HORROR 101 with Dr. AC podcast artwork

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HORROR 101 with Dr. AC

HORROR 101 with Dr. AC is a horror movie podcast that revisits classic horror films on milestone anniversaries (20, 30, 40, 50 years, and more). Each episode features a lively rotating panel of horror fans discussing the film's legacy, personal memories, cultural impact, and what makes it a lasting favorite.If you love deep dives into horror movies like The Exorcist, A Nightmare on Elm Street, or Frankenstein, this podcast is for you. Come celebrate horror history—one anniversary at a time.

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    Ep 147 - THE HOWLING & AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON - The Lycanthrope Classics That Changed It All

    THE HOWLING (1981) d. Joe Dante (USA) AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON (1981) d. John Landis (UK/USA) In the spring and summer of 1981, werewolf cinema underwent a radical transformation—not through one film, but two. Released just months apart, The Howling and An American Werewolf in London didn't just revive a fading subgenre—they redefined what cinematic horror could look and feel like. Directed by Joe Dante and co-written by John Sayles and Terence H. Winkless, The Howling blends satire, psychological horror, and media critique. Its cast includes Dee Wallace, Patrick Macnee, and Dennis Dugan, who ground the film's increasingly surreal descent into lupine terror. The groundbreaking transformation sequences were brought to life by effects artist Rob Bottin, whose work pushed the limits of prosthetics and animatronics, delivering visceral, tactile horror that audiences had never seen before. Meanwhile, across the Atlantic, John Landis wrote and directed An American Werewolf in London, a film that boldly fused outright comedy with genuine dread. Starring David Naughton, Griffin Dunne, and Jenny Agutter, the film follows two young Americans whose backpacking trip turns nightmarish after a brutal attack on the moors. The iconic, and agonizing, on-screen transformation—was crafted by legendary makeup artist Rick Baker. His revolutionary efforts earned the very first official Academy Award for Best Makeup, legitimizing special effects artistry as a cornerstone of cinematic achievement. Together, these films reshaped horror in profound ways. They elevated practical effects to an art form, influenced generations of filmmakers, and proved that horror could evoke both screams and belly laughs. Whether through Dante's subversive Hollywood satire or Landis's genre-blending bravado, The Howling and An American Werewolf in London remain towering achievements—twin pillars of lycanthrope cinema whose combined legacy still howls through the genre today. Join AC and his monstrous panel of guests (Craig J. Clark, Julia Marchese, Vanessa Morgan, Chris Scales, Jill Van Voorst) as we celebrate THE WEREWOLVES OF 1981!!  -------------------------------------- CRAIG J. CLARK watches a lot of movies. He started watching them in New Jersey, where he was born and raised, and continues to watch them in Indiana. He is a frequent contributor to Crooked Marquee (https://crookedmarquee.com/author/craig-j-clark/) and writes the monthly Full Moon Features column for Werewolf News (https://werewolf-news.com/category/full-moon-features/). He is not a werewolf himself (or so he says)  JULIA MARCHESE is a podcaster (Horror Movie Survival Guide, The Losers' Club, JodoWOWsky), filmmaker, actor, film programmer, writer and cinephile living in Hollywood; California. https://linktr.ee/juliacmarchese VANESSA MORGAN is the author of several movie reference guides (When Animals Attack, Strange blood, Evil Seeds & Meow!), all available from Amazon https://amzn.to/3Hzm0wN. She's also the creator of the websites https://cat-movies.com and https://traveling-cats.com. CHRIS SCALES is a lifelong horror fan, aspiring horror screenwriter, and horror panelist. JILL VAN VOORST has been a horror lover since childhood! From showing scary films at her sleepovers as a kid, to running LIX (with her husband Gregg)-a large booth vending horror hoodies, tanks, tees and clothing for all at the best horror cons- you're likely to see Jill adorning or doing something scary at almost any time. http://www.lixonline.com She is also a chocolatier and brings her scary style to the world of chocolate. https://delixcious.com/ -------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 146 - PAN'S LABYRINTH (2006) - Guillermo del Toro's Dark Fantasy Classic Turns 20!!

    PAN'S LABYRINTH (2006) d. Guillermo del Toro (Mexico/Spain) Revisiting Guillermo del Toro's metaphorical masterpiece combining dark real-world horror (Franco's civil war-torn Spain) with children's fantasy, it's a little surprising to realize that this, his last Spanish-language movie, was released two decades ago. For me personally, whether directing (Cronos, The Devil's Backbone) or producing (The Orphanage, Biutiful, Julia's Eyes), everyone's favorite Mexican-born monster kid delivers his best work in his native language. As diverting and visually imaginative as his Hollywood popcorn efforts like Pacific Rim and the Hellboy movies are, the heart, depth, and intellect of his more "personal" films resonate on a completely different level. Interweaving fantasy and reality, visual poetry with graphic violence, Pan's Labyrinth is an incredible cinematic experience, with astonishing production/set design, Guillermo Navarro's cinematography, and breathtaking makeup designs, each earning Oscars in their respective fields. The film also was nominated for Javier Navarrete's exquisite musical score, del Toro's brilliant screenplay, and Best Foreign Film. Within the incredible ensemble, special notice goes out to Maribel Verdu as the duplicitous housemaid Mercedes, Sergi Lopez's military and all too human monster, and Ivana Baquero as Ofelia, whose guileless central performance anchors the picture. A unequivocal must-see, the film continues to reward after countless viewings through various lenses, like every classic fairy tale. Join AC and his incredible panel of guests (Michelle Kisner, Tyler Pistorius, Lee Price, Elena Romea, Maura Sarazen) as we celebrate 20 years of PAN'S LABYRINTH!! ---------------------------------------------------------------------- MICHELLE KISNER is a film critic, freelance writer, and physical media advocate. She has contributed to several websites to include The Cultural Gutter and The Movie Sleuth and is also a member of the Michigan Movie Critics Guild.  TYLER PISTORIUS is an actor, screenwriter, and producer living in Chicago. His recent works include Death is Business and A Missed Connection, and is currently in development on a new project. LEE PRICE has dedicated his career to celebrating our history and culture (including horror films!) through freelance writing and 25 years with the Conservation Center for Art & Historic Artifacts. He is a guest blogger at "Wonders in the Dark." ELENA ROMEA is the creator behind SpanishFear.com and Horror Rises from Spain. A researcher in literature and cinema, she holds a Ph.D. in Spanish Studies with a dissertation about the filmmaker José Val del Omar. Her work explores themes of estrangement, horror, myth, and cultural conflict. MAURA SARAZEN has been watching horror movies since she was a child. Her earliest memory is watching The Exorcist while in a playpen. She enjoys long walks in a fog-filled forest, her favorite eye color is black sclera, and she truly believes turning into a werewolf would fix her back problems. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 145 - THE HITCHER (1986) Turns 40 — Rutger Hauer Owns the Road!

    THE HITCHER (1986) d. Robert Harmon (USA) While driving from Chicago to San Diego, Jim Halsey (C. Thomas Howell) picks up a hitchhiker (Rutger Hauer) who introduces himself as John Ryder. Little does Halsey realize that this simple act of kindness will change the course of his road trip, and his life, forever. The Hitcher failed spectacularly during its 1986 release, as a confused fan base and critics rallied against it. Throughout the early to mid-'80s, films like Halloween, Friday the 13th and A Nightmare on Elm Street dominated the horror genre, spawning sequels and imitators by the score. The Hitcher, by contrast, was different, very different. Unlike the typical slasher, where killers always had reasons behind their murderous deeds, no matter how contrived, Ryder has no apparent motivation for his actions. He targets Halsey for no other cause than Halsey's attempt to do a good deed, and Hauer, an actor at the absolute height of his powers, masterfully imbues his monster with an extraordinary humanity without explanation or apologies. The isolated desert setting provides a strong atmosphere of horror as well. John Seale's cinematography provides many astonishing glimpses of the morbidly beautiful, barren landscape, with the scorching heat-haze effect evoking the aesthetics of a malevolent, possibly supernatural entity. Mark Isham's haunting electronic synth score accents the proceedings with a sense of melancholy not often found in this type of material. 40 years later, The Hitcher remains a true experiment in horror. Cloaked in screenwriter Eric Red's spare, minimalist dialogue and characterization, it is a genre film that dares to constantly surprise and challenge its target audience. The blend of action, drama, horror, and the outright refusal to tidy things up make this a surprisingly intelligent and subversive piece of cinema. One that will inevitably come to mind the next time you find yourself driving alone late at night, looking ahead to see if there is a shadowy figure looming on the horizon. Join AC and his incredible panel of guests (Jess Ader, Max Deering, Grant Kuchan, John McDevitt) as we celebrate 40 years of THE HITCHER!! ---------------------------------------------------- JESS ADER is a fellow appreciator of movies and deep synth soundtracks. Former radio-TV-film student making money elsewhere but never giving up the love of all "moving" forms of media and art. He likes peanut butter. MAX DEERING is a student of genre cinema that wears many hats. From a Producer and Editor of several podcasts including Action For Everyone and The Box Office Podcast, to being a freelance writer for Fangoria, Neon Splatter, and more. You can find his work via Muckrack (https://muckrack.com/maxwell-deering). GRANT KUCHAN is a writer of pulp, wellness coach, and a real swell guy. He plays in any Jug Bands that let him. One day he'll finish another novel, which will probably be available on Amazon, as well as at most Darktower Comics locations across the greater Chicagoland Area. The horror movie that still gives him nightmares is Matango. He saw it when he was six, and still doesn't eat mushrooms. JOHN MCDEVITT is a lifelong cinephile who programs two recurring film events in Chicago: SUPER-HORROR-RAMA! and Fetish Film Forum, a monthly screening series about fetish, kink, leather, and BDSM at the Leather Archives & Museum. John is fascinated by all genres of cinema and appreciates horror most of all for its willingness to explore what makes us uncomfortable and for the compassion it often extends to its characters and the viewer. --------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare! *Introduction edited from John Archer's essay in Hidden Horror: A Celebration of 101 Underrated and Overlooked Fright Flicks (2007)

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    Ep 144 - THE BEST (AND WORST) SLASHERS OF 1981 (Part 1 of 2)

    WHO WANTS TO TALK SLASHERS?? FRIDAY THE 13TH PART 2 (1981) d. Steve Miner (USA) HALLOWEEN II (1981) d. Rick Rosenthal (USA) THE BURNING (1981) d. Tony Maylam (USA) HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME (1981) d. J. Lee Thompson (Canada) MY BLOODY VALENTINE (1981) d. George Mihalka (Canada) THE FUNHOUSE (1981) d. Tobe Hooper (USA) HELL NIGHT (1981) d. Tom DeSimone (USA) THE PROWLER (1981) d. Joseph Zito (USA) NIGHTMARE (1981) d. Romano Scavolini (USA) JUST BEFORE DAWN (1981) d. Jeff Lieberman (USA) The early 1980s were a golden age for horror, and by 1981, the slasher subgenre had already exploded into a full-blown phenomenon, with producers and filmmakers eager to capitalize on the success of Halloween and Friday the 13th. While horror sequels weren't a new concept, Friday the 13th Part 2 introduced Jason Voorhees as a full-fledged killer, creating a genre icon before our eyes, and Halloween II picked up immediately where the 1978 original left off, both pushing their respective series toward more explicit violence and expanding their internal mythologies, with impressive box office results. But there were also plenty of one-offs, from out in the wilderness (The Burning, Just Before Dawn) to civilization (Nightmare, The Prowler), from exotic settings (The Funhouse, Hell Night) including the Great White North (Happy Birthday to Me, My Bloody Valentine). Join AC and his incredible panel of gorehound guests (Fraser Coffeen, Art Ettinger, Kolleen Carney Hoepfner, Adam Rockoff, Freddie Young) as we head back 45 years to a time of body counts, masked killers, outrageous offings, eerie atmosphere, endlessly quotable dialogue, and filmmakers throwing it all at the screen to see what would stick. THE SLASHERS OF 1981!! --------------------------------------------------------------------------------  FRASER COFFEEN is the co-host of Creepy History, a podcast dedicated to all the creepy stuff you wish they taught you in High School. He's been published in Horror Homeroom magazine and How to Analyze and Review Comics. ART ETTINGER is the editor of Ultra Violent Magazine, a public defender, and a Razorcake record reviewer. He lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania where his lifelong obsessions with punk rock and horror/exploitation cinema continue to consume him. KOLLEEN CARNEY HOEPFNER is a freelance writer, copyeditor, and Southern California convention booth gal for venues such as Fangoria. She is the author of two poetry collections and recently completed her first novel. ADAM ROCKOFF is the screenwriter of Wicked Lake, a film so depraved it caused Ron Jeremy to storm out of the theater in anger. However, his 2010 adaptation of the classic exploitation film, I Spit on Your Grave, received nearly unanimous praise from horror critics. His first book, Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film, 1978-1986, a critical examination of the slasher genre, was made into a documentary which premiered on STARZ, and his follow-up, The Horror of It All traces the highs and lows of the genre through the lens of his own obsessive fandom, which began in the horror aisles of his childhood video store and continued with a steady diet of cable trash. When he's not getting his hands bloody, Rockoff runs the television production company, FlashRock Films. FREDDIE YOUNG is a NYC horror reviewer and frequent podcaster. He has been running the website Full Moon Reviews (www.fullmoonreviews.net) since 2006, telling it like it is and enjoys spreading the word on good and bad films, mainly in the horror genre. He's planning on a full-time return to podcasting soon, hoping to put some attention on some "misunderstood films." ----------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 143 - FROM BEYOND (1986) & DAGON (2001): Goo, Gore & Elder Gods (Stuart Gordon's Wet and Weird Lovecraft Films)

    FROM BEYOND (1986) d. Stuart Gordon (USA) DAGON (2001) d. Stuart Gordon (Spain) After the cult success of Re-Animator, Stuart Gordon expanded his visceral, darkly comic take on H. P. Lovecraft with From Beyond (1986) and Dagon (2001). Working with writer Dennis Paoli, Gordon transforms cosmic dread into something immediate, tactile, and perversely entertaining. From Beyond reunites Jeffrey Combs and Barbara Crampton in a story of scientific obsession and bodily mutation, featuring surreal practical effects—mutating flesh, overactive pineal glands, and interdimensional horrors. With Dagon, Gordon trades lab horror for a decaying coastal nightmare. Set in a rain-soaked Spanish village, the film follows outsiders confronting an ancient sea cult, with grotesque makeup effects emphasizing rot, mutation, and dread. Together, these films showcase Gordon's unique ability to make Lovecraft's abstract horror physical, grotesque, and wildly entertaining. Join AC and his fantastic panel of guests (Nile Arena, Derek Bohtelo, Gordon Briggs, Craig J. Clark, Graham Skipper) as we celebrate the OTHER Gordon/Lovecraft adaptations, FROM BEYOND and DAGON! ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ NILE ARENA has created cinema collectives, worked the film festival circuit, and lent his voice to podcasts dedicated to the silver screen. His literary/weird fiction journal, Success Stories, is available now at some of the places books are sold. DEREK BOTELHO is an author, film journalist, playwright, and visual effects artist. Not one to rest on his laurels, nor do much about them either, he is currently writing his first novel. GORDON BRIGGS is a devout cinephile, who also teaches Fine Arts courses at University of the Rio Grande. In addition to teaching, he publishes two film columns for his local papers. If you follow him on social media, he will give you two film reviews a day, every day. In his free time, Gordon enjoys cosplayjng super villains. CRAIG J. CLARK watches a lot of movies. He started watching them in New Jersey, where he was born and raised, and continues to watch them in Indiana. He is a frequent contributor to Crooked Marquee (https://crookedmarquee.com/author/craig-j-clark/) and writes the monthly Full Moon Features column for Werewolf News (https://werewolf-news.com/category/full-moon-features/). He is not a werewolf himself (or so he says) GRAHAM SKIPPER is a filmmaker and actor, best known for playing Herbert West in Stuart Gordon's stage production Re-Animator the Musical, as well as his roles in Almost Human, The Leech, Beyond The Gates, and Man Finds Tape. He has also directed the films Sequence Break and The Lonely Man with the Ghost Machine. Graham lives in Austin, TX. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 142 - SESSION 9 (2001) at 25 - Dread, Danvers, and "Do it, Gordon."

    SESSION 9 (2001) d. Brad Anderson (USA) Tonight we're talking about 2001's Session 9, director/co-writer Brad Anderson's exceedingly tense tale of a five-man asbestos removal team tackling cleanup duty at an inactive mental asylum. When lawyer-in-training Steven Gevedon (who co-wrote the intelligent script) discovers a collection of audio recordings of patient sessions, a haunting dual storyline develops between the events on the abandoned reel-to-reel tapes and the blue-collar crew's increasing stress with the job and with each other. In addition, the not-quite-dead building has a few secrets hidden within its dark corners. Part character study, part haunted house tale, Anderson and his team adroitly foster an increasingly claustrophobic mood with clues and red herrings thicker than the dust from the moldering ceilings. Skillfully diverting our attentions with cinematic sleight-of-hand, Anderson plays his audience like a maestro, delivering one surprising payoff after another. The location shooting (within the abandoned confines of Danvers State Hospital) offers a palpable dread along with the mildew and grime of years of neglect. One of the first features shot on High-Def 24p video, Session 9 is a wonder of economical independent filmmaking, floating its haunting sound design over oodles of B-roll to marvelously atmospheric effect. The fact that it works as well as it does is a testament to the players, with Scottish actor Peter Mullan a simmering kettle of repressed anger as the stressed-out crew boss, ably matched by David Caruso, who does the macho-aggressive stare about as well as anyone. Josh Lucas, Brendan Sexton III, Paul Guilfoyle, and Larry Fessenden round out the small and able ensemble. Join AC and his incredible panel of guests (Jenn Adams, John W. Bowen, Cati Glidewell, Carl Lyon, Jordy Sirken) as we look back at Session 9, a rock-solid psychological chiller that continues to surprise and spook 25 years later. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- JENN ADAMS is a writer and podcaster from Nashville, TN. She co-hosts The Loser's Club: A Stephen King Podcast, The Lady Killers: A Feminine Rage Podcast, Murder Made Fiction, and The Girls on The Boys. She is a contributor and columnist for Bloody Disgusting, Rue Morgue and Dread Central and creator of the Strong Female Antagonist blog. JOHN W. BOWEN has been a columnist, reviewer and feature writer for Rue Morgue magazine since 1999, and has also written sporadically for more (...cough...) "civilized" publications, including the Kingston Whig-Standard, The Toronto Star and Kingston Life Magazine. Born in Dallas and raised in Kingston, Ontario, he is also a professional musician and recovering strip club DJ. CATI GLIDEWELL (aka The Blonde in Front) is a Chicago-based film critic, lifelong cinephile, film festival jury member, and a member of Chicago Indie Critics since 2020. You can find her on all social media platforms, as well as Post Mortem radio and Radio of Horror on YouTube. CARL LYON is a veteran of Monsters at Play and FEARNET, and will occasionally slip his shackles and terrorize the villagers with his ramblings. He also likes LEGO. JORDY SIRKEN is the horror-obsessed critic behind Jordy Reviews It (jordyreviewsit.com). Slashers, creature features, paranormal haunts, and everything in between, she's an avid fan of the macabre, and a HUGE enthusiast of practical effects. Since 2015, she's been reviewing genre films and is a Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic. You can follow her on Instagram and TikTok at @jordyreviewsit --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 141 - BEST CHEESY HORROR OF 1986: Maximum Overdrive, Night of the Creeps, Chopping Mall, & More!

    MAXIMUM OVERDRIVE (1986) d. Stephen King (USA) NIGHT OF THE CREEPS (1986) d. Fred Dekker (USA) CHOPPING MALL (1986) d. Jim Wynorski (USA) TERRORVISION (1986) d. Ted Nicolau (USA) KILLER PARTY (1986) d. William Fruet (Canada) If you love horror with a little extra cheese on top, 1986 might be one of the most glorious years the genre ever produced. Tonight, we're digging into five low-budget cult favorites that prove horror and comedy have always made a deliciously messy combination. MAXIMUM OVERDRIVE When Stephen King stepped behind the camera, he unleashed a full-throttle apocalypse where machines turn homicidal. Killer trucks, AC/DC, and pure chaos—this is '80s excess at its loudest and wildest. NIGHT OF THE CREEPS Fred Dekker blends aliens, zombies, and slashers into one wildly entertaining cult classic. It's funny, gooey, and endlessly quotable—just remember to "thrill me." CHOPPING MALL Jim Wynorski turns a suburban mall into a neon death trap as killer security robots go haywire. Laser blasts, big hair, and after-hours carnage make this a perfect slice of '80s horror cheese. TERRORVISION Ted Nicolau delivers a goo-soaked blast of Charles Band/Empire weirdness as a suburban TV dish invites an alien nightmare into the living room. Loud, gross, and gloriously ridiculous, it's peak midnight-movie insanity. KILLER PARTY Canuxploitation veteran William Fruet starts with college pranks before swerving into supernatural slasher territory. The tonal whiplash is half the fun in this strange and scrappy '80s oddity. So jump in the time machine with our awesome panel of 1980s enthusiasts (Anish Jethmalani, Tim Palace, Dave James Parker, Larry Sternshein) and head back 40 years to a time when practical effects ruled, VHS boxes promised outrageous thrills, and filmmakers weren't afraid to mix genuine scares with a wink and a grin.   --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ANISH JETHMALANI is Chicago Actor who has been on stages and screens for 30 years. You may recognize him from the horror flick Girl on the Third Floor with CM Punk. He is passionate Cinephile who contributed an essay on The Omen for the original HORROR 101: The A-List of Horror Films and Monster Movies. You can find him on letterboxed at https://letterboxd.com/ajet/ TIM PALACE is a lifelong Chicago-based genre fan with a particular devotion to the horrific. A committed collector of physical media, Tim has amassed close to 13,000 titles he's excited to share with his new terror tyke Oliver. DAVE JAMES PARKER is a YouTube film reviewer, collector, and former indie actor who has been running the Mr. Parka YouTube channel and podcast ‪‪@mrparka‬ for over 15 years. In recent years he has started a deep dive into 1980s horror films where he often collaborates with horror journalist, podcasters, and authors to discuss an assorted mix of genre films. He has made appearances in notable indie horrors Headless and Applecart. LARRY STERNSHEIN is a lifelong movie fan in Colorado and host of the movie memories podcast "Reel Early." Not only does he love talking about horror and action cinema, but is also a big pro wrestling fan. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 140 - FRANKENSTEIN (1931): It's Alive! at 95 - Celebrating the Universal Monster Classic

    FRANKENSTEIN (1931) d. James Whale (USA) BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1935) d. James Whale (USA) SON OF FRANKENSTEIN (1939) d. Rowland V. Lee (USA) THE GHOST OF FRANKENSTEIN (1942) d. Erle C. Kenton (USA) The legacy of Frankenstein is one of the most influential in the history of horror. Released by Universal Pictures in 1931 and directed by James Whale, the film helped define what audiences now recognize as the classic Hollywood monster movie. Drawing from Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley's novel and filtered through several stage productions, the film transformed into a powerful visual and emotional experience that changed cinema forever. Perhaps the most enduring contribution of the film is Jack Pierce's iconic design of the Monster, as portrayed by Boris Karloff. With its flat head, neck bolts, heavy eyelids, and clumsy, ungainly, childlike physicality, Karloff's portrayal became the definitive image of Frankenstein's creature in popular culture. Although Shelley's novel describes the creature differently, Whale's cinematic interpretation became so recognizable that it influenced countless films, television shows, cartoons, and Halloween imagery throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. The film also established many visual conventions for horror filmmaking. Whale's use of German Expressionist–inspired lighting, dramatic shadows, and gothic laboratory sets created an atmosphere of dread and wonder. The famous laboratory sequence where Dr. Frankenstein brings the creature to life emerged as one of the most celebrated scenes in cinema history and helped popularize the "mad scientist" trope. Beyond aesthetics, Frankenstein and its dark twin Dracula, released earlier that year, contributed to the rise of Universal's Classic Monsters, paving the way for films like The Mummy, The Invisible Man, The Wolf Man, and sequels such as Bride, Son and Ghost of Frankenstein. These latter films collectively becoming one of the earliest recognizable horror franchises in Hollywood. Ultimately, it is the film's emotional depth that helps distinguish it from being a simple monster tale. Karloff's sympathetic, evocative performance connected with moviegoers worldwide, as did the eternal themes of loneliness, rejection, and humanity. Whale's nimble blend of horror and tragedy ensures that Frankenstein will endure not only as a landmark horror film but as a culturally significant work that continues to influence filmmakers, scholars, and audiences today. Join AC and his incredible panel of guests (Aaron AuBuchon, Anna Ceragioli, Jon Kitley, Michael Weber, Bobby Zier) as we celebrate 95 years of FRANKENSTEIN!!!  ------------------------------------------------------------------ AARON AUBUCHON is a film professor and writer, and also an editor, director, motion graphics artist and producer. He is also co-host of the Discover the Horror podcast. https://discoverthehorror. ANNA CERAGIOLI is a Chicagoan who lives for horror movies. From throwing horror-themed dinner parties, playing Monster Bash in her pinball league, or chilling with a Goblin vinyl, it's all horror all the time for her. JON KITLEY has been running his website, Kitley's Krypt for 25 years. He's a columnist for HorrorHound magazine, a co-host on the Discover the Horror podcast, and attends multiple conventions and all-night horror movie marathons at the drive-in theaters! https://kitleyskrypt.com/ MICHAEL WEBER is an actor, director, and currently the Artistic Director of Porchlight Music Theatre. A Chicago native, his fascination with classic horror began with WGN's legendary Creature Features and The Son of Svengoolie. He is an avid fan of the Golden Age of Radio and the author of the play, WAR of the WELLeS (about Orson Welles' infamous radio broadcast.)  BOBBY ZIER has a passion for Dracula and runs a TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube channel called Lugosi Theatre. He recently received his second "Monster Kid of the Year" Rondo Award for his efforts in keeping classic horror alive and well. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 139 - THE INNOCENTS (1961): The Greatest Ghost Story Ever Filmed?

    THE INNOCENTS (1961) d. Jack Clayton (UK) Tonight, we're disussing The Innocents, the spellbinding 1961 screen version of Henry James' The Turn of the Screw. Producer/director Jack Clayton and cinematographer Freddie Francis conjure a haunting onscreen atmosphere with an eye for hypnotic, symbolic imagery, where the sunlit scenes are frequently more chilling than those set at night. Truman Capote and William Archibald's screenplay also introduces layers of sexual frustration, repression, and hysteria which, while eliminating none of the original story's ambiguity, supply an intriguing psychological angle that modern viewers will appreciate. As prim governess Miss Giddens, assigned to a country estate to care for two orphaned children, Deborah Kerr is undeniably the film's anchor, engine and rudder. The six-time Oscar nominee's brilliant performance walks the tightrope between strength and fear, conviction and doubt. Pamela Franklin is terrific as the angelic Flora in her screen debut, displaying hints of the preternatural maturity that would show up again and again throughout her career. And, as young master Miles, Martin Stephens manages to top his captivating turn from the previous year's Village of the Damned, delivering a magnificently layered turn that flickers between childlike precociousness and a sinister, almost sexually predatory quality. One of the finest ghost stories ever committed to celluloid, The Innocents is often compared to Robert Wise's The Haunting (1963), another stellar example of prolonged tension tempered with minimal special effects and deep, troubling, emotionally mature subject matter. The two films also share a common theme of lead female protagonists utterly undone by their reactions to the mysteries around them, where we are never quite sure if what they see (and we, through their eyes) is reality or fiction. Join AC and his incredible panel of guests (Kait Astrella, Mark Easteadt, Nicola McCafferty, Tyler Pistorius, Michael Orlando Yaccarino) as we celebrate 65 years of THE INNOCENTS!!! --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- KAIT ASTRELLA is a librarian, archivist, and indie book publicist working in New York City. Find her posting about printed books and strange fiction on Instagram @kastrella2. MARK EASTEADT is a movie-lovin', trivia-spoutin', music-sharin', pop culture nerd that loves talking about all of the above. He also hosts the horror movie Meetup, Charlottesville Horror Film Fanatics https://www.meetup.com/charlottesville-horror-film-fanatics NICOLA MCCAFFERTY is a PhD candidate in the department of Radio, Television, and Film at Northwestern University. Her research looks at screen representations of nonhuman women such as mannequins, dolls, robots, and aliens in order to deconstruct the overlapping categories of whiteness, humanity, and femininity. Outside of grad school, Nicola has a few stray bylines at Dread Central, has seen every Kristen Stewart movie, and runs an Etsy store (https://www.etsy.com/shop/vvitchroom/?etsrc=sdt) where she sells enamel pins, stickers, and prints inspired by horror and cult films from the 1960s to today.  TYLER PISTORIUS is an actor, screenwriter, and producer living in Chicago. His recent works include Death is Business and A Missed Connection, and is currently in development on a new project. MICHAEL ORLANDO YACCARINO's critical writings and interviews have championed world fringe cinema for more than three decades. He is an award-winning biographer and author on unconventional historical figures and the occult. https://www.dorianavilla.com/  ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 138 - FEMALE VAMPIRES OF 1971: Forbidden Blood & Sapphic Shadows

    DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS (1971) d. Harry Kumel (Belgium/France) VAMPYROS LESBOS (1971) d. Jesus Franco (Spain) THE VELVET VAMPIRE (1971) d. Stephanie Rothman (USA) TWINS OF EVIL (1971) d. John Hough (UK) LUST FOR A VAMPIRE (1971) d. Jimmy Sangster (UK) THE SHIVER OF THE VAMPIRE (1971) d. Jean Rollin (France) THE WEREWOLF VS. THE VAMPIRE WOMAN d. Leon Klimovsky (Spain) 1971 was a remarkable year for the female vampire — seductive, dangerous, liberated… and deeply entangled in the contradictions of exploitation cinema. Tonight, we're exploring a remarkable cycle of films from that year, on both sides of the Atlantic, that transformed these immortal bloodsuckers into figures of erotic power and cultural tension. From the icy aristocratic seduction of Delphine Seyrig's Countess Báthory in Daughters of Darkness to the psychedelic sensuality of Jesús Franco's Vampyros Lesbos, 1971 delivered a striking wave of female vampire films across Europe and the United States. Spain's horror boom added drive-in gothic thrills with Werewolf vs. the Vampire Woman, while Jean Rollin's Shiver of the Vampires offered a surreal, dreamlike blend of eroticism and avant-garde imagery. In America, Stephanie Rothman's The Velvet Vampire reframed the female predator through the lens of sexual liberation and feminist critique. Meanwhile, Hammer Studios continued its scandalous Karnstein cycle with Lust for a Vampire and Twins of Evil, balancing gothic tradition with the era's rising appetite for sensuality and transgression. Seen together, these films reveal a fascinating paradox: the female vampire as both symbol of emergent female sexual agency and carefully lit object of the male gaze. In 1971, horror vampire cinema didn't just bare its fangs — it bared everything, and we breathlessly drank our fill. Join AC and his awesome panel of guests (Steve Archacki, Emily Barney, David Del Valle, Barry Kaufman, Nicola McCafferty) for an especially epic episode, as we unravel the threads of empowerment and exploitation! ----------------------------------------------------- STEVE ARCHACKI is a connoisseur and collector of all things EuroTrash (especially Italian/Spanish gothic and giallo films and anything Hammer Horror). He also identifies as an avid vinyl soundtrack collector, lapsing metalhead, direct mail marketing guru, and to this day, still harbors perpetual crushes on Rosalba Neri and Dagmar Lassander. EMILY BARNEY studies Czech language and is obsessed with Czech and Slovak movies. She's appeared on The Projection Booth Podcast's Czechtember series, and blogs at emily-barney.com. She's also a lifelong horror and cult movie fan, the weirder the better. DAVID DEL VALLE is a renowned film historian, journalist, and commentator specializing in horror, science fiction, and cult cinema. He has contributed to publications like Fangoria and Cinefantastique, and produced Vincent Price's only interview focused on his horror career. Del Valle's books include Lost Horizons Beneath the Hollywood Sign and Six Reels Under. BARRY KAUFMAN has been committed to spreading the gospel of obscure horror and science-fiction cinema since writing the fanzines Monsters of Japan and Demonique in the 1970s and 80s. He ran All-Horror Video out of a house in the woods in Homewood, Illinois through the 1980s, followed by his shop The House of Monsters in Chicago from 1996 to 2007. He now vends at genre related shows and programs festivals in the Chicago area featuring his inconspicuous film favorites. NICOLA MCCAFFERTY is a PhD candidate in the department of Radio, Television, and Film at Northwestern University. Her research looks at screen representations of nonhuman women such as mannequins, dolls, robots, and aliens in order to deconstruct the overlapping categories of whiteness, humanity, and femininity. Outside of grad school, Nicola has a few stray bylines at Dread Central, has seen every Kristen Stewart movie, and runs an Etsy store (https://www.etsy.com/shop/vvitchroom/?etsrc=sdt) where she sells enamel pins, stickers, and prints inspired by horror and cult films from the 1960s to today.  ------------------------------------------------------------ Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 137 - LET'S SCARE JESSICA TO DEATH (1971) - A '70s Cult Horror Classic or Forgotten Nightmare?

    LET'S SCARE JESSICA TO DEATH (1971) d. John D. Hancock (USA) Tonight we're talking about director John Hancock's brilliant low-budget psychological chiller, Let's Scare Jessica to Death (1971), which combines elements of ghosts, vampires, and zombies, yet manages to find its own uniquely eerie voice. Shot independently in and around Connecticut, over the course of 25 chilly Autumn days on a budget of only $250,000, Jessica ultimately brought in $20 million during its theatrical release after being acquired by Paramount. It was later discovered by many more viewers (including this one) over the years via television screenings and VHS rentals, building a small but dedicated fan base along the way.  Following her release from a sanitarium, emotionally sensitive Jessica (played by Zohra Lampert) leaves NYC with her classical musician husband Duncan and their like-minded hippie friend Woody to find peace and quiet working a New England apple orchard. But when they encounter a strange, beautiful squatter residing in the farmhouse, Jessica's unstable world begins to crumble. And, like our heroine, we are never quite sure what is reality or nightmare, madness or sanity…. While the original script was envisioned as a parody of scary movies, Hancock approached the material with a serious bent, allowing us to enter Jessica's fragile mind through effective use of self-doubting voice-over as well as an ongoing chorus of entreating, berating, and haunting inner voices. The evocative score by Orville Stoeber (aided immeasurably by Walter Sear's electronic synthesizer) remains one of the best of the early '70s, augmenting Hancock's haunting unsettling atmosphere. An underrated gem deserving of multiple viewings, Jessica insinuates on a deeper level than mere shocks and jump scares, creating a spell that lingers without flashy effects or gore, boasting a wealth of subtle, memorable sequences and surprises around every corner. Join AC and his incredible panel of guests (Jess Ader, Darren Callahan, John McDevitt, Vanessa Morgan, Michael Orlando Yaccarino) as we celebrate 55 years of LET'S SCARE JESSICA TO DEATH!   ------------------------------------ JESS ADER is a fellow appreciator of movies and deep synth soundtracks. Former radio-TV-film student making money elsewhere but never giving up the love of all "moving" forms of media and art. He likes peanut butter. DARREN CALLAHAN is an award-winning writer, director, and composer who has written drama, fiction, and non-fiction for many major outlets, mostly focused on the horror genre. He has also released nearly 100 records, from pop to noise to ambient to film soundtracks.  His website is darrencallahan.com and his IMDB is http://www.imdb.me/darrencallahan.  JOHN MCDEVITT is a lifelong cinephile who programs two recurring film events in Chicago: SUPER-HORROR-RAMA! and Fetish Film Forum, a monthly screening series about fetish, kink, leather, and BDSM at the Leather Archives & Museum. John is fascinated by all genres of cinema and appreciates horror most of all for its willingness to explore what makes us uncomfortable and for the compassion it often extends to its characters and the viewer. VANESSA MORGAN is the author of several movie reference guides (When Animals Attack, Strange blood, Evil Seeds & Meow!), all available from Amazon https://amzn.to/3Hzm0wN. She's also the creator of the websites https://cat-movies.com and https://traveling-cats.com. MICHAEL ORLANDO YACCARINO's critical writings and interviews have championed world fringe cinema for more than three decades. He is an award-winning biographer and author on unconventional historical figures and the occult. https://www.dorianavilla.com/  ------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 136 - THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS (1991) 35th Anniversary Special: The Legacy of Hannibal Lecter

    THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS (1991) d. Jonathan Demme (USA) MANHUNTER (1986) d. Michael Mann (USA) HANNIBAL (2001) d. Ridley Scott (USA) RED DRAGON (2002) d. Brett Ratner (USA) HANNIBAL RISING (2007) d. Peter Webber (USA) This week, we're talking about 1991's The Silence of the Lambs, that rare beast that's both mainstream Oscar-winning success as well as a first-rate horror film. A masterful blend of psychological terror and physical violence, screenwriter Ted Tally's dynamite script (adapted from Thomas Harris' bestselling novel) examines ambitious young FBI trainee Clarice Starling (Jodie Foster) and her efforts to track down the serial killer Buffalo Bill – a nickname he's earned by skinning his victims. Assisting her, with his own cagey motives, is imprisoned serial murderer Dr. Hannibal Lecter (Anthony Hopkins), dubbed "Hannibal the Cannibal" for the unsavory habit of consuming his victims. Director Jonathan Demme handles the action with a sure touch, mixing character, complex plotting, and locations that have a feeling of absolute authenticity. Repeat viewings reveal what a careful craftsman he is, and even the most superficial glance reveals how much pop culture's fascination with serial killers and crime scene pathology has been derived from the film's popularity. Thanks to Hopkins' exquisitely modulated performance, walking a tightrope between sneering intellectual superiority and barely restrained animal urges, Lecter arrived as one the of the screen's most electrifying fiends. (So memorable is he that it's easy to overlook Ted Levine's carefully shaded performance as Buffalo Bill, which is a feat unto itself.) Despite his limited screen time, Hopkins won the Best Actor Oscar, with Foster capturing Best Actress, Demme Best Director, and Tally Best Adapted Screenplay. Unsurprisingly, the film's success revived interest in 1986's Manhunter, which had actually served as the cinematic introduction of Lecter, with Brian Cox memorable in the role. Two future installments featuring Hopkins followed, Hannibal, 2001's direct sequel to Silence of the Lambs, and 2002's Red Dragon, the same source material that had inspired Manhunter, as well as a 2007 prequel, Hannibal Rising, and Bryan Fuller's network television series Hannibal, which ran for three seasons. Clearly our fascination with the chilling world of Hannibal Lecter has yet to run its course, so let's dig in! Join AC and his incredible panel of guests (Anna Ceragioli, Mark Easteadt, Mike Mayo, Frank Merle, Mackenze Parker) as we celebrate 35 years of THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS! ----------------------------------------- ANNA CERAGIOLI is a Chicagoan who lives for horror movies. From throwing horror-themed dinner parties, playing Monster Bash in her pinball league, or chilling with a Goblin vinyl, it's all horror all the time for her. MARK EASTEADT is a movie-lovin', trivia-spoutin', music-sharin', pop culture nerd that loves talking about all of the above. He also hosts the horror movie Meetup, Charlottesville Horror Film Fanatics https://www.meetup.com/charlottesville-horror-film-fanatics  MIKE MAYO has written several books about film and popular culture, among them VideoHound's Horror Show and American Murder. He is also the author of the Jimmy Quinn historical suspense novels set in Prohibition-era New York. https://www.mike-mayo.com/ FRANK MERLE is a Los Angeles-based filmmaker originally from Chicago, IL. He has written and directed several award-winning and critically-acclaimed films, including The Employer (2013), starring Malcolm McDowell and Billy Zane, and From Jennifer (2017), starring Derek Mears and Tony Todd. He recently directed Namaka, a dark fantasy starring Jamie Kennedy and David Howard Thornton, streaming now! MACKENZIE PARKER is a filmmaker living in Los Angeles. He studied at Northern Illinois University and the Moscow Art Theater. He has worked on TV shows such as Sons of Anarchy and Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and is currently working as a staff editor for Digital Alliance.  ----------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 135 - DRACULA (1931) Turns 95: A Fang-tastic Tribute to Bela Lugosi's Horror Classic - Ep 154

    DRACULA (1931) d. Tod Browning (USA) DRACULA (Spanish version) (1931) d. George Melford (USA) DRACULA'S DAUGHTER (1936) d. Lambert Hillyer (USA) SON OF DRACULA (1943) d. Robert Siodmak (USA) Released on Feb 14, 1931, Dracula from Universal Studios stands as perhaps the most influential horror film ever made. Directed by Tod Browning with cinematography by Karl Freund, the film was adapted from the wildly successful Broadway stage version of Bram Stoker's 1897 novel. At the center is Bela Lugosi, whose performance as Count Dracula became definitive almost overnight. Lugosi's thick Hungarian accent, hypnotic stare, and aristocratic poise transformed the vampire from a folkloric monster into a seductive, charismatic figure. His portrayal established many of the traits now inseparable from the character: formal dress, slow, deliberate speech, and an uncanny mix of menace and allure. Though Lugosi would struggle, unsuccessfully, to escape the shadow of the role, his Dracula remains one of cinema's most iconic performances. The supporting cast includes Helen Chandler as Mina, David Manners as Jonathan Harker, Dwight Frye as the insect-gobbling Renfield, and Edward Van Sloan as Professor Van Helsing, whose calm rationality helped define the "monster hunter" archetype that would become a staple of horror storytelling. Dracula's massive commercial success—especially during the depths of the Great Depression--played a pivotal role in launching Universal Pictures' legendary Monsters series, proving horror could be both profitable and prestigious. The studio followed with Frankenstein later the same year, then The Mummy (1932), The Invisible Man (1933), and many others, indelibly shaping popular culture for generations to come. Dracula didn't just introduce an immortal character—it helped give birth to American horror cinema as we know it. Join AC and his bloodthirsty panel of guests (Jessica Dwyer, Kate Hansen, Tom Mula, Michael Weber, Bobby Zier) as we celebrate 95 years of DRACULA!! --------------------------------------------------- JESSICA DWYER was raised on a diet of Dark Shadows, Doctor Who, and a lot of things she saw way too young.  She's been writing for nearly a quarter of a century about the world of entertainment and her own fiction (and that sound you heard was her bones turning to dust.) She works for the JoBlo Network, HorrorHound Magazine, and is a producer on a number of projects. KATE HANSEN is a music teacher with a penchant for horror. She has been published in magazines like Ultra Violent and Horrorhound. She likes dogs, enjoys the smell of campfires, collects VHS, is afraid of heights, and has only ever received two speeding tickets.  TOM MULA is a Chicago actor, director, and playwright, and author of the bestselling book and play, "Jacob Marley's Christmas Carol." MICHAEL WEBER is an actor, director, and currently the Artistic Director of Porchlight Music Theatre. A Chicago native, his fascination with classic horror began with WGN's legendary Creature Features and The Son of Svengoolie. He is an avid fan of the Golden Age of Radio and the author of the play, WAR of the WELLeS (about Orson Welles' infamous radio broadcast.)  BOBBY ZIER has a passion for Dracula and runs a TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube channel called Lugosi Theatre.  He recently received his second "Monster Kid of the Year" Rondo Award for his efforts in keeping classic horror alive and well. ---------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 134 - LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS (1960 vs 1986) - Cult Cheapo Classic vs Monster Movie Musical

    THE LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS (1960) d. Roger Corman (USA) LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS (1986) d. Frank Oz (USA) Tonight we're talking about Little Shop of Horrors—a title that refers to two very different movies yet equally beloved cult classics that share a carnivorous plant, a down-on-his-luck florist, and a surprisingly dark sense of humor. Producer/director Roger Corman's The Little Shop of Horrors is an infamously low-budget black comedy shot in just a couple of days on leftover sets. Seymour (Jonathan Haze) is a put-upon loser with a hypochondriac mother and an overbearing boss, living in a community surrounded by wacky characters ranging from the sadistic to snooty. His chatty botanical creation—Audrey Junior—is born with a taste for blood, a thirst that grows as rapidly as it does. While the film barely made a ripple on its release in 1960, over time it gained a cult status through late-night TV and repertory screenings, helped along by its oddball tone and an early cameo from future superstar and Corman regular Jack Nicholson. Said scrappy little no-budget movie eventually caught the attention of composer Alan Menken and lyricist Howard Ashman, and their eventual off-Broadway musical in 1982 fused doo-wop, Motown, and musical theater with horror comedy and social satire. Reframed as a Faustian bargain with memorable tunes and cartoonish characters, the show was a surprise hit, and producer David Geffen immediately began conceiving of a way to offer filmgoers something even grander via Hollywood's ever-evolving technology. The final product, released in 1986 and directed by Muppet Master Frank Oz, delivered a glossy, effects-heavy, star-studded crowd-pleasing spectacle that managed to honor its humble origins even as it created an entirely new generation of fans. Join AC and his incredible band of botanical buddies (Dave M Gray, Jay Kay, Anna Maurya, Mary Manchester) as we celebrate both versions of Little Shop, the theadbare no-budget joke and the blockbuster musical hit. From the tiniest seeds of inspiration, mighty and monstrous things are growing down at Mushnik's! ------------------------------------------------------------- DAVE "M" GRAY is currently a test subject in a subterranean mad science lab and allowed to send proofs of life to Raiders of the Podcast (raidersofthepodcast.blogspot.com or anywhere you podcast) and Twitch (twitch.tv/sh4ggyr4nd) weekly. JAY KAY is the creator of the 7-time Rondo-nominated horror podcast, Horror Happens, where he has conducted hundreds upon hundreds of interviews with genre celebrities. He is also a staff writer with HorrorHound Magazine. He is also a budding filmmaker, with numerous credits to his name, including No Good Deed, Within the Frame, and Swing 46: The Last Swinging Supper Club. https://astrangemaninflpro.wixsite.com/jkolucki  MARY MANCHESTER lives and works in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Lover of dogs, raised by nerds, fan of horror, drag, photography, Oxford commas, and '80s music.  ANNA MAURYA is a film fan stuck in Ohio. They have been a guest on Raiders of the Podcast, a contributor to Hidden Horror, and they generally dislike writing about themselves in the third person. -------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 133 - 45 Years of THE EVIL DEAD: How Sam Raimi and Bruce Campbell Redefined Independent Horror

    THE EVIL DEAD (1981) d. Sam Raimi (USA) EVIL DEAD II (1987). d. Sam Raimi (USA) ARMY OF DARKNESS (1992) d. Sam Raimi (USA) EVIL DEAD (2013) d. Fede Alvarez (USA) EVIL DEAD RISE (2023) d. Lee Cronin (USA) Sam Raimi's Evil Dead franchise is a cornerstone of independent horror cinema, redefining what low-budget filmmaking could achieve. Beginning with The Evil Dead (1981), Raimi combined raw ingenuity, kinetic camerawork, and extreme gore to create a relentlessly inventive horror film that left a lasting impact on the genre. Shot on a shoestring budget with collaborators including star Bruce Campbell, the film's manic energy and iconic "unseen force" camera movements distinguished it from the slower horror of the late 1970s. The franchise's legacy is equally shaped by its bold tonal evolution. While the original film plays as a brutal, nightmarish experience, Evil Dead II (1987) and Army of Darkness (1992) fused splatter horror with slapstick comedy, transforming Ash Williams into a chainsaw-wielding, wisecracking antihero and helping define the modern horror-comedy. From comics and video games to the Ash vs. Evil Dead TV series to reboots like Evil Dead (2013) and Evil Dead Rise (2023), the series continues to evolve. Join AC and his awesome panel of horror enthusiasts (Krisy Jett, Anna Maurya, Daniel Millhouse, Ryan Olson, Jennifer Olson, Joseph Wycoff) as we celebrate 45 years of THE EVIL DEAD!!  ---------------------------------------------------------------- KRISTY JETT, faithful horror nerd of 40+ years, resides in Buffalo, NY and is the mother of nine cats. She remains now and forever the world's biggest fan of the film Popcorn (1991).  ANNA MAURYA is a film fan stuck in Ohio. They have been a guest on Raiders of the Podcast, a contributor to Hidden Horror, and they generally dislike writing about themselves in the third person. DANIEL MILLHOUSE joyfully returns to review films with Dr. AC and friends! As an Assistant Professor at the College of DuPage, he cherishes his Theatre, TV/Film, and Motion Capture acting experiences. He is one mischievous, charming, goofball. JENNIFER OLSON is a lifelong horror fan and mother of three monster kids. She is a former member of The Flint Horror Con, and currently part of the Synapse Films street team! RYAN OLSON (aka S. Ravenlord of The Cold Beyond music group) is the owner of Deadspeak Design and Night World Records, as well as a member of the Synapse Films street team and a regular on the Synapse Films podcast. His work has been featured in Liquid Cheese, Horrorhound, & Evilspeak Magazines. JOSEPH WYCOFF is a veteran Chicago actor now based in New Zealand, with onscreen credits ranging from "Ash vs Evil Dead" to the Power Rangers to Josh Ruben's Heart Eyes (2025). -------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 132 - THE THING (1951) vs. THE THING (1982) - Cold War Classic to Cosmic Horror Masterpiece

    THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD (1951) d. Christian Nyby (USA) THE THING (1982) d. John Carpenter (USA) THE THING (2011) d. Matthijs van Heijningen (USA) Tonight we're discussing Howard Hawks' The Thing from Another World (1951) and John Carpenter's The Thing (1982), two science-fiction horror films that, despite sharing a source in John W. Campbell Jr.'s novella Who Goes There?, reflect very different eras in filmmaking and cultural anxiety and both represent landmark moments in genre cinema. The 1951 The Thing from Another World, directed by Christian Nyby with producer Howard Hawks leaning heavily over his shoulder, is emblematic of Cold War science fiction. Its screenplay by Charles Lederer and an uncredited Ben Hecht, significantly adapts Campbell's story, transforming it into a brisk, dialogue-driven ensemble piece. The alien is a humanoid, plant-based creature (played by future Gunsmoke star James Arness) that represents the fear of external invasion and ideological contamination prevalent in early-1950s America. John Carpenter's The Thing (1982), by contrast, reflects a far bleaker worldview. Screenwriter Bill Lancaster returns more faithfully to Campbell's original concept of a shape-shifting alien menace, emphasizing uncertainty and mistrust. Carpenter's film centers on paranoia rather than invasion, with the alien's ability to perfectly imitate its victims turning the threat inward, eroding trust among the characters. The groundbreaking practical effects by Rob Bottin redefined onscreen monster movies, pushing the boundaries of what mainstream audiences could imagine or endure. Unlike its predecessor, which was immediately hailed as an artistic and commercial success, The Thing was initially reviled by critics and commercially unsuccessful. Thankfully, it has since been reappraised as a masterpiece in the 40+ years since its release. Join AC and his incredible panel of guests (Fraser Coffeen, Chris Hainsworth, Katie McClean Hainsworth, Kevin Matthews, Ryan Olson) as we explore the genre's evolution from externalized fears to psychological and existential dread and everything in between!  ---------------------------------------------------------------- FRASER COFFEEN is the co-host of Creepy History, a podcast dedicated to all the creepy stuff you wish they taught you in High School. He's been published in Horror Homeroom magazine and How to Analyze and Review Comics CHRIS HAINSWORTH (he/him/his) is an actor/writer/director represented by Big Mouth Talent Chicago. He is a DeathScribe winner 2009 for the audio drama "Remembrance" and author of The Fourth Wall, part of Motel 666 (2015). KATIE MCLEAN HAINSWORTH is a Chicago-based performer/writer, whom you can regularly find on both the DARK NEXUS and FAWX & STALLION podcasts. She's happily guested on HORROR 101 a few times as well as on Roll For Impact's THE STRANGER. KEVIN MATTHEWS posts a movie review daily on the For It Is Man's Number blog, and is one quarter of the Raiders of the Podcast team who have been putting out weekly episodes for over six years. https://linktr.ee/raidersofthepodcast RYAN OLSON (aka S. Ravenlord of The Cold Beyond music group) is the owner of Deadspeak Design and Night World Records, as well as a member of the Synapse Films street team and a regular on the Synapse Films podcast. His work has been featured in Liquid Cheese, Horrorhound, & Evilspeak Magazines. --------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 131 - THE HOUSE WITH LAUGHING WINDOWS– 50 Years of Pupi Avati's Italian Horror Masterpiece

    THE HOUSE WITH LAUGHING WINDOWS (1976) d. Pupi Avati (Italy) On tonight's episode, we're talking about Pupi Avati's The House with Laughing Windows (1976), one of the most quietly unsettling films in the history of Italian horror, a slow-burn nightmare that lingers long after its final moments. Set in the foggy, insular villages of rural Emilia-Romagna, the film follows Stefano, a young restorer hired to repair a disturbing fresco depicting the martyrdom of Saint Sebastian. As Stefano settles into the community, he begins to sense that the artwork—and the people surrounding it—are tied to something deeply wrong. Rather than relying on gore or shocks, Avati builds dread through atmosphere, implication, and an almost suffocating sense of isolation. Sunlit landscapes feel hostile, friendly neighbors seem slightly off, and every unanswered question pulls Stefano further into danger. The film's sound design, muted performances, and methodical pacing create a creeping unease that feels both grounded and nightmarish. Often compared to the work of Dario Argento yet strikingly different in tone, The House with Laughing Windows stands apart for its realism and restraint. It's a film about curiosity, artistic obsession, and the terror of uncovering truths that were meant to stay buried. Widely regarded as Avati's masterpiece, it remains a haunting example of how subtle horror can be far more devastating than spectacle. Join AC and his incredible panel of giallo-loving folk (Steve Archacki, Jorge Didaco, Bryan Martinez, Lin Morris, Nathaniel Thompson) as we celebrate 50 years of THE HOUSE WITH LAUGHING WINDOWS! ---------------------------------------------------- STEVE ARCHACKI is a connoisseur and collector of all things EuroTrash (especially Italian/Spanish gothic and giallo films and anything Hammer Horror). He also identifies as an avid vinyl soundtrack collector, lapsing metalhead, direct mail marketing guru, and to this day, still harbors perpetual crushes on Rosalba Neri and Dagmar Lassander. JORGE DIDACO is a Brazil-based teacher on theatre, performance, and film. He contributed the essays for The Innocents for Horror 101: The A-List of Horror Films and Monster Movies and In a Glass Cage for Hidden Horror. BRYAN MARTINEZ is the creator of The Giallo Room and is also the writer and director of the short films Gelato Giallo and My Friend Lisa (check em out on YouTube). He has had a passionate love affair with Giallo since he first watched a Spanish dubbed version of All the Colors of the Dark at the tender age of 8. LIN MORRIS is a writer who makes his living doing something else entirely. His novels Spot the Not and The Marriage Wars are both available on Amazon. The first movie he recalls seeing is Two on a Guillotine at the Super 99 Drive-In at much too young an age, and he's been a horror fan ever since. Despite the strenuous efforts of his parents, he remains stubbornly left handed. NATHANIEL THOMPSON has recorded 300 audio commentaries and written five books, most recently The FrightFest Guide to Vampire Movies. You can see him in shows like Eli Roth's History of Horror and Horror's Greatest, and read him yammering about all kinds of movies at mondo-digital.com. ----------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 130 - THE BEST HORROR MOVIES OF 2025!! (and the ones we're still fighting about)

    We're breaking down the best horror movies of 2025, from mainstream hits to indie standouts—and arguing about which ones actually deserve the title. AC joins his Streaming and Screaming co-hosts Chad the Bird ‪‪@ChadTheBird‬  and Lucy Ba'al ‪‪@lucybaal2299‬ as they count down their favorite fright flicks of 2025! Movies mentioned in this episode: 00:00 Episode Intro 03:40 Final Destinations: Bloodlines 07:55 The Ugly Stepsister 10:26 The Monkey 14:19 28 Years Later 23:38 El Conde 24:34 Bring Her Back 27:54 The Long Walk 33:22 Weapons 37:28 Good Boy 38:49 Sinners 44:57 The Rule of Jenny Pen 47:14 V/H/S/Halloween (part 1) 48:50 Clown in a Cornfield 50:11 V/H/S/Halloween (part 2) 54:06 Companion 54:21 Heart Eyes 55:02 Chad's Honorable Mentions 56:10 Together  57:30 AC's Honorable Mentions 1:00:16 Lucy's Honorable Mentions 1:03:20 Toxic Avenger remake 1:05:09 Deathstalker 1:05:35 Hell of a Summer 1:07:12 Frankenstein (GdT) 1:08:12 Jurassic World: Rebirth 1:08:59 Creep 2 / Creep Tapes / Ash vs. Evil Dead 1:10:05 The Mortuary Collection 1:10:42 That Came Out This Year? 1:14:58 AC's Netflix Catch-up 1:17:11 Final Thoughts Join ussssssss!!! Let us know YOUR favorite picks from 2025! Looking forward to another year of Sharing the Scare!  -------------------------------------- All things Chad the Bird @ChadTheBird https://linktr.ee/ChadtheBird  All things Lucy Ba'al @lucybaal2299 https://linktr.ee/lucy_baal ----------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 129 - EYES WITHOUT A FACE (1960) – The French Horror Classic Turns 65!!

    EYES WITHOUT A FACE (1960) d. Georges Franju (France) In this episode, we're talking about a yet another haunting horror landmark from 1960, Georges Franju's Eyes Without a Face (Les Yeux sans visage). Adapted from the 1959 novel by Jean Redon, Franju and his vaunted team of collaborators transform the pulp thriller material into something strangely lyrical and tragic, resulting in a bona-fide art-horror classic. Pierre Brasseur stars as Dr. Génessier, a respected surgeon whose obsession with repairing his daughter's disfigurement leads him beyond ethical boundaries. Edith Scob delivers an unforgettable performance as Christiane, her features obscured by a blank mask throughout most of the picture, while Alida Valli (who Euro-horror fans will recognize from Suspiria) shines as Louise, the doctor's devoted and complicit assistant. Franju, a cofounder of the Cinémathèque Française, avoids a sensationalistic approach, favoring instead calm, clinical imagery that heightens the unsettling subject matter. The ingenious screenplay proved to be a successfully collective affair, with Redon, Claude Sautet, Pierre Gascar, and Vertigo screenwriters Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac offering psychological anguish and moral ambiguity over conventional shocks. The film's visual elegance owes much to legendary cinematographer Eugen Schüfftan, while Maurice Jarre's score, alternately eerie and ironic, adds to disquieting tone. Join AC and friends (Christianne Benedict, Lin Morris, Elena Romea, Chris Wylie) as we celebrate 65 years of scalpels, scars, and scares, EYES WITHOUT A FACE!--------------------------------------------------- CHRISTIANNE BENEDICT is a cartoonist, film writer, malcontent, and Bloginatrix at https://krelllabs.blogspot.com LIN MORRIS is a writer who makes his living doing something else entirely. His novels Spot the Not and The Marriage Wars are both available on Amazon. The first movie he recalls seeing is Two on a Guillotine at the Super 99 Drive-In at much too young an age, and he's been a horror fan ever since. Despite the strenuous efforts of his parents, he remains stubbornly left handed. ELENA ROMEA is the creator behind SpanishFear.com and Horror Rises from Spain. A researcher in literature and cinema, she holds a Ph.D. in Spanish Studies with a dissertation about the filmmaker José Val del Omar. Her work explores themes of estrangement, horror, myth, and cultural conflict. CHRIS WYLIE is the co-host of Deep Cuts Horror Trivia in Chicago, and an avid lover of psychological and trash horror. He believes we need to stop shaming people for not having seen certain movies, and has had his ass kicked by Batgirl on film ------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 128 - MAD LOVE (1935) at 90 | Peter Lorre, Colin Clive, Frances Drake | (Film Discussion)

    MAD LOVE (1935) d. Karl Freund (USA) Based on Maurice Renard's 1920 French serialized novel The Hands of Orlac, in which the hands of a murderer are transplanted onto an injured concert pianist, Mad Love is remembered above all for Peter Lorre's stunning performance as Dr. Gogol, a brilliant surgeon driven mad by obsessive love. Lorre, fresh from his success in Fritz Lang's M (1931), delivers one of the genre's's most unsettling portrayals of pathological fixation. He is incredibly well-supported by Frances Drake as Yvonne Orlac, star of the Grand Guignol, and Dr. Frankenstein himself Colin Clive, as her tormented husband Stephen Orlac. The film was directed by Karl Freund (The Mummy, 1932, a central figure in the development of horror cinema. Having begun his career as a renowned cinematographer, Freund brought with him the visual sensibility of German Expressionism, shaped by his earlier work on films such as Metropolis, Der Golem, and The Last Laugh. Aiding Freund in the visual look of Mad Love was none other than Gregg Toland, whose highly controlled and deeply shadowed lighting and camera compositions anticipate the technical mastery he would display in Citizen Kane. Further heightening the film's atmosphere is the eerie, restrained score by Dmitri Tiomkin, another legend in the making with credits for everyone from Capra to Hitchcock to Hawks, and everything from sci-fi, westerns, war films, and comedies to his Oscar-winning name. Join AC and his awesome panel of guests (Nile Arena, Gavin Schmitt, Michael Weber, Bobby Zier) as we celebrate 90 years of Mad Love, an enduring horror classic and an early example of what would eventually come to be known as body horror! ------------------------------------------------------ NILE ARENA has created cinema collectives, worked the film festival circuit, and lent his voice to podcasts dedicated to the silver screen. His literary/weird fiction journal, Success Stories, is available now at some of the places books are sold. GAVIN SCHMITT is Wisconsin's criminal historian and the author of several books. He's also a degenerate cinephile and has written on film topics, particularly cinematographer Karl Freund. He's been half naked with Norman Reedus, shared breakfast with Tiffany Shepis, and helped David Arquette find cocaine in Chicago.  MICHAEL WEBER is an actor, director, and currently the Artistic Director of Porchlight Music Theatre. A Chicago native, his fascination with classic horror began with WGN's legendary Creature Features and The Son of Svengoolie. He is an avid fan of the Golden Age of Radio and the author of the play, WAR of the WELLeS (about Orson Welles' infamous radio broadcast.)  BOBBY ZIER has a passion for Dracula and runs a TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube channel called Lugosi Theatre. He recently received the "Monster Kid of the Year" Rondo Award for his efforts in keeping classic horror alive and well. ------------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 127 - THE DAY OF THE BEAST (1995): Alex de la Iglesia's Groundbreaking Satanic Horror Comedy

    THE DAY OF THE BEAST (El Dia de la Bestia) (1995) d. Alex de la Iglesia (Spain) Tonight we're discussing Alex de la Iglesia's cult classic The Day of the Beast (1995) (El Día de la Bestia), one of the most chaotic, hilarious, and subversive horror films of the 1990s! Blending satanic panic, apocalyptic prophecy, heavy metal, and pitch-black comedy, The Day of the Beast follows a priest who believes the Antichrist will be born on Christmas Eve—and decides the only way to stop it is to commit as much evil as possible, with hilariously mixed results. In this episode, we explore: --How Day of the Beast mixes horror and comedy without losing its bite --Alex de la Iglesia's distinctive visual style and anarchic tone --The film's critique of religion, media, and 1990s Spanish society --Why this film remains a cult favorite nearly 30 years later Join AC and his irreverent panel of guests (Aaron AuBuchon, S.A. Bradley, Jennifer Olson, Elena Romea) as we celebrate 30 years of this loud, messy, provocative, and unforgettable slice of Spanish Horror! ----------------------------------------- AARON AUBUCHON is a film professor and writer, and also an editor, director, motion graphics artist and producer. He is also co-host of the Discover the Horror podcast. https://discoverthehorror.com/  S.A. BRADLEY hosts the "Hellbent for Horror" podcast, is the author of "Screaming for Pleasure: How Horror Makes You Happy and Healthy," and lectured at Webster University and The College of Idaho. His show, "My Horror Manifesto," played in NYC. JENNIFER OLSON is a lifelong horror fan and mother of three monster kids. She is a former member of The Flint Horror Con, and currently part of the Synapse Films street team! ELENA ROMEA is the creator behind SpanishFear.com and Horror Rises from Spain. A researcher in literature and cinema, she holds a Ph.D. in Spanish Studies with a dissertation about the filmmaker José Val del Omar. Her work explores themes of estrangement, horror, myth, and cultural conflict. ---------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 126 - HOUSE OF 1000 CORPSES, DEVIL'S REJECTS & 3 FROM HELL: Rob Zombie's Firefly Trilogy

    HOUSE OF 1000 CORPSES (2003) d. Rob Zombie (USA) THE DEVIL'S REJECTS (2005) d. Rob Zombie (USA) 3 FROM HELL (2019) d. Rob Zombie (USA) Rob Zombie's Firefly Trilogy is one of the most controversial and influential horror sagas of the 2000s. In this episode, we discuss House of 1000 Corpses (2003), The Devil's Rejects (2005), and 3 From Hell (2019) to explore the evolution of the Firefly Family, Rob Zombie's filmmaking style, and the trilogy's lasting impact on modern horror. From the grindhouse chaos of House of 1000 Corpses to the brutal outlaw horror of The Devil's Rejects, and the divisive return of the Fireflies in 3 From Hell, our round table of Zombie enthusiasts breaks down themes, characters, violence, controversy, and cult appeal across all three films. We debate whether The Devil's Rejects or House of 1000 Corpses is considered Rob Zombie's best movie, how the Firefly Family became horror icons, and whether 3 From Hell works as a true conclusion to the trilogy. If you're a fan of Rob Zombie movies, cult horror, exploitation cinema, or dark character-driven horror, join AC and his awesome panel of guests (Adam Ayala, Barry Under Your Bed, Chelsea David, Creepy Suzie, and Amy Pearson) as we celebrate the legacy of the Firefly Family! 🩸 Films Discussed: House of 1000 Corpses (2003) The Devil's Rejects (2005) 3 From Hell (2019) 🎬 Topics Covered: The Firefly Family explained Rob Zombie's horror style and influences Why The Devil's Rejects is a cult classic Themes of violence, nihilism, and antiheroes The legacy of the Firefly Trilogy in horror cinema -------------------------------------------------- ADAM AYALA is a sleaze horror historian and lifelong collector. At The Video Park, he had the solid Euro-horror recommends, and at the record store he told you he didn't need your origin story. But before all that his mama never made him put a Beta tape back no matter what was on the cover. BARRY UNDER YOUR BED is the from the monster world but now lives among Humans. He has hosted shows all over SoCal, from variety to drag to burlesque, and is often known for his big mouth. But, you love him anyway! Find him online at www.barryunderyourbed.com CHELSEA DAVID is an actor, budding mental health professional, and spicy food eater, deeply obsessed with all things horror. A Louisiana native and former Chicagoan of a decade, she can be found bouncing around the country at any given moment. You'll hear her laugh before you see her.  CREEPIE SUZIE has interviewed some of your favorite horror heroes and degenerates, and reviewed some brutal, nasty bangers straight from the underground. She's also that marketing girl over at Unearthed Films. AMY PEARSON is an assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at Durham University. In addition to being a whopping great horror enthusiast, she's also a power lifter, photographic model, and aerialist. ----------------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 125 - 35 Years of JACOB'S LADDER (1990): The Meaning Behind the Madness

    JACOB'S LADDER (1990) d. Adrian Lyne (USA) Tonight we're talking about Jacob's Ladder (1990), Adrian Lyne's psychological horror classic and one of the most memorable genre films of the 1990s. Often cited for its disturbing imagery and emotional depth, the film blends Vietnam War trauma, surreal horror, and existential mystery into an unforgettable analysis of the human psyche and experience. The story follows Jacob Singer (Tim Robbins), a Vietnam veteran plagued by hallucinations, intrusive memories, and shifting realities. As he searches for answers—possible government experiments, the truth about his past, and the meaning behind his visions—Jacob's world becomes a haunting maze of grief, paranoia, and revelation. With standout performances from Tim Robbins, Elizabeth Peña, and Danny Aiello, the film delivers both terror and unexpected tenderness. Join AC and his incredible (and incredibly brainy) panel of guests (Emily Barney, Ben Beard, Dominic Conti, Julia Marchese) as we explore: • Jacob's Ladder explained — themes, symbols, and interpretations • How the film portrays trauma, memory, and the Vietnam War • Its impact on psychological horror and films/media inspired by it • The practical effects and unsettling visuals that shaped its legacy • Why the ending still fuels debate and theory videos today Whether you're here for analysis, horror history, or a deeper look at one of the genre's most influential films, this conversation explores why JACOB'S LADDER continues to resonate 35 years after its release. Here's a link to Ben's book (although if you can buy it through ANY other means than Amazon - i.e. BUY LOCAL, you will have my deepest respect and gratitude. Bezos doesn't need any more of your money.) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0F1PGN7JH/... ----------------------------------------------- EMILY BARNEY studies Czech language and is obsessed with Czech and Slovak movies. She's appeared on The Projection Booth Podcast's Czechtember series, and blogs at emily-barney.com. She's also a lifelong horror and cult movie fan, the weirder the better. BEN BEARD is the author of three books on the movies, including The South Never Plays Itself, The Bad Class, and most recently Four Horses, Seven Seals: Jacob's Ladder, The Sandman, Violator, and the World of 1990. He lives in Chicago with his family. DOMINIC CONTI is a Chicago-based writer and actor. His first novel, Your Book Club, is now available. (Orders can be placed at [email protected], or you can just say hi.) JULIA MARCHESE is a podcaster (Horror Movie Survival Guide, The Losers' Club, JodoWOWsky), filmmaker, actor, film programmer, writer and cinephile living in Hollywood; California. https://linktr.ee/juliacmarchese ------------------------------------------ Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 124 – THE REFLECTING SKIN, BABY BLOOD, & SINGAPORE SLING: Forgotten Horror Gems of 1990

    THE REFLECTING SKIN (1990) – d. Philip Ridley (UK) BABY BLOOD (1990) – d. Alain Robak (France) SINGAPORE SLING (1990) – d. Nikos Nikolaidis (Greece) If you love art-house horror, extreme cinema, and deep-dive film analysis, this episode is for you! We're celebrating three groundbreaking 1990 classics that pushed horror into stranger, darker territory: Baby Blood, The Reflecting Skin, and Singapore Sling. As the genre emerged from the excess of the '80s, these international auteurs delivered bold, transgressive, and uncomfortably beautiful visions that still unsettle 35 years later. Baby Blood — A French body-horror cult gem featuring Emmanuelle Escourrou in a ferocious performance as a woman bound to a parasitic entity. A gleefully grotesque blend of splatter, cosmic dread, and anarchic dark comedy. The Reflecting Skin — A haunting fever dream of corrupted Americana starring Viggo Mortensen. With painterly visuals, hypnotic pacing, and gothic melancholy, it remains one of the most striking and emotionally devastating horror films of its era. Singapore Sling — A taboo-breaking, noir-infused art film steeped in fetishism, pitch-black humor, and avant-garde excess. Decades later, its sadomasochistic spiral still shocks—and still fascinates.  Join AC and his adventurous panel of guests—Emily Barney, S.A. Bradley, and Vanessa Morgan—as we discuss why these films endure, how they continue to challenge audiences, and what they reveal about the ever-evolving language of horror. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ABOUT OUR GUESTS EMILY BARNEY studies Czech language and is obsessed with Czech and Slovak cinema. She's appeared on The Projection Booth Podcast's Czechtember series and blogs at emily-barney.com. A lifelong horror and cult movie fan—the weirder, the better. S.A. BRADLEY hosts the Hellbent for Horror podcast, is the author of Screaming for Pleasure: How Horror Makes You Happy and Healthy, and has lectured at Webster University and The College of Idaho. His show My Horror Manifesto played in NYC. VANESSA MORGAN is the author of several movie reference guides, including When Animals Attack, Strange Blood, Evil Seeds, and Meow! Find them on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3Hzm0wN She also runs cat-movies.com and traveling-cats.com. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and—most of all—Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 123 - SANTO Y BLUE DEMON CONTRA LOS MONSTRUOS (1970) | The Wildest Lucha Libre Horror Movie Ever?

    SANTO Y BLUE DEMON CONTRA LOS MONSTRUOS (1970) d. Gilberto Martínez Solares (Mexico) This gloriously chaotic mash-up brings together two of Mexico's most iconic masked wrestlers—El Santo and Blue Demon—for a monster-filled showdown that blends classic horror, sci-fi pulp, and lucha libre action. From vampires and werewolves to mummies, Frankenstein's creature, and even a cyclops, this movie packs an entire monster universe into its brisk runtime. Add in mad scientists, rubber-suit mayhem, and drop-kicks as the solution to literally everything, and you've got one of the most delightfully bonkers films of the lucha boom. But the film is more than campy fun. Santo and Blue Demon were folk heroes, bridging comic books, wrestling arenas, and the silver screen to create a cultural phenomenon that defined an era of Mexican popular cinema. Their adventures captured a unique mix of moral clarity, earnest charm, and pure imagination that continues to resonate with fans around the world. Today, Santo y Blue Demon Contra los Monstruos stands as a beloved cult classic—a perfect example of low-budget creativity, genre-blending audacity, and the joyful spirit of fantastic filmmaking. Join AC and his Turkey-loving panel of guests (Raul Benitez, Jorge Didaco, Robin Graves, Dave M Gray, Jon Kitley) as we revisit this monster mash, celebrate its legacy, and explore why it remains such an unforgettable piece of lucha libre horror. And here's a link to the Kickstarter that Raul mentions in the show!  https://www.luchadoresvseverything.com/ ---------------------------------------------------  RAUL BENITEZ is a film programmer in Chicago for over 15 years. Raul currently is the Senior Programmer at the Midwest Film Festival, and the After Dark programmer at the Chicago International Film Festival. Raul also programs at Comfort Station Logan Square, Full Spectrum Features, and the Nightingale Cinema.  JORGE DIDACO is a Brazil-based teacher on theatre, performance, and film. He contributed the essays for The Innocents for Horror 101: The A-List of Horror Films and Monster Movies and In a Glass Cage for Hidden Horror. ROBIN GRAVES (har har) is the puppeteer behind Lucy Ba'al, a demonic puppet who recommends lesser-seen horror and cult films through his TikTok show The Laaaaaaast Video Store on Earth. DAVE "M" GRAY is currently a test subject in a subterranean mad science lab and allowed to send proofs of life to Raiders of the Podcast (raidersofthepodcast.blogspot.com or anywhere you podcast) and Twitch (twitch.tv/sh4ggyr4nd) weekly. JON KITLEY has been running his website, Kitley's Krypt for 25 years. He's a columnist for HorrorHound magazine, a co-host on the Discover the Horror podcast, and attends multiple conventions and all-night horror movie marathons at the drive-in theaters! https://kitleyskrypt.com/  ----------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 122 - CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST (1980): The Most Controversial Found-Footage Movie Ever Made!

    CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST (1980) d. Ruggero Deodato (Italy) Despite its reputation as one of the most controversial exploitation features ever made, Italian director Ruggero Deodato's 1980 film - Cannibal Holocaust - occupies an unexpectedly important place in cinema history. Its blend of documentary aesthetics, media-critique, and staged "found footage," anticipated techniques that would later become mainstream, showing up in everything from reality television to modern horror franchises. The film's enduring notoriety continues to spark debate about ethics in filmmaking, censorship, and the responsibility of artists when representing violence and other cultures—discussions around extreme cinema that are as rich and heated today as they were 45 years ago. Far from being mere "trash," it endures as a provocative case-study in how shock, style, and social commentary can collide in ways that challenge audiences and the industry alike. Join AC and his gutsy panel of guests (Art Ettinger, Rigo Garay, Michelle Kisner, Anny Maurya, Tim Palace) as we celebrate 45 years of Cannibal Holocaust! ------------------------------------------------ ART ETTINGER is the editor of Ultra Violent Magazine, a public defender, and a Razorcake record reviewer. He lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania where his lifelong obsessions with punk rock and horror/exploitation cinema continue to consume him. RIGO GARAY is a writer/actor/director from Long Island, NY, currently and joyfully employed at Glass Eye Pix (founded by horror auteur Larry Fessenden). He has been seen onscreen in Crumb Catcher (d. Chris Skotchdopple), Blackout (d. Larry Fessenden), and The Leech (d. Eric Pennycoff), as well as TV roles on Blue Bloods, Law & Order: SVU, and Law & Order: Organized Crime. He is preparing for his directorial feature debut, PULL: A DARK COMEDY, currently in pre-production. ANNA MAURYA is a film fan stuck in Ohio. They have been a guest on Raiders of the Podcast, a contributor to Hidden Horror, and they generally dislike writing about themselves in the third person. MICHELLE KISNER is a film critic, freelance writer, and physical media advocate. She has contributed to several websites to include The Cultural Gutter and The Movie Sleuth and is also a member of the Michigan Movie Critics Guild.  TIM PALACE is a lifelong Chicago-based genre fan with a particular devotion to the horrific. A committed collector of physical media, Tim has amassed close to 13,000 titles he's excited to share with his new terror tyke Oliver. -------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 121 - HAMMER IN 1960: BRIDES OF DRACULA, TWO FACES OF DR. JEKYLL, HELL IS A CITY, AND MORE!!

    BRIDES OF DRACULA (1960) d. Terence Fisher (UK) THE TWO FACES OF DR. JEKYLL (1960) d. Terence Fisher (UK) NEVER TAKE SWEETS FROM A STRANGER (1960) d. Cyril Frankel (UK) HELL IS A CITY (1960) d. Val Guest (UK) Celebrated for its distinctive brand of horror and suspense, Hammer Films has left an indelible mark on British cinema and influencing filmmakers around the world. The year 1960 was especially significant for Hammer, as it was a time when the studio was solidifying its identity as a horror juggernaut, but also experimenting with genres, and pushing the boundaries of storytelling, atmosphere, and visual style. Tonight, we'll focus on four films from that year: Brides of Dracula, The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll, Never Take Sweets from a Stranger, and Hell is a City. Each representing a different facet of Hammer's evolving approach, from Gothic horror and psychological thrillers to socially conscious drama and gritty crime narratives.  Join AC and his incredible panel of guests (Troy Howarth, Stan Hyde, Barry Kaufman, Lin Morris, Freddie Young) as we look back at HAMMER IN 1960!! -------------------------------------------- TROY HOWARTH is a Rondo Award-nominated writer who specializes in European Cult cinema. His books include The Haunted World of Mario Bava, Splintered Visions: Lucio Fulci and His Films, So Deadly, So Perverse: 50 Years of Italian Giallo Films, among others. He has also contributed audio commentaries, audio essays, and liner notes to over one hundred DVD and Blu-ray releases from the U.S., the U.K., and Germany. He resides in Pennsylvania. STAN HYDE teaches, examines, and consults on international film programs for students (International Baccaluareate's Film Course), as well as writing about model making, film history, and some fiction. He is winner of the Mangled Sky-Scraper Award for helping bring G-FEST, the annual Godzilla Convention in Chicago, to life since 1995, and is a 2021 Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association Hall of Fame recipient for his work with science fiction conventions, clubs, and fanzines. BARRY KAUFMAN has been committed to spreading the gospel of obscure horror and science-fiction cinema since writing the fanzines Monsters of Japan and Demonique in the 1970s and 80s. He ran All-Horror Video out of a house in the woods in Homewood, Illinois through the 1980s, followed by his shop The House of Monsters in Chicago from 1996 to 2007. He now vends at genre related shows and programs festivals in the Chicago area featuring his inconspicuous film favorites. LIN MORRIS is a writer who makes his living doing something else entirely. His novels Spot the Not and The Marriage Wars are both available on Amazon. The first movie he recalls seeing is Two on a Guillotine at the Super 99 Drive-In at much too young an age, and he's been a horror fan ever since. Despite the strenuous efforts of his parents, he remains stubbornly left-handed. FREDDIE YOUNG is a NYC horror reviewer and frequent podcaster. He has been running the website Full Moon Reviews (www.fullmoonreviews.net) since 2006, telling it like it is and enjoys spreading the word on good and bad films, mainly in the horror genre. He's planning on a full-time return to podcasting within the second half of 2025, hoping to put some attention on some "misunderstood films." -------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 120 - THE RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD (1985) turns 40: Why We're STILL Hungry for Brains!!

    THE RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD (1985) – 40 YEARS LATER! Tonight we're discussing The Return of the Living Dead (1985), the cult-classic zombie comedy that redefined the undead genre. Screenwriter Dan O'Bannon (Alien, Lifeforce) makes his directorial debut with this wildly exuberant black comedy that mixes terrific comic performances with good old-fashioned flesh-chomping horror. Packed with gory makeup effects, hilarious slapstick energy, a killer punk soundtrack, and a balls-to-the-wall finale, Return of the Living Dead became an instant genre favorite — spawning sequels (of varying quality!) and a generation of BRAAAAINS-loving fans. Join AC and his undead panel of guests (Eric Anderson, Aaron Aubuchon, Kristy Jett, Tim Palace) as they celebrate 40 years of THE RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD! ---------------------------------------- ERIC ANDERSON was not allowed to watch horror movies as a kid and he is now making up for lost time with a vengeance. He works in a large urban public library and spends as much time outdoors as possible. AARON AUBUCHON is a film professor and writer, and also an editor, director, motion graphics artist and producer. He is also co-host of the Discover the Horror podcast. https://discoverthehorror.com/ KRISTY JETT, faithful horror nerd of 40+ years, resides in Buffalo, NY and is the mother of nine cats. She remains now and forever the world's biggest fan of the film Popcorn (1991).  TIM PALACE is a lifelong Chicago-based genre fan with a particular devotion to the horrific. A committed collector of physical media, Tim has amassed close to 13,000 titles he's excited to share with his new terror tyke Oliver. -------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 119 - TRILOGY OF TERROR (1975) Turns 50: The Legacy of a TV Horror Classic!!

    TRILOGY OF TERROR (1975) d. Dan Curtis (USA) Tonight we're talking about Trilogy of Terror, the beloved horror anthology movie from producer/director Dan Curtis starring Karen Black which premiered on ABC television March 4, 1975. Curtis was already a household name in 1975, having created the legendary vampire soap opera Dark Shadows, as well as The Night Stalker, the highest-rated made-for-television movie released at the time, alongside well-received adaptations of Dracula and The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (both starring Jack Palance). So when he hired the legendary Richard Matheson to adapt three of his short stories, it seemed like a can't-miss proposition. Black, who was a two-time Golden Globe-winner and Oscar nominee at this point, was apparently reluctant to do the project, but there is no evidence of reticence in her performances, plural as she plays the lead characters in all three segments, including that of twin sisters in the second. Black literally throws herself into the various scenarios with such gusto that it's no wonder this has become one of her most recognizable film projects. Often remembered as "That Movie with the Little Zuni Doll," the preceding two chapters simply can't compete with the final chapter's breathtaking assault, and that's too bad, since they are both worthwhile suspenseful entries and Black is equally captivating in three separate roles. But there's also a reason the Zuni Fetish has become the poster child for the film, because it's hard to beat a little puppet chasing a full-grown woman around her apartment for good-natured thrills and chills. This anthology showcase for Black and Matheson, served up with panache and chutzpah by Curtis, stands as one of the most enduring slices of television terror ever created for the small screen and remains essential viewing for all horror fans, casual or committed. Join AC and his awesome panel of guests (Jorge Didaco, Dwan L. Hearn, Brett Neveu, Sako Tumi) as we celebrate 50 years of TRILOGY OF TERROR! --------------------------------------------------- JORGE DIDACO is a Brazil-based teacher on theatre, performance, and film. He contributed the essays for The Innocents for Horror 101: The A-List of Horror Films and Monster Movies and In a Glass Cage for Hidden Horror. DWAN L. HEARN, more affectionately known as "The Moon", is an author [The Copperwheat Collection, 2023], co-host of "The Sako and the Moon Horror Podcast," and host of "The Moon = Wrestling Podcast", film-maker with Hallowed Hills Entertainment, and a two-time award-winning screenwriter. BRETT NEVEU is a professor at Northwestern University where he teaches writing for the screen and stage. His film/TV screenplays include Eric LaRue (dir. Michael Shannon) and Night's End (dir. Jennifer Reeder) with Shudder/AMC. Past theatre productions include Revolution with A Red Orchid Theatre, Verböten with House Theatre and Red Bud with The Royal Court Theatre. Brett is also a recipient of a Steinberg/ATCA New Play Citation, The Marquee Award from Chicago Dramatists, The Ofner Prize for New Work and the Emerging Artist Award from The League of Chicago Theatres. SAKO TUMI (aka Cass Voit) is a self-published horror author based out of Northern Virginia. She is also a professional Photographer, Illustrator, Bellydancer and Flow Artist ---------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 118 - Tobe Hooper's LIFEFORCE (1985) Turns 40: Nude Space Vampires & The Apocalypse!!

    LIFEFORCE (1985) d. Tobe Hooper (USA/UK)  Based on Colin Wilson's novel, The Space Vampires, a team of astronauts encounter a ship lodged within the head of Halley's Comet and discover three impossibly beautiful humanoid creatures, two male, one female, encased in coffin-like crystalline blocks. And, as any genre film fan can predict, as soon as they get these strange creatures back to earth, blocks are going to crack and heads are going to roll. Working with a spirited screenplay by Dan O'Bannon and fellow sci-fi vet Don Jakoby, Hooper does a fine job keeping the action moving as U.S. astronaut Steve Railsback and SIS agent Peter Firth attempt to track down and contain the interstellar menace. The insane scenes of panic and mayhem as the population of greater London is bled dry of their precious electrical blue fizzies and zombified are great fun, as is watching a young Patrick Stewart strut his stuff as a histrionic asylum official. But, for a good many viewers, regardless of age or sexual orientation, Lifeforce's primary appeal lies in the glory that is French ballet dancer Mathilda May's stunning Vampire Girl. At a time when female nudity was employed in an exploitative and often sleazy manner, May transcends being a mere dazzling bit of eye candy, projecting a genuinely otherworldly and alien presence through her physical, and mostly nonverbal, performance. With grand and gorgeous production design and Nick Maley's terrific makeup effects and animatronics dancing in step with Hooper's unique vision and O'Bannon and Jakoby's cheeky, chatty and occasionally campy twist to classic vampire mythos, Lifeforce is a film like no other, both a product of its time and a timeless cult classic. Join AC and his awesome panel of guests (Fraser Coffeen, Cati Glidewell, John Kenneth Muir, Ryan Olson) as we celebrate 40 years of LIFEFORCE!! ------------------------------------------------------------------ FRASER COFFEEN is the co-host of Creepy History, a podcast dedicated to all the creepy stuff you wish they taught you in High School. He's been published in Horror Homeroom magazine and How to Analyze and Review Comics. CATI GLIDEWELL (aka The Blonde in Front) is a Chicago-based film critic, lifelong cinephile, film festival jury member, and a member of Chicago Indie Critics since 2020. You can find her on all social media platforms, as well as Post Mortem radio and Radio of Horror on YouTube. JOHN KENNETH MUIR is the creator of the award winning-web series, Abnormal Fixation, which returns for its second season in 2026, and award-winning audio drama Enter The House Between. He is also the author of Horror Films of the 1970s (2002), and Eaten Alive at a Chainsaw Massacre: The Films of Tobe Hooper (2001). RYAN OLSON (aka S. Ravenlord of The Cold Beyond music group) is the owner of Deadspeak Design and Night World Records, as well as a member of the Synapse Films street team and a regular on the Synapse Films podcast. His work has been featured in Liquid Cheese, Horrorhound, & Evilspeak Magazines. --------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 117 - BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN & WEREWOLF OF LONDON: THE UNIVERSAL LEGENDS TURN 90!

    BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1935) d. James Whale (USA) WEREWOLF OF LONDON (1935) d. Stuart Walker (USA) Tonight, we open the creaking doors to celebrate a pair of Universal classics that both turn 90 this year—Werewolf of London and Bride of Frankenstein, released in that golden year of genre cinema, 1935. While not always mentioned in the same breath, these two films mark an important moment in Universal Pictures' legendary horror cycle, one building on an already iconic legacy, and the other attempting to carve out a new path through uncharted territory. Bride of Frankenstein, directed by James Whale, is often hailed not just as the first horror sequel, but one of the greatest horror films ever made. Operatic, strange, darkly funny, deeply human, with a unique blend of gothic horror and sly camp, it expands the mythology of Frankenstein's creation, brilliantly played by Boris Karloff, and introduces one of horror's most unforgettable figures—the titular Bride, played by Elsa Lanchester. Colin Clive reprises his role as the tormented Dr. Frankenstein, and Ernest Thesiger delivers a scene-stealing turn as the delightfully macabre Dr. Pretorius. With gorgeous cinematography by John J. Mescall and a haunting score by Franz Waxman, Bride is a masterclass in horror storytelling and style. On the other hand, Werewolf of London stands as Universal's first attempt at bringing the hairy and the scary to the screen. Though overshadowed by 1941's The Wolf Man, it laid the groundwork for the werewolf mythos in cinema and boasts its own impressive pedigree. Leading the cast is Henry Hull as Dr. Wilfred Glendon, a botanist whose ill-fated expedition leads to a curse of Jekyll-and-Hyde lycanthropy. Behind the scenes, legendary makeup artist Jack Pierce—who also created Karloff's Frankenstein look—crafted the werewolf design with a distinctly different flavor than its successors. With its eerie London fog, memorable characters, and transformative makeup effects, Werewolf of London remains a fascinating chapter in the evolution of monster movies. So, light the torches and join AC and his incredible panel of guests (Jenn Adams, Craig J. Clark, Larry Fessenden, Tom Mula, Jimmy Seiersen) as we explore 90 years of the themes, legacies, and lasting influence of these two genre-defining films, one a towering achievement, the other an underappreciated pioneer. ----------------------------------------- JENN ADAMS is a writer and podcaster from Nashville, TN. She co-hosts The Loser's Club: A Stephen King Podcast, The Lady Killers: A Feminine Rage Podcast, Murder Made Fiction, and The Girls on The Boys. She is a contributor and columnist for Bloody Disgusting, Rue Morgue and Dread Central and creator of the Strong Female Antagonist blog. CRAIG J. CLARK watches a lot of movies. He started watching them in New Jersey, where he was born and raised, and continues to watch them in Indiana. He is a frequent contributor to Crooked Marquee (https://crookedmarquee.com/author/craig-j-clark/) and writes the monthly Full Moon Features column for Werewolf News (https://werewolf-news.com/category/full-moon-features/). He is not a werewolf himself (or so he says) LARRY FESSENDEN is a writer, director, producer, and actor who runs the New York production shingle Glass Eye Pix with the mission of supporting individual voices in the arts. TOM MULA is a Chicago actor, director, and playwright, and author of the bestselling book and play, "Jacob Marley's Christmas Carol." JIMMY SEIERSEN from Sweden has written essays for the HORROR 101 and HIDDEN HORROR books, been a short film programmer for Lund Fantastic Film Festival (2010–2022), and creates short films that eventually make their way to YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@JimmySeiersen ----------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 116 - THE CHANGELING (1980): ONE OF THE BEST GHOST STORIES EVER MADE!!

    THE CHANGELING (1980) d. Peter Medak (Canada) (Apologies for the tech issues during the last 4-5 minutes! We were battling the ghost of Joseph Carmichael!) Tonight we're discussing The Changeling (1980), Peter Medak's stellar haunted house tale which usually takes a back seat to the big-budget envisioning of Stephen King's The Shining, released the same year. But in many ways, this small Canadian film, loaded with creepy atmosphere and tightly fashioned suspense sequences, surpasses the ax-swinging histrionics that Kubrick and Co. dish out. As grieving composer John Russell, recovering from the deaths of his wife and daughter, George C. Scott anchors the picture with a compelling strength and vulnerability. Roused by a murdered child's spirit in the Seattle mansion where he has retreated, Russell's utter conviction with which he seeks to uncover the mystery is riveting. There's also the neat subplot of Melyvn Douglas' duplicitous politician, whose backstory proves more and more integral to the house's healing. William Gray and Diana Maddox craft a marvelous script (based on musician Russell Hunter's real-life story), and Medak, whose films don't always indicate the most subtle of sensibilities, is absolutely the man for the job, creating and sustaining incredible tension throughout as well as delivering marvelous moments of release. The film made a huge smash at the Genie Awards, Canada's version of the Oscars, winning Best Picture, Actor, Actress, Screenplay, Cinematography, Production Design, and two awards for Sound, yet has mysteriously still not achieved the same mythic status as other classic haunted house stories. But once experienced, you'll never look at a red rubber ball or antique wheelchair the same way again. Join AC and his awesome panel of guests (Aaron AuBuchon, John W. Bowen, Jon Kitley, Steven Peros, Gert Verbeeck) as we celebrate 45 years of THE CHANGELING!  (Apologies for Sound Quality in the final stretch!) ----------------------------------------------------------------- AARON AUBUCHON is a film professor and writer, and also an editor, director, motion graphics artist and producer. He is also co-host of the Discover the Horror podcast. https://discoverthehorror.com/ JOHN W. BOWEN has been a columnist, reviewer and feature writer for Rue Morgue magazine since 1999, and has also written sporadically for more (...cough...) "civilized" publications, including the Kingston Whig-Standard, The Toronto Star and Kingston Life Magazine. Born in Dallas and raised in Kingston, Ontario, he is also a professional musician and recovering strip club DJ JON KITLEY has been running his website, Kitley's Krypt for 25 years. He's a columnist for HorrorHound magazine, a co-host on the Discover the Horror podcast, and attends multiple conventions and all-night horror movie marathons at the drive-in theaters! https://kitleyskrypt.com/ STEVEN PEROS is the editor and contributor to Giant Beast Cinema and Cinema Bizarro (both reaching #1 on Amazon). Steven is best known for writing Peter Bogdanovich's The Cat's Meow, starring Kirsten Dunst. He is VP of Creative Affairs for Cineverse, home of the Terrifier series. https://stevenperos.com/  GERT VERBEECK is a filmmaker, writer and musician from Brussels, Belgium. His independent production floor Amoeba Pictures offers non-exclusive creative contributions to local projects and international co-productions. He likes his literature, motion pictures and musical experiences diverse, nuanced, and intense. ---------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 115 - Mario Bava's BLACK SUNDAY (1960) Unmasked – The Italian Gothic Horror Boom Begins!

    BLACK SUNDAY (1960) d. Mario Bava (Italy) Tonight we're discussing Mario Bava's Black Sunday (aka The Mask of Satan) (1960), one of the most atmosphere-drenched cinematic forays into the supernatural. Marrying the feel of the Universal classics with the darkness of a Grimm fairy tale, and adding in the gorier and sexier feel of the rising Hammer color Gothics, this tour-de-force directorial debut introduced the world to Italian DP Mario Bava and scream queen in the making Barbara Steele, both becoming genre superstars overnight. The breathtaking opening sequence, featuring a spike-studded iron mask, shocked audiences around the world, passing instantly into horror film iconography. The following 85 minutes see Bava weaving an elaborate tapestry of atmosphere and gloom over this tale of vengeance visited upon the family that burned the witch Aja and her lover at the stake two hundred years before. While there are few elements of the fantastic story (very loosely based on Nikolai Gogol's story) that break new ground, this is an unabashedly gorgeous exercise in style and stunning black-and-white cinematography. Steele is outstanding as Aja and her modern-day descendant, Katia, both of whom share screen time with upcoming Hammer star John Richardson. This masterpiece of Gothic mood will linger in the mind long after the lights come up, and is absolutely required viewing for any horror fan. Plus, Bava's pioneering work here paved the way for fellow auteurs Dario Argento and Lucio Fulci, and gave rise to an entirely new subgenre: The Italian horror film. Join AC and his awesome panel of guests (Nile Arena, Craig J. Clark, Ian Simmons, Alan Tromp, Cullen Wade) as we celebrate 65 years of BLACK SUNDAY!! -------------------------------------------------------- NILE ARENA has created cinema collectives, worked the film festival circuit, and lent his voice to podcasts dedicated to the silver screen. His literary/weird fiction journal, Success Stories, is available now at some of the places books are sold. CRAIG J. CLARK watches a lot of movies. He started watching them in New Jersey, where he was born and raised, and continues to watch them in Indiana. He is a frequent contributor to Crooked Marquee (https://crookedmarquee.com/author/cra...) and writes the monthly Full Moon Features column for Werewolf News (https://werewolf-news.com/category/fu.... He is not a werewolf himself (or so he says) IAN SIMMONS runs the Kicking the Seat YouTube channel, where he posts movie reviews, interviews, and critics round tables. He is also a member of the Chicago Film Critics Association, and feels conflicted about referring to himself in the third person. https://kickseat.com/ ALAN TROMP is a golden age Monster Kid, who has published articles in Filmfax, Twilight Zone Magazine, and We Belong Dead publications in the UK. He was scriptwriter for the shot-on-video nightmare, The Soul Eaters. CULLEN WADE is the author of S(p)lasher Flicks: The Swimming Pool in Horror Cinema, out in 2025 from McFarland Books. Follow him on letterboxd @tobe_whooper and Bluesky @cullenwade.bsky.social --------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 114 - FRIGHT NIGHT (1985) 40th ANNIVERSARY – Revisiting the '80s Vampire Horror Classic!!!

    FRIGHT NIGHT (1985) d. Tom Holland (USA) FRIGHT NIGHT PART II (1988) d. Tommy Lee Wallace (USA) FRIGHT NIGHT (2011) d. Craig Gillespie (USA) FRIGHT NIGHT 2 (2013) d. Eduardo Rodriguez (USA) Written and directed by Tom Holland, 1985's Fright Night is a genre-blending horror-comedy that combines classic vampire lore with 1980s suburban paranoia. The story follows teenager Charley Brewster, who suspects his suave new neighbor, Jerry Dandrige, is a vampire. When his girlfriend Amy and best friend Ed dismiss his fears, Charley turns to horror host Peter Vincent to save the day… and the night. Chris Sarandon brings a heightened modern sophistication and menace to Jerry, while Roddy McDowall shines as the cowardly genre star pressed into true heroism. William Ragsdale and Amanda Bearse are charming as the young ingenues, with Stephen Geoffreys absolutely unforgettable as "Evil" Ed. Employing a mix of prosthetics, animatronics, puppetry, and makeup, the film's outstanding practical effects were brought to life by the talented team headed by Steve Johnson, William Randall Cook, and visual effects supervisor Richard Edlund, creating richly textured visuals that evoke both screams and laughter. Thanks to Holland's clever writing and deft direction, the cast's invested performances, and groundbreaking effects which still hold up decades later, Fright Night remains a touchstone of 1980s horror, a beloved cult classic that only seems to get better every year. Join AC and his fang-tastic panel of guests (Dino Clark, Daniel Millhouse, Maura Sarazen, Chris Scales) as we celebrate 40 years of Fright Night!! ------------------------------------------------- DINO CLARK has been a horror fan since he was a wee lad, after his parents bought their first VCR in the mid-80s. Born and raised in Chicago, he loves attending horror cons & chatting about his fave horror films with fellow fans! He has been in Human Resources for most of his career, which can be a mini-horror movie at times.  DANIEL MILLHOUSE joyfully returns to review films with Dr. AC and friends! As an Assistant Professor at the College of DuPage, he cherishes his Theatre, TV/Film, and Motion Capture acting experiences. He is one mischievous, charming, goofball. MAURA SARAZEN has been watching horror movies since she was a child. Her earliest memory is watching The Exorcist while in a playpen. She enjoys long walks in a fog filled forest, her favorite eye color is black sclera, and she truly believes turning into a werewolf would fix her back problems. CHRIS SCALES is a lifelong horror fan, aspiring horror screenwriter, and horror panelist.  ---------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 113 - 40 Years of DAY OF THE DEAD (1985): The Romero Zombie Classic!

    DAY OF THE DEAD (1985) d. George A. Romero (USA) Celebrate the 40th anniversary of George A. Romero's Day of the Dead, the dark, post-apocalyptic chapter of his legendary zombie trilogy. We explore the film's unforgettable gore, chilling atmosphere, and its place in horror history. Perfect for fans of classic zombie movies, 80s horror, and cult cinema! In this episode, we dive into: 🔹 Romero's vision of the undead 🔹 Tom Savini's groundbreaking special effects 🔹 Bub the zombie & other iconic performances 🔹 The legacy of 1980s zombie horror Join AC and his amazing panel of guests (Kristy Jett, Michael Klug, Anna Maurya, Michelle Kisner, John McDevitt) as we honor everything that makes Day of the Dead a cult classic, four decades later.  -------------------------------------------------- KRISTY JETT, faithful horror nerd of 40+ years, resides in Buffalo, NY and is the mother of nine cats. She remains now and forever the world's biggest fan of the film Popcorn (1991).  MICHELLE KISNER is a film critic, freelance writer, and physical media advocate. She has contributed to several websites to include The Cultural Gutter and The Movie Sleuth and is also a member of the Michigan Movie Critics Guild.  MICHAEL KLUG was born and raised in South Dakota. He is an actor, screenwriter, film critic, screenplay consultant, novelist, filmmaker and overall movie nerd, living in Los Angeles. Long live George A. Romero!"  http://klugiverse.com/ ANNA MAURYA is a film fan stuck in Ohio. They have been a guest on Raiders of the Podcast, a contributor to Hidden Horror, and they generally dislike writing about themselves in the third person. JOHN MCDEVITT is a lifelong cinephile who programs two recurring film events in Chicago: SUPER-HORROR-RAMA! and Fetish Film Forum, a monthly screening series about fetish, kink, leather, and BDSM at the Leather Archives & Museum. John is fascinated by all genres of cinema and appreciates horror most of all for its willingness to explore what makes us uncomfortable and for the compassion it often extends to its characters and the viewer. ------------------------------------------------------------ Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 112 - GIANT MONSTERS OF 1955: TARANTULA, IT CAME FROM BENEATH THE SEA, & KING DINOSAUR!!

    TARANTULA (1955) d. Jack Arnold (USA) IT CAME FROM BENEATH THE SEA (1955) d. Robert Gordon (USA) KING DINOSAUR (1955) d. Bert I. Gordon (USA) Tonight, we step back seventy years to 1955—the cusp of the golden age for giant monster cinema, as atomic anxiety crept from the headlines onto the silver screen, mutating into monstrous metaphors that stomped, crawled, and slithered into our collective imagination. In this episode, we'll look at three emblematic 1955 films—Tarantula, It Came from Beneath the Sea, and King Dinosaur—and explore how their monsters weren't just fanciful products of science fiction, but also reflections of Cold War fears, rapid technological advancement, and the uneasy relationship between scientific progress and military might. Tarantula, directed by Jack Arnold, featured a titular monster, born of unchecked experimentation, that symbolized the dangers of science without restraint—a warning that progress could turn predatory. Arnold's tight direction gives the film a creeping tension and spooky haunting atmosphere that still resonates. In It Came from Beneath the Sea, directed by Robert Gordon, special effects maestro Ray Harryhausen brought a radioactive giant octopus to life in unforgettable stop-motion detail. The film dramatized fears of the deep—both literal and metaphorical—linking nuclear testing with uncontrollable natural retaliation. On the other end of the spectrum, Bert I. Gordon's King Dinosaur is a textbook example of low-budget outrageousness that entertains in spite of (or perhaps because of) its ludicrous plot, stiff acting, oodles of stock footage, and clumsy rear-projected lizards masquerading as prehistoric beasts. Grab your flamethrowers and portable atomic bombs and join AC and his supersized panel of guests (Joyce Boss, Barry Kaufman, Mark Matzke, Joseph Wycoff) as we celebrate a trio of black-and-white sci-fi classics filled with messages, metaphors, and monsters!! -------------------------------------------------------- JOYCE MIHARA BOSS teaches world literature and cinema, myth, and Japanese popular culture at Wartburg College. Her academic publications and presentations have focused on various topics related to Godzilla, yōkai, global fandom, and Japanese religion and folklore. BARRY KAUFMAN has been committed to spreading the gospel of obscure horror and science-fiction cinema since writing the fanzines Monsters of Japan and Demonique in the 1970s and 80s. He ran All-Horror Video out of a house in the woods in Homewood, Illinois through the 1980s, followed by his shop The House of Monsters in Chicago from 1996 to 2007. He now vends at genre related shows and programs festivals in the Chicago area featuring his inconspicuous film favorites. MARK MATZKE is the narrative voice of numerous Small Town Monsters documentaries such as "Sasquatch Unearthed." He's featured on STM's YouTube series "UFOs Revisited," and has written for Stephen Bissette's upcoming "Cryptid Cinema 2," Nostalgia Digest and G-FAN. JOSEPH WYCOFF is a veteran Chicago actor now based in New Zealand, with onscreen credits ranging from "Ash vs Evil Dead" to the Power Rangers to Josh Ruben's Heart Eyes (2025). -------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 111 - HENRY: PORTRAIT OF A SERIAL KILLER (1986) | Defending the True Crime Horror Classic

    HENRY: PORTRAIT OF A SERIAL KILLER (1986/1990) d. John McNaughton (USA) Tonight we take a look back at one of the most disturbing and uncompromising horror films ever made: Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer. Loosely inspired by the real-life confessions of Henry Lee Lucas, John McNaughton's debut feature is relentless in its refusal to offer comfort, catharsis, or a triumphant finale of good over evil. Originally slapped with an X rating, which made it nearly inaccessible for years, Henry is no ordinary 80s slasher. And what it lacks in graphic cinematic splatter, it makes up for in atmosphere and dread.   Michael Rooker, in a chilling breakout performance, grimly underplays Henry as an illiterate drifter who ends human life without remorse, logic, or pattern. Henry doesn't kill for pleasure. He kills because… it's simply what he does. Murder, for him, is as routine as breathing. McNaughton, working from a script co-written with Richard Fire, doesn't make a cheap exploitation horror film. He delivers a sincere, unsentimental character study. The film follows Henry across a bleak, anonymous Midwest to the urban locales of Chicago, shot with natural lighting, real locations, and minimal music, intentionally blur the line between fiction and reality. With strong supporting performances by Tracy Arnold as a young woman fascinated with Henry, and Tom Towles as her lowlife brother (and sometime accomplice to Henry's crimes), Henry remains a stark, nihilistic entry in the canon of independent and regional American horror that still manages to shock and surprise, decades after its troubled release. Join AC and his cadre of confrontational horror fans (Aaron AuBuchon, Ben Beard, Rigo Garay, Hunter Johnson, Jonathon Lucas) as they celebrate 35 years of the wide release of Henry!! ----------------------------------------------------------- AARON AUBUCHON is a film professor and writer, and also an editor, director, motion graphics artist and producer. He is also co-host of the Discover the Horror podcast. https://discoverthehorror.com/ BEN BEARD is the author of The South Never Plays Itself, The Bad Class, Four Horses Seven Seals, and I Never Told You I Was Any Good: The Life and Films of Joseph H. Lewis, among other books. He lives in Chicago with his wife and three daughters. https://bwbeard.com/ RIGO GARAY is a writer/actor/director from Long Island, NY, currently and joyfully employed at Glass Eye Pix (founded by horror auteur Larry Fessenden). He has been seen onscreen in Crumb Catcher (d. Chris Skotchdopple), Blackout (d. Larry Fessenden), and The Leech (d. Eric Pennycoff), as well as TV roles on Blue Bloods, Law & Order: SVU, and Law & Order: Organized Crime. He is preparing for his directorial feature debut, PULL: A DARK COMEDY, currently in pre-production. HUNTER JOHNSON is an actor, producer, and writer born in Wisconsin, educated in Chicago, experienced in L.A., and currently living in MO. He is the co-creator of the HORROR VILLAINS podcast. https://linktr.ee/lahorrorcom JONATHON LUCAS is a horror fiend from Australia whose love for the genre predates his brain's ability to form memories. He contributed the essay for At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul for Hidden Horror, and has appeared numerous times as a panelist for H101wDrAC. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 110 - MASTERS OF HORROR: SEASON 1 - LOOKING BACK AT 20 YEARS OF MoH!!

    MASTERS OF HORROR was a horror anthology series like none before, making its small-screen bow on the cable channel Showtime in October 2005. Created by Mick Garris, the show brought together some of the most renowned names in horror filmmaking to direct hour-long episodes that showcased their unique visions. Predating the wave of multi-voiced anthology films like V/H/S and ABCs of Death, each episode was a self-contained story, with genre icons such as John Carpenter, Dario Argento, Tobe Hooper, Stuart Gordon, John Landis, Joe Dante, and Don Coscarelli, alongside newer voices such as Lucky McKee and Takashi Miike, exploring different themes and scenarios ranging from supernatural terror to the murderer next door. The idea behind the series emerged from informal dinners hosted by Garris, with established horror directors sharing ideas and mutual admiration for one another, as well as discussing the genre's rich history and diversity. The first season, featuring 13 episodes from 13 directors, received praise for its bold storytelling and atmospheric tension, pushing the boundaries of cable television, delivering graphic content that rivaled R-rated horror films and giving these horror auteurs a creative freedom rarely found, especially on television. 20 years later, Masters of Horror remains a cult favorite, ripe for rediscovery by a new generation. A bold artistic experiment that ended up being a cultural, critical, and commercial success for Mick Garris and his merry band nightmare makers. Join AC and his intrepid panel of anthology fans (Jay Kay, Eli LaChance, Tim Palace) as we celebrate two decades of MASTERS OF HORROR! ------------------------------------------------------- ELI LACHANCE is a horror writer, chemist, and paleontology enthusiast. He is currently starting his last year in UMSL's MFA in creative writing program. He resides in St. Louis, Missouri with his wife, dog, and two cats, one of which may be the living dead. Some of his writing can be found in Medium Chill and on Channel-31.com. When he's not writing, he loves walking with his dog, bird watching, and hunting fossils. https://channel-31.com/ JAY KAY is the creator of the Rondo-nominated horror podcast, Horror Happens, where he has conducted hundreds upon hundreds of interviews with genre celebrities. He is also a staff writer with HorrorHound Magazine. TIM PALACE is a lifelong Chicago-based genre fan with a particular devotion to the horrific. A committed collector of physical media, Tim has amassed close to 13,000 titles he's excited to share with his new terror tyke Oliver. ----------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!!

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    Ep 109 - JAWS (1975) TURNS 50: THE GREATEST (FISH) STORY EVERY TOLD!!

    JAWS (1975) d. Steven Spielberg (USA) JAWS 2 (1978) d. Jeannot Szwarc (USA) JAWS 3D (1983) d. Joe Alves (USA) JAWS: THE REVENGE (1987) d. Joseph Sargent (USA) From its harrowing opening sequence to the breathtaking climax, Steven Spielberg's hugely successful masterpiece of suspense and thrills, JAWS (1975), scared audiences out of the water and into theaters in record-breaking numbers. On the surface, the plot is simplicity itself: The locals of the northeastern island town of Amity start turning up as fish food when an enormous great white shark materializes, leaving fear and body parts in its wake. Peter Benchley's adaptation (with able help from Carl Gottlieb) of his own bestseller charts the wise course of creating vivid characters that are as memorable as the scenes of teeth-chomping terror. Armed with a top-notch cast of Roy Scheider as the local sheriff with a healthy fear of water, Richard Dreyfuss as a feisty oceanic expert, and the brilliant Robert Shaw as the gnarled shark hunter Quint, there is nary a wasted onscreen moment. Despite being plagued with endless technical problems during production, the 26-year-old Spielberg ratchets up the tension time and again, each sequence more nail-biting than the last. And his efforts are made all the more effective by John Williams' Oscar-winning score, one of the most famous in movie history. By focusing equally between its engaging, likable human protagonists and the monster shark's mayhem, a modern horror classic emerged, one that still commands our respect and enthusiasm a half-century later. Join AC and his crew of landlubbing enthusiasts (Fraser Coffeen, Katie McLean Hainsworth, Anish Jethmalani, Kevin Matthews, Ryan Olson) as we celebrate 50 years of JAWS!! ----------------------------------------------------- FRASER COFFEEN is the co-host of Creepy History, a podcast dedicated to all the creepy stuff you wish they taught you in High School. He's been published in Horror Homeroom magazine and How to Analyze and Review Comics. KATIE MCLEAN HAINSWORTH is a Chicago-based performer/writer, whom you can regularly find on both the DARK NEXUS and FAWX & STALLION podcasts. She's happily guested on HORROR 101 a few times as well as on Roll For Impact's THE STRANGER. ANISH JETHMALANI is Chicago Actor who has been on stages and screens for 30 years. You may recognize him from the horror flick Girl on the Third Floor with CM Punk. He is passionate Cinephile who contributed an essay on The Omen for the original HORROR 101: The A-List of Horror Films and Monster Movies. You can find him on letterboxed at https://letterboxd.com/ajet/  KEVIN MATTHEWS posts a movie review daily on the For It Is Man's Number blog, and is one quarter of the Raiders of the Podcast team who have been putting out weekly episodes for over six years. https://linktr.ee/raidersofthepodcast  RYAN OLSON (aka S. Ravenlord of The Cold Beyond music group) is the owner of Deadspeak Design and Night World Records, as well as a member of the Synapse Films street team and a regular on the Synapse Films podcast. His work has been featured in Liquid Cheese, Horrorhound, & Evilspeak Magazines. ----------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 108 - RE-ANIMATOR (1985) AT 40: GREEN, GOO, GUTS, AND GAGS!!

    RE-ANIMATOR (1985) d. Stuart Gordon (USA) BRIDE OF RE-ANIMATOR (1990) d. Brian Yuzna (USA) BEYOND RE-ANIMATOR (2003) d. Brian Yuzna (Spain) Stuart Gordon's debut feature Re-Animator is a fast-paced, tongue-in-cheek blend of horror, sci-fi, and dark comedy that helped define the splatter subgenre of the 1980s. Loosely based on H.P. Lovecraft's serialized novella and set at the fabled Miskatonic University, the wildly intense Herbert West (deliciously played by Jeffrey Combs) embarks on a series of experiments to bring the dead back to life—with increasingly chaotic and outrageous results. Re-Animator leans fully into its mad-scientist premise, delivering practical effects that are by turns grotesque, absurd, and weirdly funny. Bruce Abbott, Barbara Crampton, Robert Sampson, and David Gale round out the cast, grounding the onscreen madness with enjoyably full-blooded characterizations. Balancing horror and satire with sanguinary flair, Re-Animator is gleefully macabre and wickedly entertaining. Its over-the-top tone, energetic pacing, and fearless style earned it cult status, two sequels, a stage musical, and enduring adoration from genre fans of all ages. It's a manic, fluorescent-green celebration of science-gone-wrong—and it still feels delightfully messy, manic, and totally unpredictable—a dizzing rollercoaster of science-gone-wrong that still feels fresh, funny, and furiously unhinged. Join AC and his dazzling panel of guests (Sarah Binion, Anna Ceragioli, Mike Mayo, Chris Wylie) as we celebrate 40 years of RE-ANIMATOR!! ------------------------------------------------------ SARAH BINION is a self-taught horror fan who has turned the simple question "What's your favorite horror movie?" into a personal mission to uncover hidden gems and overlooked masterpieces in the genre. ANNA CERAGIOLI is a Chicagoan who lives for horror movies. From throwing horror-themed dinner parties, playing Monster Bash in her pinball league, or chilling with a Goblin vinyl, it's all horror all the time for her. MIKE MAYO has written several books about film and popular culture, among them VideoHound's Horror Show and American Murder. He is also the author of the Jimmy Quinn historical suspense novels set in Prohibition-era New York. https://www.mike-mayo.com/ CHRIS WYLIE is the co-host of Deep Cuts Horror Trivia in Chicago, and an avid lover of psychological and trash horror. He believes we need to stop shaming people for not having seen certain movies, and has had his ass kicked by Batgirl on film. ----------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 107 - FULCI'S FINEST? CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD aka THE GATES OF HELL (1980) TURNS 45!!

    CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD (aka THE GATES OF HELL) (1980) d. Lucio Fulci (Italy) Tonight we're returning to the eerie and bonkers world of Italian horror with a film that defies conventional storytelling — Lucio Fulci's City of the Living Dead, known to American audiences as The Gates of Hell. Following up on the success of Zombie the year before, City of the Living Dead marked a turning point in Fulci's career, steering him away from the multitude of genres he had previously worked in, into the surreal, apocalyptic horror that would ultimately come to define his legacy within the genre. Working with screenwriter Dardano Sacchetti, composer Fabio Frizzi, and special effects wizard Gino de Rossi, Fulci crafted a story where atmosphere outweighs logic, favoring mood and shock value over a linear plot. Despite — or perhaps because of — its fragmented narrative, this is a film that you feel more than follow, a surreal, almost metaphysical approach to horror, one that leaves audiences disoriented, fascinated, deeply unsettled, and hungry for another viewing Join AC and his amazing panel of guests (Jonathon Lucas, Dave James Parker, Larry Sternshein, Nathaniel Thompson) as we explore City of the Living Dead's place in Fulci's career and in Italian genre cinema, and why it continues to resonate with horror fans 45 years later. ------------------------------------------- JONATHON LUCAS is a horror fiend from Australia whose love for the genre predates his brain's ability to form memories. He contributed the essay for At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul for Hidden Horror. DAVE JAMES PARKER is a YouTube film reviewer, collector, and former indie actor who has been running the Mr. Parka YouTube channel and podcast for over 15 years. In recent years he has started a deep dive into 1980s horror films where he often collaborates with horror journalist, podcasters, and authors to discuss an assorted mix of genre films. He has made appearances in notable indie horrors Headless and Applecart. LARRY STERNSHEIN is a lifelong movie fan in Colorado and host of the movie memories podcast "Reel Early." Not only does he love talking about horror and action cinema, but is also a big pro wrestling fan. NATHANIEL THOMPSON has recorded 300 audio commentaries and written five books, most recently The FrightFest Guide to Vampire Movies. You can see him in shows like Eli Roth's History of Horror and Horror's Greatest, and read him yammering about all kinds of movies at mondo-digital.com. ------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 106 - PEEPING TOM (1960) – THE CONTROVERSIAL SLASHER CLASSIC TURNS 65!!

    PEEPING TOM (1960) d. Michael Powell (UK) A provocative psychological thriller and a daring exploration of voyeurism, Michael Powell's PEEPING TOM tells the story of Mark Lewis, a withdrawn cameraman filled with deep pain and dark secrets. Powell's brilliant examination of the human urge to look—but not be seen looking—turns Mark's camera into both weapon and mirror. Peeping Tom is a film about watching, made in a medium built for being watched. Powell, fully aware of cinema's voyeuristic nature, floods the narrative with images of seeing, watching, and being seen—even including a blind character who "sees" more than others. Most disturbingly, Powell offers a psychopathic killer as the protagonist, forcing audiences not just to sympathize, but to identify with him—even more brazenly than Hitchcock's Psycho, released the same year to far greater acclaim and success. Audiences in 1960 Britain were unprepared for such a confrontational and honest viewpoint, and the film was condemned, reviled, and effectively ended Powell's career at home. For decades, Peeping Tom languished in obscurity, more referenced than seen firsthand. Today, 65 years later, it is rightfully recognized as a visionary masterpiece—an unflinching look at the dark heart of cinema itself. 👁️ From taboo-breaking storytelling to its lasting legacy in the genre, Peeping Tom is more than a film—it's a lens into horror's darkest instincts. Join AC and his awesome panel of guests (Christianne Benedict, Dave M Gray, Mackenzie Parker, Lee Price) as they celebrate 65 years of PEEPING TOM! 📺 New horror history episodes every Friday night – Subscribe and hit the bell 🔔 to join the class! ----------------------------------------------------------------- CHRISTIANNE BENEDICT is a cartoonist, film writer, malcontent, and Bloginatrix at https://krelllabs.blogspot.com DAVE "M" GRAY is currently a test subject in a subterranean mad science lab and allowed to send proofs of life to Raiders of the Podcast (raidersofthepodcast.blogspot.com or anywhere you podcast) and Twitch (twitch.tv/sh4ggyr4nd) weekly. MACKENZIE PARKER is a filmmaker living in Los Angeles. He studied at Northern Illinois University and the Moscow Art Theater. He has worked on TV shows such as Sons of Anarchy and Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and is currently working as a staff editor for Digital Alliance. LEE PRICE has dedicated his career to celebrating our history and culture (including horror films!) through freelance writing and 25 years with the Conservation Center for Art & Historic Artifacts. He is a guest blogger at "Wonders in the Dark." ---------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

  43. 107

    Ep 105 - MANIAC (1980): 45 YEARS OF SWEAT, SPLATTER, SLASHERS, AND SPINELL!!

    MANIAC (1980) d. William Lustig (USA) Celebrating 45 years of William Lustig's Maniac (1980) — a cult horror classic that's part slasher, part psychological descent, and all Joe Spinell. Wildly controversial and undeniably influential, Maniac (1980) is one of the most unsettling slasher films of the early 1980s. Directed by William Lustig and starring Joe Spinell—who also co-wrote the screenplay—Maniac follows Frank Zito, a deeply disturbed and isolated man driven by trauma, navigating the grim streets of New York City. Unlike many slasher movies of the era, Maniac is a psychological horror film that focuses less on body count and more on the fractured mind of its killer. Tom Savini's legendary practical effects are a standout, as is Lustig's raw portrayal of urban decay. Jay Chattaway's synth-heavy score and Robert Lindsay's gritty cinematography contribute to a haunting atmosphere that has helped cement the film's cult classic status. Criticized upon release for its extreme violence and perceived misogyny, Maniac has since been reevaluated as a bold example of independent horror cinema—transgressive, unforgettable, and essential viewing for fans of character-driven horror. Join AC and his awesome panel of guests (John W. Bowen, Art Ettinger, Nicola McCafferty) as we celebrate 45 years of MANIAC! ------------------------------------------------ JOHN W. BOWEN has been a columnist, reviewer and feature writer for Rue Morgue magazine since 1999, and has also written sporadically for more (...cough...) "civilized" publications, including the Kingston Whig-Standard, The Toronto Star and Kingston Life Magazine. Born in Dallas and raised in Kingston, Ontario, he is also a professional musician and recovering strip club DJ. ART ETTINGER is the editor of Ultra Violent Magazine, a public defender, and a Razorcake record reviewer. He lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania where his lifelong obsessions with punk rock and horror/exploitation cinema continue to consume him. NICOLA MCCAFFERTY is a PhD candidate in the department of Radio, Television, and Film at Northwestern University. Her research looks at screen representations of nonhuman women such as mannequins, dolls, robots, and aliens in order to deconstruct the overlapping categories of whiteness, humanity, and femininity. Outside of grad school, Nicola has a few stray bylines at Dread Central, has seen every Kristen Stewart movie, and runs an Etsy store (https://www.etsy.com/shop/vvitchroom/?etsrc=sdt) where she sells enamel pins, stickers, and prints inspired by horror and cult films from the 1960s to today.  ------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 104 - BATTLE ROYALE (2000) – THE J-HORROR CLASSIC TURNS 25!!!

    BATTLE ROYALE (2000) d. Kinji Fukasaku (Japan) How did Battle Royale become one of the most influential survival horror films of all time? In this HORROR 101 panel, we dive into Kinji Fukasaku's controversial cult classic—an ultra-violent dystopian thriller where 42 students are forced to kill or be killed. Based on Koushun Takami's novel, Battle Royale blends brutal action with haunting emotion, earning its place as a defining work of J-horror and 2000s cinema. Join AC and his incredible panel of J-Horror enthusiasts (Michelle Kisner, Grant Kuchan, Tyler Pistorius) as we explore the film's horror roots, its commentary on youth, government control, and media spectacle, and how it helped shape everything from The Hunger Games to Fortnite. ----------------------------------------- MICHELLE KISNER is a film critic, freelance writer, and physical media advocate. She has contributed to several websites to include The Cultural Gutter and The Movie Sleuth and is also a member of the Michigan Movie Critics Guild. GRANT KUCHAN is a writer of pulp, wellness coach, and a real swell guy. He plays in any Jug Bands that let him. One day he'll finish another novel, which will probably be available on Amazon, as well as at most Darktower Comics locations across the greater Chicagoland Area. The horror movie that still gives him nightmares is Matango. He saw it when he was six, and still doesn't eat mushrooms. TYLER PISTORIUS is an actor, screenwriter, and producer living in Chicago. His recent works include Death is Business and A Missed Connection, and is currently in development on a new project. ------------------------------------------ Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 103 – THE VAMPIRE FILMS OF 1970 | Count Yorga, Hammer, Dark Shadows & More

    1970 was a breakthrough year for vampire cinema — sexier, bloodier, and bolder than ever before. In this episode of HORROR 101, Dr. AC and his panel explore five iconic films that redefined the vampire mythos for a new era: COUNT YORGA, VAMPIRE (USA) – A modern bloodsucker stalks the streets of Los Angeles. HOUSE OF DARK SHADOWS (USA) – Barnabas Collins goes full Gothic on the big screen. THE VAMPIRE LOVERS (UK) – Hammer Horror leans into eroticism with Ingrid Pitt as Carmilla. COUNT DRACULA (Spain) – Jess Franco directs Christopher Lee in a rarely faithful take on Bram Stoker's novel. THE NUDE VAMPIRE (France) – Jean Rollin's surreal art-horror vision blends sci-fi and sexuality. 🎙️ Featuring special guests: Chad Hawks, Barry Kaufman, Alan Tromp, and Bobby Zier. If you're into classic horror, cult cinema, or just love a good vampire flick, this one's for you. New episodes every Friday night!

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    Ep 102 - ROMAN POLANSKI'S REPULSION (1965): MADNESS, SEX, AND SILENCE

    REPULSION (1965) d. Roman Polanski (UK) Co-written and directed by Roman Polanski, Repulsion (1965) is a landmark psychological horror film that explores the mental disintegration of a young woman, Carole (expertly played by Catherine Deneuve), living alone in London. Polanski's first English-language feature—and the first in his iconic "Apartment Trilogy," followed by Rosemary's Baby and The Tenant—Repulsion dives deep into themes of isolation, sexual repression, and psychological trauma. When Carole's sister leaves her alone for two weeks, paranoia and terrifying hallucinations take over her world. Polanski masterfully uses the apartment setting (designed by Seamus Flannery), Gil Taylor's surreal camerawork, and Stephen Dalby's eerie sound design to visualize Carole's descent into madness. Cracking walls, grasping hands, and nightmarish shadows blur the line between reality and delusion, all set to Chico Hamilton's moody jazz score. Join AC and his panel of horror enthusiasts (Dodd Alley, Matthew Amador, Thomas Puhr, and Elena Romea) as we analyze Repulsion's lasting influence, its place in horror history, the complicated relationship between art and artist, and why it remains one of the 1960s' most disturbing and enduring works. --------------------------------------------- DODD ALLEY is an author (Gamers and Gorehounds: The Influence of Video Games on the Contemporary American Horror Film) and has a Masters in Film Studies from Ohio University, where he taught courses on Cult Cinema and Hollywood Reflexive films. MATTHEW AMADOR is an actor and owner of Matador Behavioral Health, where he utilizes narrative fiction as a means to process trauma and anxiety through psychotherapy.  www.MatadorChicago.com  THOMAS M. PUHR's writing has appeared in Bright Lights Film Journal and the Los Angeles Review of Books, among others. His book, Fate in Film: A Deterministic Approach to Cinema, is available from Wallflower Press. He is the co-host of Gut Punch, a new film podcast from Beneficial Shock! magazine. ELENA ROMEA is the creator behind SpanishFear.com and Horror Rises from Spain. A researcher in literature and cinema, she holds a Ph.D. in Spanish Studies with a dissertation about the filmmaker José Val del Omar. Her work explores themes of estrangement, horror, myth, and cultural conflict. ------------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

  47. 103

    Ep 101 - DARIO ARGENTO'S PHENOMENA (AKA CREEPERS) (1985) TURNS 40!!!

    PHENOMENA (1985) d. Dario Argento (Italy)  Perhaps the only "insect detective" movie out there on the shelves, featuring a very young Jennifer Connelly (released one year before Labyrinth) as the daughter of a famous American movie star sent away to study at an exclusive Swiss girl's academy, whose students just happen to be falling victim to a homicidal killer. But as this is an Argento movie, things are hardly what they seem. Those familiar with Donald Pleasance primarily for his increasingly loony portrayals of Dr. Loomis in the Halloween series should check out his fine, subdued work here as a wheelchair-bound entomologist with a wavering Scottish accent, while Deep Red's Daria Nicolodi adds another winning portrayal to her CV as the troubled Frau Bruckner. The strong opening half hour is followed by a middle section riddled with kinetic fits and starts, with a bizarre, gory ending that has "kitchen sink" writ large upon it. (All eyes on the monkey.) Argento elects for a song score comprised of myriad recording artists (including Bill Wyman, Motorhead, and Goblin), and while much of it works, it occasionally calls attention to itself rather than complementing the onscreen action (particularly with Iron Maiden's offerings).  Potentially a bit much for the uninitiated, but those accustomed to Argento's lack of narrative logic and flair for the unexpected will enjoy the ride. In honor of the film's 40th anniversary, we have a full house (of horrors): Jon Kitley (Kitley's Krypt, Discover the Horror), Bryan Martinez (The Giallo Room), Adam Rockoff (Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film, The Horror of It All), and Lawrence P. Raffel and Carl Lyon (Monsters at Play, FEARNet) sharing reminiscences about bootleg tape trading, early internet message boards and usernames, and, of course, their first encounters with PHENOMENA and how their feelings have changed (or not) over the years. Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 100 - MOTEL HELL (1980): 45 YEARS OF CRITTERS AND FRITTERS!!

    MOTEL HELL (1980) d. Kevin Connor (USA) "It takes all kinds of critters to make Farmer Vincent's Fritters." So runs the tagline for 1980's Motel Hell, an endearing oddball combo of black humor and horror, featuring veteran character actor Rory Calhoun as Vincent, the proprietor of the Motel Hello, where the O on the neon sign keeps going on the blink. Vincent and his equally wacky sister Ida (a pre-Porky's Nancy Parsons) make their living by ensnaring unsuspecting motorists to fill up the skins of their famous Farmer Smith sausages. For his first American feature, Kevin Connor took a break from directing Amicus' fantasy epics (such as The Land that Time Forgot, At The Earth's Core, and Warlords of Atlantis) to helm the madness provided by the sibling screenwriting/producing team of Robert and Steven-Charles Jaffee, and does a smashing job balancing the chainsaws and chuckles. Calhoun and Parsons are terrific in their respective roles, and the spirited set-up and multitude of off-the-wall vignettes have earned Motel Hell a lasting cult reputation, distinguishing it from the glut of slashers emerging around the same time. Join AC and his awesome panel of guests (Jessalyn Abbott, S.A. Bradley, Eric Fritzius, Jen Olson, John Pata) as we head on down to the farm and celebrate 45 years of Motel Hell! -------------------------------------------------------- JESSALYN ABBOTT is a writer, producer and editor. She produced and edited LIKE ME which premiered at the 2017 SXSW Film Festival and was nominated for a grand jury award. Her most recent effort, PuLL: A Dark Comedy, is currently in pre-production. S.A. BRADLEY hosts the "Hellbent for Horror" podcast, is the author of "Screaming for Pleasure: How Horror Makes You Happy and Healthy," and lectured at Webster University and The College of Idaho. His show, "My Horror Manifesto," played in NYC. ERIC FRITZIUS writes things, acts in others and records mouth noises sold in the form of audiobooks. You can find his stuff at MisterHerman.com JENNIFER OLSON is a lifelong horror fan and mother of three monster kids. She is a former member of The Flint Horror Con, and currently part of the Synapse Films street team! JOHN PATA lives in Wisconsin. He's made some horror films, he's hosted some horror stuff, and he's read some horror books. ------------------------------------------------ Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 99 - DEAD OF NIGHT (1945) STILL HAUNTS US 80 YEARS LATER!!

    DEAD OF NIGHT (1945) d. Various (UK) A landmark horror film, 1945's Dead of Night was produced by Britain's famed Ealing Studios and directed by a team of mostly younger upstarts including Charles Crichton, Basil Dearden, and Robert Hamer, with veteran Alberto Cavalcanti and producer Michael Balcon marshaling their forces. Widely regarded as one of the earliest and most influential horror anthology films, Dead of Night presents a quintet of eerie and imaginative stories linked by a chilling framing narrative: an architect arrives at a country house, only to realize he's been there before—in a recurring dream. As he shares this realization, the guests recount a series of supernatural tales involving haunted mirrors, ghostly hearses, creepy ventriloquist dummies, and more. Combining original stories and adaptations, Dead of Night blends psychological horror with dark humor, setting the blueprint for anthology series like The Twilight Zone, Tales from the Crypt, and Black Mirror. Its influence still echoes through horror cinema today. Lock your doors, pour yourself a cup of tea, and enjoy some bite-sized nightmares as AC and his incredible panel of guests (Christianne Benedict, Cati Glidewell, John McDevitt, Lee Price, Alan Tromp) celebrate the 80th anniversary of Dead of Night! BONUS: Here's the link to Lee's article referenced throughout: https://wondersinthedark.wordpress.com/2025/05/15/dead-of-night-1945-50-clinical-observations/ --------------------------------------------- CHRISTIANNE BENEDICT is a cartoonist, film writer, malcontent, and Bloginatrix at https://krelllabs.blogspot.com JOHN MCDEVITT is a lifelong cinephile who programs two recurring film events in Chicago: SUPER-HORROR-RAMA!, a weekly horror gathering with film screenings at Sideshow Gelato, and Fetish Film Forum, a monthly screening series about fetish, kink, leather, and BDSM at the Leather Archives & Museum. John is fascinated by all genres of cinema and appreciates horror most of all for its willingness to explore what makes us uncomfortable and for the compassion it often extends to its characters and the viewer.  CATI GLIDEWELL (aka The Blonde in Front) is a Chicago-based film critic, lifelong cinephile, film festival jury member, and a member of Chicago Indie Critics since 2020. You can find her on all social media platforms, as well as Post Mortem radio and Radio of Horror on YouTube. LEE PRICE has dedicated his career to celebrating our history and culture (including horror films!) through freelance writing and 25 years with the Conservation Center for Art & Historic Artifacts. He is a guest blogger at "Wonders in the Dark." ALAN TROMP is a golden age Monster Kid, who has published articles in Filmfax, Twilight Zone Magazine, and We Belong Dead publications in the UK. He was scriptwriter for the shot-on-video nightmare, The Soul Eaters. --------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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    Ep 98 - HOUSE OF USHER (1960): CORMAN + PRICE + POE = GOTHIC HORROR GOLD

    HOUSE OF USHER (1960) d. Roger Corman (USA) PIT AND THE PENDULUM (1961) d. Roger Corman (USA) Journey into the heart of gothic horror with House of Usher, Roger Corman's moody and mesmerizing film version of Edgar Allan Poe's short story. Released in 1960, Usher marks the beginning of Corman's AIPoe series, his celebrated octet of Poe-inspired works, and it's an atmospheric triumph of mood and style. Leading the cast is the legendary Vincent Price, in one of his most memorable roles, the fragile and haunted Roderick Usher—a man convinced that his family line is cursed and must come to an end. Price is joined by Mark Damon and Myrna Fahey, all making a meal of Richard Matheson's swirling dialogue. Belying the film's moderate budget, Corman and cinematographer Floyd Crosby's rich dramatic lighting lend a grand, visual presence. Daniel Haller's stylized Usher sets become a living extension of the family's doom, while Les Baxter's moody musical cues evoke a decaying grandeur. Join AC and his legendary panel of guests (Jorge Didaco, Dave M. Gray, David Del Valle) as we celebrate 65 years of HOUSE OF USHER! ------------------------------------------------------ JORGE DIDACO is a Brazil-based teacher on theatre, performance, and film. He contributed the essays for The Innocents for Horror 101: The A-List of Horror Films and Monster Movies and In a Glass Cage for Hidden Horror. DAVE "M" GRAY is currently a test subject in a subterranean mad science lab and allowed to send proofs of life to Raiders of the Podcast (raidersofthepodcast.blogspot.com or anywhere you podcast) and Twitch (twitch.tv/sh4ggyr4nd) weekly. DAVID DEL VALLE is a renowned film historian, journalist, and commentator specializing in horror, science fiction, and cult cinema. He has contributed to publications like Fangoria and Cinefantastique, and produced Vincent Price's only interview focused on his horror career. Del Valle's books include Lost Horizons Beneath the Hollywood Sign and Six Reels Under. ----------------------------------------------------- Keep Searching, Keep Exploring, and, most of all, Keep Sharing the Scare!

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

HORROR 101 with Dr. AC is a horror movie podcast that revisits classic horror films on milestone anniversaries (20, 30, 40, 50 years, and more). Each episode features a lively rotating panel of horror fans discussing the film's legacy, personal memories, cultural impact, and what makes it a lasting favorite.If you love deep dives into horror movies like The Exorcist, A Nightmare on Elm Street, or Frankenstein, this podcast is for you. Come celebrate horror history—one anniversary at a time.

HOSTED BY

Aaron Christensen

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How many episodes does HORROR 101 with Dr. AC have?

HORROR 101 with Dr. AC currently has 50 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is HORROR 101 with Dr. AC about?

HORROR 101 with Dr. AC is a horror movie podcast that revisits classic horror films on milestone anniversaries (20, 30, 40, 50 years, and more). Each episode features a lively rotating panel of horror fans discussing the film's legacy, personal memories, cultural impact, and what makes it a lasting...

How often does HORROR 101 with Dr. AC release new episodes?

HORROR 101 with Dr. AC has 50 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

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Who hosts HORROR 101 with Dr. AC?

HORROR 101 with Dr. AC is created and hosted by Aaron Christensen.
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