Oh, The Horror!
by Matt PattersonWhat is horror?
The word comes down to us from the Old Roman, horrere, which means literally “to stand on end” (as in hair) or “to shiver,” whether from fear or cold – Ovid refers to the “chill-bearing breath” of the North Wind (Metamorphosis, I.65).
Halloween is a unique holiday, marked for the celebration of the chill bearing, when demons and witches are allowed to come out to play and scare the bejezzus out of us – or at least, that’s how it used to be.

Over the last decade or so, Halloween has become less about creep and more about camp; Dracula and Frankenstein costumes replaced by Octomom and Obama masks (OK, those are more scary). What I want to do here is help those who would like go old school this year, and have a truly frightful All Hallows’ Eve.
(First suggestion – avoid bars. Like St. Patrick’s Day and New Year’s, Halloween brings out the amateur drinkers, a more loathsome species than any undead thing you may encounter. No, Halloween is best spent alone with someone special to snack on in the dark, with something scary to read, listen to, or watch.)
Film
For those in the movie mood (and who isn’t?), Halloween provides a dilemma – a horror-fest is definitely called for, but in no other genre is the crap/gold ration so heavily weighted towards the fecal. Rest easy – I have done the hard work for you, and watched hundreds of hours of horror, and can heartily recommend these selections:
The Ring, 2002 – Don’t let anyone tell you the Japanese original (Ringu) is better – Naomi Watts is perfect here in a classic ghost tale, an exquisite mixture of supernatural and technology – literally, ghost out of the machine. Gave me (me!) a nightmare.
Halloween, 1978 – Forget the atrocious recent Rob Zombie remakes and stick to the original low budget, John Carpenter-helmed masterpiece, about an escaped mental patient who comes back to torment his home town. Carpenter single-handedly invents the slasher genre; often imitated, never surpassed.
Salem’s Lot, 1979 – This adaptation of Stephen King’s novel, about a small New England town invaded by – and then infested with – vampires, was directed by Tobe Hooper as a television mini-series. Constrained by network censors from going the blood and gore route, Hooper is forced to concentrate on atmosphere and character, with terrific, terrifying results. Among the best – and least appreciated – of modern horror films.
Rosemary’s Baby, 1968 – Featuring more than one Oscar-calibre performance, this claustrophobic tale of a diabolical plot has lost none of its paranoid power forty years later. (Note: For those who refuse to watch any of Polanski’s work out of principle, feel free to substitute The Exorcist for equally successful Satanic fun).
Let The Right One In, 2008 – Based on a 2004 Swedish novel of the same name, this award winning film of “romantic horror,” about a young boy who befriends an undead girl next door, has rightfully been described as one of the best vampire movies of all time. Touching, unnerving and gruesome, it is unlike anything you have ever seen.
Night of The Living Dead, 1968 – Best. Zombies. Ever. Period.

Music
So that should be more than enough to watch. But what to listen to, on Halloween? Here a couple of spine-tingling tunes:
Katch 22 by Alien Sex Fiend – Mr. and Mrs Fiend usually serve up their unique blend of electronic horror-rock with a generous helping of winks and chuckles, but not this time; Katch 22 is a lumbering beast arisen form the sea, a booming prophesy of doom.
Cervix Couch by Christian Death – Cervix Couch comes in two versions; the original, from the album “Catastrophe Ballet,” is a sparse dirge evoking stone staircases and empty white beds. The second, an electronic remix titled the Spahn Ranch Mix, is completely different – but even more unsettling.
Double Dare by Bauhaus – This magisterial masterpiece lurches to life in fits and sputters, like some sulfurous submarine coming to life before plunging into the icy depths – with your soul. Peter Murphy rages against – well, everything, and for once, he seems dead serious. I dare you to listen.
Wolf Moon, by Type O Negative – The Brooklyn-based quartet delivers a beautiful, haunting paean to Werewolves, autumn, and the female reproductive cycle (yep) from their fantastically under-rated album “October Rust.” Beware…the woods….at night.
(For those in a dancing mood, try Everyday Is Halloween by Ministry, and Now I’m Feeling Zombified by Alien Sex Fiend.)

Books
For those with the quaint passion for papyrus, since we have recently celebrated the bicentennial of Edgar Allan Poe’s birth, and this October marks the 160th anniversary of his death, selections from the master are more than fitting.
Poe’s famous tales, Masque of the Red Death, The Tell Tale Heart, etc. are all grand. But I suggest Ligeia, his masterpiece and one of the more exquisitely wrought short stories in all the world – and strangely little known for all that.
For verse, you of course can’t go wrong with The Raven, but check out the lesser known but still beautiful Gothic chimes Ulalume, The Haunted Palace, and The Valley of Unrest – you will be well rewarded.
H.P. Lovecraft was Poe’s disciple – and not quite his equal – but who nevertheless wrote some very effective horror/sci-fi fiction. For me, the much-vaunted Cthulhu mythos is far less effective than his shorter, stand alone tales. My favorites include the ekphrastic duo The Music of Erich Zann and Pickman’s Model, both of which can be devoured in a single sitting.
And of course, it doesn’t get any scarier than the Great Bard’s Macbeth. It is amazing how feverish and focused this allegedly cursed play reads – the cackle of the witches can still be heard long after the book is shut and the lights go out.
There you have it, kiddies, some chill-bearing fun to put the fright back into your All Hallows’ night. Now go forth, and reclaim Halloween for all the goblins and ghouls – remember, on this night, even the devil deserves his due.
Happy Halloween!






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78 Comments
It's not quite classic horror, but The Bad Seed, with Patty McCormack, scared the Bejesus out of me when I was a teen, and watched it on TV.
Sorry…but I love the campiness of Halloween and will be watching Bruce Campbell's Evil Dead, Army of Darkness, Evil Dead 2, and Bubba Ho Tep tonight with hot chocolate and cayenne pepper popcorn!!
The original 'The Haunting' is my personal favorite for this season. No blood, no guts, no cheesy make-up, just a suspense-filled atmosphere overprinting a pervasive gloom. The dread that is heard or felt is often far more frightening than the one seen.
"Everyone likes Bubba Ho Tep", I suggest, "My Name is Bruce", ya knucklehead.
Put me down for The Haunting, too. NOT the remake. In fact, one of the most horrifying words in the English language has got to be "remake."
I miss the old Alcoa presents One Step Beyond and Boris Karloff's Thriller. They had some stories on them that would make you pull the blankets over your head.
On the subject of scary stuff in general, I recently stumbled on a collection of sound effects from some outfit that calls itself Ultimate Horror Sounds. See here http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0019MK6UC/ref=d...
These are feature-film quality sound effects. Highly recommended.
Hate to be a party pooper, but none of this stuff impresses me anymore…
Another thing politicians have ruined for me…
I saw Salem's Lot on t.v. when I was a kid and few things have since freaked me out more than the vampire boy floating outside of his friend's window! It's still one of the scariest movies I've ever seen.
Good call on The Ring, one of the best horror movies of the decade. Samara is a horror icon on her own right, often imitated (the recent The Orphan for instance) never duplicated.
Throw in some tunes from The Cramps, Misfits and Danzig and that'sHalloween
Carnival of Souls. Amazing. Micro-budget. Scary as all get out. Sort of obscure to find.
I love The Haunting ( the original) but The ring didn't phase me one bit. I hard time believing the story. Plus who uses video tapes anymore.
well, there's The Haunting- and not the shite remake either- the original with Richard Johnson and Claire Bloom. Atmosspheric, and chilling.
The original Dawn of the Dead- works as a terrific companion piece to the Night of the Living Dead.
Best of all are the old black and white Thriller! episodes with Boris Karloff as host. 'Pigeons from Hell' is particularly terrifying.
Mood, lighting, script and suspense- not CGI gorefests- are what really work.
Blair Witch Project worked really well also… Happy Halloween!
Ok, I'll bite…how on earth has politicians ruined Halloween? I think you're giving them too much power over your life.
TCM hit me with "Psycho" last night. Damn. That movie is still great from start to finish.
Can't forget Nosferatu and The Exorcist………and The Exorcism of Emily Rose.
For true unmitigated graphic horror…
Is Barry holding an emergency press conference tonight demanding quick Congressional passage of the Pelosi's new health bill? You know, before the massive swine flu pandemic sweeps the nation killing half the population, aided by the erratic inclement weather patterns directly caused by global warming?
If you're interested, Thriller is coming to DVD next year.
http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Thriller-Press-R...
Music: Iced Earth did an entire tribute album to horror called Horror Show, and it kicked amounts of @$$ that were previously unheard of. Like a drink, mix that with Misfits, Thriller, Bad Moon Rising & Alice Cooper
Movies/TV: Although AMC's MonsterFest has thoroughly degenerated into FearFest, they still know how to knock them out of the park. Old school slashers are still the best, bar none. Bravo's 100 Scariest Movie Moments special is a modern gem if you want something long to watch.
"The Descent" is highly under rated.
Also, "Let The Right One In" is being remade "for an American audience." I guess that's code for, starring Zac Effron. Netflix the Swedish one. There's something about it they won't be able to recreate.
John Carpenter's The Thing does it for me. I've seen it dozens of times but it still freaks me out.
Also, Johnny Depp's Sleepy Hollow is a must see this time of year.
Something to read? "Whistle and I'll Come to You". Don't sleep alone…
My youngest has perfected a "Nosferatu' imitation, to keep me from clogging up the DVR. "There, Mom, you've seen it."
No love for Tod Browning's "Freaks"?
The original Wicker Man will send chills down your spine.
Kolchak: The Night Stalker movie(s) … TV movies from the 70's . Always scarred me pretty good, but I don't know where you can see them now.
Also, Abbot and Costello meet Boris Karlof…. that's a goodie! ha!
"Corky Romano" and that Carrot Top movie still scare me more than any other movies I've ever seen.
Best of all, Bubba Ho Tep is based on a true story.
Not many horror movies give me chills these days but The Descent was really good.
Nice to see that someone remembers Alien Sex Fiend. Saw them live circe 1986.
I always enjoyed The Night Stalker. Darren McGavin was the best.
Those stay with you. Emily Rose is underrated. When you wake up just before 3 a.m. …
I remember the old "Chiller Theatre", where the hand (with 6 fingers) would go down into the ground.
As a child that was always a creepy show, and the source of many childhood boogey-man nightmares I'm sure.
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for me it's the first "Nightmare on Elm Street" lots of tension and not nearly as much gore and camp as the sequels.
Shocker id another good Craven film as well.
Watched it this morning on TMC–great suspense!
Some of my favorite scary movies (needless to say, I'm talking originals, not remakes): Psycho, Wait Until Dark, The Coven, When a Stranger Calls, and Magic. And when I was little–The Wizard of Oz.
One of my favorite horror movies is "The Legend of Hell House" (1973). Great little haunted house movie starring Roddy McDowall. Heavy on the suspense and not much gore, just the way I like them.
For reading I like H.P. Lovecraft, particularly "The Rats in the Walls" and "The Whisperer in the Darkness." "The Rats in the Walls" really got to me the first time I read it because we had raccoons in the attic at the time so you'd occasionally hear the odd scampering noise and the imagination would go into overdrive.
Whether or not one thinks "The Ring" was better than "Ringu" as a whole, at least concede that the final scare scene with the television was better done in the Japanese original. Because it was. It was subtler and it looked more real in the original. Probably because the only CGI they used was Sadako coming out of the television and the rest is just the actress. Samara looked like a grayscale cartoon with a bad hair day. Rick Baker, you have had better days on the job.
But "Ringu" wasn't the scariest movie I've ever seen. That honor goes to 1978 "Invasion of the Body Snatchers". I don't have to explain, just see the movie.
Another good one that gets hardly any love is "Carnival of Souls". Will give you chill-bumps.
Also see Browning's "Freaks." The end is worth it.
Mrs. Cobalt-Blue and I watched Rawhead Rex. (We WERE going to watch At the Midnight Hour- one of my own Halloween Traditions, but there were technical problems.
It adds the fear of being buried alive on top of the monsters.
Reminds me of the global warming crowd. Irrational and scary.
say the prayer to Saint Michael and they won't bug you.
Night of the Living Dead and John Carpenter's Thing are my favorites. But for a sub-genre in the horror genre, give me the vampire movies any day of the week. The old Dracula movies really scared the bejesus out of me when I was a kid. I remember seeing some vampire movie … don't remember which, but Mom took me and my sister to see it, and when we got home, Mom had to convince me that she didn't have any garlic in the kitchen, and then I went and cut out crosses out of cardboard and hung one in every window in the house. I know, I know, cardboard isn't silver or gold, but hey, it's what I had. I don't think I slept at all that night.
I got a LOT of training, care of Uncle Sugar, and whenever something might pop out at me, I was fully prepared to wade in and make the SOB REALLY DEAD…and I can do that very easily with an entire passel of unassuming normal items readily available everywhere. Homeland Security would make me board aircraft naked if they had a hint…
Nowadays, I find I'm confronting the "…enemies both foreign and domestic", and find that I can't simply operate like I would normally do…namely, as Geo. Patton used to say, "introduce the enemy to the nether regions…"
As I said on BH, "Never underestimate the power of Stupid People in large groups…"
Like legislatures…
See?
Its stuff like THIS that keeps me up at night…I could MacGyver a zombie off the planet with a Bic pen, but dealing with that particular horror fest…Brrrrrr!
"Pee Wee's Big Adventure"…
(I keep a Kendo stick close by just in case)
I…still don't see how that ruins Halloween, but God bless you, and you might want to try decaf, and for heaven's sake, go easy on any little tykes who might trick or treat tonight!
For readers I would suggest "The Yellow Sign" by Robert W. Chambers. Creepiest damn thing I ever read. You can find it on that "WikiSource" deal (though I read it from an anthology). Just don't read it at night, if you want to sleep. Failing that, try Stephen King's short story "The Boogyman". You'll never be comfortable around closets again. For movies, I'd agree with "Carnaval of Souls". I like, and own, "Dawn of The Dead" and "The Thing", but if you want more terror than gore, try "The Haunting" (original).
Good call — I think. I saw this when I was 11 and was terrified by its lurid, nightmarish style. But I wonder what I would think now? Same with "Let's Scare Jessica to Death," which paralyzed me with fear when I was 15.
Remarkable how few good, really scary movies have been made, or how few endure as scary. Saw Rosemary's Baby and Night of the Living Dead recently after many years — and they seemed to fall a little flat. Maybe the years have jaded me.
I don't consider being jolted the same as being scared, or horrified.
These days I come closest to feeling the deepest fear from movies outside the genre, from films whose politics or ideas seem to subvert basic truths or otherwise betray a casual and cruel ignorance of the human condition. This is horrifying, as in many cases it reflects an artist class dangerously and sickly righteous in their sense of right and wrong, good and evil, freedom and tyranny. "Waitress" was horrifying — its characterization of men and its kind of unconscious reverse-Stepford Wives fantasy ending creeped me out. And "Syriana" scared me. Too many others to list.
Thanks. Excellent sound effects.
Exorcist and Emily Rose: both true stories. Yes, "Sancte Michael Archangele, defende nos in proelio".
Thanks so much Brother for informing me about this. I saw a thriller back in 1961 when I was a kid called The Hungry Glass with Bill Shatner,Elizabeth Allen and Donna Douglas. One scary teleplay let me tell you. Till this day when I have to shave and look into the mirror that damn story jumps into my head. If you ever get a chance check it out . Especially if you want to grow a beard. Thanks again pal. Be well.
Why hasn't there been a bio-pic of Poe? His fevered imagination; his expulsion from West Point; his excessive drinking; his sad, penniless demise. It's perfect.
For music, I recommend the Savatage album Hall of the Mountain King:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0LrQ2a7uZa4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i6BdwbglPio
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=veJeqwiV9gM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yrW4uUcCn5k
(FYI, the Trans-Siberian Orchestra has overlap with Savatage — Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24 is from the Savatage album Dead Winter Dead — and they sometimes do "Prelude To Madness " in concert.)
You'll also be happy to know that the first season of ONE STEP BEYOND just got a spiffy DVD release (as opposed to the countless scruffy-looking "Public Domain" disc releases that have been around for years) thru CBS/Paramount in late September, billed as ONE STEP BEYOND: THE OFFICIAL 1ST SEASON, to set it apart from those numerous PD releases.
I was just watching a few episodes this past week, and they look and sound terrific. I hope CBS/Paramount gives the same treatment to the remaining two seasons, the sooner the better!
Thanks that's terrific. I'm happy to hear it.
First time I saw it all the way through I couldn't sleep that night.
A shame it's not on his list, along with the Shirley Jackson novel it was based on (The Haunting of Hill House) – one of the best "haunted house stories" ever!
My husband, whose taste in movies unfortunately is just TERRIBLE most of the time, likes that verson because he likes getting full explanations of all the backstory. He even likes the Rob Zombie Halloween. I can't say anything about that because I haven't seen it, but I have a feeling that as with most remakes, I won't like it. The remake Haunting was so awful, I can't even think of it without cringing. It was terrible.
The 1963 version was just awesome. As I said, first time, didn't sleep. Couldn't sleep.
Yes The Ring also terrified me, but are we ever going to get a decent explanation as to what she really is. I didn't find that the Ring 2 helped in that regard at all.
You know, I didn't originally expect much out of Sleepy Hollow when it first came out. But I absolutely LOVED Tim Burton's take on the story. I thought it was fabulous.
And in that vein, Disney's Ichabod Crane movie, though sometimes silly (as it was made for kids), actually scared me a kid. That scene in the Hallow towards the end used to terrify the ever loving crud out of me! Even now, it kind of makes me scared and giggle at the same time, remembering how it used to scare me!
Man, the Wizard of Oz was scary as all get out as a kid.
It's those flying monkeys that really got my brother and I ducking under the covers quivering at every creak in the tree branches outside our window. They were out there all right, just sitting in the branches waiting for mum and dad to switch off the lights and retire to their room for the long long night.
As I got a bit older the fear switched from monsters (which can be shot, electrically fried, heat rayed, or nuked) to the supernatural, and the granddaddy of them all to my mind was The Exorcist which still gives me the creeps. Neighborhood legend has it that one of our neighbors down the street died of a heart attack after seeing it in the theater.
Now of course, the horror show of blood sucking devil children is played out on the political stage.
Peter Jackson's Dead Alive is the archetypal zombie extravaganza; some folks consider it the goriest film ever made. Except the carnage is overwhelming to where you can only laugh at it, and the New Zealanders' accents are endearing in spite of the bloodshed. The protagonist at one point is required to eliminate about a hundred or so undead with an upturned lawnmower while balancing himself on a string of severed heads. I consider it also the most visually stunning and colorful production in cinema history–and I say it with a straight face. Those who saw Meet the Feebles might know what I mean here. And I would recommend The Frighteners–itself directed by Jackson, and starring Michael J. Fox–which supposedly has some connection with Charles Williams' novel, All Hallows's Eve. Williams was a member of the Inklings, whose members included C.S. Lewis and Tolkien himself, except Tolkien was sort of obnoxious towards Williams' work while Lewis thought a bit more highly of it. The story involves a dead London girl and her interactions with an anti-Christ figure and his petty-minded followers. Too many readers are turned off by the author's style to where I could never understand why. Yet I would recommend All Hallows' Eve well above any other book for Halloween. That and W.B. Yeats' Mythologies. On either hand I feel awful for having spent my Halloween on video games. And I never play video games at all. Or did I mention Jack Prelutsky's Nightmares? Or Vincent Price's audio recordings? Great stuff.
Dead Alive is incredibly funny.
"On either hand I feel awful for having spent my Halloween on video games."
Could be worse (were they at least of the spooky sort?). I got a cold on Friday evening and ended up doing nothing at all. Because we all know the best time to get sick is just over the weekend!
Flying monkeys, the wicked witch's laugh, and her guards (Oh, oh, oh–we–oh!) had me and my brother sleeping with the lights on. And yes, the real-live horror show playing itself out on the political stage is the scariest ever!
Oh yes. The 1978 Body Snatchers is worthy. And that ending…
I saw The Wizard of Oz too late in life, but it´s not hard to believe. It is such an iconic movie, people forget how totally weird it is.
I remember the 1933 King Kong scared me to death when I was about 7. So did every other episode of Star Trek.
Shame that Guillermo del Toro isn´t going to make "At the Mountains of Madness". That could have been great.
One of the joys of reading Lovevraft is to look for THE archetypical Lovecraftian passage, the one that encapsulates his (admittedly overwrought) style perfectly. Like this one:
"Over the valley's rim a wan, waning crescent moon peered through the noisome vapors that seemed to emanate from unheard of catacombs, and by its feeble, wavering beams I could distinguish a repellent array of antique slabs, urns, cenotaphs, and mausoleum facades; all crumbling, moss-grown, and moisture-stained, and partly concealed by the gross luxuriance of the unhealthy vegetation."
Agreed. The best horror films know how to get in your head.
The Halloween remake was good, but the original will always hold a special place. Remake isn't a dirty word, as long as the remakers stay true to the story.
Does anyone remember "Night Gallery"? Holy crap, talk about spooky. That was a screwed up show.
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