HorrorRealm Radio Episode #3 Felissa Rose

On this episode of HorrorRealm Radio the guys welcome Felissa Rose, the star of Sleepaway Camp, Victor Crowley, A Nun’s Curse and more to the show. Check out the conversation about her films and her upcoming appearance at HorrorRealm!

HorrorRealm Radio Episode #3 Felissa Rose

Now Streaming: 80s and 90s Western Double Feature

Our need for entertainment has never been greater. Let’s check out some of the great television and movies available on streaming platforms.

Tonight’s Genre: WESTERN

Tonight, we dive into a double shot of 1980’s and 1990’s Westerns. There weren’t many during that period, but there were some great ones!

First Pick: Unforgiven (1992)

In this Western drama, two rival bounty hunters come into conflict with each other as they try to be the first to murder a gang of criminals. The film stars and was directed by Clint Eastwood, and it won the Oscar for Best Picture in 1993.

Yidio Plot Synopsis

To stream this with AMAZON PRIME for a low cost, click this link:

https://amzn.to/3axPCrr

Second Pick: Silverado (1985)

Silverado is an enchanting western comedy. Without giving, too much away the basic plot for the movie is simple, yet it will keep you very entertained for the entire film. Two brothers are heading to California during the late 1800’s and they need to stop in a town called Silverado so they can say goodbye to their only sister. Along the way, they run into several troubling situations like a caravan that needs help and a town that is run by a corrupt sheriff. They get out of one predicament and along come another. During their travels, they meet up with two other men that are in similar predicaments. The four men decide that they should ride together. They become quick friends and soon find out that they have a common goal.

This movie features some well-known actors that are early in their professional careers. It is one of the movie’s that helped launched the career of Kevin Costner. Kevin Costner plays one of the two brothers that is on their way to California. He plays an entertainingly goofy and unpredictable character. The brother playing opposite to Kevin Costner is Scott Glenn. Scott Glenn was an up and coming actor at the time. The other two members of their little group were Danny Glover and Kevin Kline. Kevin Kline was fresh off a hit movie and Danny Glover was an unknown. All four went on to great careers. These four worked perfectly together and they all made very believable characters. The rest of the cast for the movies featured some excellent role players. People like Jeff Goldblum, Rosanna Arquette, Brian Dennehy, and Linda Hunt did great jobs with their characters.

Western comedies that are both well written and funny are rare. Silverado is both of those things. It is a great chance to see some of your favorite actors at the beginning of their careers.

Yidio Plot Synopsis

To stream this with AMAZON PRIME for a low cost, click this link:

https://amzn.to/2VD85io

Now Streaming: 80s and 90s Western Double Feature

Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948)

Comedy and horror can be tricky. Comedy has to hit you as a surprise. Horror is often the result of surprise. Typically comedies and horror films have difficulty “holding up” over the years. Taste in comedy and horror is typically a contemporary affair and adapts to the times that surround it.

So how, oh, how has Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein held up after all these years?

The real Monster Squad assembles!

Was it the cast? This is one of the few appearances of Bela Lugosi as Dracula for Universal (he was often passed over for various reasons) despite being the iconic figure for the character. The incredible Lon Chaney Jr. is here as the classic Larry Talbot Wolf Man. Even Glenn Strange does an admirable job in the boots that Boris Karloff first made famous as Frankenstein.

Yes, Bela really is holding his cape up like that. And here you thought that was just a trope.

It is the comedy? Bud Abbott and Lou Costello typically recreated old vaudeville routines on the screen, but this movie is lighter than air. No set routines, but plenty of the wheezy fear takes of Costello shouting for “Chick!” to point at something that inevitably went away by the time Abbott returns.

Lon Chaney juggles his roles as Talbot and the Wolf Man with his usual expertise.

Is it the horror elements? I remember as a child being mesmerized by the classic transformation of the Wolf Man with Jack Pierce’s iconic makeup design. I was also impressed with the transformation of Dracula into a bat animated by Woody Woodpecker creator Walter Lantz. The hypnotic scenes of Dracula with his victims are chilling and the destructive feats of strength by Frankenstein are thrilling.

Sleepwalking monsters are always a favorite

Is it nostalgia? Perhaps. Certainly references to the Lucky Strike ad campaign (So round. So firm. So fully packed.) are not landing as jokes in 2020 as they did in mid-century America. But there is something disarming with the mix of wordplay, slapstick bumbling and a straight on classic Universal horror film. While Abbott and Costello play for laughs, the rest of the cast were playing things absolutely straight; sometimes ignoring things no human could ever truly ignore in service of the film.

It’s just crate film!

I think this combination is what brings us one of the greatest Halloween movies of all time. It was actually banned in some territories upon original release and still could scare an uninitiated child and illicit laughs even after you’ve seen every sequence and know every line of dialogue.

Grade: A-

Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948)