Yearly Archives: 2018
Chilling Adventures of Sabrina 1.5 “Chapter Five: Dreams In A Witch House” (dir by Maggie Kelly)
They say you can tell a lot about someone by what they dream about. I certainly believe that to be true. (In fact, I’ve got an entire site dedicated to that very concept.) That’s certainly the argument made in episode 5 of Chilling Adventures of Sabrina.
The plot, simply enough, is that Sabrina has unleashed a sleep demon named Batibat. Years ago, Sabrina’s father trapped Batibat in a puzzle box. Unfortunately, it was the same puzzle box that Sabrina had to solve to earn her right to take conjuring classes. As soon as Batibat gets out, she announces that she has two goals: 1) revenge on the Spellmans and 2) screwing stuff up in the outside world. Zelda casts a spell to trap Batibat inside the house. The spell works but then Batibat casts a sleeping spell and soon, Sabrina, Ambrose, Hilda, and Zelda are all having nightmares designed to cause them so much pain and anguish that they’ll reveal how to break the spell.
Ambrose’s nightmare is simple but effective. The nightmare deals with Ambrose’s inability to leave the house. The dream starts with him performing an autopsy on a corpse who looks just like him. Ambrose even eats the corpse’s heart, leading to Hilda asking him what it tastes like. “Bitter,” is the reply. The self-cannibalism is interrupted by Father Blackwood announcing that Ambrose’s sentence has been commuted and he can leave the house. However, before Ambrose can walk through that front door, he’s stabbed by Batibat and finds himself in morgue, being cut open by himself. Agck!
Hilda’s nightmare is finding herself sewn to her Zelda. Meanwhile, Zelda, in his nightmare, jealousy kills Hilda and then can’t bring her back to life. It’s an interesting dynamic. Hilda’s greatest fear is never escaping from Zelda’s shadow. (She’s also apparently worried that Principal Hawthorne will ask her out, just to reveal that he absorbed his twin brother in the womb.) Zelda’s greatest fear is losing Hilda.
(It’s also interesting that Zelda’s dream opened with her mocking the biblical version of Adam and Eve’s expulsion from the Garden of Eden but then quickly turned into a retelling of the story of Cain and Abel. Just as with Cain, Zelda’s anger was sparked by her God’s preference for her sibling’s offering. After Zelda killed Hilda, she even asked, “Am I my sister’s keeper?”)
And then Sabrina — oh my God, poor Sabrina. I felt bad for her because I’ve had nightmares like the one that she had. After dreaming that her school has become a combination of Baxter High and the Academy of the Unseen Arts, she also dreams that Harvey has asked her to marry him. Even though everyone tells Sabrina that witches and mortal can never marry, Sabrina is convinced that things will work out with Harvey. (Though, interestingly enough, Nick Scratch shows up pretty prominently in her dream, as well. Considering that she only met Nick three days ago, it’s telling that Sabrina is already dreaming about him as a possible rival for Harvey.) Sabrina even tells Harvey that she’s a witch and Harvey says he doesn’t mind. Sabrina’s father comes back to life to walk Sabrina down the aisle. However, as soon as Sabrina and Harvey marry, Harvey’s family turns on her. While the mortals in the church scream at her, Sabrina sees that her side of the family, the witches, are resentfully refusing to come to her aide, leaving her with no one. Sabrina is dragged away from the altar and tossed in an iron maiden!
Fortunately, for Sabrina, Ms. Wardwell is wandering through everyone’s dreams and she gives Sabrina some advice on how to escape. Even more fortunately, Sabrina has a familiar named Salem….
Look, I’m as disappointed as anyone by the fact that we don’t actually get to hear Salem speak in Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. That said, this was a great Salem episode. Salem not only bravely distracted Batibat but he also gave Sabrina good, if unheard (by us), advice. I have to admit that, considering how dark this series tends to get, I was a bit worried when Batibat started chasing Salem through the house. Well, fear not! Salem lives!
In fact, everyone lives, Batibat is once again imprisoned, and Sabrina finally figures out that Ms. Wardwell is more than just a reclusive teacher. At the end of the episode, Sabrina is at Wardwell’s house, demanding to know “who and what” she is.
This was the best episode that I’ve seen so far. Not only does this episode do a great job of capturing the twisty logic of dreams but it also provides insight into whose these characters are. Of course, we already knew that Sabrina is conflicted over being half-human and half-witch but now, we know that she’s worried that the other witches will abandon her and that Harvey wouldn’t be strong enough to stand up for her if her secret got out. We knew that Hilda felt inferior to Zelda but now, we know just how desperate Hilda is to escape her sister’s shadow. And, at the same time, we now understand why Zelda will never allow Hilda to escape. Zelda needs Hilda even more than Hilda needs Zelda. And finally, this episode was elevated by Batibat, a frightening creation if there ever was one. Batibat not only gave people nightmares but she was a nightmare herself.
Next episode: Sabrina confronts Ms. Wardwell!
Music Video of the Day: Vampire by Mai Lin (2017, dir by PANAMÆRA)
With Halloween only three days away, how could I resist a song and video about vampires?
I like this video because it has an enjoyably decadent, Eurohorror feel to it. This seems like one of those films that would be dismissed when first released, just to then be rediscovered by audiences 20 years later.
On a personal note, if I ever become a vampire, I will use this video as my guide for how to behave.
Enjoy!
2018 Halloween Double Feature : “The Blackwell Ghost 2”
If at first you at least partially succeed — then keep going! That seems to be the modus operandi of micro-budget horror filmmakers from Nigel Bach to Ryan Callaway to — shit, everyone in the game, right? You don’t have that much money you need to earn back from these things because they didn’t cost that much to make, obviously, but if you get a few months’ rent or mortgage payments in the can every time you put one out, then why not keep on keeping on?
Turner Clay is no exception, and since he probably recouped whatever “investment” of time and money that went into 2017’s The Blackwell Ghost, plus a little something extra for the effort, there was literally no reason for him not to go back to the well in 2018 and crank out The Blackwell Ghost 2. Amazon Prime picked up the first one, so…
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Lisa’s Week In Review: 10/22/18 — 10/28/18
It’s almost Halloween!
Movies That I Watched:
- Absurd (1981)
- Anaconda (1997)
- Antropophagus (1980)
- Blood for Dracula (1974)
- Carnival of Souls (1962)
- Count Yorga, Vampire (1970)
- The Dark Eyes of London (1939)
- Death Ship (1980)
- Deliverance (1972)
- Dellamorte Dellamore (1994)
- The Devil Bat (1940)
- Diary of the Dead (2007)
- Flesh for Frankenstein (1973)
- From Prada to Nada (2011)
- Honolulu (1939)
- The Hunger (1983)
- Manhunter (1986)
- The Male Animal (1942)
- Mark of the Vampire (1935)
- Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1994)
- The Mummy (1959)
- Night Monster (1942)
- The Room (2003)
- The Silence of the Lambs (1991)
- Teen Witch (1989)
- Thank Your Lucky Stars (1943)
- The Two Orphan Vampires (1997)
- Waxwork (1988)
- Waxwork II: Lost in Time (1992)
Television Shows That I Watched:
- 911
- Antiques Roadshow
- Camping
- Channel Zero
- Charmed
- The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina
- Dancing With The Stars
- The Deuce
- Face The Truth
- The Haunting of Hill House
- Heathers
- It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia
- Jamestown
- King of the Hill
- Kolchak: The Night Stalker
- Manifest
- Parking Wars
- Shipping Wars
- South Park
- Survivor 37
- The Walking Dead
- The Woman In White
- You
- ZNation
Books That I Read:
- Beyond Terror: The Films of Lucio Fulci (1999) by Stephen Thrower
- David Warbeck: The Man and His Movie (1996) by Jason J. Slater and Harvey Fenton
- Spaghetti Nightmares (1996) by Luca Palmerini and Gaetano Mistretta
Music To Which I Listened:
- Big Data
- Broken Peach
- Coldplay
- Dillon Francis
- Goblin
- The Heavy
- Jean-Michel Jarre
- John Carpenter
- Lindsey Stirling
- Lost in Trees
- Muse
- The Orwells
- Peach Kelli Pop
- Radiohead
- Saint Motel
- Sleigh Bells
- Steve Aoki
- Thom Yorke
Links From Last Week:
- On Horror Critic, I reviewed Death Ship!
- On Reality TV Chat Blog, I reviewed the latest episode of Survivor!
- On my music site, I shared music from Radiohead, Jean-Michel Jarre, Lindsey Stirling, Muse, Coldplay, Steve Aoki, and Dillon Francis.
- On Sleeping Lisa (that’s my dream journal!), I shared a weird TCM dream, a weird car theft dream, and a weird kidnapping dream!
- On her photography site, Erin shared: A Very Large Puddle, Cemetery, Jake is Watching, Grave Marker, Watching, and Fog!
- The Death of FlimStruck and What We Can Do About It
Links From The Site:
- Case reviewed the first two episodes of Chilling Adventures of Sabrina!
- Erin celebrated Dracula and Frankenstein Through The Ages. She reviewed It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown and Eight Men Out. She shared the following artwork: Terror From the Year 5,000, The Brain Eaters, The Amazing Colossal Man, War of the Colossal Beast, Invasion of the Saucer Men, I Was A Teenage Frankenstein, and How To Make A Monster!
- Gary reviewed Jungle Woman, The Invisible Man’s Revenge, The Mummy’s Ghost, The Mummy’s Curse, Jungle Captive, Snake People, House of Dracula, and House of Horrors! He shared some Alice Cooper and wrote about a Halloween double feature!
- Jeff shared a music video from Nekrogoblikon and reviewed Fatal Bond, All-American Murder, Spellcaster, Old Dracula, Beaks, An American Vampire Story, and Dead of Winter! He also shared the weekly trailer round-up!
- I reviewed a lot of stuff, too much to really list. Check out my thoughts of episodes 3 and 4 of Chilling Adventures of Sabrina!
- Ryan reviewed Late Era Clash, Sphere Fear, and The Blackwell Ghost. He also shared his weekly reading round-up!
To see what I did last week, click here!
Have a safe Halloween everyone and I hope you enjoy the last three days of TSL’s Horrorthon!
Love That Dirty Water: BOSTON RED SOX WIN 2018 WORLD SERIES!!
108 regular season wins… playoff victories against bitter rivals the Yankees and defending champs the Astros… a historic 18 inning loss in Game 3… and finally, the Boston Red Sox seal the deal to become the 2018 World Series Champions! And best of all, they did it before midnight!!
No one thought this team was anything special at first. Their new manager, Alex Cora, had no experience running a team on his own. They didn’t sign free agent slugger J.D. Martinez until late in spring training. There were questions about David Price, the bullpen looked shaky, superstar Dustin Pedroia was unable to come back from knee surgery, Jackie Bradley couldn’t hit, Rafael Devers couldn’t field. They lost their first game to the Tampa Bay Rays, and I had low expectations about them.
Then something magical happened. The team won nine in a row, then another eight-game streak, and they never…
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Horror on TV: Kolchak: The Night Stalker 1.18 “The Knightly Murders” (dir by Vincent McEveety)

Tonight on Kolchak….
The armor of a 12-century knight is possessed and determined to keep anyone from harming the museum in which it is currently housed. This includes anyone who might want to build a nightclub nearby. With the armor trying to prevent Chicago from enjoying disco, it’s up to Carl Kolchak to report the story and solve the case!
I like this episode because it features a holy ax.
This episode originally aired on March 7th, 1975.
Enjoy!
Cold Terror: Dead of Winter (1987, directed by Arthur Penn)
Katie (Mary Steenburgen) is a struggling actress with an out-of-work husband (William Russ) and a deadbeat brother (Mark Malone). Desperately in need of money, Kate goes to an open audition and is immediately hired by Mr. Murray (Roddy McDowall), who explains that Katie will have to meet with one of the film’s investors, the wheelchair-bound Dr. Lewis (Jan Rubes). In the middle of a raging snowstorm, they go to Dr. Lewis’s home and, once they’ve arrived, Katie discovers that she is meant to replace an actress who looked exactly like her but who Dr. Lewis claims had a nervous breakdown. She’s told that she must stay the night so she can meet the director in the morning and when she tries to call her husband to let him know where she is, the line is dead. (For those born after 1996, the line being dead was the 80s equivalent of not being able to get a signal.) Dr. Lewis says it must be due to the storm but he promises to have Mr. Murray take her into town in the morning. Of course, the next morning, the car doesn’t start and it becomes clear that Dr. Lewis is not planning on ever letting Katie leave his home.
Dead of Winter is a throw-back to the type of gothic, damsel-in-distress films that actresses like Nina Foch, Ingrid Bergman, and Linda Darnell used to make back in the 1940s and 50s. If you can accept that anyone could ever be as naive as Katie, it’s not that bad of a thriller. Director Arthur Penn fills his movie with homages to Hitchcock and the scene where a drugged Katie wakes up to discover that she’s missing a finger is an effectively nasty shock. By the end of the movie, Mary Steenburgen has played three different characters and she does a good job as all three of them. Jan Rubes makes Dr. Lewis’s too obviously evil but Roddy McDowall is great as the polite but psychotic Mr. Murray. When Mr. Murray sees that Katie has tried to escape by climbing out a window, he yells, “Oh dear!” and only Roddy McDowall could have pulled that off.
Dead of Winter was Arthur Penn’s second-to-last theatrical film. After making films like Bonnie and Clyde, Little Big Man, and Alice’s Restaurant, Penn’s career went into decline as the American film industry became increasingly centered around blockbusters and Penn’s cerebral approach fell out of favor. After Dead of Winter, Penn would direct Penn & Teller Get Killed before returning to his roots as a television director. Penn ended his long and distinguished career as an executive producer on Law & Order.
Horror Scenes That I Love: Rosemary sees her baby in Rosemary’s Baby
Halloween Havoc!: HOUSE OF HORRORS (Universal 1946)
Rondo Hatton (1894-1946) was dubbed by “The Ugliest Man in Hollywood” by Universal for his repulsive visage. Originally a Tampa-based sportswriter, Hatton began developing the disease acromegaly as a young adult, a form of gigantism which distorts the facial features and bone structure (wrestler Andre the Giant suffered from this). Rondo moved to Hollywood and got work as a film extra and some bit parts (he can be spotted in SAFE IN HELL , IN OLD CHICAGO, THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME (’39 version), and THE OX BOW INCIDENT, among others).
Hatton played “The Hoxton Creeper” in the 1944 Sherlock Holmes entry THE PEARL OF DEATH (with Universal Scream Queen Evelyn Ankers as a villainess, for a change), then proceeded to scare the daylights out of audiences in JUNGLE CAPTIVE and THE SPIDER WOMAN STRIKES BACK. While not a trained actor, his unique looks made…
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