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31 Days of Horror 4 |OT| The October Movie Marathon

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05. The Little Girl Who Lives Down The Lane [1976]

Jodie Foster plays a 13 yr old girl who seemingly lives on her own and Martin Sheen is the creepy local. Suspenseful thriller similar to Psycho, It came across as more like a play at times i think due to the script but was thoroughly enjoyable otherwise.

7/10
 
damnit, I love the original and Chloe so this was on my list.

I think I'll just watch Devils Advocate tonight. I've been meaning to watch it for like 10 years now.

It's not much of a horror film, really, but it's the best kind of sleazy and Al Pacino's overacting in that film is something else. Not even the worst Florida accent in recorded history can do much to diminish the dumb fun of that film.
 
1. Blair Witch Project

Really loved this. It was my first time watching it despite me loving found footage films. That ending scene is so good. Rough around the edges but that's to be expected for a film that was an amazing trailblazer for the genre.

8.5/10

2. The Shrine

Meh. Really by the books trying to mix in a very typical paranormal movie with an exorcism one. Plot wasn't very good and barely explained anything. Would not recommend.

3/10
 
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04) She Killed in Ecstasy (Sie tötete in Ekstase) (1971) (Oct 4)

Continuing on with my Jess Franco/Soledad Miranda theme, She Killed in Ecstasy continues on the groovy psychedelic feel of Vampyros Lesbos, including many of the same actors, crew and composers.

She Killed in Ecstasy is the story of a woman (Soledad Miranda) seeking revenge on a medical committee who rejects and then destroys her husbands research on using animal cells in human embryos.

While IMDb lists this as a horror movie, there's very little actual horror content. It's a tale of seduction and murder and even though there's some "squirm in your seat" content, there isn't a high level of violence on screen - probably the result of the low budget not allowing for extravagant gore effects than any kind of restraint by director Jess Franco.

While the directing is slow and dreamlike, it only manages to drag out the simple plot and make the movie (which is just over 70 minutes) drag on. The crazy psychedelic style score that worked in favour for Vampyros Lesbos returns, but here it's almost too energetic and upbeat for such a bleak movie. There's a few dark pieces of music that were really effective towards the end of the movie, but that just shows that they could have had a more fitting score.

It's not all a miss though. Soledad Miranda is incredible in her role. She gives a fantastic and brave performance as a broken woman who has nothing left but revenge. She manages to say more with just her eyes than most actors in these types of movies could every hope to convey with their entire performance.

I suppose as far as Jess Franco's films go, this is considered one of his better ones. While not a terrible film there isn't really much here to recommend unless you want to see something from Soledad Miranda's career which was tragically cut short.

Final Viewed List (2014):
01) White Zombie (1932) (Oct 1)
02) The Vampire Lovers (1970) (Oct 2)
03) Vampyros Lesbos (1971) (Oct 3)
04) She Killed in Ecstasy (Sie tötete in Ekstase) (1971) (Oct 4)
 
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05. The Little Girl Who Lives Down The Lane [1976]

Jodie Foster plays a 13 yr old girl who seemingly lives on her own and Martin Sheen is the creepy local. Suspenseful thriller similar to Psycho, It came across as more like a play at times i think due to the script but was thoroughly enjoyable otherwise.

7/10

I actually watched this a few months ago and really enjoyed it.
 
7 of 31

Just Before Dawn

Just swinging by to knock it off the watch list. Pretty awesome flick. Could have had a few more killing scenes for my liking but I thought it was a solid slasher.

That forest ranger dude was useless and Connie was a little hottie.

3.5/5

Starting my first grown up job tomorrow working 10 hours a day so I'll be limited to one viewing a day now. It was great while it lasted. Probably going to move on to I Am A Ghost next.
 
Movie #5: Carnival of Souls

I had no idea what to expect other than I had a friend recommended I check it out and lent me his DVD. Solid little old film. Not all that scary but definitely creepy in spots and has some good atmosphere. I'm not entirely sure why but the ghouls in the movie really creeped me right out. They don't have hideous makeup or make terrifying sounds but nonetheless they really got to me. Wrapped up really nicely.

The acting is a bit campy in places and the movie has a bit a dull spell in the middle but still totally worthwhile. I enjoyed it quite a bit.
 
#4 Event Horizon
"Whoever sent that message, he sure believes in Hell."
When you have nothing left to live for but what lies beyond your reach.... Good (perhaps overly large) ensemble, nuts-and-bolts makeup and effects coolness, and a willingness to take the elevator pitch "It's Alien meets Hellraiser" to its illogical batshit fun conclusion. Brainless but assertively agreeable.

#1 White Zombie (10/1)
#2 Strange Circus (10/2)
#3 Night of the Creeps (10/3)
#4 Event Horizon (10/5)
 
WEEK TWO (Oct 5): MEDICAL ISSUES


There's a chance that George Romero could have stopped making films right after Night of the Living Dead, and still would have inspired dozens, if not hundreds, of filmmakers to follow in his footsteps. Night of the Living Dead was a true watershed moment for horror films, which is no easy feat for a film from 1968 to claim with competition as fierce as Rosemary's Baby in the mix. Romero would, thankfully, go on to have a varied career after it, but it's difficult to imagine what that career would have been like if it hadn't started with the cinematic equivalent of an atomic bomb. Would he have embarked on one of the most varied filmographies of a horror director? Would he have gotten the cred to befriend the likes of Dario Argento and Stephen King? Would he even have tried his hands at zombie films? Does he resist the urge to make a studio film for as long he wound up going for? All intriguing hypothetical questions, but if any of these meant not getting the likes of his Dead sequels, Martin, Creepshow, and surely others, then it's good that they never got answered.

But for someone of Romero's stature, Hollywood would long knock on that door for as long as it would take, and he would finally answer after 20 years with Monkey Shines. The material is right up Romero's alley: when Allan, a successful law student, is rendered a quadriplegic in an accident, his life is turned upside down and inside out until his friend gifts him a helpful Capuchin monkey named Ella to assist him, not telling him that Ella has been experimented on with a new drug to increase its intelligence, resulting in a strange bond between the two where his growing, harmful will is carried out by his new friend with exceedingly brutal results.

So why is it a merely a decent-to-good film? As I read up on the history of the production, Romero appeared to have gotten his film practically taken away from him after shooting it, resulting in edits he did not approve of, and an ending I'll take to task soon enough. But assuming that the people who wanted to get in the George Romero business wanted a real George Romero film, I feel confident in saying that it wouldn't have been tremendously better. George Romero is a super solid director; perhaps not the most visually keen one, but someone who knows what they're doing and is able to put together scenes quite well. George Romero has never been a particularly good writer, despite having a lot of great ideas, and Monkey Shines amplifies a lot of the problems he tends to have with more rigid structures. In films like Dawn of the Dead and Martin, there's a sprawl to the storytelling that doesn't feel bound by having a pressing need to get from point A to point B, which gives them a very engrossing feel that they would have otherwise. When he's tasked with a standard three-act structure, he runs into problems of keeping everything concise and consistent, no doubt because of his tendency to have more freeform narratives, which results in a lot of sloppy details. Monkey Shines feels particularly egregious in this regard, as characters get introduced only to get forgotten or dumped somewhat unceremoniously as Romero can't think of anything for them to do but to just go away, and mechanics related to how the "science" of how the bond between Allan and Ella works remains frustratingly cloudy, especially when a method is shown on screen for another of the characters that isn't anything like what happened between those two. Some sequences feel like they needed additional trimming, as there's little in the way of character or plot development that justifies being a beat or two longer than needed. Essentially, it feels a lot like a book that was adapted into a screenplay, and it ran into the problem of having to tell a condensed version of the story, which shortchanges some important elements in the process. No doubt that the book it was based on helps fill in some of the gaps, but that never excuses a film for overlooking them.

It's a shame, since Romero definitely has some big wins. Having a bigger budget meant being able to be a little more adventurous in aspects of the production, and in particular, Romero has a lot of fun with unusual camera techniques, particularly the very low to the ground effects that simulate Ella's unchecked movements, giving a nice kinetic feel to a film that by its nature is bound to a more stationary object more often than not. In addition to that, Romero does get the opportunity to indulge in material more in his neck of the woods, which run the gamut from early scenes that sell the soul-crushing frustration of Allan's new condition to a surprisingly tender and kinda kinky love scene later on. The acting isn't the best, although it was fun spotting the likes of Stanley Tucci and Stephen Root in some of their earliest roles, but the actors do their job and never run the risk of being too annoying, despite the need for many of them to be pretty difficult to like. Also, and I'm not sure it was intentional or not, but there's an intriguing element to how the film plays out that makes me wonder if it was ever intentional to try and sell it as a horror film, as Romero stages a lot of it like some kind of inspirational story of a broken man who finds the will to live again when an unexpected source of confidence enters his life again, complete with the sweeping score to underline that. It's not hard to imagine that, at some point, there may have been talks to try to sell it like that, so that the horror elements would come as a complete surprise.

After one of the craziest finales I can think of, someone who wasn't George Romero thought that the only proper way to end a film about the dangers of manifesting unchecked rage was to have an unambiguously happy ending, where Allan stops just short of winning the Super Bowl and going to Disney World to get just about everything else he could have wanted, consequence free. To say it's an unearned ending would be the understatement of the century, especially with this being a Romero film. In his best films, even the ones with definitive endings are deeply ambiguous, that even in the death of some, the lives of other characters carry on with an immense uncertainty that could almost be perfect sequel bait if it wasn't such a strong way to cap off what came before. Night of the Living Dead famously denied us the satisfaction of anyone being able to make it through that situation unscathed, and yet it still felt like everyone else was worse off. I'm not sure how Romero would have wanted to have treated the ending to this film, but there's no way it'd be anything like what we got. Now there's a hypothetical question I'd like to see answered.
 

#05 - Phantoms (1998)

Viewed via:

Phantoms like a mo'fucker! Always had a soft spot for Phantoms. Read the novel during a week long vacation in a private cabin in the Smoky Mountains, and scared the shit out of myself a few times reading alone at night. The movie isn't nearly as good, but does get a few things right. Liev Schreiber turns in a very creepy creeper performance that is fascinating to watch. Peter O'Toole does a fair enough job bringing credibility to the story, and takes the whole thing seriously, preposterous as it may be. And the Ancient Enemy itself is entertaining throughout.

If there's one thing I wish they would have done differently it's that I wish it had been given a bigger budget. There are literally an infinite number of forms the Ancient Enemy could take, both real and imaginary, that the budget just could never allow. It makes the threat feel a little underwhelming when all it really does is turn into people, a giant moth, a dog, and a gecko.

Final Viewed List
#01 - Leprechaun Origins (2014)
#02 - Annabelle (2014)
#03 - Frankenhooker (1990)
#04 - Wrestlemaniac (2006)
#05 - Phantoms (1998)
#06 - Clownhouse (1989)
#07 - White Zombie (1932)
#08 - The Possession (2012)
#09 - The Monster Squad (1987)
#10 - Sharknado 2: The Second One (2014)
 
#4 - Basket Case (1982)
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Didn't like this movie as much as I thought I would, but I'm kind of in a weird mood tonight and didn't gel with the comedy. I can see why this film is something of a cult classic, though.
 
1) Annabelle (Theater)
2) Carrie ('76, Netflix US)
3) Carrie ('13, Netflix US)
4) Scream 3 (Netflix US): 4/5 Great way to end the trilogy. Even if the characters of Dewy and Gale start to grow up by this point. The Scream movies can hold their own in the slasher genre. The part with
Sid's mother in the window freaked me out. I had totally forgotten about that scene. Really creepy and well done.
The movie keeps you guessing. Definitely recommend it for slasher fans.
 
So far I've watched (all for the first time):
1. The Conjuring
2. The Descent
3. The Battery
4. Affliction
5. Shadow of the Vampire

I enjoyed them all to varying degrees, but The Descent was easily the best in terms of atmosphere and scares. I'm going to rewatch Alien next in preparation for the game.
 
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05) All the Colors of the Dark (Tutti i colori del buio) (1972) (Oct 5)

My first (and regrettably only) giallo of the month, All the Colors of the Dark is one of those movies that's best to go in completely unaware, so I'm not going to go into any detail about the storyline.

I will say that it does not follow the typical giallo template popularized by Blood and Black Lace where a gloved killer picks off a series of gorgeous women. While it does have an obvious influence I won't name in fear of spoilers, it's refreshing that director Sergio Martino chose to do something different as far as gialli are concerned.

Probably best known for another quality giallo, Torso, Martino delivers an excellently shot, tense and exciting film with a relentless pace. I was at the edge of my seat for the entire thing. Star Edwige Fenech (commonly refereed to as the Queen of Giallo for good reason) sizzles up the screen as the leading lady surrounded by cast of quality actors (Ivan Rassimov is especially effective as a villain). Did I mention the score yet? It's excellent as well.

It might stumble a bit during the ending and probably could have used another 5 minutes or so to flesh that out, but it's not enough to tarnish an otherwise exciting film.

Highly recommended.

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Final Viewed List (2014):
01) White Zombie (1932) (Oct 1)
02) The Vampire Lovers (1970) (Oct 2)
03) Vampyros Lesbos (1971) (Oct 3)
04) She Killed in Ecstasy (Sie tötete in Ekstase) (1971) (Oct 4)
05) All the Colors of the Dark (Tutti i colori del buio) (1972) (Oct 5)
 
#6 The Thing (2011)


This movie is not very good. I mean, it's okay until the last 15 minutes or so. Then it gets really stupid.

Mary Elizabeth Winstead is a beautiful angel, though. 10/10.
 
#5 - Dawn of the Dead (2004, Netflix)

Probably my 2nd favorite zombie movie behind 28 Days Later. The cast and dialogue are brilliant, I can't decide my favorite convo between calling Ving Rhames "Shaq" or "When you two dudes are done blowing eachother..." There are a few stupid moments/decisions, but that's a given and I don't think it really takes away from this amazing remake.
 
3) Grabbers via Netflix instant watch


I needed something streaming as most of my to watch list this year is on DVD, and we didn't get discs back to Netflix in time for one over the weekend. I looked for monster movies on instant watch and sorted by best reviews, and Grabbers floated to the top. After reading the description, I assumed it was an error:

Residents of an Irish island must get very drunk to survive attacks by alien monsters who can't tolerate a high blood alcohol level in their victims.

A small Irish island town is besieged by tentacled aliens that drink blood and for whom alcohol is poisonous. The solution is obvious and the follow through is hilarious. What do you do when the "designated driver" is vulnerable to the aliens, but the drunks are too drunk to function properly?

The premise is freaking hilarious, but the biggest shock is the movie is actually quality. It delicately balances horror and comedy and features strong production values, and by the end I was grinning ear to ear.

Great cinematography highlights the beauty of the Irish coastline and films the action effectively (no shakey-cam, yay!). The script is economical and never drags, but still leaves room for memorable characters. There is some excellent work from actors who are clearly having a ball and have actual chemistry together. (The way the relationship between the leads develops was surprisingly restrained.) Special effects are pretty good, the monster design excellent, and the climax is a ton of fun.

Knowing nods are given to Romero and Aliens, the latter of which had me laughing so loudly my wife had to shush me for fear of waking the kids.

Each year I hope to stumble upon something wonderful. The odds of doing so on Neftlix instant, when it comes to horror in particular, are pretty low so I feel like the stars kind of aligned. Very seriously recommended for monster movie fans.
 
9. Phantoms (Amazob Prime) after seeing Snaku's review I was intrigued and it didn't let me down. This was a really fun watch that needed a little more Liev but everything else worked just fine. I really enjoy this thread for getting me an excuse to catch some movies I've put off forever and introduce me to new ones.

1. Aaah! Zombies!! (Hulu) decent
2. Candyman (Crackle) good
3. Silent Night, Zombie Night (Hulu) forgettable, not worth your time
4. White Zombie (Hulu) didn't get into it
5. The Blob (1958) (Hulu) good
6. Carrie (2013) (Amazon) bad
7. Student Bodies (Amazon) bad
8. The Battery (Hulu) great
9. Phantoms (Amazon) surprisingly good, Ben Affleck is the bomb in it
 
#9 - Suicide Club

I'm not sure what to say about this one other than that I really liked it. Very interesting take on the effects of technology, popular culture, and mob mentality.
 
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3 Leatherface: Texas Chainsaw Massacre III [October 3]

"There's roadkill all over Texas."

When the House Freddy Built went cruising for strange, they stumbled across the rights for the third Texas Chainsaw sequel. New Line big-wig Michael De Luca, a huge horror freak, figured why not? He loved Leatherface, so why wouldn't the rest of America? With the aid of noted Splatterpunk David Schow, New Line's producers cooked up a story that would guide the 'saw away from the pitch black comedy of Hooper's sequel and back toward the gritty visceral horror of the original. But when the resulting film put too much Massacre into the Texas Chainsaw, the MPAA flipped its shit and slapped an X on the whole bloody mess. The film was cut to the bone, and was still banned around the world. The film limped into theaters and was largely ignored.

The bare bones story begs borrows and steals from the original. Police excavating graves after discovering the Sawyer family's misdeeds? Mysterious hitchhiker? Ghoulish family dinner? Crazed mad dash through the woods by the Final Girl? It's all here, but given a Big time make-over. The hitchhiker is now the devilishly handsome, and sexually ambiguous, Viggo Mortensen. Leatherface rocks a mullet, wields the largest chrome covered chainsaw known to man and cruises around in a fucking monster truck. The ever-suffering Ken Foree shows up as a survivalist nutjob who unwittingly stumbles into the middle of this crazy ass shit. He gets a couple of WWF styled throwdowns with Leatherface for his troubles. Although the unrated cut is still chopped to shit and back, it's far and away the bloodiest entry in the series. The KNB effects work is great, with their Leatherface mask looking particularly gruesome.

Fun in a jacked up 80s metal kind of way (Leatherface got his own theme song, slapped together by third rate thrash metal mavens Laaz Rockit), it's easy to see why fans of the first two installments could be unimpressed by the knuckle-dragging charms of Leatherface: Texas Chainsaw Massacre III. In a lot of ways, it feels like the big sellout of an indie rock darling. After two hardcore records full of razor sharp lyrics, hardcore riffs and badass blast beats, Leatherface signed with a major label and hired Bob fucking Rock for his third outing. It's got a ton of polish, but it feels a bit empty. It's Leatherface, the Big Dumb Slasher people always thought he was. It might be dumber than a bin full of Motley Crue records, but fuck it. I love Motley Crue.


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4 Friday The 13th Part VI: Jason Lives [October 4]

"I've seen enough horror movies to know any weirdo wearing a mask is never friendly."

Paramount couldn't have been more pleased with themselves when they wrapped Friday the 13th Part IV: The Final Chapter. They managed to kill Jason but good and finally washed their hands of the sub-porno slasher biz. Unfortunately for every two-bit studio hack on that lot, audiences still loved them some Jason Vorhees, and couldn't get enough of his machete wielding ways. In a business where cash is king, and personal taste means jack squat, Paramount fired-up the sequel machine. Unfortunately they had a small problem. They killed the star of the franchise in spectacular fashion and didn't think they could bring him back just one year later. The result was a Jason-less sequel that pissed off fans, and threatened the easy payday the cheap-jack Friday the 13th flicks represented. They went back to the drawing board, and brought the Man Behind the Mask back for his fourth bout of carnage at Camp Blood.

The flick opens like gangbusters, with Tommy Jarvis, now a fully grown former mental patient, deciding he needs to go all Winchester on the remains of Jason. He digs up the All-Star Slasher's grave and, in a moment he would live to regret, accidentally resurrects Jason via a scientifically dubious method involving lightning and big fucking metal pole. Fresh from the grave, Jason dons his mask and a James Bond-esque title sequence hits, giving audiences a big honking clue that, even though the J-Man is back, this won't be your usual Crystal Lake rodeo.

While the Friday films have always been funny, Jason Lives is funny on purpose. The script is playful, sarcastic and more than a bit self-aware nearly a decade before Kevin Williamson rode a similar schtick to the Hollywood Big Time. Characters acknowledge recognizable slasher tropes, make snide comments about the proceedings and just generally seem smarter than your average dead teenager. Director Tom McLoughlin keeps the pace high energy, while managing to inject moments of genuine style. The shot of Jason atop the wreckage of an RV is one of the best shots of Jason in the series. Unfortunately because the MPAA hated horror flicks, and the Friday films in particular, the violence is relatively bloodless, with most of the kills occurring off screen. Usually that would be a crippling blow to a slasher flick, but Friday the13th Part VI: Jason Lives has enough redeeming qualities to be a standout entry in the series.
 
1. The Mist
2. They live
3. Night of the living dead
4. Gingersnaps
5. The fly remake

And now starting Poltergeist!
 
Have you seen The Fourth Kind? I've always liked that one.
Thanks. Watched.

Oct 5 - Contracted. Really refreshing movie that steadily ramped up the discomfort level. Won't comment further as to not spoil it.

Oct 6 - The Fourth Kind. Creepy real footage but my other half fell asleep, so couldn't have been too scary I guess. Lead to some strange googling afterwards. The Web is a weird place.
 
#6 - Grabbers (Netflix)

I checked this out based on GhaleonEB's rec as it's been popping up in my suggested list forever. Definitely well shot, and the lead actress was smoking, but it fell short for me. I was never scared and it felt a little Simon Peggish with all the booze...I drank through the whole thing so maybe I was immune :o

5/10
 
#6 - Grabbers (Netflix)

I checked this out based on GhaleonEB's rec as it's been popping up in my suggested list forever. Definitely well shot, and the lead actress was smoking, but it fell short for me. I was never scared and it felt a little Simon Peggish with all the booze...I drank through the whole thing so maybe I was immune :o

5/10

5/10 seems a bit harsh for that one.

Regarding "The Fourth Kind": Which version did people see? I remember going to see it at the cinema and I distinctly remember that toward the end
her back is violently broken when she starts levitating, but in another version that part was cut out.
 
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2) Theatre of Death (1967) *** (of 5) (personal collection via XBMC)
Pretty solid Hammeresque mystery/thriller. Typically handsome 60's locations/photography and Christopher Lee plays an absolutely rotten, cold-blooded bastard with his usual gravitas and relish. His performance and the stylish, somewhat off-kilter direction elevate a fairly perfunctory story.
 

#06 - Clownhouse (1989)

Viewed via:

The one and only time I'd seen Clownhouse was when it ran on one of the premium cable channels back in the very early 90's. I was 7 or 8 at the time, and my cousin wanted to watch a scary movie late at night. This movie scared the living shit out of me, and if I didn't have a fear of clowns before watching it, I certainly did after. It wasn't until years later with the help of the internet did I find out what the movie was called, but I never felt compelled to revisit that experience until recently when I learned of the horror behind the horror of this film. The first time I learned of director Victor Salva's sex offender status was when Jeepers Creepers was released in theaters. I knew he'd done something to a little boy years prior, had served his time, and was back making movies, but I didn't know the details. Turns out he had forced 12-year-old Nathan Forrest Winters, the lead character of Clownhouse, to give and receive oral sex during production, and kept footage of it to add to the collection of child porn that police found in his home after a raid. It was with that knowledge in mind that I reluctantly viewed Clownhouse again all these years later and ho-lee-shit it's even creepier now. Lingering shots of the three underage boys in their tighty whities, a center frame shot of Nathan Forrest Winters' bare naked ass, and tons of homoerotic overtones. I could literally see the smile on Salva's John Wayne Gacy looking face in almost every shot. The whole slimy film made me feel dirty by the time the credits rolled.

That said it is an effective thriller with tons of atmosphere, and beautiful cinematography. Sam Rockwell makes his film debut in Clownhouse, and turns in a decent performance for such a young actor just starting out. This is probably the best movie I've seen so far this month, but that knowledge of what was happening in-between takes leaves a nasty taint on the experience.

Final Viewed List
#01 - Leprechaun Origins (2014)
#02 - Annabelle (2014)
#03 - Frankenhooker (1990)
#04 - Wrestlemaniac (2006)
#05 - Phantoms (1998)
#06 - Clownhouse (1989)
#07 - White Zombie (1932)
#08 - The Possession (2012)
#09 - The Monster Squad (1987)
#10 - Sharknado 2: The Second One (2014)
 
#6 - Grabbers (Netflix)

I checked this out based on GhaleonEB's rec as it's been popping up in my suggested list forever. Definitely well shot, and the lead actress was smoking, but it fell short for me. I was never scared and it felt a little Simon Peggish with all the booze...I drank through the whole thing so maybe I was immune :o

5/10

Sorry you didn't like it as much, I had a really good time with it. I never really found it super scary, just a fun monster romp with a good sense of humor about it. When the female lead
was drunk through the last act I thought she was hilarious, especially when she nearly burns down the bar trying to get a set of keys
.
 
So far I've watched (all for the first time):
1. The Conjuring
2. The Descent
3. The Battery
4. Affliction
5. Shadow of the Vampire

I enjoyed them all to varying degrees, but The Descent was easily the best in terms of atmosphere and scares. I'm going to rewatch Alien next in preparation for the game.
Descent is still far and away the best horror movie I've ever seen.
 
#7 - Pumpkinhead (Netflix)

I've seen it mentioned many times before and finally got around to seeing it. Like everyone else says, it's really underrated. As terrible as the title sounds, it's a pretty solid movie that manages to cover some different themes. It has a young Lance Henriksen and a creepy old woman intent on revenge. I'd say it rates pretty highly for me as far as 80's horror goes.

Sorry you didn't like it as much, I had a really good time with it. I never really found it super scary, just a fun monster romp with a good sense of humor about it. When the female lead
was drunk through the last act I thought she was hilarious, especially when she nearly burns down the bar trying to get a set of keys
.

Haha no worries, I laughed out loud when she
tumbled down the stairs after the nail gun shooting.
 
1# Zodiac - it was a really good thriller and some parts were intense 8/10
2# Alien - A classic, the alien itself is amazing to look at in blu-ray 10/10
3# Shutter Island - a very well done movie dealing with sanity - 8/10
4# Gone girl - after watching this movie it was more disturbing then many horror films lately. I honestly loved this movie so much. 10/10
Are we counting Gone Girl as horror? Went to see it in lieu of a horror flick over the weekend. I'd like to count it. It legit made me more frightened then anything I've seen in awhile but lacked your typical elements.
 
So far I've seen (the only rewatch being The Thing)

1. Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956)
2. The Thing from Another World
3. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)
4. Grave Encounters
5. The Thing (1982)

Of the ones I hadn't seen before, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre was easily the best. It's incredibly gritty and visceral, and makes for a really fun watch with a bunch of friends as well. It's pretty amazing how violent the movie seems without actually showing very much. 9/10

Grave Encounters was better than I expected, considering I had always written it off as one of those shitty direct to DVD asylum films. But it was pretty decent in terms of scares and atmosphere, and went to some more surreal places than I expected. I'd say it's about Session 9 quality, but without the great ending. I liked the overall concept of the movie as well, but I've got a higher tolerance for found footage than some. Solidly entertaining. 6/10
 
Film #6: Satan's Little Helper via Netflix

Should have turned this off as soon as it started but I'm trying watch stuff I'd normally just avoid. A misguided trick-or-treater accidentally helping a serial killer isn't a completely terrible idea but man does the execution not work. The dialogue and acting is just really awful and the movie feels like it goes on forever. The grandma getting kicked in the stomach was pretty hilarious but that was about it.

pass
 
#5 horns - I wanted to like it but honestly found it rather dumb, it had some funny moments but once it tried to become serious it lost me. 5/10
 
A bit behind on my write-ups, but so far I've kept up with a movie a day.

October 3rd
Evil Dead

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I've seen it before but it's honestly been so long it might as well be my first time viewing it. I watched the remake last year for this topic and loved it, and I love the original as well. I like how the remake copied a lot of stuff from the original as far as shots, dialogue, areas of the cabin, etc., but while the remake felt really slick and polished, the original retains a cheap yet gritty feel. They are both awesome as far as I'm concerned. There's a lot of heart and soul in both films, but in different areas, and even though they share a lot of very similar scenes. Dunno if that makes any sense.

October 4th
Evil Dead 2

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Same as the first, I've seen it before but it's been so long that I don't remember much. The sound is much improved, and I like all the close-up shots of the actors. I love how brutal Raimi gets with his actors. I remember hearing about that during the Spider-Man commentary, but it's clear that he was giving his actors hell way back in the beginning too.

October 5th
Army of Darkness

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Now this one I do remember, and it's just as good as it always has been. The camp has been turned up to 11 compared to Evil Dead 1 and 2, and it's just a crazy fun movie to watch all the way through. It feels like the movie is 10 minutes long.

October 6th
Fright Night

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First viewing. Really enjoyed it. Completely agree with another poster who wanted the main dude to die within the first 10 minutes. Jesus that kind was annoying. And his pal Evil? Well, now I see where Leo DiCaprio found his inspiration for Gilbert Grape. Not to mention Darcy from Married With Children and the voice of Jack Skellington himself. Annoying leads aside, the movie was wholly charming and enjoyable. Not scary, but the effects were really well done for a mid-80s movie, and the 80s music was also pretty sweet. I can't believe this is my first time watching this movie as I remember seeing the poster for it all the time in my local video store when I was a kid.
 
Are we counting Gone Girl as horror? Went to see it in lieu of a horror flick over the weekend. I'd like to count it. It legit made me more frightened then anything I've seen in awhile but lacked your typical elements.

I would say it is, after leaving the theater it left me uneasy with the outcome.
 
#06 - Clownhouse (1989)

Viewed via:

The one and only time I'd seen Clownhouse was when it ran on one of the premium cable channels back in the very early 90's. I was 7 or 8 at the time, and my cousin wanted to watch a scary movie late at night. This movie scared the living shit out of me, and if I didn't have a fear of clowns before watching it, I certainly did after. It wasn't until years later with the help of the internet did I find out what the movie was called, but I never felt compelled to revisit that experience until recently when I learned of the horror behind the horror of this film. The first time I learned of director Victor Salva's sex offender status was when Jeepers Creepers was released in theaters. I knew he'd done something to a little boy years prior, had served his time, and was back making movies, but I didn't know the details. Turns out he had forced 12-year-old Nathan Forrest Winters, the lead character of Clownhouse, to give and receive oral sex during production, and kept footage of it to add to the collection of child porn that police found in his home after a raid. It was with that knowledge in mind that I reluctantly viewed Clownhouse again all these years later and ho-lee-shit it's even creepier now. Lingering shots of the three underage boys in their tighty whities, a center frame shot of Nathan Forrest Winters' bare naked ass, and tons of homoerotic overtones. I could literally see the smile on Salva's John Wayne Gacy looking face in almost every shot. The whole slimy film made me feel dirty by the time the credits rolled.

That said it is an effective thriller with tons of atmosphere, and beautiful cinematography. Sam Rockwell makes his film debut in Clownhouse, and turns in a decent performance for such a young actor just starting out. This is probably the best movie I've seen so far this month, but that knowledge of what was happening in-between takes leaves a nasty taint on the experience.

Final Viewed List
#01 - Leprechaun Origins (2014)
#02 - Annabelle (2014)
#03 - Frankenhooker (1990)
#04 - Wrestlemaniac (2006)
#05 - Phantoms (1998)
#06 - Clownhouse (1989)

One thing I always took from this film was how hilariously incompetent the clowns are.
It's basically a clown-horror precursor to Home Alone.
These supposedly dangerous, psychotic clowns are essentially getting their asses kicked by a group of dipshit kids and a lot of unintentionally hilarious moments occur.

Favorite scene: The clown swan-dive out of the house window. Laughed so hard. Movie is horrible... and fuck Victor Salva.
 
One thing I always took from this film was how hilariously incompetent the clowns are.
It's basically a clown-horror precursor to Home Alone.
These supposedly dangerous, psychotic clowns are essentially getting their asses kicked by a group of dipshit kids and a lot of unintentionally hilarious moments occur.

Favorite scene: The clown swan-dive out of the house window. Laughed so hard. Movie is horrible... and fuck Victor Salva.

Yeah my brother and I were making comments about that too, the kids almost killed as many people as the clowns did. Granted they were just mental hospital patients, not a professional hit squad.
 
Yeah my brother and I were making comments about that too, the kids almost killed as many people as the clowns did. Granted they were just mental hospital patients, not a professional hit squad.

And they went out of their way to just screw with the kids, not always actively trying to kill them.

Think it was effective at being creepy with the whole clowns stalking kids in a lone house in the woods. That's some scary shit. Plus I assume they didn't want to be slaughtering kids left and right in the film, so there wasn't a ton of fodder for them to kill.
 
I don't have time to participate in this but I did end up watching Noroi: The Curse yesterday.

Awesome mockumentary style j-horror.
 
1. Identity 1/5
2. The Sacrament 2.5/5
3. The Purge 3/5
4. The Purge: Anarchy 4/5

5. I Am A Ghost 4/5

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Oooh, this is a good one! Not only is the concept very creative and interesting (we see everything from a ghost's pov), but it also offers interesting perspectives on the concept of a ghost and how we perceive it in film. I love how the film portrays
that a ghost is not really a sentient being, but a collection of memories in an endless loop

A lot of food for thought in this film. If you want to include something unique and offbeat in your marathon, consider this.
 
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