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Writer’s Picks: Back to School

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Well it’s that time of year. Summer is over, the air is getting a little bit colder and the skies are becoming gray and the rumblings of kids has ceased. Children unaccompanied adults aren’t running through your stores early in the morning and making messes. College kids no longer occupy the pubs, spilling out into the street, calling everyone “bro” and have headed back to school… thank goodness! Now that classes have started for both grade schoolers and college kids, some of our writers here at iHorror have done some thinking and want to tell you a little about their favorite horror flicks that bring them back to school.

Class of 1984

Class of 1984 is about a music teacher, played by Perry King, who starts work at a rough new high school.  No sooner does the teacher meets his students than he falls out of favor with the campus drug dealers.  The punks make the poor teacher’s life a living hell, starting by vandalizing his car and escalating all the way up to going after his pregnant wife.  Released at a time when heavy metal and punk records were being censored by the PMRC, the violent film was supposed to be a grim warning of things to come.  In retrospect, it’s just a time capsule of a needlessly paranoid era.  Fun fact: also stars Planet of the Apes’ Roddy McDowall, future “The Sopranos” and “Boardwalk Empire” director Timothy Van Patten and a little teenaged Michael J. Fox.  Bonus points for having a cool Lalo Schifrin score, complete with a nifty Alice Cooper theme song. – James Jay Edwards

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Death Bell (Gosa)

My favourite school themed horror movie is Death Bell (Gosa), a surprisingly entertaining South Korean horror from 2008.  The basic premise of Death Bell is that a class of 24 advanced students have gathered at their exclusive high school on a Saturday for a special prep class to help them get ready for the upcoming university entrance exams. After something of a slow build up, the students find themselves locked in their classroom, and the closed circuit television switches to an image of the classes’ top student, Hye-yeong, trapped in a large fish-tank. A mysterious voice tells the class that they must successfully complete the exam administered by said voice, and for every question answered incorrectly, one of them will be killed. What follows is a fun Saw meets Exam film, which may or may not have ties to the supernatural.  The story is fairly standard horror fair, without breaking any new or innovative ground, yet Death Bell is a film where the journey is an increasingly gory, good time, that is unfortunately let down some by its’ conclusion.

This is always the first film I think of when someone talks about school related horror movies as I was an advanced student myself (International Baccalaureate), and I definitely remember that feeling of pressure, and the stress, come the major exams.  Thankfully whenever I got a question wrong (which I definitely did), I wasn’t stuffed into a washing machine, but I digress…

If you can track Death Bell down, I do recommend it, but beware the sequel. Death Bell: Bloody Camp is just an uninspired rehash of the first film, which does suck a fair amount of the gory fun out of the premise, and really, that is what the first Death Bell really hangs its hat on. – Shaun Cordingley

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A Nightmare on Elm Street

There are a lot of great horror movies that have to do with schools. I love Carrie and Slaughter High (for very different reasons), but to me the movie that made school the scariest was the original A Nightmare on Elm Street.The hallway monitor scene is one of my favorites from any movie, and combined with Tina’s body being pulled down the hall and the creepy poetry reading in the classroom, it has to take the cake for me. Honorable mention to IT. – Chris Crum

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The Craft

When I think about what school-related horror flick best entices nostalgia, I think of The Craft.  I was a naive 10 years old when the movie came out, no where near high school aged, but it became an instant classic.  The Craft really was my introduction into all things horror, and was the cause of my subsequent love of all things scary.  From the actresses, the music, the attitude, all the way down to the clothes, I was obsessed.  I even remember briefly wishing I could be a real witch.  I own, and still frequently watch, The Craft today. – Kristen Ashley

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All The Boys Love Mandy Lane

Starring Johnny Depp’s main squeeze Amanda Heard, All The Boys Love Mandy Lane is a surprisingly better than average thriller about beautiful young high school girl Mandy Lane [played by Heard] who is the desire of every male [both young and not-so] within a few hundred feet of wherever she may be. Unfortunately, beauty often has a dark side, and this film is no exception. Mandy becomes friends with the in-crowd, who invite her along for a weekend at the country home of one of the cool kids, while all the boys jostle for dibs on Mandy’s virginity.

As the kids party hard, groundsman Garth tries to keep an eye on things as best he can, yet one by one the kids go missing – only to turn up dead later.

I’ve loved this movie since the first time I saw it. We think we know people – we think we know our friends, our classmates, our peers – but do we really? We want to believe we do, but how much do we really know? One of my best friends in high school was the exact polar opposite of what people thought of her.

If I say much more, it will give the whole movie away – but the twist at the end was completely and totally unexpected! – Tina Mockmore

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A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master

There are many horror movies I can think of that remind of the good ole days of high school, but the one that stands out to me is not the one you may have first thought of. Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master. It really touched on a lot of high school style drama, issues and emotions of teenagers. I.E.: sexual awkwardness, bullies, nerds, self esteem, etc… In my own personal opinion this Elm Street is the one that showed realistic emotions when dealing with the loss of a friend. You could really tell they were torn up and it was consistent throughout the movie, whereas in many other horror films it felt like it was forgotten the day after or just wasn’t touched on as much. Being a teenager can be tough and high school doesn’t make it any easier sometimes. But on the lighter side, you can make bonds that last a lifetime. The scenarios where Alice obtains her friends powers is, for me, symbolic to that. That for me is why watching Dream Master is like revisiting high school. Well minus Robert Englund running around in my dreams trying to murder me. – Patti Pauley

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Scream

My choice for best high school horror is Scream. While it may seem like an obvious choice, it’s an obvious choice for a very simple reason: it gets everything right. While I was hardly the “big man on campus” type in high school, the general spirit of Scream is a very relatable one, and encapsulates the friendships, parties, and angst that often color the teenage experience. Of course, Scream‘s characters all look to be in at least their mid-20s, but that’s Hollywood casting for you. Aside from the high school elements being done well, the film itself is a modern classic, and I will fight anyone who disagrees in the parking lot after class. – Michael Carpenter

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Class of 1999

Although some fans don’t believe it, Class of 1999 is a follow up to the 1984 flick Class of 1984 and that’s coming right from director Mark L. Lester. In all fairness, it is hard to believe that this is a sequel, given it takes place in a semi-quasi futuristic setting of the year 1999! Schools are overrun with gangs, so much so that the Police dare not intrude, so the principal (played by Malcom McDowell) reaches for some outside help in Dr. Robert Forest (Stacey Keach in a pair of those cheap, colored contacts) who has designed androids to not only look and act human, but to teach as well. It doesn’t take long before the androids (Pam Grier, Patrick Kilpatrick and James P. Ryan) military programming kicks in and they wage an all out war against the kids. It’s up to the film’s ‘rent-a-Corey Feldman’, Cody, who wants nothing more than to quit the gang life, to band them all the gangs together and stop the androids before they are killed.

I must’ve seen this one dozens of times growing up. It was one of my favorite movies to rent when I was in high school, giving me that feeling of anarchy, against the establishment and Bradley Gregg’s character Cody always made me laugh, since he wanted to resignate Edgar Frog. I thought it was cool to see kids my age and the never aging at the time Joshua John Miller (Homer from Near Dark) be total badasses, fight some Terminator clones and get the girl. It’s one of those rare cases where making a sequel where the only connection is themed and in name only works in its advantage. If big hair, pop punk and dystopian futures are your thing, you’ll dig this, as it’s oozing with style. It did spawn direct sequel, Class of 1999 2, but you may want to skip it. – Andrew Peters

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Russell Crowe To Star in Another Exorcism Movie & It’s Not a Sequel

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Maybe it’s because The Exorcist just celebrated its 50th-anniversary last year, or maybe it’s because aging Academy Award-winning actors aren’t too proud to take on obscure roles, but Russell Crowe is visiting the Devil once again in yet another possession film. And it’s not related to his last one, The Pope’s Exorcist.

According to Collider, the film titled The Exorcism was originally going to be released under the name The Georgetown Project. Rights for its North American release were once in the hands of Miramax but then went to Vertical Entertainment. It will release on June 7 in theaters then head over to Shudder for subscribers.

Crowe will also star in this year’s upcoming Kraven the Hunter which is set to drop in theaters on August 30.

As for The Exorcism, Collider provides us with what it’s about:

“The film centers around actor Anthony Miller (Crowe), whose troubles come to the forefront as he shoots a supernatural horror movie. His estranged daughter (Ryan Simpkins) has to figure out whether he’s lapsing into his past addictions, or if something even more horrific is occurring. “

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New F-Bomb Laden ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Trailer: Bloody Buddy Movie

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Deadpool & Wolverine might be the buddy movie of the decade. The two heterodox superheroes are back in the latest trailer for the summer blockbuster, this time with more f-bombs than a gangster film.

‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Movie Trailer

This time the focus is on Wolverine played by Hugh Jackman. The adamantium-infused X-Man is having a bit of a pity party when Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds) arrives on the scene who then tries to convince him to team up for selfish reasons. The result is a profanity-filled trailer with a Strange surprise at the end.

Deadpool & Wolverine is one of the most anticipated movies of the year. It comes out on July 26. Here is the latest trailer, and we suggest if you are at work and your space isn’t private, you might want to put in headphones.

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Original Blair Witch Cast Ask Lionsgate for Retroactive Residuals in Light of New Film

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The Blair Witch Project Cast

Jason Blum is planning to reboot The Blair Witch Project for the second time. That’s a fairly large task considering none of the reboots or sequels have managed to capture the magic of the 1999 film that brought found footage into the mainstream.

This idea has not been lost on the original Blair Witch cast, who has recently reached out to Lionsgate to ask for what they feel is fair compensation for their role in the pivotal film. Lionsgate gained access to The Blair Witch Project in 2003 when they purchased Artisan Entertainment.

Blair witch
The Blair Witch Project Cast

However, Artisan Entertainment was an independent studio before its purchase, meaning the actors were not part of SAG-AFTRA. As a result, the cast are not entitled to the same residuals from the project as actors in other major films. The cast doesn’t feel that the studio should be able to continue to profit off of their hard work and likenesses without fair compensation.

Their most recent request asks for “meaningful consultation on any future ‘Blair Witch’ reboot, sequel, prequel, toy, game, ride, escape room, etc., in which one could reasonably assume that Heather, Michael & Josh’s names and/or likenesses will be associated for promotional purposes in the public sphere.”

The blair witch project

At this time, Lionsgate has not offered any comment about this issue.

The full statement made by the cast can be found below.

OUR ASKS OF LIONSGATE (From Heather, Michael & Josh, stars of “The Blair Witch Project”):

1. Retroactive + future residual payments to Heather, Michael and Josh for acting services rendered in the original BWP, equivalent to the sum that would’ve been allotted through SAG-AFTRA, had we had proper union or legal representation when the film was made.

2. Meaningful consultation on any future Blair Witch reboot, sequel, prequel, toy, game, ride, escape room, etc…, in which one could reasonably assume that Heather, Michael & Josh’s names and/or likenesses will be associated for promotional purposes in the public sphere.

Note: Our film has now been rebooted twice, both times were a disappointment from a fan/box office/critical perspective. Neither of these films were made with significant creative input from the original team. As the insiders who created the Blair Witch and have been listening to what fans love & want for 25 years, we’re your single greatest, yet thus-far un-utilized secret-weapon!

3. “The Blair Witch Grant”: A 60k grant (the budget of our original movie), paid out yearly by Lionsgate, to an unknown/aspiring genre filmmaker to assist in making theirfirst feature film. This is a GRANT, not a development fund, hence Lionsgate will not own any of the underlying rights to the project.

A PUBLIC STATEMENT FROM THE DIRECTORS & PRODUCERS OF “THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT”:

As we near the 25th anniversary of The Blair Witch Project, our pride in the storyworld we created and the film we produced is reaffirmed by the recent announcement of a reboot by horror icons Jason Blum and James Wan.

While we, the original filmmakers, respect Lionsgate’s right to monetize the intellectual property as it sees fit, we must highlight the significant contributions of the original cast — Heather Donahue, Joshua Leonard, and Mike Williams. As the literal faces of what has become a franchise, their likenesses, voices, and real names are inseparably tied to The Blair Witch Project. Their unique contributions not only defined the film’s authenticity but continue to resonate with audiences around the world.

We celebrate our film’s legacy, and equally, we believe the actors deserve to be celebrated for their enduring association with the franchise.

Sincerely, Eduardo Sanchez, Dan Myrick, Gregg Hale, Robin Cowie, and Michael Monello

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