School is back in session! With it comes new things to learn and new social anxieties to realize. And if you’re especially lucky, there may be an interesting new face hanging around the fringes of your circle of friends, wanting nothing more than to get to know you (and possibly bestow some sort of witch’s curse upon you or alien slug-monster inside of you). Give your fancy book-learnin’ a rest and take a gander at these here back-to-school spookshows!

10) The Woods (2006)

When Bruce Campbell is your dad and he ships you off to a creepy all-girls school in the wilderness, you can pretty much assume that something bad is going to happen. There’s a foreboding headmistress (Patricia Clarkson, no less), mean girls and an ominous witch legend. is it just the new school jitters, or an actual curse? Imagine the setting and concept of Suspiria, mixed with the time period and character focus of Girl, Interrupted, minus the gore. For some reason, The Woods was not given a theatrical release, instead being shipped direct to bargain DVD bins everywhere and being largely forgotten, but it’s worth a watch if you can handle the slow pace.

9) Suspiria

Dario Argento’s 1977 pastel gorefest is a must for any “new kid at school” movie list. You don’t have to be a world-class ballerina to enjoy this classic Italian horror, though I’m sure it helps… I will never understand why someone at this dance academy decided it was a good idea to store all that razor wire in one room. Come on now!

8) Phenomena

Didn’t get enough Argento? Well, good, here’s another: 1985’s Phenomena. More weird Italian boarding schools, more ominous headmistresses, more Goblin soundtracks, and this time, Donald Pleasance and a razor-wielding chimpanzee. Really. Thrill at young Jennifer Connelly’s bad acting and the disturbing amounts of live bugs they used! All of the usual Argento plotholes are here, so it’s best to just sit back and not question anything. So, basically higher education in general.

7) Child’s Play 3

Time travels differently in the Child’s Play universe (much like it did during Chem 111 for me), with the third movie taking place eight years after the events of Child’s Play 2, though only a year passed in our time. Andy Barclay is understandably messed up after his previous run-ins with Chucky, and finds himself at a military academy. A newly-reassembled Chucky follows and sets his rubbery sights on a young recruit to be his new fleshsuit. It’s a thoroughly run-of-the-mill killer doll film, but worth watching if you’ve got 90 minutes to kill and a thing for foul-mouthed toys.

6) Disturbing Behavior

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3vPdDyROQJM

After the death of his brother, James Marsden moves to a sleepy Pacific Northwest town with his parents and sister (Katharine Isabelle in overalls, by the way. Overalls.) Even his chiseled features can’t get him in with the cool kids, so he slums it with a paranoid stoner, a Powder stand-in, and gothy Katie Holmes. If that sentence doesn’t illustrate how insanely 90s this film is, I don’t know what would. There’s a convoluted plot about mind controlled teens too, but the plot is secondary to William Sadler’s Rainman impression. How bad does this town suck if your only romantic interest is Katie Holmes? Poor James Marsden.

5) The Faculty

As mentioned earlier, sometimes you gotta watch out for those mind-controlling alien slug monsters, though it seems odd that they would attack a small town in Ohio of all places, during an Indian summer drought of all times. I mean, this species is intelligent enough to master space travel, but not smart enough to wait until springtime when it rains every day? Kevin Williamson must’ve been a bit over-busy on Dawson’s Creek to do a logic-check on this plot, which is basically new girl shows up, stops people from beating up Elijah Wood, stops Josh Hartnett’s amphetamine business, gets gothy Clea Duvall to shower, and teaches the T-1000 to be a little easier on his football team.

4) Fright Night 2

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0uYdPX2EG5U

Almost all the stuff you loved about Fright Night, college edition! Charley Brewster and Peter Vincent are once again thrown together to take down a sexy female vampire instead of Prince Humperdink. If you start waking up from frat parties with a killer hangover and really gross hickeys, you might want to brush up on your whittling skills and grab a couple bottles of Garlique.

3) The Craft

Sometimes the only thing that can make you feel comfortable at a new school is to join a coven of witches. Is it weird that this trope comes up 3 times on this list, or does it just show how likely this scenario really is? I never moved around, so I can’t say, but Robin Tunney sure knows how to pick her friends – or at least, her friends know how to pick her. There’s complainer-to-cutiepie Neve Campbell, token Rachel True, and trailer chic Fairuza Balk. If they were X-Men, their powers would be skin-shedding, racism-finding, and the ability to float 4 inches off the ground and kill your drunk stepdad, respectively. That’s the kind of horrors that await anyone who tries to join their clique, so you have been warned.

2) Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge

If your family moves into the town where a bunch of teens died in their sleep, CHECK THE BASEMENT FURNACE. There will invariably be a Freddy glove and directions on how to win over your crush (who looks oddly similar to Meryl Streep) by killing your classmates at her pool party. Score! I’ll never know why they went with Freddy’s Revenge instead of The Man Inside Me, but if you’re looking for tips on how to fit in as the new kid in town, look no further!

1) The Lost Boys

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U_lwtRMg0ts

Of all of the new towns in all of the movies listed here, Santa Clara has to be the coolest. There’s a carnival every day on the boardwalk, a well-stocked comic store, oiled-up saxophone dudes and gypsy vampires. You can have a new girlfriend with big hair and mom jeans, while your brother pals around with Corey Feldman; there is literally no downside to this scenario. Just don’t touch Grandpa’s root beers and double-thick Oreo cookies or there’ll be hell to pay.

Honorable mention:

Buffy the Vampire Slayer season 1 episode 1, because it’s hard to top Buffy’s first day in Sunnydale. New friends, new town, new vampire menace… Pretty standard Hellmouth stuff.

So, what do you think? Did I miss any hidden horror gems in the bottom of my moving boxes? Leave a comment!

After assembling a list of the best 80’s heavy metal songs in horror movies, my brain was still swimming with more questionable horror movie metal. To alleviate it, I decided to write the next chronological entry in my quest to document metal songs in the consecutive decades of horror. Enjoy!

11) Soak – Me Compassionate (An American Werewolf in Paris)
Barely metal, but it was pretty sinister in the context of the movie (werewolf rave scene) than it’s actual execution. Overshadowed on the soundtrack by Bush’s best song ever, ‘Mouth,’ but that one’s even less metal, so Soak gets the mention. Congrats, I guess?

10) Judas Priest – Bloodstained (Bride of Chucky)
Bride of Chucky’s soundtrack reads like a who’s-who of 90s metal, but this Priest song is the only listenable song for me anymore. “But SLAYER!” you say… Well, I’ve never liked their slower stuff and South of Heaven bores me to tears. Marilyn Manson? Never been a fan. Coal Chamber! Meh. Process of elimination leaves us with Tim “Ripper” Owens screaming for someone to clean! this! carpet!

 9) Stabbing Westward – Save Yourself (Urban Legend)
I know, I know, it’s technically industrial and not metal, but I feel like the two were close enough in the 90s to warrant a slot on this list. It’s also a fitting song for a slasher flick, though of course the original subtext was drug addiction, since what industrial song wasn’t about drugs?

8) Fear Factory – Scumgrief (Hideaway)
You knew Fear Factory would eventually show up on this list somewhere. Dean Koontz hated this movie so much that he begged Tristar to take his name out of the opening credits. It was so bad, he only allowed Phantoms to be released after he saw the final version. I’ve seen Hideaway, and can back up Mr. Koontz’s assertion that this is indeed total crap.

7) Type O Negative – Summer Breeze (I Know What You Did Last Summer)
Another movie with a great soundtrack from start to finish, I Know What You Did Last Summer inspired me to get my hair cut exactly like Freddie Prinze Jr. Don’t say anything, it was the 90s. I’m sure my parents were first delighted I was learning a Seals & Croft song, then immediately disappointed when I cranked the distortion and added my best Peter Steele impression.

6) Two – I Am a Pig (Idle Hands)
I always loved this song but never knew who it was by until compiling this list, so I was pretty excited to find that Rob Halford sang it. The entire Idle Hands soundtrack was killer, but as with I Know What You Did Last Summer, the songs were all over the place and I’d say this is the best metal song from the movie. That said, ‘Beheaded’ by The Offspring is the overall best track. And best band cameo ever. Hands down.

I can’t take any more of these puns, I’ll try to contain myself.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yFr53FLotRE

5) System of a Down – Marmalade (Strangeland)
No list of 90s metal would be complete without SOAD. I may take heat for not putting Anthrax or Pantera here instead, but I prefer Marmalade to anything else from Strangeland. This movie basically felt like a soundtrack vehicle, with songs from most of the big nu-metal bands of the late 90s (and a bunch of nobodies). I have no desire to revisit most of it, so let’s just stick with SOAD. I broke Dee Snider’s heart by not picking the Twisted Sister song. I hope he understands.

4) Triumph – Troublemaker (Hellraiser 3: Hell on Earth)
It’s 1991, you’re a big-time movie executive at Dimension Films, wearing a suit with huge shoulderpads, smoking a cigar and propping your crocodile-skin shoes up on the boardroom table. “We need more Cenobites for a new Hellraiser movie. How about one with CDs impaled in its head?” Applause, tears of joy, gnashing of teeth; Hellraiser 3 gets made.

3) House of Lords – O Father (Dr. Giggles)
I was only recently exposed to the spectacle of Dr. Giggles by my friend and podcast co-host Matt Saintmort when I visited him this spring. I didn’t catch this song in my first viewing, but came across it looking for the soundtrack from the film. While not as shred-tastic as most other entries here, it’s length and power metal vibes cement its #3 slot. Bonus points for parallelling the daddy issues which lead to Dr. Giggles’ rampage. Giggling intensifies!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=teJ7W6FwIHI

2) Laaz Rockit – Leatherface (TCM3)
This one didn’t make the cut in my first list, mainly because it’s a thrash song, but I couldn’t exclude it here. TCM3 is almost a complete waste of time, unless you want to see Viggo Mortensen act kind of weird and (another) chainsaw duel. Skip the movie and go straight for the soundtrack, chocked full of thrash songs from Death Angel, Sacred Reich, and Wrath, as well as the custom-written title track. The stupid chorus gets stuck in my head constantly and I love it.

1) Morbid Angel – Rapture (Night of the Demons 2)
Who would’ve thought a death metal song would top this list? Aside from being a hearty slice of Florida DM, Rapture was featured in arguably one of the most awkward dance sequences I’ve seen on film. Angela somehow survived the first film and decides to table-dance to Morbid Angel in hopes of luring boys into her demonic bosom. Or something. There’s also a Super Soaker full of holy water involved, which is pretty much the most 90s thing I can imagine.

\m/

Non-metal honorable mention:
Birdbrain – Youth of America (Scream)
Gob – Paint It Black (Stir of Echoes)
Harvey Danger – Flagpole Sitta (Disturbing Behavior)
The Offspring – Beheaded (Idle Hands)
Goo Goo Dolls – I’m Awake Now (Freddy’s Dead)
Letters to Cleo – Dangerous Type (The Craft)
Brother Cane – And Fools Shine On (Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers)

This week’s episode is the second of four live panels recorded at last months TanoshiiCon in West Chester, PA. The second panel is “Ranking the Slashers'” featuring Scott Roger (of Survivor Girl & Reddit Horror Club) and Will Ball. The three of us rank the slasher sequels from best to worst (specifically Nightmare, Friday, Halloween, Child’s Play and TCM). Enjoy!

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The Expendables franchise doesn’t do for me what it does for so many of you out there. Even though I am a child of the 80’s, I never cared a lick for all the overly muscled, testosterone overdose flicks that permeated movie theaters and video stores back then. I never even watched a single Stallone, Chuck Norris or Van Damme movie, at least not all the way through. And if Arnold wasn’t a cyborg from the future, fighting weird aliens in the jungle, or up on Mars, I pretty much didn’t care. Having huge muscles, firearms, and talking monosyllabically did nothing for me (for similar reasons, the Punisher is maybe the only iconic Marvel Comics character that I have zero interest in.) So when my fellow movie geeks squeel like school girls at the reunion of all these past their prime action stars when a new Expendables movie hits, I have to admit I get a little jealous. Because I want something like that to get all excited about, but with the movie icons that I loved from back in the day instead.

And the movie icons of my youth were of the even bloodier variety. I was a horror movie kid, and I took in Nightmare on Elm Street, Halloween, Hellraiser and similar movies like they were crack. Robert Englund was my Stallone, and Michael Myers was my Van Damme. I equally idolized the heroines of horror like Jamie Lee Curtis and Heather Langenkamp who kicked ass and sent their respective tormentors back to Hell. Well, at least until the sequel that is.

So with the success of the Expendables franchise, I think it is time to take the same premise and apply it to the modern horror icons. Get the classic versions of Freddy Krueger, Jason Voorhees, Michael Myers and the rest and put them into one big giant horror show. Go for broke, make it crazy and fun and a silly good time at the movies.

 

The Remakes Didn’t Cut It (No Pun Intended) This Would Celebrate The Classics

A few years back, something similar to what I’m suggesting was close to happening. When Freddy Vs. Jason came out in 2003, after some nine years of planning, it ended up making  $114 million on a $30 million budget. This was a massive success for this kind of R-rated movie, and plans were set in motion for a follow up. Rumors swirled that Freddy Vs Jason Vs Michael was coming, or even Freddy Vs Jason Vs Ash. Then, New Line’s remake of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre hit a few months later and was even more successful. New Line decided to remake and reboot their respective franchises instead, hoping for similar success. All plans for a follow up to to Freddy Vs Jason with even more characters was snuffed in favor of going the remake route. Dimension Films followed suit with a reboot of Halloween not long after. Sadly, all the remakes captured the imagination of virtually no one.

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre was the first of the 70’s/80’s horror remakes to hit big in the past decade, and started the ball rolling on all the others. I actually think it is a pretty decent remake, as it honors the original while certainly having it’s own feel to it. The success of TCM lead to the horror remake wave of the 2000’s; if you saw a horror flick in theaters this past decade, it was probably some form of torture porn, found footage style scares, or it was a crappy remake of a beloved movie from the 70’s/80’s slasher movie heyday.

The thing is, almost none of these remakes really clicked. Oh sure, they made some  money, at least enough money to cover their budgets. But critics and older fans like me saw them for the soulless, cynical cash grabs they were. the remakes for Halloween, Friday the 13th and Nightmare on Elm Street all opened pretty well in theaters, only to plummet hard the following week. Horror movies are almost always front loaded, but all these remakes were especially so. And more importantly, no one talked about them afterwards, except to talk about how much they sucked. Within a few months they were in the discount DVD bin at 7-11. Platinum Dunes (who produced the Friday the 13th and Nightmare on Elm St reboots for New Line)  scrapped their plans for follow ups to Friday and Nightmare. Rob Zombie’s Halloween got a sequel, but it made half of what the first one did. Platinum Dunes has even said they are out of the horror remake business for now. In short, these iconic characters are just sitting on a shelf now, collecting dust.

While most of the teenagers and early twenty somethings that are the prime consumer targets for most media are mind numbingly unaware of almost any pop culture that pre dates, oh, say the year 2000 or so, horror movie fans are a of a different breed. No matter how young they are, the serious horror fan has an encyclopedic knowledge of horror films, and from what I’ve gathered, most of them hate the new remakes as much as old fogies like me do. The remakes just didn’t work for any demographic, which is why I say…bring the originals back for one last hurrah. Give us a wise cracking Freddy Krueger again, a Michael Myers who isn’t a wrestler, bring back the classic monsters of yore, put them together in a movie Expendables style (or, if you will, Avengers style) and just go fuckin’ nuts. It might end up being terrible, but it probably won’t be boring.

So What’s The Plot?

So what should the plot be for a horror version The Expendables? Honestly, who cares.

Ok, ok, I’m kind of kidding. Seriously though, no one, and I mean no one, is going to go see this movie for the plot. They are going to go see it to see their favorite boogeymen from their youth hack up a bunch of stupid teenagers in bloody and inventive ways, and hopefully Freddy and Chucky will have awesome one liners. No matter which way you swing it, there is going to be a camp element to this. Better to just embrace it,  instead of overly complicating the plot to somehow have it all make sense. As much fun as Freddy Vs. Jason was, there was way too much of that in that particular movie. On some level, whoever is making this has to just accept that it all doesn’t really make sense, and just roll with it.

If this was the plot for the movie, I’d still watch it.

But since there has to be a plot of some sort, how about this for one? Freddy returns to Springwood to torment the nightmares of the teenagers once again. This time he uses the souls of other famous boogeymen to do his bidding in the dreamscape. So teenager #1 can get killed by Freddy in a classic Elm Street scenario, while teenager #2 gets whacked in Haddonfield by Michael Myers, and so on. At some point, they are all pulled out of the dream world and start reaking havok together for real. Cue Ash to the rescue! See? Easy as pie. Like I said, it doesn’t have to be complicated, it just has to be fun. A movie like this can’t try to bite off more than it can chew, it’ll never get good reviews from the New York Times no matter how good it is. Much like The Expendables, it’ll be made for the fans and for no one else.

Who NEEDS To Star In the Horror Expendables, Or Else There’s Just No Point

Robert Englund as Freddy Krueger

Obviously, Robert Englund needs to be Freddy Krueger in this movie. Without him, this whole thing just isn’t worth it. I know the man retired from playing Freddy, but if anything can get him back in the make up chair, it would be something like this. Come back Robert, make us forget that stupid remake and be the final word on Freddy for all time.

Kane Hodder as Jason Voorhees 

Obviously, everyone’s favorite hockey masked killer has to come back too. And he should be played by Kane Hodder, who played Jason for four Friday the 13th movies and was passed over for Freddy Vs Jason by that movie’s director Ronny Yu. Time to rectify that error. Kane Hodder is a horror legend, appearing in literally dozens of horror movies. If Jason is gonna be in this movie, it has got to be Kane Hodder. And he needs his iconic ch ch ch ah ah ah souto follow him where ever he goes.

Leatherface

Leatherface has been played by a different actor in almost every movie he has been in, including Kane Hodder in parts of Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2. Not sure who needs to be Leatherface here, but the character needs to be in this movie. Not to mention, the rights to the character are held by New Line Cinema, who also hold the rights to Freddy and Jason, so it is kind of a no brainer.

Michael Myers

The original iconic slasher. Bring back the silent, deliberate moving embodiment of evil from John Carpenter’s original classic Halloween, not the wrestler with the white trash upbringing (once again, fuck you very much for that Rob Zombie) Also, gotta bring back the classic Willaim Shatner mask. Michael Myers has been portrayed by several actors and stuntmen, but as long as they evoke “the Shape” and not Rob Zombie’s trailer park wet dream, I’m good.

Doug Bradley as Pinhead

Actor Doug Bradley has played Pinhead in three Hellraiser movies and countless straight to dvd sequels for almost twenty five years now. He almost was a surprise cameo at the end of Freddy vs. Jason, but that didn’t pan out for whatever reason. I can’t imagine Bradley wouldn’t be down for a movie featuring all his fellow horror icons.

Chucky (voiced by Brad Dourif)

Rounding out the main cast, you need the last of the great 80’s slashers in the form of Chucky from Child’s Play. We know character actor Brad Dourif will willingly voice Chucky in pretty much any movie, as there are even plans for a sixth Child’s Play movie for next year, this time straight to DVD. With so many other silent killers like Michael, Jason, and Leatherface, we need another trash talking, smart ass in the group besides Freddy. I nominate Chucky.

Bruce Campbell as Ash (or just as himself)

So who fights all these monsters and sends them back to Hell? Who else but Bruce Campbell? He could revive the Evil Dead trilogy’s Ash, or just play an exaggerated version of himself. In any event, the hero of this flick needs to be the one and only Bruce. I know he would be down to do this, as a couple of years ago, he made a public pitch for a horror version of The Expendables himself, although it obviously never got off the ground.

Cameos 

A movie like this is tailor made for tons of cool cameos. These are just the ones off the top of my head.

Elvira, Mistress of the Dark. -At 60, she doesn’t look a day over 30. As much of a horror icon as any of the boys. She needs her fifteen minutes here, or at least her fifteen seconds.


Jamie Lee Curtis-the original Scream Queen. All others must bow in submission. She has never shyed away from her horror movie roots, and would no doubt be down for something like this if the cameo was a fun one.


Christopher Lee-At the ripe old age of 90, Christopher Lee is easily the oldest horror icon on this list. But he’s still goin’. He makes cameos in like every Tim Burton movie, someone get him for this. Let’s be honest, the clock is ticking on this one.


Linda Blair-the little possessed girl from The Exorcist is all grown up now, and has no problem making fun of her turn as the pea soup vomiting, crucifix masturbating demon spawn. She’d make for another great cameo part.

Oh Yeah…There Is One Teeny Weeny Obstacle.

If there is anything to ever keep this from happening, it is the fact that the various characters are owned by several different parties. New Line Cinema/Warner Brothers owns Freddy, Jason and Leatherface, so that’s three down. (I would imagine it would be New Line who is the primary studio getting this made, but that’s just a guess) Michael Myers’ rights are currently at Dimension Films, which is owned by the Weinstein Company, as are the Hellraiser rights. Chucky as it Universal. The real trick will be to get the Weinsteins and Universal to loan out Micheal Myers, Pinhead, and Chucky, and convince them it would be in their best interest financially to do so.

The sequel to Rob Zombie’s Halloween remake pretty much flopped, and their plans for a Halloween 3D were scrapped not long after. Getting Michael Myers in a horror mash up produced by another studio is low risk, high reward for them, as it raises the profile of a character they own, and they don’t have to do any of the real work. Not to mention, they’ll be paid nicely for the use of the character no doubt. And right now Pinhead and Chucky are in straight to DVD Hell, a high profile theatrical release could only help those franchises as well for their actual rights holders. The trick is to get all the lawyers in a room to sit down and agree that by making this movie, everybody wins. Don’t let greed kill something as cool and fun as this could potentially be.

So there’s my pitch for an all horror version of The Expendables. This is money in the bank, not to mention a potentially very entertaining time at the theater for millions of fans who grew up watching these movies. So feel free to steal my ideas Hollywood, that’s what I’m here for. And you’re welcome.

Found these cool prints from artist Ïve Bastrash over at deviantART. He took some of the most well-known movie posters of geek-years past and re-imagined them in his very cool style. All the prints are part of his Cinemarium series. Check them out and let us know what you think!

We’ve all wondered what would happen if our favorite pop culture characters were pitted against each other in mortal combat. Well we’ve got a few match-ups covered for you! In this exciting episode it is movie villains vs. super heroes. With the help of some trusty 20-sided dice and their vivid imaginations, Heidi and Stephen tackle just who would win and why. Prepare to be surprised and possibly delighted by the outcomes

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