THE GATES OF HELL ARE CLOSED DUE TO A LARGE INFLUX OF JIHAD ZOMBIES AND SWISS BANKERS

KNOWING

JUST CHILLIN

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ROSEMARY'S BABY



Rosemary’s Baby (1968)



Rosemary and Guy Woodhouse move into an apartment in a building with a bad reputation. They discover that their neighbors are a very friendly elderly couple named Roman and Minnie Castevet, and Guy begins to spend a lot of time with them. Strange things start to happen: a woman Rosemary meets in the washroom dies a mysterious death, Rosemary has strange dreams and hears strange noises and Guy becomes remote and distant. Then Rosemary falls pregnant and begins to suspect that her neighbors have special plans for her child.

LATE DINNER AT THE RITZ



BLOODY WOMAN

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INFECT THE WORLD



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April 17-19

CREEPSHOW

Creepshow Has Some of the Greatest
Talent in Horror


Creepshow demonstrates what happens when gather together some of the greatest talents in horror, Stephen King and George Romero, and leave them alone to do what they do best.

Written by The Zombie Master Lee Roberts
January 26, 2007

Creepshow movie poster
Release: 1982
Directed by: George A. Romero
Written by: Stephen King

Starring:
Hal Holbrook
as Professor Henry Northrup
Adrienne Barbeau as Wilma “Billie” Northrup
Leslie Nielsen as Richard Vickers
E.G. Marshall as Upson Pratt
Ted Danson as Harry Wentworth
Ed Harris as Hank Blaine


EC Comics, to those who do not know, was a force to be reckoned with in the 50’s. They had such titles as Crime Illustrated, Weird Fantasy, and Shock Illustrated. What they were best known for though, and ended up getting in trouble for, were such titles as Tales from the Crypt, Crypt of Terror, and Vault of Horror. It is within these horror comics that Stephen King (Carrie, Firestarter, etc.) and George Romero (Night of the Living Dead, etc.) found the inspiration for the film Creepshow.

Creepshow is an anthology of five short horror episodes from a fictitious comic book entitled Creepshow (coincidence, I think not). So let’s turn the page and see what eerie tales lay within the pages.

Creepshow - Scene from Father's Day

Father’s Day: This first story is about a woman who feels guilt for bashing her abusive fathers head in with a marble ash tray. And she should feel guilty because she killed him on Father’s Day. She has stopped by her father’s grave and during conversation he decides it is time to wake up and leave his underground abode. Yeah!! We see a young Ed Harris in this one as well. Good story.

Creepshow - Stephen King in The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill

The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill: This installment in Creepshow is where we see Stephen King himself in the role of Jordy Verrill, a backwoods redneck who happens to see a meteorite land on his farm. He is contemplating the money he will get from the museum when it breaks and he gets “meteor s**t” on him. What follows is the slow transformation of a man into a plant. Not bad but not great either. Good thing that it is short.

Creepshow - Ted Danson in Tide you Over

Something to Tide you Over: This is actually my favorite of the five Creepshow stories and is the one that we can learn from. First, we learn that if we are going to have an affair, make sure that the unknowing spouse isn’t insanely jealous to the point of vindictive murder. Second, we learn that if we happen to be the vindictive, murdering, insanely jealous, unknowing spouse we must be absolutely sure that the unfaithful duo is dead. I mean hole in the head dead. Not able to come back as a zombie dead. This Creepshow installment has a great story, with great acting from Leslie Nielsen.

Creepshow - Adrienne Barbeau in The Crate.The Crate: Classic actors Hal Holbrook, Fritz Weaver, and the lovely Adrienne Barbeau make this story my second favorite Creepshow short. Weaver and Holbrook are professors at the local college. A crate is found underneath some stairs that is unbelievably old and upon further investigation is holding something living inside. Carnage, blood and laughs follow. Both cheesy and funny in a twisted sort of way, this is a great story.


They’re Creeping up on You: How can you go wrong with E.G. Marshall. In this Creepshow short Mr. Marshall plays a mean old businessman who happens to have a slight case of OCD. Being a clean freak, he cannot stand bugs and bugs are getting into his superCreepshow - Bugs from They're Creeping up on You. clean hermetically sealed penthouse. How are they getting in? Where are they coming from? You will have to watch the movie.

Creepshow will go down as one of the best horror anthology films of all time. When you put Stephen King and George Romero together and leave them alone to do what they do best then the result has got to be good. The stories and execution are well done and the nature of an anthology of horror shorts prevents any one story from going on too long before resolution. If you have not seen this classic, go find and watch Creepshow. As a matter of fact, buy your own copy of it - Creepshow is one to have in your horror library and watch repeatedly. Questions or comments about Creepshow? Contact us!

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HAUNTING HORROR

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THE FLESH FARM

The Flesh Farm

VOYAGE TO THE MACABRE

THE TWINS

CANDYMAN

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

THE TWO-HEADED CAREER OF RAY MILLAND PART TWO

This fellow can really see through you...

Poster for "The Premature Burial"...

"By 1960, the romantic leading man roles were drying up, but Ray Milland was far from through..."

Poster for "X"...

Poster for "The Thing With Two Heads"...

In last month's issue, we examined the early career of Ray Milland and noted that, although his genre film appearances were few in those formative and then fruitful years, he did take on a variety of roles that would prepare him for the days when leading roles in leading films become pretty scarce. Now we will see the truth of that as we delve into the end of Milland's salad days and the beginning of his B-movie and genre film days, including some pretty interesting--and even wild--excursions into fright films, as we again take up...

THE "TWO-HEADED" CAREER OF RAY MILLAND

PART TWO

By JOE WINTERS

(Note: This is the second installment in a series of three articles concerning the frightfully fabulous career of Ray Milland. Part One can be found here and Part Three will appear in next month's issue.)

Thirty years into his film career Ray Milland had seemed to have done it all; comedy, drama, westerns, horror, fantasy, directing and numerous television appearances.

Milland makes "TV Guide"...

He starred in two series. The Ray Milland Show (1953-1955) was a situation comedy with Ray as a college professor. Markham (1959-1960) starred Milland as a wealthy attorney-turned-private investigator.

About the time the latter series had left the airwaves, Milland got behind the camera again to direct, but not appear in, an episode of the Boris Karloff-hosted Thriller. The episode entitled "Yours Truly, Jack the Ripper" involved a perpetually reincarnated Jack who would repeat his grisly crimes.

Scene from "Yours Truly, Jack The Ripper"...

By 1960, the romantic leading man roles were drying up, but Ray Milland was far from through when he played the lead in producer-director Roger Corman’s The Premature Burial (1962). Corman had arranged financing through Pathe Lab, which had helped back some A.I.P. productions and did their print work.

Corman had planned to hire Vincent Price to star, on the heels of their successful collaborations on the Edgar Allan Poe-based thrillers House of Usher (1906) and The Pit And The Pendulum (1961), but A.I.P. had locked Price into an exclusive contract. Said Corman, "I went with Ray Milland, the best available actor for the part—a sophisticated, debonair native Welshman who still had a cultured trace of a mid-Atlantic accent."

Ray Milland and Hazel Court in "The Premature Burial"...

Milland plays Guy Carrell, a wealthy, middle-aged student of medicine in Nineteenth Century England. His family has a history of catalepsy, and Carrell’s fear of being buried alive is realized. But have no fear. Make that have fear! When he’s dug up by local body snatchers Mole and Sweeney (Corman regular Dick Miller and John Dierkes), about half the cast is killed off in the film’s final ten minutes! And a fine cast it is!

The lovely Hazel Court plays Guy’s bride, Emily. Hazel had already starred in at least a couple Hammer horrors (Curse Of Frankenstein and The Man Who Cheated Death) and would go on to do two more for Corman (The Raven and Masque Of The Red Death). Heather Angel, Milland’s co-star from Bulldog Drummond Escapes (1937) plays Guy’s caring sister. Alan Napier had played one of Milland’s allies in The Uninvited (1944), but here plays Emily’s father, a cynical doctor whose plan to use Guy’s remains for medical research backfires with electrifying results.

The dear departed...or is it...?

Before it’s all over, a sinister plot is revealed amid madness, revenge and tragedy. It was your basic Corman/Poe formula, handled with style, suspense and superb production values, along with haunting variations from musician Ronald Stein on the old folk tune "Molly Malone."

Corman commented that "Ray had been a true romantic leading man, and in a classic Hollywood style. And he brought that with him. It was part of his personality. It was part of his charm. So he could play with a little more ease, bringing a little more charm, a little more persona to the role, whereas Vincent, who had been a star, but primarily a character star, brought a certain quirkiness, a little offbeat look. They were both very good to work with." Corman, as it turned out, was working with A.I.P. chiefs Sam Arkoff and Jim Nicholson again, too, when they bought out Pathe films position as producer. So The Premature Burial became an A.I.P picture, after all.

Ray Milland tries to avoid "panic" in "Year Zero"...

Like Corman, Ray Milland would likewise work more with American International. That same year he would star in and direct Panic in Year Zero! With station wagon and small house trailer, Harry Baldwin (Milland) sets out with wife Ann (Jean Hagen) and their teenage son (Frankie Avalon) and daughter Mary Mitchell) from suburban Los Angeles on a fishing vacation in the Sierras. Bright lights and a mushroom cloud are followed by radio reports of nuclear bombs dropped on several major southern California cities. Harry makes the quick decision to stock up on food, guns and ammunition, proceed to their secluded camping destination, and to protect his family, come what may, until civilization starts again.

Milland is convincingly American in this with a down-to-earth style that he had perfected by this time. Whether dealing with a greedy caf� owner or gas station attendant, roadside killers, or desperate townspeople, Harry adapts a seemingly practical, strangely honorable survival-to-the-fittest approach to seeing his loved ones through the ordeal. Short on cash, he pulls a gun on a hardware clerk and signs an I.O.U. for the rest of the supplies. While the movie has its share of lapses in logic, it succeeds as a tense black & white thriller, a timely cautionary tale, and another feather in Milland’s cap.

His vision is actually a bit too good...

The following year, Ray would enjoy one of his most famous roles when he joined forces again with Roger Corman for X—The Man With The X-Ray Eyes (A.I.P., 1963). Dr. James Xavier (Milland) develops a formula that doesn’t get the red out, but extends normal vision. Trying the formula out on himself, Xavier can soon see through clothes (just like many of us had always wanted to do with those darned X-ray specs)!

In the party scene where we get to see the guests as Xavier sees them, it’s easy to agree with Corman that "Ray is particularly good reacting with amusement, reacting to the sexual quality of what he’s seeing, and at the same time aware of what is going on scientifically." Aware that he wasn’t a spring chicken, but still ready for a good time, Milland lightly smiles and uses the slightest of arm movements to dance his own variation of the Twist.

Lobby card for "X"...

Next, Xavier upstages Dr. Benson (John Hoyt) during a difference of opinion in performing a critical operation. Later while arguing with concerned colleague Dr. Brant (Harold J. Stone), Xavier accidentally pushes him out a very high window. By this time, things have obviously taken a darker and episodic turn. On the run, Xavier disguises himself as "The Great Mentallo," a phony clairvoyant at a carnival where a greedy co-worker (played by funny man Don Rickles) tumbles onto Mentallo’s secret and blackmails him into becoming a "healer" with the ability to diagnose ailments in return for donations.

When a friend and colleague Diane Fairfax (Diana van der Vlis) finds Xavier, the two leave for Las Vegas where the ability to see through cards comes in handy at blackjack. Even though Xavier is now wearing suspiciously thick dark glasses, nobody in the casino seems to see through his true gimmick until the glasses are knocked off and we all get a look at the doc’s new peepers. Dazed, confused and on the run again, Xavier makes his way to a revivalist tent meeting where the preacher (played by John Dierkes) declares, "If thine eye offends thee, pluck it out!" Xavier does just that, to both eyes, in the film’s unforgettable finale.

Better than those X-ray Specs...

According to Corman, "Ray Milland adjusted very well to short schedules and worked very hard." And indeed, Milland’s performance grows in intensity even though the film was not shot in sequence. "Ray did not require a great deal of direction," said Corman. The two would discuss a particular scene, relationship to characters, and Ray would take it from there. Corman said Milland was quoted later on as saying he (Milland) made only two pictures of which he was truly proud. The Lost Weekend and X—The Man With The X-Ray Eyes!

So when the movie’s trailer declared "Ray Milland in his most challenging role since his Academy Award winning The Lost Weekend," maybe they weren’t exaggerating for a change. A footnote, Corman had never heard of "Spectarama," which A.I.P. announced the picture was shot in. Still, the Milland’s eye view seemed effective for its time.

Beyond X-ray vision...

Co-star Harold J. Stone (1913-2005) said in an interview with Harvey Chartrand, "Ray was older, and he wasn’t getting the good parts anymore, but he didn’t care. He was a very wealthy man. After the day’s shoot, he’d get into his Rolls Royce, go to a country club, and play golf. He had his clubs with him all the time. Ray was a wonderful guy. He gave me a valuable tip. He said to me, "Someday you might get a series, and they’ll offer you ten percent of the profits. Just change the name ‘profits’ to ‘proceeds’ or you won’t get a dime."

Milland starred in a 1963 Alfred Hitchcock Hour episode entitled "A Home Away From Home." As an insane asylum inmate, Ray murders the head doctor, locks up the staff, and releases the other inmates. Bedlam follows in this tale by Psycho scribe Robert Bloch, with shades of Poe's "System of Dr. Tarr and Professor Fether."

Maybe the array of TV movies Milland would co-star in during the next twenty years would not be a great source of pride to the actor, but they kept him in view while he rallied for and alternated with roles on the big screen.

Scene from "Daughter Of The Mind"...

In Daughter Of The Mind, a 1969 ABC TV Movie of the Week, Milland played a Nobel Prize winning scientist who claims to have spoken to his dead daughter. Was the supernatural at work, or are more earthly forces responsible?

Milland made a big screen comeback of sorts as Ryan O’Neal’s dad in the box office hit Love Story (1970) at his old stomping ground Paramount. Also, by this time Ray would begin appearing more without his toupee. Around this time, I seem to recall him removing it for the audience on The Tonight Show!

Scene from "Black Moon"...

There was witchcraft in the old West, and Ray Milland was involved in the TV movie Black Noon (1971) where a minister played by Roy Thinnes (of television’s The Invaders) uncovers a cult of voodoo-practicing devil worshippers. There were more strange doings on hand that year in a Night Gallery episode entitled "The Hand of Borgus Weems" co-starring Ray as a doctor who helps Mr. Lacland (George Maharis) whose hand is possessed by the spirit of a murder victim. The guilty are punished one by one, but by the end the spirit has transferred itself to the hand of the doctor!

Milland remained versatile in his portrayals of good guys and bad guys, as appearances in a pair of Columbo episodes demonstrate. In 1971’s "Death Lends a Hand" he played a grief-stricken husband (without the hairpiece) who gave the Lieutenant (Peter Falk) full authority to investigate. The following year in "The Greenhouse Jungle" Milland played the murderer with cynical wit and panache (and hairpiece) attempting to confound and outwit the good Lieutenant.

Ray Milland packs heat in "Frogs"...

And the rug remained in place for Ray’s next two starring roles on the big screen from A.I.P. He (or someone) must have felt he deserved a rest, too, because he played both roles in a wheelchair. And both films, in their own wacky way, were issue-oriented.

Ecology was the issue in a variety of 70’s monster movies ranging from Godzilla Vs. The Smog Monster (1972) to Prophecy (1979). Milland wasn’t in those, but he did star in Frogs (1972) as a cantankerous modern day Southern patriarch determined to have his birthday celebration, even as his small island is being overrun by nature in revolt against pollution and the poisons being used to keep pests in check. One by one, most of Ray’s relatives go to their doom, courtesy of lizards, spiders, snakes, a turtle, alligators, and even a butterfly, before the title creatures move in on the old man himself. For a more thorough rundown on Frogs, hop over here.

Lobby card for "The Thing With Two Heads"...

While Milland continued to appear in mainstream movies, prestige films, television and flimsy all-star international productions, none of this garnered the recognition he received from Frogs and from another 1972 hit, The Thing With Two Heads. Dr. Max Kirshner (Milland), the brilliant, but bigoted head of a hospital and transplant foundation, suffers from crippling arthritis and terminal cancer. In his secret basement laboratory, Kirshner has conducted the successful transplant of one gorilla’s head to the body of another (a bizarre sight designed by emerging master monster maker Rick Baker). The doctor’s next step is to have his own head grafted onto the body of a volunteer from among the inmates of death row.

Jack Moss (played by former New York Giants football player-turned-actor "Rosey" Greer) needs to buy enough time to prove his innocence on a murder charge, so he volunteers to save himself from execution and, as it turns out, save Kirshner in the nick of time as well. The racist Kirshner is none too happy about his new body and less happy about his temporary co-head. Jack is equally upset, but at least still mostly in control of his body. He leaps out of bed, grabs a gun from a police guard and escapes with the help of sympathetic black surgeon Fred Williams (Don Marshall). A nearby motorcycle regatta presents the fleeing two-and-a-half men with a different mode of transportation. The hilarious sight of a two-headed man on a motorcycle is just one of the pleasures of this movie.

Ray Milland is beheaded to save his life...

Another is Jack’s girlfriend Lila (Chelsea Brown) who rightfully refuses to resume a full relationship until Jack’s bitter half is out of the picture. Kirshner’s not out yet, however, and knocks out Jack’s head, escapes Williams and proceeds with his original plan to dispose of Jack’s head and become the sole occupant of his newfound body. A last minute rescue by Dr. Williams leaves Dr. Kirshner again without a body, and Jack Moss free and cleared of the earlier murder charge.

Made at a time when the race issue was already being effectively explored through the satirical humor of television’s All In The Family, The Thing With Two Heads goes the same route and succeeds largely due to the willingness of co-stars Milland and Greer. They keep their tongues firmly in their own cheeks, which isn’t easy when you’re acting literally cheek to cheek. For certain scenes, one head would be replaced with a fake one, but the results were more intentionally fun than the previous year’s more unintentionally funny The Incredible Two-Headed Transplant, also from A.I.P.

While a lab tray seems a rather undignified place to leave Mr. Milland, rest assured he’ll have his head back on in time for next issue to take on murdering madmen, telekinetic children, dancing zombies, killer cats, Cylons, and sea serpents. All this and more in part three of our look at the reliable Ray Milland!


Thanks, Joe. Clearly, once his leading man days were over, sturdy Ray Milland just rolled up his sleeves and kept working, an attitude that not only kept him both in front of and, occasionally, behind the camera, but also made him willing to appear in genre films-- especially in our favorite genre. No matter how fantastic the premise or even how silly the plotline (and The Thing With Two Heads is about the last word in silly), Milland brought his own special charm, poise, and authority to the roles he played. We'll see even more evidence of this in Part Three of this series.

Article copyright � Joe Winters

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It's Year Zero and time to panic...

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THE ART LAIR HORRORPHILE

“The atmosphere of a film is the most important thing. Very early on I was fascinated by the moods and atmospheres which emanate from places and people. People in certain situations – in moments of terror, for example – especially interest me. They live more intensely, and we’re able to learn more about who they really are.” --- Roman Polanski

THE ART LAIR - IX

September 23rd 2008 23:59
Socar Myles
Well, I’ll be damned! I missed my monthly descent into The Art Lair. There was no August selection, I’m afraid. The horror! The horror! Lock me in the iron maiden and throw away the key! No! Wait a minute! Not that you were probably aware of the absence, but hey, what does it matter? These bones ain’t goin’ nowhere …

So, keeping the marrow to the point, here’s a selection of fantastic drawings as white as bone and as black as midnight on a moonless night … but with a hint of crimson, ‘cos that’s the kind of twisted person I am, heh heh heh … and you relish it, I know, I know.

Derek Van Den Hogen

Eva Widermann

Gabriel Bur

J. P. Targete

Kyri Koniotou

Laura Judd

Laura Pelick

Martin Vire

Matt Harpold

Matthew Kukosky

Ricardo Jurado

Socar Myles

William Teo

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THE ART LAIR - VIII

July 21st 2008 02:26
Crawlspace
I’ve had a long hard weekend. I am walking shell of man. I am in dire need of vegetable soup and mineral water. I am incapable of writing an informed and witty movie review. All I can post is something slowly emerging from the Darkness, primordial sludge, like the foul stuff oozing from my ears and clouding my bloodshot vision.

Angela Sasser

David Reuss

Derlis Frutos

Irene Bressel

Jen Hudson

Jon Hodgson

Julian Grant

Maria Binderup

Martin McKenna

Michael Jaecks

Rob Molenaar

Sandra Hirschmann

Vomitus Abortii
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THE ART LAIR - VII

June 25th 2008 05:06
crocodile and victim
I’m not sure if the above photo is an artistic installation, but it looks like one, so I’ve included it as my window display. I’ve got a thing for crocodiles (or is that an alligator?) … and the derriere and long legs of the female kind. But I digress …

There’s a bit more colour in this selection of art, a bit more vibrancy in the macabre. But that’s all I’m going to say. I’m not an art critic; I just compile the “exhibition” and let my readers have an oogle. That’s the best way to present art, let it speak for itself.

Andrey Barkov

Bryan Peters

Cathy Wilkins

Christina DeLong

Dimitar Nikolov

Egypt Urnash

Jen Hudson

Jenny Crampton

Jon Zig

Martin McKenna

Miruza B.

Rafal Hrynkiewicz

Tommy Rot



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THE ART LAIR - VI

May 1st 2008 23:14
S.H.S.
Are your bad dreams a little on the bland and tedious side? Do you need a little inspiration for your nightmare melting pot? Imagery that’s truly surreal, grotesque, outlandish and seductively horrendous? You’ve come to the right place … The Horrorphile’s Art Lair, a scarily fine selection of paintings, sketches, and illustrations from international artists.

Chloe Pogson


[ Click here to read more ]
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THE ART LAIR - V

March 28th 2008 23:29
Scott Davis
If only the modern horror movie was as richly textured, boldly formed, and palpably fearsome as the art work on display here in The Art Lair, I’d be a happy little chappy!

Cedric Savona


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THE ART LAIR - IV

February 22nd 2008 01:17
Gabriel Bur
A picture may paint a thousand words … But a piece of horror art cuts through flesh and bone and etches deep into the marrow an obituary of dark and bloodied brilliance. Check these dark and delicious works by talented young artists from all over the world.

Amara Carney


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THE ART LAIR - III

December 31st 2007 03:32
It’s my last post for the year. So I thought I’d end with the next exhibition of The Art Lair. These are dark and confronting illustrations from artists from all over the world. Linger and ogle.
Joe Kennett

And have a bloody good new year


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THE ART LAIR - II

November 29th 2007 02:15
Meg Lyman
I love the way each person can interpret different things from a piece of artwork, more so than your average movie poster. As much as I love graphic design, a movie poster is, more often than not, designed to illicit an immediate and deliberate response from the viewer; basically the poster should be saying “You want to see this movie! Now!”

Melissa Byrd
With a piece of artwork, whether it be an charcoal sketch, a water colour painting, an air-brushed illustration, or a metal sculpture, the intention of the artist is to create a reaction from the viewer; not necessarily a feel-good sensation, but definitely an excited one. With horror art, the artist’s intention is to create a sense of morbid fascination, unease, dread, a macabre rush of adrenalin as fear crawls up the spine, or, most effectively, a recoil, as the imagery reminds one of a recent nightmare


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THE ART LAIR - horror artwork

October 9th 2007 01:40
throne of death
I was surfing with intent and came across a great site full of horror and Gothic art by a multitude of artists, most of which is actually uncredited. The site is intended for webpage designers, so many of them are quite small images for using as avatars, etc. There are numerous code generators and even a whole section for myspace junkies.

cold eye
The site is a smorgasbord of horror artwork; all blood and darkness for the artiste children of the night. Most are vivid paintings, but many are digitally manipulated photographs, while others are just black and white sketches, and some images are almost endearing, in a strange, macabre kind of way





DARKSIDE OF THE NET

Dark Side of the Web: Horror

General Horror Pages | Horror Authors | Horror Links Pages | Horror Movies |

Online Horror/Gothic Literature | Online Dark/Horror Ezines


    New Horror Links

  • The Attict - A horror fan's page with music, movie clips, photos, and a Livejournal.

  • Come Play With Us, Danny - A Horror movie review blog.

  • CreepyShit.com - Articles, reviews, convention coverage, DVD reviews, and links.

  • Fatally Yours - A nicely done horror review blog by multiple authors. Timely and interesting news on the horror genre.

  • Horror Yearbook - A well done horror genre news site. Articles, interviews, and reviews.

  • Monster Kids - A community for horror genre fans.

  • League of Tana Tea Drinkers - A group of bloggers who blog about horror. They've joined forces to support each other in building thoughtful, considerate, high quality blogs about the horror genre. This is a great jumping-off point to discover interesting horror bloggers and updated news on the genre.


    General Horror Pages

  • All Things Zombie - Info on zombie movies, books, games, comics, toys. Zombie fiction, a message board, and links. They also have a couple of horror movie trailers.

  • Atrocities Cinema - News, reviews, contests.

  • Feo Amante - Highly recommended! News, reviews, comics, gallery, horror music, horror convention info, and fiction. Very useful site.

  • Beautiful, Dead Women - Some fiction, and an essay on women in horror films.

  • Beyond the Groovy Age of Horror - A blog covering 1960s/1970s pulp horror books.

  • Bloody Disgusting - Horror news, horror movie release dates, articles, and forums.

  • British Horror Films - Actors, timeline, films, extras, and a message board on the topic.

  • The CHUD Creature Corner - Extremely highly recommended! THE BEST source of daily horror news in the world. Delivered with attitude, accuracy and real knowledge of the horror field. They have cool contests, interesting messageboards, and often run exclusive interviews with horror directors, actors and writers.

  • Contamination Horror - History of horror and horror fandom, articles and research.

  • Dark Angel's Realm of Horror - UK based site with horror news, reviews, a chatroom, a history of horror, and links.

  • Dark Element 13 - A fan's site, with his lists of favorite stories, novels and movies.

  • Darkling Tales - A LiveJournal community for supernatural terror.

  • Darktales Infobase - Under construction as of April 2003.

  • Fiona's Fear and Loathing - One of the first horror sites on the net, Fiona reviews massive amounts of horror books. She may have even been around the net longer than me. Very knowledgeable lady.

  • The Fright Site - Games, stories, comics, reviews, and some streaming vampire movies.

  • The Horror Channel - These people are trying very hard to create a horror channel carried by cable television providers. I wish them luck. Meanwhile, they have a great news headlines section and interesting discussion forums.

  • Horror.com - Well designed site with discussions, reviews, articles, picture galleries, and links.

  • Horror Guide: Cafes, Pubs, Clubs, and Restaurants of the World - Theme cafes, bars and restaurants. Not updated since 2001 and icky popup ads.

  • Horror Host Gallery - Pics and info of TV horror hosts from the 1950s to the present, including Vampira, Jeepers Creepers, Ghouldardi, Svengoolie, Count Gore de Vol, Dr. Acula, Dr. Shock, and many more.

  • Famous Monsters Trading Cards of 1963 - A card-by-card guide, with photos, of the beloved series of cards.

  • Gruesome.com - Horror movie reviews, forums and chat.

  • International Horror Guild - Dark fantasy reviewers and critics join to present yearly horror literature awards.

  • Last Page on the Left - Horror articles, interviews and reviews. Very outdated, but was quite useful for years.

  • Tom Malafarina's Art of Horror

  • Mockfear.com - Horrorscopes, a zine, a forum, interviews, reviews, and links.

  • The Monster Club

  • Ray's Horror Site

  • Really Scary

  • Thrillpeddlers (Horror Theatre and Live Events)

  • Tribute to Horror

  • Where Horrors Dwell - Horror movie reviews, an award, some links, and an empty chatroom.

  • The Women of Horror Movies


    Horror Links Pages

  • DarkEcho Horror Links

  • Hauntess's Horror Web

  • Horrorview - Essays, interviews, trailers, DVD reviews, and a shop.

  • K and J Horror

  • The Spookhouse, at LiveJournal

  • Val Cap Dungeon

  • Yahoo's Horror Page

  • Zombo's Closet - A nicely put together horror fan's blog.


    updated September 20, 2008

    This page is Copyrighted © 2008 Carrie Carolin


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  • MY TOP TEN MINDFUCK HORROR FILMS



    "Sometimes the world of the living gets mixed up with the world of the dead."



    "I see dead people . . . Walking around like regular people. They don't see each other. They only see what they want to see. They don't know they're dead . . . They see only what they want to see."



    "Don't you fucking look at me!" [Read the review]



    "Eckhart saw Hell too. He said: The only thing that burns in Hell is the part of you that won't let go of life, your memories, your attachments. They burn them all away. But they're not punishing you, he said. They're freeing your soul. So, if you're frightened of dying and . . . and you're holding on, you'll see devils tearing your life away. But if you've made your peace, then the devils are really angels, freeing you from the earth."



    "There's no logical explanation for what I'm going to say to you now . . . The boy was badly crippled. I believe he was killed in an attic room of that house."



    "Here we go, the world is spinning. When it stops, it's just beginning. Sun comes up, we laugh and we cry. Sun goes down, and then we all die."



    "Especially important is the warning to avoid conversations with the demon. We may ask what is relevant but anything beyond that is dangerous. He is a liar. The demon is a liar. He will lie to confuse us. But he will also mix lies with the truth to attack us. The attack is psychological, Damien, and powerful. So don't listen to him. Remember that . . . do not listen."



    "We begin by coveting what we see every day. Don't you feel eyes moving over your body, Clarice? And don't your eyes seek out the things you want?"



    "Mother, what is the phrase? She isn't quite herself today."



    "Some places are like people . . . some shine and some don't."

    AND NOW THE SECOND FEATURE....

    Dracula

    C.H.U.D.

    Robinson Crusoe on Mars

    The Changeling

    Invaders From Mars

    The Giant Spider Invasion

    Plan 9 From Outer Space

    Mortuary

    Fantastic Voyage

    Dawn of the Mummy

    Marooned

    Destination Inner Space

    Garden of the Dead

    Piranha

    The Shape of Things to Come

    The Day It Came to Earth

    Burial Ground

    Orca

    Mission Mars

    First Spaceship on Venus

    The Little Girl Who Lived Down The Lane

    War of the Satellites

    The Blob

    Rollerball

    Creature From the Black Lagoon

    Atragon

    TerrorVision

    Jaws


    BEST HORROR MOVIES

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    LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT

    EVIL DREAD

    THE HAUNTING OF MOLLY HARTLEY


    Get More The Haunting of Molly Hartley Trailers at TerrorFeed.com

    100 HORROR FILM POSTERS PART ONE

    By Andrew Lindstrom · October 28th, 2008 · Inspiration


    For some, Halloween means costume parties and drunken debauchery. That’s never really been my style. Personally, I like to spend my Halloween evenings eating candy and watching scary movies. Yeah, I’m a nerd - I know.

    This Halloween season has had me reminiscing of the brilliant horror and sci-fi movie posters of years past. Particularly, I am a fan of the illustrated posters that used to be the staple of nearly every science fiction and horror film released. These posters are able to communicate so much about a film with a single, masterfully created image that it’s a shame this style isn’t so popular nowadays.

    Since there were so many amazing posters to showcase, I have split this post into two parts. Part two will be posted on October 31st. But for now, you may feast on the first half.

    Creature from Black Lake

    The Kindred

    Fright Night

    Tarantula!

    Death Race 2000

    Silent Running

    The Thing

    Forbidden Planet

    House

    Planet of the Vampires

    Tales of Terror

    Kingdom of the Spiders

    Day of the Dead

    The Winged Serpent

    The Island of Dr. Moreau

    Road Games

    Equinox

    Nosferatu

    Alligator

    The Alpha Incident

    Up From the Depths

    Zardoz

    Dracula

    C.H.U.D.

    Robinson Crusoe on Mars

    The Changeling

    Invaders From Mars

    The Giant Spider Invasion

    Plan 9 From Outer Space

    Mortuary

    Fantastic Voyage

    Dawn of the Mummy

    Marooned

    Destination Inner Space

    Garden of the Dead

    Piranha

    The Shape of Things to Come

    The Day It Came to Earth

    Burial Ground

    Orca

    Mission Mars

    First Spaceship on Venus

    The Little Girl Who Lived Down The Lane

    War of the Satellites

    The Blob

    Rollerball

    Creature From the Black Lagoon

    Atragon

    TerrorVision

    Jaws


    About Me

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    Concert Productions International (familiarly, CPI). Major promoter of rock concerts and tours in North America. It was established in Toronto in 1973 as a subsidiary of WBC Productions Ltd by Michael Cohl, William (Bill) Ballard, and Mediagenics Entertainment. CPI-Mediagenics extended its sphere of influence across Canada. CPI=Mediagenics organized many national tours by major rock and pop acts and produced more than 250 concerts and events each year in addition to sporting and theatrical events. With its focus on concert tours, CPI promoted successful tours for the Rolling Stones, David Bowie and Pink Floyd. In 1989 it began to acquire international touring rights for groups such as the Rolling Stones, whose 115-concert Steel Wheels tour 1989-90 in Canada, the USA, Europe, and Japan generated gross revenues reaching an unprecedented $300 million. It also presented artists in several smaller Toronto venues and promoted concerts in other Ontario cities. In 1990 Canadian concerts accounted for about half of some 1000 CPI presentations worldwide.
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