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Dahlia DeWinters - Author

Quirky Heroines, Happy Endings

Search Results for: horror movie review

5 70s TV Horror Movies

The 70s was a interesting decade to grow up in. Ted Bundy, Jonestown, Elvis’s death, Kent State, Star Wars, The Godfather, Battle of the Sexes (Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs) etc.  There was also a time when there was no cable and they ran almost anything on network TV….at least that how it seemed to me as a kid.

Those in the New York area must remember the 4;30 movie, the Sunday Night Movie, the Monday Night Movie and Chiller theater.  After shaking up my memory and a few calls to my sister, I’ve sussed out a few TV horror movies I remember watching as a child. Here they are, presented in no particular order.

Duel:

If you are a horror movie fan, surely you must have heard of this one.  It’s Stephen Speilberg’s first movie about a killer truck with a grudge. It stars Dennis Weaver, who will appear again on the list. Duel is a thriller/horror that follows David Mann, a traveling businessman as he takes a routine road trip for sales, or something like that.  He was doing fine until he runs into a rusted eighteen wheeler who doesn’t like being passed on the highway. (At least I think that’s what happened….I’ll be honest, it’s been a bit.”  What started as road rage and  revenge escalates into a life-or-death game that no one can help David with.

Recently, they tried a weak remake with Wrecker. It was….well, you can read my review here. 

See Duel. No, it’s not full of blood and guts, but it’s a study in horror film making.

Don’t Go to Sleep:

Okay, this is acutally from the 80s, early 80s, but I had to include it. My sister and I talk about this one every time we talk about movies. It’s such a good movie: weird and terrible with a great horror ending.  It was released in 1982, but such a memory from my childhood, I included it here. 

Picture this: a heart-wrenching tale that starts with a family in the deepest throes of grief. Their youngest daughter, Jennifer, tragically loses her life in a car accident. Oh noes! Of course,  Now, after such a tragedy, the family goes for that fresh start. But guess what? This place comes with more than just a change of scenery. Cue the eerie, spine-tingling stuff. Mysterious happenings that’ll give you goosebumps start creeping into their lives. Yeah. Don’t look under the bed, okay?

Secrets, lies, and tensions…as well as a pizza cutter. Yes.  Just watch the film. It is a surprisingly good movie being ‘made for TV’. Get groovy and watch it. Hold on, it was made in 1982 so, I guess groovy isn’t the best term. Anyway, watch it. Enjoy.

Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark

Yes, this is the film remade by Guillermo Del Toro, but this original 70s version is just choice. Let’s take a quick look at the synopsis. A young couple inherits an old mansion (OH NO!) inhabited by small demon-like creatures who are determined to make the wife one of their own.

Well.  I will tell you, the whispers and the sounds the creatures make gave me the chills.  I don’t know…did I say this before?  There’s something about 70s horror that gets you. Yes, some films are overacted and sort of corny, but then you get a movie like this that kinda gets under your skin.  Give it a try, see if you like.

 

Devil Dog: The Hound of Hell

If you know 70s movies/TV, you know Richard Crenna.  Best known, probably, as Colonel Trautman, from First Blood, he also portrayed a cop who was assaulted (in that way) by ex convicts in The Rape of Richard Beck. (I told you, in the 70s, EVERYTHING was on TV.) 

This wonderful suburban nuclear family innocenlty adopts a German Shephard, who, if I recall correctly, is either possessed by or bred by Satan.  The film stars Richard Crenna Yvette Mimieux (from Lipstick).  Kim Richards and Ike Eisenmann are the children. Fun fact: The two child actors previously played siblings in the Witch Mountain films from Walt Disney Productions, which I’ve also seen.  Of course, the dog rolls up with their own agenda, which includes tormenting the family and trying to get them to harm themselves. 

The kicker, though, is at the end, when the dog apparently evolves into its devil-form and…..wow. He looks like a back-projected low-rent Zuul with a fur collar. It’s not to be missed. Have fun with this one.

Horror at 37,000 Feet

What a great cast for this film. Paul Winfield, Buddy Ebsen, William Shatner, Chuck Connors.  You horror fans know the drill: Some rich (or foolish) person takes a religious artifact from its proper place, and terrible things begin to happen.  This time, it happens on a plane, where there is no escape for the innocent people.  Basically, these druid demons wreak havoc on these poor passengers until they get what they want. Also, William Shatner!

If you want to find out where these films are streaming, if they are even streaming, drop “Movie Name streaming” into the search box and it’ll tell you all you need to know. I hesitate to delineate any specific streaming services, because those things change so quickly. Best bet? Get on eBay or a used DVD place and get the physical copy.

Happy Watching!


Filed Under: Blogging, Blogtoberfest, Movies--Books--Music--Television, Uncategorized Tagged: blogtober, halloween, horror, scary, spooky season

The Horror Movie Tag

 

It’s almost that time of year.  We’re creeping up on Halloween, which seems to be fast becoming the most popular holiday out of the year!  Being a lover of horror movies (in the bright light of morning and afternoon, that is), Halloween is a fun time of the year for me too.  Although my children have now outgrown the need to dress up for the holiday–well, except for my youngest, who requested a gas mask to complete his costume–I still enjoy the spirit of the holiday.

I like to keep up with my horror movie watching with this cool journal I created… keeps all your horror movie reviews in a safe place:

 As  I mentioned, I do love horror movies during the day, so I found a YouTube Tag online that feeds my habit but good. I present to you the Horror  Movie Tag.

1. What is the First horror movie you remember watching?

2. What is your favorite horror movie?

3. What is your favorite horror movie genre?

4. What genre scares you the most?

5. What is the last horror movie you watched that actually scared you?

6. Who is your ultimate scream queen?

7. What’s a concept that you’d like to see in horror?

8. What is your favorite on screen kill?

9. What’s your favorite horror franchise?

10. Who’s your favorite horror director?

(Bonus Question) 11. What famous horror movie have you never seen?


Filed Under: Blogtoberfest, Horror Movie Reviews, Movies--Books--Music--Television, Uncategorized, Whatever Wednesdays Tagged: halloween, horror, horror film, horror movies, jackolantern, Scary books for Halloween, scary movies

Movie Review: A Kind of Murder

I’ve been neglecting this blog, I know, but I’m back with a new routine and a vengeance.  This time around, I’ve got a bit of a change for your reading pleasure.  Instead of a horror movie review, I have a bit of a thriller review.

Title:  A Kind of Murder

Starring:  Patrick Wilson, Jessica Biel

Based on Patricia Highsmith’s book, The Blunderer

Summary, from IMDB:

In 1960s New York, Walter Stackhouse is a successful architect married to the beautiful Clara who leads a seemingly perfect life. But his fascination with an unsolved murder leads him into a spiral of chaos as he is forced to play cat-and-mouse with a clever killer and an overambitious detective, while at the same time lusting after another woman.

Now, an admission:  there are two reasons why I chose this movie.  First of all, the filmed is based on a book by Patricia Highsmith, author of The Talented Mr. Ripley and Strangers on a Train.  The second reason is Patrick Wilson, who is kind of adorable, in a calmly pleasant kind of way.

The film itself is a period piece, which takes place in the early sixties.  As a fan of Mad Men, I love the clothes, the cars and the absolute devotion to smoking these “Old” movies have.  Men wore hats, women wore crinoline and the cars were simply awesome.

As much as I have love for Highsmith, Wilson and the early sixties, I had a lot of trouble with this movie.  It was beautiful to look at:  winter, dark brooding scenes and it even had a smoky, bohemian bar with a torch singer.  I liked watching it, but at the end, I felt like I had learned nothing and had merely spent my time leafing through a 1962 Life magazine.

The buildup was everything.  A depressed wife, a frustrated husband in a gorgeously designed house (very sixties) and a mysterious murder that the husband (a writer when he’s not being an architect) becomes obsessed with.  There’s even a rare bookstore with a mousy, kind of weird owner.

Another thing that I liked about the movie was that it was pulpy.  It put me in mind of Double Indemnity. Very “noir-ish” and rather unsettling in parts.

As you can tell, I’m writing a lot about what I saw and not a lot about what I felt.  The story rolled along nicely, but, as I hinted at above, never really came to a solid conclusion.  People died, people were injured, but…..yeah, okay.  The movie was kind of “meh”.  I’d watch it again, however, simply to catch set and costume details that I might have missed the first time around.  The story left a lot to be desired.

Do I recommend it?  If you’re a fan of period pieces and Patricia Highsmith, this would be for you.

3 out of 5 stars just for good looks.


Filed Under: Movies--Books--Music--Television Tagged: a kind of murder, a kind of murder review, jessica biel, movie review, patricia Highsmith, patrick wilson, thriller movie review

Blogtoberfest – Five Scary Movies – Mya Lairis

My top five scary movies are: 

 

1. Trilogy of Terror– is my all time scary movie. There is just something about that damn doll, like maybe it gnawed my ankles off in a past life or something but I have only watched this film once. Trying to get up the nerve to do it again, but…that doll!

2. Squirm– I have no issue with snakes, at all…they are tasty in fact but earthworms, shrieking, no-eyes having, able to be cut into pieces and still live, burrowing under the skin…Hell naw.

3. Event Horizon– When I first saw this film it scared the crap out of me. Dimensional terrors usually hit home with the terror mark in me and that the space ship had breached the dimension to Hell and was inescapable…yeah. I have been able to watch this a few times however and still, its a shitty deal for those on board.

4. Evil Dead Remake– This was an excellent remake and one that I winced a couple of times at but enjoyed all the same. That razor blade though….

5. Beloved– Yup, actually now that I think about it, this could be one of the scariest films I’ve ever seen. The notion of slavery is frightening enough but this film did emotional damage to me as it made me question the notions of anger, vengeance, and self. Creatures are scary and all but the human psyche can be far worse.

Bio: Mya Lairis is a monster and kaiju  fanatic who writes paranormal romance and erotica but who reads mostly extreme horror and heart racing cyber punk sci fi.

Website: www.myalairis.com

 

 


Filed Under: 5 Fandom Friday, 5 Favorites Friday, Blogtoberfest Tagged: black girl geeks, black girl nerds, blerd, blogtoberfest, CID, colors in darkness, dahlia dewinters, halloween, halloween party, horror movies, movies, movies that scare, mya lairis, scary, scary movies, top scary movies

Thriller Movie Review: Kidnap

Kidnap:  Every Parent’s Horror Movie

In the US, a child goes missing every 40 seconds. You never think it will happen to you. Until it does. Alone and scared, Karla Dyson (Halle Berry) is unwilling to leave the fate of her son’s life in someone else’s hands. When she catches a glimpse of the abductors speeding away, she decides to fight back. In a heart pounding race against time, Karla begins a high speed pursuit and will stop at nothing to save her son’s life. Written by https://teaser-trailer.com

Remember that time you stepped off to the side in the store to take a kind of important call and you got so engrossed you took your eyes of your child for more than a couple of minutes?  Yep.  That’ was Halle Berry’s mistake in Kidnap.  But boy, does she make up for it, if I may say, in spades.

Berry plays single mother Karla Dyson, who’s set up in the movie is done quite well.  She works at a diner in a thankless waitress job, as demonstrated by one snooty patron, and is looking forward to a well deserved break at an amusement park with her son, Frankie. But what should be an idyllic afternoon between mother and son turns into the worst of nightmares, as Frankie is spirited away under his mother’s nose and she’s helpless to stop it.

The film is non-stop action.  The moment Frankie is stuffed into that car, Halle Berry goes full tiger mom mode.  Without stopping to call the police, she makes an attempt at stopping the kidnapping right away and chases the villain’s car in her minivan.  This begins a cat-and-mouse game, which keeps you on the edge of your seat the entire movie.

The story is told from Halle’s point of view and that’s all the insight we need.  In such an impossible situation, she knows the police will move too slowly and that it’s up to her to save her son.  She digs deep down and finds the strength to chase her son and his kidnappers all the way into the Louisiana countryside.

Halle carries most of the movie, both in talking to herself and screaming in frustration at the kidnappers.  As a mother, I felt her pain every step of the way.  Not many people want to see a child in danger or hurt, and it was harrowing to see Halle’s near misses at getting Frankie back.  Though the villain remains unseen for most of the movie, just the fact they’ve kidnapped a kid launches them into full-on villain status.  There are no gray areas in this movie, and Halle is justified in the things she does.

It’s also refreshing to see a woman of color in a lead role in a thriller.  Instead of playing the “girlfriend” or the “woman who sits home and frets”, she takes an active role in reclaiming her child.  Digging deep for the reserves of power and ingenuity within her, there’s nothing she won’t do to get him back.  I simply love how she goes all out in pursuit.  No minivan ever has seen such action!!

For steady movie goers – you won’t see anything new in this movie.  However, Halle puts a fresh spin on the “child in peril” movie and seriously owns some of the scenes in it.  Is it a great movie?  Not at all, but it is entertaining, and isn’t that what we go to the movies for?

All in all an effective thriller with great car chases and a heroine you can root for.

A

 

[wpdevart_youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R-Ht8VRPRvU[/wpdevart_youtube]

 

 

 

SPOILER FOR THOSE SENSITIVE TO CHILDREN IN PERIL

 

 

 

 

 

No children were hurt or harmed in the film.  There are some scary situations, yes, but no children were harmed.


Filed Under: Horror Movie Reviews, Movies--Books--Music--Television, Uncategorized Tagged: black geek girls, black girl nerds, blerd, female geek bloggers, geek girl, halle berry, horror movie review, kidnap movie, kidnap movie review, movie geek, movie review, thriller movie review

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