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Dark Disney: Nine Times the House of Mouse Embraced Its Creepy Side

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Dark Disney

Walt Disney isn’t generally the studio one thinks of when considering good, creepy entertainment. Let’s face it, the mention of Disney generally brings to mind animated princesses, heroes, and happy endings.

It’s no wonder, really. The studio has been the benchmark for family entertainment since it first opened its doors in 1923.

Oh sure, they’ve had their traumatic moments.

Will anyone ever forget poor Bambi losing his mother–what is it with that studio and missing mothers anyway–or Simba trying to wake Mufasa after the wildebeest stampede?

They’ve even brought in Tim Burton to bring some of his particularly fun creations to life.

Despite those serious stories and despite its more recent mergers and acquisitions, however, the name Disney is still synonymous with wholesome family entertainment.

Yet, there have been times when the studio has fully embraced its creepy side in the nearly 96 years since it first opened its doors, and when they’ve done it well, they’ve produced nothing short of nightmare fuel.

Here are nine of my favorite creepy Disney flicks in no particular order. What are some of yours?

Authors Note: The discussion of these films includes some spoilers. If you’re not familiar with a title, we recommend you skip it, see the film, and then return for the discussion!

The Legend of Sleepy Hollow

Based on Washington Irving’s classic tale, The Legend of Sleepy Hollow was first released in 1949 and is well-known for its mash-up of slapstick comedy and dark imagery.

When schoolmaster Ichabod Crane arrives in the Dutch village called Sleepy Hollow, he soon finds himself locked in a romantic rivalry for the attentions of Katrina Van Tassel with local tough, Brom Bones. Bones always seems to find himself on the losing end until he discovers and decides to exploit Crane’s superstitious beliefs on Halloween night.

As everyone gathers around, Bones tells the story of the evil Headless Horseman who rides the lonely hillside searching for his head. The tale is terrifying, and the song that Bones sings about the vindictive spirit was considered so dark at the time that it was nearly cut from the short film all together.

Events go from chilling to terrifying as Crane leaves the holiday gathering only to discover he’s being followed.

Bing Crosby narrates and provides the voices of Bones and Crane in the otherwise silent film, and the image of the Headless Horseman on horseback holding a flaming jack o’lantern may be one of the most striking Disney ever produced.

Darby O’Gill and the Little People

The Banshee emerges in Darby O’Gill and the Little People

Setting aside the stereotype of the drunken Irish storyteller, Darby O’Gill and the Little People introduced an entire generation of American kids to Irish legends of leprechauns and gave them nightmares about the mysterious, wailing banshee.

Old Darby O’Gill (Albert Sharpe) has been a friendly adversary of King Brian of the Leprechauns (Jimmy O’Dea) for most of his life. However, when Darby loses his position as caretaker of Lord Fitzpatrick’s property to the handsome Michael (pre-007 Sean Connery), he finds he’s in need of the old King’s help.

As the film twists and turns, Darby soon finds himself fighting to save the life of his daughter Katie (Janet Munro) as the Banshees close in and the dark hearse arrives to take her soul away.

Its themes of death and vengeful spirits make it a particular standout in the Disney vault. The wraith-like, hooded banshee will chill you to the bone, and you’ll find yourself completely enthralled by the film from start to finish.

Return to Oz

Dark Disney

I will never, ever forget the first time I saw Return to Oz. It took me months to recover from it.

Much more loyal to L. Frank Baum’s original stories, the film finds Dorothy (a young and wide-eyed Fairuza Balk) trapped in an asylum for treatment of her “delusions” of a land called Oz. The poor girl is obviously being prepared for electro-convulsive therapy when she finds herself once again whisked away to the mysterious land to find it even darker than her last visit.

Characters like the Nome King and the sadistic Wheelers were terrifying. The idea of a desert whose sands would turn you to dust was harrowing.

It was the vain and powerful Mombi (Jean Marsh) that supplied a lot of the film’s nightmare fuel, however. One look at her chamber of heads which she switched out to fit her whims and moods was enough to have us covering our eyes and looking away.

It was, to date, one of the darkest things the studio had ever produced, and its status as a cult classic was almost guaranteed by a legion of horror fans who got their first taste of scary in its clutches.

The Black Cauldron

Speaking of terrifying villains…

When a young boy named Taran finds himself caring for a scrying pig named Hen Wen his world is turned upside down. Hen Wen, you see, can show the location of the ancient and powerful Black Cauldron, and no one covets the Cauldron’s power more than the evil Horned King.

Taran and a band of misfits soon find themselves caught up in a race to the mysterious relic in a fight to save all mankind from the Horned King’s lust for power. The image of the Horned King seared itself into the imagination of moviegoers at the time, and there was an outcry from “concerned parents” over the film’s seriously dark tone.

The Black Cauldron was so unexpected that critics, audiences, and the studios didn’t know quite what to do with it. Many hold it responsible for nearly sinking Disney in the 80s as it was the first of their animated films to receive a PG rating.

The studio’s animation is some of the most frightening its ever produced thanks in part to new technology that was developing at the time.

After its initial box office flop, Disney locked the film away in the vault for a very long time, but the legend of The Black Cauldron endured and it was eventually given an anniversary edition DVD release and is still available on multiple streaming services.

The Watcher in the Woods

Call it whatever you like, but Disney’s The Watcher in the Woods bears all the markings of a legit, classic supernatural horror film.

When an American family moves into a sprawling manor in the English countryside, they find themselves in the middle of a supernatural mystery. It seems that teenaged daughter, Jan (Lynn-Holly Johnson) bears a striking resemblance to the daughter of the manor’s owner, Mrs. Aytwood, played by none other than Bette Davis. Karen had disappeared years before and the woman has never recovered from the loss.

Soon Jan and her sister Ellie (Halloween‘s Kyle Richards) are haunted by an unknown presence, the Watcher, and strike out to find out exactly what happened to Karen all those years before.

Between the seances, the suggestion of inter-dimensional travel, and a setting that would make the most ardent fan of ghost stories proud, The Watcher in the Woods has been hailed as one of the scariest films the studio ever produced.

The film was eventually remade starring Anjelica Huston in 2017, but the remake never quite captured the spark of the original.

Fantasia

There are actually quite a few things creepy about Disney’s classic 1940 masterpiece Fantasia.

Watching the rise and fall of entire species in a section of animation set to the music of Stravinsky’s ballet The Rite of Spring comes almost immediately to mind, and call me crazy but there is something unsettling about all those mops coming to life and creating havoc in The Sorceror’s Apprentice.

But it was in one of the film’s closing sections featuring Moussorgksy’s Night on Bald Mountain where they decided to throw caution to the wind and terrify their audience. As the music begins, the dark Slavic God Chernobog rises on top of the mountain and spreads his bat-like wings before reaching down, unleashing horrors to toy with the damned spirits of the living.

It was an impressively dark and terrifying piece of animation that stamps itself onto your brain even as the music gives way to an ethereal setting of Schubert’s Ave Maria.

Something Wicked This Way Comes

Something Wicked Disney Dark

Sadly this film has almost been lost to obscurity save for the die hard fans who have held onto it over the decades.

Based on the novel by Ray Bradbury, Something Wicked This Way Comes tells the story of a small town confronted with a dangerous evil when Mr. Dark’s Pandemonium Carnival rolls into town one stormy night.

Before long it becomes apparent that Mr. Dark (Jonathan Pryce) is making deals with and stealing the souls of the town’s citizens and its up to two boys to stop the carnival owner and his henchman from completing his dark objective.

The film boasted an impressive cast alongside Pryce including screen legends Jason Robards (All the President’s Men) and Diane Ladd (Kingdom Hospital). Still, it was trouble almost from conception.

Bradbury had originally written a script for the film in the early 1950s but when it failed to reach the screen, he turned the story in to a novel. Later, when Disney picked up the project, Bradbury wrote a new script but executives at Disney were unsure of the script’s potential.

When it was finally finished, it fared poorly at test screenings and Disney pushed back the release in order to re-edit, re-shoot, and re-score the film. Its finished product upset both Bradbury and the film’s director Jack Clayton.

Still, the film retained much of its dark imagery, and the scene in which Pryce reveals the tattoos on his body of the souls he’s collected is particularly harrowing.

After a short theatrical run, the film found its way into the Disney vault, though it has been released since then on DVD.

The Hunchback of Notre Dame

Based on Victor Hugo’s novel, it was almost impossible to believe that Disney would attempt to bring a version of the story to animated life. Nothing, and I mean nothing, in that original tale was written for children.

Adapt it they did, however, and in doing so brought one of their most most divisive animated films to the big screen in the summer of 1996.

The film boasted one of the studio’s richest scores to date featuring music by Alan Menken and songs by Stephen Schwartz that drew heavily upon the Catholic requiem mass.

It also went full bore into the territory of sexual obsession in a story line involving Judge Claude Frollo (Tony Jay) and his lust for the gypsy Esmerelda (Demi Moore). Despite their best efforts, including a trio of wise-cracking gargoyles, nothing could erase the image of Frollo singing a song titled “Hellfire” before a blazing fireplace as seductive images of Esmerelda danced in the flames and a horde of fiendish cloaked figures watched on in judgement.

It was more than a little creepy, and made Frollo one of their most repulsive villains to date.

The Black Hole

Dark Disney

In 1979, Disney, like almost every other studio known to man, was reeling from the success of Star Wars and had decided to release its own space epic.

Their first problem came in marketing when they played it off as a fun space epic.

In reality, The Black Hole earned the studio’s first PG rating on one of their live action films with the story of crew on a space ship who find what appears to be an abandoned craft in deep space. Upon closer inspect, they find that everyone on the ship has vanished save for Dr. Reinhardt (Maximilian Schell) and his small army of robots and androids.

It seems that Reinhardt is intent upon flying directly into a black hole no matter the cost.

The film boasted an impressive cast including Anthony Perkins (Psycho), Ernest Borgnine (Escape from New York), and Tom McLoughlin, who would later pen Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives.

I’m not sure what you’d call the darkest aspect of this particular tale. The scientist’s madness? The discovery that his androids are actually the lobotomized members of his former crew? The glimpse of something hellish beyond the Black Hole?

No matter the answer, it remains one of Disney’s darkest films to date.

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Lists

Thrills and Chills: Ranking ‘Radio Silence’ Films from Bloody Brilliant to Just Bloody

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Radio Silence Films

Matt Bettinelli-Olpin, Tyler Gillett, and Chad Villella are all filmmakers under the collective label called Radio Silence. Bettinelli-Olpin and Gillett are the primary directors under that moniker while Villella produces.

They have gained popularity over the past 13 years and their films have become known as having a certain Radio Silence “signature.” They are bloody, usually contain monsters, and have breakneck action sequences. Their recent film Abigail exemplifies that signature and is perhaps their best film yet. They are currently working on a reboot of John Carpenter’s Escape From New York.

We thought we would go through the list of projects they have directed and rank them from high to low. None of the movies and shorts on this list are bad, they all have their merits. These rankings from top to bottom are just ones we felt showcased their talents the best.

We didn’t include movies they produced but didn’t direct.

#1. Abigail

An update to the second film on this list, Abagail is the natural progression of Radio Silence’s love of lockdown horror. It follows in pretty much the same footsteps of Ready or Not, but manages to go one better — make it about vampires.

Abigail

#2. Ready or Not

This film put Radio Silence on the map. While not as successful at the box office as some of their other films, Ready or Not proved that the team could step outside their limited anthology space and create a fun, thrilling, and bloody adventure-length film.

Ready or Not

#3. Scream (2022)

While Scream will always be a polarizing franchise, this prequel, sequel, reboot — however you want to label it showed just how much Radio Silence knew the source material. It wasn’t lazy or cash-grabby, just a good time with legendary characters we love and new ones who grew on us.

Scream (2022)

#4 Southbound (The Way Out)

Radio Silence tosses their found footage modus operandi for this anthology film. Responsible for the bookend stories, they create a terrifying world in their segment titled The Way Out, which involves strange floating beings and some sort of time loop. It’s kind of the first time we see their work without a shaky cam. If we were to rank this entire film, it would remain at this position on the list.

Southbound

#5. V/H/S (10/31/98)

The film that started it all for Radio Silence. Or should we say the segment that started it all. Even though this isn’t feature-length what they managed to do with the time they had was very good. Their chapter was titled 10/31/98, a found-footage short involving a group of friends who crash what they think is a staged exorcism only to learn not to assume things on Halloween night.

V/H/S

#6. Scream VI

Cranking up the action, moving to the big city and letting Ghostface use a shotgun, Scream VI turned the franchise on its head. Like their first one, this film played with canon and managed to win over a lot of fans in its direction, but alienated others for coloring too far outside the lines of Wes Craven’s beloved series. If any sequel was showing how the trope was going stale it was Scream VI, but it managed to squeeze some fresh blood out of this nearly three-decade mainstay.

Scream VI

#7. Devil’s Due

Fairly underrated, this, Radio Silence’s first feature-length film, is a sampler of things they took from V/H/S. It was filmed in an omnipresent found footage style, showcasing a form of possession, and features clueless men. Since this was their first bonafide major studio job it’s a wonderful touchstone to see how far they have come with their storytelling.

Devil’s Due

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Perhaps the Scariest, Most Disturbing Series of The Year

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You may have never heard of Richard Gadd, but that will probably change after this month. His mini-series Baby Reindeer just hit Netflix and it’s a terrifying deep dive into abuse, addiction, and mental illness. What is even scarier is that it’s based on Gadd’s real-life hardships.

The crux of the story is about a man named Donny Dunn played by Gadd who wants to be a stand-up comedian, but it’s not working out so well thanks to stage fright stemming from his insecurity.

One day at his day job he meets a woman named Martha, played to unhinged perfection by Jessica Gunning, who is instantly charmed by Donny’s kindness and good looks. It doesn’t take long before she nicknames him “Baby Reindeer” and begins to relentlessly stalk him. But that is just the apex of Donny’s problems, he has his own incredibly disturbing issues.

This mini-series should come with a lot of triggers, so just be warned it is not for the faint of heart. The horrors here don’t come from blood and gore, but from physical and mental abuse that go beyond any physiological thriller you may have ever seen.

“It’s very emotionally true, obviously: I was severely stalked and severely abused,” Gadd said to People, explaining why he changed some aspects of the story. “But we wanted it to exist in the sphere of art, as well as protect the people it’s based on.”

The series has gained momentum thanks to positive word-of-mouth, and Gadd is getting used to the notoriety.

“It’s clearly struck a chord,” he told The Guardian. “I really did believe in it, but it’s taken off so quickly that I do feel a bit windswept.”

You can stream Baby Reindeer on Netflix right now.

If you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted, please contact the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673) or go to rainn.org.

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Movies

The Original ‘Beetlejuice’ Sequel Had an Interesting Location

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beetlejuice in Hawaii Movie

Back in the late ’80s and early ’90s sequels to hit movies weren’t as linear as they are today. It was more like “let’s re-do the situation but in a different location.” Remember Speed 2, or National Lampoon’s European Vacation? Even Aliens, as good as it is, follows a lot of the plot points of the original; people stuck on a ship, an android, a little girl in peril instead of a cat. So it makes sense that one of the most popular supernatural comedies of all time, Beetlejuice would follow the same pattern.

In 1991 Tim Burton was interested in doing a sequel to his 1988 original, it was called Beetlejuice Goes Hawaiian:

“The Deetz family moves to Hawaii to develop a resort. Construction begins, and it’s quickly discovered that the hotel will be sitting on top of an ancient burial ground. Beetlejuice comes in to save the day.”

Burton liked the script but wanted some re-writes so he asked then-hot screenwriter Daniel Waters who had just got done contributing to Heathers. He passed on the opportunity so producer David Geffen offered it to Troop Beverly Hills scribe Pamela Norris to no avail.

Eventually, Warner Bros. asked Kevin Smith to punch up Beetlejuice Goes Hawaiian, he scoffed at the idea, saying, “Didn’t we say all we needed to say in the first Beetlejuice? Must we go tropical?”

Nine years later the sequel was killed. The studio said Winona Ryder was now too old for the part and an entire re-cast needed to happen. But Burton never gave up, there were a lot of directions he wanted to take his characters, including a Disney crossover.

“We talked about lots of different things,” the director said in Entertainment Weekly. “That was early on when we were going, Beetlejuice and the Haunted MansionBeetlejuice Goes West, whatever. Lots of things came up.”

Fast-forward to 2011 when another script was pitched for a sequel. This time the writer of Burton’s Dark Shadows,  Seth Grahame-Smith was hired and he wanted to make sure the story wasn’t a cash-grabbing remake or reboot. Four years later, in 2015, a script was approved with both Ryder and Keaton saying they would return to their respective roles. In 2017 that script was revamped and then eventually shelved in 2019.

During the time the sequel script was being tossed around in Hollywood, in 2016 an artist named Alex Murillo posted what looked like one-sheets for a Beetlejuice sequel. Although they were fabricated and had no affiliation with Warner Bros. people thought they were real.

Perhaps the virality of the artwork sparked interest in a Beetlejuice sequel once again, and finally, it was confirmed in 2022 Beetlejuice 2 had a green light from a script written by Wednesday writers  Alfred Gough and Miles Millar. The star of that series Jenna Ortega signed on to the new movie with filming starting in 2023. It was also confirmed that Danny Elfman would return to do the score.

Burton and Keaton agreed that the new film titled Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice wouldn’t rely on CGI or other other forms of technology. They wanted the film to feel “handmade.” The film wrapped in November 2023.

It’s been over three decades to come up with a sequel to Beetlejuice. Hopefully, since they said aloha to Beetlejuice Goes Hawaiian there has been enough time and creativity to ensure Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice will not only honor the characters, but fans of the original.

Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice will open theatrically on September 6.

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