Thursday, December 6, 2012

Chrismix 2012



I've cooked up a new batch of Christmas music each year since I was about 17. Good crop this year. Not a lot of my favorite artists (scooped those songs up years ago), but a lot of high quality material from artists I like, and some who I hadn't even listened to before. There was so much good material. I'll probably make a lower key second mix in a couple of weeks.

1. Christina Perri -- Happy Xmas (War is Over)
2. Zendaya -- Shake Santa Shake
3. The Puppini Sisters -- Winter Wonderland
4. Victoria Justice -- Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree
5. Sara Bareilles & Ingrid Michaelson -- Winter Song
6. The Shins -- Wonderful Christmastime
7. Ashley Tisdale -- Last Christmas
8. The Puppini Sisters -- All I Want for Christmas
9. Joni Mitchell -- River
10. Fun. -- Sleigh Ride
11. Carly Rae Jepsen -- Mittens
12. The Puppini Sisters -- Let it Snow
13. The Civial Wars -- I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day
14. Francesca Battisteli -- Christmas Dreams

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Scream TV

The never ending franchise is a staple of horror. Nearly any profitable series is reiterated ad nauseam until even the hardcore fans refuse to shell out the cash for direct-to-video dime store sequels. There are seven Saw films and that series only began 8 years ago! Meanwhile the acclaimed and profitable Scream series, which is twice as old as Saw, has racked up a mere four installments. Perhaps this is for the best, considering quality control issues. For example, legendary director Wes Craven was able to direct all four Scream films, meanwhile he wrote and/or directed a mere two films out of the nine Nightmare on Elm Street installments, a series which he himself invented.

With the release of Scream 4, it momentarily seemed Scream was finally poised to repeat ad infinitum like franchises oft do, with a fifth and sixth film in the works. I would have been delighted to see this come to pass, but unfortunately Scream 4 performed below financial expectations. So while the idea of more Scream sequels is not completely off the table yet, it seems unlikely, and there has been no movement towards that goal thus far.

The latest news on new Scream content (albeit 4 months old), is that MTV is developing a TV series based on Scream.

For many people this may seem a strange fit. But as an obsessive TV nerd with a finger on the pulse of the times, I'd say a Scream series makes a goddamn lot of good sense right about now. Scream is three things: horror, mystery, and snarky satire.

  •  Horror television serials (i.e. not anthologies) are in the midst of their most powerful boom of all-time, with the resounding success of The Walking Dead, Dexter, True Blood, American Horror Story, and The Vampire Diaries. 
  • Likewise, darkly cool teen mysteries have recently become a big hit, in the form of ABC Family's Pretty Little Liars and Nickelodeon's House of Anubis. 
  • Meanwhile, snarky satire has remained one of the driving forces in television since the dawn of the 90s, look no further than Archer, Family Guy, The Office, and 30 Rock to witness its enduring popularity. Mind you, those shows have very little in common with Scream per se', but the recent smash hit The Cabin In The Woods has quite a bit in common with Scream, thus proving that a new horror satire would be very timely and potentially lucrative. 
  • Scream is also a series, at its heart, about serial killers, and with the success of Dexter many new serial killer TV shows are in the works, including an NBC show based on Hannibal Lecter, and FOX's The Following (more on that in a minute). 


So clearly this is a pretty great idea they have, to make a Scream TV series. Now all that remains is how they're going to put it together, and whether they'll do it well. I imagine something along the lines of each season having a different static collection of Ghostfaces; probably just two like the films, but maybe three or four since there's more space to work with, certainly no more than that. Having a new killer every episode or every few episodes would be overkill in more ways than one (pun intended). I imagine the mystery unfolded maybe over the length of each season, and then starting relatively fresh next season.

I don't think the original cast should be brought into the series, not that they're likely to sign on anyway. Ghostface is an icon that anyone, anywhere can utilize, that's part of the point. There's no reason every deranged horror-watching revenge-seeker should seek out Sidney Prescott, that was more of a plot device to carry the plot across the film series. It's every bit as plausible for the TV series to feature brand new characters. After all, everyone knows Ghostface from the "Stab" franchise.

The most important thing they absolutely should retain from the original series, is writer/creator Kevin Williamson. The man is every bit as much a TV auteur as he is one of film, with his shows Dawson's Creek and The Vampire Diaries being just as important as his Scream and I Know What You Did Last Summer films. So a Scream TV series without Kevin Williamson? That just plain doesn't make logical sense. Another writer might be able to handle the series if we're very lucky, but nothing could insure both the show's genuine legitimacy, and its dependable brilliance, like bringing in Kevin Williamson.

Tragically, Kevin Williamson is more than likely deposed at the moment. In addition to his work on the continuingly-successful Vampire Diaries, he also has created a brand new show on FOX called The Following. Wouldn't you know it, it's a show about a serial killer. Why didn't FOX commission a Scream series instead? We can only wonder, especially considering The Following sounds like an awful police procedural that is doomed to fail almost immediately. The premise for The Following sounds kind of fucking stupid (sorry Kevin W., you know I worship the ground you walk on and consider you one of media's all-time geniuses, but this show just isn't going to work.) It's about serial killers cooperating together under the influence of one mastermind killer, and the cliche' group of FBI agents who are trying to track him down.

Depressingly, FOX has deeper pockets than MTV. So a battle between The Following and a hypothetical "MTV's Scream" would almost certainly end in FOX's favor, regarding Kevin's allegiances. But, if it's all we can get, I'm perfectly happy with accepting a Scream series under a different author. There's always the possibility Kevin could come aboard later in the series' run, if it gets that far.

So, the only link in this puzzle that worries me now is MTV. There are literally a dozen stations I would feel much more comfortable with in creating a Scream TV series.

The CW's proven they can handle horror with the gorgeously gothic and genuinely violent Vampire Diaries, a Kevin Williamson show no less! SyFy Channel may be bad at most things, but their brooding adaption of Being Human at least shows they could make a Scream series that is properly serious. FX seems like the ideal station to air a Scream series by virtue of their penchant for stylish and gorey drama, most notably the brilliant American Horror Story. I drool to imagine the joys that could come from AMC spearheading the series and giving us a Walking Dead-calibur A++ horror masterpiece. And in the era of Dexter, I'm surprised HBO or Showtime wouldn't want to pick up on Scream's venerable legacy and put together an artisan show without having to give up one ounce of the original films' blood or nudity. Even ABC Family has proven they can create a dark, mysterious flavor through the ocassional grim flourish in The Secret Circle and Pretty Little Liars.

But, MTV? Admittedly I've only watched a few episodes of Teen Wolf, but it didn't strike me as capturing the darkness necessary for Scream. It's not a horror show, it's just supernatural, like Charmed or Buffy. I don't have anything remotely against MTV, Awkward is one of the best shows on television. There's no question that MTV can match the hip sarcasm and referential humor which is part and parcel of Scream, but I remain unconvinced that they can create a decent horror series. They're just too glib of a station. And do you know what you get when you subtract the horror from Scream? You get Scream 3, resoundingly the worst of the series. And if it should come to pass that Kevin Williamson isn't in the writer's seat (which is quite likely), add that to MTV's hypothetical inability to create a horrific atmosphere and worse than Scream 3, you're going to be verging on Scary Movie territory. I shudder to imagine.

But there's always the chance that they can impress me and put together something as sadistic and brutal as the original Scream. Who knows, maybe Wes Craven could even be convinced to direct (not likely). I'll remain enthusiastic and hopeful indefinitely

Honestly, I doubt this series will ever reach fruition. But if it does you can damn well bet I will be the figurative 'first in line' to watch it. Even if it does suck, I'd love to see it happen just to see how it pans out and how they try to put it together. It'd be very interesting if nothing else.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

iGoodbye: Final Thoughts...


Bravo, Dan. You gave us a good finale. My biggest fear was iCarly's finale would sort of just be like any other episode, but it wasn't. It was sad and beautiful, I of course bawled like a baby. It was very touching and left me broken as a shattered doll. So much so that rather than watching the new Victorious that's currently airing, I had to play sad songs on my ipod and write this post.

It was really amazing to see Miss Briggs and Lewbert back. Would have been cool to see Wendy or Melanie though. 'Course there's still a chance Melanie could show up on Sam & Cat someday. And it was really awesome to finally see Colonel Shay. And all the characters were given a good send-off, Carly, Freddie, Spencer, Sam...

I know I should say something more, something better, to capture the moment. But either you felt it or you didn't. Either this show meant the world to you and now it's gone, or it just didn't. iCarly was a coming of age experience for a lot of us, and we're better people for it. Lord knows how very true that is of me.

Mercifully, we don't need to say goodbye completely. iCarly will live on in two spinoffs. Jerry Trainor has his own show coming up on Nick @ Nite. And Nathan's in an upcomming found footage film. And we'll always have 109 episodes of iCarly to return to.


And the cynics were outraged,
Screaming "This is absurd!"
'Cause for a moment, a band of thieves,
In ripped-up jeans got to rule the world. 
 -- Taylor Swift, Long Live

Thursday, November 22, 2012

iCarly Week: Fan Creations


iCarly Week: Fan Creations

As a teen I was mosty interested in stuff that not only none of my friends were into, but that was at least 10 years behind its prime. This is one of the reasons why iCarly has been such an incredible experience for me: this is something that was new, current, and fully alive. Which means there was a vast plethora of ever-changing fan content for me to explore. And I even participated in it!


Fan-fiction

Fan-fiction is a brilliant realm of fandom, where authors can take the characters they know and intimately understand, then allow them to explore new kinds of experiences they will never encounter in their native work: different genres, different perspectives, different personalities. I never read a lot of fanfiction but the few I did read really moved me a lot. They were, of course, all Cam. Here are my two favorites:


iGo to the Beach is an achingly beautiful and terribly depressing drama fic where Carly and Sam plan a carefree day at the beach to indulge the curious mix of deep abiding friendship and intimate romance. The day out takes a grim turn and Sam has to experience the most crushing angst of her life. It takes iCarly into realms of romance and angst that the original sitcom would never even consider.

iBet for Carly's Love recasts iCarly as more of a teen drama, with drinking and partying and the like, as though the show were on MTV or ABC Family. Freddie coaxes Sam into a dersive bet to see who can win Carly's affection, but when Carly gets way too drunk at a party Sam has to step in to keep her safe. It's a touching fic and it's interesting to see the iCarly gang in this kind of a setting.


Fan Videos

Fan videos are one of fandom's great pleasures. It's amazing what people can create out of just clips and music. It's one thing to create a new world with fanfiction, where the options are limitless, but to take the show that already exists and turn it into something new with naught but wit and creative editing? It's unbelievable.

By far the most ingenious creator of Carly fanvids is MyOverSizedDisguise, who gave us Cam shippers the greatest gift of all when she recast iCarly as a romantic drama in her "Dismantle Repair" video. It's my favorite youtube video of all-time, by leaps and bounds, and deserves to be a feature length film by all rights.



She also took iCarly into the teen scream horror realm with her brilliant "Seattle Webshow Massacre" videos. If Nick was smart they would have bought up the rights and made this a reality as well!



Another of the most brilliant vid makes is TurnYourCamOn. It'd be possible to pick favorites but here's one of her many good vids:



There's a massive world out there of vids so I encourage you to go and check out what you find!

Saturday, November 17, 2012

iCarly Week: Miranda Cosgrove's Music


Miranda never achieved the pop music success of other teen stars such as Selena Gomez and Demi Lovato. In fact, she didn't even best network-fellows Big Time Rush or the Victorious cast. But her music had a special quality to it. Her catalog over the years was an erratic hodgepodge of ever-shifting styles, completely unexpected from a corporate act presumably pushed into music just to bank off of her tween star power.

Her earliest material is ballsy, gruffly-produced, electric and hard rocking, like a mid-90s alt-y girlpop powerhouse ala Garbage. Her middle-work is more of a basic pop/rock outfit mixing typical rock instrumentation with pristine synth tracks, invoking comparisons to any number of early 21st Century pop singers like Avril Lavigne, Kelly Clarkson, Natalie Imbruglia, et. al. Her latter material pushes forward to the modern day with powerful EDM dance beats and spacey dance club lyrics. In all likelihood Miri's producers simply couldn't decide what direction they wanted her music to go in, but the resulting discography is a set of nuanced and varied pop gems, befitting the kind of smart selection I would expect from a pop visionary like Lady Gaga.

I had the pleasure of seeing Miranda's Dancing Crazy tour from front row center seats, and she put on a great show with a talented band. It's a shame her music never reached the noteriety of her Disney counterparts, because with iCarly gone we're unlikely to ever see her tour again. But thankfully we'll always have the studio work to jam with.

While pretty much all her stuff is excellent, and I could list a dozen A+ honorable mentions (Disgusting, Sayonara, Bam, et al!) I'll keep this short and sweet and list just the undeniable creme de la creme of her catalog. Here are the top five greatest Miranda Cosgrove songs.


Top 5 Miranda Cosgrove Should-Be Classics


#5 FYI (About You Now)




^ This deep cut from Miri's early period is girlish badass fun in the best way, with a pounding drum beat, snarky lyrics and a crunchy guitar behind a punchy synth. It's full of such genuine abandon it seems to capture the fun and fear inherent in young love.


#4 Beautiful Mess (Sparks Fly: Deluxe Edition)



^ With a late-90s chittering hip hop percussion track over cascading piano runs and moaning vocals, this gorgeously melodramatic ballad could have been a Destiny's Child outtake. It's one of the most beautiful and unique tracks in Miri's discography and it is just achingly cool.


#3 Headphones On (iCarly: Music From and Inspired By the Hit TV Show)



^ Here's the song that made me fall in love with Miranda's music in the first place. Featuring fucking ferocious guitar riffage throughout, Miri sings the praises of laziness and gives a big F-U to responsibility like a true grunger. It's catchy, it's fun, it reminds me of Tom Petty, and anyone who loves to dance around their room to their favorite song can relate to its message.


#2 Leave It All To Me [Billboard Remix] (iSoundtrack II)



^ This bouncing, dubstep-style baller of a club jam was the perfect finale to Miri's music career, appearing on her last release (the second iCarly soundtrack). It's only 3 minutes long, but unlike all the other banal "remixes," this is a legitimate dance song with real pulsating power. I still say Dancing Crazy is absolutely begging for an ethereal 8-minute Dave Aude dance mix, but I'm overjoyed that we actually received one serious Miranda Cosgrove dance remix before her time in music ran out.


#1 Face of Love (High Maintenance)


^ Face of Love is a genuinely brilliant pop song. Smooth and cool, catchy and unique. It's a perfect tune from its subtle, mysterious guitar riff, to its stuttering heart beat pulse, to its universal but vivid lyrics. It's such a cosmic jam it's worthy of ultra-hip indie pop dreamweaver Imogen Heap, and Miranda Cosgrove manages to pull of the gig with impressive competence.


Jen's Music

The illustrious Jennette McCurdy also attempted a music career during her time in iCarly. And while her country style doesn't appeal to me as much as Miranda's pop, the talent in Jennette's music is undeniable. She even wrote some of her own songs, and it's plain to see that she's one of the most technically proficient singers on Nick or Disney. Here are a couple of her better tracks.






The iCarly cast also got together for a slightly awkward but utterly awesome rendition of Puffy's "I'm Coming Home."


iCARLY WEEK


iCarly is a verifiable modern legend. It reigned at the top of the teen sitcom heap for over five years, smashed standard conventions on teen sitcom longevity, spurred Disney Channel to go bigger, edgier, and better to compete, and gave Nickelodeon it's all-time greatest ratings with the iSaved Your Life episode. It drew fanatical devotion from kids, teens, and even adults. And it's about to spawn not one, but two spin-off series. After one-hundred-and-nine glorious episodes, iCarly will air its series finale this Friday November 23rd, 2012.

This week I'll be reliving the zany, goofy, insane fun and Zenlike Immaturity will be providing you with daily entries cover all the essential topics in iCarly history, lore, and legend.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Continuing Through The Dark Nights...


Autumn is the perfect time for horror, with the rustling of leaves, the crunch under every step, as the first chill creeps across the land and the darkness begins taking more of the day for its own. But Winter is a truly spooky month in its own right. The bitter cold and howling winds keep people hunkered within their homes at night, leaving towns deserted and welcome to the prowl of creatures. Everything becomes deathly silent with the somber falling snow. And the Darkness wins over the day, giving way to 14 hour nights ripe for nightmares. 


It all started with, of all things, a creepy, kitschy commercial for a local haunted attraction. Last year I would hear the ad every night when my alarm went off at 10pm for work. The ad inspired me to get into the spirit of the Halloween season and I raced out to the local used store to pick up some DVDs. Just basic classics to start: Silence of the Lams, Scream, The Blair Witch Project....

I had never been big on Halloween before, not since I was a kid. In the years prior to 2011 I hadn't even watched a single scary movie to commemorate the holiday, not even on the Halloweens I had off from work. I enjoyed horror movies well enough, but my appettite was satiated by AfterDark's annual HorrorFest, until that series became defunct.

After watching Blair Witch I became enamored with found footage and started gathering up every film I could find from the genre. And at the time I thought it would continue well past the witching month. When October ended I still had a decent sized list of found footage I wanted to see. The problem was, though, I hit all the high notes early: Blair Witch, [REC], Wicksboro Incident. By the end of October 2011 the movies I was watching were b-grade at best and I found myself abruptly losing interest once the month was over.

This year was different. The fun and spooky allure of Halloween began haunting me as early as Spring, and by the time Autumn finally fell, I had long lists of things to watch. It was pretty much the most amazing Autumn of all-time, I was watching amazing new things on a practically daily basis for two months.

I haven't found it so easy to give up on horror this year. Though October has come and gone, I now have a whole host of films that have newly become all-time favorites, I can't simply shelve them for a whole year just as soon as I've discovered them. I've already started rewatching them, one per week. Ginger Snaps 2, Scream 4, Atrocious, The House of the Devil, Let The Right One In, these films are so good I just have to watch them again. And then again. And again. But rewatches alone may not satiate....

I'm already planning a little marathon to celebrate the Winter Solstice, since it is after all, the longest night of the year. I'm thinking something on hourly themes. At midnight I might watch Suspiria, as it is the witching hour. For the 5am hour of the wolf I can definitely scrounge up something wolfy to watch. The premise of Wolfen would intrigue me if it weren't so 1980s. Maybe the Wolfman remake.... And I'm looking for a devil movie for 3am the devil's hour.

Part of me is sad that I won't have a wide host of things to watch next October, since I'm going to be watching horror all year. But there's no telling what form my interests will take next. As unlikely as it seems, it's possible I may not even be in a scary movie kind of mood next October, and then I would have wasted hours and hours of fun I could have been having all year, only to not even watch all the movies I saved. C'est la vie!


Wednesday, November 7, 2012

5 Ways iCarly Changed My Life




Truth be known, I rarely even watch iCarly anymore; except for the new episodes, and even those I sometimes skip (there's one or two that I haven't even caught in reruns yet.) It's not that I've lost my love for this spectacular, genre-defining series, it's just that I've been watching iCarly for two-and-a-half years now. I am a person who enjoys variety, and I've long since moved on to newer curios, ones with secrets left to grant me.

But as iCarly winds down, and prepares to bookend five years spent dominating children's television (the series finale airs in a couple of weeks), it's hard for me not to look back on the preposterously unlikely role iCarly played in my life. Though its timespan was brief compared to many of my other fandoms, it managed to have quite a bit more impact than I'd expect from any one show, introducing me to a plethora of things I had simply never given a chance before. And for that I will always be grateful. It's amazing the kinds of things that exist just below the surface, things you might never have considered. Crazy as it may sound, iCarly didn't just change my life, it changed my life in several ways, I can't deny it. Insane, right? Well, it's a thing that happened, I might as well just love it.


1. iCarly broadened my television horizons.

I've been watching Nickelodeon and Disney Channel since I was a baby. But it was always strictly background noise to me, even as a kid I never fully appreciated it. Then iCarly's high craft and effortlessly light-hearted demeanor made me take a second look at how good these type of shows can be. It turns out they're just sitcoms like you might see on ABC or Fox. And as a lover of sitcoms, I've found much and more to love in this subgenre. Thanks to iCarly, I've had tens of hours of new quality entertainment ranging from the brilliant Victorious, to The Secret World of Alex Mack, to Disney's five star current roster of Austin & Ally, Jessie, ANT Farm, Good Luck Charlie, and Shake It Up.


2. iCarly helped introduce me to modern music.

Miranda Cosgrove wasn't the first modern pop artist I became a fan of (that honor goes to Taylor Swift). Even so, she played a massive role in my discovery of pop music. She was the first modern pop artist for whom I bought an entire album (as opposed to singles), and even more importantly, her brilliant dance-pop EP High Maintenance diffused my wariness towards EDM and helped to usher in a whole era of great discoveries for me including Katy Perry, Ke$ha, Dev, and a half-dozen other cool artists I might not be listening to without Miri. In the long run I'm not sure my musical landscape would really look any different without iCarly, but at the very least it and Miranda made some major contributions to the best year for music I ever had, 2011. Her music career may be short and over, but the music she released is highly excellent.


3. iCarly introduced me to Twitter.

I'm a millennial  I've been talking to people on the internet since I was probably 8 or 9. I've been going on message boards since I was 10 or 11 at the latest. But Twitter never really captured my fancy. That is, until I started meeting iCarly fans on there and they taught me how to properly utilize it. Twitter is the most advanced and convenient form of internet small-talk yet devised, making conventional chatrooms categorically obsolete. It's like a chatroom with millions of people in it, except there's zero clutter because you hand-pick every person you want to hear from, and the added bonus is you get to talk to flesh-and-blood celebrities, too! It's a very convenient tool, and I'm still friends with some of the first iCarly fans I met on Twitter over two years ago. For that, I can't thank iCarly enough.


4. iCarly introduced me to fandom.

I've been a crazy rabid fanboy since I was.... well, since before I can remember. I obsessed over DBZ in the 90s, obsessed over Led Zeppelin at the turn of the century, and obsessed over this, that, or the other ever since. But fandom was never really something I knew or understood. It was something I just passed through like a ghost, I never knew there was this wide world of memes, fanfiction, shipping. Heck even when my favorite things in the world were Gilmore Girls and Dawson's Creek (roughly 2005 to 2010), I had no idea that shipping was a thing. To me it was more about, I don't know, the story, the journey. I didn't care who they were with, but how and why.

Part of this has to do with iCarly being a girly show. Guy fandom is mostly deplorable, full of pissing matches, over-analysis and little else. Girl fandom has a sense of humor to it, so it was something I could really get into. It's fun and kooky and it's just a wonderful thing for any superfan to converge with like minds and have a communal laugh at ourselves. Fandom and shipping were one of the primary driving forces that made me fall in love with iCarly. Without iCarly introducing me to Twitter, I never would have found out about fandom in the first place!


5. iCarly kept me focused (on sobriety).

Wroth though I am to admit it, once upon a time I strugglwd with depression, and there was a time when I struggled with alcohol and other (legal) recreational drugs. iCarly had nothing to do with my initial decision to become sober, but what it eventually did was give me an avenue through which to leave that period of my life behind. Due to the four reasons listed above this one, iCarly gave me a network of interest and activity that had absolutely nothing to do with drug use, and in doing so I was able to glide past it, and never think about it again. It got to the point where the thought of doing drugs again repulsed me, because my newfound interests required me to be sharp-minded and energetic, rather than complacent and lethargic. Might I have failed, without iCarly and the new things it lead to? Luckily, I'll never need to find out.

So yes, I'm one of those crazy fans who has a fictional work change their life. But I've always been one of those people. The difference is, now, I'm all the better for it. It was never something I intended, it happened sans any input from me. But thank you, iCarly, for being a catalyst, and thank you for over one-hundred episodes. And the amazing cast. And the hilarious hijinks. You'll go down in history as one of the best. There could never be a TV show to which I owe a greater debt of gratitude. And you will be missed.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

The Great Halloween Review


It all started a little over a year ago when I heard a kitschy, creepy radio ad for Kennywood's Phantom Fright Nights. I decided to get into the spirit of the season and raced out to the local used CD store. I started with just a few basic classics, The Silence of the Lambs, Scream, The Blair Witch Project. After that, I became ensconced, but by the time I had even started, October was already half over. So ever since then I've been gearing up for my next chance to submerge myself in Halloween spooks. This year I took it as far as I could, with scary movies, creepy documentaries, haunting TV dramas and ominous Halloween music. I had Halloween 24/7 for over two months.

I had been waiting for Fall all year, so when it finally came, I was ready with a long list of things to watch. 42 films and a dozen TV shows I had never seen later, here are my rankings for the best of the best this year. This includes several of the highest quality, most superb TV & films I've ever seen!

But, honestly, I enjoyed all of what I watched. I learned pretty quickly what I do and don't like out of horror, and I chose each movie very carefully. A lot of good films like Insidious, Interview With the Vampire, and Session 9 just couldn't fit on the list. That doesn't mean they aren't excellent, just that they aren't AS excellent. Look to your right for the complete list of films I watched this Autumn.


Films


1. Atrocious

- This is the film that, in an abundantly real sense, restored my faith and interest in found footage, which happens to be my favorite genre. Everything a found footage film can do right, Atrocious achieves. The setting is beyond unsettling, the urban legend which gives the film its impetus is the most utterly flawless, scary, and believable (as an urban legend) fake urban legend I've ever heard. The way she is portrayed as being helpful but also inhuman and potentially sinister if you don't follow the rules seems to mirror so many real life urban legends, and it perfectly encapsulates the eerie hedge maze of the setting. The progression of the story couldn't be more perfect and the ultimate action handily bests the comparable climaxes of Paranormal Activity and Blair Witch. No film has scared me as much as this since I first saw Paranromal Activity 2 in theaters, and that was when I was a much younger (and more impressionable) man (hey, two years can change you a lot sometimes!). Possibly the scariest movie I've ever seen.

2. The House of the Devil

- This is easily one of the most perfect films I've ever seen. The atmosphere is so palpable and affecting you could cut it with a knife. It's not disturbing like Atrocious, it's creepy and unsettling in that classic ghost-story kind of way. Every detail is perfect, down to the super creepy film she sees when she turns on the TV. And the story is so real and believable, it's almost enough to make me not want to watch it alone (in a good way). The 1980s setting is so expertly crafted that it gave me nostalgia I had forgotten I even had. If I caught this film while channel surfing, I may have thought it was actually made in the 80s. The eventual payoff is excellent enough but the real fun in a Ti West film is the journey. The final two short scenes were brilliant, though. And oh, god, the acting throughout.... easily some of the finest acting I've seen in my life. Especially from the husband commissioning the baby-sitter job, he just nails his role with aplomb.


3. Ginger Snaps 2: Unleashed

- This is among those rare sequels that is better than the first. While the original Ginger Snaps was plump with cool gothic style and I love it for that, Ginger Snaps 2 takes a turn for the dark and improves on the first in that regard. It actually cultivates some damn creepy scenes with abandoned asylum corridors, dark wooded areas, and sanitarium mistreatment. Ginger appears only as a corporeal hallucination to calmly harbinge doom for Brigitte. Brigitte, understandably unconvinced that the condition which forced her to kill her sister is a friend and not a foe, continues to battle tooth and nail against the onset of puberty. But can she fight the inevitable  The storyline in this one was even more intriguing than the first, even if it's not as iconic. Is this the best werewolf series of films? Easily.



4. Scream 4

- While Scream and Scream 2 are admittedly better films, Scream 4 may well be my favorite of the series. I'm too young and too new to horror to intimately appreciate the cultural context of the early Scream films, and I've never been an avid or learned slasher film watcher (I haven't even seen most of the classics, it's just not my thing). Alternatively, I am intimately familiar with the rash of recent horror remakes and therefore Scream 4's pitch-perfect deconstruction of that fad resonates with me more deeply than the others could. And, as always, Scream provides a fun, smart, thrill ride of mystery-horror that masterfully achieves the precarious balance between being funny but still maintaining seriousness as a legitimate horror film. A true rarity in the horror genre.


5. Pan's Labyrinth

- An adult fantasy is an exquisite thing. Adults actually need fantasy films much more so than do children. For a child, fantasy is intrinsic, intuitive, it happens for them without even trying, whether or not there's a film attached. It's adults who rely on a film like Pan's Labyrinth to remind them that magic and beauty are not wholy incompatible with the harsh trials of the real world. That's what makes a grim but hopeful film like Pan's Labyrinth so unique and so utterly essential. But even if there weren't so few films which attempt this necessary public service as does Pan's Labyrinth, it would still rank among the very best of the form, with its ethereal soundtrack, lifelike creatures, and point-perfect storytelling. Other films have attempted it, but none has ever succeeded like Pan's Labyrinth: it created a fairytale film that was brutal without being obscene, magic without being cheesy, and as sincere as any film can be.



6. The Cabin in the Woods

- The Cabin in the Woods is just pure fun in the best way. It contains a little sprinkle of the best of each world, despite mastering none of them. It's extremely clever and indelibly intriguing to watch. I love fun horror films but the various braindead teen screams just (understandably) flatline with me, so hip, intelligent send-ups like this are a prayer answered. Some of the brilliant deconstruction of Scream, some of the grim excitement of Battle Royale, and some of the classic horror bloodbath of The Evil Dead comes together to make this a unique and essential film. It's the first truly brilliant deconstruction since Scream and it's one of the smartest films I've seen, with likely the most fully- and articulately-realized premise.


7. Let the Right One In

- The Vampire has always had some small romance to it, dating back at least as far as the sexual allegory in Bram Stoker's genre-defining Dracula. But over the decades, vampires have shed their demonic roots and become ever more romantic, to the extent that they've become soap opera characters thrice as often as horror characters today. Let The Right One In is the vampire romance to end all vampire romance, a film that treats its subjects not in soap opera broad strokes but with a realism and mercy rarely attempted. All in all, it's one of the best coming of age films you'll ever have the treat of experiencing (along with Fucking Amal and The Breakfast Club, just saying). One of my favorite aspects of it, subtle though the reveal was, is that it is in fact an LGBT romance film. Whether you interpret the Eli character as intersex, transgender, or simply a boy, it's impossible to spin the relationship as heterosexual.


8. Wilderness Survival for Girls

- Wilderness Survival for Girls was quite a pleasant surprise. The scene where they discuss the anniversary of the murders next to the glowing fire is the single most picturesque, perfectly frightening storytelling scene I've ever seen, it's exactly what I had hoped to get out of Campfire Tales. Then when a brash, foolish squatter barges in on the three young girls alone in their cabin miles away from civilization, they're forced to decide what they have to do to him to protect themselves. Tie him up, kill him, or just let him leave? The moral dilemma, psychological cat and mouse game, and creeping dread over what the man may do to them collides together to craft bar none one of the most nail-bitingly exciting thrillers I've ever had the good fortune of viewing.


9. The Innkeepers

- The modern Master of Suspense, Ti West, treats me to another pulse-pumping treatise in the art of rising tension. The build up is just as well-crafted and terrifyingly fun this time around, as a couple of amateur ghost hunters work in a creepy-as-fuck hotel for it's final weekend before going out of business. The atmosphere is sublime, the story is interesting, the set-up is perfect. Plus, the leading lady is super adorable. Ti can make as many of these films as he likes and I will eagerly watch every one of them, his style suits me wondrously.

10. Don't Be Afraid of the Dark

- I can understand why this film didn't land with some people, but it could practically have been made just for me. The dream team brilliance of director Guillermo Del Toro and music director Javier Navarrete inform this film with flawless, picturesque atmosphere as always. My long-tme favorite American Sweetheart Katie Holmes comes out of hiding to grace us with another lovely performance. The story of a child encountering bedtime monsters may be an oft-used go-to scenario, but to me it is by far one of the most inherently chilling premises because of how plausible a parent's denial would be in this circumstance. And the icing on the cake is: in Del Toro's version, the creatures are pre-human faeries! Still-surviving, pre-human, language-speaking hominids are my all-time favorite cryptids behind living dinosaurs.

11. Monsters

- Monsters was a hidden gem. Years ago the world became infected with alien spawn from a fallen satellite  These aliens are not intelligent life (more like animals), but they grow to be absolutely massive and are extremely dangerous. As there's no way to stop them, the world must learn to cope. The romantic drama in the film verges on saccharine at times but it holds a sentimentality fully worthy of classic Spielberg, and this aspect is balanced out by some very extreme and sincere grit that also accompanies the film.

12. Grave Encounters

- While not as brilliant of a film as Home Movie (#14 on this list), this was definitely more my style. Grave Encounters takes something a dozen found footage films have done, but they manage to do it well enough that it's actually an excellent and worthwhile film, the best of its particular ilk. The setting is creepy and some of the scares are downright terrifying. The disintegration of the situation is well-crafted and disquieting. I felt the final segment dragged on quite a bit passed where it conceivably could have ended on a stronger note, but the final reveal was quite disturbing none the less. One of the better found footage films out there.

13. Scream 2

- I love a good Scream film and this one more than qualifies as good, Scream 2 matches the quality and caliber of the original in every regard. Keeps you guessing and delivers the requisite body count and snarky dialogue Kevin Williamson is honorbound to court. Frankly I wish there were a million Scream films, because I can't get enough of them. Many consider this even better than the original Scream, and I'd have to say they're about equal: Scream 2 has the best reveal, and deconstruction at least as good as the first.

14. Home Movie

- Home Movie is the realistic tale of extremely apt and loving parents who are forced to confront the fact that their children have a macabre obsession with death and mutilation. The disturbing concepts of this film have haunted me ever since I saw it, almost to the extent that I regret watching it. Doubt I'll be watching this one again any time soon but I'd be lying if I said it was anything less than masterfully done. I do have some qualms with the ending, but everything that precedes it is brilliantly crafted to the utmost, one of the best handled and most realistic films I've ever watched.

15. V/H/S

- V/H/S didn't completely fulfill its potential but it's worth a watch merely for the A+ chills of the first "tape." I love found footage and I love anthologies so this was a no-brainer for me. The stories have some interesting twists and, in contrast to most found footage, this film delivers the gore and nudity in bucketsfull.

16. Requiem

- A very competent and deeply affecting coming of age drama, heart-wrenchingly sincere in its portrayal of one poor girl's true life story. Some scenes were so strong I could barely stand to watch them, the realness and force of this film can be staggering. Requiem could have ranked much higher if it didn't end quite so abruptly. I understand the point of ending it there, but they could have still given more resolution without moving any further in her life story.

17. Fun Size

- Victoria Justice and Jane Levy star in this fun teen Halloween romp with a plethora of seriously gut-busting jokes, a crazy town-trotting story, and a motley collection of peculiar characters each with their own individual nuances. Fun Size is an excellent film for what it is.

18. Tucker & Dale Vs. Evil

- Horror-comedy is rarely ever my kind of thing, but Tucker & Dale Vs. Evil was so well-written I just had to watch. The jokes are funny and the love story contained within it is by far the most touching love story I've seen in a horror film.

19. Incident at Loch Ness

- Imagine that if, out of the thousands of trips documentary crews take to find cryptids, one of them actually found something. That's the premise of this jocular satire played off as though it were real. It's straight-faced deadpan humor comparable to something like Curb Your Enthusiasm. Like Ghostwatch and the TV-version of Incident in Lake County, Incident at Loch Ness utilizes a reputable and well-known personality to lend credibility to the farce, in this case it's the world-renowned documentarian Werner Herzog. As a fan of cryptids I would have been more interested if this premise was played out as less of a satire. But it's an expressly hilarious film, and I certainly can't fault it just for being an excellent comedy. I honestly haven't laughed more at any horror/supernatural comedy than this.

20. Kissed

- A deeply disturbing premise (necrophilia), gives way to a pretty much inarguably high-craft and affecting romance/drama film. The part where she licks the dead chipmunk was a little too much for me, but to call this film anything less than brilliant would be idiotic. Kissed is so excellently put together that it lends inalienable humanity and heart to something inexorably uncomfortable and dismaying. A truly beautiful film in the deepest sense imaginable.

Television



1. The Walking Dead

- Simply unprecedented. Easily the best horror television series ever made, and instantly one of my all-time favorite shows. It seamlessly combines the grit and intellect of Breaking Bad with the expert story-telling and jaw-dropping plot twists of Game of Thrones, then it injects some of the masterful drama of Dawson's Creek for good measure (face it, it's there). Oh and did I mention the zombies? I mean this show is Scary with a capital S. Somehow they manage more gruesome and believable makeup & effects than movies which use up The Walking Dead's entire budget every five minutes. And the way the dead are always a factor, always moving, no matter how okay things seem at the moment the monsters could show up at any minute, it really gets under my skin. Not to mention this is the most genuine and captivating portrayal of the post-apocalypse I've ever seen. The Walking Dead is amazing.

2. American Horror Story

- American Horror Story is a gorgeously enthralling little love-affair with everything Horror and a little bit of a demonic soap opera. You'll find every kind of horror trope imaginable crammed into this series: serial killers, sorority murders, demonic pregnancy, an undead monster baby, doctors tampering with unholy experiments, every kind of ghost you can imagine... And amazingly, it all works. The drama is exquisite and the atmosphere is top, but the most immaculately ingenius thing about this series is that it just kept building upon itself compulsively and it never failed to tie its threads perfectly. Every episode would introduce new characters, new backstories, new connections between this character and that character which you never could have expected but which in hindsight makes perfect sense. This show is a masterpiece of form, function and execution.

3. Masters of Horror

- Despite disparate creators from episode to episode, Masters of Horror was thick with a brooding atmosphere which really permeated the series. It wasn't always great but the best episodes were brilliant. Among the best episodes: Horror legend John Carpenter lent his talents to the brilliantly unsettling "Cigarette Burns" and the demonically fun "Pro-Life," while William Malone's "The Fair-Haired Child" was creepy as fuck, and another Horror legend Tobe Hooper directed a post-apocalypse with a poignant message in "Dance of the Dead." The only thing Masters of Horror lacks was a wrap-around setup. The Crypt Keeper in Tales From the Crypt, The Midnight Society in Are You Afraid of the Dark, an anthology series without a wrap-around isn't a TV series, it's a collection of random short films.

4. The Vampire Diaries

- I held off so long on watching this because I thought it might suck. It just sounded so hokey and cliche'. Foolish of me to doubt the great Kevin Williamson, I watched a myriad of supernatural teen soaps this October and Vampire Diaries was by far the best, beating out the likes of Teen Wolf, Being Human, and the classic Buffy The Vampire Slayer. In fact it outshines HBO's True Blood. Even more impressive, it outshined Britt Robertson's The Secret Circle, and I consider Britt the new Katie Holmes. The Vampire Diaries is simply written better, with more believable romance and a more interesting mythology than most shows in this ilk. And the incomparable writing of Williamson is always appreciated, the scene where Damon discusses Twilight was an unexpected pleasure on par with any meta dialogue in Scream or Dawson's Creek.

5. R.L. Stine's The Haunting Hour

- Despite the rather awkward fact of this show only be 30 minutes, reputable kid horror guru R.L. Stine brings an excellently modern sensibility and a bit more of an adult attitude to his classic, clever bites of horror. Pound for pound I found this show more enjoyable than other horror anthology shows I watched this season including Goosebumps (same style, less mature), Fear Itself (more hit than miss, stories kind of samey), Tales From the Crypt (cool style but it didn't age well), and Are You Afraid of the Dark? (absolutely gorgeous atmosphere but the stories themselves weren't that great).


Music


Top Soundtracks:

1. Pan's Labyrinth (Javier Navarrete)

- Javier Navarrete's work is always brilliant, and Pan's Labyrinth is his best piece. Full of haunting lullabies, enchanting lingering piano, and an ethereal main theme that reoccurs at all the right moments.

2. The House of the Devil (Jeff Grace)

- Like the rest of the film, the soundtrack to The House of the Devil is idyllic and flawless. It's just iconic with it's meandering, fluttering piano chords fading into subtle strings, it perfectly encapsulates the unease the film courts.

Best Halloween-relevant Rock Songs

1. The Ghost Song -- The Doors

- Haunting, groovy, mysterious, almost supernatural... this definitely sounds like a song that ghosts would actually dance to. Soooo atmospheric.

2. Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This) -- Marilyn Manson

- Manson is the king of creepy and this song so perfectly embodies that Halloween spirit for me. It first came to my attention due to it's gorgeous use in Trick 'r Treat (the best movie ever made), and it's been an ultimate October track for me ever since.

3. Girl Afraid -- The Smiths

- The Smiths have that kind of brooding, atmospheric 1980s quality that to me just intrinsically feels like the soundtrack to a good horror movie, I don't know why. The lyrics here detail a girl's bad feeling about a man's intentions, which fits perfectly with some kind of slasher/stalker type film. "I'll never make that mistake again," I can just envision it playing during some chase scene after the killer dupes her.

4. Talons Out (And Teeth Sharpened) -- DevilDriver

- This kitschy metal track would fit so perfectly with a kitschy self-aware 21st century creature feature that I started imagining what the movie would be like, and even what the sequels would be like!

Fun Size




I didn't expect this to be a great movie. I figured it was just a fun chance to throw Victoria Justice some support and see her on the big screen, unfortunately it may be our only chance. To my gleeful surprise, it was a really good movie. It was less a kids movie than it was a zany teen comedy, full of naughty jokes and snarky humor, much more mature than I was expecting and I loved it for that.

Fun Size isn't a groundbreaking classic like Mean Girls or The Breakfast Club. But it is a solid, very funny and very watchable film, with an exciting story and some decent drama to boot. I enjoyed the Halloween setting (although they could have milked it more), and I love how almost every character's individual story sort of criss-crossed at the party. In that aspect it almost felt like a teen comedy version of Trick 'r Treat.

The fact that one of the main characters has two moms (i.e. gaaaaaay) who are featured prominently is reason enough alone for me to like this film. The fact that one of the boys raises his hand when the hot popular guy asks who wants to kiss him was icing on the cake.




This story was full of "adult children" so it was perfect for me. It almost seemed like there might be a deeper theme here, about growing up, although I couldn't really find an appropriate angle to equate Vic's crazy teenage adventure with the coming of age story all the adult characters went through (other than maybe her realization about what constitutes real romance). The mom's obsession with staying young was just depressing, but the convenience store clerk who had no friends was awesome. When he finds out that the hip girls at the party had been hanging out with Albert too, he delivers one of the films best lines: "See, it's not like I hang out with lame eight-year-olds!"

Victoria was, of course, very good. It was also a nice surprise to see Jane Levy (of ABC's Suburgatory) with such a key role. While Suburgatory isn't as good as MTV's Awkward, it's about as good as the 'network' sitcoms can get these days, and Levy's charisma is the show's best asset. She plays an obliteratingly different character in Fun Size, and thus gets a chance to prove her chops.

I had heard nothing but bad things about Fun Size. But I think the negative reception results from a cocktail of reasons, most of which have nothing to do with the actual film. Firstly, the film was promoted wrongly. It was billed as a kids film when the humor of the film is about 90% adult. Unambiguously raunchy jokes, deadpan sarcasm, self-deprecation and even a little politics makes up the majority of the film's jokes. This movie is more akin to Dude Where's My Car or Super Bad than it is to Judy Moody and the Not Bummer Summer. But there's also that 1/10th that consists of fart jokes and physical gags. And that's the second reason Fun Size had the cards stacked against it, the filmmakers don't seem quite sure whether they want this film to be Super Bad or Judy Moody. It could have been a great film by skewing in either direction, more family-friendly or as a "hard" PG-13. But instead they tow the middle line and as such the film has had a very hard time finding the right audience.

The final reason, live action children's movies are rarely ever given the fanfare they rightly deserve, while equally generic animated films get 100% ratings on Rotten Tomatoes and are called universal, ageless, brilliant... I suspect the culprit here is that adults intuitively connect childhood with fantasy, so personified inanimate objects and pixelized characters effortlessly hit home, while anything depicting a flesh-and-blood vision of youth is seen as inherently juvenile. It's ironic, because animation's target audience skews younger, which means that live action kids films are often allowed to delve into deeper issues than their animated counterparts. Mind you, there are animated kids films which are indeed staggeringly brilliant. But there are, too, live action kids films which are equally brilliant, and half as praised. Fun Size is *not* one of those films, it's not brilliant, it's merely good. But suffice to say that if this were an animated film I assure you it would garner better critical reviews from the adults upstairs.



Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Ultimate Halloween Night Marathon

I spent two months preparing my Halloween marathons for optimum fun. My intention was for the "Samhain Feast" at the end of the month to compile literally the best 7 films I'll watch all season. But for me to complete that task without error, I would have had to travel through time and sift out the hidden gems. Sometimes the greatest films are the ones you expect to be terrible, the ones you only barely convinced yourself to watch....

So after watching 42 films and countless TV episodes... here is, time travel allowed, the absolute perfect Halloween marathon I should have had this year.

6pm: Scream 4

7.55: Don't Be Afraid of the Dark

9.50: Fear Itself "New Year's Day"

10.35: Wilderness Survival for Girls

12.00: Trick 'r Treat

1.30: The Walking Dead "Vatos"

2.20: The House of the Devil

3.50: Atrocious

5.15: The Cabin in the Woods

6.45: American Horror Story "Halloween, Part Two"

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Perfect Halloween Theme Marathons!


If you know me, you know I love to program TV. If you're a crazy fan like me, you can see all 750 hours of October programming here at 31 Days of Halloween. But the best of the best are the 10 days preceding Halloween, when I break out theme marathons for all the essential Halloween fixins of terror.

The theme starts off at 4am with a day-long marathon of the finest TV: two excellent films and two five hour marathons, one of chilling real life documentaries and the other of dazzling drama TV shows. At 6pm the main course is served, ten hours of the absolute mightiest, greatest, most perfect 5 films the theme has to offer:

6pm: an all-time classic
8: a modern classic
10: a fan-favorite
12: a found footage classic
2: an underrated gem (also found footage save in cases where there simply aren't a lot of found footage options to choose from)

In general, movies are only shown once over the course of the month, but the finest films are shown twice (at relatively opposite ends of the month). The sole exception is Trick 'r Treat which is, being the ultimate Halloween film, shown several times. Then on Samhain itself a bunch of in-theaters and recently released films are debuted. Halloween programming ends at sunrise on November 1st, because sunrise is what drives the demons back into the netherworld for another year.


Movies are coded in RED.
Documentary programs & series are coded in GREEN.
Fictional (drama, comedy) television series are coded in BLUE.

Alien Night 
(Saturday, October 20th 2012)

4am: Fire in the Sky
6: Fact or Faked: Paranormal Files
7: Alien Files [Canada]
8: Ancient Aliens
9: Ancient Aliens
10: Sightings
10.30: Sightings

11: Fourth Kind
1: Falling Skies
2: Falling Skies
3: The X-Files
4: The X-Files
5: The X-Files

6: Alien
8: Monsters (2010)
10: Altered
12: Alien Abduction: Incident in Lake County
2: The Wicksborro Incident

-------------

Possession Night
(Sunday, October 21st 2012)

4am: The Exorcism of Emily Rose
6: Exorcism: Driving Out the Devil
7: Is it Real? s1e9 "Exorcism" 
8: A Haunting s1e8 "The Diabolical"
9: A Haunting s3e24 "The Possessed"
10: A Haunting s4e9 "Ghost Hunter"

11: Fallen
1: Apparitions
2: Apparitions 
3: Apparitions
4: The Secret Circle s1e4 "Heather"
5: The Secret Circle s1e5 "Slither"

6: The Exorcist
8: Requiem
10: Exorcismus
12: [REC] 2
2: The Last Exorcism

--------------

Witch Night
(Monday, October 22nd 2012)

4am: Hocus Pocus
6: Witchcraft: Myths & Legends [National Geographic]
7: Salem Witch Trials [History Channel]
8: Witchcraft: The Magick Rituals of the Coven
9: Secret Circles Hidden Prayers
10: Curse of the Blair Witch

11: Witches of Eastwick
1: Charmed
2: Charmed
3: The Secret Circle
4: The Secret Circle
5: Eastwick (2009)

6: The Wicker Man
8: The Craft
10: Suspiria
12: The Blair Witch Project
2: Paranormal Activity 3

---------------

Campfire Night (Anthology Night)
(Tuesday, October 23rd 2012)

4am: Nightmares
6: Urban Legends
6.30: Urban Legends
7: Urban Legends
7.30: Urban Legends
8: Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction
9: Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction
10: Beyond Belief: Fact or Fiction

11: From a Whisper to a Scream (The Offspring)
1: Tales from the Crypt
1.30: Tales from the Crypt
2: Tales from the Crypt
2.30: Tales from the Crypt
3: Are You Afraid of the Dark?
3.30: Are You Afraid of the Dark?
4: Goosebumps
4.30: RL Stine's The Haunting Hour
5: Masters of Horror
6: Masters of Horror

6: Tales from the Crypt
8: Trick 'r Treat
10: Campfire Tales
12: V/H/S
2: Snoop Dogg's Hood of Horror

--------------------------

Vampire Night
(Wednesday, October 24th 2012)

4am: Fright Night
6: Lost Tapes s2e1 "Vampire"
6.30: Lost Tapes s3e3 "Strigoi Vampire"
7: Diary of a Vampire: The Legacy of Bram Stoker
8: Vampire Secrets
9: Real Vampires... Exposed!
10: MonsterQuest s2e10 "Vampires in America"

11: The Lost Boys
1: Buffy the Vampire Slayer
2: The Vampire Diaries
3: True Blood
4: True Blood
5: True Blood

6: Bram Stoker's Dracula
8: Let the Right One In
10: Interview With the Vampire
12: Vampires (2010)
2: 50 Days of Night

-----------------------------

Creature Night
(Thursday, October 25th 2012)

4am: Jeepers Creepers
6: Destination Truth
7: Animal X
7.30: Animal X
8: Sasquatch: When Legend Meets Science
9: MonsterQuest
10: MonsterQuest

11: Feast
2: Grimm
3: Grimm
4: Lost Tapes
4.30: Lost Tapes
5: Lost Tapes
5.30: Lost Tapes

6: Carnosaur
8: The Descent
10: Don't Be Afraid of the Dark
12: Trollhunter
2: Cloverfield

------------------------

Killer Night
(Friday, October 26th 2012)

4am: Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer
6: The First 48
7: Snapped
8: Snapped
9: American Justice
10: American Justice

11: Wilderness Survival for Girls
1: Pretty Little Liars
2: Dexter
3: Dexter
4: Dexter
5: Dexter

6: Scream
8: American Psycho
10: Penny Dreadful
12: Alone With Her
2: Man Bites Dog

-------------

Ghost Night
(Saturday, October 27th 2012)

4am: Atrocious
6: Most Haunted
7:  Most Haunted
8: A Haunting
9: A Haunting
10: A Haunting

11: Insidious
1: Being Human
2: American Horror Story
3: American Horror Story
4: American Horror Story
5: Real Scary Stories
5.30: Real Scary Stories

6: Poltergeist
8: Session 9
10: From Within
12: Paranormal Activity
2: Lake Mungo

----------------

Zombie Night
(Sunday, October 28th 2012)

4am: Wicked Little Things
6: The Unexplained: Zombies
7: History's Mysteries: Zombies
8: Lost Tapes s3e1 "Zombies"
8.30: Zombies: A Living History
10: Beyond Bizarre

11: Deadgirl
1: The Walking Dead
2: The Walking Dead
3: The Walking Dead
4: The Walking Dead
5: Fear Itself s1e6 "New Years Day"

6: Dawn of the Dead
8: 28 Days Later
10: Perkins' 14
12: [REC]
2: Diary of the Dead

----------------------------

Night of the Full Moon (Wolf Night)
(Monday, October 29th 2012)

4am: Blood and Chocolate
6: Freak Encounters s1e2 "Werewolf"
6.30: Lost Tapes s2e4 "Werewolf"
7: The Real Wolfman
8: MonsterQuest s1e14 "American Werewolf"
9: Werewolves: The Dark Survivors

11: Big Bad Wolf
1: Being Human
2: Teen Wolf
3: Teen Wolf
4: Teen Wolf
5: Teen Wolf 

6: The Howling
8: Ginger Snaps
10: Dog Soldiers
12: Eyes in the Dark
2: Wild Country

----------------------

Devil's Night
(Tuesday, October 30th 2012)

4am: The Gate
6: Gates of Hell [History Channel]
7.30: Lost Tapes s1e14 "Hellhound"
8: Lost Tapes s2e10 "Dover Demon"
8.30: Lost Tapes s2e7 "Jersey Devil"
9: Devil Worship: The Rise of Satanism
10: A Haunting s2e4 "Where Demons Dwell"

11: Devil
1: Reaper
2: Reaper
3: Todd McFarlane's Spawn
3.30: Todd McFarlane's Spawn
4: Todd McFarlane's Spawn
4.30: Todd McFarlane's Spawn
5: Todd McFarlane's Spawn
5.30: Todd McFarlane's Spawn

6: Jacob's Ladder
8: The House of the Devil
10: Night of the Demons (2009)
12: Paranormal Activity 2
2: The Devil Inside

----------------

All Hallow's Eve
(Wednesday, October 31st 2012)

4am: Trick 'r Treat
6: Halloween (1978)
8: [REC] 3 Genesis
10: The Hole
12: Fun Size 
2pm: Kill List
4: House at the End of the Street (2012)
6: Trick 'r Treat
8: Chernobyl Diaries
10: The Cabin in the Woods
12: Paranormal Activity 4
2: Trick 'r Treat
4: Intruders
6: Trick 'r Treat

Thursday, October 11, 2012

21st Century Horse (a.k. a. The ChronoHorse)



(If you're here expecting a review of the phenomenal Neil Young & Crazy Horse concert I attended two nights ago, this is not that. It took me about 6 months to rein in my thoughts regarding the last concert I blogged about, expect a similar wait for this one.)

Some will tell you that Neil doesn't cater to the audience at all with the setlists he plays, but that's a misnomer. Neil dedicates a very crucial portion of his sets to the folks in the audience who are only familiar with 5 or less of his 40+ classic albums. In the 70s when he only had a dozen albums, Neil would throw in recent tracks along with the just-released or soon-to-be-released tracks that would define the tour. But somewhere along the line, Neil's never-ending procession of classic songs overtook the scales and there wasn't really room for recent releases anymore. While it's not uncommon for wildcards to appear from any facet of Neil's career, in general even new albums that are very well received lose their slots quickly. You were unlikely to hear any Sleeps With Angels tracks on the Broken Arrow tour, and you won't be hearing any Le Noise songs on the Psychedelic Pill tour.

And hey, the system works. The setlist is cut between brand new material which is destined to please the hardcore fans, and 20 to 40-year-old classics that are destined to please pretty much everybody.

But as a hardcore Neil fan, and I mean a hard. core. Neil fan, Neil's catalog is ever so much more to me than just the new album and the vast array of fan-favorites. As a diehard, I'd be floored by hearing Roger and Out or Goin' Home as much as any dewy-eyed new fan swoons for Heart of Gold or Old Man.

So sometimes I like to fantasize that each of Neil's distinct periods was its own independent band. Each band's discography extends only from one tent pole to the next, and as a result you get to have immaculate, gorgeous setlists of all the best cuts from that period of Neil's brilliant career. Oh and every band is an incarnation of Crazy Horse, my favorite of Neil's myriad forms.

(a space represents a set break, as in an encore)


21st Century Horse  
(Silver & Gold through Americana)
Approximate Time: early summer, 2012
Ideal Venue: Chevrolet Amphitheater in Pittsburgh (now defunct).
Perfect Opening Act: Taylor Swift
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1. High Flyin' Bird
2. Shock & Awe
3. Carmichael
4. Hitchhiker
5. Tom Dula
6. Bandit
7. Clementine
8. Goin' Home
9. Razor Love
10. Be The Rain
11. Walk With Me 

12. The Restless Consumer
13. No Hidden Path

14. Travel On


^ This set would be a ferocious storm of guitar jams. To hear one set with both Goin' Home and No Hidden Path would be beyond dreamy, add in the underrated 5-star tracks off of Living With War and it's off the charts. The crisp groove of High Flyin' Bird and the wayward spunk of Travel On provide undivided perfection re: an opening and closing track, while the powerfully anthemic chorus and  inevitable feedback mayhem that Crazy Horse would lend to Walk With Me makes it a delicious set-closer.

Possibly for nostalgic reasons, this music feels perfect to me for that great early summer atmosphere, where as the sun sets the air gets just the slightest chill running through it, but it's still warm enough to leave your jacket at home. An open air venue would be obligatory, and the powerhouse sounds of Taylor Swift could be a warm-up beyond compare.




Mindless Drifting
(1990s; Ragged Glory through Broken Arrow)
Approximate Time: mid-winter, 1997
Ideal Venue: The Jungle in Pittsburgh (now defunct)
Perfect Opening Act: The Breeders
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1. Fuckin' Up
2. Peace and Love 
3. Slip Away 
4. Sleeps With Angels 
5. Scattered
6. Scenery 
7. Loose Change
8. Music Arcade
9. Driveby
10. Prime of Life
11. Big Time 
12. Blue Eden 
13. Change Your Mind  / Dead Man (extended outro)

14. Love and Only Love 


^ This setlist would be the premium, unequaled master of sonic lucidity, just pure on brain-drifting softly down the cosmic river. I didn't focus much on (the obviously brilliant) Ragged Glory because it's very well represented in Neil's real life live sets and because I wanted to maintain the crystalline ethereal mood cultivated by the trio of mid-90s electric records.

This concert would be best suited to the dead of winter, because what it is, is an utter wave of pleasurable, oozing, reverberating audio constantly washing over you for 3 hours. This isn't a summer-fun kind of sound, it's a bundle up under your winter jacket and let your mind fly away from this harsh climate kind of sound. The most amazing venue would be this short-lived venue I saw Jonny Lang at in the mid-00s. The place felt like a big abandoned warehouse, the only place we had to see was atop a myriad of pool tables all across the venue (why, I have no idea). The music just vibrated and echoed and filled out this big wide expanse and it would be the perfect medium for Neil to channel in.

...Haven't done one for the 1980s yet. The 60s and 70s would feel kind of redundant given the focus they already get but I may get around to doing them someday as well. 'Till then, happy horsing!