Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 23, 2020 15:37:18 GMT -5
being a huge fan of Return Of The Living Dead 3, I decided to checkout another movie from the same director... that movie being "Society". what a fantastic movie, absolutely loved the special effects during "the shunting". I decided to blind-buy the Arrow bluray, but I'm so glad I took the gamble on it.
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Ultimo Gallos
Grimlock
Dreams SUCK!Nightmares live FOREVER!
Posts: 14,381
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Post by Ultimo Gallos on Jun 23, 2020 16:54:45 GMT -5
BEAUTY QUEEN BUTCHER (1991) is an SOV horror film from 1991. Four pretty high school girls enter a beauty pageant and then decide to also enter an overweight unpopular classmate purely, Phyllis Loder (Rhona Brody) so they can treat her like shit the whole time. The shit-treating is encouraged by the pageant's snooty chairwoman, Betty Prunish (played to camp perfection by Jim Boggess). As if that weren't bad enough, sometime after the pageant is over, the popular girls sneak into Phyllis's house while she's out and microwave her cat. When Phyllis comes home, she vows to have her revenge on the people who've wronged her... Imagine if Carrie White didn't have psychokinetic powers, was overweight, went to high school in the late 80s, and had her story told by first-and-only-time filmmakers, and said filmmakers didn't take their story all too seriously, and you'll get the vibe of this TWO HOUR LONG shot-on-video epic! While this certainly could have been edited down (the beauty pageant itself takes up the first hour) and the pay-off in the second half is far from a masterpiece of gore, this film still manages to be charming. You can tell the cast and crew had a lot of fun making it, and even though they aren't very experienced they give their all. The weird tangential jokes that spring up from time to time that don't really need to be there and aren't particularly funny take on an anti-comedy kind of humor just in how long they go. I don't know if I've ever called a slasher movie "cute" before, but this one seems to fit the bill. FUN FACT: one of the pretty popular girls is played by Tammy Pescatelli, who would go on to a stand-up comedy career, becoming a finalist on NBC's Last Comic Standing reality competition show in the mid 00s. I really need to watch that one again. Grabbed it cheap years ago and watched it maybe 2 times. Remember it being fairly decent for a shot on VHS movie.
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Ultimo Gallos
Grimlock
Dreams SUCK!Nightmares live FOREVER!
Posts: 14,381
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Post by Ultimo Gallos on Jun 23, 2020 16:56:12 GMT -5
being a huge fan of Return Of The Living Dead 3, I decided to checkout another movie from the same director... that movie being "Society". what a fantastic movie, absolutely loved the special effects during "the shunting". I decided to blind-buy the Arrow bluray, but I'm so glad I took the gamble on it. Been trying to get people to watch Society since it hit VHS. Great film with some amazing practical effects. Pretty sure Screaming Mad George did the FX work.
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Ultimo Gallos
Grimlock
Dreams SUCK!Nightmares live FOREVER!
Posts: 14,381
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Post by Ultimo Gallos on Jun 23, 2020 16:58:49 GMT -5
Ok so I need a distraction. Wanting a new to me horror film to watch.
I have Netflix,Hulu,Amazon Prime,Shudder and most of the free streaming services.
Would rather not see any kind of ghost/paranormal based film,they usually bore me. And prefer it be something made in the last 5 years.
Thanks guys and ladies.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jun 23, 2020 19:12:39 GMT -5
being a huge fan of Return Of The Living Dead 3, I decided to checkout another movie from the same director... that movie being "Society". what a fantastic movie, absolutely loved the special effects during "the shunting". I decided to blind-buy the Arrow bluray, but I'm so glad I took the gamble on it. Been trying to get people to watch Society since it hit VHS. Great film with some amazing practical effects. Pretty sure Screaming Mad George did the FX work. you are correct, I had no clue who SMG was before watching Society, but there is a music video by Screaming Mad George in the special features on the bluray. Can definitely see the similarities in Society and that music video for the effects
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Post by prettynami on Jun 23, 2020 20:14:53 GMT -5
Mmmmm.... Society. Wasn't quite as freaky as all the hype made me believe it was, but still was an amazingly entertaining watch. Great movie to get people to watch so you can enjoy seeing them squirm, lol.
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Ultimo Gallos
Grimlock
Dreams SUCK!Nightmares live FOREVER!
Posts: 14,381
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Post by Ultimo Gallos on Jun 23, 2020 20:30:45 GMT -5
Been trying to get people to watch Society since it hit VHS. Great film with some amazing practical effects. Pretty sure Screaming Mad George did the FX work. you are correct, I had no clue who SMG was before watching Society, but there is a music video by Screaming Mad George in the special features on the bluray. Can definitely see the similarities in Society and that music video for the effects George was this great practical FX artist. Did so many cool effects. And his work always had this "wet" look to it.
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Post by DSR on Jun 24, 2020 23:45:18 GMT -5
you are correct, I had no clue who SMG was before watching Society, but there is a music video by Screaming Mad George in the special features on the bluray. Can definitely see the similarities in Society and that music video for the effects George was this great practical FX artist. Did so many cool effects. And his work always had this "wet" look to it. I talked about Screaming Mad George a bit in my earlier reviews of THE GUYVER and FAUST: LOVE OF THE DAMNED. I love his stuff. Unrelated to that, my viewing of the very Oklahoman BLOOD LAKE has piqued my curiosity about other regional horror films. So I did what I always do when something piques my curiosity: MAKE A LIST! I typed out the names of all 50 states and went in search of films a.) shot entirely within each state, and b.) made by local/independent producers (where possible). I'm also looking specifically for stuff made between 1975-1995 (kind of arbitrarily, and I will venture out of that time frame when I have to). I'm not 100% done, but I've at least got a solid base to start with. I'm really looking for one flick per state, so if any of you folks have any leads on certain states, it'd be much appreciated. Anyway... CLAWS (1977) was shot entirely in Juneau by a company called Alaska Pictures! It starts with a happily married couple, Jason (Jason Evers, BASKET CASE 2) and Chris (Carla Layton) breaking down along a road going through a forest. As Jason walks along the road towards help, he is viciously attacked (but not killed) by a grizzly bear. Over the course of the next five years, the legend of a Devil Bear that attacks people but leaves no tracks grows, while Jason's trauma over the attack is severe that it destroys his marriage. Chris takes her and Jason's pre-teen son Bucky and starts a new life, and a new romance with Howard (Glenn Sipes, DESTINATION INNER SPACE). Howard takes Bucky and a number of other young boys on a Scout trip, and wouldn't ya know it, ol' Devil Bear shows up, giving Howard minor injuries but putting Bucky in critical condition. Now Jason, Howard, and some other locals take it upon themselves to rid the Alaskan forests of the Devil Bear once and for all! In case the title didn't give it away, CLAWS was one of a number of animals attack people films in the wake of JAWS, replacing the shark with a grizzly and the water with the woods. JAWS got serious when it needed to but still allowed room for a sense of fun and adventure. CLAWS, meanwhile, focuses as much on the drama of a deteriorating marriage as it does on the big bear hunt, AND throws in an injured child in the hospital for good measure. There's one scene in which a local Native American (unfortunately played by Italian American Anthony Caruso, THE LEGEND OF GRIZZLY ADAMS) hallucinates a coyote (I think...the people that constructed the fake animal prop didn't do a very good job) and another scene where the bear jumps through a window to attack a group of men (leaving them covered in fake blood but with no wound prostheses) that might be considered fun, but overall the film is too boring and maudlin to be considered a good time.
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Ultimo Gallos
Grimlock
Dreams SUCK!Nightmares live FOREVER!
Posts: 14,381
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Post by Ultimo Gallos on Jun 25, 2020 10:42:29 GMT -5
For MS all you really have is The Beast within. Decent flick and the only one I know of filmed and based in MS.
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Post by DSR on Jun 25, 2020 12:15:05 GMT -5
For MS all you really have is The Beast within. Decent flick and the only one I know of filmed and based in MS. I wasn't sure how much interest there was in that idea. I'm at work right now, but when I get home I'll probably share what I have so far. I do really enjoy THE BEAST WITHIN, though.
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mystermystery
Dennis Stamp
Still in the White Hummer
Posts: 4,369
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Post by mystermystery on Jun 27, 2020 9:07:57 GMT -5
Shudder put up a zombie movie titled YUMMY and it is right in the middle of my definition of "Okay." It has good parts, disturbing parts, and questionable parts with an ending that is a complete toss-up on how you'll take it. A woman wanting a breast reduction goes to a shady hospital because it'll cost less but, surprise, zombies happen causing her, her ring-toting-but-nerve-failing boyfriend, and her mother to try and survive among the nonsensical chaos.
If you really enjoy zombie films, it'd be alright but I don't want to put a seal of approval on it.
Also, here's a video of WWE's Otis discussing his favorite horror film, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
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Ultimo Gallos
Grimlock
Dreams SUCK!Nightmares live FOREVER!
Posts: 14,381
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Post by Ultimo Gallos on Jun 27, 2020 11:17:24 GMT -5
Not sure if I posted this,but currently some Walmarts have that newish Scream Factory Blu Ray of Candyman for 9 bucks. Appears if they get it they get maybe 5 copies. But that is a good price for a damn good film.
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Post by DSR on Jun 29, 2020 1:07:39 GMT -5
Alright, 3 days ago I said I'd post about my 50 states horror idea thingy, but work has kicked my ass and I expected to make a long post, so I held off. Let me start by detailing what all I've done researching for this pet project of mine...
There's two books I've used: "Regional Horror Films, 1958-1990: A State-by-State Guide With Interviews" by Brian Albright and "Analog Nightmares: The Shot On Video Horror Films of 1982-1995". Now I don't own either of these books, but you can look through a few pages of each on Amazon. Amazon includes the index in their previews, so I went through that and highlighted every film title I found. I then went to IMDB and checked the filming locations of every film I could. For instances where no filming locations were available, I looked at the director's other films to see: a lot of local no-budget filmmakers tend to stick close to home. I also would look into the production company to see if they had anything else (again, local folks don't move too much). When I exhausted those options, I took to googling "horror films made in (insert state here)" and scoured articles until I found something suitable. I haven't gone through every state in this way, but I'm...somewhere with this whole thing.
*deep breath*
With all that out of the way, here's what I have. I'll be as brief as humanly possible with descriptions (should be easy since a bunch of these I haven't watched):
Alabama - JAWS OF SATAN (A JAWS-like film with a giant snake instead of a shark and some religious overtones. While the film was distributed by United Artists, it's listed in the opening credits as "A Bill Wilson Production". Clicking that dude's name on IMDB yields only this film.)
Alaska - CLAWS (See my earlier review)
Arizona - NATAS: THE REFLECTION (Deals with a legend about a gateway to Heaven and Hell. Writer/Director Jack Dunlap works pretty much exclusively in Arizona)
Arkansas - THE DAY IT CAME TO EARTH (A meteor turns people into zombies. Filmed in Little Rock. Director Harry Thomason and writer Paul Fisk are both Arkansans)
California - NIGHT RIPPER! (Mid-80s SOV slasher, where the victims are models. Local director, Jeff Hathcock)
Colorado - THE JAR (About a jar that contains a demon. Filmed in Denver by first-and-last-time director Bruce Toscano)
Connecticut - PSYCHOS IN LOVE (Horror/comedy from local writer/director Gorman Bechard)
Delaware - ZOMBIE ARMY (Soldiers vs. Zombies in an insane asylum. Director Betty Stapleford and writer Roger Scearce's sole credit. Partly filmed in Pennsylvania, so may have to find something else?)
Florida - THE ALIEN DEAD (Another meteor turns people into zombies, this time from Florida man Fred Olen Ray)
Georgia - KISS OF THE TARANTULA (I reviewed this one briefly a few weeks back. IMDB lists this film as having drive-in scenes shot at the Pickwick Drive-in in California, the Regional Horror Films book lists it as being filmed in Georgia. I don't believe a film with this low of a budget would transport it's cast to CA to film 2 short scenes. I think they just took some stock footage of the marquee TO the Pickwick for their own use.)
Hawaii - MAKUA CHARLEY (2013 indie horror about a were-shark. Co-directors Albert and Jayne Cloutier are not originally from Hawaii, but they've live and worked there for many years, so they seem pretty embedded. Pretty much the only horror film I could find made in Hawaii.)
Idaho - THE BEING (A mutant ravages a small-town in Idaho. Not made by locals, but it was Jackie Kong's directorial debut. *shrug*)
Illinois - 555 (SOV slasher from local boys Wally and Roy Koz.)
Indiana - BACKWOODS (Hillbillies murder campers in this late 80s flick from local Dean Crow.)
Iowa - MOMMY (Muscatine, IA native Max Allan Collins made this unofficial THE BAD SEED follow-up in his hometown, with Patty McCormack "reprising" her role.)
Kansas - NIGHT SCREAMS (Insane murderers crash a party. Filmed entirely in Wichita. Writer Mitch Bryan is from Dodge City.)
Kentucky - ABBY (AIP's infamous African American EXORCIST rip-off. Other than some stuff in a cave in Indiana, filmed in Kentucky. Best I could do.)
Louisiana - MARDI GRAS MASSACRE (Title kinda gives it away. Local director Jack Weis gave us this independent flick that seems heavily inspired by Herschell Gordon Lewis's BLOOD FEAST.)
Maine - PET SEMATARY (1989) (The only horror films I can find shot in Maine are Stephen King adaptations. This one at least has the pedigree of King himself writing the screenplay. He's obviously Maine's favorite son, but I'd prefer something more independent. Oh well.)
Maryland - THE GALAXY INVADER (See my review from a week or two ago. Don Dohler is a Baltimore native who made low-budget films with locals.)
Massachussetts - WINTERBEAST (An old Native American demon legend shows up in Newbury. John Cena's too young to overcome these odds. Made by one-time writer/director Christopher Theis.)
Michigan - DEATH BED: THE BED THAT EATS (Infamous film about a bed that eats people, shot at a mansion in Detroit by local George Barry.)
Minnesota - TALES FROM THE CANNIBAL SIDE (Anthology film about cannibals from Minneapolis's Michael W. Johnson)
Mississippi - THE PREMONITION (1976) (A parapsychologist helps a couple of foster parents find their little girl who's been kidnapped by her insane birth mother. Made by a small-time studio.)
Missouri - GOBLIN (SOV monster flick from Kansas City's king of low low budget horror Todd Sheets.)
Montana - SANDMAN (1993) (Man moves into a house and discovers it was built over a burial ground; spirits give him a bad time. Local writer/director Eric Woster tragically died before the film was released)
Nebraska...I don't have anything yet.
Nevada - LAS VEGAS BLOODBATH )(Title gives it away, but this is another SOV slasher-y thing. Writer/director David Schwartz is from the titular city.)
New Hampshire...I don't have anything yet
New Jersey - ALICE, SWEET ALICE (See my earlier review. Writer/director Alfred Sole is from Paterson.)
New Mexico - TRACK OF THE MOON BEAST (Infamous were-reptile film riffed by MST3K. Filmed in New Mexico by low-budget producers.)
New York - BASKET CASE (Iconic gore-fest about separated conjoined twins getting revenge on the doctors that performed the operation. Frank Henenlotter's directorial debut.)
North Carolina - WOLFMAN (1979) (A man deals with a family curse of lycanthropy. Produced by star Earl Owensby, who calls NC home.)
North Dakota...I don't have anything yet.
Ohio - ZOMBIE COP (A cop dies, comes back to life, fights evil. Filmed in Akron by local JR Bookwalter.)
Oklahoma - BLOOD LAKE (See my earlier review.)
Oregon - UNHINGED (When their car breaks down, three women find shelter in a large mansion...it's home to a crazy family. Written and directed by local Don Gronquist.)
Pennsylvania - FLESHEATER (Zombie film from writer/producer/director/star/editor Bill Hinzman, who's most famous for his zombie role in George Romero's NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD. I could've gone with a flick from Romero himself, but by the time he reached my preferred time-frame (1975-1985) he was collaborating with Dario Argento and making fairly big movies. So I went with low budget Bill instead.)
Rhode Island...I don't have anything yet.
South Carolina - VOODOO DAWN (Another zombie film, this time dealing with a voodoo priest and Haitian migrant workers in America. Directorial debut of Steven Fierberg, who isn't from SC, but what can you do?)
South Dakota...I don't have anything yet.
Tennessee - SAVAGE VENGEANCE (Unofficial I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVE follow-up, with Camille Keaton "reprising" her role from the earlier film. Made by low-budgeter Donald Farmer.)
Texas - DEATH BY LOVE (SOV horror about an artist and his stalker. Sole writing/directing/producing credit for Allan Grant, who's usually an actor.)
Utah - DON'T GO IN THE WOODS (Bizarre slasher. Directed by indie filmmaker James Bryan.)
Vermont - DARK AUGUST (An occultist places a curse on a man who accidentally killed his daughter. Filmed by independent producers in Stowe, VT.)
Virginia - REDEEMER: SON OF SATAN (Surreal supernatural slasher about "sinners" at a high school reunion being murdered by a three-thumbed priest. Only film credit for director Constantine Gochis and writer William Vernick.)
Washington...I don't have anything yet.
West Virginia - CHILLERS (1987) (Anthology horror from Martinsburg writer/director Daniel Boyd.)
Wisconsin - BLOOD BEAT (The spirit of a samurai warrior possesses the body of a wife/mother in Wisconsin. One of only two credits from writer/director/editor Fabrice Zaphirotos.)
Wyoming - PRISON (A man put to death by electric chair returns to the prison that housed him 20 years later to exact revenge on the prison guards. Shot at the Old State Prison in Rawlins, with actual inmates of the Wyoming State Penitentiary as extras.)
If anyone is still reading after all of that, I thank you kindly. Any help with this list will be GREATLY appreciated.
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Nr1Humanoid
Hank Scorpio
Is the #3 humanoid at best.
Posts: 5,478
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Post by Nr1Humanoid on Jun 29, 2020 16:26:26 GMT -5
The Visit. 2015.
Demented old mental patients kills a couple of other old folks, takes over their lives and house and terrorizes the grand children who have never met their grand parents before.
I have to admit, I did not see that one coming, expecting a more supernatural explanation.
For a picture that moves so slowly, with scenes where not much happens this sure kept you riveted throughout, not letting you relax until it wraps. It also shows how great horror can be despite having a PG 13 rating. I have never seen a more disgusting movie with a total absence of gore.
And I can definitively see a less hardened horror crowd be scared by this one as the creep factor is at such a high level.
The cast is pretty much perfect with the elder ones giving tour the force performances, the old lady in particular. The girl is an excellent actress showing a wide range of emotions. And you would think a modern teenage Vanilla Ice would grate on the nerves but the boy is very likeable.
Easily the directors best since his debut, probably owing a lot to getting a lot of artistic control without a studios "creative" input. Particularly impressive for a found footage style picture.
Lastly, I am glad I finished my bucket of chocolate before the diapers showed up.
5 faeces faces out of 5. Loved it (the film that is).
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Post by prettynami on Jun 29, 2020 17:24:25 GMT -5
Alright, 3 days ago I said I'd post about my 50 states horror idea thingy, but work has kicked my ass and I expected to make a long post, so I held off. Let me start by detailing what all I've done researching for this pet project of mine... ... If anyone is still reading after all of that, I thank you kindly. Any help with this list will be GREATLY appreciated. That sound's like a lot of fun. Good luck! You'll finish in 5,000 years!
I wish I could help, but compared to you all "encyclopedia's of horrors" on here I am but a youngling. I will now be looking to see if some of those ones you mentioned are floating about the internet for viewing... Stealing all your hard work. Muahaha.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Jun 29, 2020 17:25:03 GMT -5
Not sure if I posted this,but currently some Walmarts have that newish Scream Factory Blu Ray of Candyman for 9 bucks. Appears if they get it they get maybe 5 copies. But that is a good price for a damn good film. went to my local Sunrise and they had Candyman for $20 (Canadian), but still worth it to upgrade my old DVD copy. Also picked up with Candyman: - An American Werewolf In London - House On Haunted Hill (1999) - Land Of The Dead - Teen Wolf - Texas Chain Saw Massacre (steelbook) I can't be bothered with all these different streaming services, and love hunting for movies.
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Post by DSR on Jun 29, 2020 17:37:02 GMT -5
Alright, 3 days ago I said I'd post about my 50 states horror idea thingy, but work has kicked my ass and I expected to make a long post, so I held off. Let me start by detailing what all I've done researching for this pet project of mine... ... If anyone is still reading after all of that, I thank you kindly. Any help with this list will be GREATLY appreciated. That sound's like a lot of fun. Good luck! You'll finish in 5,000 years! I wish I could help, but compared to you all "encyclopedia's of horrors" on here I am but a youngling. I will now be looking to see if some of those ones you mentioned are floating about the internet for viewing... Stealing all your hard work. Muahaha.
For the sake of brevity (haha!) I gave you guys one film from each state that I had. Some of those states I've found more than one film that qualifies just in case something proves difficult to get a hold of. Also, what I have so far only took me about a month (from when I reviewed BLOOD LAKE). This is an idea I've had since I reviewed the unrelated film BLOOD HOOK back in 2015, and only now got serious about it. BLOOD HOOK (1986) - Just a few years before becoming the producer and original Gypsy of Mystery Science Theater 3000, Jim Mallon directed this oddball slasher film (and even hired future "Tom Servo" Kevin Murphy as key grip). Originally made as MUSKIE MADNESS, retitled when Troma picked it up for distribution We begin with an idyllic summer scene: a young boy and his grandfather standing on a dock, listening to smooth jazz on a nearby record player. Off in the distance, the soothing buzz of cicadas can be heard. Suddenly, the grandfather is seemingly pulled by an unseen force into the water, never to be seen again! Seventeen years later, that young boy is now an adult. Peter is his name, and he's returning to the place where his grandfather disappeared all those years ago, in an effort to gain some sense of closure on the incident that has scarred him emotionally all these years. Along for the trip are Peter's friends, Ann, Rodney, and Kiersten. Said friends are also hoping to catch some fish while they're in the area (that area being Hayward, Wisconsin), and they've shown up just in time for Muskie Madness, an annual fishing competition. Soon enough, that force I mentioned earlier rears its unseen but presumably ugly face again, using a GIANT hook to catch people like they're fish and dragging them off to a terrible fate. Soon enough, Peter's going to have a choice to make. Either he overcomes the fear he's held onto for the past seventeen years, or he loses his girlfriend the way he lost his grandfather all those years ago. I'm just gonna come out and say this is a weird movie. The premise of a man catching people with a giant fish hook is quite ludicrous, and some of the kills genuinely play that up. But then the fact that nobody sees the killer despite the fact that he's merely a crazy fisherman makes no sense. There are also kills played as genuine horror setpieces. There are even a couple of visual effects on display that I found genuinely well-done and creepy. It's hard to say whether this is genuinely a horror/comedy or if it's a straight attempt at a horror film that veers into unintentionally funny territory. Peter is played by a young man named Mark Jacobs, and at first his performance simply feels like that of an inexperienced actor. But I think he actually gets better as the film progresses, and it feels to me as though Mark the actor's early awkwardness fits well with Peter the character's perfectly understandable awkwardness as a result of his childhood trauma. So again, was this something intentional or am I simply reading too much into the man's performance? I also found a lot of the side characters interesting. I think it's safe to say we're all pretty familiar with Crazy Ralph from FRIDAY THE 13TH? The weird local who insists no good can come from treading upon territory where bad stuff happens, but is dismissed? BLOOD HOOK has more than a few Crazy Ralphs. Thankfully they're written pretty well, as their rambling amounts to more than just "You're all doomed!" and actually sounds like doomsday prepper, conspiracy theorist crazytalk. More interesting is that instead of showing up once and then disappearing, a couple of them actually prove helpful! These character play into a larger point that I thought made BLOOD HOOK enjoyable. Camp Crystal Lake seemed like it could have been anywhere, in an effort to make it seem as though FRIDAY THE 13TH could've happened to anyone. That's great. BLOOD HOOK and its local crazies and its fascination with Muskie Madness seems very specific to Wisconsin. And that's great in a different way, as it sets this slasher curiosity apart from the pack with its peculiar specificity. 3.7 out of 5 stars. BLOOD HOOK is a fun watch.
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Post by DSR on Jun 29, 2020 18:34:23 GMT -5
And I've just added 4 films to my list, a little outside of the timeframe I'm looking for, but I'll take what I can get.
Nebraska - KOLOBOS (1999) (Strangers live together in a house for an experiment, are killed off by a mysterious entity. Shot in Omaha.)
Rhode Island - INKUBUS (2011) (A demon, played by Robert Englund, terrorizes a police station. Wikipedia notes the film was produced by "a fully funded film production company that started by established Rhode Island businessman and entrepreneur Chad A. Verdi".)
South Dakota - HEX (1973) (When a biker attempts to rape a Native American woman, her elder sister places a curse on him and his crew. Newspaper clippings estimate the film was 80% shot in SD before weather forced them to move to CA to finish up. IMDB searching South Dakota films reveals very little from there, so this is it for me.)
Washington - HUNTING GROUNDS (2015) (Amateur hunters vs. sasquatches. Writer/director John Portanova is from WA.)
Special thanks on those bottom 3 to an anonymous tip. I mean, he hit me up through PM. If he wants to take credit, I'll let him do so.
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Ultimo Gallos
Grimlock
Dreams SUCK!Nightmares live FOREVER!
Posts: 14,381
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Post by Ultimo Gallos on Jun 30, 2020 9:09:33 GMT -5
Not sure if I posted this,but currently some Walmarts have that newish Scream Factory Blu Ray of Candyman for 9 bucks. Appears if they get it they get maybe 5 copies. But that is a good price for a damn good film. went to my local Sunrise and they had Candyman for $20 (Canadian), but still worth it to upgrade my old DVD copy. Also picked up with Candyman: - An American Werewolf In London - House On Haunted Hill (1999) - Land Of The Dead - Teen Wolf - Texas Chain Saw Massacre (steelbook) I can't be bothered with all these different streaming services, and love hunting for movies. Not a bad haul.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Jun 30, 2020 21:04:11 GMT -5
with 161 pages I'm sure it's been discussed here, but I promise I did do a search and came up empty. Anyone wanna give their thoughts on "From Beyond"?
tomorrow's Canada Day but hopefully my copy should show up later this week. After viewing the documentary "In Search Of Darkness", From Beyond was instantly near the top of my must-watch movies
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