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31 Days of Horror 7 |OT| The October Movie Marathon

Ridley327

Member
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#08 - Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan (1989)

More like Jason Takes a Boat Ride and ends up spending a couple of minutes in Manhattan at the end. I wasn't too bummed out by that part though, I liked the boat setting. It works really well, because of the implication. Think about it. They're out in the middle of nowhere with some dude they barely know. They look around, what do they see? Nothing but open ocean. ”Oh, there's nowhere for me to run, what am I gonna do, survive?" No. The sleazy, filthy 80s New York is also a great setting for a F13 movie. As expected, the characters are still paper thin and there's lots of nonsensical (the flashbacks?) and cheesy things, but there are some more inventive kills and awesome little moments (the boxing match!) sprinkled throughout the movie. Objectively it might be one of the worst entries, but I enjoyed the hell out of this one. 6/10

Outstanding Sunny reference in that review.
 

MattyH

Member
onto some 80s Italian giallo goodness tonight with #9 A Blade In The Dark i havent seen this one since the VHS/DVD days so im looking forward to seeing how the 88 films blu pans out
 

Ithil

Member
Cancel the state funeral, tell the king to stop blubbing, Ithil did not miss a day of his October marathon, I simply had no time to post thoughts yesterday. So you're getting four overly long reviews to scroll past from me today.

The two films I watched yesterday:

15) Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)

latest


And I thought the Mississippi was something.

Aaand the colour's gone already.

One more Universal monster film, and a fine one to end it on. While the story has been done a thousand times, hell this movie was twenty years after King Kong, compared to the average 1950s monster flick this one showed a lot of restraint and patience. The eponymous Creature isn't clearly seen until quite a ways into the film, but thankfully it's not to hide dodgy creature effects a la The Giant Claw. The Creature looks great, as far as a man in a rubber suit goes. The design is just "fishy" enough to look inhuman but not enough to look ridiculous. It also allows it to look very elegant when swimming underwater, rather than cumbersome.

Speaking of which, the underwater phototography in the film was excellent, featuring not just nice scenery but also a great sense of energy. The Creature is always moving in and out of seaweed, clouds of dust and weeds are being kicked about, it all keeps the underwater scenes from seeming slow.

They even had a bit of a moral in the film, as the Creature is merely a wild animal defending its territory, and the scientists in fact, try to treat it scientifically, to document and study it, before it ends up becoming too violent. That they are forced to resort to attacking it to escape the lagoon was portrayed as regrettable, a nice sentiment to see. The cast itself is adequate, fairly standard, but I do have to say that after a week of old horror films, I'm getting tired of women whose only role is to stand and scream at the monster and don't get any agency of their own.

I also must give specific praise to the musical score. The fun brass sting they like to play any time the Creature appears aside, the rest of the score is elegant and adventurous, very well composed.

16) The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957)

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All this vast majesty of creation, it had to mean something. And then I meant something, too. Yes, smaller than the smallest, I meant something, too.

Well, this was a surprise to say the least.

I was expecting a fun adventure, perhaps I was thinking of something lighthearted like Honey I Shrunk the Kids. However, the camp premise of a shrinking man is treated shockingly seriously. His radioactive shrinking is no laughing matter, in fact, it's downright tragic. It quickly ruins his life, strains his marriage, and reduces him to a punchline. There's virtually zero humor about the whole situation, and the first half of the film is really a drama, and a depressing one.

Once he becomes action figure sized and has to fend for himself trapped in the basement, then the adventure begins. But again, a surprise, it's not a fun adventure, it's terrifying. I guess I'm used to films like Innerspace or Fantastic Voyage, but this was legitimately a horror film.

The "greenscreen" aspect of the effects has not aged well, but the shots using huge props or forced perspective hold up great. I particularly liked the detail in the huge props, like pencils or matches, a lot of effort shown.

A word of warning, the climax of the film really sucks if you are someone who happens to have arachnophobia. Someone like myself, for instance. Unfortunately for me the effects of said climax hold up very well and you'll rarely see a scarier spider on screen. Actually, I found myself wondering if this film was an influence on Peter Jackson, as a number of the shots in his fight with the spider looked very much like ones in the battle with Shelob in Return of the King.

Overall a very well made, but surprisingly serious and morose film.

Thus ends my Universal Horror trawl. Now it's Hammer time.
 

sp3ctr3

Member
#1 Serial Mom
#2 [REC]2
#3. Bloodsucking Bastards
#4. Train to Busan
#5 It Follows
#6 Hush
#7 Lights Out
#8 Cabin in the Woods (Re-watch)

#9 Krampus: The Christmas Devil (2013)
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Hey Krampus is on Netflix, cool! I heard good things about this lets give it a go!

Yes!! If it was indeed the 2015 movie. This dogturd was pure garbage. It looked like it was filmed with a phone, the acting was non-existant and the soundwork and soundtrack was a disaster.

And the most obvious continuation errors. Dude knocks on a plain wooden door with a small black metal sign on it. Next shot is from inside the room and now the door has a glas window!?

These dumb fucks spots the christmas devil and opens fire. Main dude hasn't cocked his riffle and has to do so in the middle of the scene when he finally realises it but whats even worse is that when they start firing they turn up the godawful music and complete mute the sound effects so you can't even hear the riffles shoot?

My monday is ruined. I'm going to watch The Conjuring 2 tomorrow...
 
October 09
Film #12
Under The Shadow


I've watched a number of less than stellar movies over the last few days, and this fantastic film made a very welcome change. Set at the height of the Iran/Iraq war of the 1980s, it's the slow-burning tale of an increasingly isolated mother and daughter in an apartment building in Tehran, who come to believe that they are not only under attack from Iraqi missiles, but from evil spirits too.


Starting out as a study of a sexist society thwarting female ambition, the film slowly ratchets up the tension and fear towards a deeply creepy finale. With minimal special effects, and very few jump scares, writer/director Babak Anvari conjures up a brilliant sense of unease, keeping you guessing right to the end about what is real and what is imagined. He's helped by an all round wonderful cast, led by Narges Rashidi as the mother, and Avin Manshadi as her little girl Dorsa. Their loving but spiky relationship is completely natural, and provides a grounding that keeps the film feeling realistic even when the spooky stuff really kicks it.

Verdict: Definitely recommended and my new front runner for film of the month. (Though why Netflix thought it would be a good idea to default to the dodgy English dub is beyond me. I switched over to the original soundtrack with English subtitles pretty quick.)

Films I've watched so far
 
#11- Angst (FTV)

I liked this film, but found that Man Bites Dog did this better. It's all about the exploits of one man who wants to murder so badly, yet is not considered to have any mental illness. Murder is the only way he can feel satisfied. The main murder happens to a family of 3, and he narrates just how he came to be this way due to his upbringing throughout. It's not the strongest story, but I was totally engaged and interested throughout. Hard to see what was so controversial about it. The one graphic death scene is more bloody than anything, and there's been much worse released around the same time. Recommended.

7 self-satisfying murderers with supposedly no mental illness out of 10
 
11. The Black Cat (Edgar G. Ulmer, 1934)

The Black Cat is quite a few shades darker than the other Universal horror pictures of the era, indulging in all sorts of horrific predilections I was not expecting. Unfortunately it’s also mildly incomprehensible and has stretches of dullness before it lurches into madness.

Still, it’s great fun watching how far this movie is willing to go, and Lugosi and Karloff are reliably great ho
 

Zombine

Banned
#6- Raw

A French film by Julia Ducournau about a vegetarian girl who tries meat for the first time at her veterinarian college. Soon after, she develops a taste for flesh...

So, this film was definitely something that I feel like was misrepresented in trailers. I was under the assumption that this was some sort of French-Prison/Hybrid Zombie flick, but what it turned out to be was a personal journey about the horror of a young woman’s descent into adulthood, and the bond she has with her older sibling.

The film is very compelling, and I enjoyed it more than I thought I would. Justine, Alexia, and Adrien were wonderful and I enjoyed watching Justine’s growth into adulthood and decent into canabalism. It’s got some pretty gnarly scenes, but I don’t feel like this one is for everyone. If you can invest the time and understand what the director is trying to say, then this will definitely be a film you appreciate.

9 fingers out of 10
 
OP

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Par for the course with most of Tobe Hooper's filmography (other than TCM which is an all time fave of course) for me. Not amazing quality wise but as usual this is really unique. The score which feels like it belongs to a soap opera juxtaposed with the death sequences is really something at times.

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Watched this because I wanted something that didn't really need severe amounts of investment and I also used to stan P!nk a lot. I really wish I didn't.

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Was having trouble picking a film on Shudder so I just went with this. I'm usually not a fan of killer animal films but this wasn't too bad and is better than a decent chunk of what I've seen from the subgenre?

Also the boar raging around reminds me of trying to find food half asleep at 4 am.
 

Ridley327

Member
11. The Black Cat (Edgar G. Ulmer, 1934)


The Black Cat is quite a few shades darker than the other Universal horror pictures of the era, indulging in all sorts of horrific predilections I was not expecting. Unfortunately it's also mildly incomprehensible and has stretches of dullness before it lurches into madness.

Still, it's great fun watching how far this movie is willing to go, and Lugosi and Karloff are reliably great ho

That ending goes HARD. Even with the whole "couldn't actually show it" aspect, the fact that it's described out loud what's about to happen is enough to give anyone the shivers.
 

Penguin

Member
Movie 1 - Dracula (1931) [NEW]
Movie 2 - Dracula 2000 [NEW]
Movie 3 - Dracula (1979) [NEW]
Movie 4- The Creature from The Black Lagoon [NEW]
Movie 5 - Dracula's Daughter [New]
Movie 6 - Son of Dracula [New]
Movie 7 - El Bar [New]
Movie 8 - Dark Prince: The True Story of Dracula [New]
Movie 9 - John Carpenter's Vampires [New]
Movie 10 - Blacula [New]
Movie 11 - Dollman vs Demonic Toys [New]
Movie 12 - Frankenstein 1931 [New]
Movie 13 - Bride of Frankenstein [New]

Movie 14 - Corpse Bride [New]
Movie 15 - Little Evil [New]
Movie 16 - Alienate [New]

A trio of... I don't remember much from these movies films.

Corpse Bride is ok I guess. It kind of lacks the heart and wit of something like A Nightrmare Before Christmas.

Little Evil I thought was mostly solid fun, and I think a great message of bonding in mixed families. More comedy than horror, but it works

Alienate was just dumb. Then it ended even dumber and I just wanna forget I watched it.
 
Phew, I've watched a whole bunch over the past few days. Here's what I watched over the weekend:

Sleepaway Camp
Clinical
Hellraiser
The Void
Before I Wake
Ouija: Origin of Evil
Possession
Highwaymen
The Final Girls
The Eyes of My Mother

Random thoughts:

Sleepaway Camp was so great. Still amazed I didn't get spoiled about the ending. Such craziness!

I really like Mike Flanagan's movies. Before I Wake I liked a lot more than I expected. I love Thomas Jane, so that certainly helped, but it reminded me of The Babadook and in a good way -
mainly that grief/sadness is the real monster.
Ouija: Origin of Evil was decent but probably my least favorite of his movies.

Possession was just as badshit crazy bonkers as everyone said it was. What the actual fuck. So much screaming.

The Final Girls was SO GOOD. I really loved this movie and Taissa Farmiga and Alia Shawkat were great. It was surprisingly touching as well as funny. I hope there's a sequel.
 

zeemumu

Member
9. Child's Play


Fresh off of the most recent installment in the series we're back to the beginning. This one's a little weirder than the others in that it has the least amount of actual Chucky. A lot of the scenes are done from his point of view so up until about the halfway mark you never actually see Chucky move or hear him use his usual voice. The biggest negative is probably Andy's acting, but I usually let it slide because he's a kid and he gets better as the movies go on (I didn't know that they actually brought back the same actor who played Andy in the first film to play Andy in Cult of Chucky).
 

Toa TAK

Banned
Day 9, movie Nien

9. Young Frankenstein

Switching gears from the awful film yesterday, I finally got to sit down and watch this. I love that it completely parodies the Frankenstein mythos with a great cast. Marty Feldman totally stole the show for me. I mean look at this.
 
Hey, is anyone planning on watching Pin this year?

October 8, film 2
[Wax Mask poster]
{snip} I don't doubt that the intended director would have lead to a more interesting film, but the final product here is a solid if somewhat unspectacular effort that has a decent appeal with its mix of period details and gory kills.

This may not sound fantastic, but it definitely sounds right up my alley. Gonna have to track it down.

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#08 - Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan (1989)

More like Jason Takes a Boat Ride and ends up spending a couple of minutes in Manhattan at the end. I wasn’t too bummed out by that part though, I liked the boat setting. It works really well, because of the implication. Think about it. They’re out in the middle of nowhere with some dude they barely know. They look around, what do they see? Nothing but open ocean. “Oh, there’s nowhere for me to run, what am I gonna do, survive?” No. The sleazy, filthy 80s New York is also a great setting for a F13 movie. As expected, the characters are still paper thin and there’s lots of nonsensical (the flashbacks?) and cheesy things, but there are some more inventive kills and awesome little moments (the boxing match!) sprinkled throughout the movie. Objectively it might be one of the worst entries, but I enjoyed the hell out of this one. 6/10

This is my new favourite review for all 7 years we've been doing this.
 

Quikies83

Member
Day 9, movie Nien

9. Young Frankenstein

Switching gears from the awful film yesterday, I finally got to sit down and watch this. I love that it completely parodies the Frankenstein mythos with a great cast. Marty Feldman totally stole the show for me. I mean look at this.

prime Mel Brooks
 

lordxar

Member
BTK Kane Hodder as BTK plus on Tubi free? Ok, why not call an audible and add one. I've read a bit about the real BTK and this was kind of sort of somewhat like what I'd read. Some bullet points were hit but it felt like there was a lack of real effort. Your basically thrown into things which if you don't know much about him it could be frustrating. Any sort of origin story would have helped this immensely. What was pretty interesting is that this included his family and that he was a real community minded person as well as active in his church which was all true. I think exploring his life from that angle would have been a lot better than showing half his victims and half his normal life.

Then there is the feel of the film itself. This feels like a really bloody made for tv show like you'd see on Detective TV or something. So its got a cheapness to it that makes things a bit worse.

I give this one two and a half stabs to the jugular.

btk2.jpg
 

Fox Mulder

Member
#3 the void (2016)

I'm way behind, but this was neat. The effects were good with a presumably small budget. I don't even understand what the fuck was happening with the ending, but it's an okay watch on Netflix.


So, the original Godzilla is regarded as horror, yeah? I'd like to fit it in this month.

Not really, but I count monster movies during my October viewings.
 

lordxar

Member
Angst Hey its the mechanic guy from Das Boot!

Lets start with how much of an artistic piece this is. Right off the bat its got some nice camera work tracking our guy down the street and really this shot seems a lot more modern than 1983 would indicate. That opening part really looks like someone carrying a selfie stick. As the film progresses the camera work just gets better and better and honestly this does look like a very modern film.

Our protagonist is a very off kilter human being who has a serious need to play out his fantasies. However, he's pretty inept so this gets kind of darkly comedic as he's running around trying to control the situation he's created, which of course he can't so things really spiral out of control for him.

There is a big violent death in here that your kind of expect but once you see it play out it's pretty miserable to watch. Your not getting a satisfactory spray of blood from Jason's axe here. This is a miserable end of someone's life to a murderer who straight up gets off on what he's doing.

After that crescendo your thinking the film is about done but it still has another 20 or so minutes left. Which I wondered how it would be filled but what is done here actually fits really well. Our murdered narrates his thoughts up until the finale.

As far as liking a film like this I think it is a very, very good showing of exactly what the horror genre can do both with story and with camera. Its disturbing in all the right ways without going too far in the gore which probably for the time this was out there but compared to today its pretty tame. Overall I loved this and for my serial killer theme I think it was perfect!

I rate this four sausages at a diner with some pretty girls I can ogle while planning their death.

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Roronoa Zoro

Gold Member
9. Jason goes to hell

This got really deep into Jason and honestly I just didn’t care. The beginning was a funny deconstruction of his usual methods. It’s mercifully short at least
 
That ending goes HARD. Even with the whole "couldn't actually show it" aspect, the fact that it's described out loud what's about to happen is enough to give anyone the shivers.

"Bit by bit."

Hey, is anyone planning on watching Pin this year?

I kind of forgot about it, but I had planned to after your review last year. I would like to hold out for a Blu-ray release but if it's on demand somewhere I might sub it in.
 

Steamlord

Member
#2 - The Void (God, I'm so behind)

I went in with tempered expectations based on other impressions I'd seen, but I really liked it! Really couldn't ask for a better remake of Prince of Darkness / The Beyond. A glorious, stylish, nonsensical practical effects extravaganza.
 

sadromeo

Member
October 9, 2017

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9 of 31 - 47 Meters Down

A terrifying movie about two young sisters on vacation and taking a cage down into the ocean to view the aquatic life and... sharks.

The ocean is really a scary and unpredictable place and being below the water is just as frightening as being above it. Especially when you have the issues of roaming hungry sharks and slowly depleting oxygen. The ordeals the girls have to go through in this movie in trying to survive and hopefully make it back up to the surface is crazy. There were definitely tense moments and times where you will be on the edge of seat.

The story and gore are light but the scares and intensity are plenty when the sisters are in the cage at the bottom of the ocean. The girls are polar opposites, the older one ”normal", the other, wild and free, yet none of these qualities really made a difference when they were fighting to survive, except that one knew how to scuba dive and the other didn't.

A fun movie to watch with scary underwater elements to keep you on the edge of your seat. -7/10
 
11. Maximum Overdrive (1986)

Total cult classic and a total riot. King shows decent competency as a director. Estevez is likeable but with an edge as usual. Highlight though is Yeardley Smith as she basically sounds like her Lisa Simpson but with a southern accent and her character is delightful and her dialogue even more so with that in mind. Wouldhace liked to see more usages of the electronics come tk life bit as most of it was just trucks. That said super fun.

Highly recommended.
 
Hmm debating on watching I Saw the Devil next. Is this horror or more suspense thriller? Also just subbed to Shudder. Any good must watch international films on there.
 

sp3ctr3

Member
11. Maximum Overdrive (1986)

Total cult classic and a total riot. King shows decent competency as a director. Estevez is likeable but with an edge as usual. Highlight though is Yeardley Smith as she basically sounds like her Lisa Simpson but with a southern accent and her character is delightful and her dialogue even more so with that in mind. Wouldhace liked to see more usages of the electronics come tk life bit as most of it was just trucks. That said super fun.

Highly recommended.

Vending machine kill is my favorite.
 

Hamoody

Member
9) The Omen (1976)

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The story follows the birth of a child named Damien. However his house are surrounded by mysterious and strange deaths and events. They together are unaware that Damien is the Antichrist.

The story feels fresh and original, with Damien's actor stealing the show with his supposed innocence and bursts of creepiness with his tone and body actions. The movie was released June 6, 1976 in the UK (nice touch with the 666 lads), and has done well in box office grossing over $60 million.

In conclusion, it is a good movie, and really worth the watch, due to its storytelling and creepy vibe.

Also if you enjoy the movie, you can give the game Lucius a go, since its inspired and is really similar to The Omen.
 
12. The Wolf Man (George Waggner, 1941)

Chaney Jr. is far more suitable for this lazy Everyman type character (fittingly named Larry) who just wants to fart around his estranged father’s estate and creep on local girls than one of the more menacing monsters—his turn as Dracula was rather pathetic.

Larry is such a dope it makes the whole picture have a sort of timid tragedy to it. He’d rather be enjoying the simpler pleasures of life but instead gets sucked into a moderately confusing curse (so are werewolves like a seasonal thing in this and not just a full moon?) that wrecks his life and several others.

Werewolves are notoriously tough to get right on screen, but the makeup team does a solid job here. He’s not as frightening as some of Universal’s other monsters, but the story here is fairly solid and there is oh so much fog on these sets. Fog for days. It makes for heavy atmosphere for this solidly low key effort for one of the big name


13. Rabid (David Cronenberg, 1977)

Rabid feels like a messier and less satisfying continuation of the same themes Cronenberg already handled (quite chillingly) in Shivers. Another zombie/vampire panic that has a disturbing sexual component to it. Only this time the affliction isn’t localized to one building, but spread far and wide. Like Shivers this will leave you feeling nice and gross inside, and it’s a cool spin on genre tropes as only Cronenberg could do, but it really feels like diminishing returns for this sort of material. Thankfully he was destined to move on to bigger and better things.
 
I think I might sit down and watch Halloween 3... The first time I watched it was with a girl and the lack of Micheal myers killed the whole mood
 
Vending machine kill is my favorite.

Heh yeah that was sick


12. Mikey (1992)


So this is a movie I didn't even think existed for the longest time. I had first heard about it in elementary school when a friend of mine was telling me all about it, about this serial killing 9 year old. I thought he was making it up but in my mind I had crafted this image of thos real dark, creepy , disturbing sort of movie (think Henry Portrait of Serial Killer but about a child). I found out about 10 years later that it was a real movie but then I just never watched it for some reason until now. So after 25 years of buildup the final verdict is... It sucked.

The intro was cool and made me think the violence was going to be solid throughout but there was practically nothing from there on in and everything after that was super tame, and really when you're watching a slasher movie all you want is good gore and there wasn't any. So that was kind of disappointing 25 years later.
 
6. Children of the Corn

The real hero of this movie is that car. Nothing shows how dangerous not wearing a seat belt is like the leading lady getting her clock cleaned each time they slam on the breaks. If anything, this movie touches on how dangerous cars were for women back in the 80s.

3 dash checks out of 5.
 

Ridley327

Member
October 9


It's hard not to be impressed with a lot of the ingenuity that goes into Japanese zero-budget cinema, as many filmmakers of that particular breed happily embrace the challenge of putting some of their craziest ideas on screen with as little money as possible. For Mikadroid: Robokill Beneath Disco Club Layla, this meant not only bringing to life the title character (an Iron Man that literally fell out of WWII), but also bringing to life a rather impressive underground research facility, through a mix of location scouting and miniature effects to sell the idea of there being a long-lost weapons plant that could have very well changed the tide of the war had it been allowed to be unleashed. Throw in a surprisingly somber tone with regards to a couple of the supporting cast with their own ties to the facility, albeit in that wildly melodramatic way that Japanese films can be, and there's a lot going on here that will surprise you with the ambition that seemingly laughs in the face of having no funds to be able to pull it off as well as it does. Where it does skimp on, though, is that it really doesn't seem all that concerned with the robokilling, such as it is. Aside from a couple of silly moments early on (including a "you gotta see it to believe it" moment involving several katana slashes that turns a female victim into a twirling and blood-soaked ballerina of sorts), there's really not much going on in that department, and there's a huge stretch in the film that focuses on our protagonists running away from the action in a utility tunnel. It's a horror film at its core, but it seems much more preoccupied with the backstory that went into it, which results in some impressive sights given the resources they had to work with, but even for being barely over an hour long, it suffers from a flagging pace, always potentially lethal to short run-times. Still, the work that was put into the production here is rather impressive, and if for nothing else, they sure got the title right.

Film for Oct 10: ¡Madre de Dios! The appearance of bipedal goat prompts an unlikely trio to go on the hunt to prevent the end times in the surely riotous film from Alex de la Iglesia, The Day of the Beast.
 

Ridley327

Member
If it had nothing else, Maximum Overdrive has the gas pumping montage, which is one of the most ridiculous and stupid things ever committed to film, and it's also secretly amazing. Thankfully, it has so many gonzo moments that one has to wonder how and why no one caught onto to its aims back when it originally came out.
 

Ithil

Member
On to my first Hammer Horror films of the month. On another note, I have marked out a few films from them, including several of the Frankenstein and Dracula sequels that seemed to be the most well received, but someone who has seen all of them can tell me if there's a point in watching all of them?

Onward.

17) The Curse of Frankenstein (1957)

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I've harmed nobody, just robbed a few graves!

A very different take on Frankenstein, this film nevertheless owed a lot to the Universal film, more so than it did to the novel. Rather than focusing on the Monster and its effects, it focused squarely on Frankenstein himself, and boy, what an asshole. Far from the kooky but well meaning and likable Frankenstein of the Universal films, Peter Cushing's version is a colossal scumbag. He steals, murders, cheats and lies his way to completing his experiment. Cushing is superb as you would expect, infusing his dignified delivery with a quiet menace that grows throughout the film.

The film is slow paced and small in scale, presumably due to a low budget, so the focus on Frankenstein himself rather than widespread monster antics serves a dual purpose, but it works. As the Monster is not the focus here, Christopher Lee doesn't get a lot to do other than be a mindless and confused killing machine, but the design of the Monster is impressive. In general the film is much darker and more gruesome than the Universal version, and the Monster's look reflects it with a macabre design that looks more like a corpse brought back to life than the square headed giant Karloff played. There's also something unsettling about Frankenstein's lab being in his own house than in a spooky Gothic castle.

The film seemed to end quite conclusively, but there are a pile of sequels regardless. I'm suspect of the quality remaining high.

18) Horror of Dracula (1958)

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Rest, have yourself some wine, I'm sure you could use both.

A fun personal note about this film (here it was just titled Dracula), my mom saw it in the cinema as a child and gave herself nightmares of vampires, so she kept a crucifix above her bed for a few months.

Taking an even more loose approach to the novel than the Lugosi film, this repurposes and removes characters like nobody's business. But while it's not an accurate adaptation, for this particular film, the story works. Having always seen him playing ruthless villains and mad scientists, it's fun to see Peter Cushing playing the hero, and frankly given the real Cushing was a true charming gentleman, he's actually better suited to it. The scene where he comforts a young girl after saving her from a vampire is one of the film's best.

Christopher Lee's Dracula is thankfully a completely different animal from Bela Lugosi's. Other than a penchant for standing dramatically with a long cape, the two have nothing in common. Lee's Dracula is much more human than Lugosi's melodramatic, slow speaking version. He has no trouble speaking normally to Harker at the film's beginning (whereas Lugosi's was immediately bizarre and alien), and he is much more energetic and violent. I can certainly see how he would be considerably more scary to audiences back then compared to previous Draculas.

The Technicolor used for the film is great; the colours really pop, not just the ketchup-esque blood but the scenery, clothing and set dressings too. They really make the most of a small budget and the rugged British countryside makes for a good atmosphere. This is a much more gritty and grimy film compared to the Universal film, with more explicit violence. It's never excessive, however, just enough to give the film its own style and tone.
 
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