Thursday, November 19, 2015

TV Recap: AMERICAN HORROR STORY: HOTEL Episode 507, ‘Flicker’

Shock Till You Drop
TV Recap: AMERICAN HORROR STORY: HOTEL Episode 507, ‘Flicker’

AHS-Hotel-Flicker-2-555x347

American Horror Story: Hotel Episode 507 Recap – Flicker SHOCK recaps last night’s chilling episode of AMERICAN HORROR STORY: HOTEL.

Remodeling has begun on the Hotel Cortez. The construction guys are alarmed that they found a steel wall hiding something that wasn’t on any blueprints. Will doesn’t care and instructs them to tear into it. Behind it the construction workers find a long-abandoned hallway that smells like death. Something moves in the background. In a second, the men are set upon by two severely malnourished vampires. Who are these vampires? How did they get there? 

To find out, we must go back to 1925. The Countess was a movie extra, desperate to leave her mark on the world by becoming a star. She is flattered when the film’s star, Rudolph Valentino, invited her back to his house that night. He is married, but the rumor mill claims he is in the middle of a divorce. The Countess arrives at his home, completely in awe of Valentino. Before they dine, they dance a seductive tango when Valentino’s wife, Natacha Rambova, comes down the stairs. They both calm the Countess, promising that their “divorce” was at the behest of the studio. The Countess is taken with both of them. The tango continues with all three, and before long they end up in bed together.

A few months later, the Countess attends the swanky opening party of the Hotel Cortez with an actress friend of hers. She has been carrying on with the Valentinos in private, and her friend is dying to know who her new beau is. Mr. March makes a toast to his new hotel, and catches the Countess’ eye. A man bursts in with a newspaper, screaming that Valentino is dead, and the Countess runs from the room. Her world is falling apart, as she was truly in love with both Rudolph and Natacha, and she prepares to fling herself out the window. Before she can, March grabs her from behind and promises never to let go.

b35a03c863834e95ce90f6f4f7b56373

Shortly thereafter, the Countess marries March in a simple ceremony in the hotel lobby. She only married him because she needed to be taken care of, but she admits she was attracted to his dark side. They have rough, choking sex, and one night she walks in on him carving up a hobo. Rather than be horrified, she is turned on. The Countess encourages him to kill wealthier victims, so that she may get their jewels – then they both win. And one more thing: next time, she wants to watch.

Months go by. The Countess shows up to Valentino’s crypt every day, dressed in black veils, to deliver a single red rose. (A mysterious “woman in black” used to do the same at the real Valentino’s crypt.) This time, Natacha is there to greet her. The Countess is offended that she hasn’t heard from her former lover since Valentino’s death, but she has a bigger surprise: Valentino isn’t really dead. Rudolph steps out from the shadows to reveal himself to the shocked Countess, and tell his tale.

While touring the country to promote his final film, The Son of the Sheik, he noticed a strange man eyeballing him. He was not part of the press, and he never said a word to Valentino; he just watched him from afar. Valentino began to think he was losing his mind. But the man finally revealed himself to Valentino. This was German director F.W. Murnau. While researching his masterpiece, Nosferatu, he went to the Carpathian mountains where he discovered the “blood disorder” – in the middle of an insane orgy, naturally. Murnau had been watching Valentino and wanted to bestow this gift of immortality to him. Valentino accepts. When he returned returned home, his studio reported he was ill, bringing Natacha to his bedside. He bestowed upon her the “gift” and faked his own death. Buried in his tomb is his stunt double. Now, Valentino and Natacha want to give the Countess this gift and travel the world together. She agrees.

AHS-Hotel-Flicker-2-555x347

But unfortunately, March was watching from afar.

On the day that Rudolph and Natacha were to meet the Countess at the train station, March showed up at their house with a couple of goons, who beat the pair unconscious. When they wake, they find they are in a room at the Hotel Cortez. The window has been bricked up. Out in the hallway, they discover every other room in the hall has been bricked up. And the end of the hall? Hidden behind a thick sheet of metal, behind more bricks and drywall. March has sealed the vampires in the hotel.

So it was Rudolph and Natacha who attacked the construction workers. They then attack a real estate agent, but they are still hungry and weak. Across the hall are three big Thunder From Down Under performers. After drinking them all down, they finally feel sated. Dressed in sleek new clothes, with a healthy glow, they stroll out the front door of the hotel, with Iris watching them curiously. 

The Countess and March have an arrangement: monthly dinner dates. This solution seems to be a happy compromise between the two – but the Countess doesn’t know about her sire. She requested their dinner a week early because she has an announcement: she and Will are getting married. He fakes support and enthusiasm, but asks that when she murder him, to do it off property. How uncomfortable would it be if they kept running in to each other for all eternity? She suggests that she might not kill this one, and tells him that she never loved him, which she has never kept secret. This enrages March and he takes great pleasure in telling her what happened to her first love.

American Horror Story: Hotel Episode 507 Recap – Flicker

Elsewhere, John has checked himself into the West Los Angeles Health Center, a public psych ward. Alex wants to put him into a nicer, private hospital, but John is fine here. It turns out that he is fine here because this is all a ruse. He had gone back to the department to do some more work on the Ten Commandment Killer. John tried to find out from his partner who the suspect was they had in custody. When Hahn doesn’t answer, John tries to beat the information out of him. In the melee, he sees West Los Angeles Health Center in one of the files.

Now that he is here, he knocks out the single security guard in charge of the criminal unit and goes to room 153. Using stolen keys, he opens the door to find a young girl standing there, motionless. She introduces herself as Wren, and she and John seem to be having two separate conversations. She “doesn’t want to feed anymore,” and John, thinking she was at the scene of the crime and in shock, insists that she doesn’t have to be scared, that he will protect her from the man who did these horrible things. Of course, we know that it was Wren who did those “horrible things.” She was there for all the murders, and says she wasn’t forced to do anything, but promises to take him to the man’s house if he gets her out of there. She repeats that she is tired of “this” and the “feeding” and basically of all the vampire stuff – without being oblique enough for John to pick up on what is going on. John bonds with her by telling her about the trouble with his own daughter. This warms Wren up enough to tell him about her creepy father, who used to tell her that he “couldn’t wait for her to grow up.” The things he said, and the way he said it made her stomach hurt. One day (in 1986) he went into the Hotel Cortez and left her in the hot car. She was ready to die, but suddenly the glass shatters and the Countess is there. We see this in flashbacks; John thinks her dad is the killer, but Wren assures him he died long ago.

John and Wren sneak out of the hospital. Now he wants to be taken to the killer. “We need to go home, to the Hotel Cortez,” Wren insists. John promises to kill the man if need be. Wren really likes John. “I hate to see it end.” She runs into the street and is flattened by a big rig.

The post TV Recap: AMERICAN HORROR STORY: HOTEL Episode 507, ‘Flicker’ appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Remember When Dennis Hopper Was on Letterman Talking BLUE VELVET (And TEXAS CHAINSAW 2)?

Shock Till You Drop
Remember When Dennis Hopper Was on Letterman Talking BLUE VELVET (And TEXAS CHAINSAW 2)?

Bvelvet2

Bvelvet3

Flashing back to a vintage Letterman interview with the late, great Dennis Hopper discussing Lynch’s BLUE VELVET.

I’m really having fun with these “Remember When”  blasts, SHOCK’s ongoing series in which I dig through the dense, often treacherous YouTube jungle in search of vintage clips featuring mainstream pop culture outlets discussing horror and dark fantasy film culture…usually negatively.

It’s partially an exercise in nostalgic self-indulgence, but it’s also fascinating to map the lifespan of a film, from common perceptions upon release to the way we see the picture now. Horror films need at least a decade to become what they will become. If a picture can find its cult and endure beyond that initial ten-year window, then it’s immortal. More contemporary critics should consider this when they decimate a new genre film…

Speaking of immortal, we lost actor, director and iconoclast Dennis Hopper in 2010 and, though sad, it wasn’t exactly a tragedy. Hopper’s intense, chemically-drenched lifestyle in his 1960’s/70’s heyday is the stuff of legend and should have rightly wiped him out 30 years earlier. But in 1985/86, the man had a virtual professional rebirth, getting clean and sober and starring in three coal-black motion pictures that were diverse, bizarre and unforgettable: THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE PART 2,  RIVER’S EDGE…and David Lynch’s BLUE VELVET.

Bvelvet

And although CHAINSAW and EDGE gave Hopper meaty roles, with ample room to amplify and explore his own storied strangeness while etching rich characters on-screen, it was his work as the deranged, perverted and completely dangerous Frank Booth in Lynch’s thundering surrealist psychodramatic noir that really put him back on the map.

It put Lynch back on the map too, after the crushing defeat that was 1984’s DUNE. BLUE VELVET put the weirdness that Lynch was experimenting with in his early short films, his 1978 industrial-strength shocker ERASERHEAD and the steampunk-tinted melancholy of his Mel Brooks-produced THE ELEPHANT MAN, into sharp, sickening focus and truly defined the style that he would exploit over the next three decades making movies and art.

And in the eye of BLUE VELVET’s storm is Hopper, whose lethal Frank sucks on the titular fabric while huffing gas through a ventilator and sexually assaulting the woman (Isabella Rossellini) he is obsessed with. Simply put, it’s the ultimate Hopper performance in the ultimate David Lynch joint.

So with that, let’s dial back the clock to 1986. The show was NBC’s Late Night With David Letterman. Letterman was at his peak of popularity and in the prime of his celebrated edge. No one was funnier, weirder and cooler than 80’s Letterman. Well, except 80’s Dennis Hopper…

In this amazing clip, Hopper and Letterman – who is obviously in awe of Hopper’s performance – get into great detail discussing his turn as Frank Booth in BLUE VELVET, revealing some great insight into how Hopper helped bring that character to life. He also discusses his work in RIVER’S EDGE and even touches on CHAINSAW 2.

It’s a great interview. And will make you want to watch BLUE VELVET again immediately, something I plan to do as soon as I press ‘publish’.

Enjoy…

The post Remember When Dennis Hopper Was on Letterman Talking BLUE VELVET (And TEXAS CHAINSAW 2)? appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

SyFy Channel Greenlights Horror Anthology Series, Channel Zero

Horror Movies, Horror News, Horror Reviews | Anything Horror
SyFy Channel Greenlights Horror Anthology Series, Channel Zero
According to Variety.com, the SyFy Channel has given the greenlight to a horror anthology series, CHANNEL ZERO. The series will feature a different story each season, and will begin with CHANNEL ZERO: CANDLE COVE, based on the story written by Kris Straub. [CANDLE COVE] is based on a man’s obsessive recollections of a mysterious children’s television program from the 1980’s, … Continue reading

Filmmaker Paul Hough Unleashes Terrifying New YouTube Channel

Shock Till You Drop
Filmmaker Paul Hough Unleashes Terrifying New YouTube Channel

DTA2

DTA1 Filmmaker Paul Hough launches terrifying viral video channel.

Writer/Director Paul Hough (THE HUMAN RACE, son of THE LEGEND OF HELL HOUSE director John Hough) has just announced his latest project…

DON’T TURN AROUND is a terrifying new YouTube channel launched by the filmmaker and his collaborators in a bid to create original, terrifying short horror films and bursts of audio/video strangeness.

“One of the unique things we’re going to do is create horror videos to go viral,” says Hough.

“Videos that aren’t real, but that people will think are. We will not only give birth to Creepypastas but place these videos innocuously across the internet. Only those watching DON’T TURN AROUND will be in on it and know the truth.”

You can watch DON’T TURN AROUND’s first video, DADDA below and the latest viddy, THE VAN below that…

For more on DTA go to the official site.

The post Filmmaker Paul Hough Unleashes Terrifying New YouTube Channel appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

NECA’s Life-Size Facehugger & Egg: What Every Horror Fan Needs!!

Horror Movies, Horror News, Horror Reviews | Anything Horror
NECA’s Life-Size Facehugger & Egg: What Every Horror Fan Needs!!
With Christmas quickly approaching I know my family often has trouble finding great horror-themed gifts for me. This year, though, their shopping is done before it began. NECA has announced that they will be making a life size Xenomorph Egg that a life size Facehugger can fit inside. YES!! This is a must have in my list. Unfortunately, … Continue reading

Trailer Drops for the Possession Tale, Anguish

Horror Movies, Horror News, Horror Reviews | Anything Horror
Trailer Drops for the Possession Tale, Anguish
I think it is pretty safe to say that I’ve made more than a few jabs about how stale the zombie sub-genre has gotten, and about how overused and annoying most found footage films have become. These two sub-genres need some new blood for sure. But what about the possession sub-genre? This horror trope has been … Continue reading

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

FRANKENSTEIN FAIL! The 5 Worst Frankenstein Flicks Ever!

Shock Till You Drop
FRANKENSTEIN FAIL! The 5 Worst Frankenstein Flicks Ever!

FrankensteinFAIL

FrankensteinFail2 SHOCK digs up 5 failed Frankenstein films that will blow your mind.

With the November 25th release of director Paul McGuigan’s Max Landis-scripted, ultra-revisionist take on the house that Mary Shelley built, VICTOR FRANKENSTEIN, upon us, fright fans are wondering just what in the blue blazes to expect.

Certainly from the trailer, we can glean that Fox is trying to channel some the kinetic energy of Guy Ritchie’s overly stylized SHERLOCK HOLMES movies into their bouncy, multiplex-friendly riff on the FRANKENSTEIN tale, with pretty actors (Daniel Radcliffe and James McAvoy) making whatever bio-horrors happen easier to swallow.

But no matter how VICTOR FRANKENSTEIN fares, no matter how critics or audiences respond to its charms, it’s a safe bet that it will be BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN compared to the five Frankenstein films we’ve selected below.

Indeed readers, these are the worst FRANKENSTEIN movies we’ve ever seen,  bastardized insults to ” The Modern Prometheus” of Shelley’s text and slipshod excuses to pervert it to suit their cash-grabbing ends.

Fun? Sure! Good? Well…you decide. Here we go…

FRANKENSTEIN’S DAUGHTER (1958)
Before he accepted the offer to sail to BLOOD ISLAND and become a major player in the emerging Filipino genre flick scene, John Ashley was being groomed by AIP to be a teen heartthrob. And to be honest, his James Dean-meets-Elvis-lite presence in Richard Cunha’s fun but dumb revisionist Frankenstein riff FRANKENSTEIN’S DAUGHTER, is one of its strengths. Donald Murphy plays Oliver Frankenstein, hiding out as an assistant to kindly professor and secretly turning his cutie pie niece (Sandra Knight) into a buck-toothed monster that runs around at night spooking kids. Meanwhile, he’s quietly stapling together a new monster from pieces of murdered men. He’s a bad dude. And this is most certainly a bad Frankenstein movie…

DR. FRANKENSTEIN ON CAMPUS (1970)
This bizarre Canadian film is a daft excuse for a horror movie and while it’s a flunk as a Frankenstein flick, it sure is a doozy of a head trip on its own terms. Originally titled FLICK (we know this because the word FLICK remains on the bottom corner of the screen for the entire opening of the picture), DR. FRANKENSTEIN ON CAMPUS stars future Canadian TV weatherman Robin Ward as a young Baron Frankenstein, blacklisted from his native Austria and hiding out as a student at the University of Toronto. There, he conducts brain experiments on cats and dogs and has weird psychedelic sex with his comely girlfriend before launching a reign of terror on his classmates and the faculty. Oddly, the similarities between this and RE-ANIMATOR are interesting (and almost certainly accidental). Totally obscure and truly fascinating, this is a super-silly Shelley stunt that stands alone.

DRACULA VS. FRANKENSTEIN (1971)
Starting production as THE BLOOD SEEKERS, this turgid Al Adamson offering stars declining (rapidly) Hollywood star J. Carol Naish as a descendant of the original Frankenstein who reluctantly teams up with the worst Dracula in cinema history: a bearded, white-faced ponce who says all his dialogue through an echo-chamber and is played by a dude named Zandor Vorkov. Frankenstein’s assistant is played by a boozed-to-oblivion Lon Chaney Jr. and the great Angelo Rossito from FREAKS and MAD MAX 3 adds a dash of class to what is a typically tacky bit of Adamson oddness. But man, what a cast, including TWIN PEAKS vet and Adamson regular Russ Tamblyn and monster magazine legend Forry Ackerman.

FRANKENSTEIN’S CASTLE OF FREAKS (1974)
On the surface this Italian exploitation offering looks like it can’t lose. Oscar winner Michael Dunn is in it as a horny dwarf, the great Rosanno Brazzi operatically slums to play Dr. Frankenstein, Eurotrash legend Boris Lugosi (aka Salvatore Baccaro) plays a monstrous caveman and the entire pudding is stirred by international genre movie kingpin Dick Randall (LIVING DOLL, PIECES). But my God, is this flick dull. I’ve seen it a dozen times (because I have serious problems) and I cannot remember anything about it, save for a bit of topless hot springs frolicking and some reasonably handsome production design. Frankenfail supreme!

FRANKENSTEIN ISLAND (1981)
By the early 1980’s, Hollywood icon John Carradine would sign on to star in any piece of crap offered to him. FRANKENSTEIN ISLAND isn’t any piece of crap, however. It’s sub-atomic dump of the lowest order and it comes courtesy of Jerry Warren, the dude who gave the world another dead-things junkfest in 1960’s TEENAGE ZOMBIES. Carradine stars as the disembodied, floating head of the original Dr. Frankenstein who gives sage advice to his daughter, Sheila Frankenstein Von Helsing(!), a nutter who is up to no good on the titular island. Cameron Mitchell wanders around in a daze in what is honestly one of the most insane movies I have ever seen. Recommended as the ultimate F*** you to the Frankenstein mythos.

What are some of the worst Frankenstein films you’ve ever seen?

The post FRANKENSTEIN FAIL! The 5 Worst Frankenstein Flicks Ever! appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.