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The 5 Greatest Horror Performances Not Nominated for Oscars

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Why do performances in horror films receive less recognition, at Oscar time, than performances in films from other genres?

Is it because the horror director is often viewed, by audiences and critics, as the real star of these films, while the performances of the actors are often considered entirely irrelevant, secondary, to the film’s success. The Blair Witch Project and the original version of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre provide the most severe examples of this.

What is the best performance in a horror film from, say, the past twenty years? Angela Bettis in May? Chloe Grace Moretz in Let Me In? Was there any possibility of either of these great performances being recognized by the Academy? No. They didn’t have a snowball’s chance in hell.

There have, of course, been exceptions. Piper Laurie and Sissy Spacek were both nominated for their great performances in 1976’s Carrie. Kathy Bates won the Best Actress Oscar for 1990’s Misery. Anthony Hopkins and Jodie Foster both won Oscars for their performances in 1991’s The Silence of the Lambs.

Here are five great horror performances that weren’t even nominated for Oscars and deserved to be. They also deserved to win.

Jeff Goldblum

The Fly (1986)

There was serious talk of an Oscar nomination for Goldblum following The Fly’s release in 1986, and deservedly so. As Seth Brundle, a scientist whose experiments with teleportation led him to become genetically—fused with a fly, Goldblum achieves the tricky balance of making us feel sorry for Seth, and his worsening condition, while we are simultaneously terrified of him. Goldblum’s struggle to maintain a semblance of his humanity amidst the gradual disintegration that unfolds within his mind is endlessly fascinating and horrifying to the viewer.

The Fly is also a tragic love story. Seth is in a relationship with a woman, played by Geena Davis, and her doomed pregnancy embodies Seth’s tragedy and his overwhelming sense of loss—the loss of the woman he loves, their child, and his mind.

The duality of Seth’s transformation, the melding of man and fly, is revealed through Seth’s behavior, which becomes increasingly chaotic and uneven. That Goldblum, an actor best known for gonzo, offbeat roles throughout the 1980s, is able to generate so much sympathy for his character in the mind of the viewer is an amazing acting achievement.

Christopher Walken

The Dead Zone (1983)

Loss is also at the heart of The Dead Zone, which is one of the best—and the most overlooked—of the Stephen King adaptations. The Dead Zone is dominated by Christopher Walken’s lead performance, which is every bit as good and strong as his Oscar-winning role in The Deer Hunter.

Walken’s character, Johnny Smith, is a New England schoolteacher who has lost four years of life to a car accident that left him in a coma. He has lost more than time: The girlfriend he intended to marry has married another man and started a family. He’s lost his career. The car accident has ruined his legs and left him needing a cane. Friends have abandoned him. He has also been cursed with the ability of second sight—to be able to see the fates of others, which is made possible through physical contact.

It’s only after we have absorbed the depth of Johnny’s loss that The Dead Zone turns into a thriller. It’s an extremely effective thriller, precisely because it places its supernatural elements within believable situations, which are populated by a gallery of interesting supporting characters.  Johnny is our guide, and Walken’s performance here—one of Walken’s last straight leading film roles, before he transitioned to crazy character roles, like the murderous father in 1986’s At Close Range—is so heartbreaking, and his character’s pain so identifiable, that we’re reminded of how few horror films take the time to make us care about their lead characters, and the unreal situations they find themselves trapped in, before they ask us to suspend disbelief.

Jack Nicholson

The Shining (1980)

There are some people, critics, who think Jack Nicholson’s performance in The Shining is over-the-top, forgetting that Nicholson was probably born that way.

The role of Jack Torrance serves as a monument  to the carnivorous, naked, sordid aspects of Nicholson’s screen persona—in the 1970s and early 1980s—that went a long way towards establishing Nicholson’s reputation as, arguably, the greatest living American screen actor of the past fifty years.

There is Nicholson’s trademark smile, which has never been less reassuring. This is first visible in the film’s opening scene, where Jack—do we think of Nicholson, Hollywood’s ultimate wild genius, and Torrance as one and the same?—is driving through the Rockies with his wife and son, toward the Overlook Hotel.

During the drive, Torrance regaled his son, Danny, with the story of how early pioneers resorted to cannibalism to survive their harsh conditions. It is a story that Jack lingers over, too long, which alerts us—especially after multiple viewings—to the possibility that his transformation has already begun, if it ever ended.

Nicholson’s performance and the film’s set-pieces have, of course, entered cinematic folklore (“Wendy, baby, I think you hurt my head,” “I’m just going to bash your brains in!” “Here’s Johnny!”). However, it is the ordinariness of Jack Torrance that frightens us—the every man aspects of Jack Torrance that contrast the palpable combination of lust and madness that washes over his face later in the film.

The development of Torrance’s nightmare forces us to act out in our minds, to consider, all of the unspeakable things we fear that we’re capable of.

Nastassja Kinski

The Cat People (1982)

Centuries ago, when the world was a desert wasteland of orange sand, and the human race was in its infancy, leopards ruled over the pitiful band of humans, who were forced to enter a truly twisted bargain with the powerful beasts: The humans agreed to sacrifice their women to the leopards in exchange for being left alone.

Instead of killing the women, however, the leopards mingled with them, creating a new race: The Cat People.

Paul Schrader’s criminally—underrated, wonderfully—audacious film, a hyper—stylized remake of the 1942 classic, tells its story through the feline—like eyes of Nastassja Kinski, who plays Irena, one of the two remaining cat people in the present.

Although she has the appearance of a beautiful woman, Irena’s lineage makes her a dangerous sexual partner: When the cat people reach orgasm, they turn into black leopards and kill their human lovers.

Kinski, who seemed destined for superstardom in the early 1980s, is endlessly inventive and suggestive in her approach to the character of Irena, who appears as a normal, shy woman—with heightened elasticity in her limbs—whose body and mind always seem to be in different places.

In the film, she travels to New Orleans to see her brother, played by Malcolm McDowell, who explains to her their shared curse and suggests that they engage in incest—the only way out for both of them. She falls in love with a zookeeper, played by John Heard, who, knowing all of her secrets, is still willing to sleep with her at the end of the film, as we are.

Jamie Lee Curtis

Halloween (1978)

 

Jamie Lee Curtis became so identified with the moniker of “scream queen” in the period that followed the release of Halloween that it’s easy to forget how crucial her performance is to the success of the film.

With the exception of Curtis’s Laurie Strode and Donald Pleasence’s obsessive psychiatrist, Sam Loomis, the rest of the characters in the film—particularly the roles of Annie and Lynda, Laurie’s two best friends—were meant to be ordinary types, which was entirely appropriate to the material. Laurie herself seems to fit this description—a shy, virginal teenager who has never been on a date.

But it is through Laurie that the terror unfolds, precisely because she is a virgin. Her sexual repression makes her hyperaware of the presence of Michael Myers, who has spent fifteen years inside a mental institution and, it can be assumed, is also a virgin. Curtis, who was not a virgin herself by the time she was seventeen, looked like this average girl, which made her accessible to the audience, all of whom could relate to her.

Curtis, like Laurie, did not think she was at all beautiful during her scream queen career. In the role of Laurie Strode, Curtis demonstrated the qualities that defined her scream queen persona: capability, honesty, and vulnerability.

She was attractive without seeming unreal, or being at all intimidating in her physical appearance, and she was entirely believable as this normal human being. She never comes across as the product of Hollywood glamour that Curtis was in real life.

Like Halloween, Curtis and Laurie Strode have entered the realm of immortality. While Curtis is cinema’s ultimate scream queen, Laurie Strode is the horror genre’s prototypical heroine.

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Editorial

Yay or Nay: What’s Good and Bad in Horror This Week

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Horror Movies

Welcome to Yay or Nay a weekly mini post about what I think is good and bad news in the horror community written in bite-sized chunks. 

Yay:

Mike Flanagan talking about directing the next chapter in the Exorcist trilogy. That might mean he saw the last one and realized there were two left and if he does anything well it’s draw out a story. 

Yay:

To the announcement of a new IP-based film Mickey Vs Winnie. It’s fun to read comical hot takes from people who haven’t even seen the movie yet.

Nay:

The new Faces of Death reboot gets an R rating. It’s not really fair — Gen-Z should get an unrated version like past generations so they can question their mortality the same as the rest of us did. 

Yay:

Russell Crowe is doing another possession movie. He’s quickly becoming another Nic Cage by saying yes to every script, bringing the magic back to B-movies, and more money into VOD. 

Nay:

Putting The Crow back in theaters for its 30th anniversary. Re-releasing classic movies at the cinema to celebrate a milestone is perfectly fine, but doing so when the lead actor in that film was killed on set due to neglect is a cash grab of the worst kind. 

The Crow
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Lists

The Top-Searched Free Horror/Action Movies on Tubi This Week

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The free streaming service Tubi is a great place to scroll when you’re unsure what to watch. They are not sponsored or affiliated with iHorror. Still, we really appreciate their library because it’s so robust and has many obscure horror movies so rare you can’t find them anywhere in the wild except, if you’re lucky, in a moist cardboard box at a yard sale. Other than Tubi, where else are you going to find Nightwish (1990), Spookies (1986), or The Power (1984)?

We take a look at the most searched horror titles on the platform this week, hopefully, to save you some time in your endeavor to find something free to watch on Tubi.

Interestingly at the top of the list is one of the most polarizing sequels ever made, the female-led Ghostbusters reboot from 2016. Perhaps viewers have seen the latest sequel Frozen Empire and are curious about this franchise anomaly. They will be happy to know it’s not as bad as some think and is genuinely funny in spots.

So take a look at the list below and tell us if you are interested in any of them this weekend.

1. Ghostbusters (2016)

Ghostbusters (2016)

An otherworldly invasion of New York City assembles a pair of proton-packed paranormal enthusiasts, a nuclear engineer and a subway worker for battle.An otherworldly invasion of New York City assembles a pair of proton-packed paranormal enthusiasts, a nuclear engineer and a subway worker for battle.

2. Rampage

When a group of animals becomes vicious after a genetic experiment goes awry, a primatologist must find an antidote to avert a global catastrophe.

3. The Conjuring The Devil Made Me Do It

Paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren uncover an occult conspiracy as they help a defendant argue that a demon forced him to commit murder.

4. Terrifier 2

After being resurrected by a sinister entity, Art the Clown returns to Miles County, where his next victims, a teenage girl and her brother, await.

5. Don’t Breathe

A group of teens breaks into a blind man’s home, thinking they’ll get away with the perfect crime but get more than they bargained for once inside.

6. The Conjuring 2

In one of their most terrifying paranormal investigations, Lorraine and Ed Warren help a single mother of four in a house plagued by sinister spirits.

7. Child’s Play (1988)

A dying serial killer uses voodoo to transfer his soul into a Chucky doll which winds up in the hands of a boy who may be the doll’s next victim.

8. Jeepers Creepers 2

When their bus breaks down on a deserted road, a team of high school athletes discovers an opponent they cannot defeat and may not survive.

9. Jeepers Creepers

After making a horrific discovery in the basement of an old church, a pair of siblings find themselves the chosen prey of an indestructible force.

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News

Morticia & Wednesday Addams Join Monster High Skullector Series

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Believe it or not, Mattel’s Monster High doll brand has an immense following with both young and not-so-young collectors. 

In that same vein, the fan base for The Addams Family is also very large. Now, the two are collaborating to create a line of collectible dolls that celebrate both worlds and what they have created is a combination of fashion dolls and goth fantasy. Forget Barbie, these ladies know who they are.

The dolls are based on Morticia and Wednesday Addams from the 2019 Addams Family animated movie. 

As with any niche collectibles these aren’t cheap they bring with them a $90 price tag, but it’s an investment as a lot of these toys become more valuable over time. 

“There goes the neighborhood. Meet the Addams Family’s ghoulishly glamorous mother-daughter duo with a Monster High twist. Inspired by the animated movie and clad in spiderweb lace and skull prints, the Morticia and Wednesday Addams Skullector doll two-pack makes for a gift that’s so macabre, it’s downright pathological.”

If you want to pre-purchase this set check out The Monster High website.

Wednesday Addams Skullector doll
Wednesday Addams Skullector doll
Footwear for Wednesday Addams Skullector doll
Morticia Addams Skullector doll
Morticia Addams doll shoes
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