New Fiction 2022 – October

Short Stories & Chapters

Comic Shorts & Single Issues

Video & Electronic Games

Movies

TV Episodes

TV Series

New Horror 2022 – Day 31

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“A Good Student” by Nuzo Onoh (2014)
“Bit by slow bit, his body started to disintegrate like fluffy flakes of white cotton.”

I read a story from this book every year, and they are always memorable. Onoh’s stories present such a unique cultural viewpoint that it provides new takes on stories of spirits and ghouls. Another reminder to get my head out of America’s and Western Europe’s ass.

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Dracula Daily – “October” by Bram Stoker & ed. Matt Kirkland (1897, 2021)
“The men were scared every time we turned our electric lamp on them, and fell on their knees and prayed.”

I’ve been reading Dracula Daily, well, daily since the beginning, and it ends next month. What a journey. I’d never read it before so I’ve definitely not had the typical reading experience. All the travel stuff this month reminds me most of playing the Fury of Dracula board game, zipping around Europe to hunt down the children of the night. As far as the reading, October was the most suspenseful month thus far as the protagonists chased Dracula out of London and pursued him into the east, then are forced to wait and see where he’ll turn up. I’m not actually sure how this is going to end since the 1992 movie adaptation has been all I knew about Dracula proper for a long time and it turns out is not too faithful to the actual novel written by Bram Stoker. And I suppose neither is this chronological reading, but at least this gets through the original text.

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“The End of All Things” by Natalie Leif & Elaine Well (2014)
“I’ll look at the lines myself.”

I wasn’t quite sure of the message here, and it’s probably a sign of a good story that I found it very compelling but wanted more. The ending evokes a sense of inevitable collapse beneath the weight of the world, that we are all inextricably linked to an entity we cannot escape.

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Darkstalkers 3 (aka Vampire Savior) dev. Capcom (1997)
“Let’s stick together until I’m full, shall we?”

Take Street Fighter and throw in supernatural and sci-fi horror figures, and that’s this game. Each of the 18 characters gets their own little arc and ending through the arcade mode, and while I’m sure most people are more interested in the multiplayer aspect, I always found the single player mode an interesting part of these fighting games. This is another instance in which I realize that while I never considered myself a horror fan when I was younger, I was absolutely in for monsters and the supernatural.

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Amer dir. Hélène Cattet & Bruno Forzani (2009)
"Can’t you see she’s hungry?”

This was a doozy and a strange movie to end the month. Hardly any dialogue and fairly interpretive, it’s also a sharp homage to giallo horror, which I’m not especially versed in. But part of the reason I take on these movie-a-day projects is to check out new works and be challenged, so I’m glad I did. The horror here is in confronting the self, staring inward into the abyss from which there is no escape.

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The Simpsons – "Treehouse of Horror XXXIII” (2022)
“If we want to escape with our delusions of being alive, we have to fight.”

I enjoyed this year’s Treehouse of Horror, even if it was fairly light on comedy. But the comedy in recent years can sometimes be full of some real groaners, so perhaps I just welcome an acceptance by the writers that jokes every other second isn’t their strong suit. The first two segments are straightforward retellings of The Babadook and Death Note (the latter also animated in anime style), but the third segment was especially meta and weird, even as a simple parody of Westworld. That clicked with me because it’s as meta as The Simpsons Game, which I’ve written about before from my perspective of working on the game. That introspective angle also makes it the darkest segment, asking the audience to examine pop culture today and the way we treat the characters in our favorite media.

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Bob’s Burgers – "Apple Gore-chard! (But Not Gory)” (2022)


“Everyone wants a piece of you. Sometimes as a sacrifice to the gods.”

This show’s dedication to producing a Halloween show every year is admirable. The episodes are always great, though in recent years they’ve moved away from Halloween itself as the central theme in favor of other spooky familial shenanigans. Louise’s exploration of the nature of popularity was a poignant thread.

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Castlevania – Seasons 3 & 4 (2020-2021)


“Thank you for my second life. I intend to use it well and make wonderful new dreams of it.“

I’d watched the first two seasons some time ago, and waited until the show was complete to catch the rest. While the arc of the first two seasons that were focused on Dracula felt complete, these latter two seasons were more of an extended epilogue, exploring these characters in the wake of defeating a great foe. As a result, there isn’t the same satisfying arc, just a series of interesting encounters and meditations on forming new lives and relationships. It feels like a short story anthology that follows the novel. Reflecting on it, I’d say it’s just the thing to round out the month, some breathy autumnal monologues punctuated by decadent battle sequences.

New Horror 2022 – Day 30

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“The Green Bowl” by Sarah Orne Jewett (1901)
“The English tart is nothing but a pie without a soul.”

A lot of stories from this period are people recounting some tale of the supernatural to their friends, sometimes with a little twist thrown in. This one’s fairly light on the twist part and isn’t scary except in a heaviness of the foreknowledge of death sort of way.

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“Crush” by Janet Hetherington, Ronn Sutton, Becka Kinzie, Zakk Saam (2018)
“His eyes are as wild as the sea.”

Aye, that’s a Gothic story alright. The foreword by Jacques Nodell that introduces the anthology was actually a really good breakdown of the Gothic literature genre and its trappings. The ending is pretty gruesome but then I think that’s also a tendency in the scary Gothic romances.

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It Follows dir. David Robert Mitchell (2014)
“It is not done with me either.”

This movie carried some good word of mouth but had fallen into the bottomless backlog of stuff I needed to watch. A showing at the Roxie prompted me to finally check it out. There was actually a short lecture by author Johanna Isaacson that introduced the movie and let me tell you, I’m always in for a pre-movie presentation to prime the brain for what’s to come. The movie itself is great of course, lives up to the hype and left me creeped out. I’ll be walking uneasily and constantly checking my surroundings for days.

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Zombies Ate My Neighbors dev. LucasArts (1993)
“Terror has a new name!”

This is one of those games that’s been in the back of my brain since the 90s as something to complete someday, and the season felt right for it. (It helps that I have a portable device with emulation support so I could cheese through the game with save states and a rewind function.) Now that I’ve completed it, whoof, what a pain in the ass. It can be fun with its horror and sci-fi tropes, but it’s also incredibly difficult. It’s meant to be completed over the course of weeks or months but I don’t have that kinda time. The levels also start to get repetitive, with latter levels essentially serving more challenging remixes of earlier stuff. I’m glad I finally got through it but it’s a tough proposition these days.

New Horror 2022 – Day 29

“Rearview” by Samantha Hunt (2020)
“All that’s precious; life, sleep, breathing.”

The specter you can never exorcise.

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“Sea of Souls” by Jenna Lynn Wright, Alvaro Feliu, Juan Francisco Mota, Ricardo Osnaya, Erik Lopera Tamayo, Jorge Cortes, Robby Bevaro, Maxflan Araujo, Walter Pereyra, Taylor Esposito (2022)
“This isn’t the face I had when we met.”

The feel of a rushed committee affair, but stitched together adequately enough.

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Prey for the Devil dir. Daniel Stamm (2022)
“Now that you know the devil, the devil knows you.”

I was irked by the polite series of resolutions. The final moments imply it anyway, but I would have liked more commitment to this as an exorcist series.

New Horror 2022 – Day 28

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“The Signal-Man” by Charles Dickens (1866)
“What is the danger? Where is the danger?”

This idea of the adventuring British gent who wanders out into the world and feels free to go anywhere by rights is prime horror material, in particular because it’s good to swat down that idea by putting that gent in over his head. Now this story isn’t that necessarily (”A Distant Episode” goes there), but it does highlight that if you think you can just wander into someone else’s business on a lark then you’re fucking around and you will find out.

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“Hello, My Name Is…” by Nadia Shammas, Rowan MacColl, Licha Myers, Chris Sanchez (2021)
“Workers have names. Management has power.”

What is a name but a tracking system? The means by which to search and destroy.

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Medusa: Queen of the Serpents dir. Matthew B.C. (2020)
“People like that… they’re nothing.”

I was a good half hour into this movie before I realized this was not the Medusa I was looking for, but I couldn’t just stop watching after getting that far. This one does do something interesting with transformation and a reckoning for the abusers, then it muddles things a bit by trying to justify it all with an explanation. I do like a good explanation, but this one doesn’t pan out.

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Medusa dir. Anita Rocha da Silveira (2021)
“Don’t let yourself be deceived by the worldly people.”

Now this is the Medusa I intended to watch, and it’s a different kind of movie altogether. It’s light on the horror but it does present a horrifying reality. That sense of a danger that might feel new but we’ve been facing for millennia. People get scared and they get together to come up with rules and systems that ultimately can’t serve everyone, and then they’re scared of the outliers, and then there’s death, and then one group or another is the majority and the rules and systems remain but in different forms. Anyway, that’s where my brain went from watching this. Systems and death.

New Horror 2022 – Day 27

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“A Ghost Story” by Mark Twain (1870)
“Then it occurred to me to come over the way and haunt this
place a little.”

Twain does it again with a welcome satirical break in the so serious streak of short stories I’d been reading.

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“Chemical 13!” by Michael Woods & Saskia Gutekunst (2009)
“Everything is fine.”

Comeuppance stories about Nazis getting the wrath they deserve don’t hit the same anymore, not when they are just still around in daily life.

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The Mafu Cage dir. Karen Arthur (1978)
“Do not smile during a sacred ritual.”

Whoa, Carol Kane. I mean I know she has horror chops from last year’s viewing of Office Killer, but that was still leaning into her comedic sensibilities. This is before Taxi and Kane gets to stretch more in this intense story about familial obsession.

New Horror 2022 – Day 26

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“The White Cormorant” by Frithjof Spalder (1971)
“A prayer poured from my lips.”

The ocean’s a verified scary place, but coasts are also strangely compelling. If you ask me, that space where the ocean meets the land must be the most haunted of all. This story explores the boundary.

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“Gestation” by Marguerite Bennett, Jonathan Brandon Sawyer, Doug Garbark, Nic. J. Shaw (2014)
“I’ll deal with the corpse, my lady-love.”

It’s very satisfying when men in power are absolutely wrecked by women, so I appreciate the still too-rare opportunity to see it happen. (And you should know that this short comic story was expanded into its own series.)

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Monster (aka Humanoids from the Deep) dir. Barbara Peeters & Jimmy T. Murakami (1980)
“Somebody killed my dog, Slattery. You got any ideas?”

I haven’t watched anything from Roger Corman’s wheelhouse until this. It was a decent and straightforward creature feature with emphasis on the ecological consequences of bioengineering and ignorance about colonialism, but then there are also some clearly exploitationy scenes in which women are raped by monsters. (The poster tips the viewer off to that aspect.) It looks like there was behind-the-scenes drama in which Corman mandated the nudity and rape scenes to give the movie more oomph without telling the director or actors about it. Beyond that, this had thematic crossover with the ocean stuff from today’s short story and the birthing stuff from the comic, so it tied things together in an interesting way.

New Horror 2022 – Day 25

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“Unseen—Unfeared” by Francis Stevens (1919)
“Again I struggled within me, bit at my lip till I tasted blood, and presently the blind paroxysm passed.”

Yesterday’s reimagining of Lovecraft’s background (”Turn Out the Light”) just reminded me that the paranoia that H.P. Lovecraft brought to his stories came from his racist anxieties and fear of strange foreigners. This story also hearkens back to those sentiments, showing how the racism of the day is always bubbling just beneath the surface and ready to boil over with any provocation.

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“The Speed of Pain” by Jeff Lemire, Andrea Sorrentino, Dave Stewart, Steve Wands, Will Dennis (2018)
“I spent the week cursing God.”

Whoa nelly, this first issue is a great setup. It’s got that urban decay vibe of grungy industrial hellscape movies of the 90s like The Crow, Seven, and Dark City. I’ll definitely be coming back to finish this series.

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Eve’s Bayou dir. Kasi Lemmons (1997)
“That’s how it always is. Blind to my own life.”

This movie has rich Gothic tension with underlying hints of supernatural strangeness while the real world drama leaves its traumatic scars. I’m filing this in the same drawer as Pan’s Labyrinth, Celia, and other dark coming-of-age stories where kids have to deal with shit far above their pay grade because innocence is finite.

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Bride of Frankenstein dev. Paul Smith, Steve Howard, Timedata Ltd. (1987)
“Frankenstein lives!”

I haven’t watched the movie yet, but if it’s anything like this game, it’ll be about the titular Bride murdering prisoners and robbing graves to recover the body parts she needs to revive her beloved. The navigation gameplay is so obtuse that I would’ve had to take copious notes and map out the space on paper in order to complete it without the aid of a walkthrough. The constant thumping of a heart to represent stamina/health is a great touch.

New Horror 2022 – Day 24

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“Turn Out the Light” by Penelope Love (2015)
“The distance they had struggled with all their lives was now made infinite by death.”

The horror of a gulf between mother and son.

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“The Cemetery” by Franco, Abigail Larson, Wes Abbott, Sara Richard (2022)
“Don’t you just want to get this over with?”

How do we learn to navigate the scary stuff? And why do some of us make it while others don’t?

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Trouble Every Day dir. Claire Denis (2001)
“Do you believe in loyalty, Mr. Brown? What about betrayal?”

This pendulum swings from horrifying to erotic and back again so many times it made my head spin. I had to look up what the hell was going on afterward. I’m certainly learning a lot about the New French Extremity this month.

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Halloween Forever dev. Imaginary Monsters (2016)
“Our butternut hero returns to his life as a mundane carved gourd.”

A cute Halloween platformer that hits many horror monster tropes. These sorts of games tend to lean into that “Nintendo hard” mentality but the developers are thankfully lenient and keep it a short and sweet experience.

New Horror 2022 – Day 23

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“The Pear-Shaped Man” by George R.R. Martin (1987)
“I knew when I saw you that you’d want my things.”

I was unsure where this was going to go, certain it couldn’t be as obvious as the setup implied. And the twist did not disappoint.

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“Fortune Broken” by Sandy King, Leonardo Manco, Marianna Sanzone (2015)
“Death runs from me, you old witch!”

A simple one, and too abrupt in its conclusion. A bit more time at the end and I might’ve been more into it.

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The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari dir. Robert Wiene (1920)
“Awaken for a moment from your dark night.”

That German expressionism sure is nice to look at. In fact, googling “German expressionism” mostly returns results for this movie. That art design is just so much more interesting than what we see in 90% of movies, even for the text that’s cut in to display dialogue. The music of the 1994 release that I watched was also so good! The story itself is a quaint yarn right up until the end when a twist I didn’t see coming elevated it several notches (though I feel like I’m more naive or caught up in the moment than most viewers tend to be.) Hey, it turns out I love this movie.

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The Excavation of Hob’s Barrow dev. Cloak and Dagger Games (2022)
“Life is for living, not for worrying about what comes after.”

The folk horror has left the strongest impression this month. Just that Lovecraftian sense of confronting the uncontrollable forces that direct the flow of things, which we cannot see nor feel except at our lowest and most desperate moments. And by then, it’s too late to escape. After playing this and Silent Hill, I’m ready for some lighter video game horrors.