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Halloween Window Silhouettes, Bubble Tape, and Spider Lights. In that order.

Hooray for Halloween nights! That slight chill! The sounds of crickets who refuse to admit that they're out of season! Dagger-shaped clouds bathed in moonlight! Ahhh, the only thing missing is the knowledge that I can enjoy it all night and then sleep until 3 PM. Would Halloween nights be a valid reason for quitting my job?

Earlier, we stopped at CVS on a spooky hunt. CVS never has too much great stuff, but they do have the biggest Snapple selection I've ever seen, and this helps compensate for things. Below are tonight's finds.

Halloween Window Silhouettes: You've seen these cheap, plastic Halloween window "covers" for years, in every conceivable style. If you're like me, you've probably avoided them. They seem bulky, tacky, messy and kind of pointless. No matter what a company prints on an enormous plastic window cover, it's still an enormous plastic window cover, and it's probably going to look like shit taped over a window.

Or so I thought!

I got a pair of skull-themed Window Silhouettes, which admittedly look pretty badass -- like an x-ray of a skull with alien red eyes tacked on. Problem is, they're not window-sized...they're door-sized. I can understand why the makers of Halloween Window Silhouettes didn't want to limit their potential market to people with full-length glass doors in their homes, but a spade is a spade. These are Halloween Door Silhouettes.

The package claims that you can "trim" the plastic to make the things fit in windows, but I'm having a hard time seeing how this is possible. The entire silhouette is almost 5.5 feet tall, and even the skull alone is well past 4 feet tall. In a standard window, you'd only be able to fit the left side of the skull's jaw. I should've known something was up when I saw the "buy one, get one free" banner over these at CVS.

But! If you're lucky enough to have a full-length windowed door, you are in for glory and prestige of unfathomable heights.

That's our back door -- it's a sliding one, featuring glass panels with Venetian blinds trapped inside. Not the ideal scenario for a Halloween Door Silhouette, but it absolutely works.

The picture does not do this thing justice. We taped it on the door from the inside, shone a light through it, and up above is how it looks from the outside. A humongous, disembodied glowing skull surrounded by pitch blackness. Really awesome, and the effect improves with distance. I heard some kids a few house away roaring their approval, which both filled with me with pride and made me realize that the families who live behind us can see what I'm doing in the yard. The more I think back, the more I'm concerned.

In short: They're one of the most inexpensive Halloween decorations ever, and they're everywhere. Even if you can't find these wicked skulls, you'll have no trouble finding the plastic window/door covers in a multitude of other spooky styles. If you've been passing 'em up, it might be a good idea to reconsider. So long as you have really, really big windows to work with.

Halloween Bubble Tape: Hmm. Not too impressed. It comparison to 2006's "Mummy Tape," this is not a big event. For 2009, Hubba Bubba's unleashed a new type of Halloween Bubble Tape, in a sleek black case with a neat vampire sticker on the front.

That's all well and good, but the flavor? It's original. Plain old original! No black raspberry! No blood orange! Not even a ghoulish grape! Sure, a closer inspection of the label while at CVS would've confirmed this and saved me some disappointment, but who would expect plain old original bubble gum to come out of a package like that?

I absolutely hate it when companies only dress up their products' packaging for Halloween. It's so chintzy and illegal. The only saving grace is that Hubba Bubba reportedly has an assortment of monster stickers available, so even if you aren't chewing anything extraordinary, at least you can collect gum cases with vampire, mummy and other monster sticker labels on them. The downside? To open the packages, you have to tear right through the middle of the monsters' heads.

I hate being forced to decapitate monsters. I feel that doing so is a decision I must come to on my own terms.

Dangling Spider Lights: Niiiiiice. A box of ten Dangling Spider Lights only cost me 7.50, and it can easily be argued that a ten-pack of large, plastic spiders would be worth that price even if they didn't light up. But they do!

Within the mix are three different spider styles with three different light colors, and my camera really didn't want to portray them in a positive fashion. Trust me, they look much cooler than that. The lights perfectly straddle the line between being "creepy lights" and "party lights," so depending on your intent, you can either make you home look like a haunted crypt, or like a place where people go to do the Charleston with flasks of gin in their free hands.


Before I retire, how about a Halloween survey?

In the comments, discuss your experiences in watching scaaaaary movies as a child. This is a free-for-all survey -- you can take that direction however you'd like. If your parents brought you to see a horror movies in theaters when you were way too young for it, confess. If you snuck in a viewing of The Exorcist when you were nine-years-old and couldn't sleep for weeks, tell us about it.

My own experiences wouldn't have as much to do with any specific movie, but rather the manner in which they were watched. My parents were never very strict about bedtimes (I honestly cannot recollect a time when I had one), nor did they particularly care if I slept in my bedroom or not. (To this day, I prefer couches.)

As such, it was typical for me to sleep downstairs, where nobody else slept at the time. I'd camp out on our old sofa in front of our enormous old television -- a luxury item purchased after one of my parents' rare Atlantic City victories, if I remember correctly.

I didn't have an irrational fear of scary movies, but I also knew how to live within my limits. I avoided watching them when I was home alone, or worse, home alone at night. Of course, we all fall off the wagon sometimes, and there was more than one time when I was on my own in the evening hours, downstairs, watching a movie that I definitely should not have been watching.

Whenever this happened, I had one of two responses. In some cases, I'd eventually freak, change the channel, turn on every light in the house and essentially create a kind of virtual daytime. In other cases, the movie and darkness would just totally paralyze me, and I'd be unable to crawl out from under the blanket, even it was just to change the channel to some inoffensive uppity late-night infomercial. Nothing quelled abstract fear like the sight of Jack LaLanne juicing celery.

The latter cases were pure torture, but I loved 'em. There was something exhilarating in that fear, even when it got so out of control that I was convinced I was seeing ghouls and demons in every window and every mirror. It's hard to replicate that rush once you grow up, much as I try. I still love to watch scary movies in the dark, but I can't say that it stirs my soul much. Then again, the kid version of me would've never kept a 7' audio-animatronic Jason Voorhees in plain view.

I hope your stories are better and more specific than mine.

Posted by Matt on 10/06/2009. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 185 comments

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number 1? no way…

Chestnuts roasted by sprig @ 10/06/2009 11:02 PM


I hope I can find a set of those this season – i need something cheap to spice up this house.

Chestnuts roasted by Ford @ 10/06/2009 11:23 PM


Third! My 2nd highest ever! Take that EricNRosesMom!

Chestnuts roasted by Gozer Jr @ 10/06/2009 11:24 PM


Unfortunately my mom was all responsible and stuff and never let me watch age inappropriate movies. I didn’t really watch any horror movies until high school, and I was in college before I saw any of the classics.

The upside to this is I could go down to my TV and have the joy of seeing for the first time a movie that you all have seen hundreds of times.

Chestnuts roasted by Jeff @ 10/06/2009 11:25 PM


I accidentally saw the majority of Fire in the Sky at a friend’s house when I was 7. I spent the rest of the week (month?) trying to sleep with anyone in my house that would have me (which was no one! Assholes!) and eventually slept in the hallway with the light on on the floor outside my sister’s door.

Chestnuts roasted by Mattman @ 10/06/2009 11:26 PM


My parents had no problem showing me Poltergeist at the tender age of 4.
Thanks Mom and Dad for giving me nightmares forever.

Chestnuts roasted by Boner Jams 03 @ 10/06/2009 11:28 PM


As I child, I was particularly timid and terrified of pretty much anything. My parents, too–or rather, my mother–was a bit on the overprotective side when it came to scary movies.

That being said, when I was about 6 years old I got out of bed and went downstairs to ask my parents… something or other, and walked in on them watching the original Psycho. Specifically, the infamous shower scene.

The way you entered the room at the time, you walked in from behind the couch; out of sight, but still able to see the television. I stood there in abject horror as I watched Norman Bates (or “the scary shadow lady”) murder the ever-living heck out of Marion Crane.

I think my parents figured out I was there when they heard their 6-year-old son sobbing in fear. For the next… oh, I’ll say 10 or so years, I washed my hair by tilting my head back so that the shampoo wouldn’t get in my eyes; I was too afraid to close my eyes in the shower, convinced that something would come and stab me to death if I did.

Chestnuts roasted by Rob the Traitor @ 10/06/2009 11:28 PM


I had two older brothers and my parents weren’t really strict. I probably saw Nightmare on Elm Street 30 times before the age of 6 or 7 thanks to my brothers. Horror movies didn’t really scare me much as a kid but they sort of bother me now. It’s weird how things didn’t used to bother me as a kid but now they do. I hate being a grown-up! :(

Chestnuts roasted by gingela5 @ 10/06/2009 11:32 PM


I’ll stick to the story of one scary movie experience in particular. My sister is six years older than me, and in the spring of 1985 she rented A Nightmare on Elm Street. She was 16 at the time (making me 10) and invited the neighborhood kids over, all of whom were her age. Then, to my surprise, she asked me if I wanted to watch it with them! Mom and Dad didn’t mind. They trusted her not to expose her brother to abject terror.

Just before the scene in which Johnny Depp goes up in a fountain of blood, a thunderstorm began flashing off to the north creating the perfect thrill for a ten year old. The movie was scary, the storm in the distance made it scarier, and I was allowed into the big kids’ group for a night. Age ceased to matter, as A Nightmare on Elm Street became a terrifying equalizer. I couldn’t help but be giddy because not only did I feel the fear a ten year old would have watching this flick, but I knew that teenagers six years older than me were experiencing similar emotions. For an hour and a half, they were my peers. As you can tell, it was a night I still fondly remember.

Chestnuts roasted by bludge @ 10/06/2009 11:34 PM


Wow, that window skull thing is CREEPY even over the internet.

Does anyone else wish they still used the original Bubble-tape containers, with the flip-top lid? The new ones are too big and bulky.

Horror movies: I have never really been a fan of horror films. I have a vivid memory of watching Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom with my mom when I was about 6 years old. That was PG-13, so it was probably pretty scary to me at the time, but I don’t seem to remember it being scary. I do remember yelling “BAD GUYS!” whenever the thuggees came onscreen. Temple of Doom is still my favorite Indy film for this reason, though I recognize that it’s pretty much the weakest of the four.

My only other horror film memory is watching Ghostbusters at my Grandmother’s house. I begged and begged and begged her to let me rent it (I must have been 7 at the time). My Grandmother finally relented, all the while telling me it was too scary for me. She wouldn’t watch it, so I had to watch it myself. I started the movie, not really knowing what to expect. I saw the ghost in the library standing there calmly and then OH MY GOD SHE’S A HORRIBLE DEMON SPAWN FROM HELL! I flipped out, and couldn’t bring myself to watch the rest of the film. My Grandmother said “told you so.” I still feel a little twinge of fear everytime I see that library ghost. Only ghost in the two films that is even remotely frightening to me….

Chestnuts roasted by Cameron T. @ 10/06/2009 11:35 PM


Ok, the spiders win. Even I like them. You can’t go wrong with ten spiders that light up.

I’ve always hated horror movies with a passion. Even “Gremlins” scared me when I was little. I’d run from Gizmo screaming. Sure, he looked cute, but I knew what he turned into later…and it wasn’t huggable.

Like many of you, I grew up during the “slasher series” fad of the 80s, when it seemed like any movie with a crazy guy stabbing teenagers could be turned into a franchise. My sisters would sneak Friday the 13th and Nightmare on Elm Street on the sly. Not me! I wouldn’t go anywhere near them…and still won’t to this day. I don’t get along well with blood and gore, and I scare easily.

My sisters weren’t as tough as they liked to think. The one who shared a room with me for years could not sleep without a nightlight. She claimed she was afraid of vampires. I tried to tell her this was silly, vampires aren’t real, and she wouldn’t be afraid at all if the movies she watched didn’t give her nightmares. Nowadays, she’s not really much of a horror fan, either.

Chestnuts roasted by starwenn @ 10/06/2009 11:44 PM


I watched a lot of “scary” stuff during my childhood. By this I mean Are You Afraid of the Dark? and other such children’s spooky shows. My first real scare was when I watched Close Encounters of the Third kind. I know that’s not an ultra-scary movie, but it was my first experience with aliens…

I was watching with my mom and she went to bed before it was over, but she let me stay up to finish it ’cause I was totally into it. So I turned all the lights out for some odd reason. I think it made me feel more like I was in a movie theater. Anyway, the scene where the ship comes down and they have that awesome conversation with all the lights and colors came on, and I was really beginning to like aliens.

Then, of course, comes the scene when the aliens come out of the ship. There were two in particular that scared the hell out of me: the one that was really tall and skinny and was stretching his arms out and the one that was crawling on all fours that kind of reminded me of a more intelligent spider. Fucking terrifying to an elementary school kid.

There I was, scared to death. I turned the tv off immediately, which didn’t help ’cause that meant it was pitch black in the living room; my bedroom was down the hall and I more than half expected the spidery guy to be waiting for me on my bed. Probably the most scared I’ve ever been walking to my bedroom.

From this point on in my childhood, I had an unhealthy obsession with aliens. Shortly after seeing this, I watched a Discovery channel documentary about abductions. One of the abductees had drawn many sketches of the aliens that took her. When I saw those pictures, I felt a terror I had never felt before for some reason. For many years, all the way through high school, even, I had a very hard time falling asleep for fear that I would be abducted. It was pretty much an insomniac throughout those years.

I still enjoy the crazy pseudo-historical shows about aliens and ghosts and such, but I’m not terrified anymore; I’ve abducted (I meant adopted…freudian slip? maybe I WAS abducted…) a healthy skepticism in my adulthood. And now I’m a huge fan of horror films. They’re what keeps me sane during the ridiculously boring summer months at Westminster College in the Pennsylvania Amish country.

Chestnuts roasted by Meccapocolypse @ 10/06/2009 11:53 PM


My older brothers loved subjecting me to scary movies at a tender age, almost-against-my-will. I’d watch, knowing i would be terrified as soon the lights went out for the night. one memory stands out. My parents were out of town, and they had rented Attack of the Killer Clowns, and IT, two movies that i cannot today make it through due to through-the-roof cheese levels. but on that night, they were pure. hell. i don’t think i slept soundly for years after that, and i remember my brothers pausing/rewinding our old vcr over the most terrifying bits, CONSTANTLY. but i pestered them into sleeping in their room. that’s what they get.

Chestnuts roasted by HolyHackJack @ 10/06/2009 11:54 PM


Sadly, I was raised in an extremely strict household. I loved scary movies, but my parents wouldn’t let me watch most movies, let alone slasher flicks. Friday the 13th, Halloween, and Nightmare on Elm Street were all denied to me, which sucked even more because my friends could watch whatever they wanted. I have fond memories of being in video stores with my mom, then sneaking off on my own to steal glances at the covers of those old VHS horror videos with names like Sorority Slumber Party Massacre IV (I don’t think my mom wanted me even near that section, let alone watching the movies). The covers of the boxes intrigued me so much, and I felt like I was forbidden from a really cool world that all my friends could go to.

Slasher movies were definite no-nos, but my dad did let me watch Poltergeist when I was little, which I really liked. I also have a fond memory of renting Jaws one night (my mom got more scared than I did). They also let us rent Jaws again one year when we were at the beach, which was really fun.

I remember one night when I was a little older (middle school maybe) my mom let me rent It one night when my sister and I had a slumber party with three of our cousins (at that point, It was probably the scariest thing she would let me rent). That’s a really fun memory of mine too.

Unfortunately, I feel like I was a wimp later on because of how sheltered I was. One night when I was 12 or 13, I was spending the night at my friend’s house, and she let me pick a movie to watch. I picked Bride of Chucky, because OMG I CAN WATCH SCARY MOVIES WITHOUT MOM KNOWING! About 15 minutes into the movie, I asked her if we could switch to a different tape because “I’m just not really into this movie,” but in truth I was just plain freaked out by it.

But anyway, what movie freaked me out the most when I was little (like age 5)? In all seriousness, Who Framed Roger Rabbit. It was one of the few movies my parents would let me watch. And I was FUCKING TERRIFIED at the end when Judge Doom gets rolled over by the steamroller, then pops up, flat as paper, making creepy noises, then his eyes pop out (scared me!) and he transforms into Evil Cartoon Judge Doom. Actually, you know what? That scene still kinda freaks me out.

Chestnuts roasted by Stephanie @ 10/07/2009 12:06 AM


My childhood was rather sheltered I think. Nearly every experience worth remembering happened over at a friend’s house, or at summer camp. Horror movies (R-rated movies in general) were a no-no, and PG-13 flicks had to be screened by my parents first.

I remember going through the video section of the local Krogers store with my mom, and every time, without fail, I would be absorbed by the box cover art for Chopping Mall and Phantasm II. In those moments I wanted nothing more than to be able to watch those movies, but alas, my mom always said no. In fact, I pestered her so much about Phantasm II that she said I’d ruined my chances and swore that she would never rent it for me. And she didn’t. I saw it for the first time this year, 20 years later. It would have been much cooler when I was a kid.

Being so sheltered, it really didn’t take much to scare the bejeesus out of me. TV shows like Freddy’s Nightmares, Friday the 13th, The Twilight Zone, The Outer Limits, Tales from the Darkside, Werewolf, Monsters and even Amazing Stories all made me cower in fear beneath my covers. I loved that feeling. I loved being so scared that I had to hide my head under the sheets, plug my ears with my fingers and sing some Fat Boys song to myself, hoping that whatever monster that was hiding in the closet would leave me alone.

Like you, I miss that feeling. Movies just aren’t scary anymore. At least not in the same way. The last movie that scared me was REC (NOT Quarantine, the original REC) I felt really uneasy watching that movie. I realized at some point that I was clenching my fists, gritting my teeth, and unconsciously rubbing my throat with my thumb. A sure sign that I’m freaked out.

When I was about 8 or so, I slept over at a friend’s house, and his older brother let us watch The Hills Have Eyes. I still get goosebumps when I think about how horrified I was watching that in a dark unfamiliar basement. I haven’t seen that movie since then, lol. I don’t want it to suck or ruin the mystique, and tarnish the memory.

When I was 13, I went to the dollar theater and saw The Silence of the Lambs by myself in an empty theater. It was amazing. I felt so dirty when it was over lol. The night vision part made me cover my eyes and want to run screaming out of the theater.

bah, I’m rambling and have been for a while. Good times :)

Chestnuts roasted by Kogi Kaishakunin @ 10/07/2009 12:07 AM


When I was in 2nd grade my parents went out of town for the weekend and left me and my little brother with a babysitter for the weekend. Seeing as how she was pretty much willing to let us do whatever we wanted as long as we stayed out of her hair, she let us rent Child’s Play 2. I thought it was an awesome movie until I had to go to bed.
I had a My Buddy doll in the corner of my room, and needless to say, for quite a while I thought it would come to life to try and kill me to steal my soul. I still love the movie to this day (mostly due to Chucky’s head getting blown apart at the end), but I still have a deep-seeded fear about those My Buddy dolls.

Chestnuts roasted by Jameson! @ 10/07/2009 12:08 AM


I used to watch horror movies all the time when I was young — my parents never cared about what I watched. They never bothered me when I was young (with the exception of, for some reason, Monster Squad, a movie I couldn’t sit through for longer than 10 minutes before freaking out). Now, however, I have an irrational fear of zombies, and pretty much that’s all that “scares” me. Odd, because I recall watching Night of the Living Dead (among other zombie movies) in bed (with the lights off) on numerous occasions, and not being scared at all. Go figure.

So, yeah, horror movies were no problem for young me, and I can’t recall any specific experiences (again, save for the absurd Monster Squad thing) where I was actually terrified of one, despite watching far too many. I even recall watching the Exorcist, and finding it hilarious (my mother, however, is still terrified of it).

Chestnuts roasted by Harvey @ 10/07/2009 12:10 AM


@ Stephanie

Haha! I had the same feeling about Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Or more specifically, Judge Doom. I’ve had a recurring nightmare about him since I was kid where he ties me up in my living room and scrapes the skin off of my face with a cheese grater, laughing maniacally, googly eyes going wild.

Chestnuts roasted by Kogi Kaishakunin @ 10/07/2009 12:11 AM


Poltergeist.

That was the first scary movie for me. I remember being really young, and my dad, a fan of the scary, came down our stairs in a sheet during the scene when the ghosts were, of course, coming down the stairs. I hid behind my oversized pillow while my older brother laughed hysterically. I thought that was the worst of it, then the pool scene came.

Shortly after, for some reason, my Dad let me watch the Shining. The Jack Nicholson version but, the censored TV version, but still, this is the Shining were talking about! My Dad regretted it. As soon as it got dark my imagination would conjure up creepy twins in our hallway, and I had no problem screaming my disapproval.

And Matt, I have to agree, nothing gets rid of the scary than people marveling over overpriced juicers and beauty products. All hail the late night infomercial for dispelling many nightmares.

Chestnuts roasted by On Halloween @ 10/07/2009 12:23 AM


In the Eighties when VCR’s had just started making their way into everyones homes, and video stores were cropping up in shitty strip malls everywhere, I was four years old and my Dad decided he would treat his family to a night of technological wonder and entertainment by renting both the VCR and movies from the video store (no one actually owned a VCR, they were like $1,000 and who had $1,000). I can’t believe that my Mom allowed it, so she must have not been present when he made his renting choices, but regardless he came home hefting the huge VCR and two of the scariest movies then and now: “Night of the Living dead”, and “Evil Dead”. I was four, we watched them, and I’ve had nightmares about zombies ever since, and I’m thirty for Christ’s sake. I still enjoy watching zombie films, either to try and convince myself that they don’t scare me anymore, or to try and relive that horrific night. My Dad still picks out horrible movies, but these days he usually picks out the direct to video martial arts or war movies. Though my unconscious hours are now commonly filled with flesh eating zombies, I still love “Evil dead” and the George Romero saga. Thanks Dad!

Chestnuts roasted by Red Rex @ 10/07/2009 12:24 AM


Dude! That skull thing rocks! I wouldn’t normally bother with stuff like that, but i can’t wait to see what my high-rise neighbors think of a giant creepy skull in my window at night!!

The first horror movie i ever saw was “Hell Night” … which i was wayyyy too young to be watching. It was a Halloween party my older sister was having, and I’m sure she was none to thrilled to have her annoying brother around … but somehow I stayed in that room. I was absolutely petrified with terror. The shit. Freaked. Right. Out of me.

A couple of years later, i found myself in an even worse scenario with this new kind of horror film: “A Nightmare on Elm Street” … i knew absolutely nothing about this as the opening credits rolled, but I was done like dinner after that (much more so at the time) crazy-ass opening murder scene. My pre-pubescent mind just couldn’t comprehend the whole thing with Freddy’s creepy long-ass arms, the way his face came off, the way they were inexplicably transported into the bedroom, her belly getting slashed open, then the way she rolled around on the ceiling in a bloody mess …

I can seriously remember that shit like it happened yesterday – that’s how freaked out i was … It fucked me up and made me feel inferior to all of my friends – who seemed to relish the notion of watching as many horror movies as possible. I had to start with one that was actually scary, and revolutionary in terms of it’s clever use of camera tricks, and supernatural plotline/style.

Weeks later I had a bit of redemption, as my aforementioned “badass” friends had their own encounters with Mr.Krueger – and were pretty much just as shocked as i was.

I’ve since seen both “Hell Night” and “NOES 1.0″ … and while Freddy’s first adventure is now a joy to watch, Hell Night is just embarrassing. Even though i could probably never really get scared again like I did as a child, the thought of seeing a new Freddy film still makes me feel uneasy – these old feelings of terror still linger within my soul. Freddy did some damage that will probably never get undone…

Chestnuts roasted by James @ 10/07/2009 12:27 AM


i was sleeping over at my cousins house sometime in the early 80s and we watched american werewolf in london on hbo. we were laying on an air mattress in the living room in front of the tv. the part came on where the “nazi bone dudes” (my cousin’s description) rang the doorbell and proceeded to shoot up the place.

right after that, his dog started to growl and stare at the front door.

i cant remember ever being more terrified in my life. to this day that movie freaks me out so much i cant watch it.

Chestnuts roasted by Simon @ 10/07/2009 12:33 AM


Most of my “scary childhood movies” experiences came about as I wandered into the room while my family was watching some flick on TV. The medusa scene from “Clash of the Titans” immediately comes to mind, and the electric torture scene from “Lethal Weapon” (we get it, Mel Gibson)–and tons of bloody action/horror flicks on the crappy local TV that they didn’t bother censoring too much (crappy local spanish television rocks!)

Someone here mentioned “Who Framed Roger Rabbit” and come to think of it, it was a pretty calamitous and disturbing movie, especially the ugly Jessica scene!

When I was 7 I slept over at a friend’s house and we watched “Beetlejuice.” I didn’t remember much of the movie except for the wedding scene where they turn cracked and green and start falling apart. That was etched in my mind for quite sometime until they started playing that movie nonstop on Comedy Central.

But as a kid I’d always get a thrill whenever we went to Blockbuster and I’d meander into the Horror movie section just to check out the VHS boxes: Childsplay, Leprechaun, Hellraiser, Puppetmaster, the countless sequels, and so forth. It was always a strange combination of intrigue, repulsion, masochistic bloodlust I guess you could call it…

Heck, whenever I get extremely bored I go to the shadowlands.net and read the ghost stories, it always gets me paranoid and glancing at the corners and shadows, and I always regret it later on. But at least it cured my boredom!

Chestnuts roasted by venison @ 10/07/2009 12:58 AM


I remember this movie I watched as a kid where some lady was melting like wax and kep telling this guy to kiss her. Cannot remember the name of it, but it freaked me out for years.

Chestnuts roasted by Kb @ 10/07/2009 1:01 AM


by the way, check out TIME magazine’s Top 10 Twilight Zone Episodes list:

http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1927690_1927684,00.html

I don’t understand how they could miss any of the ones with ventriloquist dummies, but at least William Shatner is there. (I think you know the one…;)

Chestnuts roasted by venison @ 10/07/2009 1:07 AM


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