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Episode three of American Horror Story Delicate wasn’t as thrilling as the others have been so far. Which isn’t to say that it was bad.

The Story

We begin this episode with Anna mourning her miscarriage. She’s doing her best to heal, but it’s a struggle.

Anna is still losing time. She blinks, and hours have passed. She goes for a walk in the woods to clear her head and is gone so long Dex calls the police.

Oh, and she also sees Preacher sitting in a tree and cackling at her. Of course, the older woman is gone when Kamal and Dex go back to look for her.

Annabelle Dexter-Jones in American Horror Story.

Siobhan comes to check on her but doesn’t do much good. She essentially tells Anna to get over her pity party.

Feeling alone, Anna heads down into the basement with a bottle of wine. She starts going through some old baby things. But she’s distracted by a hallway that certainly wasn’t there before. She investigates, only to be grabbed up by people in bird dresses and strapped onto a surgical table.

Soon after, Anna starts to feel like she might still be pregnant. After trying to call Dr. Hill and getting a hell of a brushoff, she goes to a baby shop. There, a woman puts her hand on Anna’s belly and feels the baby kick.

At least, Anna thinks it’s a baby. I think we’d all be right to be skeptical.

What worked

There was so much to love in this episode. Just to start, I adored the repetition of the song Rockabye Baby. It is honestly a fairly dark song when you think about it even a little bit.

Another great moment in this episode was the one with Anna and the woman in the store. When the sales clerk touches Anna’s belly and feels the baby move, we have concrete proof. Whatever else is happening, there is something in Anna’s belly that’s moving. What it is, we have no idea. But it is there.

I also want to draw attention to attention to a moment in this episode that didn’t get as much attention as it should have. When Anna meets Nicolette, she’s surprised that the new mother is back at work just eight weeks after having her baby. It’s a reminder that most women in America aren’t as privileged as Anna. Most women who give birth are lucky to have six weeks to heal and adapt to motherhood. Most women who suffer a miscarriage don’t get even that. Even though what Anna’s going through is terrible, she gets to heal from that terror in a lovely home surrounded by anything she could need or want.

Except for a supportive partner, but we can’t have everything.

Michaela Jaé (MJ) Rodriguez in American Horror Story

The best thing about this episode is honestly the best thing about the whole series. Anna’s experiences are messed up. The people following her. The impromptu surgery in the basement. The nasty rotting thing in the pool. We do not know if any of these things happened or not.

Is she being followed, victimized, and experimented on? Or is she just losing her mind? And even if it is the latter, why is it happening?

What didn’t work

One thing I didn’t love about this episode was the acting from Dex. Yes, we’re supposed to hate him. But honestly, at this point, it’s unrealistic that Anna hasn’t kicked him out. His consideration for Anna’s well-being ebbs and flows, though it seems to flow most when he can use it to emotionally bully her. Honestly, if he can’t yell at her for ‘worrying him’ he doesn’t give a shit. So what is she still doing with her? At the very least, one would think she’d have sent him back to the city so she could heal in peace.

Good storytelling ebbs and flows. There are moments of excitement, blood, and brutality. There are moments of shocking revelations. Then there are moments like this episode. Moments that increase the tension of the whole season. Moments that pull the storyline taunt. So taunt it vibrates. So taunt you can feel it breaking.

There are just two episodes left before we hit a mid-season break. I’m sure we’re going to be left on a killer cliffhanger. I’m excited to see what that is.

4 out of 5 stars (4 / 5)

Movies n TV

Smile 2: A Poor Rate Second.

“Break a leg out there.”

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Smile 2, a psychological supernatural horror, released in October 2024 just in time for Halloween, sees director Parker Finn (Smile, Laura Hasn’t Slept) return with a sequel starring Naomi Scott (Aladdin) as pop star and recovering addict Skye Riley. While Smile 2 boasts a talented cast, it ultimately falls short of its predecessor, offering a familiar storyline with minor variations and a predictable finale. The film attempts to introduce a new method to combat the parasitic ‘Smile Entity’, but this addition fails to elevate the sequel beyond a pale imitation of its chilling predecessor.

The Plot.

Smile 2 begins shortly after the end of the original; just six days after Rose Cotter’s death. During a short interlude scene, we watch as the now cursed Joel attempts to pass the Smile Entity on by killing one criminal in front of another. The plan backfires spectacularly, inadvertently passing the curse onto an innocent bystander named Lewis Fregoli.


The film then shifts gears, introducing Skye Riley, a singer and performer making a triumphant return to the spotlight with a comeback tour after a tumultuous past. During a candid interview on the Drew Barrymore Show, Skye opens up about her struggles with addiction and the devastating loss of her boyfriend in a car accident. Her sobriety journey, however, faces a severe setback when she seeks pain relief from her old high school friend, the unwitting Lewis Fregoli. In a chilling turn of events, Lewis takes his own life while Skye watches, passing the Smile Entity onto her.
Unaware of her new cursed existence Skye gets on with rehearsing for her tour, but she begins to notice that strange things are happening. People are smiling at her in an unnatural way and she becomes the target of anonymous attacks and aggressions. When text messages begin to arrive from an unknown number, Skye decides to get some answers.

Highlights.

Let’s not beat about the bush. I found Smile 2 difficult to finish and was struggling at about the hour-and-a-half mark to stay awake. That being said it’s worth watching because everyone needs to see the 3-minute scene of the ‘smilers’ chasing Skye through her apartment. This was possibly the creepiest thing I’ve seen on a screen.  The buildup, the synchronicity of the movement of the actors and their positioning, the camera work, and the lighting. I have rewatched it several times and it doesn’t get old. If you are only interested in watching this, fast forward to the 123-minute mark and get ready to be impressed.

Drawbacks.

Where do I start?

My primary concern with Smile 2 is its striking resemblance to its predecessor. The narrative follows a familiar pattern: an attractive woman fleeing a supernatural force, grappling with hallucinations, experiencing a mental health decline, and culminating in the revelation someone close to Skye was the Smiling Entity after all. This repetitive structure diminishes the film’s impact.

Smile
  • Sosie Bacon, Jason T. Usher, Kyle Gallner (Actors)
  • Audience Rating: R (Restricted)

Last update on 2025-01-23 / Affiliate links / Images from Amazon Product Advertising API

While the introduction of a new method for shedding the entity initially offered a glimmer of hope this concept wasn’t fully realized. It just served to add names to the line of people that the entity has infected in the past.

Furthermore, the film’s pacing suffers from excessive focus on Skye’s musical career. Scenes showcasing her stage rehearsals and music videos, while intended to establish her identity as a performer, feel unnecessary and detract from the narrative momentum. Yes, we understand she’s a performer, you told us, you don’t need to prove it. These scenes appear to artificially inflate the film’s runtime, suggesting a lack of confidence in the core story.

The Final Take.

Ultimately, Smile 2 fails to expand upon the established lore of the franchise. The film’s conclusion feels contrived, with a blatant setup for a third installment. Hopefully, if a ‘Smile 3’ is inevitable, the creative team will bring fresh ideas and avoid simply retreading familiar ground.

2 out of 5 stars (2 / 5)

Both Cthulhu’s granted for that one scene.

Smile 2
  • Amazon Prime Video (Video on Demand)
  • Kyle Gallner, Naomi Scott (Actors)
  • Parker Finn (Director) – Parker Finn (Writer) – Parker Finn (Producer)

Last update on 2025-01-23 / Affiliate links / Images from Amazon Product Advertising API

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Movies n TV

Goosebumps, Stay Out Of The Basement Pt 2, could have just been one part

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We’re back again with Goosebumps The Vanishing, episode two. A story too big for one episode, apparently.

Or, maybe this is just a nod to the fact that Stay Out Of The Basement was a two-part episode in the original 1995 show. Either way, after seeing this episode, we could have kept it to one.

The story

We begin this second episode with Anthony investigating the parasitic plant taking over his body. Rather than, I don’t know, going to the hospital, he’s decided to phone a colleague and send her some samples from the bulb he pulls out of his arm with a handheld garden trowel.

David Schwimmer in Goosebumps The Vanishing.

Meanwhile, Devin is having his own worries. He’s haunted by what he saw in the sewers. So, he gets CJ to go with him to investigate. What they find is more of the tendrils of the plant that dragged him down through the manhole last episode.

I sure would have liked to see more about that.

Instead, we see Devin pivot to flirting with a newly single Frankie. Because teenage hormones I guess.

Meanwhile, Trey is having a terrible day. First, his girlfriend leaves him. Then, Anthony breaks his car window.

Needing a way to deal with his frustration, Trey decides to break into the Brewers’ basement. There, he starts wrecking up the place. Until he meets the plant creature and has an unfortunate accident.

What worked

The big difference between this episode and the last is the increased gross-out factor. This episode had some straight-up cringy moments. From the tendrils waiving from Anthony’s arm to the whole goat he brings home to feed his new pet, this episode was skin-crawling gross in the best way possible.

The series is called Goosebumps, after all.

What didn’t work

Unfortunately, that’s where my praise ends. This episode, unlike the last, just wasn’t that great.

To start with, there was a lot of unnecessary drama between characters who are not in danger of being eaten by a plant from the inside out.

 Francesca Noel in Goosebumps The Vanishing.

I especially disliked the focus on the Frankie/Trey/Devin love triangle.

Now, I don’t hate it. This part of the story adds extra emotional depth to the show. We can see why Trey would be especially incensed by his girlfriend falling for the son of the neighbor he’s feuding with. But it would be more enjoyable if it wasn’t so cliche and dramatic.

I hate the way Trey tried to gaslight Frankie. It makes me dislike him when he should be a sympathetic character. I hate how whiny Devin is every time he talks to Frankie. And I hated the impassioned speech Frankie gives after Devin asks her why she was with Trey.

Listen, I understand what we’re going for here. Devin and Cece are not struggling financially. They’re doing alright, and their new friends here in Gravesend are not. We kind of got that without Frankie claiming that her socioeconomic status is why she’s dating a bully and gaslighter. It felt out of place. It felt like pandering. It certainly didn’t feel like something an eighteen-year-old would say. I hated it.

Sale
The Vanished Return (Goosebumps: The Vanishing Novel)
  • Howard, Ms. Kate (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 272 Pages – 02/04/2025 (Publication Date) – Scholastic Inc. (Publisher)

Last update on 2025-01-23 / Affiliate links / Images from Amazon Product Advertising API

Finally, there was a moment near the end of the episode that irritated me. I don’t want to give too much detail because I wouldn’t dare ruin an R.L. Stine cliffhanger. But, well, it doesn’t make a lot of sense.

I get that we’re watching a show about a carnivorous plant that is going to wreak havoc on this family and neighborhood. I understand the suspension of disbelief. Some might even say I am a little too generous with it. So I can buy into a teenager being absorbed by a plant and turned into a monstrous version of himself.

I can’t buy into what happens at the end of this episode. It doesn’t make sense with the rules established. It certainly doesn’t make any sort of scientific or logical sense. It is a lazy moment meant to further the storyline but threatens the structural integrity of the season.

All in all, this wasn’t the best episode of Goosebumps. But it’s only the second episode. Honestly, the season has plenty of time to go either way.

2.5 out of 5 stars (2.5 / 5)

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Movies n TV

Thriller Nite, Poem by Jennifer Weigel Plus

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So, this is a convoluted post, not going to lie. Because it’s Thriller Nite. And we have to kick it off with a link to Michael Jackson in homage, because he’s the bomb and Vincent Price is the master… (If the following video doesn’t load properly, you can get there from this link.)

The movie monsters always approach so slowly.
Their stiff joints arcing in jerky, erratic movements
While the camera pans to a wide-eyed scream.
It takes forever for them to catch their victims.
 
Their stiff joints arcing in jerky, erratic movements
As they awkwardly shamble towards their quarry –
It takes forever for them to catch their victims.
And yet no one ever seems to get away.
 
As they awkwardly shamble towards their quarry –
Scenes shift, plot thickens, minutes tick by endlessly…
And yet no one ever seems to get away.
Seriously, how long does it take to make a break for it?
 
Scenes shift, plot thickens, minutes tick by endlessly…
While the camera pans to a wide-eyed scream.
Seriously, how long does it take to make a break for it?
The movie monsters always approach so slowly.

Robot Dance found subverted street art altered photography from Jennifer Weigel's Reversals series
Robot Dance from Jennifer Weigel’s Reversals series

So my father used to enjoy telling the story of Thriller Nite and how he’d scare his little sister, my aunt. One time they were watching the old Universal Studios Monsters version of The Mummy, and he pursued her at a snail’s pace down the hallway in Boris Karloff fashion. Both of them had drastically different versions of this tale, but essentially it was a true Thriller Nite moment. And the inspiration for this poem.

For more fun music video mayhem, check out She Wolf here on Haunted MTL. And feel free to check out more of Jennifer Weigel’s work here on Haunted MTL or here on her website.

Portrait of myself with dark makeup and crow skull headdress, backlit by the sun.
Portrait of myself with dark makeup and crow skull headdress, backlit by the sun.

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