Tuesday, 30 June 2020

The Government’s Worried About UFO’s. Why?


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of The Government’s Worried About UFO’s. Why?. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

Look! Up in the sky! It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s…….well we don’t know what it is. Unidentified Flying Objects, or UFO’s, have always been a controversial subject among believers and non-believers alike. But, recently, it seems even members of the United States Congress want to get to the bottom of what has been appearing in the skies across the United States and The World, recently. What are these Unidentified Aerial Phenomena. Before we delve into the recent developments coming out of Washington D.C., our story takes us back to 2007 to a program known as the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program. The goal of the secret program, which ran until 2012, was to investigate UFO phenomena and sightings. The program had a budget of $22 million dollars over the 5 years it was active. In December of 2017, the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program was made public when the story was broken by several major news sources. The existence of the program was confirmed by the head of the project, Luis Elizondo, to the mainstream media. Elizondo left the Pentagon in 2017 and in a scathing resignation letter, told Jim Mattis, the Secretary of Defense at the time, “Why aren’t we spending more time and effort on this issue?” After leaving the Pentagon, Luis Elizondo began working with the organization To The Stars…Academy of Arts & Science (TTSA). TTSA was formed in 2017 by former Intelligence Officer Jim Semivan, along with Engineer and Parapsychologist Harold Putthoff, and former Blink-182 band member Tom DeLonge. One of the goals of TTSA is to study UFO encounters and otherworldly technology. In September 2019, TTSA released 3 separate videos which appear to have been taken from a military aircraft cockpit. The videos contained clips from United States Navy pilots and their encounters with unknown objects. The objects appear to perform acrobatic feats that are highly unlikely with the current aerospace technology we “humans” have. The videos, when released by TTSA, were still categorized as “classified” by the United States Government. The U.S. Government in April 2020, declassified the same 3 videos and released them to the general public. What is interesting about this, is the fact that in a roundabout way, the government admitted that pilots have had encounters with unknown objects, when silence or denial is usually standard operating procedure from those in the know and in high places June 2020 has given us even more interesting developments in this saga. Hopefully, eventually, we will receive full disclosure about what the Government knows or doesn’t know about UFOs. Recently the Senate Intelligence Committee voted to demand that United States Intelligence agencies and the Department of Defense compile a public report related to all information the agencies may have in reference to Unidentified Aerial Phenomena. According to some of the text of the proposed bill, which still needs to be passed by the Senate, it reads “The Committee remains concerned that there is no unified, comprehensive process within the federal government for collecting and analyzing intelligence on unidentified aerial phenomena, despite the potential threat,” It further goes on to state: “The Committee understands that the relevant intelligence may be sensitive; nevertheless, the Committee finds that the information sharing and coordination across the Intelligence Community has been inconsistent, and this issue has lacked attention from senior leaders,” The Senate Intelligence committee bill, if passed, would give the affected agencies 180 days to compile the report. SEE ALSO: Watch the Skies: Seven Alien Abduction Movies That Are Truly Scary Several members of the Senate Intelligence Committee have received private briefings recently in reference to Unidentified Aerial Phenomena by the Pentagon. Senator Mark Warner (D-Va.) was one of those. In a statement provided to news outlet Politico from Warner’s spokesperson, it says “If naval pilots are running into unexplained interference in the air, that’s a safety concern Senator Warner believes we need to get to the bottom of” If there is really nothing to these UFO encounters, then why did the United States Navy update their UFO reporting process for pilots in May of 2019? What was the reason for the change? Is the government being inundated by more reports than usual that it had to streamline and/or change its process? Why is the Government all of a sudden taking a strong interest in Unidentified Aerial Phenomena encounters? Should we be worried? If there exists life out there is it a friend or foe? Sadly, I don’t know if we will ever be privy to the answers to these questions. With the spotlight on what some consider fringe science, it will be interesting to see what comes out of Capitol Hill in the next 12 months. Are we ready to accept the fact we might not be the only life in the universe? I think the words of the late comedian George Carlin sums this whole situation up perfectly, “If it’s true that our species is alone in the universe, then I’d have to say that the universe aimed rather low and settled for very little.” Follow us on social media: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube!

The post The Government’s Worried About UFO’s. Why? appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Monday, 29 June 2020

Elisabeth Moss is Spellbinding in Shirley [Review]


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of Elisabeth Moss is Spellbinding in Shirley [Review]. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

Josephine Decker’s Shirley is a dramatization focusing on renowned horror author Shirley Jackson, a writer as troubled as the very stories that made her infamous. The film catches up with Jackson while she is in the middle of writing her masterpiece. But the arrival of newlyweds quickly upends her meticulous routine and heightens tensions in her already tempestuous relationship with her peculiar husband. The middle-aged couple, prone to drunken stupors and ruthless arguments, wastes no time inflicting psychological warfare on the young lovers. RELATED: Alexandra Serio’s Tingle Monsters is a Trendsetter in Horror  Easily one of my favorite films of the year, Shirley lays out a beautiful articulation of the human condition that navigates every relationship a person could ever go though within themselves: love, lust, depression, addiction, abuse, complex self delusions and self destructive tendencies. It’s a ruthless, existential gem. Despite a constantly tense atmosphere and the unyieldingly pessimistic attitude of literally everyone, Decker’s directing flourishes as our characters weave through an intricate web that comes across as so distant and yet so warm at the same time. It connects to viewers who are nothing like the ilk of the somewhat unlikable characters they are watching. We meet overachiever Fred, his wife, the naïve Rose, Stanley who acts as both a friend and foe, and our main character Shirley who’s instability nearly outweighs her brilliance time and time again. It’s an insanity that appears almost contagious the more time Rose and Shirley spend together. The women bond as sisters in misfortune over their lackluster marriages and over the subject of Shirley’s latest novel. “I’m a witch,” Shirley tells her at one point and one can’t help believing her. So, is it real magic or madness at Rose’s expense? Does it even matter? If you’re looking for a movie that isn’t afraid to give that unbearable feeling and love every minute of it then I implore Shirley Jackson fans and critics alike to check out Shirley. Now available on VOD. WICKED RATING: 7/10 Director(s): Josephine Decker Writer(s): Sarah Gubbins (Based on the book written by Susan Scarf Merrell) Stars: Elisabeth Moss, Michael Stuhlbarg, Odessa Young, Logan Lerman Studio/Production Company: NEON/ Killer Films and Los Angeles Media Fund Run Time: 107 Minutes Language: English Follow us on social media: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube!

The post Elisabeth Moss is Spellbinding in Shirley [Review] appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Friday, 26 June 2020

New on Netflix: June 26th, 2020


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of New on Netflix: June 26th, 2020. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

It’s Friday and you know what that means: It’s time to figure out what you’ll be watching this week. Welcome back to New on Netflix! The streaming giant’s horror department has always been a mixed bag. However, I’d say they’ve really stepped up their game in the last couple of years with the release of amazing, essential watches. We’ve been treated to must see original programming like The Haunting of Hill House, Velvet Buzzsaw, Hush, and some of the classics we all know and love. This week we enter a new month which usually means a lengthy smorgasbord of all kinds of spooky fun. So let’s dive in for June 26th’s list! Also See: Why We Need More Queer Horror Movies [Editorial] Deadwind Season 2 Arriving July 1st is season 2 of Finnish crime drama Deadwind. Following the first season’s explosive conclusion, when two bodies are discovered under bizarre circumstances it’s up to Detectives Karppi and Nurmi to uncover the truth. Double Jeopardy After being framed for her husband’s murder Libby Parsons only has two goals after her long prison sentence: reunite with her son and finding her husband’s real killer. The only thing standing in the way of her happily ever after is is her parole officer, Travis Lehman. Will be available July 1st! Paranormal Activity Also arriving on July 1st is Paranormal Activity. After moving into their new home Katie and Micah become convinced their house is haunted. Hoping to capture some evidence, they set up video cameras in the house but are not prepared for the terrifying events that follow. Also See: Review: Blade: The Iron Cross is a Major Step Forward for the Puppet Master Franchise Red Riding Hood Coming July 1st is a reimagining of the classic fairy tale that features a disturbing love triangle. Sleepy Hollow Set in 1799,  police constable Ichabod Crane is sent to Sleepy Hollow which has become home to a series of brutal decapitations. As soon as he arrives Ichabod is made aware of who the locals think is the prime suspect; a headless man who rides by horseback looking for his missing head. Coming July 1st! Splice Arriving on July 1st is Splice. When genius geneticists Clive and Elsa propose using human DNA in creating hybrids of species their bosses instantly turn them down. This results in Clive and Elsa to continue their passion project in secret. At first their experiment, called Dren, exceeds all expectations but as she begins to grow at an accelerated rate, she threatens to become their worst nightmare. The Witches While staying at a hotel in England with his grandmother, a young boy named Luke accidently spies on a spies on a convention of witches where it is revealed they have a plan to turn all children into mice through a magical formula. When Luke is discovered he is promptly turned into a mouse. Though he doesn’t let that stop him from fighting back against the witches. Unsolved Mysteries Season 15 The series revival of the iconic show Unsolved Mysteries will premiere on July 1st and will feature 12 episodes that delve into some bizarre, mysterious cases. Winchester The paranormal biopic of the firearm heiress Sarah Winchester, Winchester, will premiere on Netflix on July 1st. JU-ON: Origins Arriving July 3rd is Ju-On: Origins, a reboot of the beloved Grudge as a series. Follow us social media! Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.

The post New on Netflix: June 26th, 2020 appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Why We Need More Queer Horror Movies [Editorial]


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of Why We Need More Queer Horror Movies [Editorial]. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

Pride month is upon us and, with the release of Shudder’s rather brilliant, yet still devastating new documentary, Scream, Queen! My Nightmare on Elm Street, comes the desire to immerse ourselves in the best queer horror has to offer. Horror and queerness have always gone hand in hand, dealing as our beloved genre does with the essential otherness of being alive, all the way back to Universal’s iconic Monsters. And yet, there hasn’t been a definitive queer horror movie to latch onto in the past few years, even as issues surrounding LGBT people continue to gain prominence. Search for lists of queer horror movies and you’ll find writers helplessly arguing that a movie like Raw qualifies, purely because it contains a gay character. Raw is a clever, radically feminist movie about a young woman discovering her body and her sexuality that’s charged with potent desire but it’s not a queer movie. The protagonist sleeps with a man and only expresses interest in men throughout. Likewise, Jennifer’s Body is frequently trotted out as a queer horror movie in spite of the fact it deals with the concept of bisexuality in a crass, dehumanizing manner (I say this as a proud bisexual woman exhausted with having to explain how I don’t kiss chicks for male pleasure). Related: Spiral [Frightfest 2019 Review] Funnily enough, All Cheerleaders Die, which has a similarly caustic wit but a smarter script and stronger performances across the board, presents a romantic relationship between two teenage girls with little fanfare and zero leering from the camera. Lucky McKee’s film, then, could arguably be considered more of a queer horror movie than Jennifer’s Body. At least it doesn’t boast a sequence angling for an MTV Best Kiss award. The Neon Demon has a similar issue. Nicolas Winding Refn’s woozy, sexy, and jet-black satire of the fashion world includes shots of women showering seductively together and certainly suggests, however unintentionally, that desire often manifests in an urge to completely devour one’s partner (or, in this case, rival). It doesn’t have queer energy though, just the female equivalent of BDE. This year’s Midnight Kiss, released as part of Hulu’s imaginative but uneven Into the Dark anthology series, was the opposite — an endeavor so gay it sparkled. The movie is far from perfect, and there’s an argument to be made that it even pushes dodgy, and oft-criticized, stereotypes about slutty gay dudes, but at the very least it was a production packed with queer people both behind and in front of the cameras that, as a slasher, wasn’t too shabby at all either. Knife + Heart also utilized the slasher format to tell a queer story, albeit one set predominantly within the world of gay pornography. It’s completely loopy, but relentlessly entertaining and refreshingly doesn’t shy away from the particulars of the industry in which it’s set. Fellow French movie Stranger By the Lake goes even further, showing graphic gay sex onscreen (a warning displays before the film kicks off, causing gasps in the small screening I attended at the time of its release). Its tale of cruising gone violently wrong is underdeveloped, but it looks very pretty and, once again, it’s an impressively unvarnished take on a side of gay culture many either won’t be aware of or turn their noses up at, if they do know about it. There’s a sense that LGBT culture is often reduced to the experiences of only white men onscreen and, although both of these movies could certainly be accused of doing so, they’re both impressive in their own ways too. They’re proudly queer, arguably even too proud to the extent it renders both slightly messy and unfocused. On the teenage side of things, Jennifer Reeder’s ambitious arthouse horror Knives and Skin features a burgeoning lesbian relationship while Joachim Trier’s Thelma connects a young woman’s growing feelings for a female student with her burgeoning telekinetic abilities. Both stories are captured from a respectful distance, neither taking the Jennifer’s Body route of shooting hot chicks kissing in their underpants, instead focusing on the depth of the relationships in question. A same-sex pairing isn’t at the heart of Knives and Skin, but Reeder still gives it plenty of scope to develop naturally, devoting precious screentime to establishing its particulars in a sweet, romantic way. Thelma is more explicit in its treatment of the central almost-couple but Trier employs just as steady and considerate of a hand. When his titular protagonist is horrified to be orally penetrated by a snake, the implication is clear. Funnily enough, two of the most impressive queer horror movies to come out in the past few years both involve Colin Minihan who, if you’ve been paying attention, should fast be becoming one of your favorite horror directors. Spiral, which stars Unreal‘s Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman as a happily married gay man trying to keep to himself in the suburbs while a murderous cult lurks just below the surface, was co-written by Minihan. The film is a tightly-wound, remarkably well-told exercise in precise dramatic tension and boasts the most emotionally scarring, horrifyingly realistic, and intelligently conceived take on queer horror I’ve seen to date. It’s arguably the only queer horror movie worthy of being considered definitive for modern audiences. It’s sublime, and if you can track it down to stream online, don’t hesitate. It’s a tough watch at times but Bowyer-Chapman, who’s gay IRL, is revelatory, his performance infused with the innate hurt only a queer person could accurately communicate. What Keeps You Alive, directed and written by Minihan, puts a lesbian relationship front and centre as Brittany Allen’s Jules fights for her life against the maniacal Jackie (Hannah Emily Anderson) at a remote cabin in the woods. The story was originally envisioned with a straight couple in mind, but Allen, Minihan’s real-life partner and frequent collaborator, encouraged him to change it. By treating a queer couple just like a regular couple, the movie side-steps any accusations of virtue signalling in favor of telling a compelling and frequently frightening story of romantic obsession and survival. Allen and Anderson are both terrific, imbuing the smart script with tons of suggestions about the lives they previously lived before being unlucky enough to fall in love with each other. See Also: Midnight Kiss is a Fun, Glittery Addition to the Queer Horror Canon [Review] Horror is at its best when reflecting society’s ills back at audiences, teaching us something about the world we live in or even simply bringing to light issues we didn’t consider relevant to our experience before. Queer horror has the potential to turn the genre on its head completely, by providing a hitherto underseen perspective already packed with keenly-felt real-life horrors. There’s a richness to the queer experience that cannot be replicated in stories told entirely from the same straight, and typically, male perspective we’ve seen a million times over. It feels as though things are finally changing for the better, with more voices increasingly coming to the fore, so hopefully the next few years will see an influx in queer horror movies from every side of the proverbial coin. Follow us social media! Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.

The post Why We Need More Queer Horror Movies [Editorial] appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Thursday, 25 June 2020

Cenobites by Association: Seven Movies Influenced by Hellraiser


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of Cenobites by Association: Seven Movies Influenced by Hellraiser. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

Clive Barker really changed the game with Hellraiser, at least in terms of providing audiences with iconography that they were not used to seeing. By that point in the 1980s, Jason, Michael Myers and even Freddy were becoming played out. People had seen enough of slashers and they wanted something new. Hellraiser offered that in spades. While the Cenobites were not the main antagonists in the film and were featured in only a few minutes, audiences took to them immediately. These demons were unlike anything seen in cinema before, they looked nightmarish, but were also perversely elegant and that juxtaposition resonated with audiences worldwide. Also See: How Bloodline Went From An Ambitious Franchise Saver To The Pin In The Coffin The Cenobites, in addition to the overall visual style of Hellraiser resonated deeply with filmmakers as well. Even now there are features that continue to make their Hellraiser influences clear. We’ve put together a list of the most recognizable, iconic films to take heavy cues from Clive Barker’s hellish classic. Dark City David Goyer and Alex Proyas’s Dark City is one of the most clearly Hellraiser-inspired movies out there. When fans talk of Hellraiser, this feature often comes up by association. The visual style is almost identical and it depicts what might as well just be a city inhabited by Cenobites. Some fans even head-canon it into the extended mythos. The Cabin in the Woods There are Cenobites in this movie. I don’t care what they’re called, that’s what they are. Of course, everything that’s ever been a part of the horror landscape is on display here. But these guys have the leather and while they have a ball configuration instead of a box, it’s operating on the same basic principle. Plus, the Hellraiser comics have shown that there are many different  configurations. Cube Cube definitely has a Hellraiser-ish look and feel. From the suspenseful plot to the cinematography and labyrinthine designs, there’s a definite influence even if there are no Cenobite-reminiscent creatures to be found. In style and tone, the influence is certainly clear. Star Trek: First Contact The Borg are basically Cenobites. They look like a biomechanical version of the demons we know and love from the Hellraiser films and they even travel in a giant cube. We’re far from the first to notice the similarities, people have been pointing them out for years. With all of that in mind, First Contact—and really the entirety of Star Trek: The Next Generation—proves that a movie doesn’t have to be horror to feel like Hellraiser. Return of the Living Dead 3 One look at the poster for Brian Yuzna’s Return of the Living Dead 3 and the similarities become obvious. Julie, the female protagonist and main zombie, is a Cenobite in everything but name. More than that, the picture deals heavily in the relationship of pleasure in pain, in body modification, secret desires and forbidden love. It echoes Hellraiser on virtually every level, but also really manages to stand up as its own film. The Cell An underrated picture about a woman who enters into a serial killer’s mind in attempt to uncover the location of his final victim, The Cell deals heavily in dark, surreal imagery. Which is obvious, given the subject matter. Many of the visions inside the killer’s head are overtly similar in look and style to Hellraiser, while also looking very much like a Marilyn Manson video. Event Horizon When people talk about Hellraiser’s influence on anything, even to the smallest degree, they always bring up this film. Event Horizon takes heavy cues from Hellraiser on almost every level. It even followed on the heels of a Hellraiser that went to space. While it also takes influence from titles like Jacob’s Ladder, the connections to Barker’s world and characters are more than clear. Follow us social media! Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.

The post Cenobites by Association: Seven Movies Influenced by Hellraiser appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Wednesday, 24 June 2020

‘Inmate #1: The Rise Of Danny Trejo’ Is A Documentary That Needed To Put More Solitary Spotlight On Its Star


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of ‘Inmate #1: The Rise Of Danny Trejo’ Is A Documentary That Needed To Put More Solitary Spotlight On Its Star. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

Inmate #1: The Rise Of Danny Trejo is the story of one of the most prominent character actors of the past three decades. Even if you are not familiar with the name Danny Trejo, his deeply lined face, gravelly voice, and copious amounts of stick and poke tattoos are instantly recognizable. With over 400 onscreen credits his weathered visage has been featured in everything from gory genre fare like The Devil’s Rejects and Machete, to the family-friendly Spy Kids. Also See: Ten Years On: The Devil’s Rejects Just Keeps Getting Better While Trejo’s rise from bit player to bankable supporting star is unusual, his journey to Hollywood was even more so, with his actual life story a wilder ride than any of the roles he’s played. Born to a working class Mexican family, and raised in the Pacoima neighborhood of Los Angeles, young Danny was shuttled between relatives before landing at the home of his biological father, who had previously left the family when Danny was a toddler.Looking for a place to belong led Danny to his Uncle Gilbert, whose high rolling, live fast and die young criminal lifestyle soon imprinted itself upon the boy. By age 8, Danny was smoking marijuana and by age 12 he was supporting a heroin habit with a string of drug deals and armed robberies. Danny Trejo spent his teens and early twenties in and out of both county jail and an assortment of federal prisons. Also See: Overlooked Exploitation Films You Need To Rediscover A prison riot, a stint in solitary, and an unexpected reprieve from a life sentence finally caused Trejo to change his ways, seek sobriety, and become a drug counselor upon his release from prison. A chance encounter while counseling an actor on set led to his first job as an extra, slowly but surely leading to the career the actor is know for today.It’s the rare case of a film living up to the hype of truth being stranger than fiction, and Trejo makes for an excellent interview subject. The actor has both an impressive memory for the people and places of his past, and a long time performer’s knack for both narrative and the occasional well-placed one liner. Trejo’s life has all the story beats of inspirational uplift already mapped out, non fiction with all of the twists and turns of a cinematic property based on a novel.The problem is, both writer Scott Dodds and director Brett Harvey tend to bog down the proceedings with far too much window dressing, be it endless well-lit but unremarkable location shots, or an excess of talking head commentary that adds some additional star power (Cheech Marin, Michelle Rodriguez, Donal Logue) but little in the way of additional insight. Nearly one quarter of a 108 minute runtime is spent on an awkward career retrospective full of the early “Inmate #1/Gangbanger#6” thankless roles the title of the documentary is making a somewhat pointed commentary on. While anecdotes about fetching Robert DeNiro coffee or offering to rob a bank for Salma Hayek are charming anecdotes for a talk show appearance, they quickly wear out their welcome here. Also See: Why From Dusk Till Dawn is Still Going Strong After More Than 20 Years That time would have been better spent detailing Danny Trejo’s continued work as a speaker at prisons and rehab centers, his status as a proud cancer survivor, or the five year legal battle he recently won to have his cousin released from prison after 38 years. Instead, all of the above are shoehorned into the last 15 minutes to restore some emotional heft to the proceedings before the credits roll.Inmate #1: The Rise Of Danny Trejo does make the case for the remarkable resilience and charisma of its central subject, but invests too much screentime on traditional documentary devices. In all of the idle chatter, the film loses sight of the distinct voice of Danny Trejo, who shines in the moments when the filmmakers relax their narrative grip long enough to let him tell his story in his own words. WICKED RATING: 6/10 Director(s): Brett Harvey Writer(s): Scott Dodds, Brett Harvey Stars: Danny Trejo, Cheech Marin, Donal Logue, Michelle Rodriguez Release date: July 7, 2020 (VOD) Studio/Production Company: Abrupt Films, Universal Pictures Language: English Run Time: 108 Minutes Follow us social media! Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.

The post ‘Inmate #1: The Rise Of Danny Trejo’ Is A Documentary That Needed To Put More Solitary Spotlight On Its Star appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Tuesday, 23 June 2020

The Hunt Should Have Picked a Lane [Blu-ray Review]


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of The Hunt Should Have Picked a Lane [Blu-ray Review]. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

Craig Zobel’s The Hunt is a film rife with two things: violence and political commentary. But is it good? Well, it really depends on who you ask. The flick manages to take jabs at both the far right and far left, potentially alienating a large portion of its audience without really standing up for anything. On the topic of politics, the film doesn’t openly take sides. It follows a group of conservatives who have been abducted for the purpose of being hunted by liberal elites. Both camps are depicted as equally reprehensible. The key players are (somewhat) grossly exaggerated caricatures and heavily steeped in stereotype but there’s at least a grain of truth to the portrayals. Many of the remarks uttered by both sides could have been ripped from the comments section of any politically-charged Facebook post. The film’s message suggests that our nation’s two party system can lead people to put their political ideals before common sense. The solution to a problem isn’t always partisan and trying to make it such can keep us from seeing the humanity in others, even if we are on opposing sides of the political platform. See Also: Five Forgotten TV Horror Movies that Need to be Rediscovered That message is driven home by the fact that the one character the audience is meant to identify with never really discloses a political affiliation but does demonstrate that she has at least a shred of humanity when she helps rescue an immigrant mother and her baby from the blast radius of a grenade. Regardless of seemingly trying to stay non-partisan, the film has been called reprehensible, outrageous, and inappropriate by many critics. But I didn’t find it all that shocking. We are in a very politically-charged time and place right now and some of the humor may have been perceived as misguided or offensive (and some of it definitely is). But I was expecting much worse than what I saw after reading some of the early reviews. As hard as the film tries to stay neutral, a large part of me wishes it would have picked a lane. Like our Joey Keogh pointed out in her review, many left-leaning folks are fighting for equality for all and standing out against acts of bigotry, homophobia, and racism. To paint them as cold-blooded killers hunting for sport feels tone deaf upon reflection. And a lot of the credit, or maybe more accurately, blame for that lies with screenwriters Nick Cuse and Damon Lindelof. I appreciate the message of seeing beyond partisanship but The Hunt would have been a better film if it had actually taken a stand and picked a lane. Is it worth a watch? Maybe. There were certainly parts of The Hunt that I enjoyed. The final fight sequence between the soul survivor of the abductees and the leader of the liberal elites is a pretty epic showdown. There’s also plenty of gooey violence and masterful FX work on display. But the feature ultimately fails to speak up in a time of great turmoil and political tension. And, for that, I find it lacking. The Hunt is now available on DVD, Blu-ray, and VOD from Universal Home Entertainment. WICKED RATING: 5/10  Director(s): Craig Zobel Writer(s): Nick Cuse and Damon Lindelof Stars: Betty Gilpin, Hilary Swank, and Ike Barinholtz Release: June 16, 2020 (Home Video Studio/ Production Co: Universal, Blumhouse Budget: $14 Million (estimated) Language: English Length: 90-minutes Follow us social media! Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.

The post The Hunt Should Have Picked a Lane [Blu-ray Review] appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Beyond Goosebumps: Kids Horror Books That Are All But Forgotten


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of Beyond Goosebumps: Kids Horror Books That Are All But Forgotten. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

Many fans have loved horror most of their lives. Before we were allowed to watch the movies, many kids got into the genre through book series like Goosebumps or Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark. But if you were like me, those weren’t enough. You wanted to experience everything. Whatever the library had that was horror related, you wanted it. Unfortunately, many of the books that shaped my love of horror as a child aren’t very well remembered. In fact, I had to do quite a bit of digging just to find them for the purposes of this list. Some even had me questioning whether or not they ever existed. Luckily, they did. And even if they never skyrocketed to popularity, these were great books with often frightening imagery—some of which sticks with me to this day. Also See: Five of the Creepiest Episodes of R. L. Stine’s The Haunting Hour I’m sure you’ve had books you came across as a kid that helped fuel your thirst for horror. A couple of these tomes are so forgotten that I’m beginning to wonder if I’m the only one that’s ever read them. If you stumbled across any of these when you were younger, or if they jog your memory for something else, tell me in the comments. I’m dying to know. Ghosts, Vampires & Werewolves: Eerie Tales from Transylvania As a kid obsessed with Dracula, I also became fascinated with its sense of place. In fact, I still am—probably to an unhealthy degree. There’s something I love about the folkloric history of Transylvania. This book delivered on everything I wanted. These were spooky stories that all stemmed from the same region, but also featured some extreme gore and imagery that you would not expect from a children’s book. Vampires: A Collection of Original Stories I had to search high and low for this one. This is the book that had me questioning if it ever actually existed. It’s tough to search for a book about vampires that’s titled Vampires, especially if it’s not popular. And this one isn’t. But I took it out of the library frequently as a kid. It was usually this or Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark. It was my first introduction to how wide and imaginative the vampire metaphor could actually be. Night Terrors: Stories of Shadow and Substance Here’s a weird one: As a kid, I thought this was the basis for the Tobe Hooper film Night Terrors. I don’t even know how I knew about that movie, but I did. It’s not, though. It’s a short story collection edited by late I Know What You Did Last Summer author Lois Duncan, one of the perennial titans of YA horror. “The Bogey Man” stuck out to me. I was obsessed with the idea of that legend when I was a child and I distinctly remember checking this out from the library just for that story. But as a kid obsessed with Puppet Master and Chucky, a story about a killer doll really won me over as well. In the Forests of the Night by Amelia Atwater-Rhodes This book—as well as its sequel, Demon in My View—was an inspiration to me. I don’t remember how I learned about it, but I knew it was written by a thirteen-year-old girl. And I read it when I myself was thirteen and just beginning to write. The fact that it was a vampire novel only further fueled my interest. Looking back, it’s still certainly exceptional writing for someone that age. But instead of being intimidated by how good she was, the book only pushed me to be a better writer, even as a kid. So I have to thank her for that. Nightmares: Poems to Trouble Your Sleep When I was young, I loved the poems of Jack Perlutsky. Just about everything he did, I ate it up, particularly themed collections like The Dragons are Singing Tonight. But when the school librarian brought it to my attention that he’d done a book solely on monsters and things that go bump in the night, I was elated. I still have vivid memories of this book, even though I haven’t read it in well over twenty years. In particular, “The Ghoul” is a poem that always stood out as evoking an incredible sense of dread. The Halloween Novels by Kelly O’Rourke   I shouldn’t include books that are virtually impossible for people to go back and read, but I’m going to anyway. Sorry. As a kid obsessed with horror fiction and a Halloween fan, these were so important. I did a book report on The Old Myers Place in fourth grade—much to my teacher’s disappointment. They required little to no knowledge of the films, though I knew the series by heart at that point anyway. Though they each fell into the trap of teen YA fiction, they were standalone Michael Myers stories that were occasionally creepy and shockingly gory at times. The Bailey School Kids   I read these books almost as rapidly as I read Goosebumps, even though most of them left me disappointed, because I always started out absolutely sure that this time the teacher/coach/delivery man would actually turn out to be a monster. I think, at one point, they did have a teacher turn out to be a vampire, but for the most part it was a bait-and-switch, just like Scooby Doo. I still loved it. We always thought that people at our school might secretly be witches or mummies, so it played into the childhood need to immediately judge others based on first impressions… wait, that can’t be right. These books had to have had a better message than that. Regardless, they were fun and funny and definitely easy to get into for youngsters cautiously dipping their toes into the world of the macabre. Follow us social media! Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.

The post Beyond Goosebumps: Kids Horror Books That Are All But Forgotten appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Monday, 22 June 2020

Lost Boys Director Joel Schumacher Passes Away At 80


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of Lost Boys Director Joel Schumacher Passes Away At 80. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

The entertainment industry was rocked today by the announcement that director Joel Schumacher has passed away at the age of 80. Schumacher is known throughout the film world for his critically acclaimed films such as St. Elmo’s Fire, Falling Down, and horror fare like The Lost Boys and Flatliners. He also broke down barriers by being bravely open about his sexuality in Hollywood at a time where that was seen by many as career suicide. Joel Schumacher was born August 29, 1939 in New York City. After studying at Parsons the New School for Design and the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York, Schumacher realized that his passion was filmmaking and not fashion or design. Schumacher moved to Los Angeles and began working as a costume designer. These early days found the future director working with Woody Allen on Sleeper and Interiors. Schumacher furthered his career by penning screenplays for the films Car Wash and Sparkle. Schumacher’s directorial debut came in 1981 with the film The Incredible Shrinking Woman. In 1985 he made his mark with the Brat Pack vehicle St. Elmo’s Fire to critical acclaim. From there Schumacher has racked up hit after hit including The Lost Boys, Flatliners, The Client, Batman Forever, A Time to Kill and Phone Booth. His accolades are too numerous to list in this short article. It was reported that Schumacher had been battling cancer for the last year. Tragically he lost his battle on June 22, 2020. His absence will definitely be felt by Hollywood and Cinephiles alike. Joel Schumacher was an anomaly among film directors. His resume reads like a who’s who of Hollywood. Over the years Schumacher directed and worked with such Hollywood icons as Tommy Lee Jones, Nicholas Cage, Colin Farrell, Michael Douglas and Jim Carrey. Joel Schumacher had an effect on young me, who was just starting to discover the magic world of the silver screen. Throughout my formative years Schumacher was able to terrify me with The Lost Boys, make my sides split with laughter in DC Cab, and tugged at the heartstrings with A Time To Kill.  Directors like Joel Schumacher do not come along very often, if ever. Wherever you are Joel, godspeed and thank you for all the years of entertainment, tears and laughter.

The post Lost Boys Director Joel Schumacher Passes Away At 80 appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Review: Blade: The Iron Cross is a Major Step Forward for the Puppet Master Franchise


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of Review: Blade: The Iron Cross is a Major Step Forward for the Puppet Master Franchise. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

The first great thing I can say about Blade: The Iron Cross, right out of the gate, is that I cannot believe it was shot in five days. I know that it was, because I even watched it happen. That is, after all, the central gimmick of Charles Band’s Deadly Ten: ten Full Moon movies produced right before your eyes, the whole production live-streamed, along with all sorts of extra bonus content. And of course I know that there were a lot of added photography to get the puppet FX right, something I very much appreciate as a fan. The result is something I’ll honestly say I was not expecting: a movie that doesn’t feel like it was made for a cent less than the high profile reboot that went to theaters, a movie that takes care of the continuity and understands it in a way I wasn’t sure I’d ever see from this franchise outside of a comic book again, a movie that is more sleek and technically well crafted than any Full Moon film I’ve seen in two decades, and above all a movie that represents a huge step forward for the Puppet Master franchise overall. The story follows the previous film’s—for the continuity conscious, that’s Axis Termination—heroine Elisa Ivanov. Thankfully, much like Scarlet Witch in the Avengers movies, Elisa has lost her distracting accent from the previous movie. Tania Fox gets to play a much more fleshed out and endearing version of the character, almost a reimagining, The psychic elements are still there and right at the forefront but are coupled with her new job as a reporter, which gives her a snappier, Lois Lane edge that not only works perfectly for the period but just in general makes the character much more interesting. Partnered along with her and really adding to the ‘40s energy is Detective Joe Gray, played by Vincent Cusimano, who is surprisingly quick to believe Elisa’s visions. Together, they team up to tackle a Nazi plot for—naturally—world domination, while also of course being aided by Elisa’s puppet pal, Blade.  As for Blade himself, he is well represented in just about every way. I have been saying for years, as a fan of the series, that spinoffs would be a smart move because they’d not only allow for different kinds of storytelling in a series that has gone on this long, but they would also cater to the budgetary realities of the franchise and Full Moon. Some of the more recent Puppet Master entries had the puppets put together in about a week’s time, and we’re talking multiples of every puppet. That stretches an FX team incredibly thin and doesn’t allow for puppets that look as good as everyone wants, which is a big deal when talking about the stars of the film. I’m happy to say that I feel extremely validated, in that regard, by the way this movie turned out. Blade: The Iron Cross looks like it hails from a bygone era of Puppet Master because care is clearly taken with the central puppet. Granted, he’s not on screen as much as you’d think and I’m still not a huge fan of his new Bruce Campbell chin, but when he is on screen, he has plenty to do. There’s an animatronic puppet that you can tell Tom Devlin and his FX crew put a lot of work into and it goes a long way toward making this feel like the early days of the series. Which is amazing, when I’ve long since trained myself to get excited over a puppet standing still on camera and just slightly moving its arm. There is, I’ll admit, a bit of green screen suit acting for Blade as well, but it’s edited well and looks much more convincing than its infamous usage in Axis Termination. I’m also still in disbelief that the movie could show me anything with Blade that I had not seen before, let alone something I couldn’t believe hadn’t been done before now, but it does. There’s a bit with Blade’s eye spikes that feels amazing just in that it had somehow never happened before. Even better, though, as a fan, is how the film treats Blade as a character. I went in a little nervous because I didn’t really know how the central icon would be treated, given that this is his first solo movie and all. I shouldn’t have worried at all. You can even almost feel an influence of the recent comics, because there’s so much care taken to make it clear that Blade is a character and not just a prop or a cool effect. Even though there’s not a lot of time spent on it, one of the best things about Blade: The Iron Cross is the way it justifies being a solo outing for this puppet in particular.  It ties things back to Puppet Master III, which gave us Blade’s origin story. Dr. Hess, who had been working under the Nazis to find a way to reanimate fallen soldiers, turned coat to help the puppet master Andre Toulon, was killed for it and became Blade. The Nazis in this film, led by the mad scientist Dr. Hauser (played by Roy Abramsohn of Escape from Tomorrow) are furthering the experiments with reanimation using Hess’s leftover notes and the vial of formula he had taken from Toulon’s workshop. They are picking up where he left off. The mess at the heart of the film is one that Blade, when he had been a man, had no small part in making. This is a redemption story. There’s even a line in the movie that cements it as such. And I definitely think, simply from a story and a character perspective, that if we were going to have a solo Blade movie there needed to be a reason to justify why it centers on this character and not any of the other puppets, or why they couldn’t all be involved, and just in terms of these larger plot details, this does that without question.  As strange as it may sound, I also honestly love the way this entry approaches the Nazis. This is, after all, the fifth movie in the franchise in which Nazis make up the central villains, and it is the fifth to be set during World War II. In more recent entries, they have been cartoonishly over-the-top, which worked for those particular films, but even if there’s still a bit of that—particularly with Dr. Hauser—this is a refreshing change of pace. I don’t know if this was an intentionally timely move, but I love for the fact that this time the focus is largely on American Nazis. The last few movies all centered on Germans that had infiltrated Los Angeles as spies, but this time there’s a shift to focus on Americans who happen to ally with the Nazi party, infiltrating the police force and even higher positions as well.  Given that it was shot last summer it couldn’t possibly be intentionally timely, but man does the timing happen to work out really well nonetheless. Speaking of timing, there’s one other thing this movie does with not only the Nazis that really surprised me and provides the film with an interesting—and refreshing—perspective. There’s a scene I love fairly early on in which one of the Nazis basically walks out on the whole operation by pointing out that the tide is turning, things have happened in France that are starting to happen everywhere, and basically points out that the writing is on the wall and they all know it. It’s really smart considering the timeframe of the series. We’ve had so many prequels set in World War II now, that we’ve actually seen it through to the end of the war. In general, this is a fascinating point in time to set any Nazi story and I both can’t believe and am really excited that Blade: The Iron Cross of all things does it. The Nazis know that the war is over and they have lost. They’re scrambling and they’re scared. And as silly and low-budget as this is, there’s care taken to demonstrate that. As over-the-top as the Nazi villains have been in recent Puppet Master outings, Blade is a breath of fresh air in that it lets them be pathetic. They’re scared old racists and their time is up, and they’re lashing out with increasingly absurd and extravagant plans because they know that. There’s even a great bit when, after Blade closes in on our villains, one of the highest-ranking and most intimidating Nazis in the group turns and runs screaming, leaving everyone behind as he tries to escape.  That’s not to say that there isn’t anything over-the-top or cartoonish about Blade: The Iron Cross, either. To try and say that would be a lie, because there’s a whole section of the plot revolving around a literal death ray. But even that works in context because it feels like it’s ripped straight out of an old 1940s serial, which in a way this kind of is. It’s embracing how much these long-running low budget franchises have in common with that kind of storytelling. Puppet Master basically is a serial at this point and we all just wait with each entry to see how our little gang makes it out of one predicament and finds themselves in the next.  Honestly, though, the greatest strengths of Blade: The Iron Cross lie in its technical elements. I’ve been so used to a static camera in this franchise for so long that to see something else was almost jarring. Other entries, even ones that I like, often had an air about them that suggested that if something was in frame and in focus it wound up in the movie. Blade has a very energetic, kinetic camera. It is constantly moving and that is very nice to see after all this time. It’s also the most impressive thing because, again, I watched a live-stream of the entire principal photography and I know how much time they didn’t have. This is the most fluid camera work I’ve seen in a Full Moon movie since Castle Freak. And it’s not just the camera movement, either. Lighting plays a big role, too. There are a lot of period genre pastiches going on here, and they’re all lit very appropriately, from the snappy reporter stuff to the heavily shadowed noir elements and the seedy bad guy hideout. These areas are, I think, where John Lechago truly proves himself the man for the job.  I am not by any means saying that Blade: The Iron Cross is not extremely low budget and quickly made or that it never shows it, because there are times when it certainly does. Some of the supporting actors don’t quite hit the mark and there’s a little too much talk about bio-energy, I’ll admit. And I know that some people will look at this and see absolutely no difference between this and the recent Puppet Master movies that have come before it, but I do. This is the first modern Puppet Master movie I wish I could show my childhood self and I think that, right there, says everything. Not only because I’ve wanted a Blade movie since I was eight, but because of how much care was taken in delivering on that, especially within the realities of time and budget. My opinion is absolutely colored by being a fan, and the kind of fan who has spent the last two years writing a book on this very franchise on top of that, but I’m also a fan who learned how to manage my expectation with this series when I was still pretty young. I’ve gone in looking for any good I could gleam out of a new Puppet Master for a long time now, so it’s with both excitement and a huge sigh of relief that I am able to say that against all odds, even if it’s still on a minuscule budget, everything I love about the series is on display in this new entry, and the child in me who brought his Blade action figure everywhere he went is happy to see that this two-foot Klaus Kinski finally got the standalone movie he’s always deserved. WICKED RATING: 7.5/10 Director: John Lechago Writer: Roger Barron Stars: Tania Fox, Roy Abramsohn, Vincent Cusimano Release Date: June 26th, 2020 Studio/Production Company: Full Moon Features Language: English Run Time: Approx. 75 minutes

The post Review: Blade: The Iron Cross is a Major Step Forward for the Puppet Master Franchise appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Review: Blade: The Iron Cross is a Major Step Forward for the Puppet Master Franchise


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of Review: Blade: The Iron Cross is a Major Step Forward for the Puppet Master Franchise. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

The first great thing I can say about Blade: The Iron Cross, right out of the gate, is that I cannot believe it was shot in five days. I know that it was, because I even watched it happen. That is, after all, the central gimmick of Charles Band’s Deadly Ten: ten Full Moon movies produced right before your eyes, the whole production live-streamed, along with all sorts of extra bonus content. And of course I know that there were a lot of added photography to get the puppet FX right, something I very much appreciate as a fan. The result is something I’ll honestly say I was not expecting: a movie that doesn’t feel like it was made for a cent less than the high profile reboot that went to theaters, a movie that takes care of the continuity and understands it in a way I wasn’t sure I’d ever see from this franchise outside of a comic book again, a movie that is more sleek and technically well crafted than any Full Moon film I’ve seen in two decades, and above all a movie that represents a huge step forward for the Puppet Master franchise overall. The story follows the previous film’s—for the continuity conscious, that’s Axis Termination—heroine Elisa Ivanov. Thankfully, much like Scarlet Witch in the Avengers movies, Elisa has lost her distracting accent from the previous movie. Tania Fox gets to play a much more fleshed out and endearing version of the character, almost a reimagining, The psychic elements are still there and right at the forefront but are coupled with her new job as a reporter, which gives her a snappier, Lois Lane edge that not only works perfectly for the period but just in general makes the character much more interesting. Partnered along with her and really adding to the ‘40s energy is Detective Joe Gray, played by Vincent Cusimano, who is surprisingly quick to believe Elisa’s visions. Together, they team up to tackle a Nazi plot for—naturally—world domination, while also of course being aided by Elisa’s puppet pal, Blade.  As for Blade himself, he is well represented in just about every way. I have been saying for years, as a fan of the series, that spinoffs would be a smart move because they’d not only allow for different kinds of storytelling in a series that has gone on this long, but they would also cater to the budgetary realities of the franchise and Full Moon. Some of the more recent Puppet Master entries had the puppets put together in about a week’s time, and we’re talking multiples of every puppet. That stretches an FX team incredibly thin and doesn’t allow for puppets that look as good as everyone wants, which is a big deal when talking about the stars of the film. I’m happy to say that I feel extremely validated, in that regard, by the way this movie turned out. Blade: The Iron Cross looks like it hails from a bygone era of Puppet Master because care is clearly taken with the central puppet. Granted, he’s not on screen as much as you’d think and I’m still not a huge fan of his new Bruce Campbell chin, but when he is on screen, he has plenty to do. There’s an animatronic puppet that you can tell Tom Devlin and his FX crew put a lot of work into and it goes a long way toward making this feel like the early days of the series. Which is amazing, when I’ve long since trained myself to get excited over a puppet standing still on camera and just slightly moving its arm. There is, I’ll admit, a bit of green screen suit acting for Blade as well, but it’s edited well and looks much more convincing than its infamous usage in Axis Termination. I’m also still in disbelief that the movie could show me anything with Blade that I had not seen before, let alone something I couldn’t believe hadn’t been done before now, but it does. There’s a bit with Blade’s eye spikes that feels amazing just in that it had somehow never happened before. Even better, though, as a fan, is how the film treats Blade as a character. I went in a little nervous because I didn’t really know how the central icon would be treated, given that this is his first solo movie and all. I shouldn’t have worried at all. You can even almost feel an influence of the recent comics, because there’s so much care taken to make it clear that Blade is a character and not just a prop or a cool effect. Even though there’s not a lot of time spent on it, one of the best things about Blade: The Iron Cross is the way it justifies being a solo outing for this puppet in particular.  It ties things back to Puppet Master III, which gave us Blade’s origin story. Dr. Hess, who had been working under the Nazis to find a way to reanimate fallen soldiers, turned coat to help the puppet master Andre Toulon, was killed for it and became Blade. The Nazis in this film, led by the mad scientist Dr. Hauser (played by Roy Abramsohn of Escape from Tomorrow) are furthering the experiments with reanimation using Hess’s leftover notes and the vial of formula he had taken from Toulon’s workshop. They are picking up where he left off. The mess at the heart of the film is one that Blade, when he had been a man, had no small part in making. This is a redemption story. There’s even a line in the movie that cements it as such. And I definitely think, simply from a story and a character perspective, that if we were going to have a solo Blade movie there needed to be a reason to justify why it centers on this character and not any of the other puppets, or why they couldn’t all be involved, and just in terms of these larger plot details, this does that without question.  As strange as it may sound, I also honestly love the way this entry approaches the Nazis. This is, after all, the fifth movie in the franchise in which Nazis make up the central villains, and it is the fifth to be set during World War II. In more recent entries, they have been cartoonishly over-the-top, which worked for those particular films, but even if there’s still a bit of that—particularly with Dr. Hauser—this is a refreshing change of pace. I don’t know if this was an intentionally timely move, but I love for the fact that this time the focus is largely on American Nazis. The last few movies all centered on Germans that had infiltrated Los Angeles as spies, but this time there’s a shift to focus on Americans who happen to ally with the Nazi party, infiltrating the police force and even higher positions as well.  Given that it was shot last summer it couldn’t possibly be intentionally timely, but man does the timing happen to work out really well nonetheless. Speaking of timing, there’s one other thing this movie does with not only the Nazis that really surprised me and provides the film with an interesting—and refreshing—perspective. There’s a scene I love fairly early on in which one of the Nazis basically walks out on the whole operation by pointing out that the tide is turning, things have happened in France that are starting to happen everywhere, and basically points out that the writing is on the wall and they all know it. It’s really smart considering the timeframe of the series. We’ve had so many prequels set in World War II now, that we’ve actually seen it through to the end of the war. In general, this is a fascinating point in time to set any Nazi story and I both can’t believe and am really excited that Blade: The Iron Cross of all things does it. The Nazis know that the war is over and they have lost. They’re scrambling and they’re scared. And as silly and low-budget as this is, there’s care taken to demonstrate that. As over-the-top as the Nazi villains have been in recent Puppet Master outings, Blade is a breath of fresh air in that it lets them be pathetic. They’re scared old racists and their time is up, and they’re lashing out with increasingly absurd and extravagant plans because they know that. There’s even a great bit when, after Blade closes in on our villains, one of the highest-ranking and most intimidating Nazis in the group turns and runs screaming, leaving everyone behind as he tries to escape.  That’s not to say that there isn’t anything over-the-top or cartoonish about Blade: The Iron Cross, either. To try and say that would be a lie, because there’s a whole section of the plot revolving around a literal death ray. But even that works in context because it feels like it’s ripped straight out of an old 1940s serial, which in a way this kind of is. It’s embracing how much these long-running low budget franchises have in common with that kind of storytelling. Puppet Master basically is a serial at this point and we all just wait with each entry to see how our little gang makes it out of one predicament and finds themselves in the next.  Honestly, though, the greatest strengths of Blade: The Iron Cross lie in its technical elements. I’ve been so used to a static camera in this franchise for so long that to see something else was almost jarring. Other entries, even ones that I like, often had an air about them that suggested that if something was in frame and in focus it wound up in the movie. Blade has a very energetic, kinetic camera. It is constantly moving and that is very nice to see after all this time. It’s also the most impressive thing because, again, I watched a live-stream of the entire principal photography and I know how much time they didn’t have. This is the most fluid camera work I’ve seen in a Full Moon movie since Castle Freak. And it’s not just the camera movement, either. Lighting plays a big role, too. There are a lot of period genre pastiches going on here, and they’re all lit very appropriately, from the snappy reporter stuff to the heavily shadowed noir elements and the seedy bad guy hideout. These areas are, I think, where John Lechago truly proves himself the man for the job.  I am not by any means saying that Blade: The Iron Cross is not extremely low budget and quickly made or that it never shows it, because there are times when it certainly does. Some of the supporting actors don’t quite hit the mark and there’s a little too much talk about bio-energy, I’ll admit. And I know that some people will look at this and see absolutely no difference between this and the recent Puppet Master movies that have come before it, but I do. This is the first modern Puppet Master movie I wish I could show my childhood self and I think that, right there, says everything. Not only because I’ve wanted a Blade movie since I was eight, but because of how much care was taken in delivering on that, especially within the realities of time and budget. My opinion is absolutely colored by being a fan, and the kind of fan who has spent the last two years writing a book on this very franchise on top of that, but I’m also a fan who learned how to manage my expectation with this series when I was still pretty young. I’ve gone in looking for any good I could gleam out of a new Puppet Master for a long time now, so it’s with both excitement and a huge sigh of relief that I am able to say that against all odds, even if it’s still on a minuscule budget, everything I love about the series is on display in this new entry, and the child in me who brought his Blade action figure everywhere he went is happy to see that this two-foot Klaus Kinski finally got the standalone movie he’s always deserved. WICKED RATING: 7.5/10 Director: John Lechago Writer: Roger Barron Stars: Tania Fox, Roy Abramsohn, Vincent Cusimano Release Date: June 26th, 2020 Studio/Production Company: Full Moon Features Language: English Run Time: Approx. 75 minutes

The post Review: Blade: The Iron Cross is a Major Step Forward for the Puppet Master Franchise appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Saturday, 20 June 2020

Unsolved Mysteries Returns July 1st, 2020


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of Unsolved Mysteries Returns July 1st, 2020. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

Amateur investigators, ghost hunters and UFO enthusiasts rejoice. The hit, nightmare-inducing Unsolved Mysteries has been picked up by Netflix and will premier new episodes beginning July 1st, 2020. Unsolved Mysteries premiered in January of 1987 and ran until April of 2010. During the show’s run viewers saw stories of unsolved crimes, tales of lost loved ones, reports of buried treasure, ghosts, UFO’s and so much more. In 2017, original series producers John Cosgrove and Terry Dunn Meurer expressed interest in reviving the series again. Cosgrove and Meurer teamed up with 21 Laps Entertainment of Stranger Things fame and began working on the relaunch. On January 18, 2019, Netflix announced it picked up 12 brand new episodes of the show for its forthcoming debut. So what can fans of the original Unsolved Mysteries expect with this latest outing of the beloved series? We here at Wicked Horror have learned several things will be different this time around from the original. Unlike the initial run, each episode of the new Unsolved Mysteries will focus on just one case per episode, versus the original where 3 to 4 stories were presented. The new version will also be lacking a narrator. Fans of the original remember the velvet voiced, trench coat clad, and menacing stare of original host and accomplished actor Robert Stack. In January 2019, show creator John Cosgrove sat down for an interview with Channel Nonfiction to discuss some of the changes. In the interview Cosgrove told Gregory Crofton that the new version will “be very different and there’s no host and no narrator, so it will be pure documentary style.” The July 1st debut will cover the fascinating and intriguing case of close encounters and extraterrestrial abductions of family members that were alleged to have occurred in September of 1969 in and around Sheffield, Massachusetts. I will let the show explain the case beyond the above information. SEE ALSO: UNSOLVED MYSTERIES: 10 CASES THAT STILL REMAIN OPEN In July, Netflix will release the first 6 episodes which will be followed up in October with the remaining six episodes, just in time for Halloween. During its run, Unsolved Mysteries helped to close some 500 cases and aided in bringing closure to many devastated families and loved ones. I can only hope the new run of the series is able to similar results. As a lifelong Unsolved Mysteries devotee, I cannot wait for the new season to premier. While it will be noticeably different from the original, I have faith that the new series will hold up, especially since the original creative team is back on board. The only unforgiveable sin for this new series would be if the original Unsolved Mysteries theme has been nixed. Even those who have not watched the show in years can usually recite the notes to the theme song. It’s that memorable! As I patiently wait for the new shows to drop on July 1st, I invite you to partake in this reboot with me.  In the words of the late, great Robert Stack…Join me. Perhaps you may be able to help solve a mystery

The post Unsolved Mysteries Returns July 1st, 2020 appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Unsolved Mysteries Returns July 1st, 2020


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of Unsolved Mysteries Returns July 1st, 2020. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

Amateur investigators, ghost hunters and UFO enthusiasts rejoice. The hit, nightmare-inducing Unsolved Mysteries has been picked up by Netflix and will premier new episodes beginning July 1st, 2020. Unsolved Mysteries premiered in January of 1987 and ran until April of 2010. During the show’s run viewers saw stories of unsolved crimes, tales of lost loved ones, reports of buried treasure, ghosts, UFO’s and so much more. In 2017, original series producers John Cosgrove and Terry Dunn Meurer expressed interest in reviving the series again. Cosgrove and Meurer teamed up with 21 Laps Entertainment of Stranger Things fame and began working on the relaunch. On January 18, 2019, Netflix announced it picked up 12 brand new episodes of the show for its forthcoming debut. So what can fans of the original Unsolved Mysteries expect with this latest outing of the beloved series? We here at Wicked Horror have learned several things will be different this time around from the original. Unlike the initial run, each episode of the new Unsolved Mysteries will focus on just one case per episode, versus the original where 3 to 4 stories were presented. The new version will also be lacking a narrator. Fans of the original remember the velvet voiced, trench coat clad, and menacing stare of original host and accomplished actor Robert Stack. In January 2019, show creator John Cosgrove sat down for an interview with Channel Nonfiction to discuss some of the changes. In the interview Cosgrove told Gregory Crofton that the new version will “be very different and there’s no host and no narrator, so it will be pure documentary style.” The July 1st debut will cover the fascinating and intriguing case of close encounters and extraterrestrial abductions of family members that were alleged to have occurred in September of 1969 in and around Sheffield, Massachusetts. I will let the show explain the case beyond the above information. SEE ALSO: UNSOLVED MYSTERIES: 10 CASES THAT STILL REMAIN OPEN In July, Netflix will release the first 6 episodes which will be followed up in October with the remaining six episodes, just in time for Halloween. During its run, Unsolved Mysteries helped to close some 500 cases and aided in bringing closure to many devastated families and loved ones. I can only hope the new run of the series is able to similar results. As a lifelong Unsolved Mysteries devotee, I cannot wait for the new season to premier. While it will be noticeably different from the original, I have faith that the new series will hold up, especially since the original creative team is back on board. The only unforgiveable sin for this new series would be if the original Unsolved Mysteries theme has been nixed. Even those who have not watched the show in years can usually recite the notes to the theme song. It’s that memorable! As I patiently wait for the new shows to drop on July 1st, I invite you to partake in this reboot with me.  In the words of the late, great Robert Stack…Join me. Perhaps you may be able to help solve a mystery

The post Unsolved Mysteries Returns July 1st, 2020 appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Friday, 19 June 2020

New on Netflix: June 19th, 2020


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of New on Netflix: June 19th, 2020. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

It’s Friday and you know what that means: It’s time to figure out what you’ll be watching this week. Welcome back to New on Netflix! The streaming giant’s horror department has always been a mixed bag. However, I’d say they’ve really stepped up their game in the last couple of years with the release of amazing, essential watches. We’ve been treated to must see original programming like The Haunting of Hill House, Velvet Buzzsaw, Hush, and some of the classics we all know and love. This week we have an investigative documentary and a 2013 sci-fi flick. Dark Skies Arriving on June 22nd is Dark Skies. When someone begins terrorizing the Barrett family, turning their peaceful suburban life into a living nightmare, all of the escalating series of disturbing events eventually leads the family to believe the culprit may come from beyond the stars. Athlete A Arriving to Netflix on June 24th is the documentary Athlete A which follows a team of investigative journalists from The Indianapolis Star who would go on to break the story that the USAG women’s team doctor, Larry Nassar, had been abusing athletes for over two decades. Follow us social media! Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.

The post New on Netflix: June 19th, 2020 appeared first on Wicked Horror.


WrestleMassacre isn’t Worthy of Its Cool Title [Review]


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of WrestleMassacre isn’t Worthy of Its Cool Title [Review]. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

With a title like WrestleMassacre, you know what kind of movie you’re in for. And yet, I cannot overstate just how much this rubbish resembles a cross between a backwoods wrestling event and a no-budget horror flick filmed in your mate’s basement. To be clear, though, it’s not even worthy of the fun images those two events conjure. The thing starts off with a naked woman (a friend of the filmmakers, one would hope) running through the woods, the camera right up her vagina (seriously), and only gets more baffling from there. It’s not just incompetent, offensive, and badly made to the point of insanity; WrestleMassacre also boasts very little wrestling or massacring. Our hero is Randy (the likeable Richie Acevedo, himself a former indy wrestler), a lowly groundskeeper who dreams of pro-wrestling glory. Problem is, nobody believes in him, not even his own ex-wrestler father, and they all treat him like dirt even when Randy just wants to do his job and perv on his clients showering (more boobs!) in peace. After his big shot at a local school run by the legendary Jimmy Valiant, AKA The Boogie Woogie Man (who seemingly still has an Outlook email address, just FYI) goes embarrassingly wrong, Randy snaps and goes on a rampage. It’s like Joker, but with a wannabe wrestler instead of a comedian. There’s also some business with local criminals but that’s inconsequential. See Also: Tainted Could Stand to Be More of an Exploitation Movie [Review] Just to clear, horror movies made on the sly by a group of friends with a decent idea can be really fun. See the recent Pool Party Massacre, which was shot entirely on the director’s property and boasts plenty of blood, guts, and laughs even though, demonstrably, it cost about ten bucks to make. The issue with WrestleMassacre isn’t that it’s cheaply made by a bunch of amateurs, but rather that every single choice is wrong and, because of the inclusion of famous wrestlers like Valiant, Tony Atlas (in a sweaty, blink and you’ll miss him cameo) and Rene Dupree, the people behind it seem to think none of the fundamentals will matter and that they’ll just…get away with it. Star power doesn’t drown out inept framing, terrible sound design, and flat performances, however. Take, for example, the phone call that takes place early on between Owen (Julio Bana Fernandez, who looks like a cross between a young Jason Mewes and Fabio — the latter comparison forming the basis of a joke that pops up more than once here) and some Tiger King-looking dude he owes money to because, and I cannot stress this enough, he’s addicted to fantasy football. The shot is framed so only the aggressor’s dirty teeth are shown, which seems like something that would’ve been obvious the first time it was set up. Also, iPhones don’t ring like landlines except in WrestleMassacre. Neither actor is particularly convincing, but the script doesn’t help them either. Later, Fernandez will struggle to keep a straight face while being intimidated outside of a bar, but we can’t really blame him. The score is omnipresent and sounds like a transplant from an old arcade game. Sometimes, it overpowers the dialogue so we have no idea what the characters are even saying to each other. At one stage, there’s a big, bloody fight montage with a song that sounds like a PPV reject (yes, worse than Flo-Rida’s “My House”) laid over it and no additional audio, so the victims’ reactions and, crucially, their screams aren’t audible. The song ends before the montage does, too. A washing machine or overhead fan appears to have been left on during another sequence which, again, is surely something that was noticeable during the first take (unless they only did one, of course). The pacing in WrestleMassacre is truly bizarre. Randy disappears for a significant chunk of the final act, midway through his own rampage, the reasons for which aren’t made entirely clear, and the action grinds to a complete halt as a trio of criminals descend on Owen’s house to extract what they’re owed. Before Dupree’s character, Shawn, can show up to save the day, though, there’s a lengthy sex scene between him and his onscreen wife with, yes, even more female nudity. The film’s treatment of women is dodgy, to say the very least, as they’re mostly kept either on the sidelines, as with Owen’s well-meaning wife, Becky, but when they do take center-stage it’s purely for ogling purposes, or to complain about the boob jobs their partners haven’t paid for yet. All of the men are dressed like wrestlers, and they barge into scenes to, essentially, cut promos on each other to the extent that when the film finally does descend into a backyard wrestling match, it’s actually pretty good. The usual nonsense props like ladders and chairs are well-utilized and the participants, all either local amateur wrestlers or former pro-wrestlers, work well together. It’s almost a shame that the “massacre” element is there at all, even though poor Randy is evidently a better murderer than he is a wrestler. Acevedo brings warmth to a barely-written role, looking a bit like WWE Superstar Luke Harper (or Brody Lee, to give him his AEW name) let himself go. He’s a pathetic character and it’s easy to empathize with him, particularly as Randy stands in front of a whiteboard where “Fire Randy” has clearly been written as part of a to-do list. Aside from Acevedo, there are a couple decent performances among the no-name cast, but otherwise the clear standout here is Dupree, who’s easily more natural and charismatic onscreen than anybody else. Valiant has fun in his small role, too, proving he can still pack a punch in his twilight years and showcasing his surprisingly compact real-life wrestling school in the process. There are also some intentionally funny moments — as opposed to the shot of a plant on a stool in front of a mirror that was someone’s idea of set dressing and becomes more hilarious the longer the scene drags on —  such as when one wannabe wrestler yells, “I don’t wanna be a wrestler anymore!” after running afoul of a bloodthirsty Randy. The script, credited to four different people including, shockingly, one woman, isn’t complete garbage, it just needs more jokes and much less proselytizing. Related: Darkness Falls is Like a Cop Movie Written By a Bot [Review] As for the SFX, which are credited to about ten different people, they’re fine but some clever editing could’ve sold them a bit better. Still, it’s always better to see practical stuff rather than cheap CGI and any gore created in someone’s garage, even if it’s unconvincing, is by its very existence charming. It’s also worth noting that the logo for WrestleMassacre is pretty cool (grasping at straws here, but it genuinely is). Unfortunately, none of the mildly diverting stuff that’s fun about this movie makes up for just how incompetent it is. Suddenly it’s nighttime during a scene that, two seconds previously, was taking place in daylight. And then the whole thing ends abruptly like director and co-writer Brad Twigg had no idea how to finish it off and just stopped shooting. The thing is loaded with capital-C choices, many of which make The Room look like it was filmed competently. I realize that’s an overused comparison, but WrestleMassacre really is that bad. To add insult to injury, it can’t even be enjoyed in the same way Tommy Wiseau’s beloved cult movie can because there’s nothing bizarre enough to cling to. All things considered, there really isn’t enough wrestling or massacring to even justify that evocative title. A baffling endeavor for all involved. WICKED RATING: 2/10 Director(s): Brad Twigg Writer(s): Brad Twigg, Rosanna Nelson, Matthew L. Furnam, Julio Bana Fernandez Stars: Richie Acevedo, Julio Bana Fernandez, Rene Dupree, Tony Atlas Release date: June 16, 2020 Studio/Production Company: Fuzzy Monkey Films Language: English Run Time: 100 minutes Follow us on social media: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube

The post WrestleMassacre isn’t Worthy of Its Cool Title [Review] appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Thursday, 18 June 2020

Five Forgotten TV-Movies that Need to be Rediscovered


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of Five Forgotten TV-Movies that Need to be Rediscovered. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

Horror fans today may not realize there’s a horror aesthetic that’s almost lost, except to the DVD bends or obscure digital rentals. That’s the TV-movie horror, a distinct and creepy form that’s hinted at a bit in Hulu’s Into the Dark monthly film series.  While adhering to broadcast TV standards, textbook dramatic structure and often providing significant third-act twists as payoff, these 70-90 minute flicks sent chills down the spines of ‘70s kids while they were viewing. Those children stayed huddled under the covers at bedtime for days after, wondering what zombies or other creatures lurked in the shadows. Or which loved one might secretly be a betrayer.  A few original standouts have managed to stay above the tide, of course. The Night Stalker touched off a one-season series, a brief series reboot and enjoys an ongoing cult following. It also inspired The X-Files, so there’s that. And Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark with its haunting whispers spawned a Guillermo del Toro-produced remake. Others haven’t enjoyed that longevity, but there are still chills to be found if you seek them out via streaming services, rentals or eBay. Here are five made-for-TV tales to watch in the dark with imagination engaged. See Also: Summer of Fear [Rabid Dog’s House Review] Crowhaven Farm (1970) Debuting as an ABC-TV movie of the week a couple of years ahead of The Night Stalker, this featured Hope Lang and Paul Burke as Maggie and Ben Porter. John Carradine and other great character actors made up the supporting cast. Ben and Maggie are a troubled couple. Trust issues! But they’re hoping to start a family when they head to a Maine farm. Hints of New England witchcraft and deals with the devil plus nagging hints that Maggie might be the reincarnation of the farm’s previous occupant unsettle the couple and viewers as well. Warnings of a bite from the devil’s own teeth plus horrifying flashbacks to a crushing witch torture make this a true gem. And it’s written by John McGreevey, whose credits include Family Affair! The Norliss Tapes (1973) This pilot–written by William F. Nolan and directed by Dan Curtis, of The Night Stalker and Dark Shadows–slipped into NBC’s Mystery Movie wheel one Wednesday night. Those expecting the slightly comical McCloud or Columbo met the much darker David Norliss instead. He’s an investigative journalist fresh off researching a book intended to debunk fake mediums and other charlatans. Uh, oh. In the opening minutes, Norliss reveals to his publisher everything’s not as fake as expected. He miiiiiiiiight have accidentally upset dark forces. That said, Norliss disappears. His publisher (Don Porter, Gidget’s dad), concerned he’s out a writer and especially an advance, listens to cassette tapes Norliss left behind. Each tape’s a story. The pilot’s focus is a tape concerning the wife (Angie Dickinson) of a dead sculptor. She’s having unsettling experiences. During persistent, gloomy rainstorms, Norliss investigates. He soon suspects the deceased is coming back and is at work in his abandoned studio on a commission straight out of hell. Genuine jump scares combine with Night of the Living Dead-inspired makeup and an all-hell-breaks-loose finale for a memorable and chilling excursion. Sadly, a planned series was upended by a writer’s strike. Only Nolan’s treatment for a followup provided further details on Norliss when it appeared in a horror magazine in the 1980s.   See Also: Delivered is a Mother’s Day Bundle of Dread and Discomfort A Taste of Evil (1971) Not quite as chilling as Crowhaven Farm, this psychological thriller with Roddy McDowell, Barbara Parkins and Barbara Stanwick is still worth a look. It’s scripted by Jimmy Sangster, screenwriter on some of Hammer’s top Frankenstein and Dracula series entries. In addition to that, it’s directed by John Llewellyn Moxey whose credits include the fab black-and-white The City of the Dead aka Horror Hotel with Christopher Lee. There’s a distinctly cinematic feel to this flick. Parkins is Susan Wilcox, a young woman returning home following years in a Swiss institution following a rape at age 13. Mom (Stanwick) has remarried a boozy William Windom, and Susan’s soon experiencing what might be a new wave of hallucinations and strange experiences including a disappearing body. Is she going mad? McDowell as a psychiatrist is called in to help, but matters only escalate while answers are elusive until the the very end. Also See: Good Boy Provides and Emotional Support Dog with Bloody Benefits [Review] Dr. Cook’s Garden (1971) To sum this one up without giving too much away, Bing Crosby stars in a role far different from his musicals or folksy Christmas specials. Based on a Broadway flop by Ira Levin (Rosemary’s Baby) Garden is directed by Ted Post (Beneath the Planet of the Apes). Blythe Danner also stars, and Frank Converse is Dr. Jimmy Tennyson, Cook’s protégé. It’s mystery/horror with the underlying secrets of the surprisingly placid New England revealed slowly. A sense of dread develops as Tennyson reunites with Dr. Cook, who once shielded him from an abusive alcoholic father in his youth. The stage-roots fuel the human interactions, so it’s a great chance to view a distinctive turn by Crosby and to watch a tale with chilling implications unfold. Scream of the Wolf (1974) Firstly, it’s topped by ‘60s TV series stars Peter Graves (Mission: Impossible) and Clint Walker (Cheyenne). And you get Jo Ann Pflug fresh off the second Kolchak telefilm, The Night Strangler. Late-era Dark Shadows villain Jim Storm appears too. Not to mention perennial screen heavy Don Megowan. He wore the land suit in Creature Walks Among Us. Secondly, it’s adapted by The Night Stalker’s veteran writer Richard Matheson from a seminal horror short story by David Case. The script moves action from England to the U.S. It’s directed by The Night Stalker’s Dan Curtis. It’s not The Night Stalker. It’s not The Norliss Tapes. However, this thriller’s an intriguing excursion with a tantalizing central question. Is a lone wolf behind multiple small town deaths or is Walker’s big game hunter a werewolf? He did suffer a severe wolf bite once. It’s up to writer Peter Graves to find out, and the tension between Graves and Walker’s great as the story unfolds. Follow us social media! Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.

The post Five Forgotten TV-Movies that Need to be Rediscovered appeared first on Wicked Horror.


Wednesday, 17 June 2020

You And I Are One Forever: Why Carmilla Remains One of the Most Important Vampire Stories Ever Told


Original Source via Wicked Horror

Wicked Horror is the author of You And I Are One Forever: Why Carmilla Remains One of the Most Important Vampire Stories Ever Told. Wicked Horror is the internet's only horror fan site for free original horror movies, news, review & more.

Dracula was an obsessively well-researched book. While the novel was published in 1897, Stoker had written his first notes on the story—of a young solicitor unknowingly venturing into the home of a vampire—at the beginning of the decade. He researched history, learned the names of Transylvanian locations like Bistritz and the Borgo Pass, studied the path of the Carpathian Mountains as best as he could and, most importantly, read virtually every vampire story that had published up to that point. John Polidori’s “The Vampyre” (lifted heavily from Lord Byron’s “Fragment of a Novel”) certainly had an influence on the aristocratic Count, although the story’s Lord Ruthven, somewhat ironically, more resembles the Dracula of the film adaptations than Stoker’s novel itself. Varney the Vampire was a serial of pure pulp, but the central woman being bitten by a vampire and turning into one herself very much inspired the novel’s middle section and Lucy’s transformation into a vampire. But no story inspired Dracula more than J. Sheridan Le Fanu’s Gothic novella, Carmilla.  The novella depicts a young woman named Laura, almost a fairy tale heroine, living in a beautiful castle in a sun-lit forest, who has the whole world before her, but is terribly lonely and only wants—more than anything—a friend. And that’s very much how Carmilla plays out at first: like a fairy tale. A carriage accident brings beautiful, but sickly Carmilla to her doorstep and the two become fast friends. Carmilla is strange, enchanting, but tells Laura nothing of her past and that only makes Laura that much more curious about her. As Carmilla’s health improves, everyone else seems to become sick around her, and despite how much she cares for her new companion, Laura must come to terms with the truth about what Carmilla is. Stoker was so inspired by Carmilla, in fact, that he originally intended to set the novel in Styria, where Le Fanu’s novella is set. The story contains many overt similarities with Dracula, things that certainly offered much inspiration, such as a young woman being preyed upon by a vampire, vampirism depicted as a slow illness that seems to drain a person before ultimately killing them, and an expert on the subject who comes in and provides necessary exposition before ultimately dispatching the undead. Both Dracula and Carmilla pass off their own backstories as those of an “ancestor.” Carmilla, in appearance, with her languid features, her pale skin and dark hair, closely resembles Lucy Westenra, who of course becomes Dracula’s most prominent female vampire. See Also: Script to Pieces: Hammer Films’ Vampirella These connections make Carmilla that much more fascinating, historically, because they showcase a fundamental influence on what is inarguably one of the most famous stories ever told and one of the most prominent characters in the entire pantheon of pop culture. But they’re also somewhat bittersweet at the same time, as they draw focus away from Carmilla as a story and make it difficult to read and appreciate the novella on its own merits. Because there are plenty. In fact, I would not hesitate at all to call Carmilla one of the best vampire stories ever written.  Of course, Carmilla can be and often is discussed separately from Dracula, in a larger context that is perhaps even more well known than its influence on Bram Stoker. I’m talking, naturally, about what is often referred to as the story’s lesbian subtext. I take issue with that terminology for one reason and one reason only: if the genuine, non-platonic love between Carmilla and Laura is subtextual, then Carmilla has no plot. It’s not the subtext of the story. It is the story, and it’s as overt as gothic literature in the 1870s could possibly be. It’s felt in every interaction between the two of them, every time Laura remarks about Carmilla’s beauty without adding “I wish I looked like that,” and is made explicitly clear when Laura asks Carmilla if she has ever been in love and Carmilla answers her, “I have been in love with no one, and never shall, unless it should be with you.” That’s the heart of the story, as well as the source of its melodrama and conflict as we know that Carmilla is a vampire and that this romance is ultimately doomed. There’s such a sense of melancholy to Carmilla, and rather than wallowing in that sadness, the story revels in it. Carmilla isn’t attractive despite her dreariness. The dreariness is the attraction. The attraction between Laura and Carmilla is immediate, though Laura instantly notices that there is something strange and ethereal about the girl. And it’s in the love story that makes up the core of the novella that it ultimately breaks from the traditions of the past. These days, people are quick to point out that the Old World vampires of folklore were much more overtly monstrous, less romanticized by far than the vampires we see in pop culture today. And if that’s true now, it’s far more true for 1872, when Carmilla was written. In fact, at that point in time, it wasn’t simply a matter of subverting the conventions of vampire stories—of which there were barely any, at least in the English language. It was bigger than that, because this was a time when much of the world still believed in vampires. In fact, parts of Europe were seeing a resurgence of vampire panic while in New England it was being treated as a full-blown epidemic. In the winter of 1816, after Samuel Salladay moved his family from Switzerland to Ohio, they began to die from Hereditary Consumption, one by one. After Salladay died, his son died from the same illness and believing this to be the work of a vampire, they dug Salladay up and burned his entrails in the fireplace to stop the spread of the disease, to no avail. In 1817, Frederic Ransom of Vermont was also exhumed under the belief that he had returned from his grave as a vampire.  Also See: Six Vampire Novels That Went Widely Overlooked That’s a very different thing than the sympathetic portrayals of Barnabus Collins, Lestat, or Angel (all of whom Carmilla clearly influenced to some degree) because Carmilla was written at a time when there were people who still believed vampires to be a very real and serious threat. Of course, at the same time, that belief was not commonplace. Those stories of vampire exhumations and stakings became so highly publicized because they were not, by any means, the norm. Yet even still, they were much more common than they’ve certainly been since, and enough people had to keep believing in those superstitions for those things to keep happening in the so-called “New World.” Nonetheless, Carmilla reflects an era when vampirism was very much defined by illness.  In general, the story’s approach to illness is fascinating. Not only is Carmilla herself something of a plague carrier, but she is also—already being a vampire—feigning illness from the first moment we’re introduced to her. For a lot of people, this makes the relationship between Carmilla and Laura harder to invest in, as not only is Carmilla lying about being a vampire, she’s also something of a grifter. On that level, she could be seen as no better than Willy Wonka’s Grandpa Joe, lying in bed without lifting a finger to help his struggling family, then revealing he’s been in fine health the whole time when the opportunity to tour a candy factory comes along.  I think that interpretation really misses the point of the story as a whole and the tragedy of Carmilla as a character, though. Reading into her interactions with Laura, there’s an important scene in which Laura asks Carmilla if she’s ever been sick before, and it’s as close as the vampire ever comes to outright telling the truth. She says she was sick once, a very long time ago, and when it’s suggested to bring in a doctor, Carmilla very pointedly says “Doctors never did me any good.” It’s a revealing line, but more than that it’s a very sad line, as she obviously reflects on her own death and proves—for a brief moment—to be nostalgic for her life, no matter her actions. There’s an observed sadness to everything Carmilla does when she is pretending to be ill, and that’s literally because she’s essentially re-enacting her own death. As such, it’s not as harmful as it is made out to be, because it is based entirely in memory, not manipulation. Another constant theme in Carmilla is that of destiny. Laura dreamed of Carmilla when she was a little girl, and Carmilla claimed to dream of her as well. There’s a repeated line in Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House that says, “Journeys end in lovers meeting.” That is certainly true of Carmilla, in some respects. Laura’s story for those first few pages is that of a girl who has never known a friend or a lover and finally, fatefully, finds both on her doorstep. However Carmilla orchestrated their meeting, it is perceived by both to be fate. And as such, it is completely romanticized, particularly when Carmilla says to Laura, “You are mine, you shall be mine, you and I are one forever.” It should be interpreted as threatening, knowing that one is a vampire, and it is certainly an unhealthy and possessive thing to say, but in the text it completely reads as romantic, not malicious. Carmilla herself even recognizes that selfishness, but again explicitly states the nature of their relationship by telling Laura that love is always selfish. This also marks perhaps the best example of the story’s subversion of folklore, as even though the plot ultimately treats Carmilla as a monster, the story characterizes her as a fully-formed, fleshed out character. It humanizes her, even more than Stoker would ultimately do with Count Dracula. After all, even when he is open and kind with Harker after they first meet, everything Dracula does is manipulative. It’s all a calculated act of evil. After Lucy succumbs to illness and becomes a vampire, she is monstrous. She might as well be an animal. She ceases to be humanized and becomes a thing. That is hardly the case with Carmilla, who is humanized throughout the entire text, perhaps even more so than Le Fanu intended. After all, despite the subversion of folklore by humanizing the vampire, making her a central character and giving her a genuine love story, the novella still ends like any vampire story of the era. More than that, it reflects the folklore of the time completely despite otherwise subverting it throughout the text, with Carmilla being dragged out of her tomb looking exactly like those descriptions of believed vampires being excavated from their graves: rosy-cheeked, vibrant as though they were still alive, with blood around their mouth.  With that in mind, it must certainly be noted that Carmilla is far from perfect. It is unquestionably of its time. Given its central love story that ends in Carmilla’s staking, it’s got to be one of the earliest instances of the unfortunately persistent dead lesbian trope. As sincere as the love between Carmilla and Laura might be, it is obviously not without manipulation. Nonetheless, it remains one of the most important vampire stories ever told. It is a personal favorite, I’ll admit. Carmilla drips mood and atmosphere, but romanticizes the dark and the dreary in a way that most vampire stories—depicting things as outright tales of horror—rarely did at the time. It feels more modern than even Stoker’s novel, despite featuring barely any “modern” elements at all.  The story itself barely feels contemporary to 1872 and could easily take place a hundred years before. Its influence on Dracula might remain the story’s greatest legacy, but even taken on its own, it is one of most unique, heartfelt and altogether important vampire tales ever told. Follow us social media! Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.

The post You And I Are One Forever: Why Carmilla Remains One of the Most Important Vampire Stories Ever Told appeared first on Wicked Horror.