October Positivity: Survival (dir by Donald W. Thompson)


First released in 1975 and looking even older, Survival opens with a shot of a cougar stalking through the desert.  As a narrator rambles on about the Bible and King Solomon, the cougar snarls.  “How long will God tolerate us?” the narrator asks, right before the cougar mauls and kills a man holding a rifle.

The cougar was my favorite character in Survival, even though it only had limited screen time.  My second favorite character was the narrator, who kept talking about how everything on Earth was destined to eventually die, regardless of how they lived their lives.  Yes, the narrator was a bit judgmental but, at the same time, the narrator was right.

While two policemen search the desert for the cougar, a private airplane crashes atop a mesa.  Everyone in the plane survives the impact but will they be able to survive the desert?  The narrators seems to have his doubts.  Mom and Dad are both upset about being stranded in the desert.  The pilot, who is dating the daughter of the family, says that they better pray before they do anything else.  Finally, the family’s 12 year-old son decides to run off and try to reach a nearby town on his own.  It’s a two-day walk and his parents are not happy when they discover that he’s run off.  It’s a pretty good thing that they don’t know that the small town is actually a ghost town and that the desert is not only home to the cougar but also plenty of rattlesnakes!  While Mom and Dad worry about their son, the pilot and their daughter encourages them to keep praying.  If their son dies, that’s all a part of God’s plan and it’s probably their fault for not going to church more often.  To be honest, I wouldn’t want to be trapped in the desert with any of these people.  The incredibly judgmental narrator seems to agree.

Survival was directed by Donald W. Thompson, who is better-known for directing the Thief In The Night films.  As a director, Thompson knew how to frame a shot, which sets his work apart from a lot of other independent religious films.  Watching this film, one can feel the oppressive heat rising up from the desert.  That said, the heavy-handed dialogue is often stiffly-delivered.  (At one point, the son worries that he has lost his wilderness survival pamphlet, just for someone to announce that they got him a new one before handing him a copy of the Bible.  The lines are delivered so flatly that it almost feels like a parody of a church film.)  It’s never a good sign when the cougar has more personality than the humans.

As I watched this film, I thought about how much I hate the desert.  Would I have been able to survive as well as the characters in this film?  Probably not.  When I was 19, I dated a guy who owned his own private airplane.  It was fun because he would fly me halfway across the state on a date.  He would pick me up in Denton and then we’d fly down to San Antonio for dinner.  Watching this film made me realize how lucky I was that we never crashed because I don’t think I would have been much help if we had.  So, if nothing else, this film convinced me not to buy an airplane.  That’s the important thing.

Late Night Retro Television Reviews: Degrassi Junior High 1.6 “Rumor Has It”


Welcome to Late Night Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Sunday, I will be reviewing the Canadian series, Degrassi Junior High, which aired on CBC and PBS from 1987 to 1989!  The series can be streamed on YouTube!

This week, on Degrassi Junior High, Caitlin Ryan gets her first spotlight episode!

Episode 1.6 “Rumor Has It”

(Dir by Kit Hood, originally aired on February 22nd, 1987)

This week’s episode of Degrassi Junior High started the long and proud tradition of certain Degrassi episodes not being aired outside of Canada because of their content.  In this case, several stations in the US and the the BBC in the UK declined to air this episode because it dealt with Caitlin having dreams about her teacher, Ms. Avery (Michelle Goodeve).  Becuase Ms. Avery is rumored to be a lesbian, Caitlin starts to get nervous about what her dreams mean and whether she will also be the subject of rumors and whispers.  This episode was not only the first Degrassi episode to not air in some markets but it was also the first one to focus on Caitlin who, as played by Stacie Mistysyn, would go on to become one the key figures in the franchise.

(Interestingly enough, this is also the first episode of Degrassi Junor High to not feature Joey, outside of a few scenes where he’s in the background.  It’s perhaps for the best.  Middle school Joey does not seem like he would be quite as sensitive about Caitlin’s feelings as adult Joey would have been on Degrassi: The Next Generation.)

For an episode that apparently quite controversial, this episode seems remarkably tame today.  Indeed, half of the episode doesn’t even deal with Caitlin and her dreams but instead features Arthur and Yick following around Rick because they’re  convinced that Rick stole a hundred dollars from Yick’s locker and then used it to buy a big bag of black licorice.  Arthur, who dreams of either becoming a cop or at least heading up a neighborhood watch, even brings an oversized magnifying class so that he can investigate the crime.  Arthur and Yick follow Rick everywhere, watching as he forced his big bag of black licorice on everyone he meets.  Rick claims that he won a hundred dollars in the lottery.  If you won a hundred dollars, would you waste it on a bag of black licorice?  Then again, if you stole a hundred dollars from someone’s locker, would you waste it on a bag of black licorice?  And seriously, who likes black licorice anyway?  I mean, is life in Toronto so boring and unsatisfying that black licorice is actually the only thing that people have to look forward to?  For that matter, Rick was introduced as the brooding delinquent who never smiled or talked to anyone.  Since when does he care if everyone has black licorice?  (This really does sound more like something Joey would have done.)  Eventually, Rick gets tired of Arthur and Yick following him around and tells them to leave him alone or risk getting beat up.  Immediately afterwards, Yick finds the missing money.  It turns out that it was in the locker all the time!

Meanwhile, Caitlin is haunted by a dream in which Ms. Avery, her favorite teacher, calls her to the front of the class and praises her classwork.  Suddenly, Caitlin is aware that all of her classmates are whispering about how both she and Ms. Avery must be lesbians.  Caitlin wakes up, shaken.

The next day, at school, mean girl Kathleen lists all of the evidence that has convinced her that Ms. Avery is a lesbian.  (It’s not a surprise that Kathleen is the one spreading the rumor.)  Ms. Avery is unmarried.  Ms. Avery does not have a boyfriend.  In fact, the only man that Ms. Avery is ever seen talking to is Mr. Raditch and apparently, no one can imagine the idea of anyone ever dating Mr. Raditch.  Ms. Avery is given a ride to school every day by a woman and, one day, Kathleen swears that she saw Ms. Avery and the woman kiss each other on the cheek.

Despite the fact that Kathleen and Caitlin have nothing in common and should, by all logic, hate each other, Caitlin still invites Kathleen to a sleep-over at her place.  Kathleen, Susie Rivera, Melanie, and Caitlin spend their time prank calling teachers.  When Caitlin calls Ms. Avery, she’s surprised when a woman answers and she quickly hangs up.  It is, to be honest, the lamest sleep over ever.

Because Caitlin refuses to join in the rumor-mongering about Ms. Avery, Kathleen tells Susie that she should stop hanging out with her because Caitlin might be a lesbian and soon, everyone will think the same of Susie.  When Susie tells Caitlin what people are saying, Caitlin freaks out.  The next day, when Ms. Avery attempts to put her hand on Caitlin’s shoulder while praising her latest essay, Caitlin asks Ms. Avery not to touch her.  Ms. Avery tells Caitlin to speak to her after class.

After class, Caitlin tells Ms. Avery that people think she might be a lesbian.  Ms. Avery asks what evidence they have and then she explains that being single doesn’t make you a lesbian and neither does having a roommate and neither does sharing an innocent peck on the cheek with a friend.  Ms. Avery and Caitlin step outside of the school together and …. hey, it’s Mr. Raditch, waiting to give Ms. Avery a ride home!

Sensitive by 1987 standards and tame by today’s standard, this episode cops out a little at the end by saying, “Ms. Avery’s sexuality is no one’s business …. but, by the way, she’s definitely not a lesbian.”  Stacie Mistysyn and Michelle Goodeve deserve a lot of credit for their performances in this episode and, in the role of Kathleen, Rebecca Haines was the perfect mean girl.  But, at the same time, there was also all of that stupid stuff with Arthur, Yick, and Rick.  For all of its notoriety, this is actually a pretty uneven episode.

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 10/16/23 — 10/22/23


One more week of Horrorthon to go!  Halloween approaches.  Don’t worry.  All of us here Through the Shattered Lens are going to do everything we can to make the next 9 days!

Here’s my week review:

Films I Watched:

  1. Bloody Pit of Horror (1965)
  2. Crypt Of Dark Secrets (1976)
  3. The Demolitionist (1995)
  4. Double Threat (2022)
  5. Intruder (1989)
  6. The Killer Is Still Among Us (1986)
  7. Kiss of the Vampire (1963)
  8. Lord Shango (1975)
  9. Meatcleaver Massacre (1977)
  10. The Monster of the Piedras Blancas (1959)
  11. Opera (1987)
  12. Phenomena (1985)
  13. The Redeemer (1978)
  14. The Return of Swamp Thing (1989)
  15. The Return of the Exorcist (1975)
  16. Tenebrae (1982)
  17. The Torture Chamber of Dr. Sadism (1967)
  18. The Wedding Singer (1998)
  19. When A Stranger Calls Back (1993)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. The ALCS Game Two
  2. Big Brother
  3. Degrassi Junior High
  4. Dr. Phil
  5. Friday the 13th
  6. Gun
  7. Highway To Heaven
  8. Jennifer Slept Here
  9. Jenny Jones
  10. Monsters
  11. Night Flight
  12. Nightmare Cafe
  13. T and T
  14. The Vanishing Shadow
  15. Yes, Prime Minister

Books I Read:

  1. Gimme a Kiss (1988) by Christopher Pike
  2. Ski Weekend (1991) by R.L Stine
  3. Sunburn (1993) by R.L. Stine
  4. Weekend (1986) by Christopher Pike

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Adi Ulmansky
  2. Barry Adamson
  3. Big Data
  4. Britney Spears
  5. The Chemical Brothers
  6. Dillon Fancis
  7. DJ Nake
  8. Duran Duran
  9. Fabio Frizzi
  10. Goblin
  11. Haim
  12. Howard Shore
  13. Jane’s Addiction
  14. John Carpenter
  15. Katy Perry
  16. Nine Inch Nails
  17. Rolling Stones
  18. Saint Motel
  19. Taylor Swift

Live Tweets:

  1. The Demolitionist
  2. Double Threat
  3. The Wedding Singer
  4. The Torture Chamber of Dr. Sadism 

Horror On The Lens:

  1. Attack of the Giant Leeches
  2. House on Haunted Hill
  3. The Little Shop of Horrors
  4. Carnival of Souls
  5. Dementia 13
  6. The Terror
  7. Island of the Burning Damned

Horror on TV:

  1. The Hitchhiker 5.16 “Hootch”
  2. The Hitchhiker 5.17 “Coach”
  3. The Hitchhiker 5.19 “Hit and Run”
  4. The Hitchhiker 5.22 “Cruelest Cut”
  5. The Hitchhiker 5.23 “Dying Generation”
  6. The Hitchhiker 5.24 “My Enemy”
  7. The Hitchhiker 5.27 “Pawns”

News From Last Week:

  1. Actor Burt Young Dies At 83
  2. Actress Lara Parker Dies At 84
  3. Actor And Former London Gangster Dave Courtney Found Dead At 64
  4. Actress Haydn Gwynne Dies At 66
  5. George Clooney, other A-listers offer over $150 million in higher union dues to end actors strike
  6. ‘The Problem With Jon Stewart’ abruptly canceled after reported fight over China coverage

Links From Last Week:

  1. Vampyres, Witches, and Queen B’s Oh My::Gloria Holden
  2. “Shocktober 2023” Showers With “Carrie”! My Celebration Of 70’s Cinema Has This Horror Masterpiece And More Stephen King!
  3. Tater’s Week in Review 10/21/23

Links From The Site:

  1. Leonard reviewed Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour!
  2. Case reviewed The Gift!
  3. Erin explored The Red House!
  4. Erin shared Negative Shadows, Lair of the White Worm, The Severed Arm, Fantastic Adventures, Werewolf of Paris, Black Path of Fear, and Thrilling Mystery!
  5. Erin wrote about baseball: The Rangers Win Game Two of the ALCS, The Phillies Win Game One of the NLCS, Congratulations to the Phillies On Winning Game 2 of the NLCS Congratulations to the Rangers For Still Leading the ALCS, Congratulations to the Diamondbacks on Winning Game Three of the NLCS, The ALCS Is Tied Up, The Astros Now Lead The ALCS, Congratulations to the Diamondbacks, The Phillies Now Lead The NLCS!, and The Rangers Tie Up The ALCS!
  6. Erin shared the Horror Covers of Argosy!
  7. Jeff shared music videos from Duran Duran, Def Leppard, Metallica, Motorhead, The Misfits, Bauhaus, and Quiet Riot!
  8. Jeff reviewed The Shadow People, The Terror Experiment, Donner Party, Enchantress, Billy The Kid and the Green Baize Vampire, Demonoid, and Kiss Meets The Phantom of the Park!
  9. I shared my week in television!  I also shared an AMV and an edition of my favorite grindhouse trailers!
  10. I reviewed Degrassi, Miami Vice, Nightmare Cafe, Fantasy Island, Gun, The Love Boat, Monsters, Jennifer Slept Here, Highway to Heaven, T and T, Friday the 13th, Welcome Back Kotter, and Check It Out!
  11. I read and reviewed Gimme A Kiss, Ski Weekend, Sunburn, and Weekend!
  12. I reviewed Cabin By The Lake, The Preppie Murder, The War Within, Lord Shango, Summer of Sam, Phenomena, When A Stranger Calls Back, Monster From The Ocean Floor, The 3, Intruder, Indecent Desires, The Dead Want Women, Out of the Darkness, Tenebrae, The Pit and the Pendulum, Monstrosity, Trust, The Manson Family, Held For Ransom, Alice Sweet Alice, Scarecrows, The Drug Knot, Tales From The Darkside, Manos: The Hands of Fate, Ricky 6, The Killer Is Still Among Us, To Hell and Back, The Redeemer, Double Threat, Crypt of Dark Secrets, Kemper: The CoEd Killer, The Return of the Exorcist, 13 Eerie, The Beast With A Million Eyes, Seventy Times Seven, Garden of the Dead, Meatcleaver Massacre, Goodnight Mommy, Bloody Pit of Horror, The Frozen Ground, Aerobicide, Kiss of the Vampire, and The Favorite!
  13. I shared scenes from The Shining, The Howling, Dracula, Tales of Terror, Count Dracula, Nosferatu, and The Bride of Frankenstein!
  14. I paid tribute to Burt Young, Tobe Hooper, Curtis Harrington, Stuart Gordon, Lucio Fulci, Jess Franco, Freddie Francis, and Terence Fisher!

More From Us:

  1. At Days Without Incident, Leonard shared the Eras Megamix!
  2. For Horror Critic, I reviewed Angel Heart!
  3. At her photography site, Erin shared Hi!, Smiley Face, Clouds, The Full Moon Is Not Here Yet, Hanging About, Jack, and Sunset!
  4. At my online Dream journal, I shared Last Night’s Shopping Dream, Last Night’s Fragment Of A Dream,  Last Night’s Stranger In The Living Room Dream, Last Night’s Fly Invasion Dream, Last Night’s Zombie Dream, Last Night’s Backyard Drive-In Dream, and Last Night’s Renaissance Faire Dream!
  5. At my music site, I shared songs from Fabio Frizzi, Goblin, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, Barry Adamson, Tenerife Film Orchestra and Choir, Nine Inch Nails, and Howard Shore!

Check out last week by clicking here!

The Rangers Tie Up The ALCS!


We are going to Game 7!

Tonight, the Rangers defeated the Asstros, winning by a score of 9-2!  With this victory, the Rangers tied up the ALCS.  The next game will determine who is going to the World Series and I can’t wait to cheer my team to what I hope will be a Rangers victory!

The best part of tonight’s game?  Adolis Garcia, who was deliberately hit by an Asstros pitch during the last game, got his revenge by hitting the grand slam that let Houston know that they weren’t going to stage a comeback in the 9th.

Go Rangers!

Horror on TV: The Hitchhiker 5.26 “Pawns” (dir by Leon Marr)


Poor Eddie!

Eddie (David McIlwraith) used to be a rock star but now he’s a washed up alcoholic without a cent to his name.  Needing to pay his bills, Eddie decides to make the ultimate sacrifice.  He decides to go down to a pawnshop and sell his trademark guitar.  However, a quirky woman named Elisabeth (Jill Hennessy) has another idea.  Maybe …. he could just rob the pawn shop!

Did you know that, as a name, Lisa started out as a shortened version of Elisabeth?

This episode originally aired on December 16th, 1989.

The Shadow People (2017, directed by Brian T. Jaynes)


On a rainy night and after nearly crashing their car into a ditch, Andrew (Bug Hall) and Megan (Kat Steffens) arrive at their new country home.  Andrew is a writer.  Megan is a painter.  At first, their new home seems like the perfect place for both of them to practice their art and work on starting a family but then Megan starts to see strange people standing around the house.  She fears that they could be the Shadow People, evil spirits that her grandfather told her about.  After Megan realizes that she’s lost her necklace, her visions start to get more extreme and violent.

The Shadow People starts out as a really good haunted house film with a good performance from Kat Steffens and a lot of effective jump scares.  It works up until a scene where Megan suddenly speaks in a demonic voice, as if she’s been possessed.  Later, some of the spirits speak in the same voice and it sounds so much like autotune that it takes you right out of the movie.  The spirits are much more effective before they start talking but the movie still has a good twist ending and Kat Steffens’s performance is never less than great so The Shadow People is still worth it.

Top-billed on The Shadow People‘s poster is C. Thomas Howell.  Howell actually only has a few minutes of screen time, playing a mysterious minster whose role in the story only become apparent in the film’s final moments.

Retro Television Reviews: Cabin By The Lake (dir by Po-Chih Leong)


Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Sundays, I will be reviewing the made-for-television movies that used to be a primetime mainstay.  Today’s film is 2000’s Cabin By The Lake!  It  can be viewed on YouTube.

Screenwriter Stanley Caldwell (Judd Nelson) has been hired to write a slasher film and, to the concern of both the film’s director (Bernie Coulson) and Stanley’s agent (Susan Gibney), Stanley is taking his time to write the script.  Stanley says that he’s determined to write something more than just a typical “dead teenager” film.  His script is about a murderer who kills his victims and then dumps them into a nearby lake.  The killer spends his time tending his underwater garden.

What is taking Stanley so long?  Stanley is doing research, which means that he’s kidnapping women, holding them prisoner in his cabin, and then dumping their bodies into the lake.  Along the way, he’s observing how the victims act and he’s incorporating his research into his script.  Though Stanley tells himself that he’s just doing research, it’s obvious that the script is no longer his main concern.  Now, Stanley is just enjoying working in his garden.

Stanley’s latest victim is Mallory (Hedy Burress), a young woman who works at the town’s movie theater and who has a long-standing fear of the water.  While Stanley is holding Mallory captive and studying both her and her fear of water, Deputy Boone Preston (Michael Weatherly) is searching for Mallory.  And, of course, Stanley is running out of time to finish his script.

Cabin In The Lake was produced by and originally aired on the USA Network and, as a result, it has a much darker sense of humor than one might otherwise expect to find in a made-for-tv horror movie from 2000.  Most of the humor centers around the pretensions of the film industry, with both Stanley and his film’s director trying to turn their little slasher movie into something more than just another dead teenager film.  A good deal of the film centers around a group of special effects and makeup artists, who are recruited to help capture the killer and they’re all likable in their dorky way.  The scenes of Stanley’s underwater garden achieve a certain dream-like grandeur and, as someone who has a morbid fear of drowning, I could certainly relate to Mallory’s fear of the water.

That said, this is one of those films where the parts are definitely greater than the whole.  I think the film’s biggest problem was that Judd Nelson was a bit bland in the role of Stanley, flatly delivering his lines and barely bothering to show a hint of emotion.  If anything, Nelson appears to be a bit bored with the film.  Hedy Burress is sympathetic as Mallory and Michael Weatherly is believable as the upstanding deputy but a film like this lives or dies based on its villain and Nelson sleepwalks through the role.  As well, for all the humorous moments that do work, it soon becomes obvious that this is a one-joke film and portraying Hollywood as being a place full of shallow people is not creative enough a joke to sustain an entire film.  The end result is a film that is ultimately frustratingly uneven.

Horror Scenes That I Love: Jack Nicholson in The Shining


Today’s actor really needs no introduction.  While Jack Nicholson started his career as a part of the Roger Corman stock company and appeared in the original Little Shop of Horrors while also being strongly considered for the role of Guy Woodhouse in Rosemary’s Baby, Nicholson has not appeared in many horror movies.

But the horror movie in which he did appear is such a classic that it’s made Nicholson a horror icon, even if he didn’t appear in as many horror films as a Christopher Lee or a Boris Karloff.

In this scene from 1980’s The Shining, Nicholson’s Jack Torrance has a drink with a ghost.  Nicholson does a wonderful job in this scene, especially when he’s playing off the wonderfully sinister Joe Turkel.

October True Crime: The Preppie Murder (dir by John Herzfield)


The 1989 film, The Preppie Murder, tells the story of the murder of Jennifer Levin (played by Lara Flynn Boyle), an 18 year-old teenager from an affluent family, who was found dead in Central Park on August 26,1986.

The man who was accused of murdering her was Robert Chambers (played by William Baldwin).  Tall, handsome, and popular, Robert Chambers was a former prep school student who had spent one semester at Boston University before being asked to leave because of a series of petty crimes.  Though Chambers and Levin were both a part of the same social circle, Chambers did not come from a wealthy family.  Instead, his background was working class.  (That said, his mother did once serve as a private nurse to John F. Kennedy, Jr. and Robert Chambers even met the presidential scion once.)  Chambers supported himself through stealing his girlfriend’s jewelry and selling drugs.  At the time that he started dating Jennifer Levin, he had just gotten out of rehab.  As shown in the early part of the film, Jennifer’s friends warned her that Chambers had a bad reputation but Jennifer felt that he was just someone who had made mistakes and who was trying to take advantage of his second chance.  To be honest, it’s a sentiment to which I could relate.  I think every woman has had at least one Robert Chambers in their life, the bad boy who could melt hearts with calculated moments of vulnerability but who, in the end, turned out to be an empty shell of a human being.

In the film, the murder occurs off-screen.  We watch as Robert and Jennifer leave a bar together and then we cut to the next morning, with Robert watching from a distance as a homicide detective (Danny Aiello, bringing his trademark, no-nonsense New York style to the role) investigates the scene of Jennifer’s murder.  When the police learn that Robert was the last person to see Jennifer alive, Robert is brought in for questioning.  The cocky Robert attempts to explain away the scratches on his face and body by saying that his cat scratched him.  (“Do you own a tiger?” Aiello’s detective asks him.)  When Robert finally confesses to having killed Jennifer, he claims that he Jennifer was assaulting him and that he only struck her in self-defense.  It’s a ridiculous and offensive story but it’s one that the press loves.  Robert may be the one charged with a crime but it soon becomes clear that, despite not being able to defend herself, Jennifer is the one being put on trial.

It’s an infuriating film, all the more so because it was based on a true story and stuck close to the facts of both the case and the trial.  William Baldwin is well-cast as Robert Chambers, playing him as a handsome and superficially charming man who secretly knows that he’s empty on the inside.  William Devane plays Chambers’s high-priced attorney, who puts Jennifer on trial and only briefly allows himself any feelings of guilt about his actions.  Lara Flynn Boyle wins the viewer’s sympathy in her limited screen time and Danny Aiello is, of course, the perfect New York cop.

What was particularly disturbing about the film was its portrayal of Jennifer and Robert’s friends, many of whom chose to support Robert even though they knew he had murdered Jennifer.  The film ends with clips of Robert at a party that was thrown by his friends after he got out on bail.  While Robert pretends to twist off a doll’s heads, his friends laugh in the background, either unaware or unconcerned that Robert is recreating his murder of Jennifer while they watch.

The real-life Robert Chambers eventually pled guilty to manslaughter and spent 15 years in prison.  He was released in 2003 and promptly returned to his old life of petty crime and drug dealing.  He was sent back in prison, convicted of selling $2800 worth of heroin to an undercover cop.  He was released in July of this year.

4 Shots From 4 Horror Films: Special Tobe Hooper Edition


4 (or more) Shots From 4 (or more) Films is just what it says it is, 4 (or more) shots from 4 (or more) of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 (or more) Shots From 4 (or more) Films lets the visuals do the talking.

Today, I am proud to pay homage to a director from my home state, a man who changed the face of horror and the movies but who was treated terribly by a jealous film industry.  I am talking, of course, about Texas’s own Tobe Hooper.  Hooper redefined horror with The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.  Though his later films were never quite as critically or financially successful as that classic, many of them have since been rediscovered by audiences who now better appreciate Hooper’s quirky sensibility.  Hollywood may not have known how to handle Tobe Hooper but horror fans like me will always appreciate him.

It’s time for….

4 Shots From 4 Tobe Hooper Films

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974, dir by Tobe Hooper, DP: Daniel Pearl)

Eaten Alive (1976, dir by Tobe Hooper, DP: Robert Caramico)

Salem’s Lot (1978, dir by Tobe Hooper, DP: Jules Bremmer)

The Funhouse (1981, dir by Tobe Hooper. DP: Andrew Laszlo)