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Scooby-Doo! and the Goblin King

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Scooby-Doo! and the Goblin King is the twelfth in the series of Scooby-Doo direct-to-video films produced by Warner Bros. Animation. This movie, along with the next film Samurai Sword were both produced and completed in 2008, but Goblin King was released first in time for the Halloween season.  All the main voice actors of Mystery, Inc. reprise their roles. This is the first Scooby cartoon produced entirely without either one of the original creators, William Hanna and Joseph Barbera.

Unlike the previous seven movies, this outing is similar to Zombie IslandWitch’s Ghost - which previously also featured Tim Curry - Alien Invaders and Cyber Chase, by making all the fantastical elements of the story real. It is also significant in the fact that it shows Shaggy and Scooby being the main characters, something that has not been seen since the television movies of the 80′s. The film is a bit more light-hearted than others. It is the 5th, as well as the 2nd-to-last, movie that involves Scooby and the whole gang where the monsters all turn out to be real, instead of a person in a costume, and was not well received.

The Mystery, Inc. gang visit a Halloween carnival on Halloween night. When the magician “The Amazing Krudsky” (voiced by Wayne Knight) does not allow Scooby to see his show, Shaggy and Scooby expose Krudsky as a fraud. Later, the rebellious fairy Princess Willow (voiced by Hayden Panettiere) enters Krudsky’s tent, where he secretly reveals his wishes to become a real magician. The fairy inadvertently causes Krudsky to notice an entry on the Goblin Scepter in a spell book. The Goblin Scepter can be combined with fairy magic to control Halloween. Krudsky then gets an idea to obtain the scepter and rule the world with it. The fairy decides to toy with him, but while flying, the fairy accidentally slams her small body against a metal chair knocking her out; Krudsky then crushes her with his flyswatter. When he notices her cry of pain from being crushed, he sees that she is a real fairy, kidnaps her, and absorbs her magical powers, becoming a real magician.

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Meanwhile, Shaggy and Scooby trick-or-treat all night. Their last stop is a spooky looking house which claims to be a “genuine magic shoppe”. However, a very loud thunderstorm also begins, frightening our heroes. Inside, they meet the kind Mr. Gibbles (voiced by Wallace Shawn), who reveals that magic really does exist. At that moment, Willow enters being chased by Krudsky. Krudsky captures the Princess, turns Gibbles into a rabbit, and steals the magic equipment before leaving. Mr. Gibbles explains to an astonished Shaggy and Scooby that Krudsky, after capturing the good magic of the princess, will now want the bad magic held in the scepter of the Goblin King, which will cause an imbalance in the supernatural order. Shaggy and Scooby must go into the world of magic via the Grim Reaper Railway, get the scepter before Krudsky can, and return home before sunrise or else they will be trapped in the magic world forever…

Wikipedia | IMDb | Scoobypedia

‘The interaction of the whole cast is one thing that made these later movies so interesting. Even the recurring character of Del Chillman gave the older characters someone interesting to play off of. Getting back to just Scooby and Shaggy leaves only two predictable jokes – the two are either really scared or really hungry … In one of the better visual jokes of the film, the two take a magic potion to sneak closer to the Goblin King to steal his sceptre. Scooby turns into Velma and Shaggy turns into Daphne. Unfortunately, the scene is wasted. In what quickly becomes cheap and lazy plot turns, the two are revealed to be themselves before they can steal the sceptre.’ Musgo Del Jefe.  Read more at: BlogCritics.org

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‘By bringing in magic and real life ghosts and witches, it loses its charm somewhat. The plot is also a little all over the place, seemingly more interested in packing as many monsters in as possible rather than focusing on a story … The animation, it has to be said, is excellent, although the sight of an animated Daphne dressed up in a skintight cat suit was a little more pleasing than it perhaps should have been. The 5.1 surround sound track adds to the whole atmosphere and the vocal work is great, the drafted in Hollywood talent of Tim Curry, James Belushi and Lauren Bacall adding some weight to proceedings.’ Mark Oakley. Read more at Den of Geek

In the scene where Shaggy & Scooby-Doo enter the monster bar when the monsters are singing, some monsters from Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!What’s New, Scooby-Doo?The Scooby Doo ShowThe New Scooby-Doo Movies, and Scooby-Doo! and the Legend of the Vampire are sighted. Here’s a list of the featured monsters:

  • The Werewolf Ghost from “Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Werewolf”
  • The Phantom Shadow from “A Night of Fright is No Delight”
  • The Creeper from “Jeepers! It’s the Creeper”
  • The Mummy of Ankha from “Scooby-Doo and a Mummy, Too”
  • The Snow Ghost from “That’s Snow Ghost”
  • The Ghost of Mr. Hyde from “Nowhere to Hyde”
  • The No-Faced Zombie from “The No-Face Zombie Chase Case”
  • The Ozark Witch from “The Ozark Witch Switch”
  • Penguin‘s Troll disguise from “The Caped Crusader Caper”
  • A blue version of The Roller Ghoster from “Roller Ghoster Ride”
  • A Kelp Monster from “Scooby-Doo, Where’s the Crew?”

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I Am Zozo

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I am Zozo is a 2012 horror film written and directed by Scott Di Lalla and shot entirely on Kodak Super 8mm stock. It stars Kelly McLaren, Courtney Foxworthy, Demetrius Sager and Caleb Courtney. It follows a group of people that run afoul of a demon after using a Ouija board.

The film won Best Feature and Audience Choice Awards at the 2012 U.S. Super 8 Film Festival and was picked up  by Image Entertainment for a November 19th DVD and VOD release.

Wikipedia | IMDb | FacebookOfficial site

On Halloween night, five teens decide to liven up their party with some innocent fun: by summoning the spirits. At first, it’s all nervous laughter and scoffing. Then, the night takes a sinister turn: the board reveals truths, exposes secrets it cannot possibly know, and triggers inexplicable events within the darkened house. As the session continues, an entity reveals itself: Zozo. And as the terrified teens are about to discover, once you make contact with this ancient, demonic force, you’re no longer playing a game…

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Peter Stumpp (folklore werewolf, cannibal, serial killer)

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Peter Stumpp (died 1589) (whose name is also spelled as Peter StubePe(e)ter StubbePeter Stübbe or Peter Stumpf) was a Rhenish farmer, accused of being a serial killer and a cannibal, also known as the “Werewolf of Bedburg”. There is much confusion around his real name as ‘Stumpp’ quite possibly refers to the fact that he only had one hand. This being the case, it’s quite possible his name was actually Griswold.

Understandably, primary sources from the 16th Century are scarce but a 16 page pamphlet exists, written in English having being translated from the original German; no copy of the latter is know to exist. Essentially an early, lurid tabloid, the document recounts how Stumpp, a wealthy farmer born in the village of Epprath near Cologne, who was accused of murdering and eating countless victims over a period of 25 years, as well as having an incestuous relationship with his daughter, another distant relative and a succubus sent by the Devil.

Most sensationally, he was accused of being a werewolf, something he was happy to attest to, claiming he had been given a magic belt by the Devil which allowed him to metamorphose into “the likeness of a greedy, devouring wolf, strong and mighty, with eyes great and large, which in the night sparkled like fire, a mouth great and wide, with most sharp and cruel teeth, a huge body, and mighty paws.” Whilst in this form, he is said to have gorged on the flesh of goats, lambs, and sheep, as well as men, women, and children. Being threatened with torture he confessed to killing and eating fourteen children, two pregnant women, whose fetuses he ripped from their wombs and “ate their hearts panting hot and raw,” which he later described as “dainty morsels.” One of the fourteen children was his own son, whose brain he was reported to have devoured. Upon removing the belt, he returned to his human form.

It perhaps goes without saying that Stumpp was made to pay heavily for his outrageous crimes, as was his daughter. His execution, fittingly on October 31st 1589, is one of the most brutal on record: He was put to the wheel, where flesh was torn from his body with red-hot pincers, followed by his arms and legs. Then his limbs were broken with a hammer to prevent him from returning from the grave, before he was beheaded and burned on a pyre. His daughter Sybil (Beell) and his mistress Katharina Trump (!) had already been strangled and were burned along with Stumpp’s body.

After the executions, a real wolf’s body was hung in public, his head replaced with Stubbe’s head as a warning to anyone else contemplating lycanthropy. It is unknown how many, if any crimes Stumpp had actually committed, though there is suspcion he was simply framed by local, jealous villagers.

Daz Lawrence

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Vampire Mallows and Freaky Fingers (snacks)

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Vampire Mallows and Freaky Fingers

For Halloween 2011, British-based company Cadbury (owned by Mondelēz International after its controversialKraft Foods corporate takeover), launched horror-themed confectionary Vampire Mallows and Freaky Fingers. The former are made with a biscuit base, wrapped in low cocoa milk chocolate, filled with mallow and a blood-red blackcurrant sauce filling. Freaky Fingers are the white chocolate biscuit fingers the company normally produces, except when broken they are again blood-red.

Like many Halloween tie-ins these were an obvious attempt to rebrand a familiar product with a slightly ghoulish twist but were brief fearsome fun for kids and adults who act like kids…

Posted by AJS


Jack o’ lantern (folklore)

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A jack o’ lantern is a carved pumpkin, turnip or beet, associated chiefly with the holiday of Hallowe’en, and was named after the phenomenon of strange light flickering over peat bogs, called will-o’-the-wisp or jack-o’-lantern. In a jack-o’-lantern, the top is cut off, and the inside flesh then scooped out; an image, usually a monstrous face, is carved out, and the lid replaced.

The origin of Jack o’ Lantern carving is uncertain. The carving of vegetables has been a common practice in many parts of the world, with Gourds being the earliest plant species domesticated by humans c. 10,000 years ago, primarily for their carving potential. But the innovation of carving a Jack-O-Lantern specifically to celebrate Halloween was first recorded in the U.S., with the earliest known reference occurring in 1866. There is a common belief that its carving came to the U.S. from Ireland, where turnips, mangelwurzel or beets were supposedly used. According to historian Ronald Hutton, in the 19th century, Halloween guisers in parts of Ireland and the Scottish Highlands commonly used jack-o’-lanterns made from turnips and mangelwurzels. They were “often carved with grotesque faces to represent spirits or goblins”. In these areas, 31 October–1 November was known as Samhain and it was seen as a time when spirits or fairies were particularly active.

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The story of the Jack-O’-lantern comes in many variants and is similar to the story of Will-o’-the-wisp retold in different forms across Western Europe, with variations being present in the folklore of Norway, Sweden, England, Ireland, Wales, Germany, Italy and Spain. An old Irish folk tale from the mid-19th Century tells of Stingy Jack, a lazy yet shrewd farmer who uses a cross to trap the Devil. One story says that Jack tricked the Devil into climbing an apple tree, and once he was up there Jack quickly placed crosses around the trunk or carved a cross into the bark, so that the Devil couldn’t get down. Another tale says that Jack put a key in the Devil’s pocket while he was suspended upside-down.

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Another version of the story says that Jack was getting chased by some villagers from whom he had stolen, when he met the Devil, who claimed it was time for him to die. However, the thief stalled his death by tempting the Devil with a chance to bedevil the church-going villagers chasing him. Jack told the Devil to turn into a coin with which he would pay for the stolen goods (the Devil could take on any shape he wanted); later, when the coin/Devil disappeared, the Christian villagers would fight over who had stolen it. The Devil agreed to this plan. He turned himself into a silver coin and jumped into Jack’s wallet, only to find himself next to a cross Jack had also picked up in the village. Jack had closed the wallet tight, and the cross stripped the Devil of his powers; and so he was trapped.

In both folktales, Jack only lets the Devil go when he agrees never to take his soul. After a while the thief died, as all living things do. Of course, his life had been too sinful for Jack to go to heaven; however, the Devil had promised not to take his soul, and so he was barred from hell as well. Jack now had nowhere to go. He asked how he would see where to go, as he had no light, and the Devil mockingly tossed him an ember from the flames of hell, that would never burn out. Jack carved out one of his turnips (which were his favorite food), put the ember inside it, and began endlessly wandering the Earth for a resting place. He became known as “Jack of the Lantern”, or Jack-o’-lantern.

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Jack-o-lanterns were also considered a way of protecting your home against the undead, especially vampires.

In recent times, the most famous use of a Halloween jack o’ lantern was during the credit sequence for John Carpenter’s iconic 1978 horror film Halloween.

Wikipedia


Halloween H20: 20 Years Later

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Halloween H20: 20 Years Later is a 1998 American slasher film and is the seventh instalment in the Halloween film series. It was directed by Steve Miner (Friday the 13th, Part II and III, Lake Placid) and stars Jamie Lee Curtis, LL Cool J, Josh Hartnett and Michelle Williams. The film was released on August 5, 1998 to mark the 20th anniversary of the original Halloween.

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The screenplay, based on a story by Kevin Williamson (Scream) further developed by Robert Zapia, was written by Zapia and Matt Greenberg. It is a direct sequel to John Carpenter’s Halloween and Halloween II and set in an alternate timeline in which the events that transpired in Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers, Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, and Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers never occurred.

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Laurie Strode, now the dean of a Northern California private school with an assumed name, must battle the Shape one last time. This time the life of her own son hangs in the balance…

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Buy Halloween: the Curse of Michael Myers and Halloween: H20 on Blu-ray from Amazon.com

 John Carpenter was initially in the running to be the director for this particular follow-up since Curtis wanted to reunite the cast and crew of the original to have active involvement in it. It was believed that Carpenter opted out because he wanted no active part in the sequel; however, this is not the case. Carpenter agreed to direct the movie, but his starting fee as director was $10 million. Carpenter rationalized this by believing the hefty fee was compensation for revenue he never received from the original Halloween, a matter that was still a bit of contention between Carpenter and Akkad even after twenty years had passed. When Akkad balked at Carpenter’s fee, Carpenter walked away from the project.

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Scream writer/producer Kevin Williamson was involved in various areas of production on this particular sequel including coming up with the treatment that the film was based on. Although not directly credited, he provided rewrites in character dialogue, which is seen heavily throughout the teen moments. Miramax/Dimension Films felt his involvement as a co-executive producer merited being credited. The original working title for the film was Halloween 7: The Revenge of Laurie Strode.

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As explained in Halloween: 25 Years of Terror, some scenes for Halloween H20 were re-shot due to complaints about the Myers mask used in the film. Scenes that could not be re-shot had a CGI mask replace them frame by frame. Four masks were made for the film.

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“There are a lot of great moments to be had beyond the Myers/Strode battle, including a mother and daughter’s near rest-stop run-in with Myers, a fantastic elevator maiming, and an opening that’s an exquisite callback to the original movie. Sure, it’s a vanity piece, but it’s an entertaining, well-meaning vanity piece that’s hard to fault.” DVD Verdict

“The problem with H20 is that it’s boring, mostly relying on false scares rather than the blood and gore we’ve come to know and love from the Halloween films. It doesn’t help that Michael Myers is hardly around. The film seems content to focus on a Scream-esque group of teens while relegating Myers mostly to the third act.” Beyond Hollywood.com

Halloween H20

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Buy The Slasher Movie Book by J.A. Kerswell from Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

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Wikipedia | IMDb


Halloween II (2009)

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Halloween II – also known as Halloween: H2  and H2: Halloween — is a 2009 American horror film written, directed, and produced by Rob Zombie. The film is a sequel to Zombie’s 2007 reboot of the Halloween film series, and the tenth instalment of the franchise. The film sees the return of lead cast members Malcolm McDowell, Scout Taylor-Compton, and Tyler Mane, who portray Dr. Loomis, Laurie Strode, and Michael Myers in the 2007 film, respectively.

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Picking up where the 2007 film ended, and then jumping ahead one year, Halloween II follows Laurie Strode as she deals with the aftermath of the previous film’s events, Dr. Loomis who is trying to capitalize on those events by publishing a new book that chronicles everything that happened, and Michael Myers as he continues his search for Laurie so that he can reunite with his sister.

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John Carpenter was offered a cameo in the film by Rob Zombie, but he turned it down. Zombie originally stated he would never do a sequel to Halloween, until the studio decided to make it. Then he signed on to write and direct, because he didn’t want someone to ruin his personal vision.

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Buy Halloween II on Blu-ray at Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

“While a direct continuation of his finely scattered 2007 retread, Zombie’s Halloween II is a demented, uninhibited sequel that tears off in a vividly lunatic direction. Zombie’s making this one for himself, folks, and either you succumb to the experience or every single scene is going to feel like multiplex imprisonment.” DVD Times

“Halloween II is a better film than Zombie’s first attempt at reimaging the Michael Myers mythos but it’s still got some pretty serious problems. It improves on the first film in certain ways, but doesn’t really correct enough to save it.” Ian Jane, Rock! Shock! Drop!

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Wikipedia | IMDb

Posted by Will Holland


Halloween: Resurrection

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Halloween: Resurrection is a 2002 American horror film and eighth instalment in the Halloween film series. Directed by Rick Rosenthal, who had also directed Halloween II, the film builds upon the continuity of Halloween H20: 20 Years Later. It continues with the masked serial killer Michael Myers continuing his murderous rampage in his hometown of Haddonfield, but this time, in his old childhood home, now derelict, which is being used for a live internet horror show.

Although more sequels were planned to follow Resurrection, they were later replaced by Rob Zombie’s remake/re-imagining of the original Halloween in 2007. A sequel to the remake was released in 2009.

Three years after the events that happened in California in Halloween H20, Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) had been sent to a psychiatric hospital after it is revealed that she had beheaded a paramedic instead of her brother Michael; the paramedic had located the body of Myers in the dining hall of Laurie’s school, but Myers had attacked the paramedic, crushed his larynx so he wouldn’t cry out and forcefully switched clothing and his mask. Myers then goes into hiding for the next three years.

On October 31, 2001, still in captivity, Laurie, pretending to be heavily medicated, prepares herself for the inevitable confrontation with Michael. When Michael finally appears, Laurie lures him into a trap, but as she attempts to kill Myers, she second guesses herself and goes to remove his mask to make sure that it is really her brother this time. Myers takes advantage, and stabs her in the back before sending her off the roof to her death.

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The following year, six college students – Bill Woodlake (Thomas Ian Nicholas), Donna Chang (Daisy McCrackin), Jen Danzig (Katee Sackhoff), Jim Morgan (Luke Kirby), Rudy Grimes (Sean Patrick Thomas), and Sara Moyer (Bianca Kajlich) – win a competition to appear on an Internet reality show directed by Freddie Harris (Busta Rhymes) and his assistant, Nora Winston (Tyra Banks), in which they have to spend a night in the childhood home of Michael Myers in order to find out what led him to kill. On Halloween, each equipped with head-cameras as well as the cameras laid throughout the house, they start the show, searching the entire house for something that can provide a clue to Michael’s past…

‘The only thing this tired slasher flick may resurrect is nostalgia for when the genre was still fresh and scary. It’s so devoid of joy and energy it makes even ’Jason X‘ look positively Shakespearian by comparison.’ Lou Lumenick, New York Post

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“No, it’s not as single-minded as John Carpenter’s original, but it’s sure a lot smarter and more unnerving than the sequels.” Glenn Lovell, San Jose Mercury News

‘If H20 took the “television star” theory of Scream, this one attempts to be self-referential – and fails, mostly. Sure, a few bits work, like when the Internet audience starts to act like typical fans watching an 80s stalk-and-slash (i.e. “Don’t go in there…he’s right behind you…” etc.). Most of the time, though, the jibes and jests brought on by the Internet webcast gimmick fall on their ass.’ Nate Yapp, Cinema Blend

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‘There is not an intelligent line of dialogue muttered in the film and we are forced to listen to the six moronic teens screeching and doing dumb things that inspire spoof flicks like Scary Movie. For example the heroine at one point actually runs back into the house after she has spent half the film trying to get out.’ Guylaine Cadorette, Hollywood.com

‘Unlike the recent Jason X, which made up for its brain-dead script with some hilarious death scenes, Halloween: Resurrection can’t even manage to pull off a decent claret-stained money shot. An audacious nod to classic British serial killer flick Peeping Tom aside, Rosenthal handles the action with all the flair of a contributor to You’ve Been Framed, leaving us to ponder how any self-respecting director can fail to make a huge guy in a white mask carrying a ten-inch blade frightening.’  Total Film

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Buy Halloween: Resurrection on Miramax Blu-ray from Amazon.com

Wikipedia | IMDb



Donald Pleasence (actor)

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Donald Pleasence (5 October 1919 – 2 February 1995) was an iconic English film, television, and stage actor. His most notable film roles include Michael Myers-obsessed psychiatrist Dr. Sam Loomis in the Halloween series and the villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld, usually stroking a white pussycat, in the James Bond film You Only Live Twice

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Pleasence was born in Worksop, Nottinghamshire and raised in the small village of Grimoldby, Lincolnshire. In 1939, Pleasence started working in repertory theatre, making his acting debut with the company as Hareton in Jane Eyre’s Wuthering Heights. During the Second World War, he was taken prisoner and placed in a German prisoner-of-war camp, where he produced and acted in plays.  He would later play Flight Lieutenant Colin Blythe in The Great Escape.

In 1954 he received critical acclaim in a BBC TV version of George Orwell’s sci-fi nightmare novel 1984. The adaptation was by Nigel Kneale (Quatermass) and also starred Peter Cushing. In 1960, He received good notices as the tramp in Harold Pinter’s enigmatic play The Caretaker, a part he would again play in a 1990 revival (as seen by the author of this bio).

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Pleasence provided the voice-over for the British Public Information FilmThe Spirit of Dark and Lonely Water in 1973. Intended to warn children of the dangers of playing near water, the film attained notoriety for allegedly giving children nightmares.

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Pleasence’s first appearance in America was in 1962 in an episode of The Twilight Zone, playing an aging and suicidal teacher at a boys’ school in the episode The Changing of the Guard. In 1963, he appeared in an episode of The Outer Limits entitled The Man With the Power. He hosted the 1981 Halloween episode of Saturday Night Live with punk rock band Fear.

Horror fans best know the actor as the obsessed Dr. Loomis in the Halloween slasher series but he appeared and later starred in many horror films, beginning with a memorable role as notorious grave robber William Hare in The Flesh and the Fiends.

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Horror filmography:

The Flesh and the Fiends / Mania (UK, 1960)

Circus of Horrors (UK, 1960)

The Hands of Orlac (1960)

What a Carve Up! / No Place Like Homicide (UK, 1961)

Dr. Crippen (1963)

Eye of the Devil (1966)

Death Line / Raw Meat (UK, 1972)

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Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1973, TV movie)

Tales That Witness Madness (UK, 1973)

The Mutations / The Freakmaker (UK, 1973)

From Beyond the Grave (UK, 1974)

House of the Damned (Spain, 1974)

Barry McKenzie Holds His Own (Australia, 1975. Sex comedy with Pleasence as vampire Count Von Plasma)

I Don’t Want to be Born / The Monster (UK, 1975)

The Devil’s Men / Land of the Minotaur (Greece, 1976)

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The Uncanny (UK, 1977)

The Dark Secret of Harvest Home (USA, 1978, TV movie. Narrator)

Night Creature / Out of the Darkness (1978)

Halloween (USA, 1978)

Dracula (UK, 1979)

The Ghost Sontana (UK, 1980, BBC TV)

The Monster Club (UK, 1981)

Halloween II (USA, 1981)

Alone in the Dark (USA, 1982)

The Devonsville Terror (USA, 1983)

Frankenstein’s Great Aunt Tillie (USA, 1984)

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Phenomena / Creepers (Italy, 1985)

Nothing Underneath (Italy, 1985)

Into the Darkness (UK, 1986)

Specters (Italy, 1987)

Prince of Darkness / John Carpenter’s Prince of Darkness (USA, 1987)

Off Balance (Italy, 1988)

Vampire in Venice (Italy, 1988)

Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers (USA, 1988)

The House of Usher (filmed in South Africa, 1989)

Paganini Horror (Italy, 1989)

Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers (USA, 1989)

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Buried Alive (filmed in South Africa, 1990)

Shadows and Fog (USA, 1991)

Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers (USA, 1995)

Fatal Frames (Italy, 1996)

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Buy The Films of Donald Pleasence from Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com


The Monkey’s Paw (short story)

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The Monkey’s Paw is a horror short story, published in England in 1902, by author W. W. Jacobs.

The story involves Mr. and Mrs. White and their adult son, Herbert. Sergeant-Major Morris, a friend of the Whites who has been part of the British Army in India, introduces them to the monkey’s paw, telling of its mysterious powers to grant three wishes and of its journey from an old fakir to his comrade, who used his third wish to wish for death. Sergeant-Major Morris throws the monkey’s paw into the fire but White quickly retrieves it. Morris warns White, but White, thinking about what he could use the paw for, ignores him. Mr. White wishes for £200 to be used as the final payment on his house. Having made the wish his son, Herbert, is killed by machinery at the factory where he works. The couple gets compensation of £200.

Ten days after the funeral, Mrs. White, almost mad with grief, asks her husband to use the paw to wish Herbert back to life. Reluctantly, he does so. Shortly afterwards there is a knock at the door. Mrs. White fumbles at the locks in an attempt to open the door. Mr. White knows, however, that he cannot allow their revived son in, as his appearance will be too hideous. Mr. White was required to identify the body, which had been mutilated by the accident. It has now lain buried for more than a week. While Mrs. White tries to open the door, Mr. White makes his third wish (for his son to be dead and in his grave), and the knocking stops. Mrs. White opens the door to find no one there…

Wikipedia

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Buy The Monkey’s Paw from Amazon.co.uk

In 2011, Ricky Lewis Jr made a short film adaptation:

The story has been adapted into other media many times, including:

A 1933 ‘lost’ US adaptation by RKO directed by Wesley Ruggles, Ernest B. Schoedsack (see artwork above)

A 1948 British film adaptation directed by Norman Lee.

house in marsh road + monkey's paw dvd

Buy DVD from Amazon.co.uk

A 1965 episode of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour TV series entitled ‘The Monkey’s Paw – A Retelling’

The segment “Wish You Were Here” from the EC Comics 1972 film Tales from the Crypt is an adaptation.

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Bob Clark‘s Deathdream is inspired by the short story.

The Are You Afraid of the Dark? episode “The Tale of the Twisted Claw” is based on the story.

A short film adaptation directed by James Henschen. Filmed in 2003. Tribalfilm

A variant of this story, using a genie in a bottle, was featured in the The Twilight Zone episode “The Man in the Bottle“.

In an episode of The Monkees, titled “The Monkee’s Paw”, a nightclub magician sells the band a cursed monkey’s paw in revenge after they unwittingly force him out of a job.

The Ripping Yarns story “The Curse of the Claw”, first broadcast in 1977 and starring Michael Palin, is a spoof in the style of Monty Python, and is loosely inspired by “The Monkey’s Paw”.

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Treehouse of Horror II - In the 1991 Halloween episode of The Simpsons, one of the stories is about how Homer gets a monkey’s paw that grants him four wishes. Each member of the Simpson family (except for Marge) makes a wish, which have terrible consequences. In a humorous twist, Homer gladly gives the paw to his neighbor Ned Flanders, only for Ned’s wishes to (apparently) go off without any of the usual consequences, causing Homer to grumble “I wish I had a monkey paw.

Five Superb Tales of Horror and the Macabre, 1972, Story Four, “Wish You Were Here” is an adaptation of The Monkey’s Claw featuring Richard Greene.

The 21st episode of the seventh season of the X-FilesJe Souhaite, is a remake of the monkey’s paw myth in which Mulder seems to solve the puzzle.

The book Prom Nights From Hell: a novel consisting of 5 short stories written by Meg CabotStephenie MeyerKim HarrisonMichele Jaffe and Lauren Myracle. Myracle’s The Corsage is an adaptation of The Monkey’s Paw.

The K-Horror movie Wishing Stairs recasts the story with the family replaced by a trio of students at an all-girls school and the monkey paw replaced by the eponymous stairs.

The 2013 horror film The Monkey’s Paw is based on the W.W. Jacobs short story. The film stars Stephen LangC.J. ThomasonCorbin Bleu, and Charles S. Dutton,

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“The Monkey’s Paw” was adapted as a radio play in 1979 as part of the CBC radio drama series Nightfall.

“The Monkey’s Paw” was again adapted as a radio play narrated by Christopher Lee in 2004 as part of the BBC radio drama series Christopher Lee’s Fireside Tales

In the manga xxxHolic, a graduate student studying ancient folklore insists on obtaining the Monkey’s Paw even after being told that she is not fated to have it and will suffer horrible consequences if she were to go against fate and use it. She disregards this warning as she firmly believes that bad things only happen to other people. Five wishes (a wish for each finger on the Monkey’s Paw) later, she found out too late that she was wrong.

Stephen King‘s Pet Sematary expands on the theme of bringing the dead back to life, and includes a quote from the Monkey’s Paw.

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In the book The Dead Zone, by Stephen King, the character John Smith relates his newfound psychic powers to the wishes granted in The Monkey’s Paw, realizing that his powers can help people, but they can frighten them away, and that they give him unwanted publicity.

In The Sims 2 for consoles, when a player selects Search Couch while sitting on a sofa, he can find a “Mysterious Zombie Monkey Paw”.

In the web-comic Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, the 4 August 2010 comic features a severed monkey’s paw that grants wishes with consequences.

In the novel adaptation of 1985 film The Goonies, there is a sequence of spooky stories told by the main characters, and Mouth recalls a story which Stef promptly identifies as The Monkey’s Paw. This sequence isn’t in the movie.

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Posted by Adrian J. Smith using information via Wikipedia which is freely and legally available to share and remix under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. All review quotes are attributed and links are provided to relevant sites or sources. Horrorpedia supports the sharing of information and opinions with the wider horror community.


The Final Cut: The Modern Mythology of the Snuff Movie

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Snuff videos showing scenes of murder, mutilation and cannibalism were on sale alongside Disney films at a children’s comic fair… Trading Standards officers believe the video shows genuine footage of chanting, half-naked Amazon Indians butchering a white man depicted as a jungle explorer.”

THE DAILY MAIL, April 1992

Many serial killers found an outlet for their vivid sexual fantasies in pornography. Ed Kemper scoured detective magazines for pictures of corpses and frequented ‘snuff movies’ in which intercourse is a prelude to murder.”

Newsweek, quoted in THE AGE OF SEX CRIME, Jane Caputi 1987

There’s a lot of gay people there, gay men, so they have young boys. You get a lot of rent boys there, because they’re offered a load of money, and then they become snuff movies.”

Janet’, quoted in BLASPHEMOUS RUMOURS, Andrew Boyd 1991

It’s the darker side of the film business – the claims that someone, somewhere, is producing films which feature genuine murder and torture. Films which are then sold or screened for vast sums of money to wealthy decadents, who are so bored with life that they can only get their kicks from watching the final taboos being shattered… or videos which are circulated amongst underground networks of child molesters and rapists, ensuring that the violation of the victim continues long after their death. The term for these movies is at once shocking in its cynicism, and unforgettable in the horror of its implications: Snuff.

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Nobody is entirely sure when the stories began. Some claim that rumours were circulating as far back as the Forties, but the modern fixation with the idea of the Snuff Movie can be traced to that turbulent period as the Sixties crossed over into the Seventies, and long-held ideas of morality began to crumble. In 1961, a film-maker still risked prosecution for showing naked girls on film; a decade on, and cinemas across America were openly showing hardcore pornography. Nothing seemed taboo any more.

To moral campaigners, the idea of the snuff movie seemed both inevitable and useful. Inevitable, because after all, where else was there for the satiated pornographer and his audience to go? And useful, because it provided a potent weapon to use against the libertarians. Even the most liberal minded individual would, after all, consider freedom to murder a liberty too far, and might even be forced to rethink their deeply held beliefs about sexual freedom in the face of such material. And so began a mythology that has, if anything, grown in potency over the years, to the extent that even now, most people unquestioningly accept the existence of snuff movies as proven fact.

Which is odd. Because despite the hysteria, a single scrap of evidence confirming snuff movies has yet to be found.

What we do have are outright lies, assorted apocryphal tales, staggering cases of mistaken identity and several cases of genuine cinematic death which may seem to fit the bill at first, but don’t actually match the precise snuff movie definition.

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The first recognised tales of snuff movie production emerged in Ed Sanders’ exhaustive book on Charles Manson, The Family. Manson was known to be fond of filming Family activity, including sex orgies which he supposedly sold. He is also known to have stolen a van full of NBC TV equipment. In The Family, Sanders interviews an anonymous Family associate who claims to have witnessed the filming of what he describes as “a snuff movie” in which a naked girl is decapitated during a pseudo-occult ritual. Although the video equipment was recovered when police raided the Spahn Ranch, no snuff footage has emerged (other Family films have been seen, but consist of nothing more sensational than skinny-dipping). It was claimed that remaining Family members squirreled the footage away; if true, they hid it well. More than a quarter of a decade on, it still remains a secret waiting to be revealed. Sanders also hints at rumours that various members of Hollywood’s smart set were dabbling in animal porn, torture and snuff movies. Again, such footage, if it exists, has never emerged. Years later, the Manson connection re-emerged when writer Maury Terry tied the Family and snuff production into his exhaustive investigation of satanic connections to the Son of Sam murders in New York. Yet again, no videotapes were ever found to back up these claims.

After years of similar unfounded rumours, the snuff movie was dragged screaming into the public consciousness in the mid-Seventies with the release of Snuff. Hyped as being shot “in South America…where life is CHEAP!”. The film implied – no, almost boasted – that it featured a genuine murder, carried out for the camera. Wherever it played, the film was attacked by feminists, anti-porn campaigners and journalists, who had not long before reported on the case of a so-called snuff movie being intercepted by U.S. Customs en route from – where else? – South America.

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The protests were not, however, as spontaneous as they might have seemed. In fact, they were as phoney as the film itself. Grindhouse distributor Allan Shackleton was the warped genius behind the whole sorry scam. It was Shackleton who arranged the pickets and wrote the letters of outrage, Shackleton who planted the story of the Customs seizure (no such interception had in fact taken place), gambling that the negative publicity would ensure major box office returns before the film was run out of town. And it was Shackleton who created Snuff out of an unreleased movie called Slaughter.

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Slaughter had been shot in 1971 by husband and wife exploitation movie veterans Michael and Roberta Findlay. Attempting to cash in on the Manson Family headlines, it told of the exploits of a hippy cult leader who leads his followers to murder. It was indeed shot in South America (Argentina, to be exact), where film crews, if not life, were certainly cheap. Filmed without sync sound, the resulting movie was a sorry mess, and sat unreleased until 1975, when Shackleton – a hardened showman distributor with an eye for a good scam – picked it up and decided to revamp it into something that could make money. Noting its incoherence, he figured that the only way audiences would sit through the film would be if they were given a reason to accept – even expect – the amateur style. As a snuff movie, Slaughter’s lack of technical skill became a positive boon.

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The first thing Shackleton did was to remove the end of the film, presumably thinking that no-one would have bothered following the plot anyway. He also chopped off the opening and closing credits, giving the film a suitably anonymous appearance. He then hired Simon Nuchtern to shoot a new ending in a studio owned by hard-core director Carter Stevens, in which the cameras pull back from the action to show the studio set. The “actress” starts to get it on with the “director”, but is then assaulted by him. He reaches for a knife, chops off one of her fingers, followed by the whole hand, then disembowels her. The fact that this footage is considerably better shot than the rest of the film, that the actress bears no resemblance to the woman seen in the earlier footage, and that the special effects are somewhat rubbery didn’t matter. Shackleton knew that, for varying reasons, people would want to believe it was real. And they did. Many still do, despite the truth about Snuff being widely reported. Some believe out of ignorance; others out of cynicism. Anti-Pornography groups are certainly aware of the reality behind Snuff, but still hold it up as proof that women are being routinely murdered for the camera. It’s in their interests for people to believe that the porn industry routinely murders people for profit.

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In fact, Snuff was roundly condemned as a tasteless stunt by America’s pornographers. Producer David F. Friedman, who headed the Adult Film Association of America, begged Shackleton not to release the film. Sex film veteran Friedman, in David Hebditch and Nick Anning’s book Porn Gold, traced the snuff hysteria to early Seventies group called the Campaign for Decency in Literature, headed by Charles Keating, who claimed on TV to have evidence that X-rated film-makers were murdering their stars on film. The producer claims that he contacted the CDL and asked them to hand their evidence to the authorities, and, when nothing happened, contacted the FBI himself, who dismissed the claims.

Friedman also offered a $25,000 reward to anyone supplying evidence of snuff movies. It remains uncollected.

Snuff made Shackleton his expected bundle, and faded into history. But it provided new ammunition for pro-censorship groups and moral campaigners. Now, everyone knew that snuff wasn’t just something old men snorted instead of cocaine.

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Years later in Britain, where the film had – naturally – never been seen, it emerged on video with spectacularly bad timing. At the beginning of 1982, the first rumblings of what would become the Video Nasty tidal-wave of hysteria were appearing in the press. As the storm over the availability of uncensored video grew, Astra Video – already prime targets for prosecution after releasing the grossly misunderstood I Spit on Your Grave and David Friedman’s early Sixties splatter movie Blood Feast – added Snuff to their roster of titles, featuring the rather ill-conceived (if somewhat accurate) cover blurb “the original legendary atrocity shot and banned in New York… the actors and actresses who dedicated their lives to making this film were never seen or heard from again.” After an outraged Sunday Times article, Astra rapidly withdrew the film from sale, but not before a reasonable quantity had made it to the shops. Tabloid reporters invariably took the film at face value, and the circulation of a “real snuff movie” helped fuel calls for controls over violent videos.

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Ironically, slipping out unnoticed on video in Britain a couple of years earlier was a West German rip-off , entitled Confessions of a Blue Movie Star… although the original English language title, The Evolution of Snuff, was far less equivocal. This film was an uneasy mixture of soft porn, documentary and curious moral campaigning – it’s notable as one of the few anti-porn sex films ever made. Supposedly following the career of a German sex starlet who later took her own life, the film suggests that snuff movies are an inevitable symptom of liberal attitudes towards sex. Opening with interviews with various people (including Roman Polanski) who are convinced of the existence of snuff movies, the film reveals its true cynicism and lack of credibility at the end, when it features an interview with a masked “Snuff Movie maker” and then presents an extract from his film. This footage is shocking – grainy, shaky images of a woman seemingly being disembowelled. It looks far more authentic that the footage in Snuff. But it’s also far more recognisable. In fact, it has been lifted from Wes Craven’s brutal 1972 production The Last House on the Left. And although Craven’s movie was condemned by many critics for excessive violence, nobody would suggest that the killings were real…

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Although snuff movies would become a standard plot device for film-makers in the Seventies, providing the central or incidental themes in a number of films. Hardcore saw George C. Scott wallowing in the seedy world of pornography, trying to locate his estranged daughter, who he has seen in a porno flick and who, of course, ends up in a snuff movie. Coming from the religiously tortured mind of Paul Schrader, it was a decent film that sadly perpetuated the myth that the porn industry routinely kills its stars.

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Similarly, Joe D’Amato’s outrageous Emanuelle in America sees the titular character, played as always by Laura Gemser, investigating corruption and white slavery, at one point watching a ‘snuff movie’ as part of her investigations. The snuff footage in this film is remarkably brutal and realistic – quite what audiences expecting a softcore romp made of it is anyone’s guess.

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Last House on Dead End Street is a more impressively disturbing film about a porn producer who moves into snuff movie production. A weird hybrid of sleaze and art, the film for years was the height of cinematic obscurity, only available as fuzzy bootlegs and with no information available about director Viktor Janos. But in 2001, porn director Roger Watkins was revealed as both the director and the star, and the film – which began life as a three hour movie called The Cuckoo Clocks of Hell in 1972 before winding up in the current, thankfully shorter, version in 1977 – is now readily available on DVD. It’s quite unlike anything else you’ll ever see.

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1980’s Effects is considerably less interesting. Shot in Pittsburgh by Dusty Nelson and featuring several George Romero collaborators (Tom Savini, Joe Pilato, John Harrison), this is the tale of a horror film maker who decided real death will be cheaper than special effects. It’s a nice idea, but the film is unfortunately very dull and clumsily produced.

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Even worse is Australian film Final Cut, made the same year, in which a pair of journalists gain access to a reclusive media mogul who might be producing snuff movies for his own pleasure. Very little happens and the best thing about the film is the video cover.

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Snuff movies – or, rather, snuff TV – also featured in David Cronenberg’s hallucinatory Videodrome, in which the director played with a ‘what if’ idea – in this case, ‘what if the fears of the censors were true/’ in a tale of video-induced hallucinations via a signal hidden inside brutal torture and murder videos being beamed from (where else?) South America.

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While these films all explored the idea of the snuff movie, it wasn’t until the Eighties that the phrase and the hysteria would fully explode into mainstream consciousness. As the Seventies wave of liberalism gave way to the Eighties Thatcherite New Morality and hard-line Feminism, it somehow became easier to accept that pornographers – evil, corrupt exploiters of women, every one of them – would cheerfully kill for the cameras. And by the 1990s, British newspaper hacks, bored with the term ‘video nasty’ were starting to use ‘snuff’ as a description for just about any violent movie, culminating in one tabloid notoriously referring to Japanese amine film Akira as ‘Manga snuff’. Now, apparently, even cartoon characters were being murdered for real, despite never having actually existed in the first place!

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Feminist writers and moral campaigners both routinely told tales of snuff movies which were dressed up as proven fact, but which were always vague enough to avoid scrutiny. No names, no evidence. Films that the authorities had been unable to see were apparently easily accessed by anti-porn fanatics. And invariably, the public followed suit. Everyone these days, it seems, knows someone who’s mate has seen a snuff movie.

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In many cases, these snuff movies turn out to be more indicative of the gullibility of the viewer – or, perhaps, their desire to believe. The Amazon snuff movie reported (in a cynically racist manner) by The Daily Mail, and quoted at the top of this article, turned out to be Ruggero Deodato’s 1979 production Cannibal Holocaust, a film which has been mistaken for the Real Thing in Britain more than once. At least that film, with it’s powerfully authentic pseudo-documentary style, looks the part; more ludicrous was the insistence by Liverpool Trading Standards and various media (including Channel Four News) that Joe D’Amato’s Anthropophagous (a tedious horror movie about a cannibal killer lurking on a Greek island), seized during video nasty raids in 1993 was a snuff movie. Similarly, Channel 4 documentary series ran an episode on ‘satanic abuse’, claiming to show footage of killings in occult rituals – in reality, it was performance art footage by Genesis P. Orridge’s Temple of Psychik Youth.

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Flower of Flesh and Blood, an episode from the Japanese  film series Guinea Pig, has also convinced many people – including actor Charlie Sheen, who reported it to the authorities after watching aghast. In Britain, an NFT employee was taken to court after customs seized a tape of the film, and only narrowly escaped a jail sentence when experts declared the film to be a clever simulation. And indeed it is. Catering to the Japanese audience’s blood lust, the film is a carefully constructed fake snuff movie – devoid of any narrative structure, it simply shows a woman being killed and hacked apart by a man dressed as a Samurai. However, the film still features standard cinematic devices and full credits, which one would hardly expect to find on evidence of crime, and the DVD edition also comes with ‘behind the scenes’ footage exposing the whole artifice.

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In more recent years, the scuzzier end of US shot-on-video sleaze has seen similar ‘recreation’ movies. The likes of Snuff Kill and Snuff Perversions are plotless collections of faked snuff movies, designed to look as real as possible – deliberately crude, basic and often minimalist, these films exist only to appeal to the warped tastes of ghouls who really want to see the real thing but who will, in its absence, settle for these reconstructions instead. There’s certainly no entertainment value to be had from such movies, but one can easily imagine them being taken for the real thing by newspaper hacks, politicians and censorial groups.

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A long-standing tradition of the snuff movie mythology was that such films were made in South America, where “Life Is Cheap!”. Unsubstantiated stories of prostitutes and children being smuggled over the border into the US, where they would be raped and murdered by organised rings of snuff film-makers, had circulated throughout the Seventies. By the Eighties, however, the mythology had developed to the extent where these films were happening anywhere and everywhere and were. One of the most insistent claims made regarding snuff movies relates to paedophile rings and satanic cults.

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In both instances, the evidence remains non-existent, but has been so widely distorted and exaggerated that most people genuinely believe it. The most recurrent individual tale concerns footage of the murder of Jason Swift and several other children at the hands of a group of paedophiles in the early Eighties. At the start of the Nineties, newspapers reported that the deaths of several children had been videotaped, although there was no evidence to support this. The reports would subsequently resurface with remarkable frequency; the raids which netted Anthropophagous were reported as possibly having found such footage. Not true. And the Powers That Be conveniently float the rumour whenever calls for stricter censorship are made. So it’s worth re-stating for the record: there is no evidence whatsoever that the killings were filmed for any reason, let alone for commercial purposes. No tapes found. No cameras found. No statements from the convicted killers. Nothing.

Various cases in which murderers have filmed their activities have been held up as proof of snuff movie production. In 1985, Californian police found videotapes of Leonard Lake and Charles Ng torturing and murdering several women. Many people took these as final confirmation of the existence of snuff movies, but they were wrong. These tapes, shot for the killer’s own personal gratification (much as the Moors Murderers audio-taped and photographed their victims) don’t fit the definition of films being produced for commercial reasons; of people dying on camera for the profit of shadowy underworld figures; of movies which sell to rich, jaded degenerates for thousands of dollars a time. And despite rumours, there is no evidence to suggest that the tapes had ever been seen by anyone other than the two killers.

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And tasteless documentary films such as Executions, Faces of Death, True Gore, Death – The Ultimate Horror, Death Scenes, Snuff – A Documentary About Killing and others don’t qualify either, featuring as they do news footage (or, in the case of the Faces of Death series, rather unconvincing reconstructions) of accidents and crime scenes. Salacious they may be; offensive, probably; but hardly snuff movies. The same is true of war atrocity videos (such as the Bosnian propaganda tape that was being sold on the streets of London at the height of the Balkan war) or various medical studies, ranging from surgical operations to post mortems, that have entered into general underground circulation.

Arguably, the closest we’ve come to real snuff movies are the shocking murder videos posted to the internet – be they jihadist executions, murderous drug gangs in Mexico – where life really DOES seem cheap – slaughtering those who have crossed them or Russian murderers filming their killings and then posting them online, these are very, very real. But snuff movies in the accepted sense? They are not being shot to order for money, so no. And interestingly, no one seems to be calling these clips ‘snuff movies’. Perhaps it’s too trivial a term to be used for such obviously real atrocities.

Despite the overwhelming lack of evidence to support it though, the Snuff myth will never die. There are too many people with a vested interest in keeping it alive. Feminists see snuff as proof of the dehumanising effect of pornography – another level of the abuse of women. Moral campaigners cite snuff as proof that we need stronger censorship. Fundamentalist Christians use snuff as a way of backing their claims of widespread satanic abuse, which could only be stopped by outlawing Satanism. Yet all these groups seem to miss the point. Because even if snuff movies do exist, they exist beyond the law of every nation in the world, and no legal changes will alter that fact. Murder is already a criminal offence.

In almost thirty years of hysteria, there has yet to be a single ‘commercially’ produced mnuff movie found anywhere on the planet. And yet TV programmes like The Knock and CSI can feature storylines about the cracking of a snuff movie ring by customs or the police as if such events are common occurrences.

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Mainstream thriller 8mm perpetuated the myth further (the very title of Joel Schumaker’s film shows the lack of intelligence at work – would actual snuff movie makers shoot on film, given the expense, difficulty and risks involved, when video cameras are widely available?) and has been at the forefront of a new generation of movies playing with the myth. Possibly the interesting movie treatment of the subject is Tesis, made in 1996 by Alejandro Amenábar, a thriller that uses snuff movies as a way of examining our fascination with violence and murder, with Ana Torrent as a film student who finds a videotape featuring a snuff movie and decides to investigate its origins. It’s a solid thriller that is smarter than most.

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Bernard Rose, director of Candyman, made Snuff Movie in 2005, where a horror film director exorcises the demons of his wife’s murder at the hands of a hippy cult in the 1960s (a neat tie in to Manson) by shooting snuff movies, killing off auditioning actors. Grubbier than you might expect from the director, but fairly mainstream in its approach, Snuff Movie is a decent film but hardly innovative.

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Still, it’s better than the likes of The Great American Snuff Film, Snuff Killer or The Cohasset Snuff Film, all of which are throwaway SOV splatter movies that are frankly best avoided. None of these films offer any new insight and instead attempt to trade on the notoriety of the ‘S’ word.

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Equally, films like V/H/S and its sequel blur the line between found footage – which of course tries to pass itself off as an authentic document – and snuff movie mythology. Several other films have also touched on the subject, including The Brave, Urban Legends: Final Cut, Vacancy and Sinister, while the idea of internet snuff via live feeds – often tied to ideas of reality TV – have appeared in My Little Eye, ICU and Halloween: Resurrection amongst others.

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But let’s remember that these films, good or bad, are simply exploiting a public fear for profit. Like alien autopsy videos, they give a salivating public what it wants. The truth wouldn’t sell tickets at the box office. And in the end, the truth doesn’t matter. Snuff movies will continue to make headlines because they make great headlines, and people will continue to believe in their existence, because people need to believe. It’s an idea that simply seems too good not to be true.

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Feature by David Flint

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Honeyspider

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Honeyspider is a 2014 American horror written and produced by Kenny Caperton (owner of The Myers House NC) and directed by Josh Hasty (A Mannequin in Static) of Black House Capital. The film stars Frank Aard (April Fool’s Day remake), Joan Schuermeyer (Zombieland and Rob Zombie’s Halloween 2), Rachel Jeffreys, Samantha Mills (Bombshell Bloodbath) and newcomer Mariah Brown. The film is currently in post-production.

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Plot:

It’s Halloween day in 1989 and college student Jackie Blue wants to enjoy a quiet birthday in the midst of a chaotic semester at school. Her friend Amber has other ideas and persuades Jackie to come to the annual Halloween party on campus after her shift at the local movie theater. As the night unfolds, it becomes apparent that Jackie will get more excitement than she bargained for on her birthday this year. The murder that plays out on the silver screen becomes an ominous parallel to reality, as Jackie falls under a strange spell while everyone around her is turning up dead. All the while, a mysterious stranger watches over Jackie’s every move as she succumbs to hallucinations and slowly unravels. Jackie finds herself helplessly trapped like prey in a spider’s web, and all she can do is try to survive the night…

Related: The Web of Fear: Spiders in Horror Cinema (article) | Halloweenspiders

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Night of the Living Carrots

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Night of the Living Carrots is a 2011 Halloween short animated film, based on Monsters vs. Aliens and produced by DreamWorks Animation. Following the 2009 short, Monsters vs. Aliens: Mutant Pumpkins from Outer Space, a mutated carrot has spawned hundreds of zombie carrots taking control of the subject’s mind. Dr. Cockroach determines that the only way to defeat them and free their victims is for B.O.B. to eat all of the carrots.

The short premiered in two parts exclusively on Nintendo 3DS. It was released to a general audience on August 28, 2012, as a part of Shrek’s Thrilling Tales DVD and DreamWorks Spooky Stories Blu-ray.

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Plot:

In a theater, B.O.B. introduces the story in a manner similar to many horror films. He recalls the events of Mutant Pumpkins from Outer Space, saying “it all started with a spooky spaceship, mutant pumpkins and monsters saving the day. But that was only the beginning.”

The scene then shifts to the twist ending of the previous special. The Zombie Carrot emerges and charges at the camera but is stopped short by a gate. Carl Murphy announces to the children of the Modesto suburbs that a costume contest was about to start and that the winner got their weight in candy. B.O.B., dressed as a pirate, takes interest and comes inside but takes all the candy meant for the contest. Outside, he hears a strange voice and is initially frightened by the zombie carrot, but he mistakes it for a child in a costume. Believing the carrot would win the costume contest, he throws it inside where it immediately bites Carl, turning him into a zombie.

All the guests flee the Murphy house and not long after, the carrot is blasted by Dr. Cockroach’s scanner. Doc theorizes that the carrot was contaminated by the mutant pumpkins and that the curse could only be lifted by eliminating the infected carrot. However, the remains of the carrot replicate themselves into more zombie carrots. Before long, all three monsters are completely surrounded…

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Wikipedia | IMDb


Dracula’s Worst Nightmare – Fresh Garlic

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Sold as ‘Dracula’s Worst Nightmare’, this is a special Halloween pack of garlic bulbs that was sold in British supermarkets in 2004.

Produced by Brookerpaks Quality Foods, the product contained two garlic bulbs contained in a coffin shaped box that had a crucifix shape cut into the front, alongside a cartoon image of Dracula that looks ‘inspired’ by the Marvel Comics interpretation of the character. The bottom of the box features a cartoon bat and the words “garlic – the ultimate vampire repellent”., while elsewhere on the package are images of a graveyard and a castle. On the back of the package was a recipe for ‘vampire stake’.

This was a nice, if trivial novelty to add to the weekly shop at the time for all horror lovers.

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The Ghastly Ones (rock band)

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The Ghastly Ones are a surf–garage rock band from Van Nuys, California with a late-night monster movie theme.

The band was formed by two special effects make up/movie monster makers, Garrett “Dr. Lehos” Immel and Norman “Baron Shivers” Cabrera. They infused their love of Halloween records, late night monster movies and Screaming Lord Sutch with inspiration from early sixties surf and hot rod acts like The Lively Ones, Avengers VI, and The Del-Aires to create the first “spooky surf” band.

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The band’s first show was at Al’s Bar on Halloween 1996, infamous in the punk world for several rowdy Misfits shows. During their early shows, the stage was often decorated with tombstones and cobwebs to give their performances the proper atmosphere.

Their unique sound and look caught the attention of Rob Zombie who released their first album in 1998 on his label Zombie-A-Go-Go Records, a subsidiary of Geffen Records. Subsequent albums were released on their independent label, Ghastly Plastics Co.

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In 2007 The Ghastly Ones toured the East Coast and Japan for the first time and in 2009 they played Nottingham, England. Their music has been featured in the Halloween episode of SpongeBob SquarePants, “SpongeBob ScaredyPants” and the 2010 remake of Night of the Demons.

Selected Discography: 

A-Haunting We Will Go-Go, 1998 | All-Plastic Assembly Kit, 2005 | Target: Draculon, 2006 | Unearthed, 2007 | Gears n’ Ghoulfinks, purple vinyl 7″, 2009

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Wikipedia | Official site

 



The Scarehouse

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The Scarehouse is a 2014 Canadian horror film written, produced and directed by Gavin Michael Booth (To Hell, With Love). It stars his wife Sarah Booth (Werewoman TV series), Kimberly-Sue Murray (Crimson Peak)Katherine Barrell (Poe), Teagan Vincze (Dead Genesis, Fortune Cookie Prophecies), Emily Alatalo, Dani Barker, Ivana Stojanovic, Jennifer Miller, Brad Everett, Jack Ettlinger, Alex Harrouch. 

D Films will release The Scarehouse theatrically in North America and Universal will handle ancillary. D Films also handles international sales. 

Plot teaser:

When two friends open a Halloween fun house on Devil’s Night it is all fun and games until their former sorority sisters begin to arrive. These six sisters are confronted by their past as the night spins out of control…

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IMDbFacebook

 

 


Midnight Mutants (computer game)

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Midnight Mutants is a computer game for the Atari 7800 ProSystem, developed by Radioactive Software and published by Atari Corporation in 1990. It features a likeness of Al Lewis, dressed as Grandpa Munster, playing the role of “Grampa.” The game was one of the last releases for the Atari 7800. As with similar games of that era, Midnight Mutants features a large in-game environment with many locations, a background musical soundtrack, battles against boss enemies and an animated introduction. Despite its limited distribution, the game remains popular among Atari 7800 fans. Critical reaction has been fairly positive with praise being paid to the game’s graphics, gameplay and quirky sense of humour.

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Game plot:

On Halloween night in 1992 young Jimmy Harkman’s grandfather (known as “Grampa”) has been imprisoned inside of a pumpkin by a resurrected villain named Dr. Evil, who is taking revenge for being burned at the stake as a witch by their ancestor Johnathon Harkman on Halloween night in 1747.

Jimmy then heads on a Halloween quest to free his grandfather. With Doctor Evil on the loose, Jimmy finds the countryside has become inhabited by scary creatures such as zombies and werewolves that can injure him physically and also make his blood impure. Fortunately, even though Grampa is trapped in pumpkin form, he is available to give Jimmy advice on occasion with the push of a button. Along the way, Jimmy can collect weapons and items that will help him in his quest to defeat evil creatures, giant bosses and ultimately Dr. Evil himself…

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Review:

It’s a wonderful isometric adventure game that harks back to the days of the ZX Spectrum and Ultimate Play The Game. You are on a mission to rescue Grandpa himself who has been captured and trapped in a haunted mansion … The graphics throughout Midnight Mutants are fantastic and the cut scenes where Grandpa actually talks to you and gives you tips are particularly nice. The game is massive and the gameplay is very deep too, you will be wishing at times that it had a save option!” Retro Video Gamer

Wikipedia | Image sources: Moby Games

Related: Burn, Witch, Burn! (article) | The Munsters


Shivers Down Your Spine

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Shivers Down Your Spine is a 2014 American horror anthology film compiled by Dead Lantern Pictures, a micro-budget indie horror outfit based in Lincoln, Nebraska. The film will be released October/November 2014 on DVD and Blu-ray. Extras will include a documentary, blooper reel, audio commentary tracks for all films, and a bonus short film entitled Midnight Kiss.

The tales are:

Out of the Lamp: A man discovers a genie lamp in his microwave. Upon rubbing it, a beautiful genie named Sabiah appears, offering him three wishes. Much to her surprise, he wishes for her to tell him nine horror stories… (wraparound framing device)

Deadbolt: A young girl home alone on Halloween night discovers that the deadbolt on her door is no match for an angry ghost…

Convention Girl: Two best friends try to figure out what to do when one of them believes he staked a vampire hooker at a horror convention. Did he stake a vampire, or a cosplayer?

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Birthday Dinner: A mother and father punish their young daughter on her birthday in order to teach her a lesson.

Whispering Board: Three sorority girls attempt to commune with a dead boyfriend using a whispering board with terrifying results.

I Dream of Djinni: Sabiah the Djinn tells a story of how wishes can go horribly awry if you’re not careful with your wording…

Shortly After Nightfall: A creepy motel caretaker pays a hired gun to take out a young woman who is haunting one of his rooms in a ghostly film noir.

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A Bad Heart: 2 years after being stabbed in the heart and nearly killed by the serial killer Ray Dean Foster, a young woman decides to get back into the dating game on Valentine’s Day only to find her geeky date may be more dangerous.

Last Breath: A young woman descends into madness and depression after being stood up by her boyfriend.

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A Christmas Horror Story: It’s 1987 and a group of teens is cleaning an old movie theatre. Meanwhile, a killer Santa is on the loose and looking to make them his next victims.

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Official website

Posted by WH


Scream Factory (digital production company) [updated with Dolls Blu-ray artwork]

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Scream Factory is an American digital production company dedicated to releasing horror and science-fiction films with a cult following; it is an imprint of Shout! Factory. Scream Factory has released a slate of fan-favourites from the 1970s, 80s and 90s, many of which have never been available on Blu-ray before.

Each title is presented in anamorphic widescreen, and most are released in a “Collector’s Editions” with new bonus content, archival materials, a collectible cover featuring newly rendered retro-style artwork, a reversible wrap with original theatrical key art and more.

The series was launched on September 18, 2012 with special edition DVD and Blu-ray releases of Halloween II (1981) and Halloween III: Season of the Witch.

Almost all of Scream Factory’s releases are on Blu-ray. Some are a Combo Pack of both Blu-ray and DVD discs and are released separately as both. Additionally, some titles are released as Collector’s Editions, indicating a release with all new special features and reversible artwork.

Scroll down to the end of this entry for all the latest and upcoming Scream Factory releases…

# Title Home Video Release Theatrical Release Format(s) Artwork Notes
01 The Stepfather June 15, 2010 January 23, 1987 Blu-ray and DVD New Originally a Shout! Factory release,
but now considered a
retroactive Scream Factory release.
02 Halloween II – Click to read Horrorpedia entry September 18, 2012 October 30, 1981 Blu-ray and DVD New Halloween II Blu-ray
Collector’s Edition – includes rare Network TV Cut – Buy from Amazon.com
03 Halloween III: Season of the Witch – Click to read Horrorpedia entry September 18, 2012 October 22, 1982 Blu-ray and DVD New Halloween III Blu-rayBuy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.com
04 The Funhouse October 16, 2012 March 13, 1981 Blu-ray and DVD New The Funhouse Scream Factory Blu-rayCollector’s Edition
05 Terror Train – Click to read Horrorpedia entry October 16, 2012 October 3, 1980 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New terror train scream factory blu-rayBuy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.com
06 They Live November 6, 2012 November 4, 1988 Blu-ray and DVD New They Live Scream Factory Blu-rayBuy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.com
07 Death Valley – Click to read Horrorpedia entry December 11, 2012 May 7, 1982 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original Death Valley Blu
Buy from Amazon.com
08 The Island – Click to read Horrorpedia entry December 11, 2012 June 13, 1980 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original  Island BluBuy from Amazon.com
09 Deadly Blessing – Click to read Horrorpedia entry January 22, 2013 August 14, 1981 Blu-ray and DVD New deadly blessing BluBuy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.com
10 The Nest – Click link to read Horrorpedia entry February 19, 2013 May 13, 1988 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original  nest bluBuy from Amazon.com
11 Prison – Click link to read Horrorpedia entry February 19, 2013 March 4, 1988 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New prison-1988-brBuy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.com
12 TerrorVision – Click to read Horrorpedia entry February 19, 2013 February 14, 1986 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original terrorvision bluBuy Double Feature from Amazon.com
13 The Video Dead - Click to read Horrorpedia entry November 1987
14 From Beyond – Click link to read Horrorpedia entry March 26, 2013 October 24, 1986 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New from beyond bluBuy Collector’s Edition
Unrated Director’s Cut from Amazon.com
15 Phantasm II – Click to read Horrorpedia entry March 26, 2013 July 8, 1988 Blu-ray and DVD New Phantasm II Scream Factory Blu-rayBuy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.com
16 The Vampire Lovers – Click link to read Horrorpedia entry April 30, 2013 October 4, 1970 Blu-ray Original   The Vampire Lovers Scream Factory Blu-rayBuy from Amazon.com
17 The Burning – Click link to read Horrorpedia entry May 21, 2013 May 8, 1981 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New burningBuy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.com
18 The Town That Dreaded Sundown – Click link to read Horrorpedia entry May 21, 2013 December 24, 1976 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original 91f4pCEVg9L._SL1500_Also includes The Evictors as a bonus feature. Buy from Amazon.com
19 The Evictors April 19, 1979
20 Ninja III: The Domination June 11, 2013 September 14, 1984 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original
21 The Howling – Click to read Horrorpedia entry June 18, 2013 April 10, 1981 Blu-ray and DVD New howlingBuy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.com
22 Lifeforce - Click to read Horrorpedia entry (NB. contains full-frontal nudity) June 18, 2013 June 21, 1985 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New lifeforceBuy Collector’s Edition – includes rare U.S. Theatrical Cut – from Amazon.com
23 Dead Souls June 25, 2013 October 12, 2012 Blu-ray and DVD Original
24 The Fog – Click to read Horrorpedia entry July 30, 2013 February 1, 1980 Blu-ray and DVD New fog bluBuy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.com
25 The Incredible Melting Man – Click to read Horrorpedia entry July 30, 2013 December 9, 1977 Blu-ray Original  melting manBuy from Amazon.com
26 Swamp Thing August 6, 2013 February 19, 1982 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original  Swamp Thing Blu-rayBuy from Amazon.co.uk 
27 X-Ray (aka Hospital Massacre) – Click to read Horrorpedia entry August 20, 2013 April 1982 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original x-ray + schoizoid scream factory blu-ray disc coverBuy Double Feature from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com 
28 Schizoid – Click to read Horrorpedia entry September 1980
29 Dark Angel August 27, 2013 September 28, 1990 Blu-ray Original  Dark Angel Dolph LundgrenBuy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com 
30 Q: The Winged Serpent - Read Horrorpedia entry August 27, 2013 October 29, 1982 Blu-ray Original Q The Winged Serpent Blu-rayBuy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com 
31 Cockneys vs Zombies September 3, 2013 August 2, 2013 Blu-ray, DVD and Digital Copy Original  Cockneys vs Zombies Blu-rayBuy from Amazon.com 
32 Scanners II: The New Order – Read Horrorpedia article September 10, 2013 June 28, 1991 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original Scanners II + Scanners III Blu-ray
Buy Scanners Double Feature from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com 
33 Scanners III: The Takeover - Read Horrorpedia article May 14, 1992
34 Day of the Dead September 17, 2013 July 19, 1985 Blu-ray and DVD New Day of the Dead Scream Factory Blu-ray
Buy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com 
35 Prince of Darkness – Click link to read Horrorpedia entry September 24, 2013 October 23, 1987 Blu-ray and DVD New Prince of Darkness Blu-ray
Buy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com 
36 Psycho II – Click link to read Horrorpedia entry September 24, 2013 June 3, 1983 Blu-ray and DVD Original Psycho II Blu-ray
Buy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com 
37 Psycho III – Click link to read Horrorpedia entry September 24, 2013 July 2, 1986 Blu-ray and DVD Original Psycho III Blu-ray
Buy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
38 The Amityville Horror October 1, 2013 July 27, 1979 Blu-ray Original  1094825_319279461542405_805815254_n
Buy Amityville Horror Trilogy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
39 Amityville II: The Possession - Click to read Horrorpedia entry September 24, 1982
40 Amityville 3-D November 18, 1983
41 What’s the Matter With Helen? October 8, 2013 June 30, 1971 DVD Original All Night Horror Marathon SCream Factory
Buy All Night Horror Film Marathon from Amazon.com
42 The Vagrant – Click to read Horrorpedia entry May 15, 1992
43 The Godsend – Click to read Horrorpedia entry January 25, 1980
44 The Outing – Click to read Horrorpedia entry September 11, 1987
45 Chilling Visions: 5 Senses of Fear – Click to read Horrorpedia entry October 22, 2013 May 16, 2013 Blu-ray and DVD Original  Chilling-Visions-5-Senses-Of-Fear-Blu-Ray

Buy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com

46 House of Usher – Click for Horrorpedia entry October 22, 2013 June 22, 1960 Blu-ray New vincent price collection shout factory blu-ray
Buy The Vincent Price Collection from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
47 The Pit and the Pendulum - Click for Horrorpedia entry August 12, 1961
48 The Haunted Palace – Click for Horrorpedia entry 1963
49 The Masque of the Red Death June 24, 1964
50 Witchfinder General - Click for Horrorpedia entry August 14, 1968
51 The Abominable Dr. Phibes - Click for Horrorpedia entry May 18, 1971
52 The Dungeonmaster - Click for Horrorpedia entry October 29, 2013 February 1985 DVD Original All Night Horror Volume 2
Buy All Night Horror Film Marathon
Volume Two from Amazon.com
53 Catacombs March 24, 1993
54 Cellar Dweller - Click for Horrorpedia entry September 20, 1988
55 Contamination 7 December 29, 1993
56 Body Bags - Click for Horrorpedia entry November 12, 2013 August 8, 1993 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New Body-Bags-Blu-ray
Buy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk
57 Assault on Precinct 13 November 19, 2013 November 10, 1976 Blu-ray New 917uL5dYbBL._SL1500_
Buy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
58 Eve of Destruction November 19, 2013 January 18, 1991 Blu-ray Original  Eve of Destruction Blu-rayBuy from Amazon.co.uk
59 Night of the Comet - Click for Horrorpedia entry November 19, 2013 November 16, 1984 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New night of the comet blu-rayjpgBuy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
60 The Horror Show - Click for Horrorpedia entry November 26, 2013 April 28, 1989 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original  71AtKNQogFL._SL1500_Buy from Amazon.com
61 Saturn 3 December 3, 2013 February 15, 1980 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original  Saturn 3 Blu-rayBuy from Amazon.co.uk
62 The Initiation of Sarah December 10, 2013 February 6, 1978 DVD Original TV Terrors
63 Are You in the House Alone? September 20, 1978
64 The Beast Within - Click for Horrorpedia entry December 17, 2013 February 12, 1982 Blu-ray and DVD Original  beast withinBuy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
65 Crawlspace - Click for Horrorpedia entry December 17, 2013 May 21, 1986 Blu-ray Original  Crawlspace Blu-rayNew Audio Commentary by director David Schmoeller

“Please Kill Mr. Kinski” –- a short film by David Schmoeller
Interview with Make-up effects artist John Vulich
Theatrical Trailer

Buy Blu-ray from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com

66 Cat People – Click for Horrorpedia entry January 21, 2014 April 2, 1982 Blu-ray New cat people shout! factory blu-ray
Buy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
67 Die, Monster, Die! January 21, 2014 October 27, 1965 Blu-ray Original  Die! Monster Die! Blu-rayBuy from Amazon.co.uk
68 The Beast of Hollow Mountain January 28, 2014 1956 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original Beast of Hollow Mountain + Neanderthal man Blu-rayBuy Double Feature from Amazon.co.uk
69 The Neanderthal Man 1953
70 Night of the Demons – Click for Horrorpedia entry February 4, 2014 September 9, 1987 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New Night of the Demons 1988 Blu-ray
Buy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
71 Witchboard – Click for Horrorpedia entry February 4, 2014 December 31, 1986 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original  Witchboard Blu-rayBuy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
72 Bad Dreams February 18, 2014 April 8, 1988 Blu-ray Original visiting hours Blu-ray
Buy Double Feature from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
73 Visiting Hours – Click for Horrorpedia entry May 28, 1982
74 Darkman February 18, 2014 August 24, 1990 Blu-ray New Collector’s Edition
75 The Slumber Party Massacre – Click for Horrorpedia entry March 18, 2014 November 12, 1982 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original  slumber partyBuy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
76 Beneath – Click for Horrorpedia entry March 25, 2014 May 3, 2013 Blu-ray New  beneath-blu124-ray-1

Buy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com

77 Dead Shadows April 22, 2014 April 27, 2013 Blu-ray and DVD Original
78 Evilspeak – Click for Horrorpedia entry May 13, 2014 February 26, 1982 Blu-ray Original  Evilspeak Blu
Buy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
79 Final Exam – Click for Horrorpedia entry May 13, 2014 June 5, 1981 Blu-ray Original  81cur6zej2l-_sl1500_Buy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
80 Nosferatu the Vampyre – Click for Horrorpedia entry May 20, 2014 October 5, 1979 Blu-ray Original  Nosferatu blu-ray
Buy from Amazon.com
81 House in the Alley May 27, 2014 October 25, 2013 DVD Original
82 Sleepaway Camp - Click for Horrorpedia entry May 27, 2014 November 18, 1983 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New sleepaway camp blu-rayBuy Collector’s Edition
Uncut Version from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
83 Ravenous – Click for Horrorpedia entry June 3, 2014 March 19, 1999 Blu-ray Original  ravenous blu-rayBuy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
84 The Monkey’s Paw June 17, 2014 October 8, 2013 Blu-ray and DVD Original
85 The Final Terror July 1, 2014 May 1, 1983 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original
86 Lake Placid July 8, 2014 July 16, 1999 Blu-ray New Lake Placid Blu-ray
Buy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
87 Deadly Eyes – Click for Horrorpedia entry July 15, 2014 May 16, 1983 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original

 Deadly Eyes Blu-ray
Buy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com

88 Ginger Snaps – Click for Horrorpedia entry July 22, 2014 September 10, 2000 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New ginger snaps collectors edition blu-ray shout factory
Buy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
89 Phantom of the Paradise Click for Horrorpedia entry August 5, 2014 October 31, 1974 Blu-ray New phantom of the paradise shout factory blu-ray
Buy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
90 Without Warning Click for Horrorpedia entry August 5, 2014 September 26, 1980 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original  Without Warning Blu-ray

Buy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com

91 Motel Hell – Click for Horrorpedia entry August 12, 2014 October 18, 1980 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New motel hell shout factory blu-ray
Buy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
92 Leviathan August 19, 2014 March 17, 1989 Blu-ray Original  Leviathan Blu-ray

Buy from Amazon.com

93 The Legend of Hell House Click for Horrorpedia entry August 26, 2014 June 15, 1973 Blu-ray Original  Legend of Hell House Scream Factory Blu-ray

Buy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com

94 Pumpkinhead - Click for Horrorpedia entry September 9, 2014 October 14, 1988 Blu-ray New Pumkinhead Scream Factory Blu-rayBuy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
95 The Battery – Click for Horrorpedia entry September 16, 2014 October 13, 2012 Blu-ray and DVD New  The Battery Blu-rayBuy from Amazon.com
96 Halloween – Click for Horrorpedia entry September 23, 2014 October 25, 1978 Blu-ray New halloween blu-ray box set artwork
Halloween: The Complete Collection
Limited Edition Boxed Set
Includes the ultra-rare Network TV Cut of the originalHalloween, the original mono audio track and both versions of the original Blu-ray release and the remastered 35th Anniversary Version with the original mono track added back in.
the Network TV Cut of Halloween II,
the never-before-released Producer’s Cut of Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers,
and the Unrated Versions of Rob Zombie’s Halloween and Halloween II.
Set will come with hours of new bonus features including new interviews with cast and crew from the entire franchise. Also included will be a limited edition 40-page book written by Michael Gingold of Fangoria. Collectible packaging will include a newly commissioned illustration on the outer case and each film will be in its own black Blu-ray case with original theatrical one sheet as the key art.Buy Blu-ray Collection from Amazon.com
97 Halloween II – Click for Horrorpedia entry October 30, 1981
98 Halloween III: Season of the Witch October 22, 1982
99 Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers October 21, 1988
100 Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers October 13, 1989
101 Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers September 29, 1995
102 Halloween H20: 20 Years Later August 5, 1998
103 Halloween: Resurrection July 12, 2002
104 Halloween August 31, 2007
105 Halloween II August 28, 2009
106 Nightbreed: The Director’s Cut - Click for Horrorpedia entry September 30, 2014 February 16, 1990 Blu-ray and DVD New Nightbreed Director's Cut Blu-ray
Buy ‘The Director’s Cut’ from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
107 Hemlock Grove: The Complete First SeasonClick for Horrorpedia entry October 7, 2014 April 29, 2013 Blu-ray and DVD New

 Hemlock Grove Complete First Season Blu-ray
Buy from Amazon.com

108 Tales from the Crypt Click for Horrorpedia entry October 14, 2014 March 8, 1972 Blu-ray Original Tales from the Crypt + Vault of Horror Blu-rayBuy Double Feature from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
109 Vault of Horror March 1973
110 Pumpkinhead II: Blood Wings October 21, 2014 October 19, 1994 Blu-ray Original  Pumpkinhead II Blood Wings Scream Factory Blu-ray
Buy from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com
111 The Squad October 21, 2014 October 7, 2011 Blu-ray and DVD New  The Squad Scream Factory Blu-ray
Buy from Amazon.com
112 The Last Man on Earth - Click for Horrorpedia entry October 21, 2014 March 8, 1964 Blu-ray New Vincent Price Collection II Blu-rayBuy The Vincent Price Collection II from Amazon.com
113 The Comedy of Terrors January 22, 1964
114 Dr. Phibes Rises Again - Click for Horrorpedia entry July 1972
115 The Tomb of Ligeia – Click to read Horrorpedia entry January 20, 1965
116 The Raven January 25, 1963
117 Return of the Fly – Click to read Horrorpedia entry July 1959
118 House on Haunted Hill February 17, 1959
119 Nightbreed: The Director’s Cut October 28, 2014 February 16, 1990 Blu-ray and DVD New Limited Edition
Will also include the original R-rated theatrical version.
120 Squirm – Click for Horrorpedia entry October 28, 2014 July 30, 1976 Blu-ray New Squirm Scream Factory Blu-rayBuy Collector’s Edition from Amazon.com
121 The Dark Half November 2014 April 23, 1993 Blu-ray Original
122 Dolls November 2014 March 6, 1987 Blu-ray + DVD Combo New Dolls Blu-ray Scream Factory work

Collector’s Edition

123 Monkey Shines November 2014 July 29, 1988 Blu-ray Original
124 The Doctor and the Devils Fall 2014 October 4, 1985 Blu-ray Original
125 Lord of Illusions Fall 2014 August 25, 1995 Blu-ray New Collector’s Edition
126 Hellhole 2014 March 1985 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack Original
127 Dog Soldiers Early 2015 July 20, 2002 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New Collector’s Edition
128 Candyman: Farewell to the Flesh 2015 March 17, 1995 Blu-ray Original
129 Escape from New York 2015 July 10, 1981 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New Collector’s Edition
130 Invaders from Mars 2015 June 6, 1986 Blu-ray Original
131 Mad Max 2015 April 12, 1979 Blu-ray + DVD Combo Pack New Collector’s Edition
132 New Year’s Evil 2015 December 19, 1980 Blu-ray Original
133 Phantom of the Opera 2015 November 4, 1989 Blu-ray Original
134 Scarecrows 2015 September 28, 1988 Blu-ray Original

Wikipedia


Horror film/comic crossovers – article

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Perhaps even more abundant than the ever-popular trend of adapting comic books into films, particularly Marvel’s ever expanding universe, is the very opposite, transposing popular characters from film onto the page. So, whilst the likes of 30 Days of Night, From Hell and Blade have all, it must be said, achieved differing levels of success onscreen, a slow trickle, building to a arterial gush, of fully-formed characters with their back-stories already well-known have fallen onto the page, allowing for story-arcs, inter-world co-existence and scenes of gratuitous disembowelling that even the bravest director would dismiss as just-that-little-bit-too-far, opening up the possibilities of horror film as never before.

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Aliens

Aliens is a comic book series set in the fictional universe of the Alien films. It was first published by Dark Horse Comics in 1988. The stories often feature the company Weyland-Yutani and the United States Colonial Marines. Originally intended as a sequel to James Cameron’s 1986 film Aliens, the first mini-series features the characters of Rebecca “Newt” Jorden and Corporal Dwayne Hicks. Later series also included the further adventures of Ellen Ripley. Other stories are completely unique to the Alien universe, and are often used to explore other aspects of the species, such as their sociology and biology.

The first three stories formed a continuation of the two Alien films that had been released by the time they were published. However, 1992 saw the release of Alien 3, which contradicted the events of the comics by beginning with the deaths of Newt and Corporal Hicks. In order to keep the stories relevant to the Alien series, Dark Horse changed the names of the characters for future printings of the stories. Newt became Billie while Hicks was now known as Wilks. The only other major difference between the original publications is that as well as being renamed the trade paperbacks were also recoloured.

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A key story in the comic version of the film is Outbreak starting ten years after the events of Aliens. Hicks and Newt have been struggling with the aftermath of their encounter with the Xenomorphs. Newt is in a mental institution, and when nothing seems to help her, the doctors decide to wipe her memory. Hicks has never gotten over the Aliens and the annihilation of his squad, so he agrees to go on a mission to the alien home world to recover some eggs and to destroy one of the hives (the hive-destroying serves no purpose other than to satisfy Hicks’ hatred). Hicks goes to visit Newt before he goes, only to find out that her memory is about to be wiped. Hicks believes Newt to be the only thing that marks his existence and the only thing that marks his squad’s sacrifice, so he rescues her and takes her to the home world. Their spaceship is followed by another, though…

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Meanwhile, strange things are happening on Earth. A scientific corporation has acquired an alien Queen, and begins harvesting eggs. A weird cult that believes the Aliens to be God’s spiritual rebirth breaks in and they all give themselves up for face-hugging. Earth is overrun.

On the home world, the team lands (Newt has fallen in love with a soldier named Butler) and are attacked by a band of soldiers, who want the eggs for themselves, after tracking them to the planet. They give up their weapons and stand down, but the attackers are forced into the hive by the various other hostile species on the planet. The team gathers weapons, and foolishly go into the hive to rescue their attackers. They rescue a few, and most of them get out, but not before the reason they so stupidly went in is revealed: they are all synthetic humans.

Newt is distraught; Butler makes it back, but is ripped in half (revealing he is actually a synthetic), and Hicks almost kills them all by waiting until he has set the charges to take off, but they make it and go back to Earth. As soon as they get there, they have to leave, and are told by a general that they are following a standard military procedure against the Aliens: they are retreating. There is a mass exodus from Earth, most of the survivors being military. Butler, Hicks, and Newt get on a ship and flee Earth.

Buy Aliens versus Predator: Three World War from Amazon.com

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More excitingly for many fans were the new avenues available for exploration now the characters were free from the shackles of big budgets, timid film companies and technical viability. The alien creatures were now free to battle and invade strange new worlds and similarly well-loved characters:

  • Aliens vs. Predator
  • Aliens versus Predator versus The Terminator
  • Mindhunter
  • Batman/Aliens
  • Green Lantern Versus Aliens
  • Judge Dredd vs. Aliens
  • Superman/Aliens
  • Superman and Batman versus Aliens and Predator
  • WildC.A.T.s/Aliens

As we can see, a duff Aliens vs. Predator film is no obstacle to the writers and artists of comics – the answer? 1 complete re-write and when that isn’t quite enough, the introduction of Terminator as well.

Predator vs Judge Dredd vs Aliens

Buy Predator vs Judge Dredd vs Aliens from Amazon.com

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The incessant nature of the alien and the audience’s familiarity with the ‘lore’ surrounding their behaviour meant that team-ups and face-offs were rife and there were seemingly no end to the environments and  situations they could be thrown into, future, past or against comic book characters as localised and well-loved as Judge Dredd.

Buy Aliens versus Predator Omnibus Vol. 1 from Amazon.com

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Predator

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A natural next stop-off on our journey- if anything, Predator found itself used even more prolifically. partly perhaps the more humanoid form lending itself to better interaction, sadly, more likely, that the chances of a good new Predator film were slimmer than a good Aliens film. Again, from the Dark Horse, ahem, stable:

  • Aliens vs. Predator, the better known comic books
  • Aliens versus Predator versus The Terminator
  • Predator vs. Magnus, Robot Fighter
  • Predator vs. Judge Dredd
  • Batman versus Predator
  • Superman vs. Predator
  • Superman and Batman versus Aliens and Predator
  • JLA vs. Predator
  • Tarzan vs. Predator at the Earth’s Core (by Walter Simonson and Lee Weeks, 4-issue mini-series
  • Aliens vs. Predator/Witchblade/Darkness:
    • Overkill (by Paul Jenkins and Clarence Lansang, Top Cow, 2-issue mini-series, 2000)
    • Mindhunter (by David Quinn, Mel Rubi, and Mike Perkins, Dark Horse Comics, 4-issues miniseries

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Bringing the saga to a temporary conclusion is Dark Horse’s Prometheus: Fire and Stone, from the Eisner Award–nominated team of Paul Tobin and artist Juan Ferreyra. It’s not stretching the brain  cells too much to be given a scenario of a search team being dispatched to discover what happened to the ill-fated Prometheus. Set over a hundred years after the film (and forty years after Aliens), many fans have already speculated a to whether it continues clues to Ridley Scott’s sequel. The Weyand-Yutani corporation are still very much a feature and a return to their previous ‘behaviour’ once again makes an already difficult proposition for the team even harder. When they arrive at the moon the expedition was last heard from, it isn’t quite what the team expected.

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28 Days Later

It wasn’t only established films which were chosen for ink and papyrus. In lieu of another film, Fox Atomic Comics, in association with HarperCollins, published a graphic novel bridging the time gap between 28 Days Later and 28 Weeks Later, entitled 28 Days Later: The Aftermath, written by Steve Niles.

28 Days Later, a comic sequel also linking Days and Weeks and produced by Fox Atomic (until its demise) and Boom! Studios, begun production in 2009. The series focuses on Selena and answers questions about her in the film and her sequel whereabouts.

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 Child’s Play

Beginning in 1990, Innovation Publishing released the first comic books based on the films, in the form of a three issue adaptation of Child’s Play 2. It was later collected in a trade paperback. The success of the adaptation led to a monthly series of new stories starting in 1991. The series, titled Child’s Play: The Series, ended in 1992 after only five issues. This was followed by a three issue adaptation of Child’s Play 3.

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In 2007, Devil’s Due Publishing obtained the license to publish Child’s Play comics and released a one-shot crossover with Hack/Slash titled Hack/Slash vs. Chucky which takes place after the events of the Seed of Chucky film. This was followed by a four-issue series called Chucky. A second volume began in early 2009 but ceased publication after only one issue.

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Clive Barker – Nightbreed, Hellraiser and beyond

Some film-makers lent themselves to comic-book adaptation, none more-so than Clive Barker, an artist of some renown in his own right. A long-time comics fan, Barker achieved his dream of publishing his own superhero books when Marvel Comics launched the Razorline imprint in 1993. Based on detailed premises, titles and lead characters he created specifically for this, the four interrelated titles — set outside the Marvel universe — were Ectokid (written first by James Robinson, then by future Matrix co-creator Lana Wachowski, with art by Steve Skroce), Hokum & Hex (written by Frank Lovece, art by Anthony Williams), Hyperkind (written by Fred Burke, art by Paris Cullins and Bob Petrecca) and Saint Sinner (written by Elaine Lee, art by Max Douglas). A 2002 Barker telefilm titled Saint Sinner bore no relation to the comic.

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Barker horror adaptations and spin-offs in comics include the Marvel/Epic Comics series Hellraiser, Nightbreed, Pinhead, The Harrowers, Book of the Damned, and Jihad; Eclipse Books’ series and graphic novels Tapping The Vein, Dread, Son of Celluloid, Revelations The Life of Death, Rawhead Rex and The Yattering and Jack, and Dark Horse Comics’Primal, among others. Barker served as a consultant and wrote issues of the Hellraiser anthology comic book.

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In 2005, IDW published a three-issue adaptation of Barker’s children’s fantasy novel The Thief of Always, written and painted by Kris Oprisko and Gabriel Hernandez. IDW is publishing a twelve issue adaptation of Barker’s novel The Great and Secret Show.

In December 2007, Chris Ryall and Clive Barker announced an original comic book series, Torakator, published by IDW.

In October 2009, IDW published Seduth (Written by Clive Barker and Chris Monfette; art by Gabriel Rodriguez; colours by Jay Fotos; letters by Neil Uyetake; edits by Chris Ryall; and 3-D conversion by Ray Zone), the first time Barker has created a world specifically for the comic book medium in two decades. The work was released with three variant covers; cover A featuring art by Gabriel Rodriguez and cover B with art by Clive Barker and the third is a “retailer incentive signed edition cover” with art by Clive Barker.

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In 2011, Boom! Studios began publishing an original Hellraiser comic book series. The comic book picks up 2 decades after the events of Hellbound: Hellraiser II, and from there, builds its own mythology. The book has several credited writers: Chris Monfette, Anthony Diblasi, Mark Miller and most recently Witch Doctor creator Brandon Seifert. The series is ongoing and has just celebrated its second anniversary in print.

In 2013, Boom! Studios announced the first original story by Barker to be published in comic book format: Next Testament. The story concerns a man, Julian Demond, who unearths the God of the Old Testament and discovers that he has bit off more than he can chew. The series is co written by Seraphim Films Vice President Mark Miller.

Cloverfield

With a sequel/prequel to the surprise 2008 hit Cloverfield evidently lost in development hell, enterprising folks digested every morsel of information given in both the film and surrounding PR material to produce their own interpretation. Cloverfield/Kishin (クローバーフィールド/KISHIN Kurōbāfīrudo/KISHIN) is the manga and cross-media tie-in result. It was published once a month on Kadokawa Shoten’s website and consists of four chapters. There are English translations for the story, but only on fansites.The story details the lives of two students seeking for shelter before what may seem to be the Chuai incident seen in the film’s viral marketing material, and their internal conflicts when the Cloverfield monster makes an appearance. One of the students is being tracked by a cult that has connections to both the monster and the fictional Japanese drilling company Tagruato. The manga has a stronger focus on the viral-marketing materials such as Slusho! and Tagruato than the film. There are several new revelations regarding the nature and biology of the monster.

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Evil Dead

It may be viewed as slightly depressing that it was the most inferior film of the Evil Dead films trilogy that spawned the most comic book adaptations. Army of Darkness comics are based on the film of the same name published originally by Dark Horse Comics, and later by Dynamite Entertainment who initially published them through Devil’s Due Publishing. The stories follow the adventures of the Evil Dead series, Ash Williams, and has included a number of crossovers with a wide variety of characters such as, Marvel Zombies, Darkman, Freddy Krueger, Jason Voorhees, Dracula, Xena, Danger Girl, Re-Animator and Barack Obama.

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In 1992, Dark Horse published an adaptation of the film with the original ending intact. John Bolton adapted the story from the script written by Sam Raimi and Ivan Raimi, in addition to providing the artwork. It was published as a three issue mini-series and was released as a trade paperback by Dynamite in 2006. From here, the twists and turns were myriad.

In Ashes to Ashes, the plot picks up right at the end of the film, where the wizard of Army of Darkness goes to Ash’s times to tell him that he’s still not in his right time and that he arrived moments before he left to the wood in the first Evil Dead. Now he once again faces the evil in the woods and encounters his self from the true present, and along with the Wizard sends him to the past where the events of The Army of Darkness took place. While trying to destroy the book that caused all the events of the trilogy to take place, the two travel to Egypt, where the wizard is killed and Evil Ash is resurrected, in a final battle Ash is able to destroy Evil Ash and his army with the help of the medieval warriors of Arthur’s court from the third film and once again encounters Sheila, after the end of the battle everybody goes to their respective timeline but Ash leaves the book behind, forgetting to destroy it.

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After developing the natural story as far as it would go, it became time to introduce Ash to characters from other films, something long mooted by film production companies and fan-boys but never, as yet, risked. A crossover with Herbert West from H. P. Lovecraft’s short story, “Herbert West – Re-animator” and well-known from the film Re-Animator and its sequels came first, with a rather more traditional foe, Dracula, up next – it was this twist that led to Ash’s appearance in the hugely popular Marvel Zombies strand.

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Later, a crossover with another Sam Raimi film character, Darkman was published. It was written by Roger Stern and Kurt Busiek, with art by James Fry. It ran for four issues from August 2006 to March 2007 and the trade paperback was released in late 2007. The story features Darkman/Dr. Peyton Westlake’s former love Julie accidentally read the incantations of the Necronomicon, which unleashes a deadite infestation throughout the city and transforms Julie into the Deadite Queen. Helping her friend Brynne Kelly escape with the book, the pair use it to open a portal and summon the ‘Legendary Hero’ to them – which turns out to be Ash Williams. Teaming up, the trio take on the army of deadites – led by Darkman’s deceased enemy Robert Druant – as they plan to use the book to help rid Julie of the evil inside her. The trio succeed in reversing the effects, freeing Julie and destroying the deadite army. Ash and Brynne share a kiss before he disappears while Darkman watches over Julie and her boyfriend Tony, understanding that his desire to save Julie cost the lives of others and that he will have to live with it.

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More familiar fare followed, pitting Ash against both Freddy and Jason, as well as featuring cameos of known characters from the Friday the 13th and A Nightmare on Elm Street franchises, Xena (of Warrior Princess fame), before throwing the rulebook out of the window entirely and introducing Santa Claus and the President of the USA to the action!

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Final Destination

The wildly successful but seemingly studio-unfavoured Final Destination films actually only number five, despite feeling rather more like fifteen. The enjoyably high death-count was too much for other creative types to resist – no fewer than ten, and that’s not a typo, novels were published before a rather more restrained number of comics. The first Final Destination comic book, entitled Sacrifice, was published by Zenescope Entertainment and came packaged with a limited edition DVD of Final Destination 3 sold exclusively at Circuit City. The premise of the story involves the survivor of a terrible accident, who continually experiences images of other people’s deaths, isolating himself from the rest of the world to escape the visions that torment him. Zenescope later released a five issue miniseries, subtitled Spring Break, which involves a group led by Carly Hagan being stalked by Death after surviving a hotel fire and becoming stranded in Cancún, Mexico. The miniseries was later released in a trade paperback collection, which included the Sacrifice comic as bonus content.

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Friday 13th

Since New Line Cinema’s acquisition of the franchise, several Friday the 13th comic books have been published by Topps Comics, Avatar Press, and DC Comics imprint, WildStorm. The first comic book release for the franchise was the 1993 Topps Comics adaptation of Jason Goes to Hell, written by Andy Mangels. The three-issue series was a condensed version of the film with a few added scenes. Topps Comics published another series in 1995, with Nancy A. Collins writing a three-issue, non‑canonical miniseries involving a crossover between Jason and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre‘s Leatherface. The story involves Jason stowing away aboard a train and eventually meeting Leatherface. The two initially become friends, with Leatherface adopting Jason into the former’s family. After a series of misunderstandings (those guys), Jason and Leatherface turn on each other.

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On May 13, 2005, New Line first exercised their rights to use the Friday the 13th moniker when they, along with Avatar comics, released a special issue of Friday the 13th. Written by Brian Pulido and illustrated by Mike Wolfer and Greg Waller, the story takes place after the events of Freddy vs. Jason, where siblings Miles and Laura Upland inherit Camp Crystal Lake. Knowing that Jason caused the recent destruction, Laura, unknown to her brother, sets out to kill Jason with a paramilitary group so that she and her brother can sell the property. 

Avatar released a three-issue miniseries titled Friday the 13th: Bloodbath in September 2005. The series was written by Brian Pulido, illustrated by Mike Wolfer and Andrew Dalhouse, and revolves around a group of teenagers who come to Camp Tomorrow, a camp that sits on Crystal Lake, for work and a “party-filled weekend”. The teenagers begin to discover that they share common family backgrounds and soon awaken Jason, who proceeds to kill them. Brian Pulido returned for a third time in October 2005 to write another special issue for Avatar, titled Jason X. Picking up after the events of the Jason X film, Jason is now on Earth 2 where a bioengineer, Kristen, attempts to subdue him in hopes that she can use his regenerative tissue to save her own life and the lives of those she loves.

In February 2006, Avatar published their final Friday the 13th comic, a two-issue miniseries titled Friday the 13th: Jason vs. Jason X. The series was written and illustrated by Mike Wolfer. The story takes place after the events of the film Jason X, where a salvage team discovers the spaceship Grendel and awakens a regenerated Jason Voorhees. The “original” Jason and Über-Jason, a version of Jason with mechanical limbs, are drawn into a battle to the death. In June 2006, a one-shot comic titled Friday the 13th: Fearbook was released, written by Mike Wolfer with art by Sebastian Fiumara. In the comic, Jason is captured and experimented upon by the Trent Organization. Jason escapes and seeks out Violet, the survivor of Friday the 13th: Bloodbath, whom the Trent Organization is holding in their Crystal Lake headquarters.

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In December 2006, WildStorm began publishing its own series of comic books under the Friday the 13th title. The first set was a six-issue miniseries that involves Jason’s return to Crystal Lake, a lone survivor’s tale of the murder of her friends by a monster, a new revelation about the evil surrounding Crystal Lake, and the truth of what Jason embodies. On July 11 and August 15, 2007, WildStorm published a two-part special titled Friday the 13th: Pamela’s Tale. The two-issue comic book covers Pamela Voorhees’ journey to Camp Crystal Lake and the story of her pregnancy with Jason as she recounts it to hitch-hiker Annie, a camp counsellor who is killed in the original film..

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WildStorm released another comic book special, titled Friday the 13th: How I Spent My Summer Vacation, consisting of two issues that were released on September 12 and October 10, 2007. The comic book provides insight into the psychology of Jason Voorhees as he befriends a boy born with a skull deformity. WildStorm released a six-issue sequel to Freddy vs. Jason, titled Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash, starring the two aforementioned killers and Ash from the Evil Dead film series. The story focuses on Freddy using the Necronomicon, which is in the basement of the Voorhees home, to escape from Jason’s subconscious and “gain powers unlike anything he’s had before”. Freddy attempts to use Jason to retrieve the book, but Ash, who is working at the local S‑Mart in Crystal Lake, learns of the book’s existence and sets out to destroy it once and for all. The story, by Jeff Katz, was a sequel to the Freddy vs. Jason film in development before the former film had been theatrically released. After meeting with executives, the negotiations ended and the story was shelved.

Following the bewildering success of Freddy vs. Jason, the idea of including Ash was brought up again but New Line ultimately decided they would put the story in comic book form and bring in James Kuhoric to write and Jason Craig to do the artwork. On January 9 and February 13, 2008, WildStorm released another two-issue miniseries, titled Friday the 13th: Bad Land, which was written and illustrated by Ron Marz and Mike Huddleston, respectively. The series explores the history of Crystal Lake before Pamela and Jason Voorhees arrived. Bad Land takes place in two time frames, the “present day” and 250 years before “present day”. It follows three hikers in the present and three fur trappers in the past, each of whom is snowed in by a blizzard at Crystal Lake. Each group experiences similar events, suggesting that there is a connection between the two groups.

A one-shot comic, titled Friday the 13th: Abuser and the Abused, written by Joshua Hale Fialkov with artwork by Andy B., was released on April 30, 2008. The story involves a teenager named Maggie tricking her abusive boyfriend into travelling to Crystal Lake, where she plans to murder him, but she encounters Jason shortly after arriving at the camp. The six-issue sequel to Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash, subtitled The Nightmare Warriors, began. Written by Jeff Katz and James Kuhoric, and illustrated by Jason Craig, the miniseries has Ash and survivors of both Freddy and Jason banding together to defeat the two after Freddy is released from the world of the Deadites by government operatives who had discovered the Necronomicon.

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Fright Night

Although there were only two films (though later a remake of the first) and the second being almost lost in the memory of those who watched it, the Fright Night films were simple enough and more importantly held in affection enough to warrant a quick comic book jaunt. In actual fact, the quick jaunt spanned 22 issues, published by Now Comics between 1988 and 1990.

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George Romero

Even before The Walking Dead made zombies even cooler than CGI werewolves and foppish vampires, comic publishers were exploiting George Romero’s world of the undead, a handful of books and comics books taking place in the Living Dead universe, some of them are officially endorsed, while others not.

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Toe Tags, also known as The Death of Death is a six-issue comic book mini-series originally published from December 2004 to May 2005 by DC Comic and was based on an unused script by Romero. It was drawn by Tommy Castillo and Rodney Ramos, with covers by horror artist Berni Wrightson. Romero’s story is actually based on an unused script for a sequel to his Dead films; the miniseries therefore follows his similar tropes: Extreme gore, social commentary, evolving zombies, and the heroes riding off in the end into an unknown fate.

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  • Escape of the Living Dead is a five-issue comic book mini-series originally published from September 2005 to March 2006 by Avatar Press and written by John A. Russo as a sequel to Night of the Living Dead
  • Escape of the Living Dead: Fearbook is a single issue comic book originally published August 2006 by Avatar Press and written by Mike Wolfer and is a sequel to Escape of the Living Dead.
  • Escape of the Living Dead: Airborne is a three-issue comic book mini-series originally published from September 2006 to November 2006 by Avatar Press and written by John A. Russo and Mike Wolfer and is a sequel to Escape of the Living Dead.
  • Escape of the Living Dead Annual #1 is a single issue comic book originally published March 2007 by Avatar Press and written by Mike Wolfer and is a sequel to Escape of the Living Dead.
  • Escape of the Living Dead: Resurrected is a collection of the whole series originally published January 2008 by Avatar Press. It contains all ten issues of the story: the original 5 issue series, the 3 issue Airborne series, the Fearbook, and the Annual.

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  • Night of the Living Dead
  • Night of the Living Dead 2011 Annual
  • Night of the Living Dead Annual #1

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  • Night of the Living Dead: Back From the Grave
  • Night of the Living Dead: The Beginning #1
  • Night of the Living Dead Holiday Special #1

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Further Romero-spawned zombie fun was explored in a series of three Dawn of the Dead comics by Steve Niles and Chee and a five issue run of Land of the Dead, by Chris Ryall and Gabriel Rodriquez.

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Away from zombies, Romero was 50% of the talent behind 1982’s Creepshow, his collaboration with the famed novelist, Stephen King. As the film itself revolved around the stories in a pulp EC-type horror comic, it was natural that art should imitate… well, art and so it came to pass. The graphic novella was published by Penguin imprint Plume in July 1982, echoes the stories in the film and consists of five tales, two of which are based on earlier prose stories by King, while the remaining three were written specifically for the movie. The book’s interior art is by Bernie Wrightson with Michele Wrightson, with a cover by Jack Kamen.

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  • “Father’s Day”
  • “The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill” (based on the short story “Weeds”, first published in 1976)
  • “Something to Tide You Over”
  • “The Crate” (based on the short story “The Crate””, first published in 1979)
  • “They’re Creeping Up on You”

There is no introduction or afterword of any kind, although on the back cover it states “Stephen King conjures up five jolting tales of horror.” Interestingly, the short stories “Weeds” and “The Crate” have never been collected in a King book and both remain uncollected.

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Ghostbusters

The Ghostbusters franchise spawned various comic books published by various comic book companies through the years starting in 1988 and continuing to the present day. These comics have ranged from being based on the The Real Ghostbusters animated series, to more straight up themed comics based on the characters from the 1984 film.

The very first comic book addition to the Ghostbusters franchise was The Real Ghostbusters. It was a comic series based on the animated series of the same name – NOW Comics and Marvel Comics shared the comic book rights to the property. NOW Comics had the rights for publication in North America, while Marvel had the rights in Europe. Some of the Marvel UK issues reprinted material from the NOW Comics series, and vice versa. Publication of the series began on March 28, 1988.

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NOW Comics began their series in August 1988. The series ran for two volumes, two annuals and one special, the first volume running for 28 issues. The series was primarily written by James Van Hise, with the exceptions being issue 4 by La Morris Richmond and issue 21 which featured Marvel UK reprints due to production delays. John Tobias, Phillip Hester, Evan Dorkin and Howard Bender were among the pencilers for the series.

The series was on hiatus for a time due to the publisher’s financial difficulties, but was subsequently re-launched. The second volume ran for four issues, one special (The Real Ghostbusters Spectacular 3-D Special) and two annuals (one regular and one 3-D). The series had a main story that ran from the 3-D Special through issue 4, followed by back-up stories reprinted from the Marvel UK run. They also contained game pages and health tips for kids and parents. Several issues of volume 1 and the main issues of volume 2 used covers taken from the Marvel UK run.

NOW Comics also published a 3 issue miniseries in 1989 called Real Ghostbusters Starring in Ghostbusters II that was collected as a trade paperback.

A spin-off series of the popular Ghostbusters character Slimer was also published. NOW Comics published a series that ran 19 issues from 1989 through 1990, as well as spawning a one shot special called The Real Ghostbusters 3-D Slimer Special. Some of these issues were reprinted as a trade paperback in 1991.

When IDW Publishing licensed the comic book rights to the Ghostbusters property, they began to reprint the Now Comics series in a multi-volume series of trade-paperbacks called The Real Ghostbusters Omnibus beginning in October 2012.

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Marvel UK published a magazine-sized comic for 193 issues that also spawned 4 annuals and 10 specials. The series started its run on March 28, 1988, starting five months before the NOW Comics series. Each issue contained three to four comic stories, a prose story alternating from a regular tale to one narrated by Winston Zeddemore, a prose entry of Egon Spengler’s Spirit Guide typically discussing the entities in the comic, a bio of a character or ghost that appeared in the series, and a short Slimer strip. The comics featured a rotating line-up of creators, including John Carnell, Dan Abnett, Andy Lanning, Brian Williamson, Anthony Williams, Stuart Place, Richard Starkings, and Helen Stone.

The series ran weekly and eventually began to feature reprints from the American comics as well as stories that appeared previously in the series. The American comics were often broken up into four to five parts, and incorporated the failed Slimer! series beginning with issue 121. The last original story ran in issue 171 with the remaining issues beingreprints from the earlier comics and the American books.

Four annual comics were produced in a hardcover format. Each book contained several comic strips, full-page Slimer strips, and prose stories. The books also included game and activity pages, and reprints of bios found in the regular books.

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Over ten years after the end of The Real Ghostbusters comic books, the property returned to comics courtesy of the Quebec based comic company 88MPH Studios. They published a four issue mini-series titled Ghostbusters: Legion that ran from February through May 2004. It was written by Andrew Dabb with pencils by Steve Kurth and inks by Serge LaPointe. Unlike the previous comics, this title (as well as future titles by other publishing companies) would be presenting the characters the way they were portrayed in the original 1984 film but set in 2004 instead of 1984, more serious themed and less cartoonish than The Real Ghostbusters series.

The storyline of Legion saw the return of the four Ghostbusters and the principal cast from the movie. Set six months on from the Gozer incident (in this universe having occurred in 2004) the series was designed to follow the Ghostbusters as their initial fame faded and they returned to the regular chore of busting ghosts on a daily basis. The series sees the team run ragged as a spate of supernatural crimes and other related occurrences plague the city.

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Prior to its release, the miniseries featured five pieces of promotional artwork featuring all four Ghostbusters. Two other pieces of promotional artwork were also featured on the back of the comic books once the miniseries had begun. These featured a promo of a melting Stay Puft Marshmallow Man featuring the phrase “S’mores Anyone?” and a promo of Slimer featuring the phrase “Vermin Problems?”

A special ‘Christmas card’ was created specially for the site, drawn by well-known Ghostbusters prop member Sean Bishop and coloured by one of the comic production staff.

When IDW Publishing picked up the franchise they took the opportunity to introduce the characters to other strands already well-known – these included escapes with Mars Attacks! and X-Files.

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Godzilla and other Kaiju

Japan’s most famous monster has appeared in a range of comic books that have been published in its home country and the United States.In his native Japan, Godzilla has been featured in various comic books since his inception in 1954. These comics for the most part were black and white publications known as manga, the vast majority of these were adaptations of the films. Every film from Godzilla up to Godzilla 2000 received a comic adaptation with the exception of King Kong vs. Godzilla. All the films from Godzilla vs. Megaguirus through to Godzilla: Final Wars did not receive a comic book adaptation.

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For the most part there were anywhere from two to four different adaptations of each film (the first comic adaptation of Godzilla vs. Biollante was called Godzilla 1990, while the second adaptation of Godzilla vs. Mothra was called Godzilla vs. Mothra: Great Study). Most of these comics (in particular the comics from the 1950s through the 1970s) were published in children’s magazines such as Bokura, Bouken Oh, and Shonen, while others were published in yellow pages-sized monthly or weekly publications, while still others were published as one-shots and sold in cinemas. Many of the latter comics (1980s–1990s) were published by Shogakukan Comics, Tentomushi comics, and Kodansya Comics. In the early 1990s, many of the original adaptations from the original series of Godzilla films were compiled into two pocketbook-sized volumes and reprinted by Bamboo Books.

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Most of the time these adaptations would deviate from the original films and flesh out characters or add scenarios to the stories that were not present in the original film. Outside of these adaptations many of the original Godzilla films also received Asahi Sonorama book and record sets. These illustrated comic-style book and record sets featured painted artwork within.

Godzilla was also featured in original stories – a sequel story to the original film was published in 1955 called The Last Godzilla, while a sequel story to Godzilla Raids Again was published in 1958 called Godzilla 2: Anguirus Strikes Back. In 1979, the Japanese edition of Starlog featured a two part illustrated story written by Katsuhiro Otomo called A Space Godzilla. Part one was featured in issue #4 (Farewell Earth) while part 2 was featured in issue #6 (Return to the Stars). In 1991 an anthology style comic featuring different stories by different writers and artists was published called The Godzilla Comic. This was followed in 1992 by The Godzilla Comic Strikes Back: Gigantes(sic) The Fire Comic. These 2 comics featured varying styles of stories. The stories would range from typical Godzilla tales, to comedic stories, to violent stories, to even “adult” themed stories that featured nudity.

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In 2014, to coincide with the 60th anniversary of Godzilla and the 40th anniversary of the company’s own Big Comic Original Magazine, Shogakukan Inc. released the comic Big Comic Original Godzilla Special Issue. This one-shot comic featured twenty one Godzilla themed comic stories from the industries top manga artists and writers.

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Through the years since 1976, there have been various Godzilla comics published by different comic book publishing companies in America. These range from promotional comics to comics published by large mainstream comic companies such as Marvel Comics.

The first Godzilla comic published in the United States was actually a small promotional comic. In the summer of 1976 (as part of the publicity promoting the upcoming U.S. release of the film Godzilla vs. Megalon), a small 4-page comic book adaptation was published by Cinema Shares International Distribution Corp. and given away for free at cinemas. The comic featured no credits (so the artist and writer are unknown) and featured no cover. It was magazine-sized and published on newsprint. The comic is infamous for getting names of some of the major characters wrong as Jet Jaguar is referred to as “Robotman,” and Gigan is referred to as “Borodan”.

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It was actually another giant scaly beast who first came under the scrutiny of American artists. Gorgo appeared as far back as 1961, penned by Spider-man legend, Steve Ditko and with stories penned by Joe Gill. The series spanned 29 issues after a comic based on a film about a giant ape in London by the title of Konga proved a success for Charlton they try again with another English produced B-film, this titled Gorgo, both released at the same time as the films, the comics run for 23 issues each, a pretty good run for a Charlton comic at the time, as well as being the stars of Return of Konga (2 issues,) Return of Gorgo, (1 issue) and Revenge of Gorgo (2 issues,) there are also two less successful monster books, Reptilicus, based on herocially inept B-movie from Sweden, which runs for 2 issues, and Reptisaurus which ran for 6 issues and is only marginally based on Reptilicus.
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From 1977 until 1979, Godzilla starred in a 24-issue run of comics written by Doug Moench, drawn by Herb Trimpe, and published by Marvel Comics entitled Godzilla, King of the Monsters. The series thrusts Godzilla completely into the Marvel Universe. In a nod to King Kong vs. Godzilla, Godzilla first appears by exploding out of an iceberg near Alaska; although, how the prehistoric creature came to be trapped again in ice is never revealed – the beauty of comics are that the audience is generally very accepting of wild inconsistencies. Over the course of the series, he crosses the continental United States and eventually ends up in New York City.

Godzilla’s appearances in the Toho films are alluded to in a few issues. In at least one issue, Godzilla seems like the lesser of two evils. He clashes with a monster far more evil, who generally acts more like an actual animal, albeit one with unusual levels of intelligence. Despite such allusions to the films, Godzilla is depicted as more animal-like than as the highly intelligent, perhaps sentient, creature depicted in the majority of the films by the time of the comics’ printing (1977), in what is considered the Showa period of Godzilla films (1954–75). This version of Godzilla, while intelligent, is not the protector of mankind; however, he does, at times, exhibit compassion for human characters such as “Dum Dum” Dugan, the S.H.I.E.L.D. agent who is tasked with his capture, destruction, or repulsion from America, and Robert Takiguchi, the grandson of Japanese scientific expert Dr. Yuriko Takiguchi, who regards Godzilla as a hero and who is depicted as being Godzilla’s only friend. Unlike other characters whose actions, thoughts, and feelings are told through thought balloons, Godzilla’s are narrated externally via captions.

Godzilla encounters not only agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. during the course of the series but many other heroes in the Marvel Comics universe. Among them are the now-defunct group the Champions (sans Ghost Rider, though he was a member at the time), the Fantastic Four, Devil Dinosaur, Moon-Boy and the Avengers, along with a brief cameo by Spider-Man in the last issue of the series.

Godzilla also fights other gigantic monsters, including Yetrigar, a King Kong-esque giant primate, and the alien Mega Monsters. Red Ronin, a giant robotic entity created specifically for the series, reappears in Avengers, Solo Avengers, and an issue of Wolverine, in which Godzilla is given an oblique nod, being referred to as a “Time Lost Dinosaur,” presumably to avoid legal action by Toho. Marvel had, by then, lost the rights to depict Godzilla. Red Ronin also appears in the series Earth X.

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Godzilla, Yetrigar and Red Ronin participate in a three-way brawl in the Grand Canyon. From Godzilla King of the Monsters #11. (June 1978). Published by Marvel Comics. Art by Herb Trimpe and Ernie Chan.

Between February 1979 and July 1979, Marvel had the comic book rights to both Godzilla and the Shogun Warriors. While the characters never crossed paths in their respective comics, artist Herb Trimpe (who did the artwork for both of the series) drew a variation of Godzilla andRodan alongside Daimos, Great Mazinger, Raydeen, and Gaiking on the top page of a comic book ad soliciting the Shogun Warrior toys. Mattel Toys (who had the license to the Shogun Warriors) also had the licence to produce toys based on Godzilla and Rodan at this time. Also around this time, Marvel had prepared another story featuring Godzilla where he would have battled Dragon Lord. But since the copyright had expired, they modified Godzilla into a dragon like creature named The Wani for a story published in Marvel Spotlight vol. 2 #5 (March 1980).

Despite the loss of copyright, Marvel would continue to use Godzilla for several years afterward. In Iron Man No. 193, one of Godzilla’s primary antagonists from the original series, mad scientist Doctor Demonicus, captures and mutates Godzilla so that he no longer resembles his Toho namesake. This altered version of the monster would appear in Iron Man #193 and would return in No. 194, and #196. His last appearance was in The Thing No. 31, where he is actually referred to as Godzilla.

Outside of this, Godzilla has been referenced or spoofed in other Marvel comics. In The Web of Spider-Man Annual No. 2 from 1986, the character Warlock from The New Mutants turned into Godzilla and then King Kong during a rampage through New York City. In The New Mutants Annual No. 3 in 1987, the Impossible Man turns into Godzilla during a battle with Warlock who turns into Red Ronin. In The Amazing Spider-Man No. 413 from 1996, Spider-Man battles a huge robot toy Godzilla (among other giant robotic toys) brought about by the villain Mysterio. In the opening issue of The Mighty Avengers from 2007, a creature bearing a resemblance to the Heisei (1980s and ’90s) Godzilla, appears alongside other giant monsters sent to attack the surface world by the Mole Man. When this issue was solicited in Marvel Previews via a sneak peek page, the creature had Godzilla’s distinctive dorsal spines but when the actual comic was published, the dorsal spines had been removed. Godzilla is also mentioned in the 2005 one shot comic Marvel Monsters: From the Files of Ulysses Bloodstone and the Monster Hunters. In Astonishing X-Men No. 36 (which was published in 2011), the monster Fin Fang Foom is rampaging through down-town Tokyo. In one panel, he passes by a building that has a Godzilla billboard on its roof.

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The Marvel Comics atlas (under the article on Japan) states that the Age of Monsters began in 1954, which is evidently a reference to the original Godzilla film. Additionally, the entry mentions that Godzilla returns years later and is the reason for the construction of Red Ronin and the formation of S.H.I.E.L.D.’s Godzilla Squadron. S.H.I.E.L.D.’s Godzilla-hunting ship, Behemoth, has recently resurfaced under the command of Amadeus Cho in The Incredible Hercules #115. Yuriko Takiguchi, too, has reappeared in recent years, having been recruited by Beast to join his X-Club in Uncanny X-Men #506. Another monster resembling Godzilla served as the “self-destruct event” for Takiguchi’s lab on Kunashir Island.In 2006, Marvel reprinted the entire 24 issue run of Godzilla, King of the Monsters as a trade paperback collection called Essential Godzilla, King of the Monsters. Like all of Marvel’s Essential line, the series was published in black and white rather than colour, like in its original printing.

In 1987, Dark Horse Comics acquired the rights to Godzilla and for the next 12 years published various comic books and trade paperbacks based on the character. These ran the gamut from back up stories in anthology titles, to one shots, to mini-series, to an ongoing series, as well as various reprints in the trade paperback format. In 1987, they published a black and white one shot comic called Godzilla King of the Monsters Special. Between 1988 and 1989, DH published a 6 issue mini series simply called Godzilla. It was a translated version of the Japanese manga of the film The Return of Godzilla, which was based on the Japanese version of the film rather than the Americanized version, Godzilla 1985. This series was reprinted in the trade paperback Godzilla, which was issued in 1990 and then reissued in 1995. It was also reprinted in colour in the mini series Dark Horse Classics: Terror of Godzilla #1-#6 from 1998–1999.

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In 1992, an illustration of Godzilla (provided by Arthur Adams) was published in San Diego Comic Con Comics #1. Also that year the one shot Godzilla Colour Special was published. It would be reprinted as simply Dark Horse Classics Godzilla in 1998.

In 1993, Godzilla was featured in the anthology series Dark Horse Comics in issues #10 and #11. That year Godzilla was also featured in a pair of one shot comics. Urban Legends, which dispells the dual ending myth from the film King Kong vs Godzilla, as well as Godzilla vs Barkley, which was based on the commercial Godzilla vs. Charles Barkley. This comic was also published in Japan.

In 1995, Godzilla appeared in the one shot comic Godzilla vs. Hero Zero. That year Godzilla starred in an ongoing series called Godzilla King of the Monsters that ran from issue #0-#16. This series was published from 1995 through 1996. The series features several new monsters for Godzilla to battle and a story arc in which Godzilla was flung through time by a would-be archvillain, who uses him to cause the San Francisco Earthquake of 1906, sink the Titanic, and even pit him against the Spanish Armada. Godzilla would be flung into the far flung future as well and would rampage across it before returning to the modern day. The last issue of the Dark Horse series sees Godzilla flung back into time to just a few hours before the asteroid, which supposedly destroys the dinosaurs impacted on Earth, and fights an alien creature. This issue first seems to have an ‘it was all a dream’ ending, as Godzilla wakes from his slumber in the modern day. But then a twist is thrown into the ending. Godzilla is shown staring at a piece of his opponent’s tail that is still in his hand from where he had ripped it off in the final moments of their battle before the impact.

In 1996, Godzilla appeared in the anthology series Dark Horse Presents in issue #106, as well the miniseries A Decade of Dark Horse in issue #4. Also that year some of the earlier published material was reprinted in the one shot comic Art Adams’ Creature Features.

Finally in 1998, Godzilla appeared in trade paperbacks and miniseries that were simply reprinting earlier material. This included the mini series Dark Horse Classics: Godzilla King of the Monsters #1-#6 and the trade paperbacks Godzilla Age of Monsters and Godzilla Past, Present, Future.

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In 2010, IDW Publishing obtained the rights for the license to Godzilla, and began publishing a new 12 issue series in March 2011, called Godzilla: Kingdom of Monsters. Originally titled Godzilla: Monster World, the new series launched with a painted cover by Alex Rossas well as a record 100 plus variant covers that were mostly retailer incentives. This promotion allowed comic book shop owners to have personalized variants featuring their store being demolished by Godzilla’s foot, if they ordered over 500 copies. Godzilla: Kingdom of Monsters No. 1 was therefore able to sell out of its first printing. In August 2011, IDW released a comic called Godzilla: Kingdom of Monsters 100-Cover Charity Spectacular. The comic featured all the unique covers of the comic book smashing variants of issue No. 1 via a cover gallery. Proceeds of the sale went to benefit the International Medical Corps for Tsunami relief in Japan. The 12 issue series was collected as a three volume trade paperback.

In May 2012, IDW began publishing a new ongoing series, simply called Godzilla. The series ran 13 issues. In November, they began collecting the series as a three volume trade paperback collection. On April 2014, the entire series was collected as a deluxe trade paperback called Godzilla: History’s Greatest Monster.

In June 2013, IDW began publishing their third ongoing series called Godzilla: Rulers of Earth. They began collecting the series as a multi-volume trade paperback collection in December 2013.

Outside of the ongoing series, IDW also published various miniseries. They published a 5 issue miniseries called Godzilla: Gangsters & Goliaths from June–October 2011, that was then collected as a trade paperback in November.

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A 5 issue miniseries called Godzilla: Legends from November 2011-March 2012. The series was then collected as a trade paperback in June. A 5 issue series called Godzilla: The Half-Century War was published from August–December 2012. It was collected as a trade paperback in May 2013.

Another 5 issue series called Godzilla: Cataclysm was published from August to December 2014. In June 2014, IDW published a one-shot comic called Godzilla: The IDW Era. This one-shot gave a brief overview of all the various IDW Godzilla series in publication over the past 3 years.

Unlike the previous companies who licensed Godzilla, IDW was able to acquire the rights to other Toho movie monsters. IDW initially announced Godzilla, Anguirus, Rodan,Mothra, King Ghidorah, Kumonga, Hedorah, Gigan, Mechagodzilla, Titanosaurus, Battra, Space Godzilla and Destoroyah, but have recently added Moguera, Varan, Manda, Baragon, Gaira, Sanda, Ebirah, Gorosaurus, Gezora, Jet Jaguar, Megalon, Biollante, Orga, Megaguirus, Zilla, Monster X and Keizer Ghidorah to their acquired monsters.

 The Hills Have Eyes

Surely one of the more unusual comic-book adaptations of a horror film was The Hills Have Eyes, Wes Craven’s 1977 classic, successfully remade in 2006 by Alexandre Aja – folk of a nervous disposition will be relieved to hear that both sequels were ignored. The Hills Have Eyes: The Beginning is specifically a graphic novel prequel to the 2006 The Hills Have Eyes. It was released on July 3, 2007, and distributed by Fox Atomic Comics. The Hills Have Eyes: The Beginning tells the story of the original families who refused to leave their small New Mexico town once the U.S. government began above-ground atomic testing. Spanning multiple generations, this dark tale reveals how these once good people slowly devolved into murderous mutants.

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There have recently been rumours that Rob Zombie may be interested in turning the novel into an animated film – you can’t have everything.

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Just to prove me wrong, here’s an even more unlikely adaptation – House I was clearly too obvious so in October 1987, Marvel Comics released a comic book adaptation of House II. It was written by Ralph Macchio, with artwork by Alan Kupperberg on pencils and Kupperberg,Hilary Barta, Danny Bulanadi, Jose Marzan Jr. and Pat Redding on inks.

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Jaws 2

…and from one surprising comic sequel to another. If Jaws 2 the film is famous for anything, it’s that it isn’t Jaws 3-D. Marvel had an ill-advised run at one-off specials to tie in with major releases. Major might not be the best word – Xanadu, Santa Claus the Movie and Octopussy were all given the mouse treatment, in retrospect, a kiss of death.

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Broadly speaking, the comic sticks to the action of the film, adding and taking away as one might expect. What might not be expected is the titular shark leaping out of the water to eat a helicopter. The artwork is not half bad, inevitably less impressive than the incredibly enticing cover but with surprisingly gratuitous scenes of innocents being devoured, complete with inky blood. Ensuring that Universal get the requisite amount of coverage for their film, the comic begins with a short chat with the film’s director, Jeannot Szwarc.

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King Kong

Echoing the trend for acknowledging influences both old and modern, the Great Ape has throughout the decades featured in numerous comic book publications from several publishers.

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From the film’s first appearance, comic adaptations of King Kong have continued to be popular. The producers of both the original 1933 classic and its sequel, Son of Kong, RKO, recognised the potential and featured comic strips in their press-books which accompanied the films and also serialised in national newspapers on the run-up to release. These were presumed lost but an example was sold at auction for $15,000 in 2007.

In Japan, the cartoon version of King Kong appeared in a comic strip in issue No. 34 of the Japanese magazine Shonen Magazine. In this issue published in 1967, Kong battles a living version of the Statue of Liberty. This strip was based on the American cartoon series which was animated in Japan by Toei Animation. Shonen Magazine would publish numerous strips based on the 1960s King Kong cartoon throughout the shows run in that country featuring adaptations of various episodes but also original stories as well.

Staying away from America, a 1965 Mexican comic company called Ediciones Mexico published a series based on King Kong. The series was published with fully painted colour covers but with sepia and white interior artwork. A new issue was published every Wednesday and the series would run at least 185 issues. The series was originally called The Gorilla (El Gorilla) before being renamed a few issues later to The Gorilla of the Forest (El Gorilla del la Selva). A few issues later in 1966, it was renamed again to King Kong. At this point the series was now being published by a company called Editorial Orizaba. They continued as the publisher until 1972 when a company called Joma would take over.

The next King Kong comic from Latin America was King Kong in the Microcosmos. The publisher of the series was Editorial America and it was published around 1978, and lasted roughly 35 issues. This comic was about a group of aliens who lives in the Microcosmos and they are facing a war in their planet. Searching for a warrior to help them in this war, they found a gorilla who was chased by a group of hunters and take him and some of the hunters to their planet in order to win the war. They reduced Kong and the other earthlings and once they were in their planet they reversed the effect and Kong became a huge gorilla who helped them.

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In 1964, the British comic company IPC Media created a character in the pages of Valiant Comics called Mytek the Mighty. This character was a giant robot ape that was built by a Professor Boyce. He appeared in various issues published by IPC well into the 1970s. When these comic strips were published in France from 1972–1974, the character’s name was changed to King Kong the Robot. When the 32 issue comic was reprinted as various collections it was renamed Super King Kong.

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Monster Comics, an imprint of Fantagraphics Books, produced a six-issue black and white comic book in 1991, adapted and illustrated by Don Simpson, and authorized by director Merian C. Cooper’s estate.

It is not, in fact, based on the 1933 film, but instead on the 1932 novelisation by Delos W. Lovelace, and thus differs from the movie in numerous places. Notably, the ship is called the Vastator instead of the Venture and the characters of Charlie the Chinese cook and Second Mate Briggs are absent, replaced by a character from Lovelace’s novel named Lumpy. The comic also contains several scenes not found in the film including the infamous (and long sought after)  “spider pit” scenes and extra encounters with dinosaurs by the search party. Other notable changes include the addition of a character totally original to this comic, Denham’s assistant Wally, and an extended sequence of several dinosaurs joining Kong in attacking the native village.

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In the 1990s, Dark Horse Comics was publishing comics based on popular movie monsters such as Alien, Predator, Gamera and Godzilla. They wanted to base comics on King Kong as well. There were plans on doing a comic adaptation of the 1933 film, as well as pitting King Kong against the Aliens, the Predators and even the Rocketeer (in a story written by Dave Stevens). Furthermore there were plans on producing a Tarzan vs King Kong (aka Tarzan on Skull Island) story as well by Frank Cho. But the problems over thecomplicated and muddled rights to the King Kong character killed these plans. The most Dark Horse was able to do was feature King Kong in a one page segment in the one shot comic Urban Legends published in 1993 that dispels the dual ending myth from the film King Kong vs Godzilla.

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In 2005, Dark Horse Comics and DH Press were able to strike a deal with Universal to license and produce tie-in comic books in connection with King Kong. This included King Kong: The 8th Wonder of the World a direct comic book adaptation of the 2005 remake. They were also able to strike a deal with Joe DeVito a year earlier, to publish an illustrated novel (in both hardcover and softcover editions with differing cover art) called Kong: King of Skull Island. This story, by Joe DeVito, was an authorized sequel to the original King Kong story commissioned by Merian C Cooper’s estate.

The novel’s story ignores the existence of Son of Kong and continues the story of Skull Island with Carl Denham and Jack Driscoll in the late 1950s, through the novel’s central character, Vincent Denham (Ann Darrow does not appear, but is mentioned several times). The novel also becomes a prequel that reveals the story of the early history of Kong, of Skull Island, and of the natives of the island. On the novel’s official website; it has stated that it would become a major motion picture. It does not have a release date yet.

Kong has also appeared in ‘cameo’ appearances in many other titles, from Marvel favourites to the long-running British title, 2000 A.D.

2000

 

Halloween

It seems remarkable that the many films of the Halloween franchise were not enough to satiate either audiences or artists of all kinds. The first Halloween comic was published by Brian Pulido’s Chaos! Comics. Simply titled Halloween, it was intended to be a one-issue special, but eventually two sequels spawned:Halloween II: The Blackest Eyes and Halloween III: The Devil’s Eyes. All of the stories were written by Phil Nutman, with Daniel Farrands—writer for Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers—assisting on the first issue. Tommy Doyle is the main protagonist in each of the issues, focusing on his attempts to kill Michael Myers. The first issue includes back story on Michael’s childhood, while the third picks up after the events of the film Halloween H20.

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 These comics were based on Daniel Farrand’s concept for Halloween 8; he had been approached by the producers to pitch a follow-up to Halloween H20. His idea was to have Tommy Doyle incarcerated at Smith’s Grove for Michael Myers’ crimes, only to escape and reunite with Lindsay Wallace. Together, they study the journals of Dr. Loomis and find out more about Michael’s childhood. The movie would have explored Michael’s time at Smith’s Grove and relationship with Dr. Loomis, before returning to Tommy and Lindsay, who are attacked by the adult Michael Myers. Upon defeating him and removing his mask, they discover Laurie Strode, who has taken over her brother’s mantle. Farrand’s logic was that, since Jamie Lee Curtis was contracted to cameo in Halloween 8, they should make that cameo as significant and surprising as possible. Although the studio did not follow up on his pitch, Farrands was able to tell his story in comic book form.

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One Good Scare was released in 2003; it was written by Stefan Hutchinson and illustrated by Peter Fielding. The main character in this comic is Lindsey Wallace, the young girl who first saw Michael Myers alongside Tommy Doyle in the original 1978 film. Hutchinson wanted to bring the character back to his roots, and away from the “lumbering Jason-clone” the film sequels had made him. One Good Scare came about because Hutchinson wanted to produce a comic book to celebrate the series’ twenty-fifth anniversary; it was to be sold as a collectible at a Halloween convention in South Pasadena. Due to the positive reception to One Good Scare, Hutchinson hoped to use the comic as a “demo” for getting a distribution deal, but was unable to due to rights issues.

Whilst waiting to acquire the rights to publish more Halloween comics, Stefan Hutchinson worked on the documentary Halloween: 25 Years of Terror with Malek Akkad. Together, they developed ideas for possible Halloween stories that would be “connected into a larger tale, so the idea was that it would use the serial aspect of comic books to create different storylines than would be possible in the films”. On July 25, 2006, as an insert inside the DVD release of 25 Years of Terror, Hutchinson released Halloween: Autopsis. Written by Hutchinson, and artwork by Marcus Smith and Nick Dismas, the story is about a photographer assigned to take pictures of Michael Myers. As the photographer, Carter, follows Dr. Loomis he begins to take on Loomis’s obsession himself, until finally meeting Michael Myers in person, which results in his death.

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Rob Zombie’s reboot of the film series ensured that any Halloween comics would not be contradicted by upcoming films, allowing Hutchinson creative freedom. Malek Akkad was approached by Devil’s Due Publishing with the possibility of producing a line of Halloween comics, and he and Hutchinson worked to make them a reality. Hutchinson was convinced by the strong support of One Good Scare that the comic books would have an audience. In 2008, Stefan Hutchinson released the first issue of his new comic book, Halloween: Nightdance. This is a four issue mini-series, and it does not contain any characters—other than Michael—from the films. The four issues are titled, “A Shape in the Void”, “The Silent Clown”, “A Rainbow in One Color”, and “When the Stars Came Crashing Down”. The first issue, “A Shape in the Void”, takes place on October 31, 2000, so that it falls between Halloween H20 and Halloween Resurrection. Issue one follows Michael as he stalks Lisa, an eighteen year-old girl with insecurities and “a chronic fear of darkness”. Hutchinson explains that Nightdance was an attempt to escape the dense continuity of the film series and recreate the tone of the 1978 film. Michael becomes inexplicably fixated on Lisa, just as he did with Laurie in the original Halloween, before the sequels established that a sibling bond was actually his motivation for stalking her. The aim was to once again establish Michael Myers as a “credible and dangerous force”.

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August 2008 saw the release of Devil’s Due’s Halloween: 30 Years of Terror to celebrate the thirtieth anniversary of the Halloween franchise. This comic book one-shot is a collection of short stories inspired by John Carpenter’s original. “Trick or Treat” features the MacKenzies, unseen characters from the first film who Tommy and Lindsey run to for help. “P.O.V.” shows a murder from the point of view of both Michael and his victim, “Visiting Hours” sees Laurie Strode reflecting on how her life could have been had her brother never found her in 1978, while “Tommy and the Boogeyman” reveals that Tommy Doyle grew up to write comic books featuring Michael Myers. In the final story, “Repetition Compulsion”, Dr. Loomis tries to predict where Michael will strike next on Halloween, 1989. Writer Hutchinson explains that H30 came about because, unlike previous decades, there was no Halloween film coming out in 2008 to acknowledge the occasion.

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Devil’s Due released three-issue mini-series Halloween: The First Death of Laurie Strode in late 2008. Written by Hutchinson with artwork from Jeff Zornow, the story bridges the gap between Halloween II and Halloween H20 by focusing on Laurie Strode in the aftermath of the 1978 murders. Hutchinson explains that Laurie is “trying to get better and trying to repair, but where do you even start after going through such horror? How do you even try to resume normality when you don’t know what that is anymore?” Although Michael appears in the series, it is not clear whether he is real or if the traumatised Laurie is seeing things. Hutchinson is not a fan of the revelation that Laurie and Michael are siblings and took steps to address that problem in the story. He wanted to avoid the “bloodline plot of the middle sequels”, which he felt demystified the character of the Shape, and approach the story so that “it becomes almost incidental that she’s his sister”.

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A Nightmare on Elm Street

…and since we’re considering long-running franchises, here’s another which for many is the gift that keeps on giving. The popularity of the A Nightmare on Elm Street film series has led to several comic book series published by Marvel Comics, Innovation Publishing, Trident Comics, Avatar Press and WildStorm Productions. After the success of Freddy vs. Jason and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre remake film in 2003, New Line Cinema created their “House of Horror” licensing division which licensed the A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise to Avatar Press for use in new comic book stories, the first of which was published in 2005. In 2006, Avatar Press lost the license to DC Comics imprint, WildStorm Productions who has since published several new stories based on the franchise.

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In 1989, Marvel Comics released Freddy Krueger’s A Nightmare on Elm Street as a black and white comic book published in a magazine-sized format. The first and only storyline was the two part “Dreamstalker” written by Steve Gerber with art by Rich Buckler. Other than the inclusion of the characters Amanda and Freddy Krueger and the fictional town of Springwood, Ohio, the story does not fit seamlessly into the continuity of the films and even contradicts the film continuity in several places. The series immediately proved to be Marvel’s top selling black and white magazine, even outselling the long running Savage Sword of Conan magazine, but despite distributors soliciting the title through the fifth issue, Marvel quietly cancelled the title after only two issues had been released. New stories had been written and submitted by Buzz Dixon and Peter David. Speculation arose that, despite Marvel clearly labelling the book as a mature readers title, Freddy Krueger’s A Nightmare on Elm Street could have caused image problems for the publisher who generally catered to younger readers. In 1990, Steve Gerber told Reading For Pleasure that Marvel had cancelled the book in anticipation of pressure from various anti-violence advocate groups that were actively protesting violent media in the late 1980’s and early 1990’s.

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In 1991, Innovation Publishing picked up the A Nightmare on Elm Street license and published three series based on the franchise, before the company filed for bankruptcy in 1992. All three series were written by Andy Mangels.

The first series was the six issue Nightmares On Elm Street which featured a collection of protagonists from the first five films, including Nancy Thompson,Neil Gordon, Alice Johnson and Jacob Johnson, uniting to fight Freddy Krueger in his own nightmare world. The first two issues of the series featured Nancy’s return as a spirit in the Beautiful Dream, the place Kristen dreamed her into after she died, and revolved around Freddy killing Nancy’s college room-mates. The events of the next four issues take place in the time period between the A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child and Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare films.

The second series, Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare, was an adaptation of the film of the same name. The third issue of the series was published in both normal and 3-D formats. The 3-D issue was published in order to recreate the last ten minutes of the film which also used the visual effect. The three issues were also collected and published as a trade paperback.

The last series to be published by Innovation was A Nightmare On Elm Street: The Beginning. The three issue mini-series served as a direct sequel to Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare, as Maggie Burroughs continues to have nightmares about her father, Freddy Krueger, following the events of the film. Traveling back to Springwood with Tracy, another survivor from the film, Maggie researches Freddy’s life leading up to his death at the hands of the Springwood parents. Only the first two issues of the series were released before Innovation’s declaration of bankruptcy, leaving the third issue unpublished and the story incomplete. Mangels has since made the original script for issue number three available on his website.

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In May 2005, Freddy Krueger returned to comic books, for the first time in thirteen years, with the A Nightmare On Elm Street Special written by former Chaos Comics founder, Brian Pulido and published by Avatar Press in association with New Line Cinema’s “House of Horror” licensing division.

Events from the A Nightmare On Elm Street Special would carry over into the A Nightmare On Elm Street: Paranoid three issue mini-series, published later that same year. Due to Avatar’s erratic publishing schedule, the second and third issues of the series were not released until summer, 2006. The mini-series was followed by a stand alone issue titled Fearbook before Avatar lost the New Line “House of Horror” license.

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In 2006, WildStorm Productions, a publishing imprint of DC Comics, acquired the “A Nightmare on Elm Street” license and, in October of the same year, began publication of a new ongoing comic book series.

The first story arc, “Freddy’s War”, centered on a teenager named Jade, who moves to Springwood and learns about Freddy Krueger. Along with her father, a former army ranger, and a young comatose girl, Jade confronts Freddy. After the “Freddy’s War” arc’s completion, a story about Freddy employing a teenager to kill the girl who helped Jade and her father was released. The second story arc, titled “Demon of Sleep”, detailed a group of social outcasts who, after realizing they are being killed off one by one, decide to summon an Aztec sleep demon to battle Freddy. The last issue, released in June 2007, was about a worker at a fast-food restaurant who was dreaming about Freddy killing other people, until Freddy killed him.

In 2007, Wildstorm announced its plan to cancel their ongoing New Line horror comics in favor of publishing mini-series and specials based on the movie franchises. The ongoing A Nightmare on Elm Street series would come to an end after an eight issue run and be replaced by a mini-series, late in 2007.

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In September, Wildstorm released New Line Cinema’s Tales of Horrors, a one-shot issue featuring separate stories concerning Freddy Krueger and Leatherface. The Freddy Krueger story was written by Christos Gage and Peter Milligan and involves Freddy dealing with an inhabitant of Springwood who has taken to copying his murder style, in a story aptly titled “Copycat”.

Freddy next appeared in the six-issue Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash, an intercompany crossover with Dynamite Entertainment. The story serves as a sequel to Freddy vs. Jason and The Evil Dead trilogy, based on the original Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash film treatment by Jeff Katz. The comic book series was written by James Kuhoric and illustrated by Jason Craig. A six issue sequel titled Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash: The Nightmare Warriors followed in 2009 and featured a large cast of supporting characters from the A Nightmare of Elm Street and Friday the 13th film franchises.

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Leprechaun

With an utterly unwarranted seven films (and counting) in the series, it’s difficult to fathom how the franchise has survived this far, let alone spilled over into the comic medium. However, this is indeed the case and actually started before the first film was even released – prior to the release of the original Leprechaun, Trimark Pictures released an eight-page comic book prequel to the film. The story presented in the book is contradictory to the events of the film in several regards, such as depicting Daniel O’Grady as a lowly farmer and inhabitant of Ireland (instead of America) who obtains the Leprechaun’s gold not by capturing the creature (as was stated in the film) but by following a rainbow.

In 2008 publishing company Bluewater Productions announced that it would release a Leprechaun comic book series, which began in May 2009. Written by Zach Hunchar and illustrated by Kris Carter, the series follows the Leprechaun (who is revealed to be named Lubdan and is also the king and last of his species) as he battles rival race the Clurichaun and travels the world in search of his gold, which was stolen and auctioned off on-line, with the reluctant help of the geeky Ethan Thomas and his friends. With only four issues released, the series was seemingly cancelled, as no new issues have been announced.

Plans for a four-issue comic book crossover between the Leprechaun and Warlock series, which would have been written by Nick Lyons and released in late 2009, were made, but did not come to pass.

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Nekromantik

A brief and entertaining aside – in 1990, Phil Tägert released a limited (to 1000 copies) comic as an unlikely print version of Jorg Buttgereit’s notorious Nekromantik. Alas, the comic is somewhat amateurishly drawn and features none of the explosive gratuitous and innards fornication that the film would lead you to expect. Regardless, the comic is highly prized amongst collectors.

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Plan 9 From Outer Space

Ed Wood’s 1959 film Plan 9’s reputation for alarming ineptitude actually straddles a blurred line of charming quaintness, a quality which has ensured it has lasted far longer in the minds of the masses than a good many other films from the 1950’s.

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In 1991, Eternity Comics released a three-issue series titled Plan 9 from Outer Space: Thirty Years Later!, which served as an unofficial sequel to the film. Bluewater Publishing also told the story of what happens after the film in Plan 9 From Outer Space Strikes Again!, a 26-page one issue affair. Fifty years after the alien invasion unleashed the unspeakable horror of Plan 9, a corrupt team of government scientists reactivate the zombie horde in order to lure the aliens back to Earth! Their sinister plan: steal the most hideous weapon known to intergalactic intelligence. Only conspiracy theorist, Eugene, and his mother, a former professional wrestler, can expose the shadowy agenda of the government as they fight off the growing zombie horde. This time, a new alien force invades Earth: the revolutionary followers of the martyred Eros. Eugene and his mother join forces with the last remaining heroes of a corrupt government. Together, they must thwart Plan 9 once again, with all life in the universe hanging in the balance.

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Reanimator

Based originally on the story by H.P.Lovecraft, the first interpretation was actually routed in the action of Stuart Gordon’s 1985 film, Adventure Comic’s Re-Animator – Dawn of the Re-Animator.

Dawn of the Re-Animator is a prequel to the movie, detailing the adventures of young Herbert West as he struggles not only to prove that his serum works, to avoid arrest for murder, and at the same time, to not lose his University funding!

West’s troubles begin when he uses the serum on his colleague Dr. Gruber, apparently dead from a heart attack. Unfortunately, there are some rather grisly and eye-popping (literally!) side-effects, none of which seem to include Gruber’s reanimation. This, of course, brings him into conflict with the police, the University’s Board of Inquiry, and Gruber’s estranged daughter.

Meanwhile, the powerful Erich Metler, a man obsessed with immortality, wants the secret of West’s formula, and has already unleashed his zombie thugs to retrieve it.

The 4-issue run was the work of Dan Danko and the art work of Joe Malaga.

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It was a combination of Lovecraft’s tale and Stuart Gordon’s film adaptation which eventually led to Dynamite Entertainment’s Army of Darkness vs. Re-Animator. 

Dr. West has made a deal with a mystery man who promised West that if he Ash committed to Arkham Ayslum, the mystery man would show the Doctor how to use the Necronomicon to full fill his dreams of raising the dead. Dr. West fulfills his part, but the mystery man doesn’t trust him and chops off his head.

This doesn’t kill West, because he has experimented on himself and apparently already defeated death. It is later revealed that the Dr. West who made the deal is in fact a mirror version, and a Deadite trick. The Mirror Doctor is tricked into looking into a mirror and is replaced by the true Doctor who leaves the arrangement he doesn’t feel responsible for.

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Herbert West was featured in a story arc in the Hack/Slash comic book series but this ran into trouble after a legal battle over the ownership of cult zombie movie Re-Animator spilled over from the courtroom into the comic book world and forced them to choose between pulling the series or getting dumped by their distributor.Creator Tim Seeley’s heroine Cassie Hack run into Stuart Gordon’s version of Lovecraft’s Herbert West as part of a storyline subtly titled “Cassie & Vlad Meet the Re-Animator” – publisher Devil’s Due pulled the run from issue 15 onwards to avoid further trouble. Ultimately, they worked out the distribution themselves though ended the connection with the character soon after.

Last but not least, Zenescope modern update of the classic H.P. Lovecraft story, ‘Herbert West: Reanimator’ which sticks closest to its roots. Four volumes followed West’s exploits, the joint talents of Axel Machain (Artist), Joe Brusha (Author) and Dan Wickline bringing them to the page. The four issues were also collected into one handy tome.

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 Saw

One of recent times most successful franchises had just one crack of the whip (so far) at an inked version, though it was some way into the series before it made an appearance.

Saw: Rebirth’ is a non-canonical internet comic book published by IDW Publishing. It was written by R. Eric Lieb and Kris Oprisko with art by Renato Guedes.

The comic book is a prequel to Saw, as well as the entire series. It delves into the origins of the tortured John Kramer and his sinister alter-ego, Jigsaw, whilst also fleshing out Jigsaw’s past and motivations and answers some unexplained questions from the first film, such as how he knew all his victims and how a dying old man could concoct such elaborate traps. Saw: Rebirth was remade around the release of Saw V with a new animation style to supplement the previous and slight edits.

The comic fit neatly into the first three films’ storyline – it was discovered that John worked in a toy division, from where he may have acquired his sinister puppet, Billy. It was also discovered how he was familiar with all of his subjects from the first film. It was revealed that John’s loss of hair from the first film is not due to chemotherapy but rather him shaving his hair. Rebirth also marked the first appearance of Jill Tuck, John’s former wife, who later appeared in Saw III , Saw IV , and Saw V. (Betsy Russell, who was cast as Jill after the comic came out, bears little resemblance to her character in the comic). Frustratingly for the comic’s writers, Saw IV’s back-story on Jigsaw contradicts the one in Rebirth. Here, John Kramer is not a toy designer but a successful civil engineer and devoted husband to his wife Jill, who ran a recovery clinic for drug users. A robbery and assault from one of the clinic’s patients resulted in the loss of her unborn child, leading John to become detached and angry, which ultimately resulted in the divorce of the couple.

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Shaun of the Dead

The 2004  zombie comedy film directed by Edgar Wright and written by Wright and Simon Pegg, enjoyed a surprising amount of success outside of its native Britain and the combination of the re-flourishing zombie genre and well=practised British humour left many wanting more. Although two further vaguely connected films, Hot Fuzz and World’s End (dubbed ‘The Cornetto Trilogy) reunited several of the cast members, it would take two separate comics to delve back into the film’s original world.

2000 AD produced a Shaun of the Dead strip called “There’s Something About Mary” which was written by Simon Pegg and Edgar Wright, with art by Frazer Irving. It was published as part of the run up to the film and followed Mary, the first zombie, and other characters. It was also added as an extra on the DVD release of the film.

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IDW Publishing produced a comic book adaptation of the film, written by IDW’s editor-in-chief Chris Ryall and drawn by Zach Howard. It was published as a four-issue mini-series in 2005. The comic was released with the full backing of both Wright and Pegg who also gave the creators access to unseen material.

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Starship Troopers

Bending the rules slightly here – the surprisingly entertaining 1997 film is, of course, based on an equally entertaining book by Robert A. Heinlein, a fact reiterated on the comic’s cover. However, the visuals of the two license-holders –  Dark Horse and Markosia, borrow heavily from the film. Dark Horses’ graphic stories take the opportunity to explore the un-filmed Bug attack on Port Joe Smith, the back-stories of some of the minor characters and also a prequel of sorts, leading into the action of the film itself. The ferocious pace of the film is echoed in print, as are the sexual tensions but this does not mean there is any lack of technical information or attention to detail.

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Markosia owned the rights in the UK, an opportunity they have clearly grasped with both hands with already five substantial stories explored. These take a broader over-view of the war between humans and arachnids, the dynamic of the seemingly robotic bugs balanced by the emotions of desperation of the humans.

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Texas Chainsaw Massacre

With such a rich history, iconic characters and, in fairness, such frustratingly hit and miss sequels, it is fitting that Leatherface and his family have been represented in the comic world.

In 1991, Northstar Comics released a miniseries titled Leatherface — a loose adaptation (and frankly, the looser the better) of Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre III — that ran for four issues. In 1995, Topps Comics released Jason Vs. Leatherface, a three-issue miniseries that had Jason Voorhees of Friday the 13th fame moving in with Leatherface and his cannibalistic family.

After the success of the 2003 remake of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, New Line Cinema set up a “House of Horror” licensing division which licensed the Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise to Avatar Press for use in new comic-book stories, the first of which appeared in 2005. In 2006, Avatar Press lost the license to the DC Comics imprint, Wildstorm, which subsequently published new stories based on the franchise.

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Northstar’s entry worked from the original script by David Schow and the heavily edited theatrical release of director Jeff Burr, but had more or less free rein to write the story the way it should have been told. The first issue sold 30,000 copies.” Kirk Jarvinen drew the first issue, and Guy Burwell finished the rest of the series.

The comics, not having the same restrictions from the MPAA, featured much more gore than the finished film. The ending, as well as the fates of several characters, also changed. The roles of the Sawyer family members and their personal backgrounds are also elaborated on, for instance Mama reveals that Grandpa was adopted into the family, Tinker is revealed to be a former hippy and Tex is seen to be the more sane family member, actually showing some signs of remorse.

After completing Leatherface, Northstar planned to publish other Texas Chainsaw Massacre miniseries and one-shots, which included an adaptation of the original 1974 film (previews of the first two covers of the miniseries were included in Leatherface #4) written by J. J. Birch, Tim Vigil and Val Mayerik; and two original one-shots entitled The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Portfolio (produced by Dave Dorman, J. J. Birch, Vince Locke and Guy Burwell) and Leatherface Special, written by Mike Baron, which would have explored Leatherface’s childhood. All of these comic projects went unpublished.

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n 1995, Topps Comics released the three-issue miniseries Jason vs. Leatherface, a non-canonical crossover between the Friday the 13th and Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchises, written by Nancy A. Collins with art by Jeff Butler. It is very much the kind of head-spinning concept that only a comic could get away with.

The series premise involves accidentally placing Jason Voorhees, the main antagonist of Friday the 13th, on a train headed for a dumping ground in Mexico when Crystal Lake is drained of radioactive waste by a company. Running amok on the train, Jason kills its crew and causes the vehicle to crash in Texas, where he meets and befriends Leatherface and his inbred family (consisting of Cook, Hitchhiker, Grandpa and several other original relatives, all of them dead). After he lives with the family for a day, relations between them and Jason ultimately sour due to a series of misunderstandings, which result in Leatherface and Jason battling. In the end, the Hitchhiker apparently kills Jason with a sledgehammer and the family dumps him in a nearby lake. But Jason arises several hours later and decides to begin trekking back “home” to Camp Crystal Lake, away from the place that encouraged dangerous things such as friendship.

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In 2005, Avatar Press began to release Texas Chainsaw Massacre comics, set in the continuity of the 2003 remake of the original film, but serving as prequels to the film. The comics had a multitude of variant covers, such as “Gore”, “Terror” and “Die Cut”.

The first comic released, a one-shot entitled The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Special (written by Brian Pulido and drawn by Jacen Burrows), involves three escaped convicts and their two female companions encountering the cannibalistic Hewitt family after a botched robbery of Luda Mae Hewitt’s general store. The Hewitts kill all the convicts but keep one of the females, Charity, as she is pregnant. After Charity miscarries she escapes, only to be murdered by Leatherface.

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After the release of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Special, Avatar printed a three-issue miniseries entitled The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Grind — written by Brian Pulido with art by Daniel HDR. The miniseries involves a bus full of choir-girls, along with their teachers and the teachers’ daughter, becoming stranded in Texas when their bus breaks down near the Hewitt house. When the two teachers leave to seek aid, Leatherface kills them, while Hoyt finds the girls, plants drugs on them, and locks them in the Blair Meat Company where they wait for Leatherface to kill them. The Hewitts kill all the girls apart from one who escapes, only to be arrested and placed in an insane asylum after Hoyt uses a letter (written by her to her abusive father, and in which she professes to having recurring homicidial thoughts) to make it look like she killed her friends.

The final release by Avatar Press, the one-shot The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Fearbook, had text written by Antony Johnston with art by Daniel HDR and Mauricio Dias. The premise of this one-shot involves a quartet of friends in the midst of a cross-country trip who run afoul of Sheriff Hoyt, who forcibly takes them to the Hewitt house, where Leatherface kills them all except one, a girl named Lucy, whom he knocks unconscious; Leatherface, when Lucy awakens, puts on a mask created from her boyfriend’s face and hammers one of his own masks onto her before forcing her to dance with him as she succumbs to her injuries.

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After Avatar lost the rights to Texas Chainsaw Massacre and to New Line Cinema’s other horror properties, Wildstorm started an ongoing series written by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning with art by Wesley Craig, under the direction of editor Ben Abernathy. Once again, this series featured the continuity established in the 2003 remake.

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However, unlike Avatar, Wildstorm’s series contributed to the mythos by picking up one year after the film ended, effectively generating a sequel: Leatherface has one arm, Erin has been placed in a mental institution, the FBI have Sheriff Hoyt’s offices under investigation, and an uncle of Pepper (a victim from the film), one of the senior agents on the case, has the Hewitts in his sights. The storyline followed two new sets of characters, along with the Hewitts themselves: the team of FBI agents, led by the vengeful Agent Baines, and a TV news-crew, led by local anchorKim Burns, eager for a new scoop on the murders in Fuller, Texas.

The series also expanded the roles of some of the more minor characters from the films, such as the Tea Lady, Henrietta and Jedidiah. Whereas the films portray these characters as some of the more relatively harmless members of the family, the comics showed them as just as demented and depraved as Leatherface and Hoyt; in one scene, Henrietta and the Tea Lady rape a drugged FBI agent in an attempt to impregnate themselves, and in another Jedidiah kills an FBI agent (who has attempted to arrest his family) with a cleaver to the face. Wildstorm also introduced members of Leatherface’s extended family not present in either of the two films: Ezekiel “Zeke” Hewitt and Shiloh Hewitt. During the storyline, the characters discover that the other residents of Fuller know of the Hewitts’ activities and are complicit, living under a “code of silence” and not interfering. At one point, Kim Burns escapes the Hewitts’ “family dinner” and arrives at a local bar, only to be refused the use of the phone (“we don’t want no Hewitt trouble”) by the patrons before being dragged out by Leatherface himself. At the conclusion of the storyline, KIm crashes the Hewitts’ truck, sending Leatherface careening out the back, and escapes onto the highway and into the night, wielding Leatherface’s own chainsaw.

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In 2007 Wildstorm announced its plan to cancel its ongoing New Line horror comics in favor of publishing mini-series and specials based on the movie franchises. The ongoingThe Texas Chainsaw Massacre series would come to an end after a six-issue run. Replacing them two months later came The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: Cut!, a one-issue special written by Will Pfeifer and with art by Stefano Raffaele. This issue would take place thirty years after the first film, with a group of film-students seeking to document the Hewitts. One month later, a second special, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: About a Boy, written by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning and with art by Joel Gomez, would follow. This issue featured a back story on Thomas Hewitt as a child prior to the events of The Beginning. A third one-shot titled “Hoyt, By Himself” reunited writers Abnett and Lanning with artist Wesley Craig and focused on Hoyt’s past, in particular expanding on his time as a POW during the Korean War and perforce taking up cannibalism to survive.

In September 2007 Leatherface appeared alongside Freddy Krueger in the first issue of New Line Cinema’s Tales of Horror in a story entitled “The Texas Chainsaw Salesman”, written by Christos Gage and Peter Milligan. In late 2008, Wildstorm started a three-issue miniseries, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: Raising Cain, written by Bruce Jones with art by Chris Gugliotti. The miniseries centers around two members of the Hewitt family, twin brothers separated at birth: Cain and Abel, with Abel raised by the Hewitts and Cain by a normal, loving family.

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 The Thing

As far back as 1976, the John W. Campbell, Jr. novella, Who Goes There?, upon which both 1951’s The Thing From Another World and 1982’s The Thing are based was also published in comic book form in issue 1 of Starstream (script by Arnold Drake and art by Jack Abel).

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The Thing from Another World is a four-part comic miniseries published by Dark Horse Comics, it served as sequels to the film (The Thing From Another World, The Thing From Another World: Climate of Fear, The Thing From Another World: Eternal Vows, The Thing From Another World: Questionable Research), featuring the character of MacReady as the lone human survivor of Outpost #31 and depicting Childs as infected (The Thing From Another World: Climate of Fear Issue 3 of 4). Questionable Research explores a parallel reality where MacReady is not around to stop the Thing and a suspicious scientist must prevent its spread, after it has wreaked destruction on Outpost 31.

Darkhorse have recently released a prequel story to coincide with the release of the the Thing (2011). The Thing: The Northman Nightmare is set hundreds of years before the events of the movie and tells the tale of how Vikings have a nasty encounter with the Thing.

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In January 2010, Clarkesworld Magazine published “The Things”, a short story by Peter Watts which retells the film events from the alien’s point of view and paints it in a much more sympathetic light by describing the Thing as an alien with an innocent impulse to share with the human race its power of communion and its frightened, not to mention severely saddened, reaction when they attack it. If anything it resembles Franz Kafka’s story, Metamorphosis. The story received a nomination to the Hugo Award in 2011.

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 Toxic Avenger

Toxic Avenger is perhaps one of the best-suited horror film characters to make the cross-over to comics, such is the style of Troma’s brightly-coloured, schlocky superhero. From April 1991-February 1992, Marvel Comics published The Toxic Avenger comic. The comic was written by Doug Moench, drawn by Rodney Ramos, and Val Mayerik and lasted for 11 issues.The series focused on Toxie battling against the evil Apocalypse, Inc. and its demonic Chairman. The title was a mix of traditional superhero storytelling and satire, including the phrase “hideously deformed creature of superhuman size and strength” being repeated many times and Toxie’s “Tromatons” erupting when he was in danger similar to Spider-Man’s spider-sense. Marvel’s series also contained much in the way of “over-the-top”, cartoonish violence. No other Marvel characters ever appeared in the series, and Toxie never made his way into any other Marvel comic, although a crossover with Marvel’s RoboCop title was planned before that series was cancelled.

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In July 2000, Troma published an extremely rare comic book entitled The New Adventures of the Toxic Avenger. This comic was offered to people who donate $75 or more to TromaDance 2007.

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 Though not directly related the the films, Marvel Comics released an eight-issue comic book series, Toxic Crusaders. It had no regular writer. Each issue was written by such notables as Steve Gerber (issues #3 and #5), Ann Nocenti(issue #7), David Leach & Jeremy Banx (lead strip script & artwork) and David Michelinie (back up strip) (issue #8), Hilary Barta (issue #2), and Simon Furman (issues #1, 4, 6). A four-book mini series was written and drawn by David Leach & Jeremy Banx. The series was solicited and the first issue written and drawn before being cancelled along with all of Marvel TV tie-in titles. One issue was a direct parody of Captain Planet and the Planeteers.

In the UK, Fleetway published their own Toxic Crusaders comic book which would last for ten issues.

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Trick ‘r Treat

The 2007 horror anthology was a surprise fan (and some misguided critic) favourite and has developed something of a cult following. The segmented nature left it ripe for the picking to receive an EC-style make-over. DC Comics partner Wildstorm Comics had planned to release a four-issue adaptation of Trick ‘r Treat written by Marc Andreyko and illustrated by Fiona Staples, with covers by Michael Dougherty, Breehn Burns and Ragnar. The series was originally going to be released weekly in October 2007, ending on Halloween, but the series was pushed back due to the film’s back-listing. The four comics were instead released as a graphic novel adaptation in October 2009.

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Daz Lawrence, Horrorpedia

Wikipedia


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