THE IMPORTANT CINEMA CLUB’S SUPER SCARY MOVIE CHALLENGE DAY 5: The Witch with Flying Head (1982)

October 5. A Horror Film Featuring a Killer Flying Head

Which came first, this or Mystics in Bali? Could they have been made right around the same time? Was this made years before? Who can say? All we know is that they both feature women with flying heads.

Yu Chun has a problem. A sorcerer put a curse on her, which results in her head, once a month, removing itself and flying around to hurt people. Is it at the same time as her time of the month? I would hope so, so two birds, one rock. Anyways. Not even an exorcism can help, so she has to live with it for years.

This flying head is dangling a spine and guts, flying about while most of the Star Trek II, The Black Hole and Conan the Barbarian soundtracks play. That’s kind of perfect. I mean, as perfect as a movie where a snake that becomes a sorcerer who poops a snake out of his eye that crawls into a praying woman’s lady business can be. And by that, I mean absolutely perfect.

Are you afraid of snakes? What if a movie had people puking snakes for most of the film? Would you be frightened then? You should be. The head also breathes fire, has fangs and can shoot lasers out of its mouth.

I wish the head and the hand from Demonoid would get together and have a shoulder for a child.

You can watch this on YouTube.

2025 Scarecrow Psychotronic Challenge Day 5: Hush (2016)

5. SHRIEKS & SQUEALS: This one’s gotta have that sound that makes the hairs on your neck stand up and sends shivers down your spine.

Directed by Mike Flanagan, who co-wrote the script with star Kate Siegel, Hush is about Maddie Young, who lost her ability to speak and hear after contracting bacterial meningitis as a teenager. Now, she’s a horror writer who is trying to follow up her first book and is writing in the woods, alone with her cat Bitch. Her lack of hearing causes her to miss the stabbing death of neighbor Sarah (Samantha Sloyan) by The Man (John Gallagher Jr.), a killing machine that soon learns that she can’t hear. He even wipes out her boyfriend (Michael Trucco) and abuses her throughout the film, turning this into a cat-and-mouse affair until she uses her environment against him.

Instead of silence, ambient sounds were used. Flanagan felt that total quiet would cause viewers to be too aware of their surroundings and take them out of the experience. There’s less than 15 minutes of dialogue in this entire movie.

This was remade as Khamoshi and Kolaiyuthir Kaalam in India. The Netflix series Midnight Mass is based on the story within a story from the film, which was written by Maddie.

U of M grad Steve King said, “How good is Hush? Up there with Halloween and — even more — Wait Until Dark. White knuckle time.” Was he that happy that Mr. Mercedes is one of Maddie’s books?

UNSUNG HORRORS HORROR GIVES BACK 2025: Weapons (2025)

Each October, the Unsung Horrors podcast does a month of themed movies. This year, they will once again be setting up a fundraiser to benefit Best Friends, which works to save the lives of cats and dogs across America, giving pets second chances and providing them with happy homes.

Today’s theme: 21st Century Horror

Directed, written, produced, and co-scored by Zach Cregger, Weapons is a modern horror movie that people breathlessly told me that I must see. So I did. And it’s fine, but I always feel like I saw the cut that they didn’t, because I’m left with a feeling of, “Oh, that was fine.” Is this how fans of Hitchcock felt when Argento and DePalma started getting big? I really try, though, to look past my dislike of today and find something to enjoy.

Unlike so much modern horror, at least Weapons has a beginning, middle and end. So much horror from now seems to just falter to a conclusion, as if they had a really great idea for a movie, but had no idea how to close it off.

This takes place in Maybrook, Pennsylvania, a town where every child, except one, in Justine Gandy’s (Julia Garner) third-grade class has disappeared. Parents want to blame that kid, Alex (Cary Christopher). Or they want to blame Justine. But there are just no answers as school comes back. Life has to go on, but it can’t for one of the fathers, Archer (Josh Brolin), who is investigating the disappearance for himself.

As for Justine, she starts drinking and hooks up with her ex, police officer Paul Morgan (Alden Ehrenreich), as the episodic film tells us her story, Paul’s, Archer’s, and even that of her boss, Principal Marcus (Benedict Wong). At the center of it all is Alex’s aunt Gladys (Amy Madigan), who totally Burnt Offerings-ed her way into their house and, well, would you really want me to give the whole story away?

There’s some decent camerawork, a great chase at the end and a movie that mixes the narrative flow of Magnolia with the lost children bleakness of Prisoners. The part of this that I had the biggest problem with — the fake-sounding child narrator — was added after test screenings didn’t go well.

Madigan said of her role, “I think she’s a very misunderstood woman! For lack of a better term, I am the bad guy in the movie, but a girl’s just doing what she has to do to get through. She has a plan, but I don’t think she quite knew how that was going to unfold. She’s like an artist; she’s very extemporaneous. I think she’s moved around a lot. She’s had to go to different places, and when one’s not working, she’s kind of a creator of invention: “OK, I’m going to have to reach out to this family.” She’s really needy in the sense that she needs all these people; she can’t do it on her own, and I found that really intriguing about her. She manipulated a few people. And I understand that. But she has such confidence, and she’s charming in this really sick way. She just makes me sit up, Gladys. She just spoke to me.” She’s the best part of this.

Cregger gave her two different options for the backstory of Gladys. “Option one: Gladys was just a normal person using dark magic to cure her disease. She had to adopt this methodology that she uses out of necessity to keep herself alive. I won’t say any more than that. Option two: Gladys was a non-human creature who was using her bizarre makeup and wig in a poor attempt to mimic humans. That’s an interesting perspective to consider. I like that a lot.”

As for that hot dog meal, it’s a tribute to Trevor Moore from his skit “Hot Dog Timmy” on the TV show The Whitest Kids U Know. Cregger was also on that show and friends with Moore. I could totally eat that seven-dog dinner at any time.

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: The Day the Sky Exploded (1958)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Day the Sky Exploded was on Chiller Theater on Saturday, November 19, 1966 at 11:20 p.m., Saturday, March 16, 1968 at 1:00 a.m. and Saturday, July 19, 1969 at 1:00 a.m.

Known in Italy as La morte viene dallo spazio and in the UK as Death Comes From Outer Space, this was directed by Paolo Heusch (Werewolf In a Girl’s Dormitory) at least in screen credit, but according to many, this was actually the first movie directed by Mario Bava, who also worked as the cameraman, did the special effects and manipulated newsreel footage and backyard rockets into making crude special effects. It’s the first true Italian science fiction movie.

As for the science of this movie, it’s about a rocket launch causing a cluster of asteroids to join together and head toward the moon and Earth, causing global catastrophes along the way. One of the scientists trying to stop this is Herbert Weisser, who is played by Ivo Garrani, who would play a pivotal role as Prince Vajda in Black Sunday. Sandro Continenza, one of the writers, would go on to script several movies like Bava’s Hercules in the Haunted World, the giallo Seven Murders for Scotland Yard, Eurospy movies like Two Mafiosi Against Goldfinger, Agent 077: From the Orient with Fury and Agent 077: Mission Bloody Mary, and The Living Dead at Manchester Morgue. His co-writer, Marcello Coscia, also was behind Yeti Giant of the 20th Century, Red Rings of Fear and Three Fantastic Supermen.

Carlo Rustichelli, who did the score and would also work with Bava on The Whip and the Body and Blood and Black Lace, created the soundtrack with a ton of non-traditional music and non-music instruments, saying that he “went into the recording studio with a fire extinguisher, a blender and a vacuum cleaner to do those special sound effects.”

UNSUNG HORRORS HORROR GIVES BACK 2025: Good Boy (2025)

Each October, the Unsung Horrors podcast does a month of themed movies. This year, they will once again be setting up a fundraiser to benefit Best Friends, which works to save the lives of cats and dogs across America, giving pets second chances and providing them with happy homes.

Today’s theme: 21st Century Horror

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Adam Hursey is a pharmacist specializing in health informatics by day, but his true passion is cinema. His current favorite films are Back to the Future, Stop Making Sense, and In the Mood for Love. He has written articles for Film East and The Physical Media Advocate, primarily examining older films through the lens of contemporary perspectives. He is usually found on Letterboxd, where he mainly writes about horror and exploitation films. You can follow him on Letterboxd or Instagram at ashursey.

As they say, if you want to see an example of unconditional love, lock your wife and your dog in the trunk of your car, come back in 4 hours, and see which one is happy to see you.

Indy, the canine star of Good Boy, is indeed a very good boy. His human counterpart, Todd (Shane Jensen)…not so much. In fact, he might just be the worst. On one hand, Todd is sick with some sort of serious illness that causes him to require multiple hospital visits, blood transfusions, and cough up copious amounts of blood. Wanting to get off the grid, and perhaps away from his overly concerned sister Vera (how dare she be concerned for her brother by the way!), Todd and Indy take up residence in dead Grandpa’s old, abandoned house in the middle of nowhere. Grandpa is played here by Larry Fessenden, mainly seen in old VHS footage. Grandpa died mysteriously. They never found his dog Bandit. And now, night after night, Indy sees shadows moving in the corners of the room, blackened figures skulking about, and perhaps the cries of another dog in the basement.

But anytime Indy makes any sort of noise, Todd is there to silence him. The sicker Todd gets, the meaner he becomes. He kicks Indy out of the bed at the slightest inconvenience. Pushing him away when Indy tries to comfort him. Eventually banishing him from the house entirely. Still, Indy remains loyal to the very end. And beyond.

Audiences might have a difficult time fully embracing Good Boy. There will undoubtedly be comparisons to another Shudder release that pointed the camera into corners—Skinamarink. Personally, I could not make it through that movie. I tried just about everything, thinking that watching it around 4 AM in a sleepy haze in a totally dark room would bring the atmosphere needed. It did not work.

Good Boy has a bit more going on at least. Director Ben Leonberg does a nice job of bringing the camera down to the ground (Ozu style) to try to provide that dog’s eye view for the audience. And if you are a dog person, you should just be able to look into Indy’s eyes all day long (or at least for the 72-minute run time of this movie) and just melt. I know that I would rather watch Indy stare into the corner for an hour than watch that fake CGI dog in the latest iteration of Superman

It might also change your own perspective when your dog is barking at seemingly nothing. Maybe they are sensing something we can not. Or maybe they are just annoyingly barking at a neighbor having the audacity to walk down their street. No matter the circumstance, we need to be nice to our pets. Definitely nicer than Todd (a low bar to clear). And this month we have the opportunity to give back to some of those pets in need while watching horror movies. 

While Indy may be a good boy, our boy dog, Mr. Beauregard, is the best boy. The vet calls him a distinguished gentleman. We rescued him from a shelter back in 2014. He is always super protective of our daughter. He barks at everything and nothing. He’s just an old hound dog from Deridder, Louisiana, but we wouldn’t trade him for anything.
 

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: The Mummy’s Hand (1940)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Mummy’s Hand was on Chiller Theater on Saturday, February 12, 1966 at 1:00 a.m., Saturday, March 1, 1975 at 3:00 a.m., Saturday, July 24, 1976 at 1:00 a.m., Saturday, July 29, 1978 at 1:00 a.m., Saturday, July 22, 1983 at 2:00 a.m.

Universal brought back Frankenstein’s Monster with 1939’s Son of Frankenstein, a movie that boasts a deranged Lionel Atwill as a police officer obsessed with his fake arm. It did so well that they reintroduced the Invisible Man a year later in The Invisible Man Returns. Success in Hollywood means more of what works, so the Mummy would come back in this movie, which is a sequel in that it’s very similar without being an actual sequel, and yet, it would have a sequel, The Mummy’s Tomb, and a third in this series, The Mummy’s Curse.

Unlike the days of major league money thrown at these movies, like when the first movie was made in 1932, Universal did this on a budget, reusing sets from James Whale’s Green Hell, using stock footage from The Mummy and stealing the entire score of Son of Frankenstein. The crew worked from 6 a.m. to 4 a.m. some days, grinding down contracted talent and crew.

Andoheb (George Zucco) has come to the Hill of the Seven Jackals to speak with the dying High Priest of Karnak (Eduardo Ciannelli). There, he learns the story of Kharis, a man who loved the bride of the pharaoh, Princess Ananka, and stole the tana leaves that can bring the dead back to life to save her when she was killed. When he was caught, his tongue was torn out and he was mummified alive, used to guard the tomb of the princess for the rest of eternity.

This start of the film got me all fired up for Kharis to rise and destroy, but no, like all Mummy movies, I had to suffer through the humans in this, Steve Banning (Dick Foran) and Babe Jenson (Wallace Ford), who are supposed to be heroic and comedic, respectively, but just made me want to see them get choked out by the curse of the pharaohs. Along with  the head of the Cairo museum, Dr. Petrie (Charles Trowbridge), The Great Solvani (Cecil Kellaway), a stage magician, and his daughter Marta (Peggy Moran), they decide to enter the tomb.

Andoheb makes it seem like he’s an educated man of Egyptology, but he’s also here to protect the treasure, so he raises Kharis (played here by Tom Tyler, who play Captain Marvel the following year) and finally, after what seems like years of comic relief, I get what I want: tannis leaves, bandages and sweet death. That said, Andoheb makes the mistake of falling for Marta, and he tries to take the leaves for himself, making the two of them immortal. The white bread hero ends up shooting him and setting Kharis on fire, making it back to America with all of the riches of the pyramids and the mummified remains of Princess Ananka. This is a happy ending to some. Not to me.

THE IMPORTANT CINEMA CLUB’S SUPER SCARY MOVIE CHALLENGE DAY 4: Bullets of Justice (2019)

October 4: A Horror Film from Kazakhstan

Bullets of Justice starts with a flyover of a post-apocalyptic city, followed by a pigman crapping his pants before being shot directly between the eyes. Now that’s how you get my interest.

Pig men? Well, back during World War III, which is expected to arrive in 2020 any day now, the U.S. government initiated a secret project codenamed Army Bacon. Yes, that sounds like something out of Alex Jones, but here we are. Now, a quarter of a century later, the Muzzles have become the top of the food chain, replacing humans, and only a few humans remain.

Directed by Valeri Milev, who also worked on Wrong Turn 6 and served as second unit director on Van Damme’s We Die Young, and written by Timur Turisbekov, who also plays hero Rob Justice, this film serves as a send-up of pretty much every post-Mad Max movie that I love. No, really. I created a Letterboxd list to track all the end-of-the-world films I’ve watched.

To get this on the shelves of Walmart, Danny Trejo shows up as Gravedigger, the father of our hero, who returns as a ghost to help him. Really, Danny Trejo against pig men is all the review I need to give this. People will want to watch it, much less telling you that there’s a scene where a jet pack flying pig man gets decapitated. Its bloody head drops right into the spread eagle crotch of a female bounty hunter, which slowly dissolves into a lovemaking scene.

Seriously, Trejo is in twenty or thirty movies a month — he and Nicolas Cage must have a running bet — but this is probably the best one you’ll see him in this year, even if his part is incredibly minor. It’s also full of absolutely ludicrous stunts, dirt all over everything, a near-obscene level of gore and a hero who has lost so many girlfriends that he has a shrine to all of them in his car.

There’s also a bad guy named Benedict Asshole and our hero’s new girl, who is also his sister, who has a mustache. And plenty of male frontal nudity. Of course, it’s also all acted phoentically in English, has all the directoral chops of The Asylum and doesn’t have a coherent plot.

The best of times. The worst of times. A lot blows up. I tried not to think too hard. Also, this is a movie that taught me that bullets are birds of justice made of lead, and if you don’t want them to kill you, they won’t. That literally made me laugh for five minutes, which is enough to say that this is a success.

This movie makes me think that Bulgaria and Kazakhstan got together and said, “Why the hell do Italy and the Philippines get to make all of the great Road Warrior rip-offs?”

2025 Scarecrow Psychotronic Challenge Day 4: Kandisha (2020)

4. MYTHICAL CREATURES: Though they are hard to capture, you must see one in this feature.

Three teenage friends — Amélie (Mathilde Lamusse), Bintou (Suzy Bemba) and Morjana  (Samarcande Saadi) — invoke the spirit of Aïsha Kandisha (Meriem Sarolie), the avenging creature of Moroccan legend, by using blood and a pentagram. This seems like the worst idea, but we wouldn’t have a movie to watch otherwise. Anyway, the Kandisha is a folkloric character, similar to a djinn, who appears as a beautiful woman but has hooves. She lives near water and seduces men, making them crazy and then murdering them.

Amélie has issues with Farid (Brahim Hadrami ), an ex who tries to rape her, so they ask Kandisha to punish him. It gets out of hand when she demands more sacrifices, including the men of the girls’ families, such as Amélie’s younger brother Antoine (Felix Glaux-Delporto).

Kandisha is a woman raped at the hands of Portuguese soldiers, but her rage kept her from the next world. If one calls her name, they can summon her for revenge. Kind of, sort of Candyman. She’s not the seductress of legend, actually. She exists to destroy men. Sadly, this reminds me that for all the horrors in the movies we love, women have it much worse in the real world.

Directors and writers Alexandre Bustillo and Julien Maury also made Inside.

You can watch this on Tubi.

UNSUNG HORRORS HORROR GIVES BACK 2025: Apocalipsis sexual (1982)

Each October, the Unsung Horrors podcast does a month of themed movies. This year, they will once again be setting up a fundraiser to benefit Best Friends, which works to save the lives of cats and dogs across America, giving pets second chances and providing them with happy homes.

Today’s theme: Lina Romay

According to Letterboxd, Lina is the most-watched actor in my history, having appeared in more than one hundred movies, trailed only by Christopher Lee, John Carradine and Dick Miller. Well, Carla Mancini is gaining, even if you never see her in the movies she’s in.

Directed by Carlos Aured (House of Psychotic Women, The Mummy’s Revenge) and Sergio Bergonzelli (Blood Delirium) — maybe or maybe not… — and written by Aured, this has a gang that is either pulling off crimes or having sex with one another. Then they decide to kidnap a millionaire’s daughter, Patty Hearst-style. They are Liza (Ajita Wilson, an American-born transgender actress who is also in Macumba Sexual and Sadomania, amongst other films), Ruth (Romay), Tania (Hemy Basalo, also known as Eva Palmer; she’s in Night of Open Sex), Antonio (José Ferro, Macumba Sexual) and Clark (Ricardo Díaz, El fontanero, su mujer, y otras cosas de meterCut-Throats 9), their leader. The virginal rich girl is Muriel (Kati Ballari, who appears in only one other movie,  La vendedora de ropa), and she could be more perverted than all of them.

Speaking of crime…

Two versions were released: an R-rated and an uncensored hardcore version with explicit sex scenes. At one point, the hardcore version wasn’t legal in Spain, where it was made, so it was distributed in countries where it was allowed. Some of the actors who participated in the hardcore sex scenes signed contracts assuring them that the version would never make it to Spain, where it might harm their careers. Obviously, Lina didn’t care.

Aured claimed that he filmed the sex scenes with the help of a professional hardcore actor, as not many men could stay hard when the cameras rolled.

After the law was liberalized, there was an explosion of Clasificada S films, which the softcore version was released as. The Italians got the hardcore. Strange, somewhat, that Aured, who did four movies with Paul Naschy, was making adult films.

The Italian version has a more ironic tone to the voiceover, while the Spanish one claims this is a true story and tries to tie it to Charles Manson. There’s also a square-up at the end, trying to ask how society can make such horrible people, said just minutes after we’ve watched all of them make love, sometimes for real, depending on the cut.

The end is kind of an apocalypse, but not as sleazy or end-of-the-world as you would hope. Then again, a chance to see Lina not being directed by Jess and, as always, her smile makes me happy.

You can get this from Mondo Macabro.

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: The Curse of the Crying Woman (1963)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Curse of the Crying Woman was on Chiller Theater on Saturday, May 10, 1969 at 1:00 a.m.

An older Mexican horror film that actually played in the U.S. — American-International Pictures offered it for syndication in 1965 — The Curse of the Crying Woman is another film that attempts to translate the legend of La Llorona, the crying woman, and does the best job of any I’ve seen.

The film begins with a full realization of the weirdness and wildness within, as a carriage ride is interrupted and all three passengers are hunted down by a mysterious woman in a long black dress, accompanied by her three monstrous dogs and an even more frightening henchman. In case you wondered, “Did Black Sunday play in Mexico?” this scene will definitely answer affirmatively.

That’s when the film introduces us to Amelia, our heroine, who has come to stay with her Aunt Selma, a place shrouded in cobwebs, where the cries of a woman can be heard at night. The bodies of generations of relatives decompose in the basement. One particular relative was a powerful witch who would return to power and take Selma to an afterlife filled with black masses and blood drinking, a fact that she excitedly related to a shocked Amelia.

From there, the film descends into wild scenes of Selma transforming into the Crying Woman, an eyeless creature surrounded by thousands of eyes, as well as a black mass filmed in negative and dead bodies coming back to life. It’s a movie that transcends its inspiration and delivers its own artful—and scary—take on a legendary story.