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Queen of Scream: Janet Leigh’s Slasher Legacy

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Scream queens and horror are inseparable. Since the earliest days of horror cinema, the two have gone hand-in-hand. It seems monsters and madmen just can’t help themselves, and are drawn to the leading beauties who must face extraordinary dangers and hope to survive the grisly odds stacked against them.

When you think about it, the equation of a successful horror franchise is built on scares. Surely that should go without saying, right? Yet, what is it that makes a movie scare us? You know what I mean. The movies that stick with you long after you’ve watched them.

It’s more than “BOO! Har, har I got you,” moments. Those scares are cheap and too easy. I wouldn’t say it’s all up to gore either, although gross-out effects can twist our stomachs into knots, they end up cold at the end of the day if there’s no substance behind them.

So what is it that makes us remember a horror movie, and not just simply remember it, but discuss it, praise it, and (if we’re very lucky) lose our minds over it?

(Image courtesy iheartingrid)

Characters. It cannot be stressed enough that characters build or break a horror movie. It’s this simple: if we don’t give a damn about the characters in the movies why should we be bothered when they are in danger? It’s when we care about our leads that we suddenly find ourselves sharing their anxiety.

You remember how you felt when little Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) saw the Shape staring at her through the window? Michael Myers (Nick Castle) was in broad daylight without a care in the world. Staring. Stalking. Waiting with hellish patience. We shared Laurie’s concern.

Or when Nancy Thompson (Heather Langenkamp) was trapped inside her own house, unable to escape or convince her own parents that Freddy Kruger had come to tear her inside out.

(Image courtesy of Static Mass Emporium)

There’s also the lone survivor of Camp Blood, Alice (Adrienne King). With all of her friends dead, we see our beautiful hero safe in a canoe out on Crystal Lake. We share a breath of relief when the police show up, thinking that she was saved. Yet, when Jason (Ari Lehman) burst out of the tranquil waters, we were as shocked as she was.

We share in both the angst and triumph of our leading ladies, and when it comes to horror we have lots of beautiful talent to applaud. However, of all our favorite Scream Queens, we cannot deny the enormity of one woman’s impact on the entire genre.

I’m talking about Golden Globe Award-winner Janet Leigh. Her career was spotlighted with award winning co-stars such as Charlton Heston, Orson Welles, Frank Sinatra and Paul Newman. An impressive resume to be sure, but we all know who we best associate her with, Alfred Hitchcock.

(Image courtesy of Vanity Fair)

In 1960 Psycho broke down the door of several taboos and introduced mainstream audiences to what would become the accepted modern guidelines of slasher films.

To be perfectly fair, when it comes to this groundbreaking movie, audiences remember two names above all others — Janet Leigh and Anthony Perkins. That’s not to say that others didn’t shine in their performances, but Leigh and Perkins couldn’t help but steal the show.

I came to see Psycho much later in life. I was in my late 20s and a local theater was showing the movie as part of an Alfred Hitchcock festival. What a platinum opportunity to finally see this classic! I sat down in a dimly lit theater and there was not one seat empty. The house was packed with energy.

I loved how unconventional the movie was. Janet Leigh, our lead hero, played a bad girl, which still to this day is kind of surprising. But she does so with such smooth class and undeniable style, we can’t help but root for her.

There is something deeply unsettling about her scene with Anthony Perkins’ Norman Bates, something darkly ethereal that we all sense happening between the two. In that humble dinner scene, we see through the eyes of a predator who is summing up his prey.

(Image courtesy of NewNowNext)

Of course these are things we all know already. Nothing new being expressed here, I admit that, but even though I knew the story and already knew what to expect, the chemistry in their shared performance still pulled me in as if I hadn’t a clue what I was in for.

We want her to get out of there. We know what’s going to happen as soon as she returns to her motel room. Sure she seems safe enough, but we all know better. The shower is turned on, she steps in and all we can hear is the steady sound of running water. We watch helplessly as a tall, thin shape invades her personal space.

When the shower curtain was pulled back and the glistening knife was raised the audience screamed. And could not stop screaming. The viewers were as helpless as Leigh’s character, and shrieked along with her as popcorn flew skyward.

As the blood washed down the drain and I looked into the eyes of Leigh’s lifeless character it struck me and struck hard. It still works, I thought. After all these years (decades) the formula of those two actors in the hands of a legendary director still worked its black magic over audiences to terrify and thrill us all.

(Image courtesy of FictionFan Book Review)

The combined talents of Perkins, Hitchcock and Leigh solidified the newly awoken slasher genre. A genre her daughter, Jamie Lee Curtis, would further impact in a little movie called Halloween.

Let’s be brutally honest here. Without Janet Leigh’s breathtaking performance in Psycho, the movie would not have worked. After all, who else could Norman Bates hack to death had she been void of the script? Sure someone else could have attempted the role, but oh my God as the remake proved, Leigh’s performance is irreplaceable.

Am I saying she carried the movie? Yes, I am. Even after her character’s shocking murder her presence is still evident throughout the rest of the film. Leigh managed to take one movie and create unparalleled horror history, a performance for which we owe her a lifetime of gratitude.

Could it be that without her role in Hitchcock’s Psycho the slasher genre would not have happened until much later, if at all? In two ways possibly yes.

Firstly, Psycho gave audiences a taste for knife-wielding madmen who stalked unknowing beauties when they were at their most vulnerable.

Secondly, Leigh literally gave birth to an idol. Years after Psycho, in John Carpenter’s Halloween, Curtis picked up her mother’s royal mantle and went on to make a horror legacy of her own. One that has impacted the life of every horror fan since.

Mother and daughter would appear together on screen in yet another horror classic – and my personal favorite ghost-related movie – The Fog. An eerie revenge tale about the horrors that lurk in the ethereal depths of the unseen.

(Image courtesy of film.org)

We would see the mother and daughter team up one more time with the twentieth anniversary of Halloween, H20. Once again Jamie Lee Curtis reprised her iconic role as Laurie Strode, but this time not as a babysitter, but as a mother fighting for the life of her own child against her murderous brother, Michael Myers.

It would seem horror ran deep in their family both on and off screen. These incredible ladies just can’t help but make us scream, and we love them for it.

Janet Leigh would have been 90 years old this year. Her contribution to horror is priceless. Sadly, she passed away at the age of 77, joining the honored ranks of such scream queens as Fay Wray, but her legacy shall outlive us all.

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Editorial

Why You May NOT Want To Go In Blind Before Watching ‘The Coffee Table’

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You might want to prepare yourself for some things if you plan to watch The Coffee Table now rentable on Prime. We aren’t going to go into any spoilers, but research is your best friend if you are sensitive to intense subject matter.

If you don’t believe us, maybe horror writer Stephen King might convince you. In a tweet he published on May 10, the author says, “There’s a Spanish movie called THE COFFEE TABLE on Amazon Prime and Apple+. My guess is you have never, not once in your whole life, seen a movie as black as this one. It’s horrible and also horribly funny. Think the Coen Brothers’ darkest dream.”

It is hard to talk about the film without giving anything away. Let’s just say there are certain things in horror movies that are generally off the, ahem, table and this film crosses that line in a big way.

The Coffee Table

The very ambiguous synopsis says:

“Jesus (David Pareja) and Maria (Estefanía de los Santos) are a couple going through a difficult time in their relationship. Nevertheless, they have just become parents. To shape their new life, they decide to buy a new coffee table. A decision that will change their existence.”

But there is more to it than that, and the fact that this might be the darkest of all comedies is also a little unsettling. Although it is heavy on the dramatic side too, the core issue is very taboo and might leave certain people sick and disturbed.

What’s worse is that it is an excellent movie. The acting is phenomenal and the suspense, masterclass. Compounding that it’s a Spanish film with subtitles so you have to look at your screen; it’s just evil.

The good news is The Coffee Table isn’t really that gory. Yes, there is blood, but it’s used more as just a reference than a gratuitous opportunity. Still, the mere thought of what this family has to go through is unnerving and I can guess many people will turn it off within the first half-hour.

Director Caye Casas has made a great film that might go down in history as one of the most disturbing ever made. You have been warned.

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Movies

Trailer For Shudder’s Latest ‘The Demon Disorder’ Showcases SFX

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It’s always interesting when award-winning special effects artists become directors of horror films. That is the case with The Demon Disorder coming from Steven Boyle who has done work on The Matrix movies, The Hobbit trilogy, and King Kong (2005).

The Demon Disorder is the latest Shudder acquisition as it continues adding high-quality and interesting content to its catalog. The film is the directorial debut of Boyle and he says he is happy that it will become a part of the horror streamer’s library coming fall 2024.

“We are thrilled that The Demon Disorder has reached its final resting place with our friends at Shudder,” said Boyle.  “It’s a community and fanbase that we hold in the highest esteem and we couldn’t be happier to be on this journey with them!”

Shudder echoes Boyle’s thoughts about the film, emphasizing his skill.

“After years of a creating a range of elaborate visual experiences through his work as a special effects designer on iconic films, we’re thrilled to give Steven Boyle a platform for his feature length directorial debut with The Demon Disorder,” said Samuel Zimmerman, Head of Programming for Shudder.  “Full of impressive body horror that fans have come to expect from this master of effects, Boyle’s film is an engrossing story about breaking generational curses that viewers will find both unsettling and amusing.”

The movie is being described as an “Australian family drama” that centers on, “Graham, a man haunted by his past since the death of his father and the estrangement from his two brothers. Jake, the middle brother, contacts Graham claiming that something is horribly wrong: their youngest brother Phillip is possessed by their deceased father. Graham reluctantly agrees to go and see for himself. With the three brothers back together, they soon realize they are unprepared for the forces against them and learn that the sins of their past will not stay hidden. But how do you defeat a presence that knows you inside and out? An anger so powerful it refuses to stay dead?”

The movie stars, John Noble (The Lord of the Rings), Charles CottierChristian Willis, and Dirk Hunter.

Take a look at the trailer below and let us know what you think. The Demon Disorder will begin streaming on Shudder this fall.

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Editorial

Remembering Roger Corman the Independent B-Movie Impresario

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Producer and director Roger Corman has a movie for every generation going back about 70 years. That means horror fans aged 21 and older have probably seen one of his films. Mr. Corman passed away on May 9 at the age of 98.

“He was generous, open-hearted, and kind to all those who knew him. A devoted and selfless father, he was deeply loved by his daughters,” his family said on Instagram. “His films were revolutionary and iconoclastic, and captured the spirit of an age.”

The prolific filmmaker was born in Detroit Michigan in 1926. The art of making films swayed his interest in engineering. So, in the mid-1950s he turned his attention to the silver screen by co-producing the film Highway Dragnet in 1954.

A year later he would get behind the lens to direct Five Guns West. The plot of that film sounds like something Spielberg or Tarantino would make today but on a multi-million dollar budget: “During the Civil War, the Confederacy pardons five criminals and sends them into Comanche-territory to recover Union-seized Confederate gold and capture a Confederate turncoat.”

From there Corman made a few pulpy Westerns, but then his interest in monster movies emerged starting with The Beast With a Million Eyes (1955) and It Conquered the World (1956). In 1957 he directed nine movies that ranged from creature features (Attack of the Crab Monsters) to exploitative teenage dramas (Teenage Doll).

By the 60s his focus turned mainly to horror movies. Some of his most famous of that period were based on Edgar Allan Poe’s works, The Pit and the Pendulum (1961), The Raven (1961), and The Masque of the Red Death (1963).

During the 70s he did more producing than directing. He backed a wide array of films, everything from horror to what would be called grindhouse today. One of his most famous films from that decade was Death Race 2000 (1975) and Ron Howard’s first feature Eat My Dust (1976).

In the following decades, he offered many titles. If you rented a B-movie from your local video rental place, he likely produced it.

Even today, after his passing, IMDb reports that he has two upcoming movies in post: Little Shop of Halloween Horrors and Crime City. Like a true Hollywood legend, he is still working from the other side.

“His films were revolutionary and iconoclastic, and captured the spirit of an age,” his family said. “When asked how he would like to be remembered, he said, ‘I was a filmmaker, just that.'”

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