Tag Archives: halloween

Frankenstein Meets the Mermaid

I declared Halloween 2008 over. I guess that means we’re now in the Halloween 2009 season? Truth be told, everyday is Halloween around here so I’m not ever really clear on when the whole season begins and ends. At Target, Halloween shopping season seems to begin sometime around the 4th of July, but that’s probably my imagination. Whatever. Anyway, this was too good not to share:


Via Professor Ravensdeath’s Master Rally via Hugo Strikes Back via Vintage Photo. Also – thanks for the link, Prof Ravensdeath!

Halloween is now Totally over (John Carpenter's Halloween)

I think we’re ready to declare Halloween officially over – we’ve now watched John Carpenter’s indie classic, Halloween. We’ve still got 5 or 6 movies sitting on the TV that are worthy, but they can wait a while.

I haven’t see Rob Zombie’s remake of Halloween and while I agree that the original Halloween looks pretty dated, it’s still a fun, fast-paced, creepy movie. Plus, Jamie Lee Curtis as Laurie Strode is so adorable in this movie that you just have to make sure she gets through it all in one piece.

Although the movie is focused on Laurie, her sidekicks, Annie and Lynda, are expertly used to reveal many facets of Laurie’s character without the cheap (in more ways than one) fallbacks of either narration or wordy exposition. The acting isn’t all that great, but it’s a pretty smart script with a lot of creepy scares but very little actual gore. I’d forgotten how many times Lynda utters the word, “totally” – if you made it into a drinking game you’d be unconscious before the end of the first act.

One of the most amusing elements is the Halloween night movie that plays on the television throughout the last half of the movie – The Thing. Carpenter of course remade the thing just a few years later. For some reason I find that more amusing than the fact that Curtis is the daughter of Janet Leigh, the original Psycho scream queen. Okay, I think the fact that the killer’s iconic mask is an altered William Shatner mask is amusing, too. And that Laurie nearly kills the killer with a knitting needle. I’m sure there are other things, but you should just watch it yourself if you haven’t seen it or haven’t seen it in a while.

Hocus Pocus! (Halloween film fest, redux)

The animation that transformed the top-hat wearing Count Dracula into a bat in House of Frankenstein and House of Dracula reminded me of my favorite Bugs Bunny cartoon, Transylvania 6-5000. I hadn’t seen it in years, maybe since I was a kid, so I was excited to find it online in it’s entirety.

Bugs Bunny – Transylvania 6-5000

About House of Dracula – Glenn Strange returns as The Monster but footage of Lon Chaney (Ghost of Frankenstein) and Boris Karloff (Bride of Frankenstein) are used to pad the movie. Chaney also has a starring role as Lawrence Talbot, the Wolf Man who’s despair is at the heart of many of these movies. The poor immortal bastard just wants to quit chasing cars and howling at the moon, but every scientist he finds who’s willing to try to cure him turns out to be mad. Plus, they always turn out to have a fetish for reviving Frankenstein’s Monster that screws everything up by the final reel and leaves Lawrence Talbot once again in need of some new clothes and a case of flea collars. Poor WolfMan, he’s got the worst HMO ever.

Dracula's Homepage

Ooops. In all the election-posting, I forgot to post some of my Halloween-oriented posts, so here’s another one since Halloween has been extended one more weekend in my house.

Eminent Dracula historian, Professor Elizabeth Miller maintains Dracula’s Homepage, which contains more information on Stoker’s text than you may have ever thought possible.