31 days of Halloween, 2024
Keeping up my yearly tradition of sharing the various films and spooky / horror media I’ve been enjoying over October, usually averaging about 1 per day. This year I have been in a bit of a slump but I did hit my target and did some other stuff that’s seasonably relevant, which I’ll get into.
But first the movies:
1. Brimstone and Treacle (1982) – this was the movie version of the incredible Play for Today from the 70s by Denis Potter that was subsequently banned for being genuinely unsettling and narking off the TV Censors of the day with its themes of religious obsession and sexual exploitation. It was an undisputed classic but wouldn’t see the light of day to a mass audience until the 1990s. This film was an attempt to cash in on the controversy and get something out so people could at least see a version of it. Of the two despite better production standards this is the inferior version. The whole thing is dumbed down, the whole thing is dumbed down for a mass audience and the sexual element is amped up to being genuinely icky and exploitative. Also, whoever decided to recast the main character as Sting should have been shot.
2. Netherworld (1992) – Unmemorable cheap ropey American horror.
3. Fear Street: Prom Queen (2025) – This was a lot of fun. Part of a Netflix series based on the RL Stein YA horror books, it’s a stand alone and just goes ham on the 80s setting and slasher tropes. Its 1988 and someone is killing the prom queens in a small town high school, does what it says on the tin. Good crack.
4. Time Of The Wolf (2003) – Definitely one of the classier things I saw over the season. Michael Hanneke doing a post apocalypse. The nature of the crisis is not apparent, there’s no world building just a clear societal collapse and focus on character. We follow one family unit as they try to make their way through the world and survive as best they can. Bleak.
5. Extraordinary Tales (2013) – This is a delightful animated feature taking audio of 5 Edgar Allen Poe stories and setting them to creepy gothic animation. Solid.
6. Mermaid Forest (1991) – classic OVA period anime based on Japanese mythology around their mermaid lore. Nice and suitably creepy but if you like this sort of thjing try and find a torrent or stream for the full uncut version which is not the one that’s on Youtube.
7. Ginger Snaps (2000) – first rewatch of the season, still as great as it ever was. This is just a very cool idea executed really well, the style is iconic and the young cast rinse all the pathos out of the scenario that you could ever want.
8. Fréwaka (2024) – I managed to miss this in the pictures the one showing that it had. Really good to catch up, we need more bleak elevated horror As Gaeilgé and this did us proud. Nice creepy one.
9. Invoking Yell (2023) – Yous know I like to hit each continent at least once when I’m doing these. This was our South American film of the year and tho looking okay on paper it wasn’t much to write home about. A Blair Witch-esque FF horror about a bunch of metallers trying to get some spooky field recordings for their mix tape ought to have been great but this was poorly executed and just boring.
10. Hell and Back (2015) – Stop motion horror, couple of stoner dudes doing Orpheus with Bob Odenkirk as the devil. Again sounds like a better time on paper than it actually was. A lot of shitty bro-y humour, probably of interest and worth only as a time capsule of dumb edgy-boy comedy just before #MeToo.
11. Abigail (2025) – Dumb trashy blockbuster horror, best going in unspoiled as all the promotional material gives far too much away. Like the reveal as to whats happening is 45 minutes into this 1hour 40 minute film. Turn your brain off, enjoy, it’s a good ride.
12. V/H/S/Beyond (2024) – I got Shudder again this year so I got to catch up on this sci-fi volume of the ongoing anthology series. A bit hit and miss but the last few sections were pretty good.
13. Basket Case (1982) – A classic that I got to introduce my mum and sister to. We all had a great time. My Ma enjoyed it a lot and has recommended it to other people too. Will now see if can’t coax them to watch the sequels with me.
14. Frank and Zed (2020) – As far as low budget animated projects made by essentially one guy doing it all in his basement and garage nights and weekends around the day job go, its grand. Charming even. It feels churlish to say that the writing isn’t great and its not “good” per say in general considering but eh, ‘tis what it is.
15. To Your Last Death (2019) – A corporate exec sets his fuck-up children against each other in a death game in a high rise office to see which, if any are worthy of getting the keys to the big office and run things after he retires. This is why I need to be hard on Frank and Zed. This is an animated indie feature that seems to have been mostly funded online and it absolutely rocks, no excuses no qualifications. Good cast, well written, animation isn’t spectacular but it does the job. Some very inventive kills and very memorable twists and turns.
16. Ginger Snaps 2: Unleashed (2004) – direct sequel to the previous one. My first time watching and it does not disappoint. Adds to and deepens the mythos around the series and the angsty queer stuff in the subtext. Great series in general nice to get fully onboard with it.
17. The Devil’s Work (2023) – This was the Australian movie from the month. A home invasion film mostly done as a 1er with the USP being that the monster is the sister of the girl from the couple getting stalked and potentially murdled. I just didn’t get on with it, too much faffing about in the dark.
18. Head Count (2018) – the Horrors of partying with people you don’t know that well! Nice idea, execution was lacking. Not scary or fun.
19. PG: Psycho Goreman (2020) – Loved it as much as the first time I saw it. Had fun introducing my sister to it which considering that it really is all about family seems appropriate. Basically ET or Mac and Me but the main kid is a sociopathic bullying weirdo and the alien is an all powerful evil warlord and it’s the best.
20. Dachra (2018) – This was our African film for the month. Never seen any sort of film from Tunisia before. This was interesting, based on North African superstitions around witchcraft but seems to run deeper as some sort of commentary on life in Tunis post Arab Spring. I wish I knew more about the culture and what’s been happening since the revolution because it comes off as quite generic and somewhat conservative and pro-fundamentaist Islam in the messaging.
21. Ginger Snaps Back: The Beginning (2004) – 1800s set prequel with the same lead actresses. That kind of doesn’t make sense but its fine, very well done vintage frontier horror. This was a great series of films, would recommend, may rewatch.
22. MadS (2024) – recommended to me by my friend Jason Mills. Its quite good, another “horrors of partying” film that asks, what if you’re having a bad time on trippy gear but its all real (or is it tho?) again done mostly as a 1er but this all just clicked and worked rather well in ways the films I watched earlier this month that attempted those things didn’t quite. Yes, very good, worth catching.
23. The Stuff (1985) – another rewatch where I got to introduce it to the fam. Classic but jesus don’t watch the cut that’s on Shudder, must have been edited for TV showings in the day or something because it feels weird and like there’s a bunch of stuff missing.
24. V/H/S/Halloween (2025) – This years one! And its themed around Halloween so there’s a bit of trick-or-treating and some really grim stuff done to and by children! If that turns you off fair enough, some are sensitive to those things. I personally enjoyed it, a good combo of the edgy modern youtube horror culture with FF and has a fair few bits that will stay with me.
25. The Devil’s Path (2024) – German Language historical gothic, based on real accounts of actual events. Basically, if you were suicidal according to Christian theology you can’t just kill yourself since you’ll end up in hell as suicide is a sin itself and you can’t get absolution. So some people rather than be put off by all that used the loophole that if you kill someone else and confess to it the state will execute you and give you last rights before so you do definitely get to heaven. This was heavily gendered as these were mostly desperate women and their victims were generally children in their care. Grim eh? Well aye, that’s how it was and this film does a good job of depicting the personal / psychological, cultural and social context.
26. Spoonful of Sugar (2022) – Oh dear, we’re at the point with “Elevated Horror” where we’re getting By The Numbers iterations of the Horrors Of Fucked-up Families and thats what we’re getting here.
27. The Being (1983) – nice old school creature feature with a good cast and some dope practical SFX. Basically jaws but in a small potato orientated town in the mid west.
28. Golem (1979) – Polish “horrors of living behind the Iron Curtain” sci-fi horror. Its similar to Possession in that our removal from the original context and what is being satirised makes it impenetrable and frustratingly inscrutable though certainly memorable.
29. Bloodsuckers (2021) – Not even sure if this counts as a horror film or even adjacent. It’s a mannered satire about communism that takes the lines from Capital about the Vampiric nature of capitalism as a basis with some light implications of real vampirism in the story. I enjoyed it because I’m a nerd for this sort of thing, Eisenstein shows up in it as a character ffs, not sure how many other people I know would like it.
30. Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me (1992) – we lost an absolute legend this year. RIP David Lynch, one of the best to ever do it. The last time I saw this I was a teenager and hadn’t seen any of the series, watching it again now, I can absolutely see why people were generally baffled and frustrated but I enjoyed it a whole lot. Poor Laura!
31. I wanted to cap the month off by rewatching Sinners and showing it to my Dad at least, who is a big Blues fan, but he’s been busy and I couldn’t get him to sit and watch a 2 hour film with me on the day or any other I tried him. So instead I dipped again into the extended To Watch list and watched a new Irish film All You Need is Death (2023). This is about Irish traditional music and musicologists getting in over their heads collecting unheard and nearly forgotten tunes back in troubles era rural Ireland. The soundtrack is done by Ian Lynch of Lynched / Lankum, Darragh is in the film, as are members of The Mary Wallopers. Naturally, all that is the best part of the film, which does the typical horror thing of starting well with a creepy set of ideas and visual conceits but not quite sticking the landing re. taking it all somewhere. So imperfectly executed as the last act might be I’d say its still worth seeing just on that basis.
Other visual media:
Netflix actually came up a blinder by showing a pretty decent wee horror comedy series Haunted Hotel. A woman co-runs a Shining style haunted hotel with her Brothers ghost, there are supernatural hijinks etc. Good fun. I also got recommended a Polish indie animated horror series Bad Exorcist which probably makes more sense and is funnier / more relatable if you are polish or familiar with the culture. Still pretty good without that. I also rewatched Over The Garden Wall and aye, still great. Cutesy YA Autumnal spookiness that just happens to match with The Divine Comedy’s circles of hell each episode. Great voice cast too.
Reads:
Wasn’t reading as much as usual this year. I read Tender Is The Flesh by Agustina Bazterrica that came out in its native Argentina in 2017 but since getting published in English at the start of this decade has developed a cult following online. It’s easy to see why, a meatless, animal-less dystopia where people that supposedly don’t have a consciousness are used as cattle and treated the way we treat animals in the meat industry IRL. Reads like vegan agitprop. Its well written and relentlessly grim. Decent enough, not quite my bag though. I also started reading but haven’t finished the latest Chuck Tingle non-tingler Lucky Day (2025) which is very good so far. It’s about probability and the central theme of the horrors of being hit by the random unfairness of existence is very resonant to me right now. I have also started and am still reading through Back For Good the collected EC Ray Bradbury collaborations, and most of the ones I’ve been through so far are his work on the Tales From The Crypt and adjacent lines. These are a whole lot of fun and its cool getting them all in one volume with supplementary materials (including a short bit by Greg Bear about Bradbury’s involvement in the fandom / convention culture in California during his lifetime).
So that’s been basically it. If anyone else has been watching or reading anything fun please comment. Happy Halloween!




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