Wrapping up the list of Best Horror Movies You Didn’t see. The #1 is- JACOB’S LADDER!
Even while watching it NOT on halucinegenics you will freak. And c’mon, Tim Robinson is completely tremendous. This is a movie that you think got seen by millions. But it was not.
See, Herman Cain’s a different kind of Republican candidate. One who wants to protect us from spiders and big potato moths. He’s got swag, he’s hungry for a McDonald’s special and he’ll even leave you dime to go eat at White Castle. It’s the latest installment of Bad Lip Reading
A stunning weeks-long rally, from 10 1/2 games out of a playoff spot on Aug. 25, to World Series champions with a 6-2 victory against the Texas Rangers in Game 7 on Friday night. Enjoy it St. Louis, you won’t be tasting victory on Sunday; Who Dat!
A search of “The St. Louis Cardinals” within the first 4 minutes of the game’s conclusion produced only this video; enjoy your 15 minutes kid =)
Monday is the real Halloween 10/31. I will reveal the best Horror Movie Un-Seen. Check back for it then.
Today is 2nd best Horror movie you have never seen. I watched this as a very young child in the 70’s for the first time and had nightmares about it up until last week!
Sarah (Carol Lynley) brings her husband to visit her childhood home on a remote island. Even though the Old Mill is legally hers, the islanders try and warn her away, saying that the building is cursed, and anyone who goes in there is savagely attacked by a demon… But because Sarah is young and attractive, some of the young men, including her cousin (Oliver Reed) don’t mind if she stays a little longer. If only her husband (Gig Young) wasn’t around… The hostile, closed community of the island, and their menacing treatment of outsiders is a weighty subplot to the story of the thing in the attic.
Most horror fans are familiar with images from F.W. Murnau’s silent-era Nosferatu, even if they’ve never seen the film itself. But let’s be frank here — sometimes those silent movies, classic or not, can be tough-going. And this is certainly true of Murnau’s original Dracula adaptation. But that’s why we keep Werner Herzog around, isn’t it? To spice things up at the movie house from time to time.
Maybe it’s the 13 year old boy in me refusing to die, but I’m psyched that new episodes of Beavis & Butthead began airing tomorrow night (MTV, 9p/central). Last night, B&B did the late night viewing world a solid, and took the spotlight off of Jimmy Kimmel’s interview w/ Snooki.
As we continue this week with great Horror Un-Seen, this is a music video. A reminder to buy CANDY for the kids this Halloween! Do NOT give them anything healthy! Or else!-
You know about my fascination with Serial Killers. This movie is by far one of the best serial killer movies in the history of serial killer movies. Loosely based on a real serial killer. ‘Henry’ is a sick twisted f*ck. See a clip below-
Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer
Is memorable — nightmarishly so — for its own portraits, specifically of the murders the title character undertakes. So heinous and horrible are these acts that the film most certainly is not for all audiences, but for those looking for an alternative to the increasingly cartoonish portrayals of the Hannibal Lecters and Jason Voorhees of the world, Henry is the place to be.
Michael Rooker stars as Henry, who is loosely based on the real-life killer Henry Lee Lucas. Shot on 16mm film for a hundred grand, the low-budget picture thrives because of its constraints, embracing the “realness” of it all. Rooker is a cipher, a half person who is as inscrutable as the question of why any human being would ever do what he does. The film was slapped with an X rating when it was made in 1986, and it subsequently went unreleased for a few years before finally seeing the light of day… and setting off a firestorm of controversy.