Slasher Studios: Best Horror Opening Scenes

On this week’s show, Kevin Sommerfield and special guest co-host Joshua Schuh will be going over their favorite horror movie opening scenes. Scenes that set the tone for the rest of the film and let the audience know they were about to see something special. Make sure to listen in live tonight on 10PM central to find out what made the cut. Click on the link below to listen or to check out one of our previous shows.

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/slasherstudios/2011/09/05/slasher-studios-best-opening-scenes

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Slasher Studios: Most Annoying Horror Movie Characters

On this week’s episode of Slasher Studios, Steve Goltz and Kevin Sommerfield will be going over their lists of the most annoying characters ever put in horror films. Characters that you just couldn’t wait to see get sliced and diced. Make sure to listen in August 21st at 10PM central to see who makes the cut. Click on the link below to listen in live or to check out one of our previous shows.

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/slasherstudios/2011/08/22/slasher-studios-most-annoying-horror-characters

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Slasher Studios: Greatest Fears

On this week’s episode of Slasher Studios, Kevin Sommerfield and Steve Goltz will be talking about their great fears. Stuff that scares them, freaks them out, or things that they could never imagine happening to them. They will also be talking about horror filmmakers can use these fears to make a successful scary movie. It’s going to be a great show so make sure to tune and talk about your greatest fears. Click on the link below to listen live tonight at 10PM central or to check out one of our previous shows:

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/slasherstudios/2011/08/08/slasher-studios-greatest-fears

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Slasher Studios: Top Five Horror Movies that SHOULD Be Remade (Official List)

Remakes. It’s a dreaded word in the horror community. Why, you ask? Because most horror remakes suck. “The Amityville Horror”, “A Nightmare on Elm Street”, “The Fog”, “Friday the 13th” , even the best of these horror remakes have been lackluster to say the least. On this week’s webcast of Slasher Studios, we talked about horror movies that we think SHOULD be remake. Whether it was a problem with the script, the direction, the acting, or something else wrong with the production, the following are movies that have the potential to be great. They just didn’t quite work the first time around. For those of you who missed the show, click on the link below to listen to Kevin Sommerfield and special guest Joshua Schuh discuss their list.

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/slasherstudios/2011/07/21/slasher-studios-horror-movies-that-should-be-remade

The Official Slasher Studios Top Five:

5. “The Slumber Party Massacre”
Probably the best known of the popular “girls have a sleepover and get murdered one-by-one” subgenre of horror movies. “Slumber Party Massacre” is fun, a little bit cheesy, and quite outdated. The film moves at a snail’s pace throughout the first half and when the killer is reveled, he isn’t exactly frightening. This is a prime example of ripe 80’s cheese. It is fun for what it is but imagine a “Massacre” that was actually scary!?!

4. “The Burning”
A fun “Friday the 13th” rip-off that has some great death scenes and a memorable villain (Crospey has been and will always be freaky as hell. The problem with “The Burning”? Too many damn characters. So many characters in fact that none of them really leave an impression so that you don’t care who lives and who dies. This is a fun movie, don’t get me wrong, but I always thought that it could be a better movie than what it is.

3. “Sleepaway Camp”
Everyone remembers the ending of the film. Nearly no one remembers just how bad the rest of the film is. Like the other movies on this list, this is a great example of 80’s camp. It is so over-the-top, so loony, so terribly acted (the Aunt is a hoot), that it is seen more as a comedy than as a compelling horror movie. The ending is creepy as hell but imagine if something more was done with it. It gives me chills just thinking about it and if the rest of the film had been as compelling, it would probably be remembered as one of the best horror movies ever made.

2. “Happy Birthday to Me”
Another slasher in the string of holiday 80’s horror movies, “Happy Birthday to Me” is better than the majority of the pack. The acting is actually quite good, the murders are incredibly well staged, and the twist ending is pretty damn clever. Still at 110 minutes, the film is grossly overlong. At least 15 minutes could have been cut (especially the boring flashback sequences that add little to the story) and no one would have cared. The is probably the best made movie on the list and I think that a remake would be/could be fantastic.

1. “Slaughter High”
Probably the goofiest movie on the list. This movie takes the revenge aspect to a whole new level but adding on some of the worst acting you’ve ever seen, a lead “teen” who is at least two decades too old for her part, and a twist ending that makes no sense whatsoever. Still, the central story is quite strong and the deaths are well handled. “Slaughter High” will never be a “good” movie but a remake could be a hell of a lot of fun.

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Slasher Studios: Top 10 Horror Movies that Should be Remade (James List)

In order to get ready for our Blog Talk Radio show airing July 20th at 10pm, we decided to consult another slasher fan, James King, to see what top 10 horror movies he would like to see remade. His list is a good one and we will have to see tomorrow how many, if any, might also appear on our official list. Thanks again James for your list!

Click on the link below to listen to our show live or to check out one of our previous shows:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/slasherstudios

James’ Top 10 List:

1. Happy Birthday to Me (1981)

“You’re invited to the bloodiest party of the year.”

After losing her memory in a freak accident, Anderson returns to her school and an exclusive club. Days before her birthday the club members are gruesomely murdered.

2. Bad Dreams (1988)

“The scream you don’t hear… Is your own.”

Cynthia is the comatose — but sole — survivor of a mass suicide committed by a religious cult she belonged to. Thirteen years later she awakens from the coma and begins group therapy sessions, but soon she is plagued by horrific nightmares about Harris, the cult’s presumed-dead leader. When members of Cynthia’s therapy group start to die in gruesome, mysterious ways, Cynthia cannot help but wonder if Harris is really dead, and if not, will he come after her to finish what he started 13 years ago…

3. The Funhouse (1981)

“Pay to get in. PRAY to get out.”

Two teenage couples decide to spend a night inside the spooky funhouse of a traveling carnival, in this horror treat from cult director Tobe Hooper. Once inside, they find that there is no way out of this deadly hall of mirrors — with its white-trash zombies, sexual assaults and relentlessly gruesome murders.

4. Stage Fright (1987)

“The theatre of death.”

A troupe of struggling stage actors is rehearsing for a small-town production of a play. Everything seems to be as it should until one of the cast members turns up dead. In a panic, the others try to get out, only to find they are now locked in the theater with the killer! Which one of them committed the murder, and who will get out alive?

5. Killer Party (1986)

“By the end of the dance some of the sorority sisters were dead on their feet.”

A sorority holds an April Fool’s party in an abandon frat house that was closed down, because of the accidental death of a pledge. As all the guys and girls arrive, it appears the pledge’s spirit has never left the house and is determined to get revenge on somebody.

6. The Slumber Party Massacre (1982)

“Close your eyes for a second, and sleep forever.”

A group of scantily clad young ladies find it difficult to get any sleep when a mental patient shows up at their slumber party with an electric drill.

7. The Burning (1981)

“Gather Around the Campfire to Die!”

A former summer camp caretaker, horribly burned from a prank gone wrong, lurks around an upstate New York summer camp bent on killing the teenagers responsible for his disfigurement.

8. Terror Train (1980)

“The boys and girls of Sigma Phi. Some will live. Some will die.”

A masked killer targets six college kids responsible for a prank gone wrong years earlier and whom are currently throwing a large New Year’s Eve costume party aboard a moving train.

9. He Knows You’re Alone (1980)

“Every girl is frightened the night before her wedding, but this time… there’s good reason!”

A reluctant bride to be is stalked by a serial killer, who only kills brides and the people around them. Years before, the girl he loved rejected him for another man, and he killed her just before their wedding night. While her friends are murdered one by one, a hard boiled renegade detective, whose bride was the one that the killer murdered, tries to hunt him down before it is too late. Meanwhile, the bride has to figure out if it is all in her imagination or not, with the help of her ex-boyfriend.

10. Slaughter High (1986)

“Marty majored in cutting classmates.”

Marty was the nerd everyone made fun of. Now it’s five years later and he’s throwing a reunion for all his old “friends” – does he have a surprise for them? Five years ago Marty got mad…Now he’s going to get even.

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Slasher Studios: Top Five Favorite Scream Queens

On this week’s episode of Slasher Studios, we talked about our favorite Scream Queens/Final Girls. These are the women of horror who slashed up the screen and slashed up our hearts. The best of the best of horror heroines. Below is our list of favorite Scream Queens!

If you missed the show click on the link below to listen to an archive:

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/slasherstudios/2011/07/18/slasher-studios-final-girls-and-scream-queens

5. Jamie Lee Curtis

Curtis’s film debut occurred in the 1978 horror film “Halloween”, in which she played the role of Laurie Strode. The film was a major success and was considered the highest grossing independent film of its time, earning accolades as a classic horror film. Curtis was subsequently cast in several horror films, garnering her the title, “scream queen”.

Her next film was the horror film, The Fog, which was helmed by Halloween director John Carpenter. The film opened in February 1980 to mixed reviews but strong box office, further cementing Curtis as a horror film starlet. Her next film, “Prom Night”, was a low-budget Canadian slasher film released in July 1980. The film, for which she earned a Genie Award nomination for Best Performance by a Foreign Actress, was similar in style to Halloween, yet received negative reviews which marked it as a disposable entry in the then-popular “slasher film” genre.

That year, Curtis also starred in “Terror Train”, which opened in October and met with a negative reviews akin to Prom Night. Both films performed only moderately well at the box office. Curtis had a similar function in both films – the main character whose friends are murdered, and is practically the only protagonist to survive. Film critic Roger Ebert, who had given negative reviews to all three of Curtis’ 1980 films, said that Curtis “is to the current horror film glut what Christopher Lee was to the last horror movie glut-or Boris Karloff was in the 1930s”. Curtis later appeared in “Halloween II”, “Halloween H20: 20 Years Later” and “Halloween: Resurrection”, as well as giving an uncredited voice role in “Halloween III: Season of the Witch”.

4. Adrienne Barbeau

The ever enchanting Adrienne Barbeau is best known among horror fans as one of the original Scream Queens. She is one of the few actresses who is not afraid to attack each role with gusto. From Stevie Wayne, the beautiful, gravelly voiced DJ in John Carperter’s “The Fog” to the biggest bitch of in all horror anthologies, Wilma Northrup, in George Romero’s “Creepshow”; there is simply nothing that Barbeau can’t do. She has worked with some of the greats of the genre, including the aforementioned Carperter and Romero, she has also appeared as Alice Cable in Wes Craven’s underrated classic “Swamp Thing”. More recently she appearing in one of the best direct to video horror films Slasher Studios has ever seen, “The Convent”. A mix of “Evil Dead” and “Night of the Demons”, “The Convent” is a hoot and a must see for every genre fan. If you haven’t seen it yet, go over to Amazon and order your copy now. You won’t be disappointed.

3. Danielle Harris

Danielle Harris is, and has always been, one of my favorite “Scream Queens”. She has shown a dedication to the genre ever since she was a child. She has appeared in over two dozen horror movies, four of them in the “Halloween” series: “Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers” and “Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers” as Jamie Lloyd and Rob Zombie’s remakes “Halloween” and “Halloween II” as Annie Brackett. In 1988, she auditioned and was chosen (beating out Melissa Joan Hart) for the part of Jamie Lloyd, Michael Myers’s niece, in the movie “Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers”. Just one year later, she would reprise the role in “Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers”. The character of Jamie returned in 1995 for “Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers” but Harris did not participate due to disagreements regarding the changes to her character on the script. After seeing the final film, at least part of me is glad that she didn’t participate.

Harris would later return to the franchise in a much different role, that of Annie Brackett, in Rob Zombie’s “Halloween”, a 2007 reboot of John Carpenter’s classic 1978 original. In this film, she had nudity for a sex scene and her encounter with the dangerous Michael Myers, a career first. She stated “[It] is something that I wanted to do because everyone’s like, ‘Oh, she’s little Jamie. She’s 14.’ And it’s like, no, actually, I’m 30. It’s something that I’ve never done before.” She reprised her role in Zombie’s sorely underrated “Halloween II”.

2. Neve Campbell

Campbell’s first widely released film was the fun, “witchy” horror movie “The Craft”. She then got the role of her career. A role that would change her life as a Scream Queen forever. She was offered the leading role in “Scream”, directed by horror master Wes Craven. In the film, she plays Sidney Prescott who receives threatening phone calls from a killer with, who is obsessed with scary movies, on the anniversary of her mother’s death. Campbell stated that she “adored” the character saying “She’s a fantastic character for any kind of movie.” Sidney is depicted as an intelligent, resourceful young woman who slowly becomes stronger as she attempts to overcome the threats and deaths around her.

The film was a huge success, earning over $173 million at the worldwide box office, and winning critical acclaim. Campbell’s role as Sidney Prescott has received significant critical praise throughout the series, earning her the title of “Scream Queen in the 1990s”. Campbell won the Saturn Award for Best Actress for her role in “Scream”. She also received two Blockbuster Entertainment Awards for Favorite Actress – Horror, for “Scream 2″ and “Scream 3″. The film was followed by two sequels, both of which were also hugely successful, with “Scream 2″ earning over $170 million and “Scream 3″ earning over $160 million. Campbell won the MTV Movie Award for Best Female Performance for “Scream 2″. Roger Ebert, in his review of “Scream 3″, wrote of Campbell, “The camera loves her. She could become a really big star and then giggle at clips from this film at her AFI tribute”. In 2011, she reprised her role as Sidney Prescott in the wonderful “Scream 4″.

1. Heather Langenkamp

Heather Langenkamp wasn’t always a horror fan and admits that before she was cast in the role that would change her life that she had never seen a horror film. Funny that now, nearly 30 years later, the actress is remembered as one of the greatest horror Scream Queens of all time.

While she was studying at Stanford University, Wes Craven cast her as teen heroine Nancy Thompson in the original “A Nightmare on Elm Street” as he wanted someone very “girl next door” to play Nancy. He believed that Langenkamp met this quality. For the part, she beat out over 100 actresses. The film, follows the story of a group of teenagers who are killed in their dreams one-by-one by a past child murderer turned supernatural serial killer, whom their parents killed. The film was continued the 80′s slasher movie craze, following the trend set by “Halloween” and “Friday the 13th”.
The film introduced the iconic villain Freddy Krueger, played by Robert Englund. Nancy, as the film’s protagonist, lives, and defeats Krueger after he has killed all of her friends. Johnny Depp, in his feature film debut played Nancy Thompson’s boyfriend, Glen. Veteran film actor John Saxon played Nancy’s father, police lieutenant Donald Thompson. The film was both a critical and commercial success, earning a total of $25 million at the American box office. In 1985, she received the Best Actress Award at the Avoriaz Film Festival for this role. She also became one of the original scream queens and final girls.

She continued her role as Nancy in “A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors”, in which she co-starred alongside Patricia Arquette and Laurence Fishburne, and “Wes Craven’s New Nightmare”, in which she played herself, and through events in the narrative, she is compelled to reprise her role as Nancy Thompson. John Saxon also returned with Langenkamp in “Dream Warriors” and “New Nightmare”. “A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors” earned nearly $45 million at the domestic box office, making it both the highest grossing film for the studio that year. “Wes Craven’s New Nightmare” earned $18 million at the U.S. box office. The three films in the series in which Langenkamp stars are considered the three best due to their critical reception. As Craven write on the script that Langenkamp reads from, “Thank you for having the guts to play Nancy once last time”, the horror world couldn’t agree more.

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Slasher Studios: Top 10 Favorite Supporting Horror Movie Characters

This week on Slasher Studios Web Cast we talked about our Top 10 Favorite Horror Movie Supporting Characters. These are characters that never got the chance to be a “final girl” and never got a chance to revel in being a killer. The following is the Slasher Studios list of its favorite horror movie characters that never got the appreciation that they deserved.

To listen to our show:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/slasherstudios/2011/07/11/slasher-studios-top-10-horror-characters

Runner Up:

The Real Jennifer Jenzen- “House on Haunted Hill” (scenes deleted)
Poor Debi Mazer. Filmed three scenes in “House on Haunted Hill” and they were all cut. Thank god we have DVD so we see her revel in over-the-top goodness as Ali Larter’s bitchy producer boss. Every line out of her mouth is a zinger and every putdown crackles with energy.

Top 10:

10. Maddy-“Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood”
A geeky girl with spirit, Maddy is the perpetual best friend who can’t get a guy and doesn’t have a clue. After being told that she needs a little “touch up work”, Maddy gives herself a much needed makeover. Sadly, Jason is the only one who gets to see it as Maddy sees her ultimate demise just minutes later.

9. Suzanne-“ Night of the Demons” (1988)
What would the horror genre be without the slutty best friend? By all accounts, slutty best friends made up 40% of all slasher deaths in the 1980’s. Suzanne is the best of all of them. Whether it be a peep show at the convenience store (“Do you guys have sour balls?”) to a lip stick through the nipple, Suzanne was just out to have a good time.

8. Tangina- “Poltergeist” series
Everyone’s favorite little munchkin from horror, Tangina is a hoot. Whether it be the way that Zelda Rubinstein “sings” her lines or the fact that she is the only character in the entire series to know what the hell is going on, her character is just plain fun.

7. Lily-“Sleepaway Camp 3: Teenage Wasteland”
Another staple of the 80’s slasher genre: the overacting old lady. Lily just wanted to put the camp back together. She knows that no one wants to go to a camp where everyone has been “slauuuugghhtterred”! Lily is crazy fun and gets the ultimate death by Angela: death by lawnmower. “GET ME OUTTTTTTAA HERE!”

6. Annie-“Friday the 13th”
One of the sweetest characters ever in the “Friday” series, Annie should have been our final girl of the piece. Sadly, she is killed before she even has a chance to get to camp. She is fun, bubbly, and warm-hearted. Three traits missing from 90% of “Friday” teens.

5. Mo-“The Convent”
Mo, the pseudo goth girl who knows all the rules about demons. Mo is brash, in-your-face, and frequently quite hilarious. With lines like “Are you a bulimic bitch?” only adds to her appeal. Sadly, much like Annie, she doesn’t make it very far into the film.

4. Ethel-“Friday the 13th Part V: A New Beginning”
If “Sleepaway” had Lily, “Friday” had Ethel. Ethel is brass, white trash who utters every line with vile contempt. Every single scene that she appears on camera works in this film and she is easily the most entertaining adult character in the entire series. How can you not love a mom that tells her son that he’s “a big dildo” and should “eat his fucking slop”.

3. Kirby- “Scream 4”
A welcome surprise from the new “Scream” film, Kirby is sweet, fun, knowledgeable about horror movies, and beautiful. Kirby is the postmodern character that should be in every horror movie today.

2. Judy- “Sleepaway Camp”
The ultimate 80’s bitch. How bitchy is Judy? She has to have her name embroidered on her shirt. She is just plain mean. Along with her friend Meg (M-E-G) these two girls rule the show and play up the hammy campiness of the script beautiful.

1. Megan-“House of the Devil”
Poor Megan. One of the smartest, funniest, and most realistic college students I’ve seen on film, Megan is the best friend with the brains. She knows there’s something wrong with the house. Something wrong with the people that live there. She knows there’s a reason why her friend shouldn’t babysit. But sadly her friend doesn’t listen and Megan becomes the first victim in one of the all time great jump scenes of the past decade. Poor Megan.

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Slasher Studios’ Holiday Horror Hits

On this week’s episode of Slasher Studios, Kevin Sommerfield and Steve Goltz will be counting down their top 10 favorite Holiday Horror movies at a special time THIS Friday June 17th at 3pm central. Make sure to call in to talk about your favorite Holiday Horror movies and we’ll see which holiday is the favorite “Holiday of the Slashers”.

Click here to listen LIVE or to check out some of our older shows:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/slasherstudios

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“Why Would They Want to do That?!? Sequels Suck!”

Just a reminder to everyone that our show is tonight! On tonight’s show, Steve Goltz and Kevin Sommerfield will be looking at their top ten favorite horror sequels. Movies we think are just as good, about as good, and, in some cases, even better than their predecessor. So make sure to listen in with your list and call in to talk about the horror sequels that YOU really love! It’s going to be a great show! Tonight at 10PM central. Click on the link below for more details or to listen to a previous show.

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/slasherstudios

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Slasher Studios: Top 10 Best Horror Sequels

On this week’s show, Steve Goltz and Kevin Sommerfield will be looking at their top ten favorite horror sequels. Movies we think are just as good, about as good, and, in some cases, even better than their predecessor. So make sure to listen in with your list and call in to talk about the horror sequels that YOU really love! It’s going to be a great show! June 12th at 10PM central. Click on the link below for more details or to listen to a previous show.

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/slasherstudios

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