Just had a random thought: what if I started adding actors + their movies to my calendar?
I already know I can’t write about everything I want… but this idea won’t leave my head. Still thinking about it…
I already know I can’t write about everything I want… but this idea won’t leave my head. Still thinking about it…
New calendar challenge unlocked:
Pick one actor/actress and add EVERY horror, thriller & drama they’ve ever been in… until the list is finally done.
I’m about to traumatize my schedule with 47 years of pure psychological damage.
Wish me luck… or send therapy 😭🩸
Pick one actor/actress and add EVERY horror, thriller & drama they’ve ever been in… until the list is finally done.
I’m about to traumatize my schedule with 47 years of pure psychological damage.
Wish me luck… or send therapy 😭🩸
You leave direct links to the films in the comments so everyone can watch them.
The idea is still brewing... but I like it 👀
The idea is still brewing... but I like it 👀
Variety’s review of the new ‘Faces of Death’ (dir. Daniel Goldhaber) calls it a clever ’70s-style B-horror slasher that smartly taps into our modern craving for “real” horror.
Starring Barbie Ferreira and Dacre Montgomery, it reimagines the infamous 1978 mondo cult film — mostly fake snuff presented as documentary — as a meta meditation on voyeurism in the social media era.
The film blends grimy exploitation vibes with timely commentary on our appetite for authentic violence and forbidden footage. Halfway clever, fully disturbing, and perfectly timed for today’s true-crime/snuff-obsessed culture. A throwback that feels dangerously relevant.
Worth a watch if you like your horror with brains and bile.
Starring Barbie Ferreira and Dacre Montgomery, it reimagines the infamous 1978 mondo cult film — mostly fake snuff presented as documentary — as a meta meditation on voyeurism in the social media era.
The film blends grimy exploitation vibes with timely commentary on our appetite for authentic violence and forbidden footage. Halfway clever, fully disturbing, and perfectly timed for today’s true-crime/snuff-obsessed culture. A throwback that feels dangerously relevant.
Worth a watch if you like your horror with brains and bile.
On this day in 2007, the insane double feature Grindhouse dropped — Robert Rodriguez’s zombie madness Planet Terror + Quentin Tarantino’s high-octane Death Proof. Pure exploitation gold! 🔥🎥
Happy 28th birthday to Peyton List! 🎂👻
She’s brought the scares in horror flicks like The Inheritance, Bereavement, Aileen Wuornos: American Boogeywoman, and Hubie Halloween. Queen of screams! 🩸
She’s brought the scares in horror flicks like The Inheritance, Bereavement, Aileen Wuornos: American Boogeywoman, and Hubie Halloween. Queen of screams! 🩸
Hulu canceled the Buffy revival, and it truly hurts. After all the excitement surrounding Sarah Michelle Gellar's return as Buffy Summers in Buffy: New Sunnydale, the show died before it even aired. But beyond the disappointment of losing new episodes, this cancellation forces us to confront a larger, more troubling pop culture pattern.
Why do we so rarely let our female heroes age, grow wiser, and still remain strong? Buffy was a teenager when she began slaying vampires in Sunnydale. More than twenty years later, the idea of seeing her in a more mature age—perhaps mentoring the next generation, overcoming life's wounds, and still kicking ass—seemed revolutionary. Instead, as before, the beloved female icon seems frozen in her youth. Consider the contrast with male heroes: Indiana Jones returned as a seasoned adventurer at age 70. Batman has had numerous older versions in comics, films, and animation. John Wick continues to destroy villains even in middle age. Even Han Solo and Deckard aged onscreen with dignity and respect. These characters are allowed to evolve, bear the burden of their past battles, and remain at the center of their stories.
Female heroes? Too often, they are expected to remain eternally youthful, as if aging somehow diminishes their strength or appeal. We rarely see a middle-aged woman continue to be an action heroine or the Chosen One without it being treated as a gimmick or a side story. Buffy deserved better. She deserved the chance to show that the Slayer's power doesn't fade with time—it deepens.
Aging isn't the death of a hero's journey; it's the beginning of a richer, more multifaceted chapter. It brings experience, complexity, and emotional depth that only make the struggle against darkness more meaningful.
This cancellation hurts not only because we've lost potential new Buffy stories, but also because it reinforces an outdated double standard. Female characters should have the same opportunity to age and still save the world.
What do you think—should studios give our favorite heroines the same lifespan as their male counterparts?
Read the full article that inspired this:
https://x.com/i/status/2041127031220367546
Why do we so rarely let our female heroes age, grow wiser, and still remain strong? Buffy was a teenager when she began slaying vampires in Sunnydale. More than twenty years later, the idea of seeing her in a more mature age—perhaps mentoring the next generation, overcoming life's wounds, and still kicking ass—seemed revolutionary. Instead, as before, the beloved female icon seems frozen in her youth. Consider the contrast with male heroes: Indiana Jones returned as a seasoned adventurer at age 70. Batman has had numerous older versions in comics, films, and animation. John Wick continues to destroy villains even in middle age. Even Han Solo and Deckard aged onscreen with dignity and respect. These characters are allowed to evolve, bear the burden of their past battles, and remain at the center of their stories.
Female heroes? Too often, they are expected to remain eternally youthful, as if aging somehow diminishes their strength or appeal. We rarely see a middle-aged woman continue to be an action heroine or the Chosen One without it being treated as a gimmick or a side story. Buffy deserved better. She deserved the chance to show that the Slayer's power doesn't fade with time—it deepens.
Aging isn't the death of a hero's journey; it's the beginning of a richer, more multifaceted chapter. It brings experience, complexity, and emotional depth that only make the struggle against darkness more meaningful.
This cancellation hurts not only because we've lost potential new Buffy stories, but also because it reinforces an outdated double standard. Female characters should have the same opportunity to age and still save the world.
What do you think—should studios give our favorite heroines the same lifespan as their male counterparts?
Read the full article that inspired this:
https://x.com/i/status/2041127031220367546
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TERROFLIX (@terroflix1) on X
Hulu canceled the Buffy revival, and it truly hurts. After all the excitement surrounding Sarah Michelle Gellar's return as Buffy Summers in Buffy: New Sunnydale, the show died before it even aired. But beyond the disappointment of losing new episodes, this…
🎈 HAPPY BIRTHDAY PAUL RUDD! 🩸🎃🎉
Tommy Doyle in #HALLOWEEN6 (1995) — still hasn’t aged a day!
Tommy Doyle in #HALLOWEEN6 (1995) — still hasn’t aged a day!
Happy Birthday to Diora Baird! 🎂
Known for horror roles in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning, Night of the Demons, Stan Helsing, Brain Blockers, and 30 Days of Night: Dark Days.
Known for horror roles in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning, Night of the Demons, Stan Helsing, Brain Blockers, and 30 Days of Night: Dark Days.