31 Days of Halloween 31 Movies To Watch by Jesus Was A Robot
September 25, 2009 / 5231
I’ve decided to do mine a bit different. I watched Last House on the Beach on the 30th, but do to time restrictions and wanting to participate…I am going to include it. I will also be switching my list at random because I work at Blockbuster and get to rent pre-streets every week. So there is probably going to be a bunch of new horror I will be able to see before it hits release date.
01.Feast 2
02.Stuck
03.Body Melt
04.God Told Me To
05.The Last House in the Woods
06.Philosophy of a Knife
07.Last House on the Beach
08.Dead Mary-Brainbug this ones for you buddy
09.Vengeance of the Zombies
10.The Car
11.Triology of Terror
12.Home Sick
13.Red
14.The Strangers
15.Exte: Hair Extensions
16.Nightmare in a Damaged Brain
17.Razorback
18.Strange Circus
19.Dark Floors:The Lordi Motion Picture
20.St. Francis
21.Watch Me When I Kill
22.Body Count
23.Jack Brooks Monster Slayer
24.Slaughter Night
25.Hell Ride
26.Cannibal (2005)
27.Dance of the Dead
28.Lucker the Necrophagous
29.Corpse Mania
30.The Suicide Song
31.Uzumaki
Halloween Special: The 10 Most Pants-Wettingly Scary Movie Posters of the ’80s
October 21, 2008 / 9877
Halloween Special: The 10 Most Pants-Wettingly Scary Movie Posters of the ’80s
Hard to believe in this day and age, but there was once a time when Blockbuster, Netflix and friggin’ DVD dispensers at McDonalds didn’t possess a stranglehold on the movie-rental market. With the VHS/VCR boom of the early ‘80s, mom n’ pop video stores—rental locations with instantly catchy names like Mega Video, Captain Video and Movies-4-Rent—became widespread as people clamored for home entertainment, and visiting one of these spots was an event. Most children of the ‘80s have incredibly vivid memories of hitting up a video store with the parents, along with the movie posters that plastered every inch of the wall.
These posters found ran the gamut from summer blockbusters (Ghostbusters! Indiana Jones!) to some pretty bizarre direct-to-video dreck (Michael Dudikoff Presents Action Adventure Theater: The Bronx Executioner?). But it was the posters for that era’s brand of horror flicks that truly stick out in our minds; many of them presented some gruesome, freakish imagery that weighed heavily on us after we’d left the store, and made for a shitty’s night’s sleep. The irony is that these flicks certainly weren’t classics of the genre; the majority sucked and weren’t even remotely scary! But their promotional materials were able to latch onto unique fears that 8-year-olds have. So with that in mind, here are 10 horror-flick posters from the mom n’ pop video store heyday that left us crawling under the covers with our actual Ma and Pa. Read more …











