I got a DC vs. Marvel omnibus; it feels absolutely surreal to see this image in an official release.
Also, I wound up watching a decent amount of movies this October. I'll put my thoughts/rankings under a spoiler tag.
Also, I wound up watching a decent amount of movies this October. I'll put my thoughts/rankings under a spoiler tag.
1. Halloween (1978) - this is a rewatch, though it's been a year or two since I last saw it. It still holds up extremely well; watching more of the Friday the 13th series made me really appreciate the acting by Jamie Lee Curtis and Nancy Loomis. Their interactions felt really natural. Also, there were little moments where Michael was just standing in the background of a shot that creeped me out.
2. Army of Darkness - also a rewatch; it had been at least five or six years since I'd last seen it, possibly more. It drifts away from the horror-comedy of Evil Dead 2 to full-on comedy with only minor horror elements. Surprisingly short at an hour and 20 minutes, it had Bruce Campbell as a one-liner-producing machine, and some great physical comedy.
3. Child's Play 2 - everything below this point consists of movies that I'd never seen before. The puppetry or animatronics were amazing, Brad Dourif was great as Chucky, Alex Vincent did a great job as a world-weary child, and I was able to follow what was going on despite not having seen the first one.
4. Gremlins - this movie was barely a Halloween-themed movie; if anything, it's closer to a dark Christmas movie. It felt kind of tonally confused, like it wasn't sure if it wanted to be dark or silly. Still, the Gremlins (particularly Gizmo) were great, and the writing and acting were solid.
5. Friday the 13th Part 3 - it felt like the filmmakers finally got the formula down for the Friday the 13th movies with this one. There weren't any dragged-out moments like in the first two, and while the 3D shots were unintentionally hilarious (especially when watching the movie in 2D, which results in characters throwing stuff at the camera for no reason), at least one of them (towards the end) felt like it would be pretty unsettling.
6. Taste the Blood of Dracula - I'd seen a Christopher Lee Dracula movie before, but this one was in the same four-pack, and I hadn't seen it. Christopher Lee didn't have as many lines of dialogue as I was expecting or hoping, and it didn't go as dark as I thought it would. Also, the R-rating felt tacked on; only one scene felt like it earned the movie that rating, and it was completely gratuitous and unnecessary. Still, I had fun with it.
7. Friday the 13th - this movie is not well-written; it's a whodunnit where the one who did it isn't mentioned or doesn't appear until the last ten minutes, and any other suspects who are built up get built up at a point where it would be physically impossible for them to be the murderer. Impressive gore effects; I avoided watching the movie at all because of Kevin Bacon's death scene, and even knowing that it was coming, it was still uncomfortable to watch.
8. Alien 3 - the movie starts with 3/4 of the survivors of the previous movie killed off-screen and the fourth infected by a face-hugger, which is a death sentence. The survivor doesn't learn about that detail until the last half hour, and she's one of two living characters in this movie who's even remotely likeable. The movie just gets bleaker and darker from here. Most of the characters look identical, the rooms are lit in an unpleasant brown colour that makes the Xenomorph stick out like a sore thumb rather than blending in with its surroundings like it did in previous movies, and the whole thing was a huge downgrade from Alien and Aliens.
2. Army of Darkness - also a rewatch; it had been at least five or six years since I'd last seen it, possibly more. It drifts away from the horror-comedy of Evil Dead 2 to full-on comedy with only minor horror elements. Surprisingly short at an hour and 20 minutes, it had Bruce Campbell as a one-liner-producing machine, and some great physical comedy.
3. Child's Play 2 - everything below this point consists of movies that I'd never seen before. The puppetry or animatronics were amazing, Brad Dourif was great as Chucky, Alex Vincent did a great job as a world-weary child, and I was able to follow what was going on despite not having seen the first one.
4. Gremlins - this movie was barely a Halloween-themed movie; if anything, it's closer to a dark Christmas movie. It felt kind of tonally confused, like it wasn't sure if it wanted to be dark or silly. Still, the Gremlins (particularly Gizmo) were great, and the writing and acting were solid.
5. Friday the 13th Part 3 - it felt like the filmmakers finally got the formula down for the Friday the 13th movies with this one. There weren't any dragged-out moments like in the first two, and while the 3D shots were unintentionally hilarious (especially when watching the movie in 2D, which results in characters throwing stuff at the camera for no reason), at least one of them (towards the end) felt like it would be pretty unsettling.
6. Taste the Blood of Dracula - I'd seen a Christopher Lee Dracula movie before, but this one was in the same four-pack, and I hadn't seen it. Christopher Lee didn't have as many lines of dialogue as I was expecting or hoping, and it didn't go as dark as I thought it would. Also, the R-rating felt tacked on; only one scene felt like it earned the movie that rating, and it was completely gratuitous and unnecessary. Still, I had fun with it.
7. Friday the 13th - this movie is not well-written; it's a whodunnit where the one who did it isn't mentioned or doesn't appear until the last ten minutes, and any other suspects who are built up get built up at a point where it would be physically impossible for them to be the murderer. Impressive gore effects; I avoided watching the movie at all because of Kevin Bacon's death scene, and even knowing that it was coming, it was still uncomfortable to watch.
8. Alien 3 - the movie starts with 3/4 of the survivors of the previous movie killed off-screen and the fourth infected by a face-hugger, which is a death sentence. The survivor doesn't learn about that detail until the last half hour, and she's one of two living characters in this movie who's even remotely likeable. The movie just gets bleaker and darker from here. Most of the characters look identical, the rooms are lit in an unpleasant brown colour that makes the Xenomorph stick out like a sore thumb rather than blending in with its surroundings like it did in previous movies, and the whole thing was a huge downgrade from Alien and Aliens.