Wrapping up the list of Best Horror Movies You Didn't see. The #1 is- JACOB'S LADDER!
Even while watching it NOT on halucinegenics you will freak. And c'mon, Tim Robinson is completely tremendous. This is a movie that you think got seen by millions. But it was not.
Monday is the real Halloween 10/31. I will reveal the best Horror Movie Un-Seen. Check back for it then.
Today is 2nd best Horror movie you have never seen. I watched this as a very young child in the 70's for the first time and had nightmares about it up until last week!
Sarah (Carol Lynley) brings her husband to visit her childhood home on a remote island. Even though the Old Mill is legally hers, the islanders try and warn her away, saying that the building is cursed, and anyone who goes in there is savagely attacked by a demon⦠But because Sarah is young and attractive, some of the young men, including her cousin (Oliver Reed) donât mind if she stays a little longer. If only her husband (Gig Young) wasnât around⦠The hostile, closed community of the island, and their menacing treatment of outsiders is a weighty subplot to the story of the thing in the attic.
Most horror fans are familiar with images from F.W. Murnau's silent-era Nosferatu, even if they've never seen the film itself. But let's be frank here -- sometimes those silent movies, classic or not, can be tough-going. And this is certainly true of Murnau's original Dracula adaptation. But that's why we keep Werner Herzog around, isn't it? To spice things up at the movie house from time to time.
And this for fun. Movie Villians laughing maniacally. Click below for video mash up-
As we continue this week with great Horror Un-Seen, this is a music video. A reminder to buy CANDY for the kids this Halloween! Do NOT give them anything healthy! Or else!-
A report says that the Tyrann Mathieu suspension is for use of synthetic marijuana. The LSU football world is panicking over the suspensions of the Honey Badger and two other LSU players, as first reported by the LSU Reveille.
Internet message boards have been circulating a rumor this afternoon that the suspensions are for testing positive for synthetic marijuana, and the New Orleans Time-Picayune now cites a source that says the failed test was indeed for synthetic pot.
Synthetic marijuana has become popular among both professional and amateur athletes over the past five years because it contains no THC, and thus does not show up on drug tests. But law authorities -- and apparently drug testing technology -- has been catching up with the new synthetic strains. The substance -- also known as spice -- is now illegal in most states (including Louisiana), and is on the NCAA's banned substance list. But until now -- assuming the Times-Picayune report is true -- it was not known that drug testing technology could detect the synthetic drug.
Mathieu has posted twice to Twitter in the past two hours:
TM7_Era Tyrann Mathieu: If you don't have anything positive to say just quit it, Life is a long test full of obstacles and split second choices..21 minutes ago
TM7_Era Tyrann Mathieu: Look in the face of death and took it's mask off....2 hours ago
The most recent tweet is a response to the negative response Mathieu has been receiving on social media and, it seems, an acknowledgement of the situation. The second tweet is a line from a Lil Wayne song.
Not unexpectedly, the reports have caused widespread panic among LSU football fans. The greatest concern among Tigers faithful seems to be about how long the suspensions will be (i.e. will they miss the Alabama game or not), while many other fans have called Mathieu and teammates selfish, or worried that they have tarnished the image of the LSU program, which was already recovering from a preseason bar fight involving multiple members of the LSU team, including then-starting quarterback Jordan Jefferson.
LSU coach Les Miles has a regularly scheduled press conference tonight at 7 p.m., where he is expected to address the suspensions.
(Reuters) - Former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi died of wounds suffered on Thursday as fighters battling to complete an eight-month-old uprising against his rule overran his hometown Sirte, Libya's interim rulers said.
His killing, which came swiftly after his capture near Sirte, is the most dramatic single development in the Arab Spring revolts that have unseated rulers in Egypt and Tunisia and threatened the grip on power of the leaders of Syria and Yemen.
"He (Gaddafi) was also hit in his head," National Transitional Council official Abdel Majid Mlegta told Reuters. "There was a lot of firing against his group and he died."
Mlegta told Reuters earlier that Gaddafi, who was in his late 60s, was captured and wounded in both legs at dawn on Thursday as he tried to flee in a convoy which NATO warplanes attacked. He said he had been taken away by an ambulance.
There was no independent confirmation of his remarks.
An anti-Gaddafi fighter said Gaddafi had been found hiding in a hole in the ground and had said "Don't shoot, don't shoot" to the men who grabbed him.
His capture followed within minutes of the fall of Sirte, a development that extinguished the last significant resistance by forces loyal to the deposed leader.
The capture of Sirte and the death of Gaddafi means Libya's ruling NTC should now begin the task of forging a new democratic system which it had said it would get under way after the city, built as a showpiece for Gaddafi's rule, had fallen.
Gaddafi, wanted by the International Criminal Court on charges of ordering the killing of civilians, was toppled by rebel forces on August 23 after 42 years of one-man rule over the oil-producing North African state.
NTC fighters hoisted the red, black and green national flag above a large utilities building in the center of a newly-captured Sirte neighborhood and celebratory gunfire broke out among their ecstatic and relieved comrades.
Hundreds of NTC troops had surrounded the Mediterranean coastal town for weeks in a chaotic struggle that killed and wounded scores of the besieging forces and an unknown number of defenders.
NTC fighters said there were a large number of corpses inside the last redoubts of the Gaddafi troops. It was not immediately possible to verify that information.