Apr 7, 2019
Apr 6, 2019
SKINNER (1993)
Stemming back to when I was a young video-store junkie, I’ve heard of the Ted Raimi-starring slasher flick Skinner, mostly due to two things: its slimy, gory reputation, and its inclusion of Traci Lords, whom the genre and genre fans were enamored with during the early ‘90s. (Ricki Lake’s involvement was a novelty back then, but hardly means anything these days…unless you’re a purveyor of ‘90s pop culture.) Watching Skinner with 2019 eyes, and coming from someone who has just seen it for the first time, I can understand why it gained such an infamous reputation upon its release all those years ago. Moments of it still seem shocking today -- one absolutely more than any other, and for wildly different reasons than you’re thinking. (If you’ve seen the movie, you know exactly what I’m talking about.) However, some of it has bypassed any previous levels of bad taste and now comes across almost charming, thanks to its usage of daring practical effects and an all-around “fuck, let’s go for it” independent mentality.
Skinner charts the exploits of Dennis Skinner (Ted Raimi, brother of superstar Spider-Man director Sam Raimi), a drifter who has a habit of hiring prostitutes, killing them dead, and skinning their dead bodies while reminiscing about his shitty childhood. One of these former streetwalkers, Heidi (Traci Lords), who previously survived an encounter with Skinner, has been hunting him down to take revenge for her mental and physical torture. Meanwhile, Skinner has rented a room from Kerry Tate (Ricki Lake) and her awful husband Geoff (David Warshofsky, an actual actor from stuff like There Will Be Blood and Lincoln, just to name a couple). Geoff’s job as a trucker has him on the road a lot, leaving Kerry behind to grow chummier and chummier with the aloof but innocent-seeming Skinner. (Also, I have to point this out: Laurie Strode uses the alias ‘Keri Tate’ in 1998’s Halloween: H20, so are we expected to believe that uncredited writer Kevin Williamson wanted to homage, of all things, the ‘90s video nasty Skinner and attach it to the genre’s ultimate final girl? The world gets weirder the longer it turns.)
The interplay between Skinner and Kerry makes for an interesting dynamic, in that both of them are lonely souls in their own way and could potentially find meaning in each other’s company, and it’s additionally affecting that Raimi and Lake don’t look like typical movie actors – they instead look like real people, adding to the approachability of this subplot. Raimi, too, despite his history of having appeared in his brother’s Evil Dead series in various costumed rules, has generally made a lot of garbage, but he often proves to be a capable actor, and Skinner is no exception. Lords’ subplot as a ruined Heidi, however, leads to absolutely nothing, which is a shame, being that the idea of Skinner’s unfinished business having potentially created its own monster could have been very interesting, had it been handled in a more assured manner. Lords gives her all in her performance as well, and though it never quite gels, in the end it doesn’t matter because it’s ultimately wasted on a go-nowhere character.
The best friend to the horror genre there ever was, Ed Gein--after inspiring the likes of Norman Bates in Psycho, Leatherface in The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, and both Hannibal Lecter and Buffalo Bill in The Silence Of The Lambs--has again lent his visage to Dennis Skinner. For you see, Skinner doesn’t just skin his victims, but he refashions their skin into a full body suit, leading to the astounding sequence that I wasn’t going to get into, but my lord, I think I have to.
For newbies to Skinner, feel free to skip this entire paragraph. Your viewing experience will go off much better if you’re not expecting it. BEGIN SPOILERS: At Skinner’s new job as a maintenance man, he runs afoul of a fellow coworker named Earl (DeWayne Williams), a former (and black) boxer that immediately emasculates Skinner in front of another coworker. Well, as you might expect, Earl doesn’t last long, soon finding the sharp end of Skinner’s blades. However, Skinner not only slips into Earl’s skin, but takes it one step further by turning his costume pageant into a horribly offensive display of racial monstrosity, using a “black” voice and minstrel slang like “Mammy” as he chases down his next victim. This sequence goes on for nearly ten minutes, during which you will be making the post-aftershave Home Alone face the entire time. END SPOILERS.
Skinner is a wild ride, with plenty of gore and over-the-top insanity and it should entertain less discerning horror fans.
Just leave your political correctness at the door.
Apr 5, 2019
Apr 4, 2019
HALLOWEEN (2018)
Multiple franchises have been quick to prove that long-delayed sequels are hardly ever worth the wait, and this ranges across all genres. Twelve years after Die Hard with a Vengeance came a bored, bald, tired, and profanity-free John McClane in the anemic Live Free or Die Hard. Seventeen years between Dirty Dancing and Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights proved that studios could reuse a film’s title, but they couldn’t make ’80s-era zeitgeist relevant in 2004. Even the horror genre, where sequels are king, and thus have more opportunities to create a worthy follow-up, often shit the bed. Just ask the The Rage: Carrie 2 (and don’t even mention Phantasm: Ravager in front of me).
This year’s Halloween isn’t technically a forty-years-later sequel, considering the franchise has remained active since the 1978 original, but it does embark on the ballsy move of pushing aside alllll those other sequels and remakes and pretending they never happened (something many fans already do) in favor of branching off from the best and least complicated entry in the franchise. (Easter eggs abound, however, for the sharp-eyed franchise fan — there are nods to every single Halloween entry, including the much maligned Halloween: Resurrection.) It’s additionally ballsy because 1978’s Halloween is so beloved — by both critics and fans of the genre and film in general. Halloween is that rare title that transcends its place in horror — a title that most people would say is simply great, and not just great “for a horror film,” which is like saying that cheeseburger you just scarfed down wasn’t bad “for McDonalds.” (Horror don’t get no respect, I tells ya!) If a director says he’s going to make Halloween 11, expectations are pegged pretty low from the get-go. At that point, most fans just want a solid slasher. But when a director — scratch that, a filmmaker (yes, there is a difference) — enters the scene and says he wants to make a direct follow-up to a legendary title, expectations are reset. There’s less franchise baggage and mythological mud to wade through, and when said filmmaker doesn’t come from a world of music videos but rather a world where his previous films have been released by the snooty Criterion Collection, that’s a big deal for a slasher series. That’s unprecedented territory.
Halloween ‘18 isn’t as good as the original, but only because that’s an impossible feat — not because the original is a flawless endeavor, but because it became the new watermark to which all subsequent slasher flicks have been compared. Halloween didn’t create a handful of the tropes and techniques for which it’s celebrated, but it did perfect them, popularize them, and marry them together in a splendid genre film that was part slasher, part supernatural terror, and part haunted house spookshow fun. Halloween wasn’t the first slasher film, but it was the first to take the world by storm. John Carpenter’s film endures because it’s pure, well-made in the face of a meager budget, and contains horror’s most iconic masked killer whose creepiness has yet to fade. For a long time, most fans felt that 1998’s Halloween: H20 was the last respectable entry in the franchise, which saw a returning Jamie Lee Curtis once again doing battle against the boogeyman, who in that timeline was still her brother. Halloween ’18 has now rendered H20 as being near-irrelevant, proving to be the best entry since the original.
In these last forty years, cinema has changed, including the horror and slasher genres. Audiences have different expectations. Charming, near-bloodless thrills just won’t do — not in a film where the bad guy wears a mask and carries a huge knife. Halloween ‘18 is obviously the bridge that connects the classy and pure intent for terror of the original with modern-day audiences, who expect a certain amount of viciousness and grue in their slasher offerings. Yes, Halloween ‘18 is violent — perhaps as violent as Rob Zombie’s gritty, immature, and white trashy take on Haddonfield. But (head stomps aside), the violence in Halloween ‘18 works to its favor, because this isn’t Zombie’s take on Haddonfield — it’s still Carpenter’s, and now Gordon Green’s (and co-writer Danny McBride’s). Their Haddonfield is idyllic, quaint, even boring. In their Haddonfield, murderous rampages aren’t supposed to happen, and it makes those moments — like that gorgeous, unbroken tracking shot which sees Michael walking and slaying from one house to the next — much more shocking. In Zombie’s Haddonfield, where everyone is terrible and exists in a pit of despair, we’re waiting for the violence to unfold. In Gordon Green’s Haddonfield, where the events of 1978 are barely a memory and life seems just fine, we’re hoping the violence never comes, because we’re not sure if we can take it.
Halloween ‘18 is being referred to as the series’ #MeToo entry, and while that wasn’t the intention, that’s not wrong, either. It’s one thing to see, and to have become accustomed to, the “final girl” in the slasher genre, but we don’t often get to see that final girl return for another bout of bloody murder committed by her foe, and we certainly don’t see an adult actor return to her teenage stomping grounds as a haunted, ruined shell of a final woman. Halloween ‘18 is absolutely, positively, without question, Jamie Lee Curtis’ movie — one that honors and acknowledges her legacy in the horror genre, cements just how underrated of a performer she is, and boasts quite possibly her greatest performance in any genre. The Laurie Strode of 2018 is not the Laurie Strode you remember from the original; she’s now a grandmother, baring her scars both physical and emotional from her Halloween encounter forty years prior. She’s the genre’s ultimate defacto heroine, so naturally she’s still strong and tenacious, but only to a degree. It’s not often you see your hero break down in tears throughout his or her journey, and in Halloween ‘18, you’ll see that more than once. If you’ve invested yourself in Laurie’s struggles over the course of the franchise, and in Curtis’ real-life struggles over the years, your heart will break seeing her steely resolve crumble, leaving her a heaving mess in the arms of her somewhat estranged granddaughter. Judy Greer and a new-coming (and an excellent) Andi Matichak also bring life and complexity to their roles as next-generation Strodes, with the latter naturally drawing the most parallels with circa-1978 Laurie. They’ll prove essential to the inevitable sequel, and it would be to the series’ continued betterment that they return for another round of Halloween carnage.
As for Laurie’s pursuer, Michael Myers, aka The Shape, he’s scary again — not because he’s nine feet tall or cutting off entire heads and throwing them down the stairs, but because Gordon Green utilizes him the way he should be. For the most part, he’s back in the shadows, and he’s also back to playing his cat-and-mouse games — but sometimes he’s captured in blinding, brilliant light, mask or no mask, as a reminder that evil exists all the time, everywhere, and not just in the dark. The aforementioned tracking shot puts you directly at Michael’s back as he walks, unnoticed in his mask on Halloween night, up Haddonfield’s sidewalks, eyeing its people for his next target. You witness his decision-making in real time and see him veer off his path like a great white shark spotting an easy meal, and this extremely eerie and pulse-pounding sequence reinforces what made the original so disturbing: Michael’s murderous motivations weren’t based on him and Laurie being siblings, or because he was being controlled by an evil Celtic cult, or because there were a bunch of MTV douche bags wandering around his house and only Blackberries and the internet could save them. The original Halloween was horrifying because Michael’s motives were unknown, and his attacks were utterly random — the horror came from the not-knowing-why. It came from Michael watching Laurie approach the front door of his long-abandoned childhood house as he hid inside its dimness and thinking, “Okay. Her.”
Bolstering Michael’s presence is the phenomenal score — the best since the original and perhaps the best of the franchise — by John Carpenter, Cody Carpenter, and Daniel Davies. It’s a marriage of old themes and new, which perfectly complements Halloween '18, because that’s exactly what the film is, too. The original’s film score, by itself and without any visual representation of Michael Myers’ mask or knife, is scary. Appropriately, free of its haunting visuals, the score for Halloween '18 achieves the same result. (Don’t believe me?) Not to mention, Carpenter and sons have pulled off the unthinkable: during the climactic showdown between good and evil, they’ve taken the most recognizable horror theme in cinema history (respect to JAWS) and re-imagined it to be free from fear and tension and re-orchestrated it to sound almost…hopeful. If music has ever made a moment work, it’s this one.
Though not without its problems (the Dr. Sartain subplot should have been entirely dropped, as it deviates the main story to a distracting degree), Halloween '18 gets so much right that to laundry-list its faults seems like salty tears. The fact is, a slasher sequel forty years in the making shouldn’t be as good as it is, so instead of dictating faults, let’s instead celebrate that this Halloween dream-team of David Gordon Green, Danny McBride, Jason Blum, Jamie Lee Curtis, and John Carpenter have achieved the unthinkable: they revitalized one of cinema’s longest-running horror franchises and rebooted not just the property, but the respect it once carried. I’d give anything for this to be the final entry in the series, as it’s doubtful such a sequel could ever live up to what Gordon Green et al. managed to do, but they’ve proven one thing at least: if anyone can do it, they can.
Apr 3, 2019
OH, HAI BLOG
Hello?
Is there anybody in there?
Just nod if you can hear me.
Is there anyone home?
Hi everyone. After some recent hemming and hawing, I've decided to embark on a soft resurrection of the ol' blog. For the past few years, I've been writing for a handful of different movie sites, but I'd like to start grouping together all my crazy thoughts and opinions in one place again. I haven't quite decided if I'll return to the old format of daily posts, or only post intermittently if I've got some thoughts on a recent flick.
Whatever readers I once had all those years ago, I hope you're still out there!
More to come...
Dec 11, 2017
A TIME TO KILL: ANTICIPATING AND DREADING THE NEW 'HALLOWEEN'
As a kid, I was a devout Michael Myers fan. Granted, I was a horror
junkie in general, but there was something about that white-masked boogeyman
that fueled my imagination and struck fear into my bones like lightning. I can
still remember my elementary-school self waiting impatiently in the living
room, on Halloween, for my older brother and his friend to complete their dead
hockey player costumes by gluing half-pucks to their faces. It took so long,
and I was so antsy to get out there and trick-or-treat, that I flipped on the
television hoping to find distraction in the cadre of Halloween-appropriate
titles sure to be on. While surfing, a burst of screams and frantic chaos in
the dark caught my attention. Feeling good about my choice, I’d put down the
remote and began to watch.
That was how I first discovered John Carpenter’s Halloween.
Okay, fine, it was only the last ten minutes or so, but as a young
horror-loving fiend, what better time to tune in? The film was at its frenzied
peak, and the suddenness and ambiguity of the terror helped to heighten the
experience. Who was this man in the mask? Who was this old man in the trench
coat trying to stop him? Why here, why now? What is this?
I saw it all — Laurie Strode fleeing and shrieking across the street from
masked maniac Michael Myers; her frantic pounding against the locked front
door; the couch attack, the closet attack, and the final confrontation where
Michael was unmasked and Dr. Sam Loomis shot him directly in the jumpsuit.
For a moment, everything was quiet. The shot had knocked Michael
offscreen into a back room. Surely he was dead, right?
Loomis ran into that same back room after him. Michael waited in the
darkness — still, and very much alive.
At that moment, seeing his unnatural stillness framed by darkness, I
was petrified. Beyond petrified. I
couldn’t move — something so simple as a scary mask in silhouette, with a bit
of inhuman breathing, and I couldn’t fucking move.
Five more gunshots rang out. Michael flew backwards off the balcony
and landed with a crash on the cold hard October ground. Finally, he appeared
dead.
But after a quick cut away, his body was gone.
And thus began a forty-year legacy.
After that fateful television viewing of Halloween, I was hooked. One by one I sought every remaining
sequel, skipping Halloween 3: Season of the Witch, as I’d go on to learn that it didn’t feature the babysitter
murderer known as The Shape. (I’d eventually mature and warm to this entry,
which I now watch every Halloween.) This love for the series continued for
years. I bought every Halloween
available on VHS, including multiple copies of the original. I bought every
magazine or book or figure or poster or anything that bared the face of Michael
Myers. Had there been a Halloween
secret society, I’d’ve been a charter member.
1995 rolled around and I was in the fifth grade. One Friday in
September, a childhood chum named Barry and I were swapping weekend plans on
the bus ride home.
“My sister’s taking me to see Halloween
6 tonight,” Barry said casually.
My face went full :O and I
begged him to take me along.
He did, and soon after, he became a boyhood best friend.
Flash forward a few years. It’s 1998, and I’m in eighth grade. My love
for horror continues, and sometimes I’m successful in forcing my friends to go
along with it. Scream 2 had proved
such a massive box office success that Dimension Films re-released the sequel
for encore showings. And so of course I went. It was then, in the
popcorn-smelling dimness of the auditorium, that one particular trailer stuck
out among all others:
From the audience’s point of view, we glided down long hallways as
heavy winds made curtains billow and dry autumn leaves dance across the floor.
An ominous voice growled, “he has pursued her relentlessly…”
Meanwhile, the tick-tock piano music in the background sounded so familiar…
“He has hunted her…everywhere…”
I knew I’d heard that music
somewhere…
“Twenty years later, the face of
good and the face of evil will meet…one last time.”
The music was a track called “Laurie’s Theme” from the Halloween soundtrack, and the trailer,
which suddenly flashed to Jamie Lee Curtis looking through a window directly
into the darkened eyeholes of Michael Myers, would end with the Halloween theme and the title Halloween H20: Twenty Years Later
shrieking across the screen.
What I felt at that moment was indescribable — an insane amount of
shock and surprise and excitement that I still haven’t felt for a movie to this
day. It was euphoria. It was like meeting a superhero, or winning the lottery.
A franchise that had seemed all but dead after the abysmal Curse of Michael Myers was suddenly back with a vengeance, and not
only that, it was also hailing the return of Laurie Fucking Strode, the ultimate
final girl.
In the dark, I could feel my friends look over at me and make their
own :O faces. They didn’t care
nearly as much for horror and the Halloween
franchise as I did, but I could feel their excitement for me. And they were
right. At that moment, I didn’t care about anything else. Once I regained my
composure, I excitedly ran out of the auditorium and to the nearest payphone.
(Yes, a payphone — it was 1998, ok? The only people with cell phones at that
time were Mulder and Scully.) There was one person who needed to know – Barry,
my horror movie/Halloween partner in
crime – and he needed to know NOW. I was overjoyed, over the moon, and not
thinking clearly. I felt like a celebrity, as if I had been the first person in
the world to experience such groundbreaking news, and it was my privilege and
duty to alert the masses.
Seeing that trailer was magical. To be taken completely by surprise
still lives on in my mind as one of the happiest moments I’ve ever experienced.
And here I am, nearly 20 years later, and the idea behind what I am saying –
undying devotion for what is essentially Halloween
7 – sounds completely ludicrous. But that’s the kind of magic I suspect
dies off as your childhood does.
By the time I got back to the auditorium, Jada Pinkett was already
dead. I was so excited by this revelation that the exploits of Ghostface and
the stabbing of Sarah Michelle Gellar barely registered in my mind. Suddenly, Scream 2 didn’t mean shit in the face
of Halloween: H20.
For months after that, I waited impatiently for the poster to appear
in the theater’s lobby — to confirm that it wasn’t all just a dream, but a
reality. And once it arrived, I stared at that poster and marveled at The
Shape’s mask, and took in the pure pleasure of knowing it was coming soon…
Consumer-grade internet had just become a thing (we’re talking AOL
3.0), so naturally, for the next several months until Halloween: H20’s
release, I would Ask Jeeves and AOL Netfind everything I could about this new
sequel. I’d click over and over on distributor Dimension Films’ official
website and watch the trailers and look at the photos. Every fold of my brain
needed to be saturated with every bit of info I could find. Though I’m now of
the age where I depend significantly on an internet lifestyle, I can also
remember what life was like before it. Back then, if you wanted to know about
the next installments of Phantasm or
Halloween, you only had Fangoria Magazine. And all you were
allowed to know about their productions was what Fangoria allowed you to know – a quote here, description of a scene
there, and topped off with a publicity still that, nine times out of ten,
wasn’t indicative of the final film. Back then, I wasn’t in the habit of
bookmarking film sites and receiving daily news updates about projects in
production. Nowadays, as a grumpy adult with the internet on his phone, I can
assure you that finding out about a new Halloween
sequel coming soon in the form of an article by an online pipsqueak movie
writer isn’t nearly as magical as seeing that same sequel’s trailer in a
theater for the first time — the very first sign to you that it existed.
Always the pioneer, I began assembling my own version of Halloween: H20 “special features” on a VHS tape based on material recorded off
television; it included a Sci-Fi Channel hour-long making-of special; an MTV
thing where the cast and story writer, Kevin Williamson, hosted Dawson’s Creek trivia in between music
videos; and multiple appearances of the cast on late-night talk shows. I
watched that tape over and over until I could finally see the film for myself.
Opening weekend, I finally did — myself and a whole host of my chums
I’d likely strong-armed into going. My eighth-grade self was not disappointed.
Seeing Jamie Lee Curtis holding an ax and furiously bellowing her brother’s
name gave me chills. By film’s end, I was legitimately shocked and a little
heartbroken to see Michael lose his head. I was very happy with it, and my
chums seemed to have enjoyed themselves as well. After months of foreplay, the
big moment had arrived: the rolling out of Halloween:
H20 felt like the successful culmination
of a plan I had nothing to fucking to do with, yet I couldn’t have been more
pleased with myself. At home I put together a framed Michael Myers memorial,
complete with birthdate and death date, because I was a silly nerd/psychopath.
Too young to understand the concept of commerce over creativity, I felt assured
Halloween: H20 would be Michael Myers’ final hurrah (LOL), and while that made
me sad, I felt that it was a perfect finale. (As an “adult,” I look at Halloween: H20 with a more critical eye, as its shortcomings are no longer
veiled by childhood romanticism. The mask, which changes frequently, even
relying on CGI for one scene, is terrible; the California shooting location lacks
that small-town and autumn feel of Haddonfield, Illinois; the stuntman who
donned Michael’s mask and jumpsuit was just a hair too pint-sized to be fully
intimidating; and except for the lush and orchestral rendition of the Halloween
theme, John Ottman’s score, Frankensteined with Marco Beltrami cues from Scream and Mimc, is all wrong. Those misgivings aside, I still think
it’s the best Myers-centric sequel since Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers.)
What might be the longest intro in the world leads us to the point of
all this.
I was born in 1984. By then, the original Halloween was six years old, though I wouldn’t know it existed
until the mid-’90s. That’s ten years. When you’re a kid, ten years is forever. Halloween: H20 was the twentieth anniversary of the original film, but to me
it was basically Halloween: H4VR. Anything that predated my
existence didn’t jive with the timeline of my life. I couldn’t appreciate the
full sense of that anniversary because I didn’t exist or wasn’t cognizant for
most of it.
Halloween: H20 may as well have been the
bicentennial.
Here were are, in 2017, just a couple weeks away from 2018. And with
it comes the twentieth anniversary of Halloween:
H20, and the fortieth(!) anniversary
of the original. A new Halloween film
is in production — for the intent of my point, let’s call it Halloween: H40. Like Halloween: H20, this new film will be ignoring all
the sequels and getting back to the original’s roots of dread, suspense, and
little emphasis on violence. And Jamie Lee Curtis returns as the embattled
Laurie Strode.
If you can avoid getting caught in the petty trappings of the
internet, Halloween: H40 has a lot
going for it. The production is in good hands with Jason Blum,
who has kick started the horror genre over the last decade by sacrificing
multi-million dollar budgets in exchange for handing off full creative control
to the films’ talented writers and directors (a refreshing change of pace from
former rights-holding and extremely meddlesome Dimension Films/the Weinstein
brothers), with this approach resulting in new classics Insidious, Sinister, and
more. (Dude might also be nominated for an Oscar for producing Get Out — you read it here first.) Jamie Lee Curtis is returning, of
course, but the casting of Judy Greer as her daughter shows that the production
is more interested in talent than vapid Facebook-level recognition value. John
Carpenter returns to compose and consult. And it’s being directed by David
Gordon Green — an actual filmmaker — who, comedies aside, has a solid body of
work, including the very underrated, Night
Of The Hunter-ish stalker thriller Undertow.
As of this writing, not a single frame of Halloween: H40 has been
shot, but it’s already as terrifying to me as the original was all those
Halloween nights ago. Because, to me, Halloween:
H20 is only a few years old. I
remember everything about the excitement I felt in the months leading up to its
release. I remember going to see it, that all my boyhood chums came with me,
and what each and every one of them said about it after the credits rolled. I
even remember, upon Michael’s first on-screen appearance, my friend Kevin
jokingly whispering to me, “It’s him, the guy from the ad!,” quoting from an
episode of The Simpsons — something
we did constantly.
Within the confines and timeline of my life, Halloween: H20 feels
like it just happened to me. There’s no possible way it’s been twenty years.
Yes, I’ve lost friends and family; I’ve moved multiple times; I’ve gotten
numerous jobs; I’ve been lucky enough to have fallen in love a couple times.
Those childhood friends who went with me to share in my excitement of
Laurie Strode’s return, all of whom I miss dearly, eventually scattered to
different parts of the world, and it’s been years since I’ve spoken to any of
them. All of that makes a solid case for a two-decade timeline. But there’s
just no way. I can’t fathom it. And I don’t want to.
As a film fan, a horror fan, and a Halloween fan who has weathered some serious mediocrity over the
years, I’m more excited than anyone for the coming of Halloween: H40.
But as a mere mortal keeping a wary eye on the clock and the calendar,
it just might be one of the most terrifying films I ever see.
[Reprinted from Daily Grindhouse.]
[Reprinted from Daily Grindhouse.]
Apr 21, 2015
BYE
I'm formally announcing that this shall be the last post on The End of Summer. I opened this blog a million years ago back in July of 2011 (my
first post was a review of Insidious,
if you're curious) and since then have done my best to provide you with
insights on every horror-related thing I could conjure. Now, nearly
four years later, I've said everything I have to say and am looking
forward to seeing what else may be out there for me to pursue. This blog
has allowed me to "meet" a wonderful array of people, some of whom
whose contributions to horror cinema I've respected for way longer than
I've been blogging for TEOS, whereas other people I've met I now
consider to be my friends.
TEOS
itself isn't going anywhere - it will remain upright and fully-stocked
for your late night reading; though I did my best to provide you with
daily updates of constant oddness, think more of the blog as an archive
of the creepy and the morbid for you to scroll through at your midnight
leisure.
For
anyone who ever stumbled upon TEOS at random and decided to check in
from time to time, I thank you. For anyone who ever bookmarked TEOS with
the intention of checking in every day, or "followed" the blog for that
same reason, I thank you more.
If it's midnight, stop by. You never know what you'll find.
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