I have that same set!Ack wrote:Is it the 50 Horror Classics set put out by Mill Creek Entertainment, with a picture of Lon Chaney on the cover in his 1925 Phantom of the Opera makeup?Czernobog wrote:I have a 50 horror movie collection sitting on my shelf that I may often put on in the background and if anything sucks me in, I'll give it a good watch.
http://www.amazon.com/Horror-Classics-M ... B0001HAGTM
If so, I own the same set. I can name a few suggestions off there if you like. They're not all horror films, by the way.
Month of Horror V: the Seed of dsheinem & noiseredux
Re: Month of Horror V: the Seed of dsheinem & noiseredux
Re: Month of Horror V: the Seed of dsheinem & noiseredux
QFT. If you haven't seen this, then I feel sorry for your mother.noiseredux wrote:^Night Of The Living Dead is absolutely mandatory viewing for anyone in this thread.
Re: Month of Horror V: the Seed of dsheinem & noiseredux
It's a shame the production quality of these is so poor, but it was all about quantity, not quality with these releases, and I'm still happy to have it. Because now I can watch some of the films of my childhood anytime I want.dsheinem wrote:I have that same set!Ack wrote:Is it the 50 Horror Classics set put out by Mill Creek Entertainment, with a picture of Lon Chaney on the cover in his 1925 Phantom of the Opera makeup?Czernobog wrote:I have a 50 horror movie collection sitting on my shelf that I may often put on in the background and if anything sucks me in, I'll give it a good watch.
http://www.amazon.com/Horror-Classics-M ... B0001HAGTM
If so, I own the same set. I can name a few suggestions off there if you like. They're not all horror films, by the way.
Re: Month of Horror V: the Seed of dsheinem & noiseredux
The Mill Creek sets are great to have a bunch of flicks on hand, but the print quality is unwatchable on some of the movies. It does a disservice to not even be able to see what's going on in them.
Re: Month of Horror V: the Seed of dsheinem & noiseredux
The first movie of the month....
Ginger Snaps

It’s been quite a while since I’ve seen Ginger Snaps, so when I saw it at the thrift shop recently I decided to remedy that travesty.
Ginger Snaps is about sixteen year old Ginger and her fifteen year old sister Bridgette, two morbid, outcast, high-school students who spend their free time faking their own death.

At least they have a sense of humor about it.
The two of them are already appropriately miserable, snarky teens, when one night Ginger ends up being attacked by a very large canine. The two of them manage to get away and the creature is conveniently killed by a passing motorist, but it doesn’t take them long to realize that Ginger’s wounds shouldn’t heal that fast.
Bridgette is the first to realize the truth, and though her sister is initially in denial she too begins to realize that something is horribly wrong.
As the next full moon approaches it’s up to Bridgette to figure out a way to help her increasingly out of control sister before it’s too late.

I don’t know about this puberty thing. No one ever mentioned anything about an urge to eat the neighbors dog.
Being focused on teenagers, Ginger Snaps is chock full of coming of age metaphors. On the night that the girls are attacked Ginger gets her first period and the filmmakers spend no small amount of time making sure you remember that and linking it to the ‘other’ changes Ginger is going through. And it’s not so much subtley suggested as rubbed into the viewers face while the fat kid in school sits on you and laughs as you flounder in the dirt trying to get away. So not only does poor Ginger have to go through the slow process of changing into a werewolf, but she also has to go through the horrors of puberty as well. Gee, swell.

Not to mention the horrors of the feminine hygiene product isle.
For the most part, the other horrors of the film are left up to the viewer’s imagination. The movie utilizes the tried and true method of using the power of suggestion, or the ‘what you don’t see is more horrifying than what you do see’ method, to good effect here.
While heavy on the blood the film is surprisingly light on the gore, considering what’s going on, and most action occurs just off camera.

Oh, ew, where the hell did you even stick tha-…On second thought, I don’t want to know.
This was an excellent decision, since a large number of the special effects aren’t that great. The werewolf build-up, what should have been the high points of the film, start looking a little too fake the further along the film gets. Ginger looks fine when she’s growing random spurts of hair and fangs, but the closer she gets to the full moon the less she looks like a werewolf and the more she looks like a silicone-y model.
Not to mention a Klingon.
But the effects really aren’t the focus of the film. The focus is the characters and the relationship between the sisters, and in that respect they filmmakers did a good job.
Ginger (Katherine Isabelle) and Bridgette (Emily Perkins) are close, and grow closer as the clock counts down. Both girls grown and change in different ways as the movie progresses and it’s interesting to watch how they’re both drawn together and ultimately apart by the looming crisis.
Most of the side characters are also interesting, especially Mimi Rogers as the ever-perky soccer mom, desperate to bond with her completely disinterested daughters. The woman is wonderfully and completely over the top and out of the loop, but you get a genuine sense that she cares about her children and that really helps make up for it.

Despite its graphical shortcomings Ginger Snaps is a great werewolf movie as well as a film about the plight of two teens trapped in dead-end (Canadian) suburbia. It’s self aware, filled with black comedy and has a witty script that allows Isabelle and Perkins to shine. I loves it.
Ginger Snaps

It’s been quite a while since I’ve seen Ginger Snaps, so when I saw it at the thrift shop recently I decided to remedy that travesty.
Ginger Snaps is about sixteen year old Ginger and her fifteen year old sister Bridgette, two morbid, outcast, high-school students who spend their free time faking their own death.

At least they have a sense of humor about it.
The two of them are already appropriately miserable, snarky teens, when one night Ginger ends up being attacked by a very large canine. The two of them manage to get away and the creature is conveniently killed by a passing motorist, but it doesn’t take them long to realize that Ginger’s wounds shouldn’t heal that fast.
Bridgette is the first to realize the truth, and though her sister is initially in denial she too begins to realize that something is horribly wrong.
As the next full moon approaches it’s up to Bridgette to figure out a way to help her increasingly out of control sister before it’s too late.

I don’t know about this puberty thing. No one ever mentioned anything about an urge to eat the neighbors dog.
Being focused on teenagers, Ginger Snaps is chock full of coming of age metaphors. On the night that the girls are attacked Ginger gets her first period and the filmmakers spend no small amount of time making sure you remember that and linking it to the ‘other’ changes Ginger is going through. And it’s not so much subtley suggested as rubbed into the viewers face while the fat kid in school sits on you and laughs as you flounder in the dirt trying to get away. So not only does poor Ginger have to go through the slow process of changing into a werewolf, but she also has to go through the horrors of puberty as well. Gee, swell.

Not to mention the horrors of the feminine hygiene product isle.
For the most part, the other horrors of the film are left up to the viewer’s imagination. The movie utilizes the tried and true method of using the power of suggestion, or the ‘what you don’t see is more horrifying than what you do see’ method, to good effect here.
While heavy on the blood the film is surprisingly light on the gore, considering what’s going on, and most action occurs just off camera.

Oh, ew, where the hell did you even stick tha-…On second thought, I don’t want to know.
This was an excellent decision, since a large number of the special effects aren’t that great. The werewolf build-up, what should have been the high points of the film, start looking a little too fake the further along the film gets. Ginger looks fine when she’s growing random spurts of hair and fangs, but the closer she gets to the full moon the less she looks like a werewolf and the more she looks like a silicone-y model.
Not to mention a Klingon.
But the effects really aren’t the focus of the film. The focus is the characters and the relationship between the sisters, and in that respect they filmmakers did a good job.
Ginger (Katherine Isabelle) and Bridgette (Emily Perkins) are close, and grow closer as the clock counts down. Both girls grown and change in different ways as the movie progresses and it’s interesting to watch how they’re both drawn together and ultimately apart by the looming crisis.
Most of the side characters are also interesting, especially Mimi Rogers as the ever-perky soccer mom, desperate to bond with her completely disinterested daughters. The woman is wonderfully and completely over the top and out of the loop, but you get a genuine sense that she cares about her children and that really helps make up for it.

Despite its graphical shortcomings Ginger Snaps is a great werewolf movie as well as a film about the plight of two teens trapped in dead-end (Canadian) suburbia. It’s self aware, filled with black comedy and has a witty script that allows Isabelle and Perkins to shine. I loves it.
Last edited by Michi on Fri Oct 03, 2014 2:02 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- noiseredux
- Next-Gen
- Posts: 38148
- Joined: Fri Nov 14, 2008 1:09 pm
- Contact:
Re: Month of Horror V: the Seed of dsheinem & noiseredux
yup. Love this movie big time.Michi wrote: Despite its graphical shortcomings Ginger Snaps is a great werewolf movie as well as a film about the plight of two teens trapped in dead-end (Canadian) suburbia. It’s self aware, filled with black comedy and a witty script that allows Isabelle and Perkins to shine. I loves it.
- prfsnl_gmr
- Next-Gen
- Posts: 12410
- Joined: Mon Jun 01, 2009 10:26 pm
- Location: Charlotte, North Carolina
Re: Month of Horror V: the Seed of dsheinem & noiseredux
Agreed. It is a lot of fun, and Katharine Isabelle is a first-class scream queen.noiseredux wrote:yup. Love this movie big time.Michi wrote: Despite its graphical shortcomings Ginger Snaps is a great werewolf movie as well as a film about the plight of two teens trapped in dead-end (Canadian) suburbia. It’s self aware, filled with black comedy and a witty script that allows Isabelle and Perkins to shine. I loves it.
Re: Month of Horror V: the Seed of dsheinem & noiseredux
Still need to see that.
-
Opa Opa
Re: Month of Horror V: the Seed of dsheinem & noiseredux
Alrighty.
I'm going to try to tackle a few games this month.
1) Castlevania Legacy of Darkness - N64
-I'm already about half-way through it. Playing as the werewolf dude. I've technically already beaten Castlevania 64, but as some of you know this is the 'definitive' edition with the extra character.
2) Castlevania Bloodlines
-looking forward to this one as I've never really gotten too deep into it.
---
up in the air:
Castlevania IV (have it on wii u; not sure I want to play three CV's in one month). RE 5 (the only numbered RE I have not completed).
other titles in my collection I haven't beaten yet: Siren (PS2), Echo Night Beyond (PS2), Silent Hill Downpour (PS3)
---
If I'm able to play 3 games this month, I'll probably choose SH Downpour or RE 5 as the third selection; I think they're shorter games.
I'm going to try to tackle a few games this month.
1) Castlevania Legacy of Darkness - N64
-I'm already about half-way through it. Playing as the werewolf dude. I've technically already beaten Castlevania 64, but as some of you know this is the 'definitive' edition with the extra character.
2) Castlevania Bloodlines
-looking forward to this one as I've never really gotten too deep into it.
---
up in the air:
Castlevania IV (have it on wii u; not sure I want to play three CV's in one month). RE 5 (the only numbered RE I have not completed).
other titles in my collection I haven't beaten yet: Siren (PS2), Echo Night Beyond (PS2), Silent Hill Downpour (PS3)
---
If I'm able to play 3 games this month, I'll probably choose SH Downpour or RE 5 as the third selection; I think they're shorter games.
Re: Month of Horror V: the Seed of dsheinem & noiseredux
Awesome write-up Michi. I need to see that movie now.
My contributions to the Racketboy site:
Browser Games ... Free PC Games ... Mixtapes ... Doujin Games ... SotC Poetry
Browser Games ... Free PC Games ... Mixtapes ... Doujin Games ... SotC Poetry



