Just in time for a nice Halloween rambling!
Back in the earliest days of my blog, Simcha Fischer posted a list of scary movies she watched with her family around spook season when she was at National Catholic Register. Deciding to shamelessly steal the idea, I posted the same thing, and it led to an early boost in my visits. No doubt in part because of the images I used being ones people at the time were likely searching for. Eh. It still worked, and the old blog got quite a lift in page views.
Since then, we've watched many more movies that weren't on the list. Some on the list aren't watched as much anymore. Of course most aren't watched with everyone because of obvious life changes. And there are those not listed here because, while we have watched them many times over the years, they aren't even a once every three Halloween watch. So here is the much awaited update - Movies to Scare Kids By, Part II:
Night of the Demon, 1957
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| MacGinnis (L) and Andrews selling the story | 
The City of the Dead, 1960 (US: 1961)
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| The shadow of the cross will protect them... | 
Psycho, 1960
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| No caption needed | 
Speaking of which, somehow this began to be included in the annual cycle of spooky viewing. I needn't dwell on the specifics. I mean, is there a more iconic suspense thriller than this? I knew about the shower scene before I knew what showers were. And that was back then. Though I will say this. I have forever envied those moviegoers who saw the film upon its initial release. Only they could have appreciated Hitchcock's sleight of hand, as it's clear the early movie sets up Janet Leigh as the actual psycho. Embezzling money from her boss to force the hand of her lover Sam Loomis into marrying her, she then drives across country, becoming more neurotic and paranoid with each mile. Each person she runs into -seeing her boss cross the street, a police officer, California Charlie the used car salesman - becomes more and more of a threat as her mind runs wild. Then as the weather turns sour, she pulls into the isolated Bates Motel. Upon meeting a young Norman Bates, the audience thinks here's another person she's going to go crazy worrying about. And yet, as they converse over an impromptu snack, something is different this time. From the moment you see him change from picking keys to Room 3 to Room 1, you begin to get the impression that somehow, in some way, perhaps she wasn't the psycho after all. To be able to watch it like that is something I do envy.
The Wicker Man, 1973
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| Christopher Lee gives another understated performance | 
Steven King's Silver Bullet, 1985
Made in the wake of The Howling and Rick Baker's groundbreaking effects for An American Werewolf in London, it is inferior to those two movies in most ways. The design for the monster in question always looked like a teddy bear with a mean streak and not much more. With most of King's movies, either they deviate enough to improve the material, or try to stretch the material out to a two hour version of not much. Somehow, this movie manages to do a little of neither. Still, there are some things to like. It wisely adds a seasonal feel by having the final confrontation take place on Halloween night (while picky observers note that in the actual year it is supposed to happen, the moon was not full on Halloween). The principal actors are good enough, and do their jobs well enough to carry the story. Many in the support cast actually shine brighter than the leads. There are some heartfelt moments, and some good scenes that suggest a better movie in the making. Plus it does contain one of the most purely gothic scenes ever put to celluloid. Then of course there is Gary Busey. Never has Gary Busey more Gary Bussied than here. If you like your Gary Busey acting three sheets to the wind even when he's not drunk, this is the movie for you.
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| L to R: Angry teddy bear; Werewolf to scare the bloody pants off of you (courtesy of The Howling) | 
The Fall of the House of Usher
One of the catalogue of Roger Corman's 'how to mutilate Poe' films. Of all of them, this is the one trying at least somewhat to cleave unto the original source material. Vincent Price, Mr. Horror of Poe himself, does a good job of making the ailing Roderick Usher come off as unsettling at best. The settings are typical Corman, lots of fog, everything looks dead (as well it should), the interior shots are properly gothic, and the costumes are straight out of a Broadway costume drama. At only 79 minutes, it still feels like the main goal is to stretch and stretch again the story into a full length theatrical release. Nonetheless, when it does get going, and the set of the crypts is revealed, the whole begins to come together and makes for viewing that fits well into the Halloween seasonal feel.
Dracula, Prince of Darkness (1966)
The sequel to Hammer's The Horror of Dracula, its first instalment of an eternally long string of Dracula movies. Featuring one of the best showdowns between Dracula and his arch-nemesis Van Helsing, Hammer reminds us that when it comes to adapting books into movies, don't worry about the books. The names are the same, but don't apply to the same people. We still have no clue where it is supposed to take place. The story begins in the first minute by quoting Jonathan Harker's journal, and then promptly begins rewriting the journal itself, with the story to follow. Nonetheless, so successful was its performances at the box office that a sequel from Hammer was inevitable. Dracula, Prince of Darkness begins a decade or so after the events of the first movie. Not able to get Peter Cushing back, they bring in four stalwart Brit performers as well as the always reliable Andrew Keir to weave together a new story centered around a speechless Dracula (the reasons for Lee having no dialogue being debated to this day). Two brothers and their wives defy warnings from a rambunctious abbot and visit too close to the Castle Dracula. As they say, when you're in horror movies, you make dumb decisions. What follows is predictable, and the ending, while interesting in leaning on the tale that vampires can't cross running water, is nowhere close to the first movie's ending (see below). Also, the 'vampire as bizarre mutant monster, not supernatural' gets kicked into high gear, and you're left pondering just what Keir's abbot actually believes about - anything. I suppose it was the apex of accepting that everything spiritual must really be material. It's worth noting, BTW, that the TV channels we had when I was growing up must have owned this movie outright, because more than almost any other horror movie, it seemed this was shown repeatedly. Also, like The City of the Dead, one can see some clear influences on both Stephen King and, of all things, Dungeons and Dragons!
Curse of the Werewolf (1961)
Oliver Reed shines in this tortured tale. While Hammer would raid old Universal story lines and adapt them liberally from the source material, they toss Curt Siodmak's concocted Wolf Man story out the window. Instead, for this movie they lean on actual European folklore and superstitions about werewolves and their origins. Reed's Leon is definitely a tragic character, almost as much as his adopted father, played brilliantly by Welsh actor Clifford Evans. A viewer will almost be lost at first, as the initial scenes in the movie tap into historical beliefs about where werewolves originate. Then we meet Leon as a young child with decidedly un-childlike tendencies: Like sleepwalking and returning with blood all over his torn up clothes. Growing up doesn't help, and like any true Gothic tale, it oozes with tragedy, for that's typically what defines a Gothic tale. True to form, Hammer Films, as it so often did, managed to punch well above its weight in terms of what it could do with very limited budgets and resources, and makes this one of the most rewatchable of its extensive catalogue.
The Curse of Frankenstein (1957)
The Hammer film that put Hammer in the spotlight. Initially panned for its gore, its production and its gratuitous levels of - then - shocking visuals, the movie has since been seen as a milestone due to its role in bringing back the classic horror genre in the age of sci-fi and nuclear paranoia. Like most Hammer films, the source material is out the window. It isn't even based on stage plays. The film begins with Dr. Frankenstein awaiting his execution. He tells his tale of what happened, a tale we should be at least vaguely familiar with. If Frankenstein is sometimes less sympathetic than his creation in the original novel, here he's pure villain. Willing to murder to maintain his project of life creation, Cushing's Frankenstein ranks as one of Hammer's most heartless monsters. Even more than the grotesque creature itself, played again by a speechless Christopher Lee. Scottish actor Robert Urquhart is wonderful as Frankenstein's mentor, turned adversary as he begins to recoil in horror at what his prized student is capable of doing. Like most Hammer films, for its day it pulled no punches, and the ending shows that not all movies need to end happily.
The House on Haunted Hill, 1959
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| The move makes as much sense as this photo | 
The Haunting, 1963
In keeping with the emerging focus on the supernatural and away from space aliens and giant mutants, we're treated to this cinematic version of Shirley Jackson's novel The Haunting of Hill House. To be honest, this isn't really my cup of tea. For some reason, the atmosphere and the portrayal of the haunting itself comes off as almost tinny, if that means anything. There is a mechanical feel to it all that doesn't hit me as 'supernatural' or 'spiritual.' More like sound machines and drum sets behind the stage than ethereal spirits. Nonetheless, it is liked here on the home front, and I don't hate it. There is some good there, especially the lore attached to the story. The sets themselves are good, and the acting solid. Yes, we all get the subtle inuendo behind the two female leads' relationship. But overall, each actor of the small cast does good enough. Not to mention Julie Harris's Elinore Lance has a bullseye over her that even the least attentive viewer can't help but see. So it's OK, but probably not a favorite, at least for me.
Night of the Living Dead, 1968
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| And in color, too! | 
Ghost Story, 1981
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| Enough class to fill the screen | 
Based on Peter Straub's 1979 novel of the same name, the movie distills the book down to the classic 'old dark secret shared by friends' storyline. As they enter the twilight of their years, four life long friends become concerned when one suddenly dies, for no apparent reason. Then goes another one. Finally, the son of the first to die shows up and tells his tale. A beautiful young woman came into his life who seemed, well, every guy's dream. It being the sex saturated early 80s, this dream is played out on screen in very non-family friendly ways. Yet something begins to look wrong. He soon links her to his own brother who died mysteriously after meeting a young woman who sounded a lot like his current flame. Stories are told, and the dark secret the four pledged to keep forever when they were young is revealed. At that point, they conclude this might be a case of revenge from the netherworld. The fact that they rounded up some phenomenal acting power - Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Fred Astaire, John Houseman and Patricia Neal to name a few - lifts the movie by at least a letter grade. Good atmosphere and creepy settings don't hurt.
The Witch, 2015
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| It's a family in-joke | 
CHEATS:
The next couple are movies we used to watch but my wife began to find a bit troubling. I think it has to do with raising teenagers and college students.
Halloween, 1978
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| It begins | 
The Blair Witch Project, 1999
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| You have to admit - it works | 
SPECIAL MENTION
Ghost Story (2017)
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| Really, he's in a bed sheet | 
So there you have it. For the record, not all of them are watched every year, and some more often than others. A few have only been watched a couple times, but almost always around October, owing to the seasonal vibes.
 
 
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