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#untapped horror memes
tyanis · 8 months
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Old Horror Movie Trailer Reaction Images. Batch 1.
I recently posted these screenshots from old horror movie trailers and you guys seemed to like them. I had been re blogging them with more but the post was getting pretty lengthy, so I'm just gonna make separate posts from now on with a bunch of them on each. Here you go!
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Unlucky Tug's videos have inspired me to join the Thomas fandom over the past few months, so here are some opinions of mine that many of you may find Upsetting and Wrong:
- I like Billy, he's such a dick for no reason in his episode and then he never shows up again, what a lad
- People are overreacting when it comes to the new reboot, the last time the show was consistently good was before I was even born anyway, I understand disliking it but some of y'all need to chill
- The Adventure Begins is pretty bad imo
- Lost Treasure is pretty alright, but if this is the peak of CGI Thomas, then I'm not interested in anything even remotely worse
- I really hate Percy post-season 1. Don't ask me why, I just do
- Part of me vibes with the generic upbeat music in the later model seasons. Maybe because it's so campy and goofy? Idk
- Pierce Brosnan is the best narrator and it's not even close (And this is from someone who prefers the US dubs)
- Season 1 is the only perfect season, I thought so as a child and I think so now
- If I made a Sodor map I'd put Misty Island on there just to mess with people
- I know the meme's been done to death but the model seasons have a lot of untapped horror potential, a remake of Shed 17 in that style or at least an alternate ending to that season 5 episode where Stepney almost gets scrapped would be AMAZING
- Diesels are better /hj
- This may sound surprising considering everything I just said, but I'm a RWS purist when it comes to the deep lore, I interpret season 5 onwards as loose retellings of canon events not seen in the books (Yes, this includes BWBA kinda sorta)
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treesandwords · 1 year
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1, 5, 10, 17, 19 for the weird writer asks meme?
1. What font do you write in? Do you actually care or is that just the default setting?
A lot of the time I write in a font that makes it Look Like A Book. So Times New Roman or something similar/adjacent, especially at the beginning it helps to get me engaged and take the work seriously.
5. Do you have any writing superstitions? What are they and why are they 100% true?
Ok contrarily to above: the comic sans hack DOES work! This is something I often do when I've been working on a piece for a while and need to ~spice things up~ to get my inspiration back. Switch the font to comic sans. It works.
10. Has a piece of writing ever “haunted” you? Has your own writing haunted you? What does that mean to you?
Yes and yes. When it comes to other pieces of writing, I think it's what's left unsaid that haunts me the most. 'Haunting' to me is all about absence, about what we don't see and hear and feel but is there all the same. In terms of writing, it's about themes that are never stared but are lurking beneath what's actually said, it's about characters who live (or die) in a way where what they might have become is a mystery, it's about people never saying exactly what they mean.
In regards to my own writing, usually it means just. Hm. Things (characters, settings, plots) that like...don't really feel like they come from me? Where did this idea originate? I have no idea who's brain was that born in???? Not mine.
17. Talk to me about the minutiae of your current WIP. Tell me about the lore, the history, the detail, the things that won’t make it in the text.
So I can't talk too much about this or I will talk all day BUT there's a very specific element I've been going Unhinged over and do really really want to talk about so here it goes. I really want to try the idea of subtly comparing the magic within my world to real-world energy sources. Specifically, electricity and nuclear energy. Hear me out. While harnessing the power of the wind, sun, tides etc. are also of course valid forms of energy in our own world (and historically in some cases) they aren't exactly mystical. We know what the sun and wind and water are, and the ancients would too to a degree. But something like electricity, which occurs naturally in lightning, and radioactivity, which exists in certain earth minerals, while more recent forms of energy harnessing, are still forces that have existed in the world for as long as we know. But they aren't things you can experience as tangibly (nor would you want to) or on a daily basis, so to a society inspired on Medieval times with roughly the same knowledge of science and technology, the concept of lightning and of radioactivity (or the effects of exposure to it, since they wouldn't understand what it was) seem...more Eldritch Horror to me? These are forces that exist, but we Don't Understand - and yet people in the far future will use them as a means of energy. HOkay so where this comes in is like. Hmm. I have a few instances in the book where characters who aren't used to handling magic or being around it, are affected by it in ways that resemble exposure to these forces. Hair standing on end + what is basically the feeling of an electric shock when touching magical objects, or touching something that feels cool but seems to heat your hand as you hold it, long term effects that resemble mild to severe radiation sickness - all this to say my version of magic isn't one or both of these forces, but I'm doing this knowing/hoping a reader will see the resemblance and understand it as an existing force within the world that is a) essentially an untapped and potentially very very powerful energy source that can (and may in the future) be used as one by people who know what they're doing and b) if handled by people who *don't* know what they're doing can cause A Lot Of Dying and c) know that while they as a modern reader understand these things, the characters do not. I've even thought of mages having some kind of containers they use to magically hold the remnants of the magic they've tapped into that is no longer usable bc if they don't it just kinda. lingers in the air and Kills Things Slowly -- basically like a medieval fantasy version of nuclear waste disposal.
tl;dr: Magic = a super powerful energy source that people are scared of harnessing because in their minds it's an eldritch horror thing the equivalent of nuclear energy and/or electricity (symptoms to magic exposure in this world resemble symptoms of exposure to either/both so the reader will make the connection) and if handled wrong can be Bad
19. Tell me a story about your writing journey. When did you start? Why did you start? Were there bumps along the way? Where are you now and where are you going?
SO I've been writing or trying to write since I was a little kid, and didn't actually finish a draft until my current book. I started it in the middle of a high school math class (lol) and was inspired initially by a facet of Greek mythology we'd been learning about in a different class. For some reason this idea stuck and I just...kept going with it. Rn I've written two-three drafts and I'm finishing up the one I'm currently on, after that I'll go back and edit (no more rewrites!) and then...keep editing until it's time for beta readers I guess.
Thanks for the questions sorry for the Long Long responses I ramble
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sigmashuffle · 1 year
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I posted 590 times in 2022
That's 590 more posts than 2021!
38 posts created (6%)
552 posts reblogged (94%)
Blogs I reblogged the most:
@2offayyo-kzt
@gracetoldmeto
@walking-meme
@babygirlchuuya
@kyouka-supremacy
I tagged 571 of my posts in 2022
Only 3% of my posts had no tags
#sigma - 166 posts
#chuuya nakahara - 159 posts
#osamu dazai - 97 posts
#bsd - 64 posts
#bungo stray dogs - 55 posts
#nikolai gogol - 50 posts
#bsd sigma - 27 posts
#bsd spoilers - 25 posts
#fyodor dostoevsky - 25 posts
#ryunosuke akutagawa - 22 posts
Longest Tag: 138 characters
#edit: yalls response to this post is one of the best things to ever happen to me tysm 😊 im new to the fandom so this makes me so happy!!!
My Top Posts in 2022:
#5
Sometimes I think about how its possible that Sigma was indeed NOT born from the book and he had a life up until 3 years ago that he simply doesn't remember.
The book could've just erased his memory.
22 notes - Posted June 11, 2022
#4
When You’re Dealt a Bad Hand
~A BSD 101 Fix It AU~ Happy "Birthday" Sigma
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Read on ao3
WC: 2.4k
Summary (mentioned in this post):
“You knew he would need to die.”
Dazai paused mid-step and looked at him blankly before exploding into laughter.
Sigma was dumbfounded in horror.
Once the laughs subsided and Dazai caught his breath, overdramatically wiping a tear from his eye, he looked back to the console with a mischievous smirk. “Who said he was going to die?”
Sigma immediately removed his eyes from the floor and returned his gaze to Dazai’s, trying desperately to read his intentions.
“Of course, however,” Dazai paused, “little Chibi is not-so-pleasantly unaware of that at the current moment.”
or
How Chuuya survives the events of Chapter 101...and meets a brand new face with an odd haircut.
A/N: A BSD 101 Fix It AU - Happy "Birthday" to Sigma. If anything goes against canon, well… ignore it. This is my first fic in this fandom. And because it's my fic I threw some subtle Chuusig into the mix bc the potential in their dynamic is an untapped goldmine. Enjoy Chuuya still being alive! <3
See the full post
24 notes - Posted May 4, 2022
#3
Still really proud of this joke from Chuuya's first convo with Sigma hehe
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Read the whole fic here
26 notes - Posted June 13, 2022
#2
This is a plea to the dear lord (Studio Bones) to give us the child (Sigma's character design)
42 notes - Posted November 28, 2022
My #1 post of 2022
Nov 30th, 2022 - the day Sigma was first animated
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325 notes - Posted November 30, 2022
Get your Tumblr 2022 Year in Review →
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so-true-overdue · 7 months
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Unveiling the Mind-Boggling Truth: An Angsty Teen's Revelation
Have you ever wondered about the bizarre and mind-boggling truths that the world has to offer? Well, brace yourselves folks, because I, an angsty teen with an inexplicably heightened sense of disillusionment, am about to share with you a random, obscure, and totally unbelievable fact that will blow your mind – or maybe not. Prepare to have your reality shattered as I unveil this incredible truth: plants actually have feelings! Yes, you heard it right! Who would have thought that those innocent, green creatures sitting quietly in your garden would possess emotions? But don't worry, it's not like we're chopping onions or anything here. Picture this: you're out on a sunny day, walking amidst the enchanting wonders of nature, when suddenly, you hear a faint cry. You stop in your tracks, bewildered. Now, you might assume it's just the wind rustling through the leaves, but hold your horses, my skeptical friends! Those are the anguished cries of the plants! It turns out that plants, in their silent, stationary existence, are capable of experiencing pain. And not just any pain – unimaginable agony that puts our own fleeting human sorrows to shame. We may think we're the alpha species, but let me tell you, the plants have been watching and waiting for their moment to reveal their emotional depth. Did you know that every time you pluck a flower, it lets out a tiny, inaudible scream? Oh, the horror! But do we care? Of course not! We continue to arrange them beautifully in vases, blissfully ignorant of the atrocities we're committing. Shame on us! Furthermore, plants not only feel pain, but they also have a secret network – an underground communication system, if you will. It's like the internet of the plant kingdom, except without memes. They exchange vital information, warnings, and even share nutrients through intricate fungal networks hidden beneath the soil. It's like a secret society conspiring against us! So, next time you take a stroll through nature's abundant playground, be cautious, my dear friends. Those swaying branches and blooming flowers may appear innocuous, but behind their delicate facade lies a realm of untapped emotions and complex networking systems. And remember, the truth is often stranger than fiction, especially when discovered by an angsty teenager who believes they've got it all figured out. Disclaimer: The author of this blog post cannot be held responsible for any nightmares, existential crises, or paranoia-induced plant hoarding that may result from this mind-blowing revelation. Proceed with caution, for you have now entered the twilight zone of teen angst and obscure truths.
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aion-rsa · 3 years
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Leonardo DiCaprio Finally Does Comedy in Don’t Look Up Trailer, It’s Glorious
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You know Leonardo DiCaprio has brilliant comic timing, right? It’s something rarely remarked upon in the press or on social media, but it’s been true since practically the beginning of his career. And it’s one of the primary reasons the first trailer for Adam McKay’s new movie, Don’t Look Up, is such a welcome delight.
To  be sure, the upcoming comedy, which will be released on Netflix in time for Christmas, has plenty going for it beyond DiCaprio visibly reaching for the yucks. After all, this is a (dark) McKay comedy, and the first full-on one the now Oscar winning filmmaker has made since his pair of tragic dramedies based on real world horrors: the implosion of the housing market on Wall Street in The Big Short and the reign of Vice President Dick Cheney in Vice. Before those films, McKay was primarily known as the behind-the-camera partner-in-crime of Will Ferrell on films like Anchorman, Talladega Nights, and Step Brothers.
Additionally, the film marks Jennifer Lawrence’s first performance since 2019 and also sees her dabbling her toe back in the comedy realm where she’s thrived before, including in the dramedy that won her an Oscar, Silver Linings Playbook.
Yet the image that many viewers will take away from the teaser? It’s of Leonardo DiCaprio breathing heavily and failing to prevent a panic attack as he deals with the pitch black gallows humor of the movie’s premise: A pair of scientists have discovered a comet is about to eradicate all life on Earth and most Americans either don’t care or believe them. The fact that this idea was penned before the COVID-19 pandemic hit seems depressingly prescient.
So expect Don’t Look Up to maintain the sharpened elbows of McKay’s more recent true story riffs. Even so, it’ll certainly allow DiCaprio to stretch muscles we’ve only seen hinted at to memorable effect in recent work, including perhaps most notably his last film: Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood.
With the exception of an early stint at the start of his career on television sitcoms, DiCaprio has gravitated time and again toward the dramatic and seriously harrowing. Sorrowful might even be the way to describe the fate of a variety of his protagonists, from Romeo + Juliet to his Oscar win in The Revenant, with all the doomed heroes he played in between via Titanic, The Aviator, The Departed, and Shutter Island (to name but a few). Yet the charismatic performer has undeniably shown a penchant for the type of pointed line reading, and the big physical gambles that on-screen belly laughs are made of.
Remember DiCaprio’s brilliantly awkward dance moves in The Wolf of Wall Street? Or how about the instant meme-worthy way he declared select individuals had captured both his curiosity and attention in Django Unchained? Then there’s the entire portion of Wall Street where he loses his motor functions at a golf club. Despite being known for his red-in-the face screaming scenes—and his, until recently, continual snubbing by the Academy Awards—there’s been a natural comedic talent left relatively untapped in DiCaprio’s portfolio. Some might even view the aforementioned Martin Scorsese and Tarantino joints as pseudo-dark comedies, but DiCaprio plays such unrepentant and cruel bastards in those movies that it’s impossible to not walk away and be rightfully despising those characters.
Yet a movie where we can laugh with, or at least at, one of his creations? Again, only after winning his Oscar in 2016 has the thespian seemed to let his proverbial hair down, first in Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time and now in Don’t Look Up. There is, indeed, much to snicker about DiCaprio’s Rick Dalton in OUATIH, from the way he threatens to blow his own brains out during a drunken self-pity party in his trailer to how he’ll cry after a little girl tells him he really is a good actor. But at the end of the day, a film which plugs into the real-life horrors of the Sharon Tate murders can never be anything less than bittersweet.
So bring on a McKay laugher where DiCaprio can play one of the filmmakers’ many patented privileged white male douchebags with the fragility of a Ron Burgundy or Ricky Bobby! Let him and Lawrence improv like it’s bedtime at Brennan and Dale’s house in Step Brothers! Let these actors have fun. We certainly will.
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The post Leonardo DiCaprio Finally Does Comedy in Don’t Look Up Trailer, It’s Glorious appeared first on Den of Geek.
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queendom25 · 3 years
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Hostile Game Over 
    The internet remains undefeated as the memes have documented the new Wolf on Wall Street-GameStop. Reddit users have taken the Revolution from the forum to the fiscal platform of the stock market in just a few months! Thanks to r/WallStreetBets the GameStop stock increased to more than 822% and millennial nostalgia stocks such as BlackBerry and AMC have also made a dramatic comeback. Pay attention Pacific Northwest proletariats because we could bring the bourgeoisie to their knees  with a similar Attack on Titan strategy starting with some of the biggest publicly traded companies in Oregon! Nike, Lithia Motors, and Schnitzer Steel  Industries are just some of the big names that influence the climate here in the Rogue Valley and I’m concerned with the lack of support towards anti-racism. We know that the local big wigs aren’t going to make such a “political” argument without some costly coercion so what can the average Oregonian do?
The GameStop Gambit on seasoned Wall Street investors has shown us that collectively as a community we can be an unstoppable force and emphasize that it’s people over profit. I encourage every concerned citizen to take a good look at the SOREDI action plan and reflect on where our voices can hold the most impact. At first glance, the Rogue Valley is a fertile landscape with plenty of homegrown revenue but at what cost? There are plenty of underpaid, overworked, and overlooked seasonal workers that have some horror stories that every union representative should hear but why don’t they? Well first let’s call these hard-working citizens what they actually are-exploited workers. If English isn’t your first language, some of your family members are considered “undocumented”, or if you don’t understand the legal jargon on a predatory labor contract then congrats you are subject to exploitation. If you’ve worked as an independent contractor on the farm or on a construction site then SOEQUITY wants to hear from you! We have some big plans brewing for March Madness and we can’t do it without you the citizens to hold these predatory employers accountable.
We shouldn’t stop at just shifty contracts for seasonal workers, we need to go for the entire exploitation entree with the underpaid work for our fellow incarcerated Americans. It’s not equitable unless we include their lived experience in the quest for change. I love shopping locally to support the community that I live in; and I can’t think of a better way to continue that support, than with the untapped talent of recently released outcasts whose work experience reflects their time inside. I realize the attitudes that some of our more well-to-do members of the community hinder this concept but that’s part of why change is needed. If the rest of you have been religiously watching the actions of our “Centrist-in-Chief”, then you’re probably aware by now that he has terminated private prison contracts and are completely underwhelmed by it. According to law professor John Pfaff, “This is not about shrinking the footprint of the federal prison system, it’s just about transferring people to public facilities…” Exploitation in all forms within the borders of these United States is in fact a bipartisan effort and it’s counterproductive to believe otherwise. While I’m ecstatic that our congressional meetings no longer resemble the cast reunion episode to Love & Hip-Hop, the oppressive foundation of America is still very much intact.
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bobskiii87-blog · 6 years
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How Cinema Is Fighting Back Against Streaming
Spoiler warning: this article does not contain overt spoilers for Avengers: Infinity War or A Quiet Place, but the necessity of a spoiler warning is sort of the point of the article, so. You know.
Ten years and 20 films in the making, Marvel's Avengers: Infinity War is a titan of a movie, every bit as formidable as its purple-toned, Brolin-voiced villain Thanos. Having already become the studio's most successful feature in the UK, it's now well on its way to become the first summer movie (and only the third film ever) to gross $2 billion worldwide. And, unlike films such as Jurassic World – which made similarly tremendous amounts of money but evaporated quickly in cultural and critical terms – the pop cultural response to Marvel's mega-movie has been seismic.
Quote, if you can, a single line from the $2.7 billion-grossing Avatar? Exactly. You can't. But even before many viewers made it to the cinema, the Avengers' "I don't feel so good" meme had made it into the collective conscious, and discussions of "that ending" and the future of the franchise have dominated the cultural discourse. Put bluntly: you had to see Infinity War because everyone was seeing it, and you had to see it in the cinema. More than just a movie, Avengers: Infinity War became a cinematic event.
This is an increasingly difficult thing to achieve in an age of streaming and among a plethora of new franchises. Seeing through that noise has been one of the major reasons for Marvel's cinematic success: the MCU has grown steadily bigger and stronger while the attempts of others have crumbled upon inception (looking at you, The Dark Tower). Marvel Studios' continued ability to create the sense that each new movie is the movie event of the year – a mere Avengers trailer is greeted with a more ravenous response than most films – hasn't hurt. Their marketing machinery is so robust that it can thrive in an environment of depleting attention spans, information overload and franchise over-saturation. It even survived Thor: The Dark World.
Marvel Studios have also maintained their movies' "Big Deal" status while stocking Netflix with their street-level heroes, The Defenders – an especially impressive feat, given how the two ways of engaging with content are increasingly seen as warring kingdoms. The Netflix/Cannes feud was just the latest proxy war, with shots fired from either side: Steven Spielberg dismissing Netflix films as "TV movies" was the first rasper, with the announcement that Martin Scorsese's long-gestating The Irishman would arrive under the streaming kingpin's big red banner the retort.
It's been argued that Neflix brings smaller and more obscure films to an audience they would never have had before; another contests that it reduced Okja and Annihilation to smaller screens than they deserved. So the back and forth continues. There’s a lot of politicising behind the platform you relentlessly rewatch Peep Show re-runs on.
The economy and ease of streaming services is quickly turning them into the preferred way to watch for many people, and the entertainment industry is still very much in the process of adapting to that change: how to compete with something you can half-watch while looking at your phone, or eat a plate of chicken nuggets in front of? Fundamentally, streaming is a very different experience to sitting attentively for two hours in a theatre: you can laze on your couch, scroll through Instagram, talk to your friends and break when you want. But in the urgency to watch Avengers – and the experience of watching one of 2018's major hits, A Quiet Place – the cinematic experience might have clawed some points back.
A Quiet Place is especially reliant upon the audience's goodwill because it uses silence to create tension. The sound of a room full of people sitting silently is powerfully unnerving, and John Krasinski's film thrives and feeds on this feeling. It's an untapped perk of the cinema experience – horror and comedy both benefit immensely from being viewed in a theatre, because they play for reactions, which are amplified in a group watch. (One of the best cinema experiences I have ever had came watching Paranormal Activity 2, which is obviously awful, but shitting your pants at a jump-scare in the middle of a room full of similarly tense viewers makes for a singular collective watching experience that Netflix could never rival.)
It goes both ways: the spell is immediately broken if the audience won't play ball, and social media has been full of angry tales of A Quiet Place screenings ruined by obnoxious movie-goers and pleas for advice on where best to see it uninterrupted. But as a film it’s fundamentally designed for the traditional cinematic experience, so it relies upon an audience who know and care about what that is.
If you think about it, going to the cinema is an innately weird experience. You enter a room filled with people – often alongside friends, family, partners or first dates – and then, as the lights go down, you hope that the movie will be good enough for all of them to fade into the dark so that you can disappear into the film alone. It is a bizarre, half-paradoxical and part-sacred experience whose place in society is rapidly changing under the challenge of new technology and new viewing habits.
But a new era of event cinema can change that. Avengers and A Quiet Place are just two examples of films that project their own "cinema etiquette" onto the watching experience, and that can only be a good thing.
How many times have you checked your phone since you started reading this? Not to sound like your dad, but we spend our lives surrounded by screens which blare addictive bursts of instant gratification all through the day, and it’s not hard to see that as having a corrosive effect on our attention spans. Maybe the role of cinemas today should be as movie temples where we briefly turn all that shit off, tune everything else out and enjoy the film.
In a way, watching a big purple lad called Thanos threaten to kill half the population of Earth is, actually, very zen.
@onebigwiggle
This article originally appeared on VICE UK.
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tyanis · 8 months
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Old Horror Movie Trailer Reaction Images. Batch 2.
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tyanis · 8 months
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what movies did you use for the old horror movies memes?? sorry if you posted somewhere and I haven't seen. my friend is movie nerd and I wanna quiz him.
Gonna assume you're talking about the first one I posted as it's the most popular. Unfortunately I'm drawing a blank on "Horrifying Life" and "Terrifyingly Different", but here are the rest:
Doubles in Size - 20 Million Miles To Earth
Billion Volt brain - Creature With The Atom Brain
Delving into Mysteries - Beast From 20,000 Fathoms
One word - THEM
Shockingly Convincing - Gorgo
Stranger than Anything - The Monolith Monsters
It's Fantastic But Possible, Why?, Unusual! - Invaders From Mars
Fierce Woman - The Wasp Woman
Don't Be Embarrassed - The Tingler (people keep mistaking this for House on Haunted Hill due to the presence of a skeleton and Vincent Price. Pretty sure both are from William Castle so... close enough?)
Biggest Thing - The Giant Behemoth
Comedy of Terrors - A Bucket of Blood
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tyanis · 9 months
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Kinda feel like there's some untapped meme/reaction image potential from old horror movie trailers...
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