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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

I don’t remember how old I was at the time but I rember being fairly young and pestering my (older) sister to take me to the drive in with her and her friends to see The Omen and Phantasm. I don’t remember a whole lot of either film, I just remember at one point these kids are playing ice hockey and one falls through the ice and is trapped underneath (which terrified me as I lived in MI at the time and used to play on Lake Michigan in the winter). The other part that terrified me were those damn flying balls in Phantasm! I remember seeing one guy get stabbed in the head and the drill coming out and spending the rest of the night curled up in a ball in the back seat with my eyes closed and my hands over my ears.

Chestnuts roasted by Dan H @ 10/07/2009 2:33 PM


When I was about 8, I saw The Birds on tv. OMG …ever since then I have this awful fear of any taxidermied birds, dead random birds laying dead in the road. I’m afraid they are gonna fall on my head at night like the one scene where they move a painting and the dead crow falls out beneath it.

One time after an epic Nor’Easter storm, I was driving down the highway near the ocean, and all these dead sea gulls littered the road. I had no choice but to drive over them….bump bumping all the way down the street with my eyes closed and screaming and crying

Chestnuts roasted by mandy_Reeves @ 10/07/2009 2:54 PM


I never had a scary moment with a scary movie, but did have one with a scary commercial. Back in the late 80′s when Time/Life was always selling some sort of book series, the one commercial that always scared me was with the “books of the unexplained.” One night I was up way too late watching a show, house completely dark, and the commercial was on. Right at the second when they showed a picture of a ghost, a picture fell off the wall in my living room. After that I ran screaming into my mother’s room. Still cannot explain why a random picture fell off the wall at that very moment. Very creepy…

Chestnuts roasted by JiveTurkey @ 10/07/2009 3:18 PM


Nicole – I loved “Jennifer’s Body”, thought it was a great movie. Definitely had that old horror movie throwback quality to it. I also saw “Zombieland” on opening day, another great flick.

Chestnuts roasted by JiveTurkey @ 10/07/2009 3:21 PM


venison- I love you and hate you for mentioning theshadowlands.net. I have spent the whole day here at work reading the stories and freaking myself out considerably even though it is the middle of a beautiful day and I am in my very brightly lit office. In fact, I was/am so freaked out that earlier today when my supervisor told me she was headed down to the basement, my heart skipped a beat because I thought she was going to ask me to go with her.

Chestnuts roasted by Mrs. DarkSideofBrightness @ 10/07/2009 3:25 PM


Nothing ever scared the infant Rev. BIOU 13, although we did have a vampire that lived in the boiler room in our basement. And Pennywise the Clown DID live in a sewer pipe near my grade school. And every white van that passed our house contained nothing but bloodthirsty child murderers toting sacks of razor-blade filled chocolate miniatures. These things did not scare me, even then, because I knew it was MY movie and thus I could not be killed, only tormented and enslaved.

What DID scare the tiny version of me was the cover of a book my grandmother had, a true story about a green beret who killed his wife and children with an ice pick. The book cover showed a portrait of a smiling family, WITH A BLOODY ICEPICK STUCK THROUGH IT AAAAAGGGHH.

I was also pretty freaked out by those COP-SHOT billboards.

Chestnuts roasted by Rev. Back It On Up 13 @ 10/07/2009 3:28 PM


I never thought I’d be able to recreate that rush of total unreasonable fear that I had as a child. That is until I came up with a really bizarre nonsensical idea. I originally thought of it just straight boredom kink or maybe just a personal test. I tried to shower in the dark. Complete pitch blackness with no one else in the house. It’s hard to explain the ridiculous thoughts I had in my head, but they involved demons and being dragged to Hell. I really wanted to do the whole shower just to prove to myself I could do it, but I couldn’t handle it. I relented and jumped out the shower, soaking the bathroom to get the lights on. Nevermind the fact that I could have seriously injured myself during this weird endeavor. But, if you ever want to scare the crap out of yourself, give it a try.

Chestnuts roasted by zelda2fanboy @ 10/07/2009 3:37 PM


When I was a kid my dad would sit down with me on Sundays and we would watch Commander USA, that was the first time I remember watching a horror movie, and that movie was Friday The 13th…..since then I’ve been desensitized to them and find them amusing, but loving every bit.

Chestnuts roasted by Will @ 10/07/2009 3:40 PM


1-800-COP-SHOT.$10,000 reward.Right on Rv. :)

Chestnuts roasted by Jason @ 10/07/2009 3:42 PM


My parents were generally pretty strict about potentially scary things, also clueless about what is truly scary.
Once, when I was about six, we were visiting friends who had a son about my age, all of us stayed up late and were watching a local Elvira-typ show, the feature was Night Of The Living Dead. My parents figured, black-and-white, stagy beginning, how bad can it be? Well, we watched it up until the daughter pulls the trowel on her mother. I wasn’t fazed at all, though my mother still apologizes for putting me through it. She makes no apologies for the 20 times I’ve seen it since.

On the other hand, about two years later I saw a Scooby Doo episode called “Vampire Bats and Scaredy Cats” that I had to turn off and go sit outside until I was sure it was over. I missed the cheesy ending until iTunes finally made it available.

Chestnuts roasted by other matt @ 10/07/2009 3:54 PM


My scariest moment watching movie had more to do with the events that occurred after watching it, rather then while watching it.

I was staying over a friends house and we watched the first Nightmare On Elm Street. I was slightly frightened afterward, but nothing that was not controllable.

Anyway, we went to bed and I had to sleep on the floor next to my friends bed (air mattress and sleeping bag for comfort). At one point in the night I wake up and there is a pair of eyes staring at me from under the bed. I was terrified; couldn’t move. I stared at those eyes for what seemed like an eternity. Then, I heard a noise outside the room. Someone was walking up the stairs. The door to my friends room opened and there stood my friends younger brother. He peered into the room and in a voice only a pre-pubescent boy could conjure he said my friends name in this really eerie drawn out manner… “Raaaaaannnnnndddddy”.

I freaked!! Jumped up and started yelling who knows what. My friend’s cat streaked out from under the bed (explaining the creepy eyes staring at me). My friend’s brother… a sleepwalker. He simply turned around and walked back to his room and went back to bed. Apparently this trek up to his brother’s room was something he would do at least a couple of times a year.

Chestnuts roasted by Tabandz @ 10/07/2009 3:59 PM


Love the stuff from CVS, Matt. Nice finds.

Debs, was that the same Alice in Wonderland where the baby turned into a pig? *shudder*

I didn’t watch many scary movies when I was a kid, but I remember Silver Bullet scaring the crap out of me after Rev. Werewolf has been shot and then he makes that last lurch.

Chestnuts roasted by Teddy Ray @ 10/07/2009 4:02 PM


my relationship with scary movies is weird. i remember being scared of a chucky doll in a store when i was real young and being absolutely terified of were wolves. later when i was about 10 i always liked to look at vhs cases of f13 movies in particular but never really thoght of watching them. then there came freddy i remember hearing about him and not being able to fall asleep at night even though i knew he wasn’t real. nowadays i haven’t seen many but i’m not scared of them anymore but am still fasinate

Chestnuts roasted by Super GAMERA @ 10/07/2009 4:08 PM


Teddy Ray – I loved that Alice in Wonderland! It had an “all-star” cast of people I didn’t know or care about, like Shelley Winters and Rip Torn. All the old washed up talent of Hollywood hamming it up, like auditions for the New Years Eve Dead Celebrity Countdown.

I don’t remember the Jabberwocky at all, and I watched that tape about a thousand times. Must’ve blocked that part out.

Chestnuts roasted by Rev. Back It On Up 13 @ 10/07/2009 4:12 PM


Gremlins seriously fucked my world up. The first time I saw it, it creeped me out. But it would certainly not be the last time. Not long after the first viewing, I would have horrible nightmares. I would imagine all sorts of scary stuff that wasn’t even in the movie like gore and throat slashing and such. The fact that my family used to rig Gremlins-related pranks like having that god awful Stripe doll hidden in certain places did nothing to help. Ugh, the horror.

Chestnuts roasted by Mike83 @ 10/07/2009 4:13 PM


I am one commenting MF today. Sorry, folks.

Scary movies do not hold up well as we age. My husband recalled the one that scared the pants off him when he was a kid, and had me seek it on DVD. It was hard to find, although I understand a remake is being done now. My husband is fearless and bold, lethal and potent, a kung fu mortician. I braced myself for the movie that made him cower in terror when he was small.

I laughed my ass off through the entire thing. These little demons haunting this dumb skeeze named Sally, but they only come out in the dark. You can make them go away simply by turning on a light. Guess what’s the one thing moron Sally never does in the entire movie? They get her in the end, and I gave it a standing ovation.

Chestnuts roasted by Rev. Back It On Up 13 @ 10/07/2009 4:17 PM


Had to share this with everyone here, ’cause who better than the X-E crowd would appreciate this? Apparently, there is an ESB Tauntaun sleeping bag (complete with guts print inside) coming in the near future.

http://chud.com/articles/articles/21060/1/GEEK-CHIC-FINALLY-COOL-STAR-WARS-BEDDING/Page1.html

Really awesome, kinda gross, and pretty damn expensive for a sleeping bag. Wonder if they made it smell authentically foul?

Chestnuts roasted by Jeremy Whatsisface @ 10/07/2009 4:38 PM


Sixty men, all lost at sea, and all of ‘em drunk except fer me!

Twas I who had to face th’ storm with nothin’ in sight to keep me warm!

YO-HO YO-HO, Over the raging seas we go!

YO-HO TO-HO, Wherever the four winds blow – HEY!

Chestnuts roasted by Morfnblorsh @ 10/07/2009 4:45 PM


If we’re talking books, the ‘Stories to tell in the Dark’ or similar ones were quite the trip back in the day. The black and white charcoal illustrations alone would freak me out. However there was another group of knock-off books that were pretty gruesome. In one a girl turned into a fly, got swatted, then changed back into a person. It went into detail. The Tales from the Crypt also usually ended in some sort of death.

I was also too old for Goosebumps, but that didn’t seem to stop me. I used a younger brother as an excuse.

Chestnuts roasted by Dann @ 10/07/2009 4:48 PM


Rev.-You got me all worked up with that tid-bit,and you’re not even gonna tell us what the name of that movie is? :(

Chestnuts roasted by Jason @ 10/07/2009 4:50 PM


Looks like a goofy version of a Terminator’s skull… right down to the glowing red eyes.

Chestnuts roasted by Engel @ 10/07/2009 4:50 PM


Jason – D’oh. Guess you won’t get far without that handy detail.

It was this masterpiece: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0069992/

Chestnuts roasted by Rev. Back It On Up 13 @ 10/07/2009 4:56 PM


My older brother was nine years older than me, so I was exposed to a wide array of horrifying things at an early age. He also very much enjoyed torturing me, my older sister and younger brother when he babysat us.
My brother enjoyed watching terrible scary things on TV to get us to leave him alone while he babysat. Most of the time it worked.

One of my very first memories of TV is of the monkey-brain-eating scene from Faces of Death. He tried to rush me out before I started screaming but it’s buried in my head.
I believe that watching Thriller at age 4 made for my intense love of zombies. That wasn’t totally his fault, though. It was EVERYWHERE at that time.

But the Scary Movie that scared me the most was Maximum Overdrive. Now, it was broadcast on TV so my parents assumed it’d be fine.
I was intensely watching the movie while I helped slice radishes in the grater for dinner. During the Electric Knife scene I sliced my finger on the grater JUST AS THE KNIFE WENT BERSERK.
I abruptly freaked out and bled all over the kitchen.
The visual connected with the pain of my small injury and created a very strong phobia of power tools I am only now beginning to deal with.
The phobia prevented me from learning to drive, use a sewing machine- i even get startled by soda machines still.

Chestnuts roasted by kittymo @ 10/07/2009 5:01 PM


Teddy Ray- Yep, that’s the one. The whole movie was odd-feeling, but the Jabberwocky really freaked me out. Made me hate mirrors, especially in the dark.

Chestnuts roasted by DarkSideofBrightness @ 10/07/2009 5:01 PM


My horror movie days really didn’t begin until I was a teenager. But I remember going to the movie rental store and being freaked out by the horror movie boxes. I remember Zombie, Frightnight, and Evil Dead 2 were the ones that haunted me the most. I may have been renting Muppets Take Manhattan but my nights were still full of fear.

I went to see Ghostbusters in the theater with my parents when I was a kid. The library scene had scene had me pretty twisted for years to come. I still have an irrational fear of librarians.

Chestnuts roasted by Bill @ 10/07/2009 5:09 PM


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