Another trend setter.  Carpenter’s masterpiece centering on the immortal, knife-wielding psychopath, Michael Myers.  Much creepiness and terror as Myers stalks Jamie Lee Curtis and her friends.  Lots of shadows, lurking, mayhem, frights.  A true classic.
Here is a disaster flick with an unhappy New Year’s theme.  A luxury cruiser on its final voyage has the misfortune of confronting and ending up on the losing end of an earthquake generated massive tidal wave.  The net effect is that the USS Poseiden is flipped upside down by the wave and as a result everything down is now up and vise versa.  A group of survivors of the initial disaster then mount an effort to find a way to be saved by the eventual rescue crews.  What proceeds from this point is a potboiler of clashing ideologies and [More]
  This is the full movie version of Tales From The Crypt (1972).  A couple of nice segments in this British horror anthology.  Fantastic ghoul makeup applied to Peter Cushing.
I have come across this story a couple of times and see it as a truly chilling account of hunters turning into prey.  Hunters off in a very remote wilderness “trespass” across an unknown creature’s domain.  Things go very downhill from there. This story is given an air of credibility when it is discovered that this tale was relayed to Theodore Roosevelt by an old Mountain Man and included in Roosevelt’s book, “The Wilderness Hunter”. After reading it several times over the years, it has yet to loose its fearsome, chilling effect.  Probably my favorite old time Bigfoot report.  Of [More]
  Christopher Lee commented that he welcomed this take as Dracula because it was a role that followed the novel source material closer than the Hammer Film’s series which brought Lee to international stardom.  Lee also had a chance to emote beyond the various snarls, grunts and invectives that the Hammer Dracula required.  I look back fondly on this film, admittedly. a low budget affair.  Yes.  The interior sets look a bit prefabricated and cheap and spray on spider webs adorn Dracula’s castle to an uncomfortable degree but there are many charming exterior sequences that sustain my interest.  There is [More]
What a cool concept!  A haunted house walk through at Universal Studios in Hollywood of psycho Michael Myers’ various killing grounds.  In this scenario, you go toward the hulking Shape and he and other scary figures  jump out at you.  No nasty slashing or blood spilling is involved.  You may soil your shorts but at least you’re doing this in the dark.  You may get away with no one seeing it.  
Two of Hollywood’s most beautiful stars at the time, Kevin Costner and Madeline Stowe, engage in an illicit affair in this Tony Scott directed film.  The scorned husband of Stowe, Anthony Quinn, uncovers the truth and orchestrates an unremittingly grim beat down upon the two lovers.  Shockingly violent and ugly, this is a movie plot conjured out of nightmares and grim fantasies.  There are no hero saves the day moments in store, just a final, sickening realization within the main characters that maybe it would have been better to have just stayed the course and avoided the ruination of their lives that [More]
  Here are some creepy examples of unexpected, ghostly patrons photobombing the living’s photo ops.  Plenty of examples provided here to get your hackles up.  Another frightening element to this video is the narrator’s robotic, sing song tone.  The entertainment value of this post just went up!
Lifeforce has always been an enjoyable viewing experience for me.  Directed by Tobe Hooper of Texas Chainsaw Massacre fame, this flick straddles the line between falling into either the science fiction or horror movie camps.  It ends up having elements of both in its delivery.  An international space crew observing Halley’s Comet become aware of an unidentified object hidden within the comet’s tail.  The crew decides to investigate the object up close and then things start to get really interesting.  I think the first thirty minutes of this movie are brilliantly paced.  I love that portion of the movie but [More]
Pretty harrowing moviefare as a man and his son wander a wasteland attempting to survive a post apocalyptic North American landscape.  The cause of the cataclysm is never fully divulged.  We do know that most plant and animal life has been wiped out and resources such as food and water are in short supply.  Based on Cormac McCarthy’s book of the same name.
When you get right down to it, there are a ton of potential choices for Halloween movie viewing marathons.  For the sake of brevity, I am choosing just five selections which will still take you a good day to get through so plan ahead to take the day off from your work or school grind!  Wolfen (1981) – a cop is assigned to investigate a series of animal attacks.  Is there a pack of werewolves on the loose in modern day New York?  Some creepy situations and a suspenseful story should keep you entertained throughout.  Albert Finney and Gregory Hines [More]
Edited NASA CLIPPY 071613 movie Unidentified space junk floating by the space shuttle, the Russian space station Mir, Skylab, Apollo spacecraft and transiting the Moon’s surface.  Who’s to say what these films truly reveal?  Judging by the abundance of activity displayed, space is one crowded place.
The premise of this queasy little tale is that climate change, aka global warming, has caused the partial thawing of a wooly mammoth up in Northern climes that is infested with an ancient parasite that emerges ready and willing to infest a New Age.  The roughly cockroach sized bugs burrow under your skin and lay eggs that basically feed on their host and then emerge ready to find a new home.  This movie is definitely not for the squeamish!  Yes.  I felt my skin crawl on more than one occasion. There are numerous grotesque set pieces throughout this flick. All [More]
A perfect document of an intense rock band performing live.  Here are The Who performing “Won’t Get Fooled Again”, live, as part of a filmed segment to be included in a documentary about the band’s history, “The Kids Are Alright”.  Jeff Stein directed the documentary and caught and edited this spirited performance of the song which originally appeared on their studio release, “Who’s Next”.  The Who have always excelled as a live act and this is surely one of their most classic live documents.  Keith Moon tirelessly rattles out his drum parts.  Roger Daltrey shrieks and howls his way through the [More]