
Michael Myers finds Laurie Strode twenty years after Laurie escaped his killing spree in Halloween H20: 20 Years Later. Join us as we journey back to 1998 for today’s installment of ‘31 Days of Horror’. 🎃🪦🔪

Michael Myers finds Laurie Strode twenty years after Laurie escaped his killing spree in Halloween H20: 20 Years Later. Join us as we journey back to 1998 for today’s installment of ‘31 Days of Horror’. 🎃🪦🔪

The ’31 Days of Horror’ take us to Cradle Bay, Washington where teenagers in a group known as the “Blue Ribbons” are suspiciously well behaved. Watch our review of the 1998 sci-fi/horror movie Disturbing Behavior, starring James Marsden, Katie Holmes and Nick Stahl. Sounds Razor.
#DisturbingBehavior #MovieReview

If you’ve ever been a 10-year-old who felt they outgrew Disney or that you were more mature than most kids around you, then Rushmore is the perfect movie for you. I grew up watching it on Comedy Central for years and it was at a perfect time in my life when my parents were getting divorced and I was starting middle school. I didn’t really have many people to lean on so Wes Anderson’s distinctive style spoke to me for many reasons. I felt Rushmore was a good version of a ‘90s teen movie filtered through a very reserved but adult lens. It feels like a prototypical high school movie but its unusual tone sets it apart from other movies like it. A lot of this is what has kept me coming back to it over the years and shows why Wes Anderson is still the best to ever do it.

Logan Myerz reviews the Disney channel original movie Halloweentown starring Debbie Reynolds, Kimberly J. Brown, and Judith Hoag.
#Halloweentown #31DaysofHorror #Disney #MovieReview
“When a young girl living with her good-witch grandmother learns she too is a witch, she must help her grandmother save Halloweentown from evil forces.”

With Bottle Rocket being a critical hit, it only made sense for another studio like Touchstone Pictures to come calling and give Wes Anderson the skills to become the filmmaker that he is today. Due to its larger budget and higher profile, it’s no doubt that Rushmore is truly a Wes Anderson movie. I remember it being the movie that introduced me to Wes Anderson. Because of his unique style, no movie was like it at the time to me. Not to mention that it stood out from many other high school movies of its time such as Can’t Hardly Wait or American Pie. He knows how to use his style to create an immersive world that’s so meticulously detailed that he’s able to flesh out the characters and the story in a more convenient and subtle way than other filmmakers would probably do. Watching it now was somewhat unexpected. While I don’t think I can tout it as the masterpiece I once did, it was still an entertaining movie.