Showing posts with label horror movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horror movies. Show all posts

Monday, December 4, 2017

Pennywise in Guadalajara

Sometimes you're walking down the streets of Guadalajara, minding your own business... When you run into Pennywise the Dancing Clown.

Thursday, January 12, 2017

Author of "The Exorcist" on Johnny Carson (1974)

I came across this old video after reading that William Peter Blatty, author of "The Exorcist" and the film's screenplay, had appeared on The Johnny Carson Show.

The interview with him is fascinating, but so is everything else about the episode. The pacing is much slower and less flashy than modern TV, and the audience reaction more subdued. People had a greater ability to take their time processing what they were watching.

Despite the differences, though, the "current events" in Johnny's monologue are timeless: a pipeline that threatens the environment. A celebrity with controversial political views. And, of course, unthinkable scandals in Washington.

If only we had an Exorcist who could rid our world of these things.

Episode of "The Johnny Carson Show" from January 17, 1974. Blatty interview begins 51:40 into the video.

Monday, September 5, 2016

Festival Macabro: clausura con Tyler MacIntyre

La ceremonia de clausura del Festival Macabro, en el Museo de la Ciudad de México.

Con la presencia de Tyler MacIntyre, director del largometraje horror-comedia "Patchwork".

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Thursday, October 31, 2013

The Wisdom of "The Exorcist song": a Halloween Meditation


The Wisdom of "the Exorcist song":
A Halloween Meditation


Tubular Bells, minute one

In honor of Halloween, I’d like to invite you to listen to the first 30 seconds of this song, “Tubular Bells”:



Now pause the song. I’m sure you recognize it—most people know it as “That Creepy Song from the Movie ‘The Exorcist’”. Go ahead, listen to another thirty seconds.

What feelings does the song evoke? Most of us associate this music with the same feelings that we associate with horror movies in general. Fear, darkness, terror. Hopelessness. We think of the pure, unadulterated horror that people feel when they watch a good, scary movie like “The Exorcist”. The sort of fear that, back when the movie originally came out 40 years ago, caused people to pass out, or vomit into the movie theater trash cans.