7, 2026 | 7:30 PM – 10:30 PM

Venue & Address

SeeScape, 347 Keele Street, Toronto

Wheelchair not accessible

Street Parking

Paid Parking

Accessible by Public Transport

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