MONSTERZERO NJ’S 15 CABIN IN THE WOODS HORRORS!

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MONSTERZERO NJ’S 15 CABIN IN THE WOODS HORRORS!

The Granddaddy of the modern cabin in the woods horror, Evil Dead 1981!

Despite being a horror film no-no, folks are always vacationing in, or moving into, remote cabins or houses in the woods. Win, win for us horror movie fans, as this almost always means bad news for the occupants! So…here are 15 such chillers, that can be found on various streaming outlets such as iTunes, Hulu, Vudu, Amazon, Tubi, Google Play, Netflix and Youtube Movies. Just Google the title and they’ll tell you where it’s available and how much to rent, if it applies!

 

Here are three old school honorable mentions that were remote house/cabin flicks before it was cool!

Decades later, no one has learned from the movies!…as Evil Dead 2013‘s bunch will soon find out!

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(To get to the reviews of the titles listed above covered here at the Movie Madhouse, just type the title in the search engine to find the corresponding critique!)

-MonsterZero NJ

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25 CULT CLASSIC HORROR FLICKS TO SPICE UP YOUR HALLOWEEN MOVIE LIST!

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Need some spooky diversions for your Halloween movie watching this year? Something a little off-beat? These are 25 cult classic horrors that add some ghoulishly refreshing spice to your movie playlist for the upcoming Halloween season!

(Click on the titles below the movie poster gallery to get to our reviews!)

Click on the titles here to go to the review page for the corresponding movie!

  1. THE BOOGENS
  2. THE PROWLER
  3. BLACULA
  4. THE EVIL
  5. HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME
  6. PROM NIGHT
  7. CHRISTNE
  8. SUPERSTITION
  9. THE CAR
  10. FIEND WITHOUT A FACE
  11. RE-ANIMATOR
  12. GALAXY OF TERROR
  13. PRINCE OF DARKNESS
  14. GARGOYLES
  15. DON’T BE AFRAID OF THE DARK
  16. THE BURNING
  17. HUMANOIDS FROM THE DEEP
  18. THE MONSTER SQUAD
  19. NIGHT OF THE CREEPS
  20. JOHN CARPENTER’S VAMPIRES
  21. MY BLOODY VALENTINE
  22. BUG
  23. DEADLY BLESSING
  24. PARANORMAL ACTIVITY
  25. EATEN ALIVE

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TOMB OF NOSTALGIA: FIEND WITHOUT A FACE (1958)

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FIEND WITHOUT A FACE (1958)

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Fiend Without A Face really spooked me as a kid. The brain creatures are one of the most iconic 50s sci-fi creatures and maybe of all time. To a five year-old watching Chiller Theater or Creature Features (don’t remember which it was on) on a Saturday night they were the thing of bad dreams. Having recently revisited this 50s classic it obviously doesn’t have the same effect in some ways, but in others it does. A lot of what was creepy is now campy, but I got to say these bizarre little beasties are still effective and the stop motion effects that render them haven’t lost their charm.

Fiend is an English film set in the rural Canadian town of Winthrop (though filmed in England) where locals are very unhappy about a nearby US air force base and it’s nuclear reactor. Remember, it’s the 50s and every sci-fi flick had something to do with atomic power. This small village is also home to Professor Walgate (Kynaston Reeves) and the well meaning professor’s experiments with psychic power and telekinesis don’t mix well with atomic energy. After a series of mysterious deaths blamed on the air force personal and their use of the reactor, it’s revealed that Walgate somehow created a race of invisible and quite hungry beings who like to suck the brains and spinal cords out of their victims and feed off the atomic energy created at the base. It’s now up to Major Jeff Cummings (Marshall Thompson) and Walgate’s plucky secretary, Barbara (Kim Parker) to stop these fiends. But with the creatures rendering the reactor out of control and now becoming fully corporeal, no one may have the power to stop them as they feed and multiply.

The film made quite a stir when first released, but is kind of silly and campy now. Director Arthur Crabtree creates a decent atmosphere of dread and takes this tall tale of science gone awry very seriously as does his cast. But the film does take about an hour for our fiends to finally appear visible and there is some silly dialog and grin inducing situations to sit through, before our stop motion animated critters trap Cummings and company in Walgate’s house and lay siege to their potential meals. At only 77 minutes that’s quite a stretch to sit through to get to the real action, but the last act is still effective today as the effects still hold up and the creatures design still gives chills.

All in all, Fiend is still one of the best examples of 50s atomic age sci-fi and it’s creatures are still held in high regard by fans of horror cinema even if it’s science is silly, dialogue worthy of MST3K and it takes a really long time for our mysterious villains to actually appear. Campy fun and with one of the most unique and iconic creature designs ever. Fiend is available on DVD in a wonderful edition from the awesome Criterion Collection!

MonsterZero NJ trivia: Fiend is based on Amelia Reynolds Long’s short story The Thought Monster with a script by Herbert J. Leder who was originally to direct. The stop motion effects were actually done in Munich, Germany by FX artist K.L. Lupel and the spooky FX sequences were directed by Florenz Von Nordorff.

…and does anyone else think the reactor guy (Kerrigan Prescott) looks like he’s from the 80s band Squeeze…

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…and leading lady Kim Parker is quite fetching in a towel… *sigh*

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 Fiend gets a nostalgic 3 hungry brain monsters and 1/2 left over human brain!

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