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Will & Hesse bring you Horrotober Ghoulvie Screamset, a selection of Horror film bangers for this October. We start with two all-time classics of the genre: George Romero’s “Night of the Living Dead (1968) and Tobe Hooper’s “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” (1974). Both films redefined the genre into heightened levels of gruesome nihilism, creating vivid reflections of charnel-house America while serving up ghouls galore for your puerile titillation.

As always, the first episode of this miniseries is free for all to listen, all subsequent episodes will be for subscribers only at: www.patreon.com/chapotraphouse

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Anonymous

I’ve been thinking and writing about the cultural implications reflected in these films for years, I even made some of the same points about these two movies in my silly senior project way back in 2002. This episode was fucking awesome, you knocked it out of the park

Anonymous

Never seen NOLD. About halfway thru. Why every time there are siblings do incest accusations abound?

ploob

When I grow up I want to be the wretched capering of the damned 🖤

Anonymous

I feel sad that kids no longer walk down the horror aisle at blockbuster and look at scary box art to test their courage.

J.P. McD.

I still have to watch “Don’t Answer the Phone” at some point for childhood VHS box fear catharsis

Chuck Skooch

I am really weirded out by how Tom Savini from NotLD got no exposition. He literally learned how to make the gore shocking and realistic by sketching viscera in Vietnam. Romero would arguably be nowhere without this artist. Savini is the one who grabs the attention of the generation that watched war unfold at the kitchen table never knowing when it would be their turn. Date night for a population suffering from helplessness-based anxiety and trauma-induced sexual pathology needed this shock to avoid the overt racial themes long enough to make it a big hit.

Anonymous

I never watched one of these before, and I have to say, I'm pleasantly surprised. This has to be one of the best movie podcasts that I've seen. Most movie podcasts are really, really boring and provide nothing of substance to the viewer. I actually feel that I got a perspective that I wouldn't have found just anywhere, that and this episode was very entertaining.

Anonymous

Hesse was totally right. There were tears in my eyes at the cut to black in Texas Chainsaw

Clay Perry

Watching chainsaw right now and it feels notable that Franklin mimics the airgun killing a cow 5 times, same as how many teens are walking into the slaughterhouse

chance

I used to have to pick up my uncle from a Tyson pork processing facility in the middle of the night when he got off after 2nd shift...the screams of the pigs being unloaded from the trucks still haunt me

Rohmer Simpson

just caught up with LIFEFORCE which is, indeed, a banger.

Jordan Brewer

Leatherface should’ve played football brother was hustling with that chainsaw in another life he’d be a Dallas Cowboys DT

ETHAN C GIBSON

Extreme movie malpractice for y'all to endorse Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2. And Will praising Bill Moseley's performance? Jesus Christ that may have been the most irritating and torturous movie I have ever sat through. Zero redeeming qualities. I thoroughly wish I had not seen it. And I'm a big fan of "bad" movies. But this was just a horrendously paced cluster fuck of a film. Some Of the worst directing, writing, acting, lighting, set design, special effects even! Just overall quite possibly the worst most disrespectful and abysmally disappointing sequel ever released on film. I'm mad at you for tricking me into watching it and it makes me seriously question your mindset credentials if you found that entertaining. Had to stay up late to watch this he og tcm as a palette cleanser. Tobe better have been in the throws of a debilitating cocaine habit to have his name attached to this low rent schlock. Uninspired, depressing, obnoxious, confusing, disjointed, disrespectful. Boo.