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SCARE-A-THON 2018: DARK TIMES... AND TIME'S UP

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Hello, friends and fellow fiends! It’s that time of year again, when shadows grow deeper, sweet tooths grow longer, and autumn leaves rustle just a little louder....

It’s time for SCARE-A-THON 2018.


As many of you know, for the past several years I have dedicated my October viewing energies to various organizations deserving of some TLC (Terror Lovin’ Care). Thanks to generous, like-minded souls, we have raised thousands of dollars for over two dozen different groups. This year, I have selected Resilience (formerly Rape Victim Advocates), dedicated to "empowering survivors and ending sexual violence." I think we can all agree it's a topic on many people's minds these days, and here is an easy, tangible way to be part of the solution.

In years past, my goal has been to watch as many movies as possible in the spirit of a walk-a-thon or read-a-thon. This year, I am dialing it back a little, aiming for a humble 31 films, one for each day of the scariest month of the year.


I am asking for your support, pledging whatever amount you deem suitable. If you are able to pledge $2 for every movie, that would be a total of $62. $1 = $31, $.50 = $15.50, $.25 = 7.75, and so on, or you can use nice round numbers if that's more your speed. (All donations are tax-deductible.)

Here is an easy link to make your donation online anytime from now throughout the month of October:

https://resilience.salsalabs.org/supportresilience/p/scareathon/index.html

If you would prefer to pay by cash or check, please contact me at drach101@gmail.com and we can easily make arrangements.


That’s it! As in years past, I will be documenting my progress here on the HORROR 101 with Dr. AC blog, so please stop by and see how we’re doing (and maybe get a few recommendations for your own fright nights)! If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to drop me a line here at drach101@gmail.com. Also, please, please, please feel free to share the link (and your own good juju) throughout your social circles, online and off. More helping hands are better than fewer....

Thanks for your time! Wishing everyone a happy and healthy Halloween season!

Caring through scaring,

AC





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Fool’s Views (9/24 -9/30)

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Howdy, folks!

No time to waste! The October Challenge and SCARE-A-THON 2018 are underway, so gotta get these in the books and start Sharing the Scare!!!

As always, feel free to leave your two cents worth – we’ll make sure you get some change back.

Enjoy!

HORROR:


Mandy (2018) d. Cosmatos, Panos (USA) (1st viewing)

Everyone seems to be going crazy for this art-house revenge flick from the son of George P. Cosmatos (Rambo: First Blood Part II, Tombstone) starring Nicholas Cage, and while I recognize there is plenty to admire, the overindulgent tone left a wicked aftertaste in my mouth both during and afterwards. With a pulsing, oversaturated color palette and (deliberately) lugubrious pacing, we are introduced to a couple (Cage, Andrea Riseborough) living a blissful existence in the backwoods (he’s a logger, she’s an artist) until a strange traveling cult-in-a-camper led by a long-haired Richard Lynch-looking gent named Jeremiah (an excellent Linus Roache) decides to kidnap Mandy with the help of their motorcycle-riding Cenobites.

On paper, this all sounds enjoyably wacked-out and proves so in execution, but with too many scenes that go on far, far longer than needed, it becomes clear that we are witnessing an artist so in love with his own creation that he lacks the sense of how much is too much, sacrificing storytelling for the need to show just how Capital V-Visionary he is: We don’t lose ourselves in the story so much as we are entreated to respond, “Wow, this is so different and unusual and WTF, nice job, dude.” It’s interesting then how the casting of Cage, so decidedly his own onscreen animal, actually steals the focus away from being “A Panos Cosmatos Film” (which it clearly wants to be) to “that new weird Nicholas Cage flick where he’s got that cool chrome axe thingie.” If editor Brett Bachman had been allowed a firmer hand (there’s a great 90-minute movie inside the two-hour running time), I might have liked this so much more.





Hereditary (2018) d. Aster, Ari (USA) (2nd viewing)

Repeat viewings only enhance one’s appreciation for writer/director Aster’s unsettling tale of family drama and supernatural leanings, allowing viewers to pick up on the multitude of foreshadowing sprinkled throughout the opening chapters as well as the delicately shaded performances from all concerned. A devastating examination of grief and loss, as delicately assembled as the miniature dioramas that Toni Collette’s artist character creates, where the click of a character’s tongue can send more shivers down the spine than a hundred jumped-up jump-scares.

Like other modern masterpieces (The VVitch, It Follows), it is not going to satisfy every casual fright fan looking for a big-bang-boo, but the overall sense of dread generated is truly impressive and the performances (led by Collette, Gabriel Byrne, Alex Wolff, Milly Shapiro, and Ann Dowd) are all top-shelf. The very epitome of slow-burn horror (until the grab-your-armrests-and-scream-at-the-screen conclusion, that is), one that envelops its audience just as inexorably as the in-the-shadows antagonists sucking in our unsuspecting family unit. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.




CIVILIAN:


Scarlet Diva (2000) d. Argento, Asia (Italy) (1st viewing)

I’ll be providing a more detailed Blu-ray review soon, once I’ve had a chance to listen to the two commentary tracks recorded by its star/writer/director (one in 2002, one in 2018), but this “largely autobiographical” effort reveals Dario’s offspring to be a unique talent in her own right, nakedly putting her own issues onscreen as a form of artistic therapy. It’s a brave and personal portrait; Argento does not paint herself as a sympathetic victim of circumstances but as a spoiled and indulgent hedonist who creates as many problems for herself as the Hollywood machine she fervently condemns. Filled with unpleasant characters making unhealthy choices, the sit can be a bit grueling for those unused to gritty indie dramas, but it’s hard to deny the passion and courage on display. Available now from Film Movement:

http://www.filmmovement.com/product/scarlet-diva





Macbeth (1961) d. Almond, Paul (Canada) (1st viewing)

It was hard to resist the opportunity to see everyone’s favorite Scotsman (Sean Connery) in this Canadian TV presentation of Shakespeare’s “Scottish Play,” even if the results are exactly what one might expect of a 90-minute distillation on a bare-bones set with rudimentary camerawork. With Zoe Caldwell co-starring as Lady M, it’s a curiosity at best, but I’m not sorry I saw it.




MARVEL US, MARVEL:


Thor: Ragnarok (2017) d. Waititi, Taika (USA) (1st viewing)

I would have to say that it’s a dead heat between this and the first Guardians of the Galaxy offering for “Most Straight-Up Fun Marvel Flick.” Genuinely funny, charming, well-scripted, action-packed, and everyone seems to be having a good time without sabotaging what went before – what’s not to like? Quite a feat.





Avengers: Infinity War (2018) d. Russo, Anthony / Russo, Joe (USA) (1st viewing)

This was also a lot of fun, although it definitely got a little convoluted and heavy-handed as things moved into the third act. And the ending is just…. I don’t know. I’m a little exhausted with the whole “Death used for emotional heft even though we know they’re not really dead because $$$.” I believed it with Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, because it was real. I believed it with The Death of Superman, because it was real. And then it wasn’t real anymore because there was money to be made, and so presto changeo we have zombie Spock and Supes and everyone was happy so why the hell not. At least Walking Dead and Game of Thrones play for keeps.




JOIN TOGETHER WITH THE BOND (BROSNAN EDITION)


Goldeneye (1995) d. Campbell, Martin (UK/USA) (3rd viewing)

It’s impressive to look back and realize that Martin Campbell successfully rebooted not one but two new incarnations of 007, and even more impressive when you consider how different those incarnations were. Pierce Brosnan brought back much of the smooth charm and droll wit of the Moore era, aided immeasurably by some fantastic set-pieces (the opening is one of the best in the series), top-notch baddies (Sean Bean as former agent 006 and Famke Janssen barely containing her orgasmic sadistic joy as Xenia Onatopp), and a new boss in the form of Judi Dench (the first and thus far only female “M”) who makes no bones about decrying Bond’s legacy of womanizing and casual misogyny.

What’s puzzling is why Campbell (and his leading lady, beautiful and feisty Izabella Scorupco) were not able to translate their success into more viable Hollywood careers – Campbell rang the winner bell again with The Mask of Zorro in 1998, but then 2000’s Chris O’Donnell mountain-climbing vehicle Vertical Limit (also Scorupco’s next Tinseltown feature) seemed to stall things until Daniel Craig’s 007 debut, Casino Royale, in 2006. He followed that with the so-so Mad Mel Gibson feature Edge of Darkness (based on the BBC series that Campbell had directed in the 1980s) and then lost all goodwill when Green Lantern tanked the following year. Happily, he successfully re-teamed with Brosnan in 2017 for Jackie Chan’s back-to-badass feature, The Foreigner, so fingers are crossed.





Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) d. Spottiswode, Roger (UK/USA) (2nd viewing)

I had remembered Brosnan’s second outing far more fondly than it seems to have deserved. Yes, it has the extraordinary Michelle Yeoh as Bond’s most capable and equal female counterpart, but the rest of the recipe is a bit wobbly. Jonathan Pryce’s unchecked scenery-chewing is straight out of the 1960s Batman villainy handbook; by contrast, Teri Hatcher is lovely but lacking a pulse. There are a few fun stunt sequences, but the “let’s create problems so our 24-hour cable news network can scoop and cover it” plot never really supplies the oomph needed.





The World is Not Enough (1999) d. Apted, Michael (UK/USA) (2nd viewing)

Elevating the proceedings immeasurably with her every onscreen moment, Sophie Marceau’s complex victim/villain Elektra King deserved a much better movie. Regrettably, she’s saddled with one of the dullest Bond baddies to date (sorry, Robert Carlyle), and overshadowed by Denise Richards’ implausible presence as a crop-topped lesbian astrophysicist. Even Brosnan seems to be flagging a bit, though he’s at his best opposite Marceau, which isn’t often enough.

There are some decent chase sequences (the boat chase with Maria Grazia Cucinotta is particularly snazzy, ditto the snowmobile jousting) and a lovely passing of the torch from longtime 007 staple Desmond Llewellyn as “Q” to his successor John Cleese (as “R,” which actually makes no sense at all, considering that Q stands for quartermaster, i.e. it’s a job title, unless R stands for... replacement quartermaster?) Unlike its immediate predecessor, World is Not Enough is not as bad as I recalled, and the title song (performed by Garbage) is right up there with the best in the series.





Die Another Day (2002) d. Tamahori, Lee (UK/USA) (1st viewing)

And then there’s this one. I apparently was so unenthused by the buzz that I didn’t even bother to see it in the cinema (or ever, until now), and it’s easy to see why that might have been the case. No one was urging anyone to see Brosnan’s final appearance in the tuxedo, it seems, and I’m not going to start the rallying cry now. It’s pretty dire, with invisible cars, space rays melting ice palaces, CGI para-surfing on tidal waves, title-song-diva Madonna showing up as a fencing instructor, Halle Berry trying and failing to sass her way into her own franchise, Moneypenny masturbating to virtual reality… it’s just a mess.

Director Tamahori indulges in goddawful “push-n-blur” techniques for his action sequences while Brosnan gets the tar whipped out of him in the opening sequence and spends the next 20 minutes running around in a terrible fake beard for his troubles. Our two bad guys, Toby Stephens and Rick Yune, are equally awful and clueless, Stephens trying to steal Jonathan Pryce’s overacting thunder and Yune glaring at having diamonds shoved into his skin. The only pleasant surprise was seeing 22-year-old Rosamund Pike show up, followed by the unpleasant not-really-a-surprise that she was soon going to be making out with her quarter-century-older co-star.

2017 Totals to date: 199 films, 121 1st time views, 71 horror, 21 cinema


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ERNEST SCARED STUPID (1991) movie review

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Ernest Scared Stupid (1991) d. John Cherry (USA) (91 min)

Confession: prior to now, I had never seen an Ernest P. Worrell movie or television skit. I was aware of the character created by Jim Varney and advertising executive-turned-director John Cherry from the various direct-address commercials he appeared in, frequently spouting his signature “KnowwhatImean,Vern?”catchphrase, but I had never had the inclination to actually sit down and experience the phenomenon firsthand. When I stumbled across a three-pack of Ernest films at the local library with the October Challenge in full swing – a time when good judgment often gives way to “why the hell not?” – it seemed like the perfect opportunity. Having ventured to the other side, however, I wish I could say I understood the appeal or, more to the point, that everyone’s standards could have been just that much higher.


A monstrous troll (hats off to the great creature design by the Chiodo Brothers of Killer Klowns from Outer Space fame), buried at the bottom of a tree for generations, is accidentally freed by Ernest and it’s up to our hero, his faithful pooch Rimshot, and his neighborhood tween friends (Austin Nagler, Shay Aster) to send the gnarly beast back from whence it came, with a little help from town weirdee Eartha Kitt.


The rubber-faced Varney is clearly a capable actor (even if one didn’t already know he was a classically trained Shakespearean actor and successful stand-up comedian), but his onscreen antics feel like the first week of a haphazard, “throw everything at the wall and see what sticks” workshop as opposed to a well-tuned (read as: ruthlessly edited and refined) final production. Too bad, since within the relentless mugging and straining, there are actually some worthwhile funny bits. I expect this will please the less-than-discriminating 8-year-old monster kids out there, but for anyone looking for the next great family-friendly horror/comedy, keep looking.

MOTHER! (2017) movie review

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mother! (2017) d. Darren Aronofsky (USA) (122 min.)

Rich with allegory, imagery, and dream logic, Aronofsky’s wildly expressionistic exploration of relationships, boundaries, and grief falls into the same category as his previous efforts Pi, Requiem for a Dream, and Black Swan in terms of not explicitly being yet generating more tension and disturbing imagery than most “legit” horror films.


Javier Bardem plays a frustrated poet living in a secluded mansion, Jennifer Lawrence his attentive and supportive bride, focused on rehabbing and restoring their living space (his childhood home). One night, they are visited one night by a stranger (Ed Harris) claiming to be a professor at the local college, mistakenly informed that their abode is a B&B. Bardem invites him to stay the night (without asking his wife’s opinion), setting into motion a series of increasingly discomforting events and visitations that will ultimately challenge Lawrence’s foundational beliefs about herself, her marriage, and her sanity.


To say more about the plot would be a disservice to first-time viewers; suffice to say that those looking for easy answers and linear storytelling will likely be frustrated. I can understand some viewers being put off by the heavy-handed symbolism (religious and otherwise) and graphic visuals, but for me, it’s a masterpiece of catharsis and empathy – on numerous occasions I found myself saying, “Yes, that is exactly what (X) feels like,” despite the onscreen scenario not echoing my literal experience. The cast, which also includes Michelle Pfeiffer (as you’ve never seen her before) and Stephen McHattie, is phenomenal, providing a devastating emotional core for Aronofsky’s experiment in “pure cinema.”

SURVIVAL OF THE DEAD (2009) movie review

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Survival of the Dead (2009) d. George A. Romero (USA/Canada) (90 min)

Reportedly inspired by the Gregory Peck/Burl Ives western The Big Country (1958) and shot in Canada and Nova Scotia, this is a decided change-up from Diary of the Dead, its immediate predecessor, with POV camcorder shots replaced with gorgeous widescreen vistas. But the clunky social commentary, the ridiculous (and unexplained) Irish accents, the lack of likeable or empathetic or non-cartoon characters (living or undead), etc. reduce it to an entirely forgettable effort, just another low-budget zombie movie in a decaying sea of same.


The only spark seems to be in the creative offings of the shamblers (with fire extinguisher/flare gun head explosions leading the pack), but since most are executed using woefully shoddy CG effects, there’s no genuine thrill to be found here either. The rest of the time, things seems to be done simply for the “ain’t never seen that before” novelty factor (zombies driving cars or riding horses) or a similarly unjustified “why the hell not” approach (see: feuding Irish-accented Hatfield/McCoy island-living characters living off the coast of Delaware).


When this was originally released, back when Uncle George was still amongst us, the general reception was chilly at best and openly hostile at worst. Now, nearly a decade on, my sighs are fueled less by livid frustration and tinged instead with melancholy disappointment that this proved to be the Undead Godfather’s swan song.


Trivia: Alan Van Sprang (who plays tough-guy Sarge aka Crocket) is the only actor to appear in three consecutive “Dead” films under Romero, though his character in Land of the Dead is billed as “Brubaker” – due to the films being produced by different companies, it was impossible for there to be any continuity without copyright infringement, i.e. no one wanted to pay for it.


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THE HOWLING IV: THE ORIGINAL NIGHTMARE (1988) movie review

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The Howling IV: The Original Nightmare (1988) d. John Hough (UK) (94 min)

Joe Dante’s original 1981 werewolf smash was a perfect assemblage of sharp direction, Rob Bottin’s superb special effects, marvelously calibrated performances, and a smart, cunning script from John Sayles that improved markedly upon novelist Gary Brandner’s source material. For the fourth entry in the (very) loosely connected franchise, the decision was made to dispense with these winning elements and get back to the basics of shoddy lycanthropic cinema: a muddled yet cliché plot peopled with thunderously dull thesping, occasionally punctuated by a few sequences of fur and fangs and froth, all in the service of providing a more “faithful” adaptation of Brandner’s slick pulp yarn.


Accounts differ, but the prevailing story seems to be that co-screenwriter/co-producer Clive Turner was originally in the director’s chair, and that things were proceeding so miserably he was given the boot and veteran Hough (Legend of Hell House, Twins of Evil) flown into South Africa where filming was taking place to save the day. After production wrapped, Turner shot additional footage and scenes and edited them into Hough’s version, leaving the final product a disjointed, muddled mess.


It’s unclear who directed what, but it’s readily apparent that stars Romy Windsor and Michael T. Weiss have better hair stylists than acting coaches – their monotone delivery sinks the leaden dialogue written by Turner and “Freddie Rowe” (suspected to be Turner’s pseudonym, allowing him to surreptitiously slip changes into Hough’s shooting script) even further. And despite her best efforts, sultry siren Lamya Derval cannot replace Elisabeth Brooks (Marsha Quist from the 1981 original) in the pantheon of toothy temptresses.


FX whiz-kid Steve Johnson (Night of the Demons, Species) is credited with the makeup effects, but outside of a few tufts of hair and pointed incisors, his main contributions are the climactic show-stopping “transformation” scene (literally, because all dramatic action halts while we watch Weiss melt down into a gooey puddle a la The Devil’s Rain) and an impressive-looking but barely-glimpsed werewolf suit - one has to wonder why Hough/Turner decided to obscure it behind a wall of flame.


Johnson would return to the franchise three years later for the slightly better Howling VI: The Freaks, finally realizing his ultimate werewolf vision with 1996’s underrated Bad Moon. For his part, Turner went on to write, produce, and co-star in Howling V: The Rebirth before writing, directing, producing, and headlining the “you gotta see it to believe it” Howling: New Moon Rising(1995), which effectively killed the series for good.


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GRAVE ENCOUNTERS 2 (2012) movie review

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Grave Encounters 2 (2012) d. John Poliquin (Canada/US) (95 min)

Grave Encounters, written and directed by “The Vicious Brothers,” was a fairly standard found-footage flick about a gang of wannabe reality-TV ghost hunters exploring the “infamous” Collingwood mental institution. It had a few scares and generated a bit of buzz, but was nothing exceptional in the pantheon of POV horror. The sequel (penned by the VB and directed by Poliquin) earns a few more points, adopting a meta approach by having our main character Alex (Richard Harmon), a video blogger and an aspiring horror filmmaker himself, review the 2011 original whilst mocking anyone who believes the onscreen events to be (scoff) real. (Shades of Blair Witch 2: Book of Shadows.) Of course, when he receives an anonymous online comment, insinuating there is more to the GE story than a simple low-budget venture, he rounds up his posse of insufferable film student pals and they head off to Collingwood to shoot their own documentary about the “maybe/maybe not” fictitious documentarians.


Be warned: the first hour is excruciating – positively everything you expect and despise within the found-footage format is laid out front and center: obnoxious characters, unjustified shots, winks and nods and chastisements about shoddy filmmaking, etc. Be further warned, once things start getting “interesting” (i.e. characters start getting killed and/or disappeared), it doesn’t get a whole lot better, but there are a couple of worthwhile surprises that make this almost, almost merit a viewing. (The scene where left becomes down being the clear highlight.)


I watched this purely on the recommendation of pal Kevin Matthews (the lone endorsement in the “hated it” wilderness) over at For It Is Man’s Number, and while I’m not categorically sorry I watched it, I’m not thrilled about it either. Be careful with those 7/10 scores next time, my friend!


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RAW (2016) movie review

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Raw (2016) d. Julia Ducournau (Belgium/France) (99 min)

From the land of chocolate, beer, and waffles comes this marvelous urban cannibal feature about an innocent young vegetarian (Garance Marillier) who eats raw meat as part of a college hazing ritual and develops a taste for it—humans in particular. Written and directed by Ducournau, who uses her heroine’s ever-growing hunger as a metaphor for sexual awakening, familial bonding, and a host of other meaty subjects.


Beautifully crafted and performed, the pre-release buzz about audience members passing out in the aisles at festival screenings almost does the film’s artistic achievement a disservice – this is the type of intelligent and satisfying effort that discriminating horror fans have been clamoring for. Here’s hoping they find and appreciate it. With Ella Rumpf, Rabah Nait Oufella, and Calvaire’s Laurent Lucas.


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RAMPAGE (2018) movie review

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Rampage (2018) d. Brad Peyton (USA) (97 min)

It’s not often that I get to say, “It’s exactly what you think it is,” but it’s rarely been as true. Rampage is a big, dumb, fun creature feature starring Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson opposite a giant spiky wolf named Giant Spiky Wolf (not really), a superhuge giant mutated alligator named Chompy the Chomptastic (not really), and a giant albino gorilla named George (really), all of which have been blown up to jumbo size thanks to some nefarious scientists meddling in, um, science and now everyone’s heading for Chicago to stomp the bejeepers out of everything because, um, urban devastation/monster mash porn.


Did I mention Rampage was big and dumb and fun? Because that’s all this videogame adaptation ever attempts to be, succeeding handily in all arenas. Naomie Harris (28 Days Later) is also on hand, sporting a passable American accent, along with Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Malin Akerman, Jake Lacey, and (all too briefly) Planet Terror's Marley Shelton. Peyton also teamed with his superstar on San Andreas and the clumsily titled Journey 2: The Mysterious Island.


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[REC] (2007) Blu-ray Review

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[Rec] (2007) d. Balagueró, Jaume/Plaza, Paco (Spain) (78 min)

As the reality-TV onslaught continued into the late 2000s, it was no surprise that the “found footage” trend of horror filmmaking (originally spawned with Cannibal Holocaust, later reaching the mainstream with The Blair Witch Project, and soon to explode with Paranormal Activity) still had legs. With 2008 already having seen releases of Cloverfield and Diary of the Dead, there should have been little surprising left to do with the first-person, shaky-cam format. However, Spanish filmmakers Balagueró and Plaza’s high-concept, low-budget offering managed to pack more feverish, twitchy energy and legitimate scares into its under-80-minute running time than both of its gringo compatriots combined.


The chirpy, impossibly cute Manuela Velasco stars as Angela, the host of a dreary, dead-air filler TV program, following the routine of local Barcelona firefighters which includes a late-night call to an old apartment block. But when a terrifying hag-like resident takes a bite out of her would-be rescuers, the entire complex is locked-down as all hell breaks loose – with the ensuing mayhem duly captured on shuddery, blood-splattered, documentary-style video. (Kudos to DP/camera operator Pablo Rosso, who actually plays Velasco’s onscreen cameraman “Pablo.”)


With plentiful gore and little exposition, Balagueró, Plaza, and co-screenwriter Luiso Berdejo conjured a true (and all-too-rare) sense of urgency, terrifying viewers with the prospect of what lies just outside the camera’s viewfinder, with a mind-blowing third-act twist that made it much more just another fast-moving-zombies flick. This closing-reel reveal left the door open for further exploration, a challenge the dynamic duo accepted and exceeded with their stellar follow-up, [Rec] 2, which in turn spawned a prequel and a concluding chapter, [Rec] 3: Genesis and [Rec] 4: Apocalypse, directed (individually) by Balagueró and Plaza, respectively.


Shout! Factory delivers one of the best POV flicks to your home screen as part of their [Rec] Collection, which includes all four Spanish-language features. The high-def presentation of this first installment showcases a terrific audio commentary by the filmmakers (in Spanish with English subtitles), as well as a number of featurettes, including a 40-minute making-of, extended and deleted scenes, theatrical trailers, TV spots, still gallery, and nearly an hour of cast/crew interviews. The film itself is presented in its original Spanish with English subtitles, although there is also an English-dubbed version available for the reading-shy set.


[Rec] is available now on Blu-ray from Shout! Factory and can be ordered HERE:

https://www.shoutfactory.com/product/the-rec-collection?product_id=6833

Trivia: [Rec] was made in 2008 (nearly shot-for-shot, at 17 times the budget) as the Hollywood big-screen effort, Quarantine, which then spawned its own sequel, Quarantine 2: Terminal.


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THE OLD DARK HOUSE (1932) Blu-ray review

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The Old Dark House (1932) d. James Whale (USA) (72 min)

Almost forgotten (and for a period of time considered “lost”) in the Universal collection of horrors, this gem of a flick is often overshadowed by its more popular monster rally brethren. Director Whale’s follow-up to Frankenstein is well worth seeking out for its sheer wackiness and gale-force acting from the entire ensemble, two of whom (Boris Karloff and Ernest Thesiger) would turn up again in 1935’s Bride of Frankenstein.


A torrential, wonderfully photographed rainstorm assembles a curious collection of stranded travelers (Charles Laughton, Gloria Stuart, Raymond Massey, Lilian Bond, and Melvyn Douglas) at the titular Pemm estate, and madness and mayhem ensue. Karloff receives star billing as Morgan, the mute shuffling butler hulking about the mansion, Thesiger (Bride’s Dr. Pretorius) and Eva Moore play out a quibbling sibling rivalry as the occupants, and Brember Wills turns in an electrifying performance as their pyromaniac brother Saul, locked away for the safety of all. Last, but certainly not least, there is the withered patriarch Sir Roderick (played by a female actress, Elspeth Dudgeon, billed as "John Dudgeon":).


While not especially scary, there is atmosphere to burn, endlessly quotable dialogue (much of it taken directly from J.B. Priestly’s source novel “Benighted,”) with the energy never flagging and each performance juicier than the next. When the end credits roll, one feels the exhausted thrill of a wild amusement park ride.


The Old Dark House was remade in 1963 by William Castle for a co-production between Columbia Pictures and Hammer Studios as a straight-up comedy starring Tom Poston, and it was this production that put the fate of the original film in limbo. With the performances rights having lapsed, Universal had little interest in preserving a picture which possessed no possibility for financial gain, allowing the original negative to deteriorate within its vaults. Enter Curtis Harrington, director of such low-budget Roger Corman efforts as Queen of Blood and Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet (and close friend of Whale), whose efforts literally rescued this marvelously entertaining outing from the sands of time in the late 1960s.


In 2017, Cohen Film Collection released a 4K restoration of the revived prints struck by Eastman House on Blu-ray, armed with two full-length audio commentaries (one featuring star Gloria Stuart, who capped her illustrious career with her appearance as “Old Rose” in James Cameron’s Titanic, and the other by James Whale biographer James Curtis), as well as conversations with Boris’ daughter Sara Karloff (15 min) and another with Harrington (8 min), in which he discusses his efforts to bring The Old Dark House back into the light. (There is also a brief interview with Harrington included in the BD liner notes.)


The Old Dark House is available now on Blu-ray from Cohen Film Collection and can be ordered HERE:

http://www.cohenfilmcollection.net/films/old-dark-house


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THE CURSE OF THE CAT PEOPLE (1944) Blu-ray review

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The Curse of the Cat People (1944) d. Gunther Von Fritsch / Robert Wise (USA) (70 min)

Despite identical cast and characters from Cat People, this peculiar sequel (featuring neither cats nor curses) is more childhood fable than atmospheric chiller, which may confound fans of the original. Producer Val Lewton and co-directors Von Fritsch and Wise concern themselves this time not with the sexuality of shapeshifting cat women, but with the loneliness of a young girl.


The story picks up five years after the events of the 1942 film, with returnees Kent Smith and Jane Randolph’s characters of Ollie and Alice Reed, now happily married, though Ollie’s former marriage to Irena (Simone Simon) still casts the occasional shadow. Their daughter Amy (Ann Carter) is a dreamy child unable to fit in with her peers, finding solace in a world of imagination, much to the chagrin of her father. The companionless child’s desperate search for “a friend” leads to a peculiar relationship with an aging stage actress Julia Farren (Julia Dean), whose gift of a ring conjures the image of Irena to Amy.


Dewitt Bodeen’s multi-layered storyline is engaging and the sentimental journey charming, though Lewton’s hijacked title may leave some viewers feeling hoodwinked. (The film did not do well with either audiences or critics of the time, but has grown in estimation over the years.) That said, Carter gives a wonderful central performance, with the relationship between Dean and estranged adult daughter Elizabeth Russell a fascinating one to observe, while Lewton regular Sir Lancelot shines as the kindly house servant Edward. A terrific offering, often neglected when “Christmas Horror” lists are circulated, and well worth tracking down and snuggling up with.


Shout! Factory’s high definition presentation offers Gregory Mank’s archival commentary track (which features audio excerpts with Simone Simon), as well as a stellar new track with author/historian Steve Haberman. Both of these are fantastic supplements, equaled by Constantine Nasr’s 30 min featurette, “Lewton’s Muse: The Dark Eyes of Simone Simon” examines the actress’ life and career from her screen debut in Durand contre Durand (1931), her tempestuous relationship with Hollywood and its studios (and studio heads), the tabloids that whipped up flashy stories of her myriad romantic relationships while digging at her heavy French accent, and her star-making roles in Jean Renoir’s Le Bete Humaine (opposite Jean Gabin), The Devil and Daniel Webster, and, of course, Cat People and its sequel. It’s a lovely tribute to a mysterious and fascinating personality and talent who has slipped into near-obscurity, remembered only by classic horror fans (such as Nasr, who lovingly narrates the documentary short).


There’s also a 20-min audio interview conducted in 2007 by Tom Weaver with Curse of the Cat People’s real star, Ann Carter, who shares her memories of being a young actress, and specifically with the film. The package is capped by theatrical trailers and a stills gallery.


The Curse of the Cat People is available now on Blu-ray from Shout! Factory and can be ordered HERE:

https://www.shoutfactory.com/product/the-curse-of-the-cat-people?product_id=6745


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CLUB DREAD (2004) movie review

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Club Dread (2004) d. Jay Chandrasekhar (USA) (104 min)

Comedy troupe Broken Lizard (of Super Troopers fame) tries their hand at the slasher genre, with fairly impressive results in both the gore and guffaw departments. Set at “Pleasure Island,” a Costa Rican resort owned by boozy soft-rock balladeer Coconut Pete (Bill Paxton, doing his best Jimmy Buffet) where the guests come to drink their fill, lose their inhibitions (and clothes), and get naughty. Unfortunately, a serial killer is slashing his/her way through the fun-loving staff and patrons, with the body count piling up faster than you can say “Margaritaville.”


BL members Jay Chandrasekhar (who also directed), Kevin Heffernan, Steve Lemme, Paul Soter, and Erik Stolhanske are credited with the script and all turn in entertainingly frenzied performances, with terrific, bawdy support from Brittany Daniel (as spirited aerobics instructor Jenny) and Jordan Ladd (Cabin Fever, Death Proof) as closet horndog gymnast Penelope (pronounced “Pee-nell-lope”). Played primarily for laughs, while still managing to generate solid suspense sequences and splatter shots. Worth checking out.



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THE BRIDE (1985) Blu-ray review

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The Bride (1985) d. Franc Roddam (UK) (118 min)

An inspired extension of James Whale’s Bride of Frankenstein, this sumptuous costume drama captures the Gothic look and feel with fine production design and sturdy acting even as it fails to engage emotionally. The film begins on course, with great-looking laboratory scenes of mad doctor Charles (?) Frankenstein (Sting) animating Eva (Jennifer Beals) to be his first creation’s (Clancy Brown) mate. But the seams begin to show when the plotline splits in two: One half following the original creature (dubbed “Viktor”), shunned by both mate and creator, in his travels while the other observes Frankenstein as he dresses up his newest creation as an independent society lady at home.


Doing a commendable job beneath layers of latex makeup, Brown follows well in Karloff’s large footprints, and when he meets diminutive circus performer Rinaldo (an excellent David Rappaport, best known from Time Bandits), a Victorian-age Of Mice and Men dynamic is created to good effect.



Sadly, the film’s other two leads have not one volt of electricity between them onscreen, with the comely Beals utterly vacant behind the eyes (perhaps by design, but it doesn’t make it any more interesting) and Sting every inch the preening rock-star narcissist.


For better or worse, Roddam and screenwriter Lloyd Fonvielle (who had previously collaborated on 1983’s The Lords of Discipline) eschew many of the horror tropes, focusing on the characters’ relationships and their place in the world. The bond between the two outsiders (Rinaldo and Viktor) fares rather well, but attempts at some sort of social commentary and sexual politics ring rather false and the climactic showdown between creator and creation feels rushed and tacked on.


While not even in the same class as the 1935 original, this is a well-intentioned if flawed effort, and not one without intriguing elements. Fonvielle, who would go on to co-write Stephen Sommers’ 1999 Mummy reboot, introduces a psychic connection between monster and mate that is unfortunately only briefly touched on. It’s also fun to see Cary Elwes (The Princess Bride, Saw) and Timothy Spall (Wakewood, the Harry Potter movies) pop up in small early roles, as well as genre veteran Guy Rolfe (Mr. Sardonicus, Dolls, Puppetmaster 3-5). It’s also worth noting that Geraldine Page won her Oscar for The Trip to Bountiful the same year that she was slumming it as Frankenstein’s serving woman.


In addition to contributing an enormously informative and entertaining audio commentary track for Shout! Factory’s new Blu-ray release, Roddam sits down for a 30-min interview, where he reveals that he originally envisioned Sting (whom he given his first role, that of “Ace Face” in Quadrophenia) for Elwes’ role of the soldier who falls for Eva but was forced by the studios to cast him as the lead. He also muses on how Beals was – like his screen creation – “freshly made” from her breakout role in Flashdance the year prior, and was perhaps not yet prepared for such a challenging role.


For his part, Brown is given nearly 40 minutes (“Monster,” curiously and seemingly arbitrarily divided into two 20-minute sections) to discuss his experiences on the film, for which he still clearly has a great deal of affection, despite various hardships (at one point, he had a terrible allergic reaction to the glue for the facial prosthetics, which sent him home for 10 days while his skin healed). The veteran character actor (Highlander, The Shawshank Redemption) comes off as avuncular, intelligent, passionate, self-effacing, and a complete professional; it’s nice to see him given the spotlight for an extended amount of time, both here and in the feature itself.


The Bride is now available on Blu-ray from Shout! Factory and can be ordered HERE:

https://www.shoutfactory.com/product/the-bride?product_id=6835


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GOKE: BODY SNATCHER FROM HELL (1968) movie review

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Goke: Body Snatcher from Hell (1968) d. Hajime Sato (Japan) (84 min)

In the 1960s, Japan turned out some of the wildest, weirdest genre offerings fans could encounter. Case in point: This futuristic Flight of the Phoenix where, after passing through blood-red cloudbanks, murdering a score of kamikaze birds, and encountering a glowing UFO, a commercial airliner crashes in the desert, stranding its disparate band of survivors. An evil space amoeba subsequently takes possession of a would-be hijacker (a show-stopping, head-splitting, glob-oozing sequence) who begins drinking the other passengers’ blood.




Of course, this turn of events brings out the worst in the survivors (i.e. human nature strikes again), who instantly began throwing each other under the extraterrestrial bus in a desperate attempt to avoid being space vampire lunch. Before long, the “Gokemidoro” alien has drained or killed everyone except the captain and stewardess who make a break for civilization, only to confront more sinister surprises in a downbeat, politically-charged twist ending.



Released as part of Criterion's "When Horror Came to Shochiku" box-set, this is a long-hidden horror worth discovering. Hats off to the Music Box Theatre (and programmer William Morris) for choosing it to kick off this year’s annual Music Box of Horrors 24-hour film festival.

THE MAFU CAGE (1978) movie review

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The Mafu Cage (1978) d. Arthur, Karen (USA) (102 min)

Raised in Africa on their father’s research outpost, adult siblings Ellen (Lee Grant) and Cissy (Carol Kane) have returned home following his death. They reside together in a gorgeous SoCal house bedecked with countless artifacts and native decorations, with Ellen pursuing her burgeoning career as an astronomer while her younger sister stays at home creating meticulous, detailed, and seemingly purposeless illustrations for her late father’s extensive scientific notes. Then there is the titular enclosure for Cissy’s series of pet orangutans, all named Mafu, none of which seem to survive for very long under the violent and unpredictable stewardship of their unstable owner.


Ellen, trapped in her thankless caretaker role and longing for alternative human companionship in the form of her co-worker David (James Olsen), grows weary of her sister’s tantrums and habitually burying small hairy bodies in the backyard. Will she break her promise to protect Cissy from the madhouse, a course of action strongly recommended by family friend (and orangutan provider) Zom (Will Geer), or will she live out her days in this urban jungle nightmare?


One of the great things about being an avid horror fan is constantly being surprised by what we don’t already know. With 3,000 horror titles under my belt (and scores more that I’ve heard about via reference books and online resources), it’s a rare day when someone unfurls a completely unknown entity in my direction. And yet, that’s exactly what happened at this year’s Music Box of Horrors when programmer William Morris trotted out this relative obscurity as the second feature of the afternoon. While it is a decidedly slow burn – and, in retrospect, goes exactly where you suspect it’s going – there are more than enough bizarre flourishes and details to keep the viewer’s attention.


The film was apparently well-received during its screening at Cannes, but stumbled into distribution woes due to its ungainly title and disquieting subject matter. (In addition to their decidedly unhealthy and co-dependent relationship, there are hints that Cissy and Ellen share an incestuous past if not present.) Even so, the production values are quite impressive, as is director Arthur’s restrained storytelling, hinting at much while explicitly showing very little.


Of the two lead performances, Kane’s is certainly the showier and she makes the most of it, prancing around in elaborate African garb and tribal makeup, shrieking tossing her wild mane around with wide eyes ablaze one minute, cooing and infant-like the next. It’s a classic “tour-de-force” turn, but it wouldn’t work without the sad-eyed-and-dead-inside grounded quality that Grant brings to the proverbial table. The emotional journey is hers, and we ache for her to break free of the bonds that keep her from happiness and a fully realized life.


An unusual and troubling effort that challenges genre expectations, The Mafu Cage is not for all tastes. I can’t say that I loved it, but I also can’t stop thinking about it (which is more than I can say for, oh, Rampage). If you dig strange and slow-moving psychological horror (a la The Witch That Came from the Sea), I’d say give it a try.


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THE CHILDREN (2008) movie review

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The Children (2008) d.Tom Shankland (UK) (84 min)

During a winter holiday visit between two families, the younger set starts to exhibit cold-like symptoms (coughing, vomiting) as well as erratic behavioral swings which are easily rationalized by changes in the weather and, well, “they’re kids.” Of course, once the grown-ups start getting bumped off in a series of “accidents,” the real challenge begins: convincing themselves that the pint-sized antagonists are genuine threats and dealing with them accordingly.


In the pantheon of “killer kids” genre offerings, a subset that includes such classics as Village of the Damned and Who Can Kill a Child? and low-budget exploitation efforts Devil Times Five, Bloody Birthday, and the black-fingernailed tykes of The Children (1980), this inexplicably under-the-radar Brit effort ranks right near the top.


The cast is excellent, led by Eva Birthistle (star of neo-Hammer’s Wake Wood), Stephen Campbell Moore, Jeremy Sheffield, Rachel Shelley, and Hannah Tointon, who shines as resident teen wild child Casey caught between the world of children and adults. But the real wonder is writer/director Shankland (who helmed 2007’s similarly underrated The Killing Gene and now seems to have found his way into the Netflix/Marvel stable with episodes of Iron Fist, Luke Cage, and The Punisher) and his innate ability for crafting genuinely suspenseful scenes that pay off in thoroughly crowd-pleasing ways.


The monstrous pint-sized antagonists are creepy, but not in a purely mechanical, dark-shadows-under-the-eyes way, and the sinister (and entirely plausible) goings-on continue to escalate right through to a pleasingly fever-pitch climax. Some have complained about the lack of explanation for the mysterious mind-altering flu upon which the plot swings, but to my mind it’s as inconsequential as Alfred Hitchcock’s refusal to justify his aviary assailants a half-century prior. It doesn’t matter why – what matters is that it IS and must be dealt with.


The Children was eventually released to DVD in 2009 with little fanfare by Sam Raimi’s Ghost House Underground, where it has labored in obscurity ever since, to the point that it has yet to be upgraded to Blu-ray outside of the UK. Major kudos to Music Box Theatre’s general manager Ryan Oestreich for including this sorely overlooked entry into the Music Box of Horrors line-up this year – a sterling example of using one’s powers for good.




HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.


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GHOST STORIES (2017) Blu-ray review

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Ghost Stories (2017) d. Jeremy Dyson / Andy Nyman (UK) (1st viewing) (98 min)

Based upon their hit live show, creators Dyson and Nyman so successfully leave the trappings of the stage behind that folks who have not witnessed it firsthand (such as your humble narrator) are left wondering, “How would they have done that onstage?” Taking the classic anthology approach, we are introduced to Nyman’s character, Professor Goodman (is he or isn’t he), a professional debunker of the supernatural and unexplained, who is contacted by another of his trade to investigate three unusual cases: 1) a night watchman (Paul Whitehouse) who is visited on the job by a strange figure, 2) a young man (Alex Lawther) whose late-night drive home takes a hard right turn into darkness, and 3) a well-to-do businessman (Martin Freeman) wrestling with poltergeists in the wake of his wife’s pregnancy.


All three stories deliver substantial build-up of tension and satisfying, scream-fueled release, aided immeasurably by top-flight performances from all concerned. The source material’s theatrics are definitely alluded to, with onscreen magic tricks and hidden identities adding to the fun. It’s smart and it’s clever and, most importantly, it delivers the chills promised by the title – one can imagine sitting around a candlelit drawing room, hearing the narrative gravely intoned, complete with a large “BOO!” somewhere in the midst of each tale. Good stuff.


Ghost Stories is available now from Shout! Factory and IFC Midnight on a no-frills Blu-ray or DVD and can be ordered HERE:

https://www.shoutfactory.com/product/ghost-stories?product_id=6827


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CHILD EATER (2016) DVD review

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Child Eater (2016) d. Erlingur Ottar Thorodsson (USA) (82 min)

With his vision failing from macular degeneration, petting zoo proprietor Robert Bowery (Jason Martin) starts to lose his younger clientele as parents fear for their offspring’s safety. His macabre solution is to viciously gouge out and consume the eyes of children in the hopes not going blind, which understandably does not go over too well with the community at large. Fast forward 25 years: the myth of the old dark zoo on the edge of the woods is alive and well, and babysitter Helen (Cait Bliss) is tasked with watching Lucas (Colin Critchley), the young lad whose father has recently taken up residence near The Old Bowery Place. As night falls, Lucas senses a malevolent figure lurking in his closet (one resembling a gaunt and begoggled coal miner); while Helen dismisses it as the after-effects of their evening’s scary movie, the boy – and the audience – knows better, and the race is soon on to see who will survive the night with orbs intact.


Expanded from his Columbia College short film thesis project-cum-festival darling (available in its entirety here and starring the delightfully vocal-fried Bliss), writer/director Thorodsson creates a moody and effective boogeyman story using those tried-and-true elements: an intriguing backstory, believable performances from unknowns, excellent cinematography, restrained but worthy special effects, and imaginative sound design.


It seems somewhat strange to be celebrating what should be Independent Horror Filmmaking 101, but I found myself impressed time and again by how effectively the story was being told on what was clearly a slim budget. Like, “Wow, that’s a really nice pan-and-dolly shot,” or “Huh, that line of dialogue doesn’t sound completely awkward coming out of that actor’s mouth,” or “That is such a simple monster design – how is that working as well as it is?” It’s called going the extra mile, folks, and I for one feel more respected as a viewer and a horror fan because of it.


Child Eater is exactly what it sets out to be, a fantastic piece of urban legendary told simply, told well, and told without overstaying its welcome or imposing upon viewer goodwill (the cardinal sin of too many independent efforts). While hardly revolutionary, that in itself is refreshing and announces Thorodsson as a talent to keep an eye (haha) on.


Child Eater is available now on DVD from MVD Visual, with a commentary track by Thorodsson, Bliss, and Martin as its sole extra, and can be ordered HERE:

https://mvdb2b.com/s/ChildEater/MVD9584D


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THE A-LIST OF HORROR FILMS AND MONSTER MOVIES... SO FAR

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In 2006, over the course of a few weeks and with the help of fellow fiends online and off, I put together what I felt was a list of essential horror films, a “Horror Primer,” if you will, that I hoped would be useful to newcomers to the genre. These films, ranging from the early silent years to the turn of the 21st century, provided what I felt was a path, one that would lead horror fans through a variety of subgenres and influential figures that had shaped the course of onscreen fright. I was also quick to note that these were in no way meant to represent “THE BEST HORROR FILMS OF ALL TIME,” but merely the ones that had made a significant impact on the genre in some fashion.


That list, substantiated by 101 accompanying essays from horror fans around the globe, eventually found its way into print form in late 2007, under the amazing colossal title, HORROR 101: The A-List of Horror Films and Monster Movies, Vol. 1.(Midnight Marquee Press). I served as editor for the project, giving birth to my Dr. AC alter ego in the process.


For years, I have been reluctant to post said list online because a) I did not want to devalue our literary efforts and b) did the world really need another “essential horror” list out there? But now, with most horror fans getting their intel through the internet and H101 having been out in the world for over a decade, it seems naïve and small-minded not to Share the Scare™ with as wide an audience as possible. (I have expanded the list into the 2000s, although it remains to be seen how many of these will be significant in years to come, or if other, lesser-known titles will rise to take their place.)


Again, these are NOT the best horror films ever made, nor a list of my personal favorites. Below you will find titles that in my estimation have made a substantial impact on the genre in one fashion or another, ones worthy of any seasoned horror fan’s time. Experiencing these offerings firsthand, you will become familiar with a wide array of fright flicks and be able to hold your own in conversation with any like-minded aficionado. (Whether you like or dislike the movies in question is, of course, up to you. Such is the stuff of which impassioned late-night geek-outs are made.)


As always, I welcome discussion regarding any films listed as well as those omitted. One of the great things about the internet is that oversights can be amended and opinions altered, so don’t be shy. I look forward to your thoughts.


Cheers!



1920s





The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) d. Robert Weine (Germany)
Der Golem (1920) d. Paul Wegener (Germany)
Nosferatu (1922) d. F. W. Murnau (Germany)
Haxan (1922) d. Benjamin Christensen (Sweden)
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923) d. Wallace Worsley (USA)
The Phantom of the Opera (1925) d. Rupert Julian (USA)




1930s




Dracula (1931) d. Tod Browning (USA)
Frankenstein (1931) d. James Whale (USA)
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1932) d. Rouben Mamoulian (USA)
Freaks (1932) d. Tod Browning (USA)
The Mummy (1932) d. Karl Freund (USA)
White Zombie (1932) d. Victor Halperin (USA)
The Invisible Man (1933) d. James Whale (USA)
Island of Lost Souls (1932) d. Erle C. Kenton (USA)
King Kong (1933) d. Ernest B. Schoedsack (USA)
Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933) d. Michael Curtiz (USA)
The Black Cat (1934) d. Edgar G. Ulmer (USA)
The Bride of Frankenstein (1935) d. James Whale (USA)
Mad Love (1935) d. Karl Freund (USA)




1940s




The Wolf Man (1941) d. George Waggner (USA)
Cat People (1942) d. Jacques Tourneur (USA)
I Walked With a Zombie (1943) d. Jacques Tourneur (USA)
Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man (1943) d. Roy William Neill (USA)
The Uninvited (1944) d. Lewis Allen (USA) d. Lewis Allen (USA)
The Body Snatcher (1945) d. Robert Wise (USA)
Dead of Night (1945) d. Alberto Cavalcanti, Charles Crichton, Basil Deardon, Robert Hamer (UK)
Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948) d. Charles Barton (USA)





1950s




The Thing from Another World (1951) d. Christian Nyby, Howard Hawks (USA)
Beast from 20,000 Fathoms (1953) d. Eugene Lourie (USA)
House of Wax (1953) d. Andre De Toth (USA)
War of the Worlds (1953) d. Byron Haskin (USA)
Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954) d. Jack Arnold (USA)
Them! (1954) d. Gordon Douglas (USA)
Gojira (1954) d. Ishiro Honda (Japan) and Godzilla, King of the Monsters (1956) d. Ishiro Honda, Terry O. Morse (Japan/USA)
Diabolique (1955) d. Henri-Georges Clouzot (France)
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) d. Don Siegel (USA)
The Curse of Frankenstein (1957) d. Terence Fisher (UK)
Curse of the Demon aka Night of the Demon (1957) d. Jacques Tourneur (UK)
The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957) d. Jack Arnold (USA)
The Fly (1958) d. Kurt Neumann (USA)
Dracula aka Horror of Dracula (1958) d. Terence Fisher (UK)
The 7th Voyage of Sinbad (1958) d. Nathan Juran (USA)
The Blob (1958) d. Irvin S. Yeaworth, Jr. (USA)
Plan Nine from Outer Space (1959) d. Edward D. Wood, Jr. (USA)
House on Haunted Hill (1959) d. William Castle (USA)




1960s




Black Sunday (1960) d. Mario Bava (Italy)
Eyes Without a Face (1960) d. Georges Franju (France)
House of Usher (1960) d. Roger Corman (USA)
Peeping Tom (1960) d. Michael Powell (UK)
Psycho (1960) d. Alfred Hitchcock (USA)
Village of the Damned (1960) d. Wolf Rilla (UK)
The Innocents (1961) d. Jack Clayton (UK)
Carnival of Souls (1962) d. Herk Harvey (USA)
What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962) d. Robert Aldrich (USA)
The Birds (1963) d. Alfred Hitchcock (USA)
Blood Feast (1963) d. Herschell Gordon Lewis (USA)
The Haunting (1963) d. Robert Wise (UK/USA)
Blood and Black Lace (1964) d. Mario Bava (Italy
Kwaidan (1964) d. Masaki Kobayashi (Japan)
The Masque of the Red Death (1964) d. Roger Corman (USA)
Onibaba (1964) d. Kaneto Shindo (Japan)
Repulsion (1965) d. Roman Polanski (UK)
Rosemary’s Baby (1968) d. Roman Polanski (USA)
Night of the Living Dead (1968) d. George A. Romero (USA)
Witchfinder General (1968) d. Michael Reeves (UK)





1970s




Tales from the Crypt (1972) d. Freddie Francis (UK)
The Last House on the Left (1972) d. Wes Craven (USA)
The Wicker Man (1973) d. Robin Hardy (UK)
The Exorcist (1973) d. William Friedkin (USA)
Black Christmas (1974) d. Bob Clark (Canada)
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) d. Tobe Hooper (USA)
Deep Red (1975) d. Dario Argento (Italy)
Jaws (1975) d. Steven Spielberg (USA)
Shivers (1975) d. David Cronenberg (Canada)
The Stepford Wives (1975) d. Bryan Forbes (USA)
Carrie (1976) d. Brian De Palma (USA)
The Omen (1976) d. Richard Donner (USA)
Martin (1977) d. George A. Romero (USA)
Suspiria (1977) d. Dario Argento (Italy)
Dawn of the Dead (1978) d. George A. Romero (USA)
Eraserhead (1978) d. David Lynch (USA)
Halloween (1978) d. John Carpenter (USA)
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978) d. Philip Kaufman (USA)
Alien (1979) d. Ridley Scott (UK/USA)
Phantasm (1979) d. Don Coscarelli (USA)
Zombi (1979) d. Lucio Fulci (Italy)





1980s




Cannibal Holocaust (1980) d. Ruggero Deodato (Italy)
Friday the 13th (1980) d. Sean S. Cunningham (USA)
The Shining (1980) d. Stanley Kubrick (USA)
An American Werewolf in London (1981) d. John Landis (USA)
The Beyond (1981) d. Lucio Fulci (Italy)
The Evil Dead (1981, released 1983) d. Sam Raimi (USA)
The Howling (1981) d. Joe Dante (USA)
The Thing (1982) d. John Carpenter (USA)
Poltergeist (1982) d. Tobe Hooper, Steven Spielberg (USA)
Videodrome (1983) d. David Cronenberg (Canada)
A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) d. Wes Craven (USA)
The Terminator (1984) d. James Cameron (USA)
Re-Animator (1985) d. Stuart Gordon (USA)
Return of the Living Dead (1985) d. Dan O’ Bannon (USA)
Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1986, released 1990) d. John McNaughton (USA)
The Fly (1986) d. David Cronenberg (USA)
Aliens (1986) d. James Cameron (USA)
Hellraiser (1987) d. Clive Barker (UK)
Evil Dead II (1987) d. Sam Raimi (USA)
Child’s Play (1988) d. Tom Holland (USA)




1990s




Jacob’s Ladder (1990) d. Adrian Lyne (USA)
The Silence of the Lambs (1991) d. Jonathan Demme (USA)
Jurassic Park (1993) d. Steven Spielberg (USA)
Se7en (1995) d. David Fincher (USA)
Scream (1996) d. Wes Craven (USA)
Ringu (1998) d. Hideo Nakata (Japan)
The Blair Witch Project (1999) d. Daniel Myrick, Eduardo Sanchez (USA)
The Sixth Sense (1999) d. M. Night Shyamalan (USA)




2000s




Battle Royale (2000) d. Kinji Fukasaku (Japan)
Final Destination (2000) d. James Wong (USA)
Ju-on: The Grudge (2002) d. Takashi Shimizu (Japan)
Resident Evil (2002) d. Paul W. S. Anderson (UK/Germany/USA)
28 Days Later (2002) d. Danny Boyle (UK)
House of 1000 Corpses (2003) d. Rob Zombie (USA)
High Tension (2003) d. Alexandre Aja (France)
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003) d. Marcus Nispel (USA)
Saw (2004) d. James Wan (USA)
Hostel (2004) d. Eli Roth (USA)
Shaun of the Dead (2004) d. Edgar Wright (UK)
The Descent (2005) d. Neil Jordan (UK)
The Devil’s Rejects (2005) d. Rob Zombie (USA)
Wolf Creek (2005) d. Greg McLean (Australia)
Pan’s Labyrinth (2006) d. Guillermo del Toro (Spain)
Inside (2007) d. Alexandre Bustillo, Julien Maury (France)
Halloween (2007) d. Rob Zombie (USA)
The Mist (2007) d. Frank Darabont (USA)
The Orphanage (2007) d. Juan A. Bayona (Spain)
Paranormal Activity (2007, released 2011) d. Oren Peli (USA)
[Rec] (2007) d. Juame Balaguero, Paco Plaza (Spain)
Trick ’r Treat (2007) d. Michael Dougherty (USA)
Let the Right One In (2008) d. Tomas Alfredson (Sweden)
Pontypool (2008) d. Bruce Macdonald (Canada)
Twilight (2008) d. Catherine Hardwicke (USA)




2010s




Stake Land (2010) d. Jim Mickle (USA)
The Human Centipede (2010) d. Tom Six (Netherlands)
Cabin in the Woods (2012) d. Drew Goddard (USA)
V/H/S (2012) d. David Bruckner, Adam Wingard, Glenn McQuaid, Radio Silence, Joe Swanberg, Ti West (USA)
The Conjuring (2013) d. James Wan (USA)
The Purge (2013) d. James DeMonaco (USA)
The Babadook (2014) d. Jennifer Kent (Australia)
It Follows (2015) d. David Robert Mitchell (USA)
The VVitch (2015) d. Robert Eggers (UK/USA)
Get Out (2017) d. Jordan Peele (USA)




TO BE CONT'D....



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