Horror Film Review: Festival of the Living Dead (dir by Jen and Sylvia Soska)


Opening with a montage of scenes from Night of the Living Dead mixed in with actual footage of civil unrest from the 60s, Festival of the Living Dead imagines a world where a zombie outbreak actually did occur in 1968.

Humanity survived.  All of the zombies were apparently put down by human hunters and the plague of the living dead was ended.  In order to commemorate the night of the living dead, a Festival of the Living Dead is held every year at the sight of the zombie outbreak.  Over the past 55 years, the Festival has become a high-priced event that can only be attended by people who are willing to spend a lot of money for the honor to stay in tents, listen to live music, and set fire to a giant wicker woman.  Essentially, the Festival of the Living Dead is Burning Man but instead of basing the festival of new age nonsense, the Festival is based on a zombie outbreak.

Unfortunately, those who attend the Festival have lost sight of what the party is supposed to be about.  Now, instead of celebrating the survival of humanity and paying honor to those who lost their lives (sometimes more than once in one night!), the people attending the Festival are just influencers who are hoping to go viral.  Early on in the film, Iris (Carmen Bicondova) point out how weird and tacky it is to have a festival celebrating an event where so many people died.

This year, the folks at the Festival of the Living Dead are going to be reminded about what the entire festival is supposed to be about!  When one vlogger films himself snorting what he claims to be a crushed meteorite, everyone assumes that he’s just another person looking for online fame.  But soon, he’s foaming at the mouth, throwing up, and then savagely attacking the festival staff.  Of course, those who have seen the original Night of the Living Dead will remember the much-ridiculed scene in which a news reporter is heard to speculate that the dead are coming back to life due to space dust that was brought back to Earth by NASA.  It turns out that reporter knew what he was talking about.  It’s not just a case of Hell no longer having room for the dead.  It’s the meteorites!

Ash (Ashley Moore) and her friends try to survive the Festival of the Living Dead, which turns out to not be an easy task.  Not only are zombies famous for being relentless in their pursuit of the living but the living are famous for reacting to living dead outbreaks in the dumbest ways possible.  Ash has one cool friend, that would be Iris.  Unfortunately, the rest of her friends are nowhere near as smart.  Fortunately, Ash has zombie hunting in her blood.  Though the film doesn’t specifically state it, it’s suggested that her grandfather was Ben, the hero of Night of the Living Dead.

Festival of the Living Dead is a loving homage to Night of the Living Dead and its sequels.  It’s undeniably derivative but it’s also made with so much love for the genre that it doesn’t matter that you’ll be able to guess who is going to live and who is going to die from the minute they first appear onscreen.  Ashley Moore, Carmen Bicondova, and Christian Rose (as the film’s bravest character) all give strong performances and the film’s central joke — which is that everyone at the Festival is either too stoned or too stupid to initially notice the zombie outbreak — is one that works because it’s rooted in fact.  Do you seriously think anyone at Burning Man would notice the living dead?

Horror Film Review: Tales of Terror (dir by Roger Corman)


Eh, anthology films.

I have to admit that I’ve never been a huge fan of anthology films.  Anthology films are almost always a bit uneven.  Some filmmakers are better suited to making short films than others and, as anyone who has ever sat through one can tell you, sitting through a boring short film is actually worse than having to watch a boring long film.  Too often, anthology films are just a collection of boring short films.  If you get lucky, there might be a good segment hidden amongst all of the bad segments.  But even so, that often means sitting through 30 minutes of bad filmmaking for 15 minutes of something that’s moderately entertaining.

1962’s Tales of Terror is an anthology horror film.  Directed by Roger Corman, the film is a part of his Poe cycle and features adaptations of three Poe short stories, Morella, The Black Cat, and The Facts In The Case of M. Valedemar.  While it definitely suffers from the flaws that afflict many anthology films, Tales of Terror is saved a bit by the presence of Vincent Price.  Price not only appears  in all three of the films but he also provides the narration that links each film.  As I mentioned when I reviewed The Premature Burial, one cannot underestimate the importance of Vincent Price and his unique style of acting when it comes to discussing Corman’s Poe adaptations.  With his dramatic flourishes and his theatrical style of speaking, Price was the perfect star for these films.  As an actor, he perfectly complimented Corman’s flamboyant and colorful direction.  It also helps that Price himself seems to be truly enjoying himself in all of these films.  His eccentricity brings the film’s to life.

As for the separate stories that make up Tales of Terror, things get off to a rather macabre start with Morella.  Leonora (Maggie Pierce) returns home to visit her father (Vincent Price), who is now a drunken wreck who continues to blame Leonora for the death of her mother, Morella (Leona Gage).  Morella died while giving birth to Leonora.  Leonora is shocked to discover that her father is keeping her mother’s decomposing body in the mansion.  Leonora, who is suffering from a terminal illness, tries to take care of her father.  However, Morella’s spirit remains in the house, leading this story to a rather depressing and unsettling ending.  This story was effectively done, playing out like a particularly morbid companion to The Fall Of The House of Usher.

The Black Cat is presented as a comedy, starring Peter Lorre as a man who becomes convinced that his wife is cheating on him with a snobby wine taster who is, of course, played by Vincent Price.  This overlong segment did not work for me and I have to admit that a lot of that is because I love cats, black cats in particular.  Beyond that, the humor is a bit too broad.  Corman could do comedy, as he showed with Little Shop of Horrors, but he seems to be trying a bit too hard here.

Finally, the third segment is The Facts In The Case of M. Valdemar, in which Vincent Price plays the title character.  The dying Valdemar employs a hypnotist (Basi Rathbone) to put him in a trance to help relieve his suffering.  However, the hypnotist hopes to marry Valdemar’s wife (Debra Paget) and, after putting Valdemar into a trance, he leaves the dying man there.  Valdemar, whose body starts to decay, cannot die.  But, once he becomes angry enough, he can still rise from his bed to seek revenge even as his body putrefies.  This segment was the best of the three, featuring Price’s best work in the film and also a wonderfully villainous turn from Basil Rathbone.  The makeup effects that were used to capture Valdemar’s decay remain effectively frightening today.

Tales of Terror is two good stories and one mediocre one, which is better than the usual anthology film.  Still, not surprisingly, the main reason watch is for the wonderful Vincent Price.

Horror on the Lens: Trilogy of Terror (dir by Dan Curtis)


For today’s horror on the Lens we have a made-for-TV movie that was produced and directed by Dan Curtis.

Trilogy of Terror, which aired in 1975, is an anthology film, featuring three segments that were each based on a short story from Richard Matheson.  What makes this particular film special is that each segment features Karen Black playing a radically different character from the previous segment.  The film really is a showcase for this underrated actress, though Black herself later said that the film ruined her career because it typecast her as a horror actress.

The third segment is the one that gets all the attention.  That’s the one with the killer doll.  I like all of the segments, though.  The first one is often considered to be the weakest but anyone who has ever been through a similar situation will appreciate it as tale of revenge.  The second segment has a playful vibe that I liked.  And yes, the third segment is genuinely frightening.

From 1975, here is Trilogy of Terror:

Horror Song of the Day: Something Wicked This Way Comes by Barry Adamson


Today’s song of the day is Something Wicked This Way Comes, by Barry Adamson.

This instrumental work appeared on the soundtrack for David Lynch’s 1997 film, Lost Highway, and its one of my favorite pieces of music.  It’s amongst the songs that I tend to play whenever I’m dealing with writer’s block or if I just need an extra boost of energy to finish up a project.  This song also seems like the perfect way to kick off the second half of October and our annual horrorthon!

I also have to say that the video below, which was put together by Jessie Essex, is amazingly cool.

 

Music Video of the Day: Apology by Dana Dentata (2024, dir by Kathleen Dycacio)


This video definitely has a decadent Halloween sort of feel to it.  One gets the feeling that it’s actually about an ancient pagan priestess come back to life, to the appreciation of her adoring fans.

Enjoy!

October Positivity: Pardoned By Grace (dir by Kevan Otto)


Wait, what’s this?

A sincere and heartfelt faith-based film that works largely due to a sensitive and likable performance from Joey Lawrence?

Well, stranger things have happened.

2022’s Pardoned By Grace tells the story of Scott Highberger (portrayed by Joey Lawrence).  Scott is a screw-up.  From the first time we see him until roughly until about an hour into this film, Scott is always doing something wrong.  He starts out the film as a small town drug addict and dealer and, throughout the course of Pardoned By Grace, he is consistently tempted to retuning to that lifestyle.  He’s someone who has spent his entire life being told that he’s never going to amount to anything and that he’s destined to be a failure so it kind of makes sense that he wouldn’t be worried too much about following the laws of conventional society.

The film follows Scott as he goes in and out of prison.  The warden, the guards, and even the other prisoners all know that Scott is capable of being more than just a convict but Scott himself cannot find the faith to keep from getting into trouble.  Whenever he’s released, he messes up and he’s sent back to jail.  At one point, he even gets a good job and he starts making a lot of money and that’s all it takes for him to start using cocaine again.

Finally, after having alienated every member of his family and committed one too many crimes, Scott finds himself in a church, where he listens to a sermon from Pastor Dave (Michael W. Smith).  Dave instinctively hires Scott to handle odd jobs at the church.  While Scott cleans up the place and stacks chair and tries to live an honest life, Dave makes plans for his prison ministry.  Scott is excited when he’s invited to take part in the ministry but then he learns that he won’t be allowed to enter any prisons to preach because he still has a years-old warrant out for his arrest.  Scott heads to Florida, where he turns himself into the police, even though he knows that, as a repeat offender, he is looking at a potential life sentence as a result.

Pardoned by Grace works surprisingly well.  Joey Lawrence is not exactly the first person who comes to mind when you think of an actor with tremendous dramatic range but he is still likable and earnest as Scott, a man who is determined to atone for his past mistakes and to take responsibility for his actions, even if it means losing his freedom.  If anything, Lawrence’s limited range actually makes him a good pick for Scott, who is initially portrayed as being someone who does whatever he feels has to be done in the moment with very little consideration given to what his actions could mean in the future.  As well, one doesn’t have to be religious to appreciate the film’s portrait of a justice system that is so obsessed with punishment that it’s forgotten that one of the purposes of prison is rehabilitation.  Scott is not someone who wants to be a criminal but it’s not prison that helps him to move on from his old ways.  Instead, it’s the faith of someone who is willing to give him a second chance.

Pardoned by Grace was surprisingly good.

Late Night Retro Television Review: Degrassi Junior High 3.12 “Taking Off: Part Two”


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, Degrassi goes there again!

Episode 3.12 “Taking Off: Part Two”

(Dir by Kit Hood, originally aired on February 20th, 1989)

When last we checked in with the students at Degrassi Junior High, Shane was missing and Wheels, having been sexually assaulted by a man who picked him up while he was hitchhiking, was walking towards Port Hope in search of his biological father.

Shane is discovered underneath a bridge.  As the police tell his friend Luke, it appears that Shane either jumped or he fell.  Shane is alive, but he’s in a coma and there’s no guarantee that he’s going to survive.  When asked whether or not Shane had done any drugs at the Gourmet Scum concert, Luke finally admits that Shane did drop acid right before the show began.

As for Wheels, he manages to make it to Port Hope and he even finds the cheap hotel where his father, Mike (Dave James), is playing with his band.  Wheels imagines knocking on the hotel room door and his father happily greeting him and inviting him to join the band.  Instead, when Wheels knocks on the door, Mike is shocked and not particularly happy to see him.  Though Mike forces Wheels to call his grandmother and let her know that he’s okay, Mike does agree to let Wheels spend the day at the hotel.  Mike then promptly abandons Wheels.

When Mike eventually returns, a few things become obvious.

First off, Mike didn’t even know that Wheels’s adoptive parents had died.

Secondly, Mike doesn’t want anything to do with his biological son.

Third, Mike’s new girlfriend is pregnant and, as she explains it, they can’t afford to have Wheels around.

I mean, goddamn!  Poor Wheels!  First, he gets sexually assaulted while hitchhiking.  Then, his father rejects him.  Wheels, after yelling at his father for abandoning him, is prepared to run away again but suddenly, his grandmother shows up.  She was finally able to convince Joey to tell her where Wheels had run of to and she shows up to take him home.  Wheels is adamant that he’s going to run away again but when his grandmother starts to cry and calls him out for being a “selfish, selfish boy,” Wheels reconsiders.

At the end of the episode, Shane is still in his coma and it’s still up in the air whether he accidentally fell or if he was trying to commit suicide when he plunged from that bridge.  Wheels, however, returns to school and is greeted by Joey and Snake.  Joey apologizes for telling Wheels’s grandmother about Port Hope but Wheels says it’s okay.  He’s ready to give school another try.  Everyone smiles as the end credits roll on a well-acted and classic episode of Degrassi Junior High.

YAY!  It’s a happy ending, as long as you haven’t seen Degrassi: The Next Generation.  If you have seen The Next Generation, you know that Wheels has alcoholism and prison in his future.  And, for that matter, Shane is going to end up spending the rest of his life in an institution.  So, it’s not really that happy of an ending.

But it’s very much a Degrassi ending.

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 10/7/24 — 10/13/24


Week two of Horrorthon is in the books!  200+ posts and we’re not even halfway done yet.  I am exhausted but it’s the good type of exhaustion.

Here’s what I watched, read, and listened to this week:

Films I Watched:

  1. Army of Darkness (1992)
  2. Baffled (1973)
  3. Before It Happened (2023)
  4. Black Cadillac (2003)
  5. Blood Feast (1963)
  6. Bride of the Monster (1958)
  7. The Cloning of Clifford Swimmer (1974)
  8. Coogan’s Bluff (1968)
  9. Cult Killer (2024)
  10. Dark Flower (2011)
  11. Dark Intruder (1965)
  12. Dreamaniac (1986)
  13. Evil Laugh (1986)
  14. Final Curtain (1957)
  15. The Friend (2023)
  16. Glen or Glenda (1953)
  17. Godzilla vs King Ghidorah (1991)
  18. Godzilla vs Mechagodzilla 2 (1993)
  19. Hope (2024)
  20. House of Dark Shadows (1970)
  21. Jail Bait (1954)
  22. Keeping Clean and Neat (1956)
  23. Last Man On Earth (1964)
  24. The Lost Missile (1958)
  25. Manos: The Hands of Fate (1966)
  26. Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975)
  27. The Naked Gun (1988)
  28. The New Kids (1985)
  29. Night of Dark Shadows (1971)
  30. Night of the Ghouls (1959)
  31. The Norliss Tapes (1973)
  32. Pardoned By Grace (2022)
  33. Past Shadows (2021)
  34. The Ripper (1986)
  35. Robot Monster (1953)
  36. Safe (2012)
  37. The She Creature (1958)
  38. The Sin (2017)
  39. The Sinister Urge (1960)
  40. Snow White: A Deadly Summer (2012)
  41. Two Steps From Hope (2017)
  42. VHYes (2019)
  43. The Violent Years (1956)
  44. Whitcomb’s War (1980)
  45. The Wizard of Gore (1970)
  46. Zombie Nightmare (1986)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. Abbott Elementary
  2. Accused
  3. American Sports Story: Aaron Hernandez
  4. Dr. Phil
  5. Hell’s Kitchen
  6. Homicide: Life On The Street
  7. Law & Order
  8. The Love Boat
  9. Miami Vice
  10. Night Flight
  11. One Step Beyond

Books I Read:

  1. Aftershock (1987) by Robert M. Walker
  2. The Mall (1983) by Steve Kahn

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Alice Charter
  2. Barry Adamson
  3. Big Data
  4. Britney Spears
  5. The Chemical Brothers
  6. Daemonia
  7. Goblin
  8. Howard Shore
  9. John Carpenter
  10. Syamali
  11. Saint Motel
  12. Teagan and Sara
  13. UPSAHL
  14. voyeur
  15. Warren Zevon
  16. X

Live Tweets:

  1. Safe
  2. The Naked Gun
  3. Coogan’s Bluff
  4. Army of Darkness

Plan 9 From Outer Space (1956, dir by Edward D. Wood, JR., DP: William Thompson)

Trailers:

  1. 6 Ed Wood Trailers For Horrorthon

Horror On The Lens:

  1. Baffled
  2. Last Man On Earth
  3. Bride of the Monster
  4. Night of the Ghouls
  5. Robot Monster
  6. Manos: The Hands of Fate
  7. The Norliss Tapes

Horror On TV:

  1. One Step Beyond 1.6 “The Burning Girl”
  2. One Step Beyond 1.19 “The Captain’s Guests”
  3. One Step Beyond 2.1 “Delusion”
  4. One Step Beyond 2.4 “Doomsday”
  5. One Step Beyond 2.5 “Night of the Kill”
  6. One Step Beyond 2.6 “The Inheritance”
  7. One Step Beyond 2.7 “The Open Window”

Horror Scenes That I Love:

  1. Wishmaster 2
  2. Bride of Frankenstein
  3. Damien: Omen II
  4. Plan 9 From Outer Space
  5. The Wizard of Gore
  6. Murder By Decree
  7. Trilogy of Terror

4 Shots From 4 Films Tributes:

  1. Tod Browning
  2. Roy Ward Baker
  3. Jess Franco
  4. Edward D. Wood
  5. Herschell Gordon Lewis
  6. Bob Clark
  7. Dan Curtis

Films That I Reviewed:

  1. Final Curtain
  2. The Sin
  3. Before It Happened
  4. The Wizard of Gore
  5. The She Creature
  6. Dialtone
  7. The Sinister Urge
  8. Godzilla vs Mechagodzilla 2
  9. The Day The World Ended
  10. Glen or Glenda
  11. Past Shadows
  12. The Friend
  13. Evil Laugh
  14. Dreamaniac
  15. the Ripper
  16. Godzilla vs King Ghidorah
  17. Cult Killer
  18. Dark Intruder
  19. Whitcomb’s War
  20. Party Night
  21. The New Kids
  22. The Grim Sleeper
  23. Godzilla vs Biollante
  24. The Bride and the Beast
  25. The Climb

Television Shows I Reviewed:

  1. Degrassi Junior High
  2. Miami Vice
  3. CHiPs
  4. Fantasy island
  5. Baywatch Nights
  6. The Love Boat
  7. Monsters
  8. Malibu CA
  9. Highway to Heaven
  10. T and T
  11. Friday the 13th
  12. Welcome Back Kotter
  13. Check It Out!
  14. Homicide: Life on the Street

Books I Reviewed:

  1. The Mall
  2. Aftershock
  3. Revolution In The Head

Films That Case Reviewed:

  1. The Life of Death
  2. Ring

Films That Jeff Reviewed:

  1. Ghost Box
  2. Black Cadillac
  3. Alarmed
  4. Hider In The House
  5. Flight of the Living Dead
  6. Dark Flower
  7. Party Line

Films That Erin Reviewed:

  1. Kill Shot

News From Last Week:

  1. Character Actor Nicholas Pryor Dies At 89
  2. Jackmaster Dies At 38

Links From Last Week:

  1. Have You Seen “The Witches House” Of Beverly Hills? Welcome To “The Spadena House “– Where It’s Halloween All Year Long!
  2. Tater’s Week in Review 10/11/24
  3. Playing the Victim Is A Drug

Links From The Site:

  1. Erin wrote about baseball!
  2. Erin shared Fantastic Adventure, Weird Tales, Science Fiction Adventures, Hollywood Detective, Detective Fiction, Argosy, and Clues!
  3. Erin shared the covers of Science Fiction Adventures!
  4. Jeff shared music videos from Rosalie Cunningham, Slaughterhouse, Ghost Cop, and voyeur!
  5. I shared music videos from Alice Chater, X, and Syamali!
  6. I shared my week in television and an AMV of the Day!  I shared a song of the day, as well!

More From Us:

  1. Erin posted pictures at her photography site!
  2. I shared a selection of songs at my music site!

Click here to check out last week!

Horror on TV: One Step Beyond 2.7 “The Open Window” (dir by John Newland)


If tonight’s episode of One Step Beyond seems familiar, that’s because it’s a remake of a story that was originally filmed as an episode of The Veil. 

This time, instead of witnessing a murder occurring in another apartment, it’s a suicide that is witnessed by artist Anthony March (Michael Higgins).  Of course, when he investigates, he discovers that the apartment in empty.  Is Anthony hallucinating or has he gone one step beyond and is he seeing the future?  Watch to find out!

By the way, that’s future Oscar winner Louise Fletcher playing Anthony’s model.

This originally aired on November 3rd, 1959.

Enjoy!

AMV of the Day: Lullaby (Corpse Party)


How about ending the week with an AMV of the Day?

Song: Lullaby by Receptor feat. K.I.R.A.

Anime: Corpse Party

Creator: AnimeAMVnightcore  (As always, if you enjoyed this video, we encourage you to subscribe to the creator’s channel and give them lots of likes and nice comments)

Past AMVs of the Day