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Day 7 – Goosebumps (2015)

Goosebumps (film) - Wikipedia

2015

In the last 25 years, I have not experienced the same intense amount of peer pressure that I had as a kid to read the Goosebumps books. As it will come as a shock to zero people reading this, I was absolutely terrified of them. I ended up reading exactly three titles from start to finish, and I still remember feeling very uneasy. I think I read 14 Baby-Sitter’s Club books to level out. Give me 13-year-olds in charge of 9-year-olds on a deserted island over those terrifying stories. Never mind, all 1990s kids’ book series were messed up. So many absent parents and no cell phones.

I’m going to admit that as an adult, I actually liked this movie. It was fun. But I think we need to start discussing a new rating system and that involves putting another film rating in between PG and PG-13. Frozen is PG. So is You Got Mail. Also Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Either we put more info in these ratings or just abolish them all together. They make zero sense. PG now basically means no boobs, no blood splatter, and no “F-word.” Everything else is on the table! Including plenty of monsters. So. Many. Monsters.

The plot is very meta. Jack Black plays the mysterious next door neighbor to a teenage boy (Zach) and his mom who have moved to this small town after the death of the teenage boy’s dad. Jack Black ends up being the actual R. L. Stine, and he hoards his crazy and his daughter which seems suspicious until you realize he’s a horror writer. Horror writers get a lot of passes once they sell a certain number of novels. Even if the ones for children.

Zach and his new (only) friend Champ sneak into the house because they suspect Stine is holding his daughter, Hannah, hostage. Instead, Zach accidentally unleashes all the monsters that R. L. Stine has every written about by opening the locked manuscripts of each book. Apparently, Stine’s magic wasn’t just infiltrating pre-teens’ nightmares. He was also able to physically manifest every horror he ever wrote about.

The remainder of the film is the four of them chasing down and rounding up the monsters, before they destroy the entire town, and possibly the rest of the world. The only way this can happen is if R. L. Stine writes the book on his magic typewriter. I’m not sure how this works when he needs to actually get his books published, but I have to keep reminding myself this is a kids’ movie. For children. Not for me to be scared of anymore. I’m not scared, I’m an ADULT.

The ending obviously leads to the possibility (definitely) more sequels. Which I may watch. Or I’ll watch the Baby-Sitter’s Club on Netflix again. I prefer my nostalgia without nightmares, thank you.

Scare Rating: 3 out of 10 ghosts

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Day 6 – The Fog (1980)

TheFog.1980TheatricalPoster.jpg

1980

When a film opens with an old timey sea captain baby-sitting children by a campfire, telling them ghost stories, it’s safe to assume the town isn’t exactly on stable footing. For one, the story goes way over the children’s heads. They don’t understand maritime law or leprosy and why John Carpenter likes watching Jamie Lee Curtis get tortured. Some mysteries should be left to adults and lawyers.

Although there’s not a lot of good adults in this town anyways. A small coastal fishing village has somehow stayed alive in Northern California for 100 years. The town believes the charter was established legitimately and by no way had any terrible history. White people get a lot of things wrong, but gosh darn it, they are gold-medal award winning at denial!

A priest (it’s always a priest) discovers his grandfather’s diary in the walls of the church after some masonry falls off the wall. They don’t exactly give the denomination, but if this old dude is Catholic, he shouldn’t have a grandfather that was a priest. But who knows, Episcopalians and Lutherans can be in horror films too; this is still America.

In the old diary, it’s revealed that 6 of the original town founders decided to sink a ship carrying a wealthy man with leprosy and his friends (who also have leprosy). The lepers wanted to leave their current situation and establish a colony just north of the seaside town. The original Karens apparently got together, and decided that ew, no, we don’t want them. Let’s just murder them and steal all their gold, then use the gold to build the town! We know where this is going.

At midnight of the 100 year anniversary of this tragedy, a bunch of mysterious things start happening. There’s also numerous tremors (still California), random glass breaking (salt air can corrode things). A weird fog shows up on the weather radar. And the strangest thing of all: Jamie Lee Curtis hitchhikes right outside of town and gets picked up by a guy who DOESN’T murder her. In fact, they fall in love!

The fog is actual a vessel for bringing in the ghosts of the leper ship. They call them revenants, which I guess is cooler than “leper zombies” which just sounds redundant (no offence to current or future lepers). The leader of these ghouls leads them through the town murdering people with all the tools you would expect to find on an 1880’s ship about to set up a new town: fish hooks, bigger fish hooks, machetes, scythes, hoes, and the occasional saber. The lepers had a mission to make the town pay.

However, in the end, they just wanted 6 dead bodies and the remaining gold. I figure that is a fair deal between priests and lepers gone wrong. I mean they did cheat them out of prime Northern California coastal real estate for 100 years all because they didn’t want lepers to not live just north of their town. They didn’t even want to live IN their town. This is the reason why I think HOA’s were manufactured in hell.

Scare Rating: 5 out of 10 ghosts

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Day 5 – The Exorcism of Emily Rose

The Exorcism of Emily Rose - Wikipedia

2005

Before watching this, I found out it was based on a “true story” about a Catholic girl in Germany in the 1970s. I’m sorry, WHY aren’t we seeing that one? That’s way more scary than some farm girl in “small town modern day America.” Are middle-America Catholics the most pious people in world? Probably not. I’ve met Baptists and Irish grandmothers. In fact I don’t think I’ve ever met another Catholic that doesn’t put their ethnicity before their religion. Like they need to double down on how much they love their mother and their intense guilt.

Obviously I’m not winning anyone over with my theology on this one. My issues with organized religion aside, this film did get one thing very, very right: a Catholic archdiocese will stop at nothing to protect their reputation; even when it was their direction that put everyone in this predicament.

Emily Rose is a young Catholic girl who gets accepted to a nearby university, and against her parents’ hesitation decides to go in order to become a teacher. She’s a pretty, kind, naïve girl. Even without the devil lurking in the bursar’s office, this girl was going to get eaten alive at college no matter what. The possession happens shortly after she decides to go dancing (gasp!) and meets a boy (double gasp!). At first it just seems like Emily developed epilepsy. And perhaps schizophrenia or psychosis. However, her condition gets worse, even under the care of doctors.

It is decided that she will leave college and try to recover at home. Being the pious girl she is, the family allows the local parish priest to counsel her. Honestly, this isn’t a bad idea at the beginning. Many priests are trained to act as social workers and offer guidance. But of course, this is Halloween, not Arbor Day, so we’re about to deal with demons. Multiples. At least 6, which VERY impressive resumes.

The priest decides to perform an exorcism which doesn’t work and Emily ends up dying shortly after. The film is about the trial against the priest, after he is accused of negligent homicide. Not really sure why the parents aren’t up on trial, but that’s not “sexy” for horror movie tropes. Please of parents abuse their kids in real life. We need the fantasy of a priest talking to demons in the middle of a corn field, gosh darnit!

A hard hitting (read: heartless) lawyer (played by Laura Linney) is hired by the archdiocese to defend the priest. Even though the archdiocese OK’d the exorcism, they don’t want to look “silly.” Once the lawyer gets involved, she also starts to become affected by the demons. Or carbon monoxide poisoning. Lots of explanations surround hallucinations. At least that’s what I tell myself because I don’t like the idea of the devil sending minions to take up residence in anyone’s house, much less a lady just trying to do her job.

The ending is what it is, but I had a hard time watching this movie. Literally. Every time I tried to stream it, the TV would reboot or I lost audio or the subtitles glitched on the screen. I’m not saying it was supernatural, but whatever devil was hanging out in my house that day and refused to let my toddler take his afternoon nap: I’ll see you in hell.

Scare Rating: 7 out of 10 ghosts

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Day 4 – The Descent

The Descent (2005) - IMDb

2005

People who are not scientists or vigilante billionaires, but still choose to explore caves….why? The things that are down there spent so many evolutionary reiterations trying to get away from you AND sunlight, and you just go in there with your headlamps and flares and crunchy granola bars and mess with their vibe. They don’t want you there, and this documentary about caves is evidence.

It’s not really a documentary, but I don’t care. Leave the caves alone.

Six extremely attractive women from the UK decide to explore a cave in the Appalachian mountains for a weekend girls trip. If I EVER say that my “weekend girls trip” involves the words “Appalachia” or “spelunking” or “pre-dawn car ride,” I want you all to know I’ve been kidnapped and to call the police. The women know each other, but some better than others. You’ll have to forgive me, but British people all look alike, but I’m pretty sure two are sisters, one is possible the lover of another, and three were best friends before a tragic, gruesome accident one year prior.

They follow all the rules about caving (I know that’s not the correct word, but the other one is hard to spell over and over). They have all the correct gear, file a report with the rangers, remind each other of the procedures, and read up on the cave that’s been explored by thousands of people before. Except it’s the wrong cave. And one of the women (Juno) knew this and did it on purpose. Because she wanted to claim this “unexplored” cave as her own and possibly name it after herself or one of the other ladies. Fucking British and their innate need to still colonize everything.

Of course, it’s not just that the cave has been unexplored and therefore unknown, it’s also inhabited by a sub-human species that knows privileged British ladies are delicious. But throughout the women’s harrowing ordeal of trying to escape the slimy Bat Boy cosplayers, you realize that in the darkness, we all become a little sub-human. There’s a LOT of backstabbing (literally), secrets spilled over how shitty they all are, and a lot sacrificing each other as bait. In the end, the comradery that existed before their trip was obviously bullshit. You don’t need an infrared camera to see that.

By the middle of the movie, I was over it. Mostly because the jump scares and gross ways to maim with caving hooks got tiresome. I was also mildly disappointed the ladies didn’t try to work together against the fine young cannibals. I guess when a girls trip starts with a lie, it’s hard to reel that back in.

One final note that I was very happy to read: they didn’t film in any underground caverns. It was all a set. So thankfully, no actual caves were harmed in the making of this movie that’s almost exactly like another movie that came out a few months later.

Scare Rating: 6 out of 10 ghosts

Day 2 – Boys From County Hell

Boys from County Hell (2020) - IMDb

2021

At least once a week, I land on Irish TikTok. It’s not hard. If my phone is reading my face, it knows that I have the skin tone of a haunted Victorian doll, and therefore must hail from the sunless isle of Erin. I love it though. I’ve learned more about the Irish and Celtic customs in my two years on that scroll, then I have from 37 years of family stories. However, even with spooky season here, I was not prepared for this film.

For starters, I saw it had an actress from household favorite Derry Girls, so I immediately thought it would be a funny horror film like Shaun of the Dead or The World’s End. It’s day two. I need to stop assuming things.

The description make it sounds like a couple of inept construction crews accidently dig up a grave of a vampire and chaos ensues. Okayyyyy that’s not it at all. For one, they all know there is a large pile of cursed rocks because they’ve lived here their entire lives. For two, the main character Eugene, keeps finding skulls in a nearby farmhouse he’s renovating. I don’t want to perpetuate the myth that blue collar Irish are dumb, but they aren’t doing themselves a service. And lastly, everyone is either angry or drunk all the time. This is easy picking weather for any monster, but especially vampires.

This vampire, named Abhartach, doesn’t change people though. The rocks he is buried under is what makes you a vampire. So you just have to impale yourself on his craggy gravesite, and voila! you are now a vampire! That’s way easier than the MLM-like vampire life. However, in order to stay alive, you have to literally drain the blood from any human orifice with magical “sucking from afar” powers. These scenes were gross. The movie should just be called “Bloody Hell.”

After one of Eugene’s friends is changed into a vampire, the remaining intact friends have to figure out quickly what to do to save the town. Even though they were the ones that moved the rocks in the first place. They try all the methods with the stakes and the bullets and the beheadings and the sunlight, and nothing works. There’s a nice little twist at the end to explain why they were able to finally slay the lurking creature, but it required extra stomach-churning special effects.

I was vaguely aware of the legend this type of vampire–remember, there are many types and the least important are the sparkly ones–was based on. Luckily, my husband who is more wellversed in folklore than I will ever be, had to remind me when the film was over. If my terrible review convinces you to watch this movie, I suggest reading up on Abhartach before watching it. Also keep the captions on. I know we shouldn’t make fun of people’s accents but bloody hell, it feels like the wee Irish cubs are just making up words most days.

Scare Rating: 5 out of 10 ghosts

Day 1 – The Addams Family (2019)

The Addams Family (2019) - IMDb

2019

I admit it. I’m tiptoeing back into scary movies, but also children could read my blog and they don’t deserve to be left out. Who am I kidding? Kids today are scary. They know how to code. They know ALL of the names of the Paw Patrol characters and how their jobs relate to a larger problem of authoritarianism. They know how to say “red” and “blood” and “maniac” in 5 different languages thanks to YouTube. I don’t ever want to be on the wrong side of a child’s anger.

Even though I’m loathe to like scary things, I did love the 1990’s The Addams Family and sequel and have grown to appreciate their appeal the older I get. So when I heard they were remaking it, I got excited when I started to see the cast announcement, knowing nothing else:

Oscar Isaac (yes, perfect little weirdo he will do great), Catherine O’Hara & Martin Short (never miss a chance to see them), Charlize Theron (…ok interesting choice), Snoop Dogg….Chloë Grace Moretz (what–she’s like 22), ohh dangit! This is an animated movie. I’m not the target demographic. Carry on.

But I saw this come on Hulu when my husband reminded me it existed (because our devices are always listening…) and decided to make it my first movie. I’ve noticed the off-the-cuff comparison of “traditional” TV families versus the the Addams Family in the last few years. It’s not hard to do. Morticia and Gomez are a loving couple that provides a home for their children to explore their ideas and is very supportive of each other’s hobbies and interests. The extended family offers their own quirks, but really, who doesn’t have a rando in the family tree who marches to their own drum circle.

This film offers a brief background as to how the Addams Family establishes their house, explains that the children are home schooled, and also why they haven’t had neighbors. Until now.

Several decades ago, if you lived on inhabitable land, chances are, no one else was going to try to also live there. Safe from development, corporate greed, and climate change because it has built in protection: humans should NOT live there. Obviously that’s not the case anymore and a small underlying message of this film: if you drain the marsh, be prepared for what you find crawling around.

An HGTV-esque suburban “town” is built downhill from the Addams Family mansion for a TV show. Think Celebration, Florida with the deeply disturbing voyeurism of The Truman Show. Once the show’s host and producer realizes the Addams Mansion is an eye-sore, and meets the “freaks,” she is on a mission to destroy them before they destroy her “perfect” development. She does so by posing as different citizens on the town’s version of NextDoor. If you’re not familiar with the absolute bananas insanity that exists in NextDoor, you probably are too millennial to afford a house or too off-the-grid to want a house. It’s like if you took away the cute puppy photos and social engineering surveys off Facebook and was left with the complaining about nothing and the racism. Which I guess is Facebook anyways, but it’s condensed to just people you could possibly see at the grocery store.

There’s several other story lines throughout the film, but in the end the movie is just about family and accepting each other’s flaws and differences. It’s a cute movie, not scary. However there’s a few disturbing images that some younger viewers (or those with arachnophobia) might not like.

Scare Rating: 2 out of 10 ghosts

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Scare Weather Fan

I’m either setting myself up for failure or slowly drifting into insanity, but I’m going to do this again: 31 Nights of Horror. This is basically what my blog has evolved into and I’m okay with that. “Lower it up” doesn’t really make any sense and neither did this direction, but here we are. I have no plans outside my house and access to all the content inside my house. Follow me on this journey, as I rediscover grammar and overdone tropes and bad acting.

This year, I’m adding a little theme challenge: Alphabetical titles for the first 26 movies (unless I find a foreign film with a new letter or I discover that Prince released a horror film when he was a symbol) and then numbered titles after.

Here are the films I’ve already watched, so if there are any suggestions for new films (especially in the weird letters) I’ll gladly take them. I’m not counting “The” as the first letter and I’ll be on the fence about “A” depending on if I get desperate with a letter (Looking at you “X”).

Below is all the films I’ve watched so far since 2013 for 31 Nights of Horror. I always try to watch something I’ve never seen before, I really HATE gore porn (the Saw franchise is a no for me), and also limit the brand new films to only a few to avoid too many spoilers.

Bring it on, because after the last 18 months, I’m really not afraid anymore! I’ve also gotten really good at denial!

Happy Spooky Season All!

A

The Abominable Dr. Phibes

Alice, Sweet Alice

An American Haunting

An American Werewolf in London

The Amityville Horror (1979)

Asylum

Attack the Block

The Awakening

B

The Babadook

The Birds

Blair Witch (2016)

Burn, Witch, Burn

Burnt Offerings

C

Cabin Fever (2016)

The Cabin in the Woods

The Call of Cthulhu

Carrie

Children of the Corn

Cloverfield

The Conjuring

D

Don’t Go In The House

Dracula (1931)

E

Ernest Scared Stupid

F

FeardotCom

The Final Girls

Firestarter

The Forest

Friday the 13th

The Frighteners

Frozen (2010)

Funny Games

G

“Ghost Hunters”

The Ghosts of Buxley Hall

Gothic

Green Room

H

The Haunted Mansion

The Haunting (1963)

The Haunting in Connecticut

The Haunting of Bly Manor (Episode 1)

The Haunting of Fox Hollow Farm

Hell Fest

The Hills Have Eyes (1977)

Hocus Pocus

House on Haunted Hill (1959)

House of Wax (1953)

The Houses October Built

The Howling & The Howling II: … Your Sister Is a Werewolf

Hubie Halloween

Hunt

Hush

I

The Innkeepers

The Innocents

Interview With The Vampire

The Invitation

I Am Not A Serial Killer

I Am The Pretty Thing That Lives In The House

IT (2017)

It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown

J

John Carpenter’s Vampires

K

Killer Klowns From Outer Space

Kindred Spirits

Knights of Badassdom

Krampus

L

Last House on the Left (1972)

The Legend of Hell House

The Little Girl Who Lives Down The Lane

M

The Monster Squad

Murders in the Rue Morgue

N

Night of the Comet

Night of the Living Dead

O

The Omen (1976)

Orca

P

Paranormal Activity 4

Phantasm

Poltergeist (1982)

Population 436

Pirde and Prejudice and Zombies

Pumpkinhead

The Purge: Election Year

Q

R

Rasputing: The Mad Monk

Raw

Red State

THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW: Let’s Do the Time Warp Again (2016)

Rope

S

Silent House

Sleepy Hollow

Sinister

Society

Solomon Kane

Stag Night

Stage Fright

Stir of Echoes

Stitches

T

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)

Theater of Blood

They’re Watching

The Town That Dreaded Sundown

Toy Story of Terror

Train to Busan

Transylvania 6-5000

Trick ‘r Treat

Trollhunter

U

V

The Vatican Tapes

Village of the Damned

The Void

W

“The Walking Dead”

What We Do In The Shadows

Willow Creek

Winchester

The Witch

Witchboard

The Woman In Black

X

Y

Z

#

30 Days of Night

10 Cloverfield Lane

DAY 2, 2016 – STITCHES

Stitches Poster

2012

 

Clowns are the newest trend. Well, not clowns, more like reports of “clowns being creepy AF” is trending. As if there was a time in history when clowns weren’t creepy. So with recent news reports, I needed an extra glass of alcohol to get through this one. Even though it is 4 years old and set in Ireland. I turned on subtitles because (I’m sorry if this is racist) all English, Scottish, Welsh, and Irish teen accents sound the same to me.

This movie opens with our title character, Stitches, screwing a tramp. I’m not being sexist, she might actually be a traveling gypsy person. While he is nailing her (in his costume and makeup), she sees a painted egg and says “that looks like you.” Don’t worry, this is important later. As all revelations during sex scenes in horror movies are.

Anyways, Stitches is late for his afternoon gig, which is an afternoon at a wealthy 10-year old’s birthday party. Most ten year olds are awful, but these seven children are the absolute worst. And they prove it by making Stitches’ gig a living hell, and then eventually accidentally killing him.

***One thing to take away from this and many other movies: Close the fucking dishwasher!!! Where were you raised!?! A b-horror movie set?!***

The birthday boy, Tom, becomes slightly obsessed with the clown’s death and decides to stake out the graveyard near his house (where Stitches is conveniently buried). After the funeral, he sees a line of fully dressed clowns leading a creepy Latin-esque procession to the Clown Crypt in the middle of the graveyard**

**side note, if “Clown Crypt” exists in America, we need to petition to have those burned to the ground yesterday

Tom witnesses a ritual in the crypt involving confetti, balloon animals, and the painted eggs (see, I told you it would come back). The mourning clowns catch him peeping and give him the ominous warning, “A clown that never finishes a party can never rest in peace.” As if clown deaths at parties are common. Or maybe they are in Ireland. A lot has changed since Angela’s Ashes. 

Jump ahead 6 years later Tom and his 6 friends are super maladjusted, as you would expect any child who witnessed clown death to be. So let’s break it down:

Tom: Birthday boy, highly anxious, prescribed pills for anxiety

Vinnie: Tom’s best friend, obsessed with girls, especially the damaged ones, also alcoholic/pot head

Bulger: Possibly gay, definitely fabulous, over-eater, really good at splits

Kate: Tom’s love interest, turned super emo, apparently gives a lot of blow jobs to guys, especially to those in bands

Paul: Dick. Dick to the max. Only speaks in dick.

Sarah: Ginger who was doomed from the start. Alcoholic who also enjoys Paul’s dick language, as they are coupled.

Richie: Slight introvert/creeper. Enjoys taking photos of humanity at its worst.

Tom decides to have a birthday party for himself, which obviously gets out of control, because we’ve all seen 10 Things I Hate About You and Can’t Hardly Wait and so have the filmmakers. Unfortunately, one of the adorable invitations gets Irish-wind blown to Stitches’ grave. Which, I guess in Ireland, is how you invite the dead to wake up. I’ll remember this, if I ever go yonder the Atlantic Ocean.

So now Zombie Stitches is awake and looking for revenge. And luckily for him, no one moves or ever un-friends anyone in this town, so they are all at the same party, which is a few yards (or metres) nearby. Stitches somehow wanders out of the heavily locked graveyard to Tom’s house (which his mom was nice enough not to move away from after her son witnessed death there) to terrorize the original birthday party.

He does well. He gets through 4 of the 7 attendees in valiant fashion akin to how each of them treated him on his last day alive. In fact, there should be a genre for this inventive and versatile ways of killing those who have slightly wronged the villian. Maybe #CleverGore. I’ll market it later.

The three leftovers (Tom, Vinnie, Kate) now understand that normal ways of killing a person (head bash, knife to the eye, trip over dishwasher) aren’t going to work on Zombie Stitches. Then Tom remembers the egg and sets off to the clown crypt to destroy it. Unfortunately Zombie Stitches also realizes what they are up to and is quick behind. Tom finds the egg but is knocked out by Stitches’ spring-loaded punch fist (which is hopefully illegal in America: concealed guns or none).

Ultimately, the three clever teens get Zombie Stitches to trip over himself and crack the egg himself, which results in a Zombie Stitches full-on egg blowout. All the yolk and whites. Those kids definitely got Salmonella after that night.

 The epilogue (6 months later – the standard time for you to get over 4 teenagers murdered in your home), begins with a FOR SALE sign and Tom and Kate together as kissy face, but severely psychologically fucked up couple. Seriously, both of you will be on medication and in therapy the rest of your lives.

If nothing else, these movies prove that rich Irish teen are hilarious, and also I want to know what the “Irish gypsy” life is like.

DAY 1, 2016 – THE TOWN THAT DREADED SUNDOWN

The Town That Dreaded Sundown Poster

1976

We open on the whitest town in America after the end of WWII. A great time for white people. Wonderful. They still gush over it today like it was some goddamn utopia. But don’t worry white people, because there is one piece of life that doesn’t discriminate: death. He’s coming. And he’s super white.

I didn’t expect this movie to be scary, especially since the title both rhymes and is five words long. Everyone knows the best horror movies are one word: Poltergeist. Vertigo. Precious. But that’s fine, I needed a little camp and a little terrible special effects to ease me into this month.

The opening is like watching those old Popular Mechanics shorts from the 1950s, where your kitchen turns into one giant self cleaning oven so wife can get back to more important things; like ignoring her children and her husband’s alcoholism. So now that I’ve set the idyllic scene, you know where this is going.

The film is set in Texarkana, a small town on the border of Texas and Arkansas. It’s 1946 and serial killers back then were lucky. It was super hard to have sex, so you were apparently legally obligated to go to an open field in the middle of nowhere. Nowadays, kids just have sex in the Chipotle bathroom and go about their day. But at least they don’t get murdered.

The first couple (I’ll call them “weird finger-banging couple”) are victims of a pretty smart guy. First, the killer pops the hood and rips out wires which I presume are important, then grabs the dude and drags him through a window to beat with a lead pipe. We can clearly see what the killer’s costume is now: black boots, jeans, dark button up shirt, white sheet that covers his face with eye-holes. Also known as The KKK Starter Kit.

He then possibly rapes the girl and throws her on the side of the road. She is inevitably saved by a passerby, who is definitely driving drunk and not a good witness. Which I think is probably par for the course in this town. This is the part where the protagonist comes in: Deputy Sheriff Ramsey, who looks EXACTLY like a 70s actor pretending to be in the 40s version of Jim Halpert. It’s a little distracting.

The first couple doesn’t die and the doctor at the hospital is fairly certain the lady wasn’t raped but she did have human bites all over her body. Which is stupid because the mask didn’t even have mouth holes. Maybe in between their weird finger-banging, the couple liked to engage in cannibalism. Serial killers are weird, but white people in the suburbs can be even weirder.

The next round of victims are introduced: A 24 year old vet with 17 year old girl. Sounds like ripe picking for the Chow-down Brown Killer. Especially when the girl accuses her boyfriend “missing the Japanese girls,” like she shouldn’t be worried about VD. We find out it is 3 weeks later and raining like the first night of the attacks. Deputy Sheriff Jim Halpert is worried the cops aren’t looking in enough on couples fucking. And obviously he is right, albeit creepy. This fresh couple slides around the road and while the DS is out patrolling he hears gun shots. He also displays some sweet off-roading moves in his police cruiser.

Deputy Sheriff follows the gun shots which inevitable leads to gun shot up bodies. The dude in a ditch, and the girl tied to a tree. Now despite the fact that it is supposed to be raining and at night, there is blue sky, because night shooting is stupid (or at least that’s what the studio probably said to the director). It’s fine, we can clearly see White Hood strolling confidently to his car and then clearly see the Deputy Sheriff miss his chance to take out the killer. Or he didn’t shoot because he just wants to see how this is all going to play out.

Back in town, the townspeople are buying up guns and putting up locks on the door like they just got their first black president. Obviously the police and sheriffs departments can’t handle it. They couldn’t even handle shooting a black car in the middle of broad night light! So in order to calm the fears, they enlist a detective from Austin who is nicknamed The Lone Wolf of the Texas Rangers. Just like the film’s title, this name is far too long, so I’m just going to refer to him as LoWo. This guy gets to town and ready to do some business, like set up stings and dress the sergeants in drag, because when you’re in Texarkana, you gotta make your own fun.

Of course curfews and patrols aren’t going to stop people from screwing, but the investigation gets compromised as people start confessing to the murders. This is why people in the 40s needed TV. When you got bored, I guess you just start confessing to murders to break up the day.

At the same time the cops are trying out for Drag Race, the high school prom is happening. And oddly there are NO cops at this dance. Which is ridiculous. We had cops at our dances whether there were serial killers on the loose or not. So the kids and chaperones are going to get lit without the watchful eye of cops or DWI checkpoints.

We are now introduced to dumb couple #3. The girl is a trombone player in the band and the boyfriend just wants his tromb–you know what, they just make this shit too easy. The girlfriend complains that she has a curfew (bitch calm down, the whole town has a curfew). However, her boyfriend justifies going to park, by saying they’ll be in the “city limits,” because everyone knows how much killers hate city limits. So off they go, blissfully unaware how uncool playing a trombone in high school is.

White Mask starts to sneak up on their car but they start to drive away. But not before the killer can jump on the running board and hang on like he is the world champion at skitchin’. He drags the boyfriend out of the car and the car keeps going until it ends up on a bramble patch, tossing the girl out. Trombone lady runs through the woods in her prom dress, because the real FBI will actually arrest you if you don’t include this cliche scene in your horror movie. White Mask Mouth Breather picks her up and ties her to a tree.

The boyfriend isn’t dead yet, and wakes up from his round with the killer’s fists (this guy is NOT consistent with his weapons) and realizes half his face is bashed in and he is just as useless as he was before. He starts to run away but gets shot dead. Tree girl knows she’s about to get it, but killer is more interested in her trombone, because he needs new ways to kill that not even the Japanese have thought up. He must have been kicked out of a band, because he stabs the girl with her own trombone and doesn’t even have the decency to play a diddy while she dies. Another moment when having a mouth opening would have helped.

Back in town, press and experts are convening. A famous prison psychiatrist (which is a legitimate career in Texas, apparently) is now explaining to the sheriffs and cops what a “serial killer” is and what they are “into” over a fancy dinner. I love these explanation scenes, because they literally haven’t changed in the history of movies. The cops are more interested in why the killer didn’t rob the victims, and the psychiatrist really wants to bring the conversation back to sadism. Across the restaurant we only see the boots of the killer, as he politely pays for his meal and leaves. Killers: They’re Just Like Us!

The police chase down a few leads, including a dapper looking armed robber from Shreveport who drives a mint green car. I would watch a movie just about this guy. He (of course) confesses to the serial murders and the cops have had just about enough of this, so they stick him the back of a police cruiser with the fattest, sweatiest detective. Dapper Dan comes clean and the cops realize they are back to square one.

We now see people going about their business and enjoying summer, which is cue for another murder. Here come ol’ boots and we see him follow a lady home from the grocery store to her farm. Unfortunately for farm wife, her dumb husband doesn’t notice someone lurking outside and subsequently gets shot twice through a window. The wife tries to call police but gets shot in the face and head but still is alive. What kind of bullets are these?! The husband took two bullets to his head and was still able to walk for a bit before making a mess of the living room.

The farm wife hides out in the garage where Pillowcase Face picks up a pickaxe to finish the job. And presumably to use on the gun seller who sold him “non-murdering” bullets. Now for a game of corn maze which follows blood and items of clothes through the field. I’m pitch it a an app next week. FarmKille.

We hear dogs barking and we know farm lady (his husband is dead, she dropped the “wife”) has reached a neighbors house, who either aren’t home or have the good sense to not open the door to bloodied women who were shot in the fucking face. Of course the dogs barking alerts the killer where the lady is, which unfortunately is with a heavily armed elderly couple.

The lady lives. But now that people know the killer is a fan of looking in windows, they board up their houses like a damn hurricane is coming, and not summer in Texas. These people gonna dies of heat exhaustion. More cops show up, more curfews in place. However, now the killer isn’t following the dates anymore, because i assume the calendar the gun shop gave him was just as defective as the bullets.

A call for the most common looking car in america (which looks exactly like the police cars) comes over the radio and Deputy Sheriff and LoWo follow a lead into the woods, which ends at a sand pit. Now I can’t tell if this is a naturally occurring sand pit or more like a sand quarry. But I guess people in Texas need sand. They see White Mask standing atop a sand hill (and now we know he wears his costume all the time; probably a Stanislavski method man). They chase him into the woods, then across train tracks and end up shooting him in the leg, but the killer is still able to run away because every bullet in this town is defective. They bring in the bloodhounds which leads to a bayou. Which I guess they have in Texarkana. The the bloodhounds lose the scent and we never see him again. My theory is that he definitely died of MRSA from that nasty swamp.

The most amazing part of this movie is the ending, because we find out the chief and the sheriff are reelected for THREE more terms! Because i know when I have murders on my watch, it’s a sure shoo-in. The killer is never caught and true to “based on a true story” genre, he shows up at the premiere of his own movie. Killers are so meta.

And this, kids, is why we don’t live in small towns. And don’t ever buy your bullets from Texarkana.

A MONTH OF MONSTROSITIES – 2016

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We can all agree that 2016 is not the world’s greatest year. However, I’m sure it wasn’t our WORST year ever. I mean 79AD comes to mind. 1865. 1941. Whatever year Ann Coulter was spewed from Lucifer’s lair. So in order to bring back everything to about me (because I wouldn’t be accused of being a millennial if I didn’t act selfish 124% of the day), I’m going to revisit a 3-year old writing exercise: “Watch Scary Movies; Write About Them”

I don’t have a theme, but I will take suggestions from friends, family, strangers, bots, Ann Coulter’s internal demon, really any one person or entity. You see, horror movies are not my “thing.” I stay away because, for all intents and purposes, they scare me. It’s a pretty simple human emotion that I tend to avoid. So I need some help from the World Wide Web to know what to watch next.I will not repeat anything from my last round, but I wouldn’t mind a prequel, sequel, remake, Broadway musical adaptation, or concept album with its basis in a previous post.I have access to almost every platform, so finding a movie, TV show, short video, play, book, or even a scary Vine should not be difficult. And with the beauty of DVRs, ON-Demand, Digital rentals, the Darknet, time-shifting, smartphones, and garage sales, I will not be short on material.So since we know the next month will be full of terrifying things in reality, I will try to bring us back to the world of the “unwoken” and hang out there until our national nightmare is open. I will start posting on October 1 and continue once a day until October 31. So I would like to apologize in advance for breaking up your newsfeed of “Buzzfeed’s Best Pumpkin Pizzas” and pics of badly photo-shopped devil eyes over presidential candidates.Below are the recaps from 2013. Enjoy at your leisure. Or non-leisure work time. I don’t know your life.

Day 1 – The Cabin in the Woods

Day 2 – Sleepy Hollow

Day 3 – Red State

Day 4 – The Monster Squad

Day 5 – The Woman In Black

Day 6 – The Frighteners

Day 7 – 30 Days of Night

Day 8 – The Call of Cthulhu

Day 9 – “Ghost Hunters” Season Premiere Recap

Day 10 – The Abominable Dr. Phibes

Day 11 – Firestarter

Day 12 – Hocus Pocus

Day 13 – “The Walking Dead” Season Premiere Recap

Day 14 – Orca

Day 15 – The Haunting

Day 16 – Burn, Witch, Burn

Day 17 – Night of the Comet

Day 18 – It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown

Day 19 – Paranormal Activity 4

Day 20 – Murders in the Rue Morgue

Day 21 – Trollhunter

Day 22 – Solomon Kane

Day 23 – Transylvania 6-5000

Day 24 – Stag Night

Day 25 – Ernest Scared Stupid

Day 26 – Carrie

Day 27 – Trick ‘r Treat

Day 28 – The Birds

Day 29 – Attack The Block

Day 30 – The Amityville Horror

Day 31 – Toy Story of Terror