“You are all my children now.”
Hey, does that voice sound familiar? Who would have thought you could dance to Freddy Krueger?
Some people have told me that they find the clown in this video to even scarier than Freddy.
“You are all my children now.”
Hey, does that voice sound familiar? Who would have thought you could dance to Freddy Krueger?
Some people have told me that they find the clown in this video to even scarier than Freddy.
This October, I’m going to be doing something a little bit different with my contribution to 4 Shots From 4 Films. I’m going to be taking a little chronological tour of the history of horror cinema, moving from decade to decade.
Today, we continue with the 70s!
4 Shots From 4 Horror Films

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974, dir by Tobe Hooper)

Jaws (1975, dir by Steven Spielberg)

Carrie (1976, dir by Brian DePalma)

The Omen (1976, dir by Richard Donner)

“Reality’s not what it used to be.” – Sutter Cane
John Carpenter’s Apocalypse Trilogy is widely regarded as a foundational pillar of modern horror cinema, uniting three seemingly diverse films—The Thing (1982), Prince of Darkness (1987), and In the Mouth of Madness (1994)—under a singular thematic and philosophical canopy. Together, they explore cosmic horror, a subgenre of horror fiction that emphasizes humanity’s profound insignificance in a vast, indifferent, and often hostile universe. This trilogy traces a carefully crafted trajectory of escalating menace—from tangible physical fears to metaphysical anxieties, culminating in deep epistemological crises. By doing so, Carpenter’s trilogy challenges the audience’s very perceptions of reality, identity, and trust, pushing viewers to confront existential questions cloaked within horror narratives.
This study offers a comprehensive analysis of each film in sequence, revealing their major thematic concerns and unpacking Carpenter’s distinctive stylistic choices that unite the trilogy into one cohesive vision of apocalypse and despair. The analysis reveals that the trilogy extends beyond horror storytelling, engaging instead with the anxieties surrounding human perception, the limitations of knowledge, and cosmic insignificance.
John Carpenter is celebrated for his ability to move beyond conventional scares, crafting atmospheric and philosophical horror that delves deeply into existential dread. While his debut with Halloween secured his place in slasher cinema, Carpenter’s Apocalypse Trilogy marks his most profound engagement with the tradition of cosmic horror, heavily influenced by the works of H.P. Lovecraft. These films focus less on conventional monsters and more on entities and forces beyond human comprehension that systematically erode sanity, faith, and the familiar social order.
In essence, Carpenter’s cosmic horror examines the frailty of human understanding in the face of vast, unknowable forces. His films suggest that the perceived stability of reality, morality, and identity are slender constructs that can unravel rapidly when exposed to those cosmic truths. This philosophical underpinning provides the connective tissue for the trilogy, positioning it as a sustained meditation on humanity’s precarious and often deluded sense of place within the universe.
Carpenter combines his hallmark minimalist aesthetic with unsettling soundscapes to create settings steeped in dread and uncertainty. These environments refuse to offer comfort or clarity. Instead, they become spaces where reality’s veneer thins, paranoia grows, and the audience is drawn into the slow disintegration of order.
The trilogy begins in the frozen desolation of an Antarctic research station—a brutally unforgiving landscape depicted through Carpenter’s distinct minimalist style. The opening, consisting of sweeping, stark aerial shots paired with Ennio Morricone’s haunting bass synth score, plunges viewers into an environment defined by isolation and claustrophobia.
The physical environment functions as an active force in the story, enhancing tension and alienation. It becomes impossible for the characters—and the audience—to escape the oppressive atmosphere, emphasizing themes of entrapment and despair.
Carpenter’s adaptation of Campbell’s Who Goes There? foregrounds psychological horror, centering around an alien organism that perfectly imitates any living creature it infects. This ability destroys the survivors’ social cohesion, as the possibility that anyone might be the alien breeds constant suspicion and fear. The alien infection acts metaphorically, symbolizing humanity’s deepest anxieties about identity, otherness, and contamination.
Rob Bottin’s practical special effects remain iconic, transforming the concept of body horror into palpable cinematic terror. Scenes such as the infected dogs blending with the humans visually communicate the indivisibility of friend and foe, reinforcing the thematic belief that not even one’s own body is fully trustworthy.
The film’s ambiguous finale, where the surviving characters share an uneasy, silent distrust, masterfully underscores existential despair. Echoing Sartre’s famous assertion that “Hell is other people,” Carpenter closes with no clear resolution, reinforcing a bleak worldview that permeates the entire trilogy.
The second chapter shifts from Antarctic physicality to a metaphysical siege within a Los Angeles church, where scientists and clergy confront a cryptic green liquid imprisoning an ancient quantum entity identified as Satan. Carpenter weaves a thematic collision between faith and science, positioning the characters in a supernatural standoff that tests the limits of rational belief.
This paradigm collision is central to the film’s tension. Characters engage in empirical inquiry and theological reflection, yet neither fails to fully grasp or control the cosmic forces unleashed. Dreams broadcast across neural networks, quantum mechanics concepts, and disorienting visions unravel the sense of coherent reality and blur lines between the physical and the spiritual.
Mirrors act as critical motifs, symbolizing portals or gateways that problematize identity and perception. As reality itself becomes infected and fractured, the boundaries between natural and supernatural, self and Other, disintegrate. This thematic decay anticipates the disintegration of reality that reaches its apex in In the Mouth of Madness. The siege allegory encapsulates humanity’s futile attempts to impose order over chaos.
The trilogy culminates in a meta-textual horror narrative tracing John Trent, an insurance investigator ensnared by the vanishing horror novelist Sutter Cane. This film explores the erosion of reality and identity as Trent journeys into a fictional world that becomes concrete, gradually dissolving the distinctions between fact and fiction, sanity and madness.
Drawing explicitly on Lovecraftian ideas of forbidden knowledge and cosmic despair, Carpenter situates the archetypal theme in a modern media environment. Cane’s novels exert a parasitic force upon readers, triggering apocalyptic psychological and ontological shifts that implicate society itself.
The narrative layering intensifies to a climax wherein Trent watches a film adaptation of his destructive unraveling, collapsing the barrier between spectator and spectacle. This recursive structure evokes chilling reflection on the instability of identity and reality.
The phrase “losing me” becomes a haunting leitmotif. Characters’ gradual loss of selfhood illustrates cosmic horror’s existential core: the dissolution of individuality under the weight of incomprehensible cosmic forces, a theme central to the trilogy as a whole.
This collection of films explores a profound and unsettling meditation on humanity’s place in an uncaring, vast cosmos, using horror as a lens to examine themes of isolation, paranoia, faith, knowledge, and the tenuous nature of reality. Without explicitly presenting themselves as a connected series, they create a rich thematic tapestry that invites viewers to contemplate not only external terrors but the fragility of human systems meant to protect meaning and identity.
The opening confronts the visceral and physical: a mysterious alien force invades bodies, dissolving trust and social cohesion. This invasion is deeply symbolic, reflecting fears of contamination, loss of self, and the breakdown of community ties. The body becomes a battleground where identity is no longer stable, and the enemy might be anyone—including oneself. This phase grounds horror in concrete fears but already sows the seeds of existential uncertainty.
From there, the narrative moves to a metaphysical plane where science, religion, and philosophy—humanity’s traditional pillars of understanding—struggle and fail to contain an ever-spreading cosmic evil. This shift from physical threat to metaphysical chaos illustrates how human knowledge and faith are insufficient to explain or confront the vast, dark unknown. The intermingling of scientific inquiry and religious dread reveals a universe that defies compartmentalized understanding, forcing a reckoning with ambiguity and the unknown. With reality itself starting to fray at the edges, the threat becomes more abstract yet no less terrifying.
The final movement confronts the fragility of perception and reality itself. As realities collapse, identities dissolve, and narrative and truth blur, the horror becomes psychological and epistemological—loss of sanity, loss of self, loss of a stable world. This breakdown reveals the highest level of terror, where nothing can be trusted, no truth is certain, and reality is malleable. It captures the profound human fear of mental disintegration and the obliteration of meaning in an indifferent universe.
Together, these stages chart a journey from external bodily threat to metaphysical disruption and ultimately to existential collapse. They reveal horror not just as fear of outward monsters but as internal decay of mind, belief, and identity, underscoring human vulnerability not only to external forces but to the fragility of cognition and existence. This arc reflects deep anxieties about human limitations: no matter the knowledge or faith, cosmic forces remain beyond control, making certainty an illusion. By layering escalating horrors, the films engage on emotional and intellectual levels, inviting lasting reflection on fear, reality, and humanity’s place in the cosmos.
Across all three films in John Carpenter’s Apocalypse Trilogy, the limits of human knowledge are a central theme. Characters—whether scientists, clergy, or ordinary people—try to impose order and meaning on forces they cannot understand or control. But they consistently face phenomena far beyond their cognition, revealing the fragility of human certainty. This motif challenges anthropocentrism and critiques human arrogance by exposing absolute truth and certainty as illusions in a vast, indifferent cosmos.
In The Thing, the alien defies identification or control, sowing paranoia among the survivors. Scientific tests fail, and certainty dissolves into fear that anyone could be the monster. The alien symbolizes the unknown randomness and uncontrollability threatening human identity and social bonds.
Prince of Darkness deepens this theme by confronting the limits of both science and faith. A cosmic evil trapped in a mysterious liquid defies both scientific and religious understanding. The film blurs boundaries between science, theology, and metaphysics, suggesting human knowledge is incomplete and vulnerable to forces beyond comprehension. The inevitability of apocalypse underscores the insufficiency of human understanding.
In In the Mouth of Madness, epistemological collapse is central. Reality and fiction merge, and the protagonist loses grip on truth. Carpenter suggests reality depends on belief and narrative, making truth unstable. This reveals the ultimate vulnerability of human cognition and identity.
Together, these films show that no human system—scientific, religious, or cultural—can fully grasp or control the universe’s nature. This breeds existential horror, highlighting human fragility and limited knowledge on a cosmic scale.
Carpenter’s trilogy aligns with Lovecraftian cosmic horror, updating its themes with contemporary anxieties. The films go beyond simple scares to challenge viewers to confront the fragility of knowledge, reality, and identity, giving the trilogy lasting philosophical weight and emotional power.
Carpenter’s hallmark minimalist style is a key part of what makes the Apocalypse Trilogy so effective and enduring in its impact. His careful framing often restricts what the audience can see, focusing attention on essential details while leaving much to the imagination. This approach compels viewers to fill in unseen gaps themselves, which creates heightened suspense and engages the viewer’s own fears. Rather than overwhelming the audience with explicit gore or frantic action, subdued movements and carefully controlled pacing allow tension to build slowly and organically. This slow burn style deepens engagement by forcing the audience into a state of heightened alertness and anticipation.
Carpenter’s sound design is equally important to the films’ mood. Low-frequency drones and eerie synth scores envelop viewers in an unsettling sonic atmosphere that mirrors the creeping dread in the story. These soundscapes don’t seek to startle but to create pervasive unease—a feeling that danger lurks just beyond perception. The music often mimics the alien or supernatural presence itself—unpredictable, cold, vast—helping to reinforce themes of existential dread and the incomprehensibility of the cosmic forces involved.
The combination of minimalism in visuals and sound creates a liminal space where reality feels unstable and disorienting. Audiences experience not only the narrative horror but also a profound sense of ambiguity and existential uncertainty. This stylistic restraint deliberately avoids clear answers or visual excess, underlining the theme that the real terror is ineffable and beyond human understanding. The unknown and unseen become the most frightening elements, much in line with the tradition of cosmic horror that Carpenter’s trilogy embodies.
In addition, ambiguity in character behavior and narrative direction invites multiple interpretations. Questions are often left unanswered—What exactly is the alien’s goal? How much control do the characters really have? What is the nature of the “darkness” in Prince of Darkness? This lack of closure compels viewers to wrestle with uncertainty and the limits of human cognition, mirroring the trilogy’s philosophical concerns.
In integrating this stylistic mastery, Carpenter crafts a cinematic experience that is not merely about monsters or scares but about immersing viewers in the unsettling, unstable space where human understanding falters. This immersive uncertainty evokes the core cosmic horror concept: that our place in the universe is fragile, our perceptions unreliable, and the forces around us ultimately unknowable.
These three films transcends traditional horror by engaging deeply with contemporary anxieties about faith, knowledge, identity, and the influence of mass media on how reality is perceived. It reflects the emotional and intellectual struggles of postmodern individuals trying to navigate a fragmented, uncertain world. Rather than offering simple resolution or catharsis, Carpenter’s bleak vision portrays apocalypse as a slow, creeping dissolution of human confidence and coherence. This approach adds philosophical weight and emotional resonance that have secured the trilogy’s lasting impact on horror cinema and cosmic horror traditions.
The films challenge viewers to confront fears beyond the supernatural or monstrous, focusing instead on the fragility of belief systems and the vulnerability of identity in a world where truth is unstable. By threading themes of epistemological uncertainty and spiritual crisis throughout, the trilogy mirrors the postmodern condition, where mass media distorts reality, and personal and collective certainties erode. Carpenter’s work thus becomes an exploration not only of cosmic terror but also of cultural disintegration and psychological fragility.
This subtextual richness extends the trilogy’s legacy beyond genre boundaries, influencing later horror films and narratives that explore existential dread and the human condition’s limits. The trilogy’s refusal to simplify or resolve its themes encourages ongoing reflection on the nature of fear, reality, and human understanding — making it a profound philosophical statement as well as a cinematic achievement.
The Enduring Power of Carpenter’s Dark Vision
The Apocalypse Trilogy by John Carpenter is far more than a collection of horror films; it is a profound meditation on humanity’s fragility, the dissolution of trust, and the shattering of reality itself. Through The Thing, Carpenter explores the primal fear of isolation and the collapse of social bonds when faced with an enemy that hides among us, perfectly embodying the horror of paranoia and mistrust. Moving into Prince of Darkness, the trilogy confronts the collision of science and faith, unraveling the foundations of knowledge and belief as cosmic evil seeps into the rational world and forces characters to confront metaphysical chaos. Finally, In the Mouth of Madness pushes this existential crisis to its zenith, dismantling the very concept of reality and identity through a meta-narrative that implicates not only its characters but also its viewers in the apocalypse of the mind.
What ties these films together, beyond surface narrative dissimilarities, is their shared thematic obsession with the limits of human understanding and the erosion of the self. Each film intensifies the scale of horror—from bodily invasion to spiritual contagion to the complete annihilation of the individual’s perception of reality—revealing Carpenter’s uniquely bleak worldview steeped in Lovecraftian cosmic horror. Through restrained yet evocative stylistic choices, utilizing minimalist visuals and sound design, Carpenter immerses audiences in atmospheres of claustrophobia, dread, and creeping madness. This underlines a core message: true horror lies not in external monsters but in the internal unravelling of everything we rely on—trust, faith, and the coherence of reality.
The Apocalypse Trilogy is a quintessential study of “losing me,” a phrase echoed in In the Mouth of Madness but foreshadowed throughout the series. It captures a universal existential anxiety about identity’s fragility in the face of implacable, incomprehensible forces. Carpenter’s films, in their relentless exploration of despair and dissolution, resist offering hope or redemption, instead presenting apocalypse not as spectacular destruction but as a slow, inevitable erosion of the human condition itself.
John Carpenter’s Apocalypse Trilogy stands as a landmark achievement in horror cinema and cosmic horror literature adaptation. It confronts viewers with unsettling questions about what makes us human and how easily those foundations may crumble. More than a trilogy of scares, it is a dark genius unfolding in three acts—charting a terrifying journey “from isolation to madness” that challenges the very nature of reality, faith, and the self. It demands that we not only watch the horror but reckon with the unsettling possibility that within each of us lies the capacity for both fear and dissolution in equal measure.
Since today would have Tor Johnson’s birthday, it only seems appropriate to share a bonus Horror On The Lens. This is the one film in which Tor Johnson starred, 1961’s The Beast Of Yucca Flats.
The Beast of Yucca Flats is a thoroughly inept film that makes next to no sense and has massive continuity errors. It’s a film that also features Tor Johnson as a Russian scientist who gets mutated by radiation and becomes a monster, but not before taking off almost all of his clothes while walking through the desert. For that matter, it’s also a film about a family that comes together though adversity — namely, being shot at by the police after the family patriarch is somehow mistaken for Tor Johnson. And finally, it’s the story of how a dying monster can find comfort from a rabbit and that’s actually kind of a sweet message.
Here’s the thing — yes, The Beast of Yucca Flats is bad but you still owe it to yourself to watch it because you will literally never see anything else like it. Plus, maybe you’ll be able to figure out what the whole point of the opening scene is.
Because I’ve watched this film a few times and I still have no idea!
Enjoy!

Agck! I hate spiders and today’s movie has got a lot of them!
Fortunately, it also has William Shatner and some lovely Southwestern scenery.
Still, if you have a thing about spiders, this film will probably scare the Hell out of you, which makes it perfect for October. Fortunately, William Shatner gives a very William Shatenerish performance and therefore provides some relief from all of the tarantula horror.
Here is 1977’s Kingdom of the Spiders!

This short film was not on IMDB; so, I used a graph from my amazing post on Alien Earth. Wasn’t that a great review? The math was perfect!
This another AI short film, but you have to dig around to determine that a robot made it. I gotta say, it looks good. Maybe this will be how films are going to be made from now on?
A pale lady is walking down a hallway and then the wall starts bleeding…. motor oil? Maybe, they’ll ask me to drill a well there? I WOULD! The motor oil starts rippling and the pale lady is about to put her hand in it… for some reason. Then, a hand reaches from the motor oil puddle. She runs to an …. apartment? I can’t tell what is going on. Without any lead up, a monster appears out of nowhere and nothing happens.
This is NOT good. I have no idea what is going on and I don’t care. Maybe AI will takeover, but that doesn’t mean you don’t have to have a story. You will still need a story or your short will be terrible. What else can I say about this short?

by John Drew
This horrifying cover is from 1938.
Bed of Nails is from Alice Cooper’s 11th studio album, Trash. It was the album’s second most successful single, despite not even being released as a single in the U.S. Maybe some of that success was due to this music video, in which Alice the singer performs over and in a bed of nails while women in leather walk through the studio and play the cello.
This video was directed by Nigel Dick, who directed videos for anyone who was anyone. If Nigel Dick has not done a video for you, you are not really a rock star.
Enjoy!

2022’s Miracle at Manchester tells the story of a high school community that is brought together by one potential tragedy.
Brycen Newman (Kory Getman) is a high school student and an all-around athlete, a star on both the baseball and the football teams. But when he faints during baseball practice and also suffers a sudden nosebleed in the middle of class, his father (played by director Eddie McClintock) rushes Brycen to the hospital. He’s told that there’s nothing wrong with Brycen, beyond the typical teenage growing pain. Take a Tylenol and don’t worry about it, he’s told. That night, Brycen is woken up by a blinding headache. Another trip to the hospital reveals that Brycen has got a tumor in his brain. Brycen is continually given hope, just to have it snatched away. At first, he’s told that the tumor has been removed. But then the tumor comes back. Brycen goes through chemotherapy and even prepares to be sent to Florida so that he can take part in an experimental treatment. No one has much faith that Brycen is going to survive but Brycen’s fellow students rally around him. The football teams shaves their head in honor of Brycen. A priest leads a prayer ceremony in the stands. Journalist Miles Himmel (Nick Avila) follows Brycen’s story and reports all the details, even though he firmly does not believe in miracles. (He even snaps at his young daughter when he hears her talking about a miracle.)
While this is going on, a local mechanic named Ed Hanson (a nice performance from Daniel Roebuck) is fixing cars and, for veterans, charging on a dollar. His wife, who happens to be a nurse at the hospital, tells Ed that he need to get more rest and he needs to come up with a better financial plan than only charging people a dollar for thousands of dollars worth of work. Ed replies that he has no choice. He does it for the veterans and the needy. Good for Ed. We need more people like Ed in the world.
Miracle at Manchester is the type of low-budget, overly earnest filmmaking that typically brings out my cynical side but I have to admit that I actually teared up a bit while watching this film. Some of that is for strictly personal reasons. I lost my mom to cancer in 2008. Last year, I lost my Dad to Parkinson’s. Right now, I’m still in a state where even seeing a hospital room in a film will trigger my tears. But beyond that, it was a heartfelt story and also one that was (perhaps loosely, I don’t know) based on a true story. The film ended with the footage of the actual Brycen. It got to me.
Speaking of my father, after he died, I was organizing his estate and I was surprised to discover that he used to regularly give money to Make-A-Wish. Two representatives of Make-A-Wish appear in this film. Again, I can be cynical when it comes to various charities but Make-A-Wish seems like a good group of people. I’m proud of my Dad for supporting them.
Welcome to Late Night Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past! On Saturdays, I will be reviewing Saved By The Bell, which ran on NBC from 1989 to 1993. The entire show is currently streaming on Prime and Tubi!
Good Morning Miss Bliss failed where it aired on the Disney Channel but Brandon Tartikoff, president of NBC, felt that the show still had a potential future on NBC. Specifically, Tartikoff felt the kids — Mark-Paul Gosselaar, Dustin Diamond, and lark Voorhees — and Dennis Haskins were the ones worth keeping around. As such, Hayley Mills was let go. Max Battimo and Heather Hopper were dropped from the cast. The show was retconned from taking place in Indiana to taking place in California. The show itself was retitled Saved By The Bell….
Episode 1.1 “Dancing To The Max”
(Dir by Don Barnhart, originally aired on August 20th, 1989)
This is it. This is the first episode of Saved By The Bell, the network morning show that would go on to dominate syndication for 20 years. That’s the thing about Saved By The Bell. It’s not necessary to have been anywhere close to being a teenager when this show began. It’s not necessary to have watched the shows when they originally aired. If you grew up in the 90s or the aughts, you knew Saved By The Bell. It was one of those shows that always seemed like it was airing somewhere. Even as recently as two years ago, it was airing on MeTV and there were frequent marathons on E! Today, it’s on Prime and Tubi. That’s not bad for a show that, if we’re to be absolutely honest, really wasn’t that good.
The first episode — which actually premiered in prime time before the show subsequently moved to its Saturday morning time slot — sets up the show. Zach Morris (I know that some people claim that it’s spelled Zack but I’ve always gone with Zach), Screen Powers, Lisa Turtle, and Mr. Belding have all been resecured from the Indiana Hell of Good Morning, Miss Bliss. Now, they all live in California and they all attend Bayside High School. They hang out at the Max, a tacky restaurant owned by a tacky magician named Max (Ed Alonzo).
Joining the ensemble are Jessie Spano (Elizabeth Berkley), Kelly Kapwoski (Tiffani-Amber Thiessen), and AC Slater (Mario Lopez). Both Slater and Zach have a crush on Kelly. Screech likes Lisa. A dance contest is approaching, one that is hosted by Casey Kasem. (All the teenagers on the show go crazy over someone who, realistically, most of them had probably never heard of. Max imitates Casey Kasem saying his name twice.) Screech wants to ask Lisa to be his partner but Lisa’s already been asked by someone else. Kelly can’t choose between Zach and Slater so they agree to have a dance-0ff. Uh-oh, Zach can’t dance! Maybe his childhood friend Jessie will teach him….
Jessie doesn’t have a date because she’s tall. When she tells Kelly and Lisa about being insecure about her height, they joke that she could become a basketball player. This gets a big laugh and I assume this episode aired before the WNBA was a thing. Eventually, Zach tells Kelly to enter the contest with Slater because he’s going with his best friend, Jessie. Meanwhile, Lisa sprains her ankle, get dumped by her partner, and ends up entering the contest with Screech.
It’s interesting to watch the character dynamics in this first episode. Jessie is not the straw feminist she would later become. Slater is a jock but still sensitive enough to comfort Screech. Kelly is actually portrayed as being somewhat shallow. Watching this episode, one gets the feeling that Zach and Jessie were originally meant to be the show’s main couple until someone decided that Zach and Kelly had better chemistry and that Jessie’s feminism and Slater’s chauvinism would make for an interesting combination. Lisa doesn’t like Screech but she doesn’t quite hate him as much she would in later episodes. Even more importantly, Zach is nowhere near as cocky as he would be in later episodes. He’s actually insecure about something.
As for the dance contest, Lisa and Screen dance “The Sprain” and they win, largely due to Slater and Zach bullying everyone into voting for them. “C’mon,” Casey Kasem announces, “let’s all do …. THE SPRAIN!” Everyone starts hopping on one foot and, at home, I cringe like you wouldn’t believe.
God, this was a stupid episode. And yet …. it was very likable. The young cast had a lot of talent. In this episode, even Dustin Diamond’s Screech is tolerable. I cringed at the extremely cheesy dance contest but I also smiled. I guess that’s the power of nostalgia. Sometimes, even the really bad things make you feel good when you rewatch them.