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Halloween has always been my favorite holiday. So, since 2011, I have spent the entire month of October every year reviewing a horror movie each day. I've changed formats many times over the years, and in the past few years, I've even been joined by my wife Solee, as well as the occasional guest. We've got text, drawings, video reviews, audio reviews... we got it all! Wanna check out our reviews? Look below, or use the menu to the left to dig deeper!
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  Belittling Horror Excessively: Haunter 05:53 PM -- Mon October 13, 2014  

SPOILER WARNING: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS

This is the story of a family of ghosts. They can't leave their house, because they're ghosts. The daughter in the family somehow becomes aware of the surreal nature of their existence (they just keep repeating the same day over and over), and has to find out why they're so stuck and solve the problem. Hauntings ensue.

This is a fun and interesting story, as the layers peel back and answers slowly emerge. I'm not sure it all wraps up with complete logic, but since I saw Shallow Ground the day before, this feels like a masterpiece. It's not my favorite movie ever, but I like mysteries, and I like ghost stories, so why not to enjoy?

Overall, this has a rather murky body count, maybe 15 or 20? They're all ghosts, so they died sometime! And I shall award it 4 out of 5 Surprising Cigarettes.

My drawing for this movie is simply the furnace door that appears prominently a couple of times (done without reference while on an airplane, so don't blame me if I have no idea what bolts and hinges were actually on it):
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  Belittling Horror Excessively: World War Z 11:53 PM -- Tue October 14, 2014  

SPOILER WARNING: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS

This is the story of Brad Pitt roaming the earth seeking Patient Zero of a zombie plague and failing at every turn. Zombie pyramids ensue.

I admit to enjoying this. The science is no good at all (magic disease-sniffing zombies... that's technology we could use today!), but the drama and action are fun and feel very real. It feels like what an unstoppable zombie armageddon would feel like.

This was an interesting time to see this particular movie, in juxtaposition to the current ebola epidemic (is it an epidemic yet? It's not looking good, that's for sure). It really got me thinking how ebola could cause almost this exact movie to occur. Sure, there'd be no zombies tearing at people, but in an absolute pandemic, countries would wall themselves off, trade would shut down, and Brad Pitt would roam the earth seeking a nonsensical magic bullet to shut it down. Angelina Jolie would probably go help him though, in real life. It's a scary prospect (what will happen to their kids??).

Oh, and the one note I took while watching this movie was how it reminded me of Dead Rising, when he started piecing together a a weapon with duct tape.

So in the end, we have a body count of somewhere between 3 and 6 billion, and I rate this a healthy 4 out of 5 Arm Magazines. It was fun. Stupid fun. Oh, and not scary at all, not really a horror movie, just sci-fi action.

Inspired by this film and by not wanting to draw an entire pyramid of zombies, which was the obvious picture, I tried to draw a Dr. Lunatic zombie from memory. It didn't go very well:
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  Belittling Horror Excessively: Crow's Nest 07:19 PM -- Thu October 16, 2014  

SPOILER WARNING: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS

As always, a group of teens have decided to take a trip to a remote cabin. Nothing kids today like better than being in the woods with no amenities. Apparently! I'm so out of touch with today's youth, I like internet. So anyway, these kids are taking a trip, and they get sidetracked because they heard beer was cheap in a town called Crow's Nest. Sadly, that's the whole point of the title of the movie. Don't you think there should be something more to it? I'm expecting ghost pirates at least!

So the kids get run off the road and hunted down by rednecks in an RV. The end.

This is found footage once again. I think I could've filled all 31 days of October with found footage movies and still had plenty to spare in Netflix's collection. I do like found footage as a general concept though, so that's not so bad. But this one was filled with really annoying people, and a lot of time wasted showing off how annoying they are (including of course the classic character of somebody who refuses to ever stop filming things and everybody else being annoyed with them for it). It takes 22 minutes for something interesting to happen in this movie, I checked. Whoever found this footage really should've edited it before releasing it as a horror movie (and how perverse are they to be profiting off of this tragedy??).

One fun moment is when they are driving at one point, I think shortly before they get rammed by the RV, you can clearly see a member of the film crew is laying down in the back of their SUV, reflected in the back window. I liked that part, it made me feel like I had defeated this movie at its own game.

As a film though, there's nothing here really to watch. It's everything you expect - they head out to the woods, and get hunted down and killed. No story, no twist, no message, not even any hint of an explanation for what's happening. It just happens. Also no interesting villain or anything - I was hoping for a ghost and I got a couple of cannibal rednecks driving by in an RV. What it does have going for it is a Blair Witch Crying Selfie scene. Classic. It also has bad digital blood effects, and about 50% of the movie is people yelling "Shutup!" at each other. I agree with them.

So in the end, we have a body count of 6 plus 1 deer, and a pathetic 1 out of 5 Cheap Beers. Bleh.

Since there are no interesting things to draw in this movie, I drew an RV!
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  Belittling Horror Excessively: Sharknado 2 10:20 PM -- Fri October 17, 2014  

SPOILER WARNING: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS

It's the second one! I've been dying to see this since it came out, and of course my sister, who is a huge Sharknado fan, Tivo'd it for me to see when I visited her this past weekend. As you might expect, it is the story of Fin Shepard, and his Bruce-Willis-esque problem with always ending up in the middle of sharknados, as one heads in to New York along with the flight he is on (a flight he ends up landing himself, after sharks somehow eat the pilots). For those who aren't experts at meteorology, a sharknado is an apparently common weather pattern where a waterspout (not a tornado!) forms in the ocean and sucks up some sharks, which then gain the power of flight and air-breathing for the duration of the weather event. I'm sure it's happened in your hometown once or twice, so I probably didn't need to explain.

This movie is sort of a new breed in the past 10 years or so, where it's intentionally stupid for the entertainment value. It has to ride a pretty fine line - it has to take itself seriously (otherwise it's just a bad comedy), and yet still have enough "jokes" to keep from being boring, since it is by intent a bad movie. This movie is really pushing that line, it's almost more like a joke that you are in on - there are a lot of references to other things like a comedy would have (there are about 10 references to 'Airplane!' in the first 10 minutes), yet they're thrown away and ignored by the completely serious cast, whereas in a comedy they'd be front and center like "look at this!". It's easter egg overload.

One thing I found interesting that I don't think I've seen before is some really well-done use of making a 'mistake' for the viewers to catch and mock, as part of the fun. My favorite one is when Tara Reid, whose hand has been bitten off, sneaks out of the hospital dressed in a button-up blouse with a necklace, full makeup, and a glove on her remaining hand. She accomplished this by herself, off-camera, with a missing hand. The fact that they had her wearing a glove is what tips off that they did this on purpose and it's not just bad writing - it looks ridiculous that she's wearing a glove in the first place, which makes you think about it, and realize just how hard it would've been to put on. I actually think that's pretty clever.

There are also things that go over the top into true joke territory, like weather reporters having actual sharknado displays on their weather maps and discussing how many feet of sharks will be falling. But even these things are presented in a completely serious and 'real' way, which makes it better. If it had been done like a spoof comedy, it would not be nearly as good.

So anyway, it's Sharknado, you know what you're in for. You're in for 27 bodies and 4 out of 5 Buzzsaw Hands. This movie is significantly better thank Sharknado 1, and that was fun to begin with! I feel like The Asylum is really getting things together. Maybe they're learning how much better it feels to put out original movies instead of trying to clone every blockbuster. Of course, the super shady cloning act (where they try to make money entirely on the basis of people choosing the wrong movie from the cover) is surely more profitable. So sad.

I have drawn for you today a climactic moment from the film, the conclusion to Fin's rousing speech to the citizens of New York:
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  Belittling Horror Excessively: Insidious 2 08:35 PM -- Sun October 19, 2014  

SPOILER WARNING: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS

This is the continuation of the story of a family in which a certain sort of magical power resides. The father and son can see, and be seen by, the world of the dead. Something like that. Anyhoo, in the first movie some stuff happened, and now in this movie, the father has been possessed by an evil old lady who's actually a dude. So the father's soul is actually wandering the world of the dead wanting to get out, while his body is running around the real world being evil, and his son is continuing to connect to all this and be freaked out, and a team of wacky comic-relief ghostbusters run around and bungle things up. Ghostly child abuse ensues.

Honestly, this movie was pretty hard to follow, in part because the wife of the family, and someone who I believe is her mother, were too hard to tell apart. That's probably insulting to the daughter, but hey, let's say I'm being flattering to the mother! It's also confusing in other ways, it kind of jumps around. Anyway, like the first Insidious movie, this one isn't really scary... it has a scene or two that can creep you out, but mostly it's just telling a story. Just like the first movie, it's a fantasy story by my calculation rather than a horror story. I can't quite define what the difference is, but that's how it feels to me. I did enjoy the sort of 'time travel' between the two movies (more between the end and beginning of this movie, but there's a bit of it tied to the first movie).

One thing I did not enjoy was the climactic battle with the evil ghost... the image of all the women standing underneath sheets was creepy, but it all came down to this cartoonish pop-up screaming old lady, and smacking her on the head with a rocking horse. Yes, that's literally how the evil ghost was slain. They smacked her with a rocking horse. Spoilers.

So in the end, there's a body count of 17, I think, and I rate this a passable 3 out of 5 Rocking Horses.

For this movie, I drew the set of 'spirit dice' that the medium guy uses to talk to ghosts. It seems the spirits have a special Hamumu message for us...
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  Belittling Horror Excessively: Kill Theory 10:47 PM -- Mon October 20, 2014  

SPOILER WARNING: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS

This is a story all about how some kids' lives got flipped, turned upside down, when a guy who once cut a rope while mountain climbing to save himself at the expense of 3 other people traps them all at a remote cabin they are of course all going out to visit as kids like to do, and forces them to kill each other or be killed by him. How's that for a sentence?

Yes, once again the teens (well, 20-somethings - they so often play teens I'm not actually sure which they are supposed to be in this movie) find the idea of a cabin in the middle of nowhere to be the most delightful notion since being murdered one by one. Though the two experiences are generally interchangeable.

So, huh. This movie is, according to a bunch of the reviewers on Netflix (I like to check sometimes!), full of twists. What they mean is that the people you think are dead come back and kill other people. And that does happen quite a few times, but I'm not willing to call it a twist. It's just kind of eh. Similarly, the movie actually ends with a final revelation that some have called a twist, but it was completely what I expected, and unlike an actual twist, it didn't change your view on anything you had seen. It's more like just another piece of irrelevant information really. I was pretty mad about that, because I'm a sucker for twists. As soon as I saw a review that said "the final twist was a real head-spinner", I couldn't just go without knowing what it was. I guess my head is just screwed on tighter than some, because the only spinning was me shaking my head.

As you can probably guess by now, this movie didn't do much for me. It was okay, there was a level of interest to see who would snap and decide to kill who. But it just had nothing fresh or anything to get excited about.

I do see two other notes I took while watching: first is that it was kind of refreshing to see the "put down the camera and stop filming everything already!" scene in a movie with no found footage element at all. It was just an annoying guy who liked to film people. I guess those must exist! The other note, I don't quite remember writing, but it reads "White people all look the same, but they're so hard to kill." Good advice for life.

In the end, we have a body count of 7, plus 3 more in the past, and I rate this a disappointing 2 out of 5 Gas Balloons.

I just drew the first thing I remembered from the movie - an axe stuck in a stump. But don't look a gift axe in the mouth, because there's probably a bear trap around it (not pictured).
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  Belittling Horror Excessively: Dead Silence 07:06 PM -- Tue October 21, 2014  

SPOILER WARNING: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS

Who doesn't love evil puppets? I guess the people they kill don't. In this movie, there's a ventriloquist who owned 101 puppets, who was murdered and then buried according to her will: not only buried with all of her puppets, but actually cut up into a puppet herself after death. Yeah, that's really weird, and I can't imagine anybody fulfilling that request. But they did! Anyway, that's all backstory. In the actual story, a puppet is delivered to a guy's doorstep, it kills his girlfriend, he goes back to his hometown where it was sent from, discovers the aforementioned backstory, and battles evil puppets and a ghostly old lady. Puppetry ensues.

This is a James Wan film, like Insidious 1 and 2, and it shows. It was instantly obvious that this was made by the same guy. He must have fallen into the coffin at his grandma's funeral when he was young, because he has a terrible fear of old ladies. He also makes very polished-looking horror movies, full of red lighting and people covered by sheets, which aren't really very scary. They're almost like Disney Family horror movies. They're too neat and clean, and the music is too overblown, and he doesn't seem very good at jump scares. There's a scene in Insidious 2 which starts out really creepy, where a boy is looking into his half-open closet at night, hearing noises inside and the camera is zooming closer and closer as we fear what might pop out. In the end, somebody does pop out and runs across the room, which should be very frightening, yet somehow it's not sudden enough or something, because it just has zero impact. It's more like a feeling of relief after all that tension rather than a shock. Hard to explain, but you watch the scene and you won't be scared!

That's not to say his work is all bad, it's just that I wonder if horror is really the place for this guy. He should try a nice romantic comedy or something. It can't be that bad though, because I'm willing to see what else he's going to do.

The big reveal at this end of this movie is big enough and fun enough that I won't even spoil it here despite my spoiler warning. It's not a world-changer like The Sixth Sense, but it does what I want a twist to do: makes you go back over the movie and change your view on earlier scenes, and realize that you could've figured it out if you had just noticed certain things earlier. That trips a fuse in my brain and joy just sparks out.

What it does wrong is what about 80% of all twists do: it manually takes you back over those earlier scenes and shows them to you again, far far too many of them, to beat the twist into your head as clearly and completely as possible. I got it after the first two quick flashes, I didn't need to rewatch the whole movie, and if I wanted to do that, I could hit the rewind button. This is a cardinal sin that so many movies commit, the massive over-explanation to the point where you actually get bored and want to get back to the climax of the movie you were trying to watch. I'm sure it's a fine line, as there are bound to be some people who need all that extra reinforcement (as evidenced by the reviews of movies I see that flat-out miss entire chunks of the plot). I'm sure they test this out with test audiences until it's "just right", but it sure never feels just right to me.

So in the end, we have a body count of 4, and because it's kind of fun, but by no means good cinema, and with a bonus point for the disturbing final twist, I'll award it 4 out of 5 Missing Tongues.

I of course had to draw a puppet here. I did a terrible job.
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  Belittling Horror Excessively: Absence 10:52 PM -- Thu October 23, 2014  

SPOILER WARNING: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS

Guess what? A group of kids decided to get together and drive out to a remote cabin in the woods to party! Specifically, this group is a husband and wife who lost their unborn baby mysteriously (it just disappeared from inside her during the night!), and the wife's brother who is the token Obnoxious Cameraman for this found-footage film. So they go out to the cabin, and nothing ensues.

Firstly, there has never been a human being alive who was remotely as obnoxious as the cameraman in this movie. And it is also completely impossible to believe that he meets a girl who is willing to talk to him during the movie.

The entire film is just these people hanging out at the cabin and trying to relax and get over the loss of the baby. That's it. You just watch them be sad, or get annoyed at the insanely annoying brother. Every so often there's a moment of weirdness during the night, but only a couple of times. Then in the last few minutes of the movie, a little bit of stuff happens but who cares at that point. And it's not interesting, it's not explained, it's not scary, it's not anything.

So we have a body count of anybody who tried to sit through the movie and didn't have the iron will to carry on, and a score of 0 out of 5 Whatevers. Your life will be better with an absence of this movie, avoid it.

This movie did not inspire me at all. There was nothing interesting in it to draw, and it sapped all creative energy from me, so here is a triangle.
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  Belittling Horror Excessively: Barricade 02:01 PM -- Sun October 26, 2014  

SPOILER WARNING: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS

This is a story about pro wrestlers pummeling each other... Or so you would think when you see that it's produced by WWE Entertainment! In fact, it's actually the story of a non-wrestling man whose non-wrestling wife has died recently, so he's having to take his non-wrestling kids on a trip to the cabin (yep, trip to a remote cabin!) his wife had wanted them to go to before she died, all by himself. It's stressful and depressing, and none of them are too in the mood for fun. Lucky for them, horrible (non-wrestling!) evils lurk in the darkness, so they don't have to worry about fun! No wrestling ensues.

This is one of those depressing horror movies, more sad than scary. It's loaded up with cheap false jump scares, like the classic scene of somebody stepping through the door suddenly along with a shriek of violins when they turn out to just be somebody who is supposed to be there, and who you should've heard coming rather than being surprised by. When it gets down to the actual scares, it's alright... there's something mysterious stalking this house, and they end up going back and forth trying to decide if they need to get out or "Barricade"(tm) themselves inside the house to be safe.

Big spoiler alert, it's time to reveal the big twist! There's not much to this movie other than the twist - the family goes to the cabin, they are sad, everything seems weird, time skips, people act strangely. There's a lot of fairly pointless action, repeated times where he has to search the house for his suddenly missing kids again and again... and then the twist is that the father had a high fever messing with his head for most of the movie (an absurdly short incubation time, by the way - he contracted it from the guy they met a couple hours earlier). So all the weird stuff either didn't happen, or was things he did while feverish, and then didn't recognize he had done later. It all makes sense in the end, as they flashback through it (not to too much excess, thankfully), and you see what really happened, which is that he mostly did all the right things to save his kids from this disease, he just didn't know he had done them. So that's pretty good.

It was an interesting and semi-original twist, a different form of "it was all a dream" that could actually happen. Although the one thing I found really odd was the way the sheriff, who the father tied up and stuffed in the attic while insane, reacted to it all. I couldn't quite understand it. He seemed pretty cool with having been kidnapped in the end, although then he adds, "He'll get what he has coming..." ominously, which makes him seem quite the opposite of cool with it. It was strange.

In the end, this is probably going to be the record low body count for the month: 1 death. And it earns an acceptable 3 out of 5 Monster Nails. Not the greatest movie ever, but it works.

This movie inspired me to draw a barricaded front door, because that's something in the movie. Plus I wanted to nail it shut because until they actually did nail it shut in the movie, they left that thing open way too much! It drove me insane that in a snowstorm, he'd run outside and leave the door open. Was he raised in a barn?
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  Belittling Horror Excessively: Grabbers 08:58 PM -- Sun October 26, 2014  

SPOILER WARNING: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS

This is the story of a comet crashing in the ocean near an Irish island. Like any comet, this one is filled with aliens. They are tentacley and like the water but are happy to chase people onto land too. What they aren't happy to do is come in contact with alcohol. So if you'll pardon the stereotype, the inhabitants all get seriously drunk in order to keep the monsters from attacking them, and proceed to try to put a stop to them. Rain ensues (otherwise the monsters couldn't get to the people!).

This is like a Simon Pegg/Nick Frost/Edgar Wright movie, but without any of those people. And it does suffer for the lack. So as that implies, it's a horror-comedy, and it's fairly light-hearted, with none of the characters really being quite as terrified as they ought to be facing giant balls of tentacles, and making jokes.

However, that's where it sort of falls down - it is light-hearted and amiable, but there really aren't very many jokes. It's like the mood is there, but I'd say there are probably only 10-20 jokes in the entire movie, many of which are minimal at best. So you're smiling a little bit the whole time, waiting to be amused, but you never quite get there. It's likeable, just not funny.

New fact I learned: Irish cops are called "garda".

In the end, we have a body count of 10, plus 20 or so whales, and a score of 3 out of 5 Gardas. It's fun, but not fun enough. It's hard to complain, like it's good all around, just not great. Nothing really... grabs me. Eh? Eh? Now that's comedy.

Here is what the tentacle monsters in this movie look like:
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