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Dahlia DeWinters - Author

Quirky Heroines, Happy Endings

Summer Series Watch – Stranger Things

Stranger ThingsI think I’m the kind of person who’s just over “regular” TV.  I’m sick of these fake reality shows.  Sorry, but no one’s life is that interesting for me to watch week after week after week.  And anyone who actually thinks these reality shows are real…well, I don’t have much to say to that either.

That being said, I’ve rediscovered the joy of an actual story which doesn’t include someone getting told off or embarrassed to bring high ratings.  The good shows are not only on Netflix and Hulu, but some of the premium channels manage to bring some quality programming also.

Today I’m chatting about Stranger Things on Netflix.  When I read about this series in a friend’s status on Facebook, I rushed to my Roku to watch it.  What a show!  Even the title font evokes the feeling of those old Stephen King paperbacks and old push button wall telephones.  I’m only two episodes in, but I’m hooked.

Why only two episodes when the entire season is ready to go?  I tried to binge watch.  It doesn’t work.  There is so much to absorb and think about with these well written shows.  I just can’t watch one after the other after the other.  Thinking about a  story after it is over is the afterglow of seeing a good show.  I see each episode as an experience.  When you rush from one experience to the other, one doesn’t fully absorb all the nuances of each.

So, I’m two episodes in and I’m pretty pleased.  If you’re a fan of the 80s and Super-8, then this show is for you.  When my son walked in while I was watching it, he told me it looked like The Goonies.

Take a watch, if you’re a mind to.  Here’s the trailer.

 

 


Filed Under: Screen Time, Uncategorized Tagged: binge watching, netflix, science fiction, Stephen King, stranger things, super 8, the goonies

Blogtoberfest – Scary Stories – Pet Sematary

Horror is different for everyone.  I don’t think the “experts” can agree on what horror is and thus there are tons of movies and books that represent the horror

Cover of "Pet Sematary (Special Collector...
Cover via Amazon

genre, as it should be.

I also believe that horror is different depending on where you are in your life.  What’s represents horror for a twenty-year-old might be old-hat to a forty year old. Books that resounded for me in my twenties are just “eh” now that I’m a lovely seasoned woman of a certain age.

But Stephen King’s Pet Semetary broke that mold.  It’s just as frightening now as when I first read it many years ago.

Here’s the blurb

“Sometimes dead is better….”When the Creeds move into a beautiful old house in rural Maine, it all seems too good to be true: physician father, beautiful wife, charming little daughter, adorable infant son — and now an idyllic home. As a family, they’ve got it all…right down to the friendly cat.

But the nearby woods hide a blood-chilling truth — more terrifying than death itself…and hideously more powerful.

 

SPOILERS  SPOILERS   sort of SPOILERS sort of  SPOILERS  SPOILERS 

My goodness, what a story.  It runs the gamut from the “real-life” horror of the death of a child and the grief that follows, to the otherworldly horror that awaits when the family tries to alleviate the grief that follows the death of a family pet.

The first time I read the story the scene on the hill wasn’t so horrifying.  You know why?  Because I didn’t have children of my own.  I think I was more touched by the death of the pet than I was by the other.  However, when I read it now, that scene on the hill makes my gut twinge and jump.  After reading it, I had to go “check on the children”.  Having children of my own makes the following scenes more poignant and so much more touching.

Sympathy turning to empathy.

SPOILERS END (they were half-assed anyway)

My theory of horror if you’re “just watching” it makes it a lot less scary.  “This could never happen to me because blah blah”.  When an ordinary situation turns into a “horror” situation, something that could happen to anyone, something that is plausible (with a little “what if” thrown in)  that’s when the true terror begins.

Pet Sematary is about grief, loss and at its core, the horror of not letting go and where it can get you.

 

 

 

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Filed Under: Blogtoberfest, Uncategorized Tagged: blogtoberfest, dahlia dewinters, halloween, pet semetary, scary stories, Stephen King

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