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- Sep 30, 2018
I keep forgetting I have a Shudder subscription and I'm only not canceling because I want to support Joe Bob
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Amicus Productions had a slew of memorable anthology horrors, I should definitely give them a rewatch sometime.I would add From A Whisper to a Scream AKA The Offspring to that list of great anthology horrors along with the original Tales from the Crypt (shame on you) and The Asylum.
I'm weird. I don't really like Black Sabbath aside from The Drop of Water segment which is genius. I like Bava but his filmography is very hit and miss for me but when it hits it's fucking genius.Amicus Productions had a slew of memorable anthology horrors, I should definitely give them a rewatch sometime.
Gotta give a shout out to Mario Bava's Black Sabbath (1963) which is probably my favorite anthology.
I never got into it. My favorite all time horror show is still Hannibal followed by Tales From the Crypt.Those of you who care about Horror tv shows and serial killers and shit, the Dexter revival was fantastic... until the last half hour of the finale. Just watch the first 9 episodes, which was as good as any point in Dexter's history, then make up your own ending because I can guarantee whatever you come up with won't be as shitty and bland as this finale was.
Spoiler it. I'm curious.Those of you who care about Horror tv shows and serial killers and shit, the Dexter revival was fantastic... until the last half hour of the finale. Just watch the first 9 episodes, which was as good as any point in Dexter's history, then make up your own ending because I can guarantee whatever you come up with won't be as shitty and bland as this finale was.
I regret not buying the final season of Tales on DVD because it's out of print individually and the complete box set goes for $100I never got into it. My favorite all time horror show is still Hannibal followed by Tales From the Crypt.
The last season is bad though. Only good episode from that is The 3rd Pig.I regret not buying the final season of Tales on DVD because it's out of print individually and the complete box set goes for $100
FYI I got them all individually at a Samsclub for $60
I agree, that's why I didn't buy it. I meant more for the sake of completing my collection.The last season is bad though. Only good episode from that is The 3rd Pig.
that reminds me, wasn't there some book about "it's from Jason's point of view" in the works?Speaking of slasher movies, I recently read the somewhat meta horror novel Camp Ghoul Mountain VI: The Official Novelization. by Jonathan Raab.
The idea is that "Jonathan Raab" has been commissioned by Malthus Pictures International to write a tie-in novel of the most controversial black sheep entry in a 80s cult horror movie series. - it diverged wildly from the previous franchise films which were considered derivative of already derivative movies, a weird retcon of previously established series lore similar to Halloween 6 or TCM: The Next Generation but much stranger. The director of VI was Monty Blackwood, a psychedelic-mushroom addicted conspiracy theorist who used the franchise to tell his own bizarre story about occult conspiracies and counter-culture protests against the Vietnam War, etc. The production company was left with a movie they didn't understand and released to box office failure that become a cult classic despite itself. The movie gained notoriety for drawing down the wrath of moral guardians who unwittingly provided it all the publicity it needs to escape it's bizarre plot as well as nonsensical twists. The director and the producer of the franchise joining forces to save the film if for different motives: an auteur who had a message to share and a man who wanted to make money with movies about people being murdered and plenty of women showing their tits onscreen. Conspiracy kooks were drawn to the movie over the years, claiming secret messages were encoded into it.
The book is thus divided in telling the story of the slasher movie franchise's most infamous entry ( what starts out as a straightforward Friday the 13th knockoff descends into mindscrew territory with black-robed cultists, cover-ups and talking animal heads) as well as "Raab'"s research into the increasingly bizarre and sinister backstory about it's troubled production history and crew (the sighting of strange lights in the sky near the location was the least of the crew's problems), it's path to becoming a midnight movie classic, and the various rabbit holes he is lead down, involving conspiracy theories, reports of "high strangeness", the tragic end of Monty Blackwood (mountain compound, raided by Feds) and if there was an agenda behind Raab being selected to write the book accompanied by his paranoia ramping up due to strange phone calls and the like.
While this sounds drily-metafictional as all get out, the tone is pulpy and Raab is an obvious slasher aficionado, and not out of some detached ironic stance either.
I didn't hate that movie. It was better than 2 and 3 and the gore was quite good.It can't possibly be lamer than Scream 4 was. I hope.
The whole streamer thing is what turned me off, but I will admit it had a better twist than 2 & 3.I didn't hate that movie. It was better than 2 and 3 and the gore was quite good.
4 was actually pretty good. Gore was top notch.It can't possibly be lamer than Scream 4 was. I hope.