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Oct 2020

Never heard of The Professor's Teddy Bear, going to check that out. Anything unusual or uncanny-valley horror is always a plus for me. Thanks for these recommendations!

Hereditary I've seen. I don't care what anybody says, Toni Collette was 100% robbed of the Oscar that year. That was hands-down the best horror performance I've ever seen. Those mournful screams haunted me all night. The dinner scene was also incredible. I didn't like Midsommer though. I don't know why I was laughing through all of The Exorcist, maybe I need a (plague) doctor.

My god, Spawn is a classic for sure. Who's your favourite villain? I love Clown/Violator. And do you have a favourite Cenobite? I like Chatterer.

F**KING A RIGHT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THANK YOU FOR NOTICING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
(I mean, ahem, yes...yes she did, that was one of the most heart-wrenching dinner scenes ever.)

Your orc description is hilarious! I like it. And I absolutely love The Craft (the original one) too.

I'm one of those pumpkin-pie enjoying weirdos. Now that I think about it...I don't even know why I like it.

If I could be a monster I'd be a dragon because I have a long list of grievances.

Started a horror Anthology! It's got a horror host named Mikki Menace who tells stories within the framing narrative of a phone call to a friend.

Also, The Bad Seed is my favorite scary movie, and book hands down. I even use it as my photo here on forums and on my main page on tapas!

Here on Tapas, I really like Sally Nosferatu!

Books: I just finished rereading Dracula last night - I hadn't read it since middle school and I wanted to see how it held up since I remembered enjoying it then. My opinion: the first few chapters are really strong but then it kinda drags for the rest of the book. Still, it was an overall enjoyable experience and it's nice to see where a lot of modern tropes originated in this novel. I have a trend of making comics about whatever book I've recently read and I was hoping I'd be able to get one for Dracula before Halloween, but I couldn't quite make it. Though I do have an older comic about Frankenstein that I might repost on Twitter and Reddit for the season.

TV: For a few years I've been hearing the cartoon aficionados say good things about the 2012 series Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated so I figured Halloween season was the best time to check it out. The first 10 or so episodes of the first season are kind of interesting, fairly formulaic with some annoying bits (Velma is kind of terrible in a lot of the early episodes) but once the overarching plot gets into gear near the end of the first season there's a noticeable increase in quality that's gotten me invested. I'm a few episodes into the second season, which is where I've heard most of the praise come from, so I'm looking forward to how that turns out.

Movies: I'm saving these movies for Halloween, as that's how I plan on spending the day. Train to Busan is something I haven't seen yet but I constantly hear good things about it, so I figured Halloween would be an appropriate time to check it out. Scooby-Doo On Zombie Island is a childhood favorite of mine and the moment I saw that it was on Netflix I knew I had to slot it into my Halloween viewing list. It's probably my favorite piece of Scooby-Doo media and it legitimately holds up as a quality film overall with genuine horror elements. Over the Garden Wall isn't a film, but it is an animated mini-series that's practically the same length as a film. It's a charming little series about two brothers who get lost in a spooky forest and has a good mix of lighthearted fun and frightening themes/imagery. It uses old-fashioned Americana visuals and music that's not really seen anymore in modern media.

I may include more in my viewing list by the time Halloween proper arrives, but that's just what I've got so far.

Starting Mr. Mercedes by Stephen king (a well overdue read for me)

I'm off to find this right now! :laughing: In case you find a link, please send it to me.

Horror movies: I recently watched the Autopsy of Jane Doe.

Horror novel/comic:
1) Stories from Alternate Realities by May Ravenwood (@MayR ). It is a collection of many short stories, I finished the first one. It's about a zombie-infested city.

2) Karana by Kainat Arma (@uselessgoddess) . It is a fantasy but with awesome horror vibes to it. You should check it out!

Favourite horror novelist/artist: Jihye Han, creator of the comic Jack: The American Ghost. Ahh, I've never read something so unique before!

Dark music: Lullaby of Woe, from the Witcher. That should be the most recent one.

What would I be doing in Halloween: I wish we celebrated Halloween in our country!

What do I like most about Halloween/Horror: The spookiness. I don't like gore and violence but I'm totally into those bats against the full moon, those hoots of the owls, those long shadows and leafless the trees and things like that...

If I could be a monster?: Ahhh, a Vampire :heart_eyes: They're so dark and sophisticated.

Ever had a creepy experience: Hmm. In our land, it's said that if you're near a foul-smelling area, there is an evil spirit around, so you should chant prayers to drive it away. I was alone in my house once (this is from when I was a child). It was getting late and my parents hadn't returned. I was studying when an awful smell emerged from somewhere. I went straight for my phone to call my parents but the battery died down. It scared me so much that I stood frozen stiff, and began praying like crazy and the smell vanished after some time. Strange occurrence.

Horror novel I'm writing? Ahh, I don't know if I should call it a horror. It has spooky vibes in it and I can't do without spooky. There are ghosts and cemeteries and dark themes in it, so maaaybe I'll take my chances and drop the link here:

Happy Halloween everyone! :jack_o_lantern:

@wh_vigo

In my case, I'm either watching horror movies, watching The Simpsons Treehouse of Horror specials(The Good Ones) or even replaying Bendy and the Ink Machine.

Thanks for sharing. I read the first chapter - it's a bit hard to tell which character is speaking and where the dialogue is separate from the narrative. It's an interesting concept though (I wrote a horror chapter that takes place almost entirely in an online chat room) and I encourage you to keep refining it and above all; keep writing.

Are you writing the anthology with anyone? If you're the only author, that means you're writing a collection (I'm writing one, too).

ABSOLUTELY FANTASTIC MOVIE!!!!

that was slow-burn horror at its BEST and deserved a lot more attention than it did. :smiley:

Thanks for the feedback! I changed the title and put in some ellipsis to indicate breaks in where speech stops and starts. That really helped!

Halloween isn't something commonly celebrated here, sadly, so a lot of spooky season vibes were quite nostalgic for me lol.

Movies: Not much of a horror movie geek, as I'm faint of heart and squeamish. I remember watching IT and all of Conjuring movies, though. I also watched "Train to Busan" in high school with all my classmates, and we watched it on a small laptop screen instead of using projector. But, one movie that stuck in (and traumatize) me was "Monster House". That movie was insane for a kids movie. Also, I remembered when I was young, my relatives didn't let me join in to watch local horror movies lol.

Novel(ist): Goosebumps! Definitely a classic. Collecting a lot of it. I also read "Slasher Girls & Monster Boys" anthology. Pretty fun of an anthology. Well, one that stuck in me the most was "Holy Mother" by Akiyoshi Rikako. It was really insane. More of a dark mystery/thriller, though, but crazy regardless. The plot twist was also crazy. Akiyoshi Rikako also wrote a few other novels that are arguably as great.

Art(ist): Junji Ito. The legend. I also remember reading Usamaru Furuya. A little weird, but cool regardless. Horrors I read recently would be Apocalypse no Toride, which was about zombie. Great story, I got to cry a lot.

Horror music: I remember listening to Gloomy Sunday when it was famous. Also, there's this song that is known to attract a ghost. In high school, sometimes, my friends would randomly play it in class and we all freaked out.

Events: As Halloween isn't commonly celebrated here (:cry_01:), my memory of celebrating halloween was at my English course place. We had a trick or treat event where we went to each room, played some minigames, and got candies. There was even one room dimmed where the teacher dressed as a witch lol

Spooky things: I was little when this happened. I was tailing by brother and our cousin, they were fighting about something. We entered a bedroom, where there was a bathroom at the corner of the room. The door was initially closed. They kept arguing until suddenly the door slammed on itself. I didn't see it open, but we heard the slam. I cried lol and the two of them stopped fighting.

Horror novel: I think I tried writing an experimental kinda thriller-ish (lol not sure) short movie script once, but I think I've deleted it.

Maybe the ghost was irritated by the bickering.

Indeed. There were a lot of beings living in my granny's house before it was renovated. From tales that my big family told me, it seemed to me that the ghosts were actually kind of playful tho :rofl:

I haven't read Dracula since middle school either. I agree it kinda drags in the middle. I remember really enjoying the first few chapters and the end but the middle being a bit tougher to get through. Speaking of middle school, might give Lord of the Flies or Animal Farm another go. Coincidentally, I re-read Frankenstein not too long ago!

Train to Busan was a good one. I'm not much for zombie horror but there are some that resonated like 28 Days Later, The Girl With All the Gifts (watch this one if you want to cry and be terrified). I'm also looking forward to Little Monsters, it's a horror-comedy about a kindergarten teacher protecting her students while on a field trip when the zombie outbreak starts (trailer).

I've seen some of Over the Garden Wall. It definitely has some unsettling/trippy qualities.