- Joined
- Feb 19, 2020
oh, right...
happy pride month
happy pride month
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One of the few instances where the soundtrack is more famous than the movie. Apparently Jess Franco himself worked on that soundtrack under a pseudonym.
It's even more interesting to find out that Poughkeepsie Tapes was originally set for a theatrical release on February 29, 2008, as there were ads well before release, but a few weeks before it was supposed to come out, MGM pulled it from release with zero given reasons why. Some sources could be pointed at MGM's financial troubles during the late-2000s as it was one of the many victims of the recession and why they had to dump the movies to theatres with little promotion or just not release them at all. Others can be pointed at the lukewarm test audience response. Either way, it didn't take until 2014 to finally be released on VOD (under its then newly-resurrected Orion banner) and three years later on DVD with licensing by Shout Factory (under its horror/thriller-based Scream Factory sublabel).Just watched Savageland and the Poughkeepsie Tapes, both really good takes on found footage and crime documentaries. Savageland is a really fresh take on zombies with them only being seen through the lens of the only survivor of an attack who photographed the carnage before escaping. The Poughkeepsie Tapes are really dark and it feels like you're watching the story of a super serial killer (which did make it a bit hard to believe but the story worked great as horror). Both are made up like TV documentaries and make for a really good double feature.
I heard about Savageland when Ryan Hollinger covered it on his channel. What has kept me from seeing that film is the not so subtle social commentary (and I noticed Ryan's biases have been showing more in his recent videos but I digress). Perhaps when I get to Savageland, I will endure the identity politics.Just watched Savageland and the Poughkeepsie Tapes, both really good takes on found footage and crime documentaries. Savageland is a really fresh take on zombies with them only being seen through the lens of the only survivor of an attack who photographed the carnage before escaping. The Poughkeepsie Tapes are really dark and it feels like you're watching the story of a super serial killer (which did make it a bit hard to believe but the story worked great as horror). Both are made up like TV documentaries and make for a really good double feature.
What I got from watching it was a bunch of people arguing over the case and completely missing the point, no one in the film seemed to believe that zombies were on the move and wanted to push the case as a part of their agenda. In a way I thought it was a pretty good message, the real threat got lost in identity politics. It legit protrayed the border control agent as the only guy taking the threat seriously.I heard about Savageland when Ryan Hollinger covered it on his channel. What has kept me from seeing that film is the not so subtle social commentary (and I noticed Ryan's biases have been showing more in his recent videos but I digress). Perhaps when I get to Savageland, I will endure the identity politics.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=fDQF96e0V9c
They actually brought up a very good point/very good reason why they liked it... and I get where they come from, and why they liked it. I'm gonna have to rewatch it from their perspective now.
If it had been a passing of the torch, if their idea of the ending being that Michael Myers gets thrown into the shredder, cut to the incel, sits right up in Michael Myers fashion, Halloween theme starts, evil doesn't die, it just changes form, leave the ending open ended etc.. etc.. would have been a much better way to end the trilogy.
Fuck.
Halloween 4 >>>> EndsExcept this idea was already done in the ending for Halloween 4 you fucking pleb!
https://youtube.com/watch?v=1bxQenqRTjE
Get your ass back on the Farms so I can yell at you.
Personally the only thing worse than Ends was Resurrection.Halloween 4 >>>> Ends
I'm on the same page here.
Gotta say after the Blumhouse trilogy I think I'd enjoy watching JLC get stabbed a whole lot morePersonally the only thing worse than Ends was Resurrection.
An A24-style of horror film starring Barney the Fucking Dinosaur is happening. And it's going to be PG-13... Greatest timeline? I don't know anymore.
Barney the Christ Figure“Barney was a ubiquitous figure in many of our childhoods, then he disappeared into the shadows, left misunderstood,” Kaluuya added at the time. “We’re excited to explore this compelling modern-day hero and see if his message of ‘I love you, you love me’ can stand the test of time.”
they work almost always with youtube-dl tech, tooTubi is a gold mine for content. It's just a shame you really have to dig through their catalog and use search engines to find most of the good shit.
As long as the director does better than the Winnie The Poh horror movie. Talk about a missed opportunity.
An A24-style of horror film starring Barney the Fucking Dinosaur is happening. And it's going to be PG-13... Greatest timeline? I don't know anymore.
I get why parents hated the show, but shit like that was made by college-age kids who would have only been exposed to Barney by social osmosis rather than ever being made to watch the show,Nobody has nostalgia for Barney the Dinosaur, though when you looked back a lot of the anti-Barney sentiment on the internet back in the 1990s, it was very "Reddit" if you get my meaning. People were getting way too into it back then. Writing endless reams of anti-Barney fanfiction and going on about a Jihad against the dinosaur. Yes, we get it, it was a cheap, dopey kid's show, move on.
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