We all have those movies that we saw as kids and were horribly scarred-slash-influenced by. They aren't always good movies. In fact, I'd say a lot of them are bad movies, which we love because hey, when you're a kid, men in rubber suits chasing girls in bikinis after inexplicable beachfront musical numbers are pure gold. These are the movies that make us the people we become as adults. For me, these movies were split just about fifty-fifty between "really bad horror movies" and "candy-colored cartoon wonderlands." This explains a great many things, if you stop and think about it for a moment. Or don't. It might be better for you.
One of my most formative films was a creepy little horror-comedy called The Night of the Creeps [Amazon]. It, along with The Monster Squad, Night of the Comet, and Buffy: The Vampire Slayer, informed me on a very deep and meaningful level. And it has been totally unavailable for years now, due to rights issues and the fact that, let's face it, they needed to wait for those of us who remembered loving this movie were old enough to have disposable income.
Guess what came out on DVD today?
There is so much love.
October 20 2009, 22:17:30 UTC 7 years ago
I do so love living in the future. When I was growing up, we waited *weeks* for movies to come to the military bases where we lived, and many months before the bookmobile got hold of new titles. Now I can read a movie or book recommendation, find it on line and put it in my Netflix queue/download it to my Kindle, all in under a minute.
October 21 2009, 08:16:13 UTC 7 years ago