Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Diabolique Films Launches Campaign for New Hammer Horror Doc

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Diabolique Films Launches Campaign for New Hammer Horror Doc

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HamKick2 Diabolique Films backs new Hammer Horror doc; launches Kickstarter campaign.

Every time the fine lads at Warner Home Video have spat out one of the treasured titles from their Hammer Films library in any digital format (including recent Blu-ray releases), it’s a tragically bare bones affair, with the presence of a trailer being the most we can hope for. It’s a crying shame as the pictures released under the Warner wing, include many of their most interesting and essential titles including Freddie Francis’ DRACULA HAS RISEN FROM THE GRAVE, Peter Sasdy’s TASTE THE BLOOD OF DRACULA, Alan Gibson’s lively DRACULA A.D. 1972. Terrence Fisher’s malevolent FRANKENSTEIN MUST BE DESTROYED and many, many more.

The history behind the Warner/Hammer international distribution agreement runs deep and is worthy of a serious examination. Now, Dima Ballin of Diabolique magazine is putting his weight behind a new Kickstarter campaign whose goal is to produce the definitive documentary about this period.

Says Ballin:

“Hammer’s period at Warner Bros produced some of their finest films, including FRANKENSTEIN MUST BE DESTROYED which is not only Peter Cushing’s finest screen performance, but Terence Fisher’s directorial triumph as well. There have been many documentaries and featurettes made about various aspects of Hammer Horror and the various period’s in Hammer’s illustrious history, but no serious study has ever been done on Hammer’s period at Warner Bros. Diabolique Films is happy to team with Marcus Hearn, Hammer’s official historian, in compiling the first film of this kind to tackle Hammer Horror/Warner Bros. illustrious history.”

Hearn is, of course, Hammer’s official historian and HAMMER HORROR: THE WARNER BROS. YEARS will be both written and directed by the man. The documentary will feature exclusive interviews with many of the key players from that period, as well as authors and film historians like Jonathan Rigby and Constantine Nasr. Also included will be rare production stills, film footage, Hammer’s original shooting locations, and access to previously unseen archive documents. The documentary will be available via streaming and in a limited Blu-ray release, exclusive to the folks who contribute to the Kickstarter campaign.

For fans of Hammer’s vast, influential history, this is certainly a most worthy project. SHOCK gives it our seal of approval and urges you to explore the campaign and the perks within (including gorgeous poster-size prints of select titles by cover artist Mark Spears).

To peruse the HAMMER HORROR: THE WARNER BROS. YEARS Kicktstarter project go HERE.

And we’ll leave you with the trailer for FRANKENSTEIN MUST BE DESTROYED. Because we can.

The post Diabolique Films Launches Campaign for New Hammer Horror Doc appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Toronto! Blood in the Snow Film Festival Announces 2015 Lineup

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Toronto! Blood in the Snow Film Festival Announces 2015 Lineup

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Northern frights reign supreme at the 2015 Blood in the Snow Film Festival.

Canadian horror film festival Blood in the Snow has just announced their full film lineup for their 2015 program. The fest – BITS as it’s commonly known – runs from November 27th to the 29th at the Carlton Cinemas in Toronto, Canada. The mandate of the festival is to showcase and support Canadian horror and exploitation films in a country that often frowns upon the production of such things.

Highlights in this year’s lineup include the World Premiere of NIGHT CRIES by director Andrew Cymek (DARK RISING/ SUMMER VALE series), the Toronto Premiere of maverick filmmaker Larry Kent’s controversial SHE WHO MUST BURN (winner of Best Canadian Feature at Fantasia Fest 2015), the Canadian Premiere of FARHOPE TOWER by April Mullen DEAD BEFORE DAWN 3D/ 88) and the Toronto Premiere of the acclaimed BITE from Chad Archibald (THE DROWNSMAN) closes the fest.

Go HERE for the full lineup.

And be sure to follow BITS on Twitter, Pinterest and Facebook.

Check out the highlight video from the 2014 show:

The post Toronto! Blood in the Snow Film Festival Announces 2015 Lineup appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

Interview: Actress Brit Shaw on PARANORMAL ACTIVITY: THE GHOST DIMENSION

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Interview: Actress Brit Shaw on PARANORMAL ACTIVITY: THE GHOST DIMENSION

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Brit1 Actress Brit Shaw talks PARANORMAL ACTIVITY: THE GHOST DIMENSION.

As audiences prep to literally immerse themselves in the 6th and (supposedly) final entry in the venerable PARANORMAL ACTIVITY fright film franchise this Friday, one of its leads, actress Brit Shaw, sat down with SHOCK to talk shop about the spooky sequel that reportedly is the most bone-freezing PA flick of them all…

Shaw stars as Emily in the mostly found footage flick PARANORMAL ACTIVITY: THE GHOST DIMENSION; she’s a young mother who, after discovering a high-tech video camera hidden in her house, gains the ability to see the dead around her, specifically the enduring, malevolent ghost that wants to claim her daughter.

Shaw has appeared in a myriad television programs and films and even wrote and starred in the short film IT’S NOT ME, IT’S YOU. But with PARANORMAL ACTIVITY: THE GHOST DIMENSION, her star is about burst through the screen….

No, seriously. It actually will. The film is in 3D.

SHOCK: Why do you think children, especially little girls, are so effectively creepy in horror films?

BRIT SHAW: Yeah, they are and I really don’t know. why, exactly. It’s like in THE SHINING. Those girls. You can’t even articulate it. They’re just scary. It’s like when you’re a kid and you’re playing cops and robbers, you believe it so much. Kids are so intense. So locked into the moment. So , maybe when they’re in a horror movie and they’re creepy, you just believe it.…

SHOCK: This is the 6th film in the series, but your first appearance. Did the Blumhouse team demand you watch the previous 5 pictures?

SHAW: Yeah, so what happened was I got the job and then they sent me a package with every film in it and told me to watch them. So I did. And what we created on set was sort of a PARANORMAL ACTIVITY bible, where if we had any questions we had to reference the “bible” to get the facts right. Blumhouse really cares about the fans and what the fans are thinking. He knows that they’ll remember everything and since this is the film, it has to provide closure and answer a lot of fan questions. So yeah, it was important that everyone in the cast and crew was on the same page.

SHOCK: Are we sure this is the last one?

SHAW: Well, I mean…how many can you do?

SHOCK: Was there ever a reference on set to the film 13 GHOSTS?

SHAW: No. What’s that?

SHOCK: A William Castle classic. When the characters put on their ghost viewers, the audience would do the same and they could see the ghosts that the characters were seeing. It’s gimmick is very similar to the one in THE GHOST DIMENSION.

SHAW:  What? No way! I never knew that! And no, no one ever talked about that.

SHOCK: Have you seen the final film yet?

SHAW: Not with a crowd, no, but I heard the audience response was crazy. I’ve seen the behind the scenes trailer with filmed audience reactions and it looks great.

SHOCK: Are those audience reaction trailers real?

SHAW: It’s totally real. The director was telling me about it and telling me me how I’d be be blown away with the fans responses to the scenes. And the trailer has had great feedback.

SHOCK: Well, there’s already a GHOST DIMENSION parody trailer…

SHAW: There is? What do you mean?

SHOCK: It’s called PARANORMAL ACTIVITY: THE TIGER MOM DIMENSION. It’s a play on the cliché of the Asian American family that expects too much from their kids. Here…watch….

SHAW: Oh my god, that’s hilarious!

SHOCK: Now, I’ve never seen a found footage film get made. Did you have room to improv or did you have to stick to script?

SHAW: Oh, there’s always room to improv and we shot tons of footage so that in the edit, they could find the movie. And we had a great writing team on set that was always writing and making suggestions. So it was both.

SHOCK: Are you going to wind up in any more horror movies?

SHAW: Well, horror films are a rite of passage for an actor. And it seems that since I’ve starred in one, everyone thinks it’s cool and I’m getting a bit more excited. I don’t know what the future will bring…but I’m excited about it….

The post Interview: Actress Brit Shaw on PARANORMAL ACTIVITY: THE GHOST DIMENSION appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

In Defense of GRAVE OF THE VAMPIRE

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In Defense of GRAVE OF THE VAMPIRE

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 Grave6 Australian horror journo and author Lee Gambin goes to bat for the battiest of all vampire movies: GRAVE OF THE VAMPIRE.

There is something so incredibly appealing about vampire films from the seventies that have nothing whatsoever to do with the infamous and exceptionally popular (as he should be) Count Dracula. This is in no way a slur against our beloved literary prince of darkness; but instead, it simply means that there are other features that ventured into vampiric terrain during the grittiest period of cinematic decades that boast original and sometimes innovative bloodsucker outings. When American International Pictures released the subversively provocative and proudly lurid COUNT YORGA, VAMPIRE in 1970, audiences thrilled to a lusty feral vampire played by Robert Quarry who built an army of devoted female disciples (one of which feasted upon a cat in one of the film’s most memorable and controversial scenes). The film was originally intended as a softcore sexploitation film (some prints of the film would feature it’s originally intended name as the title card), but Quarry insisted that AIP stick to a straight and narrow vampire feature that would embrace seventies newfound anti-glamour sensibilities. The result was a profoundly disturbing and entertaining horror classic. Following hot off YORGA’s success was GRAVE OF THE VAMPIRE, directed by exploitation maestro John Hayes and loosely based on the David Chase novel “The Still Life”.

In this grisly, bleak piece, Michael Pataki plays the role of century old vampire Caleb Croft like a brutish thug, picking up his victims by the scruff of the neck and tossing them onto a pile of dirt with swift ease, moments before holding them up over his shoulder and slamming them down onto a dense cement gravestone breaking their back. The final insult is that this cretin lunges upon them and rips into their flesh feasting upon their fresh oozing blood. Pataki’s vampire has not one iota of glamour or charm, instead he is presented as a lumbering menace, which is not only refreshing and downright scary, but also satisfying to watch. In many ways a lot of Pataki’s physicality resembles Paul Naschy, that iconic Spanish cinematic lycanthrope who made a career out of fevered and frenzied performances in the lavish Hombre Lobo films from the sixties, seventies and early eighties. In comparison, Pataki jolts and bolts through each scene with a maddening intensity much like Naschy in his werewolf state, throwing his body around in an ecstatic and hedonistic manner – linking Pataki to Naschy’s bestial out-pour.

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GRAVE OF THE VAMPIRE gives Pataki a lot of well-deserved room to be that maniacal menace with a heavy hand, and it is only in the second half of the feature, where his character has to “fit in” and “pass” as innocuous, that Pataki is allowed to reign in his larger than life ruthlessness and channel a different kind of threat. He is supported by a collective of sturdy actors, some there to serve genuine narrative purpose and others rendered loose-ends that succumb to a nasty demise even though they seem to be set up as mainstays. For example, the character of the lieutenant (Eric Mason) somehow represents a bizarre red herring. We are lead to believe that this character will be a Van Helsing of sorts, set to destroy Pataki’s Croft, however, early in the piece he is killed. The death of the lieutenant is gruesome and shocking. His body is smashed into the side of an open coffin by Croft and then his head is left to rest at the place of where the lid would shut tight. With a mighty blow, Croft drops the coffin’s heavy lid onto the lieutenant’s head and the sound of a crushing skull stabs the sound design. In a strangely homoerotic tail-end to the scene, Pataki rips open the handsome law enforcer’s shirt and dives in, ripping open his flesh and drinking his blood.

Before this entertaining sequence, we have been introduced to the lieutenant and get the impression that he suspects vampirism from the get-go (he even has a skeptical co-worker cynically remark “And then runs off into the sunrise like Bela Lugosi!” – which is a nice play on post-modern horror, where the characters in the film already understand what vampires are about, and that films about such mythical monsters exist, starring the likes of Hungarian imitable actors). Another first act character that is established, given purpose but then tossed to the sidelines is abuse victim Olga (Lieux Dressler), who is another bizarre addition to the film. Olga is introduced in the hospital where our initial heroine Lesley (played by Kitty Vallacher who somehow tries to channel a neurotic Sandy Dennis in her performance, and also billed as “The Unwilling Mother”) is recovering from being raped by Croft. This frazzled older woman takes an instant shine to our vulnerable leading lady, plus there is also a subdued hint of lesbianism here, as Olga caresses Lesley’s quivering hand and aggressively asserts herself as Leslie’s “protector”.

The theme of rape and the repercussions of rape permeate the film which makes GRAVE OF THE VAMPIRE an interesting example of vampire-centric cinema predating compelling and gritty rape-centric movies such as RAPE SQUAD and DEATH WISH (both from 1974). Even hearing the word uttered on multiple occasions makes for a seedy excursion into the vampire sub-genre. Rape-centric cinema was of course no stranger on the grindhouse circuit of the early seventies, however when it is introduced to a film about bloodsuckers (a movie monster that is already seemingly “old hat” by the time of 1972) it somehow “frightens the horses”. This said, the film bears a semblance to the European horror/psychological character study of Werewolf Woman (1976), a phenomenal film that successfully marries the rape-revenge motif with the legend of lycanthropy. GRAVE OF THE VAMPIRE dances with the notion of rape, but then fixes it’s focus on the concept of vampiric conception – Lesley, this fragile “unwilling mother” falls pregnant to the undead Croft (something that seldom happens in cinematic vampire logic). The film plays with the rules of vampirism – most notably that if Caleb Croft bites his victims they don’t turn into vampires, instead, this ancient and powerful undead only really births another vampire through raping Lesley in the open grave in the beginning of the picture.

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The image of Lesley cutting into her breast and drawing blood to feed her vampiric baby is what gave the film its notoriety and cult status (plus it also inspired a pre-feature warning). It is a striking image that perverts the holy bond shared between mother and child, and here this loving and essential act is completely misshaped as the natural maternal/infant unity is turned into something grotesque and demonic. The extreme close-up of the grey/bluish baby lapping up the fresh droplets of blood that fall onto his face is quite simply a nightmarish vision of unnatural monstrousness. On top of this unsettling image comes Lesley’s creepy lullaby where she sings “When you wake you shall have all the pretty little horses….” The fleeting moments with mother and vampire baby are undeniably compelling and eerie, and a dose of visceral bloodletting gives it the punch it needs. For example, Lesley takes a large syringe to her arm and withdraws her own blood to feed her son. This lingering image gives the movie a much welcomed queasiness that is appealing in the most down and dirty grindhouse-fevered sense. Dark humor is also infused within the lively dialogue – Olga asks about the young half-vampire half-mortal baby: “Why is he so grey? I’ve never seen a baby with this color before?”

The second half of the film changes it’s mood – and bloodsucking babies are sent on their merry way as cultists and occultism (a very popular trend in horror cinema at the time) picks up where we leave an infantile son of Croft, James Eastman. Playing the adult Eastman is the wonderful as character actor William Smith, however even with his hulking presence that made him a go-to heavy for other motion pictures and television of the time, he doesn’t seem to have the same intensity that Pataki has and because of this, the latter half of the picture staggers a tad – but only a tad. Thankfully, Pataki returns to the screen and now in an urbane and semi-sophisticated turn, where he poses as a professor at a local college. Muscular and stoic William Smith spends his time on screen wanting to track down his father while using women that work at the college to help him find out more about their elusive boss. Smith’s Eastman knows that Croft is his father – but this is something that he chooses to out just when the time is right. Eastman has also spent his entire life repressing his vampiric self, however elements of his hidden desires pop up throughout the film and prove rather humorous. When a female associate at the college comes over for a drink at Eastman’s house, she notices blood-red raw meat on a plate to which she asks “Do you have a dog or a cat?” to which he replies “The meat is mine”. We get the idea that this man is trying to suppress his urges by letting the blood from a steak assuage his lust, rather than surrender to the pleasures of human blood.

The film takes its time with lingering mood-pieces and visually engaging story-servers, such as the elongated moment where Eastman struggles to give in to his budding vampiric desires when his pick up is lying asleep underneath him, with the veins in her throat pulsating and throbbing. Eastman runs his fingers over these vessels blood, and distracts himself. But by the end of the film, Smith’s Eastman submits to his vampiric self and bares his elongated fangs while a title card reads: “The End! Or is it…?”

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The film is ultimately, exploitation bliss. The varied versions of the film with alternate cuts make for this to be one of those films that is seldom seen in its entirety. An uncut version has yet to surface, and the best print available for the film is made available on DVD through a company called Retromedia who have saved the original format and cleaned it up to the best they could, however this is once again another modified version – most notably cuts made during the baby blood feeding sequence, an elongated shot of Croft coming into extreme close-up baring his fangs and being blurred into obscurity, as well as endless stagnant shots of characters “deep in thought” or “scrutinizing situations at hand” – with these missing in action it is completely forgivable seeing that they bog the pace down and offer nothing but muted moments in an almost endlessly action-heavy horror film. And “action” is the key word. By the end of the picture, when father and son duke it out and come face to face with one another beating up on each other and throwing each other across the room, the film shifts into a fists of fury scenario that could match the likes of any Burt Reynolds action movie released around the same time. William Smith is most certainly an action star prototype – a man with few words, muscular and impressive in size and stature and boasting alpha appeal both for the male contingent and female. A truly stoic figure in his concentrated approach, the actor makes some of the flat dialogue engaging by giving it a grounded sense of realism. When we first meet him he speaks in voice over, giving us necessary exposition (something that could have been accomplished without such overstatement, however does seem to work here) about his mother’s death and denial of her son’s hybrid vampirism, and here we get a sense that perhaps this character (the new protagonist for the second half of the film) might hold onto his noir-esque inner-narration, serving as an internalised Greek-chorus which might give the film an altered sense of dreamscape in rudimentary grit. However, this dies with the image of his mother dead in her coffin.

GRAVE OF THE VAMPIRE is worth it for many reasons – namely Pataki’s incredibly menacing and brutish performance, the infamous baby blood splattered close-up and the odd choices in setting up character and plot and aggressively dismissing it while keeping entertainment levels at an all time high. Besides the first half being stronger than the occult heavy second, the picture has a mesmerizing stride and energy and truly is one of the best vampire movies of the early seventies.

The post In Defense of GRAVE OF THE VAMPIRE appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

Feature: Ten Awesome Episodes of THE TWILIGHT ZONE

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Feature: Ten Awesome Episodes of THE TWILIGHT ZONE
TZone11 SHOCK’s Kalyn Corrigan picks her favorite episodes from Rod Serling’s landmark TV series THE TWILIGHT ZONE.

Created in 1959 by Emmy award winning writer Rod Serling, THE TWILIGHT ZONE is one of the most famous and influential T.V. shows of all time. In a period when people shied away from horror and dark fantasy, Serling dove head first into the abyss of the unknown, and put his fears on display through the manifestation of an alternate universe where time is relative and the strange and unusual has come to be defined as the norm. Through his various recounts of odd stories and everyday people caught up in ghastly situations, Serling both brought to life a sanctuary for those viewers who had trouble relating to mainstream television, and also elicited metaphors to help push through real life traumas and trepidation that were otherwise difficult to face. There have been various imitations and homages paid to the iconic series, but none have come close to the impact and brilliance that these unique little stories generated; small slices of life revealed through Serling’s poignant monologues and lessons of morality that reached out and touched audiences across the nation, and over time, across the globe.

For this writer, personally, some of my very first experiences with horror and science fiction came from this show, and even now, when I revisit the episodes that aired well over fifty years ago, I can still find comfort, inspiration, and self-actualization through the timeless messages played out in black and white images. THE TWILIGHT ZONE isn’t just one of the most recognizable shows to ever hit the air, it’s also one of the most important, not only for its prestige, but also, for its entertainment, and for its invaluable teachings that extend far beyond its time zone.

Below, I’ve listed ten of my favorite TZ episodes, just in time for Halloween, but perfect for any time of the year. Please, feel free to leave a comment and tell me which ones are your favorites, too!

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1. “Living Doll” S5E6
Annabelle has just bought her daughter a lifelike doll named Talky Tina that can actually recite a few lines to her owner. However, when Annabelle’s new husband, Erich, picks up the doll, Talky Tina tells him she hates him, a use of dialogue that most likely wasn’t programmed by the manufacturers at the toy company. Hostile to begin with, but now moved to the realm of ticked off, Erich decides to destroy the doll, but finds it completely indestructible, even to the force of a blow torch. Taunting him as he attempts to melt her immortal plastic skin, Tina laughs and tosses out threats; a tiny, pretty plaything getting the best of a raging grown man. In a very unique way, this episode manages to be both hilarious and terrifying at the same time. Set around the idea of a killer doll, influences of this episode can be spotted in countless television shows, literary material, and popular films like CHILD’S PLAY, DOLLS an DEAD SILENCE. Although many different forms of media have mimicked this tale, it remains special for its unusual approach to a murderous toy in the way that it depicts Tina’s devious deeds as frightening, but overall, righteous and necessary for a single mom and her daughter who struggle to stick up for themselves in the face of an emotionally abusive lover’s eruptions.

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2. “Eye of the Beholder” S2E6
A woman whose face is hidden by bandages resides morose in a hospital room, waiting to be beautiful. Ever since she was a little girl, people have turned away from her on the street. But no more. Not now. Now, they’ll smile when they see her because she’ll finally fit in with society’s idea of “normal”. The only trick is — society’s standards of beauty in THE TWILIGHT ZONE include faces that more closely resemble that of a pig than a person. Warped smiles with large, swine-like noses are what walks the street here, and no matter how much the doctors try to operate on this poor, sweet girl, her perfectly symmetrical features have doomed her to a life where she is characterized as hideous, in this backwards world. In this commentary on beauty and how it is defined in our culture, the tables are turned, offering a fresh, interesting perspective on what we find attractive, and an amusing and somewhat comforting proposition of a plane of existence where what most consider the norm is for once labeled as odd, and those that look “different” are perceived as beautiful.

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3. “The Monsters are Due on Maple Street” S1E22
At precisely 6:43 P.M. on a lighthearted Saturday afternoon, all the electricity suddenly and inexplicably shuts off on Maple Street. At first, all is dark, but then, without warning, random rooms in selective houses begin to light up. Cars come on, electrical items power on in certain people’s houses, but not others, and before long, the growing paranoia and suspicion begin to emerge. That’s when the monsters come. The monsters toss around wild accusations and demonstrate crazed mob mentality, growling at one another in the street, picking out victims and cornering them into fearful submission. Although, in truth, there are aliens watching from above, controlling the electricity and flipping the lights on and off, they are not the ones to be feared. The real monsters are the people who occupy this street. In the midst of all of their finger pointing, the citizens of this sweet, naive little neighborhood quickly evolved into the snarling ghouls, and the aliens watching from above need only tamper with a few switches to bring out the evil that existed long before they landed on earth’s shifting soil.

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4. “Time Enough At Last” S1E8
Imagine the horror of a world without books. A world where reading is frowned upon, newspapers are seen as irrelevant, and finding a quiet corner to turn page is virtually impossible. Novels gain dust on a shelf as people grow less fond of print and more and more dependent on technology. Every moment is filled with crowded noise and meaningless conversation and no one seeks to grow any wiser or imaginative. It’s probably not too hard to picture nowadays, in a fast-paced modern society where excitement is defined by the newest technological gadgets and the hottest celebrity gossip, but in the 1960s, it was a frightening notion. For many today, it still is. Through this nightmarish depiction of a society without an appreciation for the written word, Rod Serling provides viewers with a quick peek into his brain, and shows us what terrors plague him in the dark of the night.

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5. “Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up” S2E28
Clearly inspired by the 1951 sci-fi classic THE THING (FROM ANOTHER WORLD), this episode starts off with two policemen arriving at the scene where a landing of an unidentified flying object has just crash landed to earth and left tracks in the snow. While investigating, they’re lead to a nearby diner, where seven passengers have just tumbled off a bus, when there should only be six. Filled with side-eyeing, suspicious glances, and hostile doubts, this episode toys with the idea that our worst fears are hidden within the stranger seated next to us, waiting until the pretense of a kind face for a vulnerable moment when it can pounce. Also, the twist within a twist during the final moments make this story not only priceless in its influence on future filmmakers, but also, just downright entertaining.

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6. “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet” S5E3
A man who recently suffered a nervous breakdown faces his greatest challenge yet when he has to re-enter society, specifically, in the same place where he experienced his mental collapse: an airplane. At first, Bob is getting along rather swimmingly, as he elicits a calm, logical composure, overriding his fears with rational thought. However, just when it seems that Bob is no longer suffering the torment of his demons, life, as it often does, plays a cruel trick on him, and tosses a terrifying gremlin onto the wing of the plane, one which only he can see. A petrifying creature slicked wet with rain, the creature begins tearing at the wiring, causing the innards of the aircraft to begin malfunctioning. Bob tries to alert the other passengers to the large critter roaming the outside of the vessel, but the more he shrieks and hollers, the crazier Bob appears, and the more his loving wife fears that she may have released him from the mental ward he resided in far too soon. Starring William Shatner as Bob, the only man capable of saving the aircraft, unable to save his peers without identifying himself as mentally unstable, this was the first episode of the famous show that this writer ever watched, at about the age of five. Needless to say, my next ride on a plane (in the rain, I might add) featured me constantly looking out of my window, expecting to see a disfigured man on the wing, pulling at cords in the hopes of destroying us all.

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7. “Number 12 Looks Just Like You” S5E17
Our vanity will ruin us all, and eventually turn us into submissive airheads is the message in this Brave New World-esque universe where people are only allowed to look one way: beautiful. There are a few different body types to choose from, so everyone wears name tags in order to differentiate between the same sea of perfectly symmetrical faces. There’s even happy pills readily available that people are encouraged to take to ensure that their mood never dips below blissful. Short, rotund, emotional, inquisitive, restless — these are things of the past; character traits that might lead to independent thought, and personal identity, which are two things that any supreme ruler wouldn’t want his submissive nation to exhibit. Even though they may not always seem desirable, as this episode brilliantly points out, flaws are what make us unique, and our pain is what teaches us wisdom, and without the aspects of ourselves that we’re not as fond of, we are not fully whole, and therefore, cease to truly exist.

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8. “The Midnight Sun” S3E10
Norma and her landlord Mrs. Bronson are doing their best to keep each other company on what seems to be their final days. Tortured by sweltering temperatures as the earth slowly inches closer to the sun, the two women are the last occupants of their apartment building, and cling to one another as they fight for survival in the relentless heat. Night time no longer exists, there is no safe haven from the sun’s piercing rays, and most people have either died from heat exhaustion, or gone mad with hysterics. All day long, Norma paints pictures of the sun endlessly shining over the horizon, because in this life, where there is no shade and no coolness, it is the only thing that occupies her thoughts, and she and her talents waste away, melting in this endless drought. Lucky for her, this place is only a dream. The end of the episode reveals that Norma is merely dreaming, and in actuality, the earth is moving farther away from the sun, not closer to it, and soon, everyone will freeze to death. In a wicked turn of events that demonstrates both extremes feared by those who know the dangers of dramatic climate change, this episode asks the daunting question of ‘Which way would you prefer to go?’ and offers no solace for either route of destruction.

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9. “Walking Distance” S1E5
Fed up with life and feeling nostalgic, thirty-six-year-old Martin Sloan decides to take advantage of the fact that the gas station he’s pulled into happens to be within walking distance of his old home town. It’s been decades since Martin felt the simple joys of etching his name into the park jungle gym, scurrying to catch the last drops of an ice cream cone before it melts in the summer heat, or a ride on the carousel, but upon his return to his old beloved Homewood, Martin finds that nothing has changed — literally. The year is 1934, and Martin can actually see his pre-teen self sitting alone at the park, unfazed by the burdens of adulthood that he has not yet faced. From that point on, Martin chases his younger self around town, attempting to tell him to appreciate these precious moments, and tries to get his parents to recognize him, but his pleas of regaining his youth fall on deaf ears. Like many adults, Martin feels that if he could just wipe his slate clean, and start over, his jaded life would somehow be better. He thinks that the answer to happiness in his future lies in connecting to his past, but as he learns in this story, his current discomfort stems from lingering on what has already happened, instead of appreciating the delights of his present.

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10. “To Serve Man” S3E24
Humans have gown complacent with the fact that we’re at the top of the food chain, unshakeable in our reign as the ultimate rules of the earth, and of life itself. But what if that weren’t true? What if life exists outside of our humble planet, and that life exceeds our technology, our fragile bodies, and our knowledge? What if in reality, we are nothing but tiny specs in an infinite universe, just waiting to be eaten? Based on the short story by Damon Knight, “To Serve Man” is a clever episode, told from the point of view of Michael Chambers, a decoding specialist who works for the United States government. Slightly ahead of its time, this episode features a character breaking the fourth wall to ask the audience “How about you? You still on earth, or on the ship with me?” Using this trick from the director’s toolbox allows the story to not only play on humans’ fear of their small size in the grand scale of stars and infinite space, but actually reaches out and confronts the viewers with the cold, hard fact that they’re probably not alone, and our first encounter with extraterrestrial life will probably be about domination, not unification.

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Monday, October 19, 2015

Anything Horror Scott’s Favorite Mind Fuck Films

AnythingHorror Central
Anything Horror Scott’s Favorite Mind Fuck Films

The “mind fuck” film is exactly what it sounds like. This is a type of movie that messes with your head the entire length of the film. When the mind fuck film is done right it makes your jaw drop and you wind up sitting in your chair as the credits roll. I’ve been a fan of this sub-genre since seeing JACOB’S LADDER back in 1990.

What makes JACOB’S LADDER such a great mind fuck flick is that it’s not just the ending that fucks with you; the entire movie, every second of it, keeps poking at your brain daring you to try and understand what’s going on. When you think you’ve figured out what’s happening, bam, the movie shifts gears and fucks with you even more.

Many people confuse a mind fuck movie with a film that simply offers a twist ending. This isn’t the same thing. THE SIXTH SENSE, for example, is a great film with an ending that knocks your socks off, but this isn’t a mind fuck film. The majority of THE SIXTH SENSE is a standard film of a doctor trying to help a young boy.

Below is my list (in no particular order) of some of my favorite mind fuck films. I love all these movies and watch them all over and over again. Every time I watch one of the films on this list, I get something new out of it.

Mind Jacob's Ladder

JACOB’S LADDER (1990)

There’s not a weak element in this film. From the acting to the script to the special effects, Jacob’s Ladder is a damn-near perfect film. Director Adrian Lyne masterfully controls the material here and keeps the audience wondering what the hell is happening. If you haven’t seen this film, don’t look it up and don’t read anyone’s reviews of it. Just go buy the DVD and watch it. It’ll blow your fucking socks off.

Mind Attic

THE ATTIC EXPEDITIONS (2001)

Seth Green, Jeffrey Combs, Ted Raimi, and Alice Cooper all star in a movie helmed by the guy who directed the 2007 Wizard of Gore remake, Jeremy Kasten??!!? A guy is sentenced to a mental hospital for killing his girlfriend, but starts to question whether he actually killed her, or if he’s just a pawn in some strange brainwashing experiment. This one keeps you scratching your head and wondering what the fuck’s going on. Repeated viewings are recommended.

Mind Videodrome

VIDEODROME (1983)

I may be stretching the definition of what a mind fuck film is by including Videodrome on this list, but if you’ve seen this film you know why I’m including it. A sleazy cable TV station owner (James Woods) becomes obsessed with tracking down a television show titled “Videodrome.” This show has no script, no plot, and, as one character observes, “no recurring guest stars.” Oh, but there’s a whole lot more going on in this movie. This film really messes with your head. Videodrome isn’t just my favorite David Cronenberg movie, it’s one of my favorite films, period.

Mind Darko

DONNIE DARKO (2001) – Time travel? A near death experience? A large rabbit predicting the end of the world? What the hell is going on here?!? You may never know, but it sure is a fun ride. Donnie Darko became an instance cult classic and after you watch it a few times, you’ll understand why.

Mind Angel Heart

ANGEL HEART (1987) – I love this film! I remember the first time I saw it: I was living in a shitty little apartment in Ottawa, Canada and had no cable. I only got three channels and one Saturday night Angel Heart came on around one in the morning. I was mesmerized by Mickey Rourke’s portrayal as Harry Angel, a private detective hired by a mysterious man to find another guy called Johnny Favorite. Just sit back and enjoy all the twists and turns this one takes. And just wait until you see Robert De Niro peel that goddamn hardboiled egg!!!

Mind Head Trauma

HEAD TRAUMA (2006) – A man returns home after being away for twenty years to settle his dead grandmother’s estate. As he cleans the house he gets hit in the head and this triggers a series of very vivid nightmares and waking visions. Soon the line blurs between what is real and what is “unreal”. Directed by Lance Weiler (one-half of the directing team behind 1998’s The Last Broadcast), this one keeps you on edge the entire time.

Mind Don't Look Now

DON’T LOOK NOW (1973) – A classic from the 70’s. Donnie Sutherland and Julie Christie recently lost their young daughter. Sutherland takes them to Venice on business and there they meet a psychic who claims to “see” the spirit of their dead daughter. But there’s so much more going on here. This film is heavy in atmosphere and drips gloom. After watching this film, you feel that there’s no hope in the universe. And just wait until you see that goddamn ending!!

Mind Chasing Sleep

CHASING SLEEP (2000) – This is a little known gem starring Jeff Daniels as a professor who wakes up one morning to find his wife never came home the night before. As he searches to find out what happened to her he is stricken with insomnia. As his sleep deprivation gets worse and worse, reality and hallucinations merge together. Writer-director Michael Walker fucks around with the viewer until we get a great reveal at the end. I was way impressed with Daniel’s performance; I didn’t know he had it in him.

These are some of my favorite mind fuck flicks.  I know this is an incomplete list, so tell me your favorite mind fuck movie.  You know I wanna hear from you all.

Stay Bloody!!!


Filed under: Blog Special, Horror Lists, New Posting

Happy Birthday to Harry Alan Towers

Shock Till You Drop
Happy Birthday to Harry Alan Towers

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Harry1 SHOCK remembers the late, great producer Harry Alan Towers.

Although he departed this mortal coil in 2009, SHOCK would like to take a moment to recognize the birthday of one of cult cinema’s most storied and important producers, the wild, wonderful gentleman rogue of Eurogenre films, Mr. Harry Alan Towers.

Born on October 19th, 1920 in London, England, Towers led many lives before entering the world of moviemaking, producing and often writing dozens of feature films throughout the 1960’s including the internationally financed and lensed FU MANCHU series and, of course, it was Towers who gave exploitation film legend Jess Franco some of his largest budgets. The Towers/Franco partnership yielded such notable, lavishly produced pictures as the somber women in prison epic 99 WOMEN, the De Sade adaption JUSTINE,  the Christopher Lee witch hunter vehicle THE BLOODY JUDGE and most famously,  COUNT DRACULA, of which Lee famously cited as his favorite of the Dracula films he starred in. Many of these pictures starred his wife, the lovely actress Maria Rohm, who is still alive and well and living in Canada…

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And even though horror fans will remember Towers primarily for these remarkable Franco pictures, his body of work was expansive and fascinating. He literally never stopped working, producing pictures like the Michael Caine thriller BULLET TO BEIJING, the brilliant Anthony Perkins giallo EDGE OF SANITY (co-written by Franco and co-produced by Rohm), the sequel HOWLING IV and DELTA FORCE 3…his list of credits is long and eccentric.

Towers was indeed an eccentric. A larger than life figure who saw the art and science of making movies as one, big globetrotting adventure. Making these celluloid-locked fantasies allowed Towers to live a life of intrigue that echoed the action-packed worlds etched by the authors and storytellers he loved, like Sax Rohmer, Edgar Wallace and Ian Fleming. There was no one else like Harry Alan Towers. And likely, there never will be again…

So Happy Birthday Harry…wherever you are. Thanks for the dreams. :)

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