Patron Pick – Saw 3

This special reward is available to Patreon patrons who pledge at the $10 or $20 monthly levels. Each month, those patrons will pick a film for me to review. If they choose, they also get to include some of their thoughts about the movie. This Pick comes from Matt Harris.

Saw 3 (2006)
Written by Leigh Whannell and James Wan
Directed by Darren Lynn Bousman

I have never seen a single film in the Saw franchise before this one. That made my viewing experience quite an incoherent one. If you asked me what I knew about this franchise, it would have been that Tobin Bell played the bad guy Jigsaw, and he made elaborate death traps. Asked about characters or plot beyond that I would simply have to shrug both before and after watching Saw 3. I have no idea. It became very clear within moments of the film starting that I was supposed to recognize several of these characters. The weird thing is that no new characters were introduced, so I understood them to be new. Thus, I kept wondering who the ongoing series characters were and who were the ones just being introduced to die.

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Solo Tabletop RPG Actual Play – Supersworn: The Victory Academy Part Seven

Read the previous chapter here

[Begin a Session: Flashback reveals an aspect of another character, place, or faction]
Plot Thread: Coup at the Academy
Oracle: Evade Superstition

One year ago.

Aiden Bell enjoys the quiet of the Academy around midnight. The new students are settled in at the dorms. Days earlier, they had attended a speech from one of the Victory Vanguard founders, Master Destiny. Bell had chatted briefly with the seemingly immortal man, elderly during World War II and looking unchanged in 2024. Master Destiny mentioned how the Book of Destiny became lost inside the Academy during The Whisper’s siege of the grounds in the late 1970s. Master D had also mentioned rumors of a secret arcane library that had grown organically but is said to only be visible to those it wishes to find it.

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Movie Review – Killer Klowns From Outer Space

Killer Klowns From Outer Space (1988)
Written and directed by the Chiodo Brothers

The Chiodo Brothers (Stephen, Charles, and Edward) had been absorbed by making movie special effects since they were kids. They had worked in the industry for a few years, selling their skills to productions like Critters, Faerie Tale Theater, and UHF. One of their most well-known works was the Large Marge effect in Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure. Puppets, stop motion, make-up, they loved it all. Ironically, in their first feature film, most of the special effects work was done by other artists they had befriended over the years. The Chiodos spent most of their time directing, producing, and playing some Killer Klowns. The result is that the film is less interested in the plot and more about the spectacle of the movies.

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Comic Book Review – Blackest Night/Green Lantern: Blackest Night

Blackest Night (2010)
Reprints Blackest Night #0-8
Written by Geoff Johns
Art by Ivan Reis

Green Lantern: Blackest Night (2010)
Reprints Green Lantern #43-52
Written by Geoff Johns
Art by Doug Mahnke, Ed Benes, and Marcos Marz

Geoff Johns’s run on Green Lantern was intensely inspired by Alan Moore’s work on the title during the 1980s. The short story “Tygers” was most influential, which mentions the rise of the Guardians of the Universe’s greatest threats in the form of Ranx the Sentient City and the Children of the White Lobe, both of whom had shown up as enemies early in Johns’ run. In these Green Lantern Corps short tales penned by Moore, he introduced the prophecies of a Blackest Night. The details of this weren’t fully developed, but Nekron, a cosmic god of the dead, was involved. As Johns loves repurposing bits of DC Universe history, he devoted a large chunk of this run to the build-up of Blackest Night.

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Movie Review – Anguish

Anguish (1987)
Written and directed by Bigas Luna

Sometimes, you discover an underrated movie so cleverly made you are shocked that more people aren’t talking about it. That’s how I felt thirty minutes into Anguish as the film made a huge revelation that completely turned the audience on their head. I won’t go into more detail in this introductory paragraph, but I will discuss spoilers below. If you haven’t seen this movie yet, I would recommend finding a way to do so. Streaming in the U.S. is only available via a Full Moon Features channel subscription on Amazon. I don’t know about the rest of their catalog, but this is well worth watching, and it has clearly inspired several contemporary horror directors.

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TV Review – Ripley

Ripley (2024)
Written and directed by Steven Zaillian

There are few protagonists in modern literature as challenging as Tom Ripley. He’s a captivating figure because he’s pretty pathetic yet so cunning. In many ways, Ripley is the shadow underdog, a guy who, by all evidence, should lose, yet he manages to commit multiple murders and steal millions while evading capture. Despite coming from a poor/working-class background, Ripley has evolved refined tastes mainly because he believes he deserves to live the best life possible. Other people are inconveniences most of the time, hindrances to him enjoying the luxury offered to the wealthiest among us. If ever there was a character to highlight the negative aspects of sociopathy, an actual condition that isn’t as one-dimensional as much media would like you to think. Ripley can’t seem to care about anyone other than himself; it troubles him, but it is not enough to stop his pursuit of comfort.

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Movie Review – Martin

Martin (1977)
Written and directed by George A. Romero

While most know George Romero as the director of the zombie films Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead, and Day of the Dead, he also made other films during the 1970s. Between 1968 and 1978, Romero wrote and/or directed five non-zombie films, including a romantic comedy. Most of his interests stayed firmly in horror, and of these pictures, Martin is the one you’re most likely to hear about, and for good reason. Having seen only three Romero pictures to date, I can say Martin is the one that kept my attention the best. It is a character study and vampire movie that plays with our perceptions by centering us entirely in the mind of the protagonist, who is definitely a murderer but may also be a literal monster.

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PopCult Podcast – Robot Dreams/Beetlejuice Beetlejuice

A lonely New Yorker mail orders a companion but a series of complications split them apart and they dream of being reunited. A woman haunted by strange encounters in her adolescence returns to the old house where it all started.

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Movie Review – From Beyond

From Beyond (1986)
Written by Brian Yuzna, Dennis Paoli, and Stuart Gordon
Directed by Stuart Gordon

Stuart Gordon was a well-regarded name in American horror cinema, particularly in the 1980s. Born in Chicago in 1947, Gordon was drawn to acting and live theater, which he majored in at university. After graduation, he started his own theater company and engaged in highly provocative stagings. One of these, The Game Show, was designed as an attack on audience apathy. With plants in the audience, Gordon’s cast would begin to provoke the viewers, and each show would conclude with an audience riot that brought the play to a halt. He put on a politically charged adaptation of Peter Pan in 1968, which got him and his wife arrested for obscenity. Live nude actors and allusions to pixie dust being a substitution for LSD seemed to draw ire from the community. Gordon would come around to film in the mid-1980s, with his first production being The Re-Animator and From Beyond as his follow-up.

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Solo Tabletop RPG Actual Play – Solo Liminal Horror Part Three

You can purchase Liminal Horror here
You can purchase Jeansen’s Machines here
You can download the Liminal Horror Solo Starter here

Read the previous chapter here

Scene #6 – (Confrontation 5/8)

  • Modified: Cristian is in the local jail as the police process him trying to convince them he’s innocent – Add some trouble or bad news.
  • The GM asks you to: Explain what’s currently happening – activities around.
  • Oracle: Eliminate Prison
  • Doom Clock #2 – The Promethean Fire (4/6)

Cristian sits in a cell at the Sevier County Sheriff’s Department. Officer Fletcher discovered a body hidden in the back room of the crawlspace. During his interrogation, Cristian learned that it was an adult male, so it was not the missing child, and that it had been in the crawlspace for about a week. He told them he had an alibi, to call his secretary, and she would confirm that he had been to work every day for the last week until today. It’s around one in the morning, and he sits in his cell, hoping they get ahold of her ASAP. But he’s wracked by the thought of how a dead man ended up in the crawlspace under his late grandparents’ mountain cabin. And where is cousin Albert?

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