Recently went to a screening of the 1922 Nosferatu with a live accompanist creating an improvised soundtrack on violin, piano and waterphone - which was not an instrument that I had not encountered before, but evidently features in the score of The Matrix, Aliens and a range of other films. I can certainly see why - it was extremely atmospheric. I had seen Nosferatu a couple of times before - as well as the 1979 Herzog version, and Shadow of the Vampire (2000) - but this definitely added something new.
Caddo Lake was surprisingly good. Try it.
All 3 versions of Salem’s Lot! Will be wrapping up the newest one tonight, then more horror movies until the weekend.
I’ve been watching the original Halloween movies.
I understand why people don’t like the later ones, but I still like them, overall.
Four or Six.
Five was a bit of a rehash of Four, but Six tried to introduce a new paradigm that didn’t quite carry through.
Interesting! I love 2, and have a weird soft spot for 3 (season of the witch)
I think Six works better as the bootleg cut that floats around. Really gives the cult more and makes it rank higher for me.
It’s horror month Baby!
So, far not gotten as much off my list as I would like but.
Bloody Hell: really great film, almost Deadpool esque kinda movie without the 4th wall breaks. They look straight at but never break it. Good action. Good acting. Fun story if a bit underwhelming an end.
Stuart Gordon films: (i.e. Re-animator, From Beyond, Dolls ) and these are just fantastic for the cheap yet super effective practical work. I really love them and gives that right ick factor.
Uzumaki: I like Junji Ito a lot. And I respect that he is a silly weirdo more than I think others do. This show is just as disturbed and silly as his books but does suffer from a budget issue that gets worse as the show goes on. But I don’t think it ever ruins the show. It’s campy and I think it’s gonna be a cult classic that way that most of the others on my list are. You get tension and giggles at bad effects. What more could you want.