Next SFF Author: Ben Aaronovitch

Month: October 2024


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Horror Double Feature: Circus of Horrors & She Freak

In today’s Shocktober Double Feature, we will be rattled by a jinxed circus, knife throwing, a carnival full of mutants, and a Joni Mitchell look-alike! It’s Circus of Horrors and She Freak!

CIRCUS OF HORRORS (1960)

Potential viewers of the 1960 British thriller Circus of Horrors should not be put off by its cast of relative unknowns; it is a real winner, despite that. This film tells the fascinating story of Dr. Rossiter, who, after performing a botched plastic surgery operation in post-War England,


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One Dark Window: Pleasant Enough

One Dark Window by Rachel Gillig

If I’d checked Amazon, probably I would have learned everything I needed to know about Rachel Gillig’s 2022 fantasy novel One Dark Window. It was a BookTok sensation. I can probably stop there.

One Dark Window is the first of a Duology, the SHEPHERD KING series, a second-world fantasy, or romantasy, actually, since much of our protagonist Elspeth’s time is spent wondering if Ravyn, the grouchy nephew of the king, really likes her,


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Horror Double Feature: The Brotherhood of Satan & Psychomania

In today’s Shocktober Double Feature, we will be wowed by a gaggle of geriatric devil devotees, Ahna Capri, a gang of undead bikers, and frog worship! It’s The Brotherhood of Satan and Psychomania!

THE BROTHERHOOD OF SATAN (1971)

If there’s one thing that the middling horror movie The Brotherhood of Satan demonstrates, it is that Old Scratch must have been pretty desperate for worshipping disciples in the early 1970s. In this film, directed by Bernard McEveety, Charles Bateman, his 8-year-old daughter and his hotty gal pal (the yummy Ahna Capri) get stuck in a small town out West that is in the midst of being terrorized by a coven of elderly Satanists.


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Horror Double Feature: Werewolf of London & The Haunted Strangler

In today’s very impressive Shocktober Double Feature, we will be regaled by the mariphasa flower, modern-day lycanthropy, Boris Karloff, and the always delectable Vera Day! It’s Werewolf of London and The Haunted Strangler!

WEREWOLF OF LONDON (1935)

A full six years before returning Welshman Lawrence Talbot ever heard the dire prediction that “Even a man who is pure in heart, and says his prayers by night, may become a wolf when the wolfbane blooms, and the autumn moon is bright,” English botanist Wilfred Glendon was having problems of his own,


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Horror Double Feature: Lost Continent & The Phantom Planet

In today’s Shocktober Double Feature, we will be awestruck by rampaging dinosaurs, the always-scrumptious Hillary Brooke, disintegrating gravity plates, and a pre-Jaws Richard Kiel! It’s Lost Continent and The Phantom Planet!

LOST CONTINENT (1951)

Lost Continent is a film that I used to love as a kid but hadn’t seen in over 40 years. I still remembered parts of it vividly, however, especially the gripping image of a man falling to his doom through a covering of cloud, and wondered if it would hold up all these years later.


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Horror Double Feature: See No Evil & Endless Night

In today’s Shocktober Double Feature, we will be stunned by a blind Mia Farrow, a butchering maniac, lovely Hayley Mills, and the always-wonderful music of Bernard Herrmann. It’s See No Evil and Endless Night!

SEE NO EVIL (1971)

The appearance of Brian Clemens’ name in the credits of any film or television production is, for me, kind of like a Seal of Approval. From the hit ’60s TV show The Avengers to such marvelous horror films as Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde (’72) and Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter (’74),


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Ballad for Sophie: One of the best graphic novels of all time

Ballad for Sophie by Filipe Melo (words), Juan Cavia (art and color), Sandro Pacucci (color), and Gabriela Soares (lettering/translation)

Ballad for Sophie is one of the best graphic novels I have ever read. Upon a first read, I immediately decided to add it to the syllabus in my college English class, and I look forward to teaching it next semester. The art by Juan Cavia is brilliant, and the colors by Pacucci are striking. And Filipe Melo writes a story that is incredibly hard to put down and that is quite tender.


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Horror Double Feature: Black Christmas & The Prowler

In today’s Shocktober Double Feature, we will have to somehow survive obscene phone calls, a psycho killer, pitchfork murders and Tom Savini FX! It’s Black Christmas and The Prowler!

BLACK CHRISTMAS (1975)

Before I sat down to watch Black Christmas for the first time, director Bob Clark had been two for two with me. I had loved his previous two flicks – the zombie gut-muncher Children Shouldn’t Play With Dead Things and his living-dead Vietnam vet horror comedy Deathdream,


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The Asgardians 2: Thor

THE ASGARDIANS 1: Thor by George O’Connor

So I’ve lost track of how many of George O’Connor’s graphic novel retelling of myths I’ve reviewed, from his original series OLYMPIANS to the first book of his current ASGARDIANS series, Odin. He’s back with book two, everyone’s favorite Norse god — Thor, and all I can say is what I’ve been saying since the beginning: the story is great, the artwork is great, they’re not just for kids,


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Horror Double Feature: Eaten Alive & Night Creature

In today’s Shocktober Double Feature, we will be startled by a very hungry crocodile, Robert Englund, a ferocious leopard, and yummy Nancy Kwan! It’s Eaten Alive and Night Creature!

EATEN ALIVE (1976)

Tobe Hooper’s debut film, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974), although not nearly as graphically violent as popularly believed, is nevertheless quite a nightmarish experience to sit through. His sophomore effort, 1977’s comparatively unknown Eaten Alive, is almost as nightmarish and ups the gore quotient considerably.


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Next SFF Author: Ben Aaronovitch

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  1. Please contact me Scott I know who got us away and contacted social services.

  2. Thanks for the kind words, George! And no, I have only read the nine Taine books that I have reviewed…

  3. Great review! I agree this book had some entertaining parts, and the final section with the invading crystals was very…

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