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We open into Sookie’s home where Eric jumps in front of the bullet she fired. The bullet strikes Eric, and the werewolf turns into a man at the scent of his blood. When the werewolf won’t give Eric any information, Sookie shoots him again. The only tidbit of information she gets before Eric kills the werewolf completely is a thought of “Jackson.”

As Eric buries the werewolf, Sookie asks him about Jackson. Eric tells her that it is a town in Mississippi where the wolf is probably from. Sookie tells him she wants to go there tomorrow.

Meanwhile in Mississippi…

At the king of Mississippi’s home, Bill still isn’t too pleased to see Lorena. He’d thrown a lamp on her, catching her on fire. There’s definitely still some bad blood there. King Russell asks Bill why he hasn’t turned Sookie as he did his lover.

Tara is still messing around with the new vampire in town, sleeping with him before her dead boyfriend is even in his grave. Sookie and Tara are the only ones to attend Eggs’ funeral the following day. Franklin pays Tara a visit that night and when she won’t let him in, he glamours her into doing so.

Sam lets his brother, Tommy, know that he didn’t enjoy almost getting killed. His brother plays it off as a joke, but there is certainly animosity. When his alcoholic family shows up at his diner, Sam fakes happiness, but when things get rowdy with his father, he has to kick them out. At the end of the episode, Sam’s diner is broken into in the middle of the night. His office is rifled through and a bird flies from the window.

Jessica is still freaked out about the dead body gone missing from her house. She calls Pam again to talk about the matter, but Pam replies that it doesn’t sound like she has a problem at all since the body isn’t her problem anymore.

More Than She Bargained For…

The big kicker from this episode is when Arlene goes to the OB-GYN and finds out she’s pregnant. This seems like okay news until the doctor tells her that she’s nine weeks along, which is longer than she’s been with Terry. We’ve got a Rene serial killer baby on our hands. Matters are made even worse when Arlene tells Terry she’s pregnant and doesn’t stop him from believing it is their baby together. Yikes.

A Flash From Bill’s Past

We do get to see a flashback from Bill’s life shortly after he was turned. Bill returns to his family home to find his wife with the body of his son. His daughter has been sent away so as not to get sick. Bill’s wife, Caroline, seems ecstatic to see Bill return home until she notices he is cold to the touch and crying blood. She becomes hysterical, and Lorena has to take Bill away and glamour Caroline. This was apparently Bill’s version of Jessica returning home and Bill having to clean it all up. We all make mistakes.

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A Headless Corpse

Jason continues to study for the police exam, finding himself distraught with not being smart enough. One day when he is napping in his truck at the construction job site, Lafayette wakes him up. They’ve found a headless body in a drainage pipe. We can only assume that this is where Jessica’s corpse went. It seems that Franklin – the strange new vamp in town – did Jessica a favor to get her to owe him.

Franklin shows up at Jessica’s house with the man’s head in a bag. He did a favor for her. Now he wants information about Bill.

Sookie Gets Escorted

Back at home cleaning up werewolf blood, Sookie gets snuck up on and spooked. Turns out the man is Alcide, a werewolf Eric called on to watch over Sookie. Alcide has intimate knowledge of the werewolves she’s looking for, as his ex is dating their leader.

When Alcide and Sookie go to a werewolf bar in Mississippi, Sookie chats privately with a man that she knows fed on Bill. When things turn nasty, Alcide has to intervene and causes a ruckus in the club.

Trouble in Paradise

The episode ends with Lorena following Bill into his bedroom at King Russell’s home. She kisses him, and he kisses her back as he tells her he will never love her. Bill bites her, tells her no, and suddenly they are having sex. Bill breaks Lorena’s neck and twists it all the way around as they continue having sex. Lorena tells Bill she loves him as he screams.

We can only assume that Lorena is Bill’s maker, so she is forcing him to do this against his will. Sookie sure will like this turn of events.

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Sarah Moon is a stone-cold sorceress from Tennessee whose interests include serial killers, horror fiction, and the newest dystopian blockbuster. Sarah holds an M.A. in English Literature and an M.F.A. in Fiction Writing. She works as an English professor as well as a cemeterian. Sarah is most likely to cover horror in print including prose, poetry, and graphic forms. You can find her on Instagram @crystalsnovelnook.

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Movies n TV

Low point or a daring experiment? Halloween VI (1995) Review

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To a lot of fans, this is the film that killed the franchise. It says a lot that the next installment is yet another retcon. Halloween VI: The Curse of Michael Myers attempts to explain Michael’s unrelenting evil, which lead to mixed opinions from longtime fans. There are two cuts of the film, theatrical vs producer’s. For a lot of people, the latter is the only one worth mentioning. Aiming to be as accurate as possible, I will be talking about the producer’s cut. Let’s begin! 

Plot

We start Halloween VI with a six-year time jump from part five. Jamie is now barefoot and recently pregnant, running away from Michael as he wants her baby. While she manages to hide the little one away, Michael finally gets his hunger satiated by killing her. The moment is one of the most brutal ways in the franchise up until that point. Rest in peace, Jamie, you held your ground for as long as you could, the sequels were just too relentless. 

The movie then cuts to a whole different scene going on. We have a new family living in the Myers house and their youngest child is hearing voices telling him to kill his loved ones. Tommy Lloyd is watching the family, played by none other than Paul Rudd in his first-ever theatrical role. Tommy still carries trauma from the events all those years ago when Laurie Strode was babysitting him. So when he finds Jamie’s baby, his part in the story becomes even more essential. 

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Dr Loomis also stars in what was Donald Pleasance’s final role before his passing. He and Tommy try to stop Michael once and for all before the cycle can repeat itself. As it turns out, Michael is a victim of a druid cult which makes him want to kill his family members every Halloween. Thorn, the cult in question, thinks they can control Michael and make him do their bidding. This results in catastrophe and Michael goes berzerk and kills all the cult members. Once again, it’s one of the most gruesome montages for the franchise up until that point.  

Tommy and Kara are left to face Michael on their own which they manage to do with some corrosive liquid and good luck. However, nothing stays dead in this franchise as it’s soon revealed Michael somehow escaped and this time Dr Loomis might not be so lucky… 

Overall thoughts

I would say for me personally Halloween VI definitely ranks somewhere near the bottom. The whole point of Michael is that there is no rhyme or reason to his killings and this film tries to go against that. I am glad the mistake was rectified by the upcoming installment. There were still some good things about it, such as Paul Rudd’s acting that reveals some raw talent as far as I’m concerned, as well as some direction choices and musical score. However, I also think it absolutely deserves all the criticism that it gets. 

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2.5 out of 5 stars (2.5 / 5)

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American Horror Stories, The Thing Under The Bed

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We’ve reached the final episode of American Horror Stories, season three. After the ups and downs of the season, I didn’t know what to expect. I felt that we were due a big finish, Killer Queens. But I feared we were in for a big letdown.

As it turns out, The Thing Under The Bed was neither.

The story

We begin our story with a little girl named Mary, who is scared of something under her bed. She sneaks out of her room, only to be caught by her father and sent back to sleep. And of course, there is something horrible waiting for her under her bed.

Debby Ryan in American Horror Stories.

This scene cuts away to a woman named Jillian. She has strange dreams, including one about Mary. But her husband, Mark, doesn’t want to hear about it. He’s only interested in a little lovemaking because he wants a baby. Jillian doesn’t, which makes total sense because she’s already married to one. But her irritation with her childish husband goes away when he goes away. And by goes away, I mean he’s sloppily devoured by something vicious under their bed.

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What worked

In short, this episode just worked. The acting was professional and believable. The cinematography and lighting work were wonderful, adding spooky effects and startling moments without impairing visibility.

Best of all, the story was solid. There were no plotholes to be found. Our main character, Jillian, was relatable and sympathetic.

This was maybe my favorite part of the story. I thought Jillian was a remarkably sympathetic character. She was dealt a hand she never asked for, having her husband slaughtered in their bedroom. I don’t think she missed him, so much as she was afraid of the legal ramifications of being caught with literal blood on her hands.

Then, when it would have been safest for her to just lay low and save up for a good defense attorney, she instead goes into unlikely hero mode. She does her best to save people, putting herself in legal and physical danger. It’s hard not to root for her.

It’s also a little hard not to root for the antagonist, too. I don’t want to ruin the twist for you, so I’m going to tread lightly here. But it’s great when you have an antagonist who might be off their rocker, but also maybe has a point.

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What didn’t work

I can only really think of one complaint with this episode. And that is how frequently one character says the word Chickadee. And if you’ve seen the episode, you know what I am talking about.

I get it, he has a pet name for his daughter. It’s adorable. It’s meant to convey that the two of them have a healthy loving relationship and I get it. We all get it. Blind monks get it. But the fact remains that no parent on Earth calls their kid by their pet name every single time they speak an individual sentence to them. It was just too damn much.

All in all, this was a good episode. It was a classic story, turned on its head, told by professionals from start to finish. And I hope that if there is another season, we see more stories like this one. But after the efforts put into this season at large, I wouldn’t be surprised if this is the last we see of American Horror Stories.

4 out of 5 stars (4 / 5)

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American Horror Stories, Leprechaun

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If you’ve watched enough short-form horror anthology shows, you’ll notice that some stories are mainstays. Each show seems to put on the same sort of episodes, with the occasional surprising storyline that we’ve never (or at least rarely) seen before.

Leprechaun was an example of a repeated story—the story of a greedy thief whose punishment far outweighs the crime.

The story

We begin our story in 1841, with a drunk man leaving the bar one late night. He’s distracted by something glowing at the end of the well. When he reaches down for the glowing thing, he falls in. Moments later, he screams.

We then cut to the modern day. The well is still there, and now it’s surrounded by a dying town. In this town lives a young man named Colin. He’s married, his wife is pregnant, and he’s out of work. Like many of his friends.

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Hudson Oz in American Horror Stories Leprechaun.

Desperate for cash, Colin and his friends decide to rob a bank. They put together an Equate version of Ocean’s Eleven, and break in one night. But, of course, they find that the gold is nothing more than bait. And the creature waiting for them is something they never expected.

What worked

The first thing I want to point out is how real this episode felt. At least to anyone currently living in the same small town they grew up in. These characters felt like guys I went to school with. Guys I would see at the bar.

I appreciated the real anger and frustration these characters are feeling. Especially Colin. He’s bitter, and maybe he has a right to be. He did exactly what he was supposed to do to succeed. He went to school and invested in his career, and yet now he’s out of work and struggling to support his family. I probably don’t need to tell you how that feels. Because of this, we can all kind of understand why he was tempted to rob a bank.

I also want to talk about the fact that this was, as I said, an often-explored story. That can be a bad thing, but it can also be a good thing. This story is told over and over because it’s a good story. A relatable story. And there’s nothing wrong with that.

What didn’t work

That being said, this version didn’t try to do much to break out of the mold.

Because we have seen this story so many times, most of us could tell the story themselves. I would have expected something new, or some twist. But, in the end, the story didn’t bring anything new to the discussion.

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Maybe because of this, the ending left a lot to be desired. Trapped in the basement of the bank, everyone just sort of stares at everyone else, until the thieves give up. And that’s it. The ending wasn’t scary, shocking, or funny. It was just sad, on multiple levels.

Overall, this was an okay story. It was entertaining, if not surprising. I would compare this episode to homemade macaroni and cheese. Everyone’s got their own version, they’re all pretty good, and none of them are exciting.

There’s just one episode left in this season of American Horror Stories. Let’s hope they’ve saved the best for last.

3.5 out of 5 stars (3.5 / 5)

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