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  • HOME
  • CONTACT / FEATURE
  • FEATURES
  • FICTION REVIEWS
  • FILM REVIEWS
  • INTERVIEWS
  • YOUNG BLOOD
  • MY LIFE IN HORROR
  • FILM GUTTER
  • ARCHIVES
    • SPLASHES OF DARKNESS
    • THE MASTERS OF HORROR
    • THE DEVL'S MUSIC
    • HORROR BOOK REVIEWS
    • Challenge Kayleigh
    • ALICE IN SUMMERLAND
    • 13 FOR HALLOWEEN
    • FILMS THAT MATTER
    • BOOKS THAT MATTER
    • THE SCARLET GOSPELS
GINGER NUTS OF HORROR
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Cover Reveal for Dreams for the Dying by Adam Light from Corpus Press

25/5/2021
COVER REVEAL   DREAMS FOR THE DYING  BY ADAM LIGHT FROM CORPUS PRESS

Cover Reveal for Dreams for the Dying by Adam Light from Corpus Press

Corpus Press is thrilled to announce the publication of a single-author collection by Adam Light called Dreams for the Dying! Dreams for the Dying collection will be available June 14, 2021. The spectacular cover is by Mikio Murakami, who continues to be a shining artist on the scene with his unique and stunning creations. The cover for Adam Light’s collection is no exception. Coupled with Adam Light’s superbly penned and haunting content, this makes for a book you don’t want to miss out on this year.

Dreams for the Dying

Bad dreams don't always evaporate in the light of day.
Some refuse to fade, forever haunting dark corners of consciousness.
The dread of an approaching headlight on a deserted road . . .
Swirling black clouds claiming the sky, bringing death and madness . . .
The cabin of a trucker's rig, where a waitress lies bound and gagged . . .
A cursed soul in a moonlit pumpkin patch, desperate and lonely . . .
These are songs for the damned, poisons for the cure, and Dreams for the Dying.
For years, Adam Light has frightened and delighted readers around the world with his stories of horror and the bizarre. Fully revised to best represent the author's original vision, these fearsome tales of the macabre are finally collected under a single cover for the first time.
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Pre-order links:

Dreams for the Dying eBook & hardcover:
https://tinyurl.com/DreamfortheDying-ebookandHC

Dreams for the Dying paperback:
https://tinyurl.com/DreamsfortheDyingPaperback

Adam Light Biography
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Adam Light resides in northeast Florida with his wife and daughter, along with two canine fur babies. He haunts the earth by day, writes horror stories at night, and rarely sleeps. Follow Adam on Twitter.

About Corpus Press
Corpus Press is a publisher of horror and weird fiction, specializing in modern pulp that emphasizes plot over gore. Based in Charlotte, North Carolina, the press has garnered praise from SCREAM Magazine, Cemetery Dance, Horror Novel Reviews, Hellnotes and others for its anthologies and for its short story collections and novellas.
Follow Corpus Press:
Website
Facebook
Twitter
Watch for more news about the next anthology from Corpus Press too, In Darkness, Delight: Fear the Future, which has a planned release date is August 16, 2021.
Reviewers/Media

Review copies are currently available upon request by contacting Erin Al-Mehairi, publicist, at hookofabook@hotmail.com or twitter (@erinalmehairi).

THE HEART AND SOUL OF HORROR WEBSITES 

Horror And Me, Part 1 By Award Winning Editor Eugene Johnson

25/5/2021








May is Mental Health month. I’ve been struggling horribly for awhile now with disabilities including PTSD, anxiety with panic attacks, bipolar depression, ADHD, dyslexia, agoraphobia, and more. The last few years these have been impossible to manage, effecting every area of my life from my physical health to my relationships. My whole life one of my primary coping mechanism has been storytelling and the horror genre. So I found myself creating fiction in the horror genre as a form of therapy and escape. Lately I’ve been thinking of my struggles and how storytelling and the horror genre has been such an important part of my survival. I decided to write a series of articles based on my reflection and experience on how a genre that some see as taboo has been a lifeline for me all my life. Below is the first article.








Stephen King once said “we make up horrors to help us cope with the real ones in the world.”


Looking back on my life, seeing how horror has helped me cope with my own trauma and mental illness, I believe that his statement may sum up why people are drawn to horror so much. Horror allows us to escape the real life monsters in our life, even if it’s for just a few moments. Horror is an important piece of our culture helping us to cope with the dark side of humanity that is sometimes too hard for a person to face.


When I look back at all the horrible times of my life, I can see I was drawn to the horror genre as a way to deal with the all too real horrors I faced daily in my home at the hands of abusive and neglectful parents. 


My father was very abusive taking the majority of his anger out on me from a very young age. I was his outlet, he and my mother blamed me for everything that went wrong in their life.


He even pushed my mother out of a moving car when she was in the late stages of her pregnancy with me. They thought they were going to lose me for a bit. So from an early age my maternal grandparents would take me as much as they could to stay at their house to spare me of the terror of my parents.


I grew up on horror in the late seventies and eighties. Everything horror and everything of the fantastic. My grandmother introduced to me to the genre at a very young age. I still remember going to the theater with her to see Poltergeist shorty after my fifth birthday. The clown scene scared the crap out of me, along with the scene with the corpses in the water. Yet I loved the movie.


At the time, I wasn’t sure why my grandmother, an old-fashioned church going woman, decided to introduce me to horror at such a young age, but she did and I fell in love with the genre. It was much later in life that I discovered that my grandmother had loved horror before any of her children were born, reading the old paperbacks when she could or catching a creature feature at the drive in. She even introduced all three of her children to the horror genre turning them onto it. I also found that she had a very bad childhood herself, full of pain with possible abuse. That she lost her first child just days after she was born. My grandmother also struggled with depression as well as possible anxiety though she never talked about it. My grandparents were from a generation that did not believe in therapy or talking about feelings. They believed appearance and what people went through was to keep everything inside. So looking back, my guess, is horror might have helped distract her from the real word darkness. She might have even thought it might help me. I don’t know the real reason she introduced me to all the creepy fictions most grandmothers turn their noses up at. But I’m so thankful she did.


Whenever I stayed with my grandparents, I consumed anything I could related to horror and the strange within reason. Which was pretty often seeing I grew up with very abusive parents. For awhile I basically lived there. So I took in a lot of horror. Whether it was sitting on the white old wooden swing in my grandparents backyard reading old horror comics. Or sitting in front of the big box television set on the 70’s style pea green carpet of their living room watching black/white reruns of the Twilight Zone, Creature Of The Black Lagoon, the old Hammer Horror films, and many more. I collected any monster related from my cherished Remco Monsters to the Crestwood Monster book series. I even had one of those large official movie Alien action figures that my grandparents found at a garage sale for me. When not reading or watching horror on TV,
Grandma and my babysitters would take me to the theaters as well to catch the new scary movies (both the Jolly Rogers Drive in and South Gate in door theater) being released. Some of my very few childhood memories are of me going to see movies with her such as Poltergeist, Gremlins, Critters, Day Of The Dead, The Evil Dead, The Hand, and many more. I was raised on everything Science-fiction, Horror, or Fantasy related adventures and I loved it. The escape to the different worlds took my mind off the horrible things that awaited me when my grandparents had no chance but to send me home.


Growing up there was just something special about the scary stories that just grabbed my attention. I remember being scared to death, but not wanting to look away.  I was fascinated with the monsters, yet I was rooting for the heroes at the same time. In those stories, anything was possible. The monsters brought people together of all types no matter what their differences. The heroes always had hope, even when everything around them was telling them they should just give up. While in those worlds, I forgot the abuse I was going through at home and from the real monsters that waited for me there. Instead I had hope and was brave and thought anything was possible. I learn hope, creativity and so much more from my beloved horror stories. From this young age, horror and storytelling would become my main coping mechanism when ever I was going through a hard time.


I have no doubt of this, as I look back at my life, which is filled with trauma and abuse. I lived through 15 years of every type of abuse you can think of from two sick addicts who where suppose to love me, a drive by shooting, the loss of both my grandparents, horrible health issues and disabilities, and so much more. The horror genre and storytelling has always been there to help me face the real world pains that I could barely face on my own. Even now, as I struggle worse then ever with my disabilities, they are my primary coping mechanism, third only to my faith and family. I definitely think Mr. King was on to something as I’m not sure what I would do without such an interesting genre such as horror as an outlet for all the real life nightmares I have battled inside.

WHEN THEATERS REOPEN, THEY SHOULD DO MORE HORROR STORIES BY RAMI UNGAR

24/5/2021
WHEN THEATERS REOPEN, THEY SHOULD DO MORE HORROR STORIES BY RAMI UNGAR

WHEN THEATERS REOPEN, THEY SHOULD DO MORE HORROR STORIES BY RAMI UNGAR​

It’s inevitable. When this pandemic ends, Broadway will reopen, as will the West End in London and any theater where audiences want to sit in the dark and enjoy a live show. Some already are, albeit socially distanced, and people are buying tickets in droves. Let’s face it, people love the theater as an institution and as an experience. And after over a year stuck at home, they’re ready to give theater new life.
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And for that, I think the theaters should look at adapting and performing more horror stories.

Horror has actually had a decent enough track record on stage. Plenty of the classics have found success on the boards. Dracula was actually raised out of obscurity partly because of its stageplay. Sweeney Todd’s operatic tale of revenge and cannibalism is a beloved classic. The Grand Guignol Theater of Paris told gory and psychological tales for over sixty years to audiences’ terror and delight. And there are plenty of horror comedy stories, such as Little Shop of Horrors, The Addams Family, and, most recently, Beetlejuice.

But after this pandemic ends, audiences might be very much in the mood for horror stories. As Principal Hawkins notes in his song “We Look to You” in The Prom, an escape helps people heal, and many fans find horror to be therapeutic for real world horrors. And we’ve had our share of real-world horrors during this pandemic. Along with the horrific death toll and the changes we’ve had to our lives, there has been violence, political unrest, wildfires, and shootings, among others things. Some dramatized horror might not only be a welcome escape for theatergoers, but may help put some of these tragedies and events into perspective for them.
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So, what shows should be performed? Obviously, the abovementioned stories should be considered. And there are many plays based on classic novels such as Frankenstein, Jekyll & Hyde, and others worth watching. The accused murderess Lizzie Borden has a rock musical based on her titled simply Lizzie, which I would love to see. And while the musical version of Carrie has had a spotty track record, Stephen King’s works have had wonderful adaptations, such as Misery and his collaboration with John Mellencamp, Ghost Brothers of Darkland County.
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And I hear there’s a theater in South Carolina that will be performing a play set in the house that inspired The Amityville Horror later this year. I certainly think plans for that should move forward.

As for new stories, I’m sure there are playwrights and composers coming up with scary stories for the stage right now. Perhaps Lin-Manuel Miranda is coming up with something involving a hidden room, a town with a sordid history, and a man trying to outrun his past. And if he’s not, or if anyone reading is looking for some inspiration, let me make some suggestions for stories that I feel would make for great stage shows.

I won’t include any of the classics or King’s work, as they’ve both had plenty of adaptations over the years. Nor will I include any of my own work, for all the obvious reasons (besides, if anyone wants to contact me, they know how to find me). I’m suggesting stories or subjects that are either lesser known or would find new life onstage.

So, without further ado, here are the stories I believe would make for great stage shows and musicals:
  • The Deep by Alma Katsu. I read this Bram Stoker-nominated book last year and immediately thought it would make a wonderful stage show. A supernatural tale set aboard the Titanic, the tale follows several haunted souls dealing with the darkness inside themselves and in each other as something evil influences the doomed cruise. Done right, this story could be a beautiful and haunting tale to witness on stage.
  • A Nightmare on Elm Street. After films like The Final Nightmare and the 2010 remake, we haven’t seen hide nor hair of Freddy Kreuger, and honestly, that feels like a waste. A musical version of the original film, with kick-ass musical numbers and plenty of laughs, would make for one hell of a show. Not to mention, we all secretly want Freddy to burst out into song, don’t we?
  • The Work of Junji Ito. Since 1987, Ito has made a name for himself in horror and his work is no stranger to adaptation. I think some of his work would make for great theater. My top choice of his work would be Tomie, his story about the bewitching young woman who never dies. Musical or not, it would be a great tale of lust, obsession and how evil cannot be killed.
  • The Life and Music of Robert Johnson. If you’re trying to place the name, Robert Johnson was the blues singer whom legend says sold his soul to the Devil for musical talent. But if you look deeper into his story, you’ll find there’s a much more complicated man, and a much more fascinating story, lost within the legend. I think a musical incorporating Robert’s work, as well as other blues classics, would be fantastic. It could tell the story of someone trying to rediscover who Robert was, so the audience would be learning who he was at the same time the characters are.
    Given that a 750-page book about America’s first Treasury Secretary became one of the most phenomenal musicals of all time, I think something similar could happen with as fascinating, as enigmatic, and as musical a man as Robert Johnson.
  • The Works of HP Lovecraft. Lovecraft might have been an overly wordy writer and a reprehensible person, but his ideas have lasted through time and been adopted and adapted by writers of all types and backgrounds. Some of his stories, if approached right, might make for great shows. My top choices would be Herbert West: Reanimator, the inspiration for the hit cult 1985 film (which originally was meant to be a theatrical production), and The Shadow Over Innsmouth. Both seem the most suited for the stage, though I’m sure you could adapt some of the more fantastic with the right effects and puppetry.
  • The Works of Paul Tremblay. One of the most well-known names of modern horror, Paul Tremblay’s novels have a lot of fans out there. And they’re well-suited to adaptation. I can see both A Head Full of Ghosts and The Cabin at the End of the World becoming very tense stageplays. And Survivor Song would make one hell of a musical (the word “song” is in the title, after all).

If you like some of these ideas or have ideas for other properties that could do well on stage, then talk about them. Write the scripts and music if you have the talent. Reach out to theaters in your area to let them know what you want to see. Discussion stays discussion if no action is taken, so why not say something and then get to work making it happen?

You never know. The story you love so much or the music you compose could someday end up being performed on a stage near you. It could inspire the next generation of storytellers, musicians and actors. It could end up being the healing audiences need after a difficult year and so many months.

To me, all those reasons seem worth the work, brainstorming, and effort. In fact, you could say it is worth all the drama.

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Rami Ungar is a novelist from Columbus, Ohio specializing in horror and dark fantasy. He has self-published two books, The Quiet Game: Five Tales to Chill Your Bones and Snake, as well as traditionally published a novel, Rose, as well as several short stories in various publications.

Rami enjoys being afraid and making others afraid and tries to accomplish that through his writing. When not telling his own stories, Rami enjoys reading, watching horror movies and anime, and giving his readers the impression that he’s not as human as he appears.

Email: ramiungar@ramiungarthewriter.com
Website/blog: https://ramiungarthewriter.com/
Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/Rami-Ungar/e/B00J8PLKDY?ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1&qid=1620097608&sr=8-1
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RamiUngarWriter
Twitter: https://twitter.com/RamiUngarWriter
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rami_ungar_writer/?hl=en
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCP1kPr9_snmT5annJ55eYZQ?

TODAY ON THE GINGER NUTS OF HORROR WEBSITE

IN THE SHADOW OF THE PHOSPHOROUS DAWN BY ROB TRUE  (BOOK REVIEW)

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THE HEART AND SOUL OF HORROR WEBSITES ​

HORROR NEWS: KILLER SHORTS, STEVE DINES, AND A.C. WISE ARE SHOCKADELICA BABY!!

22/5/2021
HORROR NEWS: KILLER SHORTS, STEVE DINES, AND A.C. WISE ARE SHOCKADELICA BABY!!

WENDY, DARLING by A.C. WISE

“You need not be sorry for her. She was one of the kinds that like to grow up. In the end, she grew up of her own free will a day quicker than the other girls.”
For those that lived there, Neverland was a children’s paradise. No rules, no adults, only endless adventure and enchanted forests – all led by the charismatic boy who would never grow old.

But Wendy Darling grew up. She has a husband and a young daughter called Jane, a life in London. But one night, after all these years, Peter Pan returns. Wendy finds him outside her daughter’s window, looking to claim a new mother for his Lost Boys. But instead of Wendy, he takes Jane.

Now a grown woman, a mother, a patient and a survivor, Wendy must follow Peter back to Neverland to rescue her daughter and finally face the darkness at the heart of the island...

A lush and vividly imagined continuation of the story of Peter Pan that places Wendy at the heart of the story as the childhood dream of Neverland unravels into a nightmare that will delight fans of Circe and The Mere Wife. Wendy, Darling is a richly textured and powerful story of women’s resilience and strength that feels deeply relevant for our times.

A.C. Wise is a writer of speculative fiction and her work has appeared in various publications, including Uncanny, Tor.com, Shimmer, and several Year's Best anthologies. "Catfish Lullaby" was nominated for the 2020 Nebula Award for Best Novella, and "How the Trick Is Done" was nominated for the 2020 Nebula Award for Best Short Story. She tweets at @ac_wise.
9781789096811 | 15th June 2021 | Paperback & eBook | £8.99 | 336pp
www.titanbooks.com | https://www.facebook.com/titanbooks | @TitanBooks ​

Alessandra Jara Del Castillo wins Killer Shorts Horror Short Screenplay Competition
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Alessandra Jara Del Castillo has won the 2nd Annual Killer Shorts Horror Short Screenplay Competition.

The contest, now in its second year, awarded Alessandra as the overall winner out of 952 entries for her horror short screenplay, THIS HUNGER. Alessandra Jara Del Castillo’s script follows ‘an indifferent Hispanic housewife who grows infatuated with her husband—only after he returns from the dead, hungry for meat.” It’s a subtle story about the death, rebirth, and re-death of a marriage that works as both a zombie body horror and a compelling drama.

The Killer Short Contest celebrates horror short screenwriters from around the world, connecting them with managers, producers, and filmmakers. Season 1 third place winner, Chris Hicks, signed with a manager after the contest inspired him to adapt his viral short story THE BUTTER STREET HITCHHIKER, and increased his exposure to industry members on the screenplay submission platform, Coverfly.

COPY CAT by Vanessa Branch has been selected as the 2nd Place Winner and HIDE YOUR CRAZY by Austin Kase has been selected as the 3rd Place Winner.


Killer Shorts partners with female-led film groups to provide heavy discounts for submissions to their female-identifying and non-binary writers. With this discount, the contest saw an increase, from 1 last year, to 4 womxn placing in the Top 10 in Season 2.

“This year we focused on providing even more opportunities for women and POC,” says contest director Alison Parker, “Not only did we end up with two women of color in the Top 3, but I was excited to learn that Alessandra entered the contest because of the discount we provided.”

The Killer Shorts’ jury included: Julian Terry (Whisper, They Hear It, The Nurse), Chelsea Lupkin (Short of the Week, Lucy’s Tale), Barbara Crampton (Re-Animator, From Beyond, You’re Next), Joe Bob Briggs (The Last Drive-In with Joe Bob Briggs), Scott Stoops (Good Fear Film + Management), Glenn Cockburn (Meridian Artists), Sophie Carroll (ALTER), Scott Carr (Management SGC), Jason Tamasco (Bad Idea Films), John Zaozirny (Bellevue Productions), Zack Zucker (Bellevue Productions), Matthew Dartnell (Writ Large), Krista Sipp (First Friday Entertainment), and Jenn Wexler (The Ranger).

As a part of the prize package, the Top 3 winners receive circulation and recommendation to a network of Hollywood managers, agents, producers, and development executives, Final Draft 12 screenwriting software, Shudder subscriptions, waived entry to multiple other contests and festivals, increased rank on Coverfly’s The Red List, and swag from sponsors like Creepy Co and Rue Morgue. The third place winner receives coverage notes from The Script Butcher.

The newest addition to the list of prizes is a one-of-a-kind skull-shaped typewriter trophy, hand-sculpted and designed by Tyler Green of Tyler Green FX Studios (SyFy’s FACE/OFF).

“As always, we are looking for original short screenplays with captivating stories and unique voices in the horror genre. The amount of raw talent out there is staggering and we can’t wait to read next year’s scripts” said Parker.

Next year’s competition will reconvene with submissions opening on June 1, 2021 and closing on Dec 17th. The worldwide contest is open to anyone over 18 years old and accepts screenplays up to a maximum of 25 pages.


For more information visit: KillerShortsContest.com

Look Where You Are Going, Not Where You Have Been by Steven J Dines(release date 21 September) The Harvester Series #9

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The past is never far behind. If we do not leave it, if we insist on carrying it with us to the end...that end is a monster.

This stunning debut collection of dark, literary fiction drowns the reader in its themes of grief, regret, love, and hope.
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A family is torn apart by tragedy and misadventure, their future creaking under the weight of judgment. Old men play at being ghosts while a young boy sees real ones wherever he turns. A wandering immortal desperately seeks an end to his pain. Intimate, unflinching, and poignant, these eleven tales of the broken and the unmade include the two previously unpublished novellas, dragonland and This House is Not Haunted.

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Steven J Dines' dark literary fiction has been published in numerous magazines and anthologies, including Black Static (nine times), Interzone, Crimewave, Fireside Magazine, Terror Tales of the Home Counties, and Best British Horror. Originally from Aberdeen, Scotland, he currently lives south of the border, in Salisbury, with his wife and two sons.

Look Where You Are Going Not Where You Have Been is a stunning debut collection of dark literary fiction exploring grief, regret, and hope. A family is torn apart by tragedy and misadventure, their future creaking under the weight of judgment. Old men play at being ghosts while a young boy sees real ones wherever he turns. A wandering immortal desperately seeks an end to his pain. Intimate, unflinching, and poignant, these eleven tales of the broken and the unmade include the two previously unpublished novellas, dragonland and This House is Not Haunted.

Look Where You Are Going Not Where You Have Been will be Harvester #9, following Paul Kane, Marie O'Regan, Stephen Bacon, Wole Talabi, Tim Major, Ian Whates, Nick Wood and Fabio Fernandes. You can find their books on the Harvester page of the store.


SHOCKADELICA BY JON O’BERGH​

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Two horror podcasters—drag artist Kendall Akande and best friend Jenna Chen—share a passion for art, fashion, and horror. When they learn their Toronto apartment building might be haunted, they see an opportunity for a podcast episode. But as they investigate further with the help of their quirky neighbors, they uncover something far more sinister. Their quest brings them face to face with a house of curiosities, a Nigerian/Irish witch, an intimidating musician known as the Bone Man with tattoos of serial killers, and strange legends from various cultures. Then a stranger appears who promises protection if Kendall sacrifices something of value. While Kendall struggles to understand his recurring nightmare and the demands of the stranger, Jenna struggles to cope with her grandmother’s dementia. As the ghosts of the past become entwined with the growing terror, Kendall and Jenna must use their creativity to confront the evil force that threatens them all.




Amazon:  https://www.amazon.com/Shockadelica-Jon-OBergh/dp/1098372417/ref=tmm_pap_title_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1619367428&sr=1-1
Sound Cloud (for album Box of Bones):  https://soundcloud.com/the_bone_man/sets/box-of-bones
Bio:
Jon O’Bergh is an author and musician who appreciates a good scare. He received a Bachelor of Arts in Music from the University of California at Irvine. A fan of ghost stories and horror movies, O’Bergh came up with the idea for his first novel, The Shatter Point, after watching a documentary about extreme haunts. He has published five books and released over a dozen albums in a variety of styles. His supernatural short stories have appeared in anthologies and magazines. After many years living in San Francisco and Washington, D.C., he now resides with his husband in Toronto.
Links:
O'Bergh website: https://obergh.net
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/JonOBergh
Twitter: @jon_obergh
The Bone Man: https://theboneman.hearnow.com

the heart and soul of horror websites 

RICHARD MARTIN REVISITS  THE MASTERS OF HORROR: HOMECOMING

21/5/2021
REVISITING THE ‘MASTERS OF HORROR’ BY RICHARD MARTIN homecoming

Revisiting the ‘Masters of Horror’, Homecoming 

We are living in a golden age of horror on TV. Shows like ‘The Walking Dead’, ‘Supernatural’ and ‘American Horror Story’ have effectively taken the genre mainstream, offering weekly doses of gore and mayhem to the masses. Go back a decade or two however, and genre fans had far fewer options to choose from. Anthology shows, like ‘Tales From the Crypt’, ‘Monsters’ or ‘Tales From the Darkside’ were king during the horror heyday of the 1980s, providing cheesy and cheerful tongue in cheek horror in half hour bites. It wasn’t until 2005 that the TV horror anthology show got serious, and delivered arguably the most consistent, memorable and scary anthology show to date.
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The brainchild of horror legend Mick Garris, the show’s title is no hyperbole. ‘Masters of Horror’ brought together the best horror talent Hollywood (and beyond) had to offer. Episodes directed by undisputed genre luminaries such as John Carpenter, Tobe Hooper, Dario Argento and Stuart Gordon were like hour long movies brought to your TV screen. High production values, A-List talent and a free reign to do whatever they pleased resulted in some truly unforgettable work from a group of horror legends let off their leash. These are stories that have stayed with me in the fifteen years since many initially aired and, in this series, I’ll be revisiting all twenty-six episodes, one at a time, to shine a light on a fondly remembered and undeniably influential moment in horror TV history.
Join me as I take a look back at;
Homecoming
Directed by: Joe Dante
Starring: Jon Tenney, Thea Gill, Wanda Cannon, Terry David Mulligan
Original Air Date: 10 February 2006
Synopsis: Set during President George W Bush’s re-election campaign, the story follows his speechwriters and campaigners during a zombie uprising, where fallen soldiers of the ongoing war come back to life to make their voices heard.
If you’d asked me before I’d started my recent re-watch of Masters of Horror what my least favourite episode was, or which I was least excited to revisit, ‘Homecoming’ would be it. This is no comment on the undeniable talent involved with this particular episode, being directed by Joe Dante, the man behind ‘Gremlins’, ‘The Howling’ and ‘Piranha’. The reason the episode didn’t connect with me back in 2006 was the subject matter. The episode is overtly political and has a very clear moral to the story and, being firmly based on (then) current US hot topics, as a UK based horror fan, the episodes message just didn’t resonate with me. I was pleasantly surprised when watching it again how much more I enjoyed it and was taken aback by how relevant its message is today, fifteen years on. Perhaps as I’ve gotten older I have more appreciation for the complexity of the subject it’s trying to tackle, but there was a lot about ‘Homecoming’ that hit home for me that passed me by initially.

The episode opens with David (Jon Tenney) and Jane (Thea Gill) driving down an empty road at night before hitting a wounded soldier with their car. Something is not quite as it seems as Jane seems hellbent on running him over and it doesn’t take long to realise why. The man they have hit is very, very dead, but that doesn’t stop what’s left of him (mostly just his decapitated head) from crying out to them as it sits atop their car windscreen. More zombies, all clad in camouflage, make their way towards the pair from a military truck as Jane opens fire on them using the semi-automatic rifle she keeps in the trunk.

Before we find out what happens next, we cut to a talk show taping (presumably set prior to the zombie outbreak) where David (Jon Tenney) and Jane (Thea Gill) are discussing ongoing war protests with host Marty Clark (Terry David Mulligan). Both are right-wing advocates and while Jane is depicted as extreme in her views (going so far as to refer to the anti-war protestors as ‘ugly, stupid and clueless’) David is shown to be more insidious, justifying clearly troubling actions of protestor suppression with some impressively reasonable sounding spin.

You can’t discuss this episode without mentioning the politics behind it, they are just too explicit and have the subtlety of a bulldozer. There is even a scene at the very end of the episode where zombie soldiers are marching to the beat of a drum with an American flag fluttering patriotically in the background. The right-wing campaigners are almost all stereotypical caricatures, lying and cheating through their every second on screen, and the zombies only talk when giving an impassioned speech about their voices not being heard by the current administration. Your personal politics notwithstanding, the message is loud and clear and as interesting and inventive as the concept is, I think a large part of my problem with this episode at the time is a sense I was being talked down to. A little more subtlety could have gone a long way without diluting its impact.
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David is, unwittingly, the person who brings about the political zombie uprising when an impassioned speech while on air with a grieving mother whose son has been killed in action during the ongoing war efforts, during which he states that, if he had one wish, he’d wish that her son could come back. The spin here is that he wishes he could come back to justify the ongoing war, a point that the soldier’s mother is clearly about to disagree on before she is taken off air. David’s speech goes down so well with voters that the President himself uses the same speech in a public address later that week, the only difference being that the wish actually comes true, and dead soldiers do begin coming back to life.

If you think you’re in store for a Day of the Dead style zombie apocalypse, then you would be wrong. The zombies are shown as being peaceful and intelligent and have come back in order to… vote in the upcoming election. The zombies actually get very little screen time too, and this is where the episodes greatest strength comes into the play. The focus is squarely on David, Jane and Kurt (played with aplomb by Robert Picardo) as they try and figure out how to put a positive spin on people literally rising from their graves in order to vote against their candidate. It helps that all three leads are fantastic, and fully committed to their larger-than-life characters. It’s a great choice to see the zombie uprising from the perspective of three people who take it as a personal affront to their jobs and the episode gets a lot of mileage out of it.

Although Jane and Kurt never waver from their views, we do see David slowly begin to have a change of heart as he begins to appreciate the consequences of the lies (which he refers to in one memorable outburst as ‘horseshit and elbow grease’) he has been telling in order to further his own political career. A subplot involving his older brother who seemingly died during the Vietman war, giving some weight and explanation to his shift in opinion.

It is as the episode progresses that we see more of the spin machine in action, as Jane starts to take centre stage. We see the undead soldiers on television being rounded up and placed in internment camps as she justifies them as ‘health checks’. The party’s previous stance of respecting the voice of these fallen heroes taking a complete 180 shift as they go back on the Marty Clark show questioning a dead person’s legal right to vote. While the zombies are ultimately allowed to vote, in a surprisingly prescient scene we see that the party suppress their votes, allowing the Republicans to win an election that they would have otherwise lost.

This obviously does not go down well with the undead voters, who have only come back to have their voices heard, only to have them ignored when it mattered the most. The opening scene of David and Jane being chased down by a horde of angry zombies makes a little more sense now and it’s revisited for the finale where David kills Jane and changes his political allegiance to the zombies cause when he is reunited with his decades dead brother, who turns him. The ending of the episode doesn’t feel as grand as it should considering the whole episode has been about the fate of the entire country, but I do admit that it plays to it’s strengths by maintaining it’s focus on the lead characters until the bitter end.

Overall, I got a lot more out of ‘Homecoming’ on my re-watch than I did when I saw the initial airing back in 2005. While I’ve commented on the episodes lack of subtlety, it’s perhaps this transparent agenda which made it easier to appreciate as a piece of entertainment, so blunt is the show's ultimate point. Conversely, perhaps the events of the recent US election have made some of the more outrageous parodies in ‘Homecoming’ feel uncomfortably plausible and the message is no less relevant today than it was fifteen years ago regardless of how indelicately it may be presented.
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Join me next time as I’ll be looking at episode seven of the first season, John Landis’s ‘Deer Woman’. See you then!
If you missed any of Richard's previous Revisting The Masters of Horror articles, you can find links to them all here on our handy landing page 

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​Richard is an avid reader and fan of all things horror. He supports Indie horror lit via Twitter (@RickReadsHorror) and reviews horror in all its forms for several websites including Horror Oasis and 
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Steve Johnson - Glasgow based Director chosen for new feature film!

20/5/2021
STEVE JOHNSON - GLASGOW BASED DIRECTOR CHOSEN FOR NEW FEATURE FILM!

Steve Johnson - Glasgow based Director chosen for new feature film!
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Award-winning, Glasgow-based filmmaker, Steve Johnson, has been attached to direct a new psychological horror motion picture, Fre(i)ght, by international award-winning film production company, Stronghold.

Steve was chosen to direct Fre(i)ght after his festival success with feature film Convergence, which won Best Feature Film as well as 20 additional award wins and nominations. The movie went on to play at the Cineworld, Glasgow and is now for sale internationally.

Fre(i)ght is currently in pre-production development with BAFTA award-winner Stuart Brennan attached to act in the film.

Written by screenplay writer and Scotland based novelist, Chris Watt, Fre(i)ght is a suspenseful thriller delving into the depths of extreme human psyche. An actress and a stranger find themselves trapped in a freight elevator when the lift malfunctions. With their calls for help unanswered, the two can only rely on each other, until their trust is shattered upon discovering they are not strangers at all.

Steve Johnson’s first feature film, The Students of Springfield Street won Best Feature Film at the 2015 Aberdeen Film Festival. He also has experience working on over 16 short films as a Director of Photography.

Steve Johnson was thrilled to be approached about the movie and believes he can bring something unique to the direction of the film: “Fre(i)ght is a grounded and dramatic psychological thriller with a dark and moody undertone which I think reflects society at the moment. Whenever you have a single location story, you want to utilise every inch of the playground that you have access to, which is a challenge, but we are taking advantage of the freight elevator location in some interesting and unique ways.”

When asked what attracted him to the project, Steve Johnson said: “I’m attracted to films that really delve into the characterisation of a person's psyche and Fre(i)ght looks at this from a complex juxtaposition of both male and female perspectives.”

Stronghold is an entertainment production company with offices in Los Angeles, Calgary, Glasgow and London. Committed to the art and craft of creative, meaningful and unique storytelling with a strong focus on strategic development. They have brought 5 movies so far to shoot in Scotland, this they hope will be their sixth. Recent credits include Tomorrow executive produced by Martin Scorsese and starring Stephen Fry, James Cosmo and Joss Stone.

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