Tag Archives: Julie Lynn Hayes

Saturday is Horror Day #141 – I Spit on Your Grave (1978), Violent Night

Reviewer: Julie Lynn Hayes

I Spit on Your Grave (1978)

Jennifer (Camille Keaton) heads to the Connecticut woods in order to write her first novel, having previously only written short stories. Fresh air, solitude, and country living should do it, right? But she quickly learns that all things in the country aren’t good or healthy.

On arrival in town, Jennifer gets gas at the local station, where she shares her excitement over the coming summer with the owner/attendant, Johnny (Eron Tabor). Later she meets Stanley (Anthony Nichols), who delivers her groceries. He is friendly and sweet, if a little slow. Seems like a good place. But she learns otherwise when she is laying out in her bikini in a boat and Johnny and a couple of his friends come upon her and decide to have some fun, in a brutal attack which they continue even after she thinks she has escaped from them. When they send Stanley in to finish the job, he can’t do it, and lets them think he has. So now it’s time for revenge.

I’m not going to lie, the rape scenes are brutal and hard to watch.  The poor actress also spends most of the film naked. I read that the actors asked to be naked as well in order to help make her feel more comfortable. This is a revenge film, pure and simple, and as such it succeeds, although certainly not a great film in any way. But the brutality of the rape makes the revenge that much more satisfying. I am going to watch the sequel, which was made like 40 years later, and hope it’s a better film. There is also a remake of the series, which I may or may not watch. But for now, I’ll give this film 3 Stars for succeeding in its primary goal.

Violent Night

Santa Claus (David Harbour) is jaded and weary, tired of the commercialism and cynicism of the modern world. He feels as if the spirit of Christmas has been lost, and he drinks to dull the pain. Trudy (Leah Brady) is a very bright little girl with only one wish for Christmas – that Dad (Alex Hassell) and Mom (Alexis Louder) make up and get back together again. They are all meeting at her Grandma Gertrude’s (Beverly D’Angelo) house, along with her aunt and uncle and their brat, Bertrude. The latter are all in a tizzy to make sure they stay in good with the wealthy grandma. But a criminal who calls himself Scrooge (John Leguizamo) has other ideas. This is a Christmas they won’t soon forget.

You’d think with a cast like this, and an interesting premise, this movie would be a shoe-in. I like David Harbour from Stranger Things and Hell Boy, and I have loved John Leguizamo for a long time, both for his stand-up and for such movie roles as Toulouse Lautrec in Moulin Rouge (we can forget his Mario Brothers Stint). But if you believe this, you will be sadly disappointed. The film doesn’t lack of looks, and it clearly had a decent budget. But there is nothing interesting or original about it. As my son son, it’s bland. It reminds me of a wanna-be copy of Die Hard. I was not just disappointed, I was bored, and I could imagine how everything was going to play out. I gave up after about thirty minutes. I suggest you just pass on this one.

Wednesday Briefs: November 29, 2023

Here is a list of all the authors flashing this week, along with a brief snippet from their latest free work. Click the link after the snippet to be taken to the complete story on the author’s home page.

Bad Karma and the Family Plan #94 (20.3) by Julie Lynn Hayes

We were shown into a private room off the main hallway. The only furniture in the room was a table and three chairs. And in the single chair across from us, sitting there with the smuggest expression on his smarmy face, was… you know who.

The Florida Mangler himself. The man who’d killed our late partner, Eva June, among others. The man who’s kidnapped me and held me hostage for reasons I still didn’t comprehend. I won’t add injury to insult by referring to him as the alleged Florida Mangler, even though he hadn’t been to trial yet and wasn’t everyone innocent until proven guilty, because we knew without a shadow of a doubt that he was the Mangler. Despite whatever his lawyer might or might not plead when the time came, up to and including insanity. But I didn’t believe for one moment that Chip was crazy, just very evil.

If I’d expected Chip

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Saturday is Horror Day #141 – A Monster Calls, Silent Night, Deadly Night 2

Reviewer: Julie Lynn Hayes

A Monster Calls

Twelve-year-old Conor (Lewis MacDougall) i8s having a rough life.  His mother (Felicity Jones) is dying, and the thought of living with his strict grandmother (Sigourney Weaver) is more than he can bear. On top of that, he is being bullied at school, and no one will come to his assistance. His dad (Toby Kebbell) lives in America now, and he has a new family, and he has no room for Conor. What’s a boy to do?

But then he encounter a monster in the form of a giant tree (Liam Neeson). While frightening at first, he helps Conor to cope with the reality of his existence. He tells Conor that he shall tell him three stories and then Conor will tell him his own story. Conor protests that he has no story to tell, but the Monster proceeds anyway with his tales.

I honestly did not know what to expect from this movie, but I was most pleasantly surprised. Twelve is

very young to have to deal with the impending death of one parent and the seeming indifference of the other, along with a grandmother he barely knows and doesn’t like. It’s a tale of bravery and imagination that will warm the coldest of hearts. It’s well written, acted, and directed. I really enjoyed it. I’ll give this film 4.5 Stars.

Silent Night, Deadly Night 2

Ricky Caldwell (Eric Freeman) was just a baby and his brother Billy only 7 when their family was attacked by a man in a Santa suit by the side of the road. Dad was shot and killed, and Mom was assaulted and murdered in front of her children. The two boys were sent to live in an orphanage run by Mother Superior (Jean Miller). Billy grew up haunted by what he had seen, and the nun was brutal in her punishments. He became a serial killer in a Santa suit himself.

Fast forward a number of years. Ricky is in a mental institution, being interviewed by the new psychiatrist.  He tells of his past family trauma, but he has plans of his own. Will history repeat itself?

Silent Night Deadly Night 2 picks up where the last one left off. But if you haven’t seen the first one,  no worries – this one recaps all of the highlights of that film, and that takes up about two-thirds of this movie. So you might as well skip the first one completely.

Let there be no doubt this movie is all about shock and gore and senseless violence. And women with bare breasts. The writing is horrible, the acting atrocious. It’s like watching a train wreck. And yet you find you can’t look away. If you don’t take it seriously, and just accept it for it is, you might not be sorry you watched it. I didn’t realize I’d already seen one of the scenes  in another video. Now I’ll never forget Garbage Day. All things considered, I’ll give this movie 2.5 Stars. I hear there are sequels. Might have to check them out.

Wednesday Briefs: November 15, 2023

Here is a list of all the authors flashing this week, along with a brief snippet from their latest free work. Click the link after the snippet to be taken to the complete story on the author’s home page.

Bad Karma and the Family Plan #93 (20.1) by Julie Lynn Hayes

The Clay County Detention Center/ was a more imposing structure than I had imagined it would be for such a small town. It probably housed inmates from many areas of northern Florida, I surmised. We’d received instructions from Anderson on what was expected of us, and left everything inside the vehicle, including our weapons. Neither Ethan nor I cared for that idea, but we had no choice. The rules applied to law enforcement visitors as well as others. I supposed it would be different if we were dropping off or picking up. But as Chip was already there, and I had no intention of taking him with us (the very thought made me shudder), we followed their instructions before we made our approach to the edifice.

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Saturday is Horror Day #139 – Renfield

Reviewer: Julie Lynn Hayes

Renfield

Renfield (Nicholas Hoult) was once a solicitor in his native England, living the good life, his future seemingly bright. But a fateful business trip to meet with a client in faraway Transylvania changed Renfield’s life forever. He became the minion of that client, Count Dracula (Nicolas Cage), and now, years, later, he finds himself attending meetings of a group that deals with codependency. Listening to the stories of his fellow attendees, he realizes he can’t help them change themselves, but he can do something to the people who make their lives miserable.

Renfield and Dracula are now living in New Orleans, after Dracula was almost killed by vampire

hunters, so that he may recuperate. Renfield is fed up with suffering abuse in silent, which is why he begins to attend the 12-step program meetings. He decides to use the abusers to feed Dracula, in order to ameliorate his guilt for having sacrificed many innocent people in the past. But he ends up in conflict with a rival crime family, the Lobos, and he kills their assassin, which brings him to meet Detective Rebecca Quincy (Awkwafina). One thing leads to another, and Renfield confesses his story to Rebecca, deepening the relationship between them, and ultimately leading to a confrontation with Dracula himself.

Renfield is a dark comedy/horror/fantasy film with a whole lot of gore thrown in for good measure. Nicholas Hoult is amazing as the beleaguered and fed-up minion who finally decides that enough is enough. As for Nic Cage, he plays the part of Dracula for all he’s worth, which is saying quite a lot. Campy, creepy, and yet somehow likeable. It’s clear he had fun with the role, and I had fun watching this movie. I loved Awkwafina in Crazy Rich Asians, and I loved her here, she is very talented and has great comedic timing. Just be aware that there is a great deal of blood, and if this is a trigger for you, maybe you should pass on this. I would love to see it again, and plan to do so.

I give Renfield 4.5 Stars.

Wednesday Briefs: November 8, 2023

Here is a list of all the authors flashing this week, along with a brief snippet from their latest free work. Click the link after the snippet to be taken to the complete story on the author’s home page.

Bad Karma and the Family Plan #92 (20.1) by Julie Lynn Hayes

Chip, aka the Florida Mangler, was being held in the Clay County Jail, in Green Cove Springs, Florida. His trial hadn’t happened yet, which was why he wasn’t in prison, and he was being held without bail, so I knew he wasn’t getting out any time soon. Under Florida law, a judge had the right to rule that a particularly violent crime warranted withholding bail, deeming that person to be a threat to society. Considering what Chip was accused of, that decision seemed to be a no-brainer.

Normally, according to what the website for the jail said, visitation had to be scheduled 24 hours in advance. But Anderson was able to get that formality waived for us—don’t ask me how,

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Saturday is Horror Day #138 – Oculus

Reviewer: Julie Lynn Hayes

Oculus

Kaylie Russell (Karen Gillan) has an obsession  – she is determined to prove that it wasn’t her father who killed her and her brother Tim’s (Brenton Thwaites) mother, but rather supernatural forces. First she obtains the mirror once owned by her parents, at a dear price. Then she picks up her brother on his release from the mental institution where he has been incarcerated since he was a teen for the murder of his family. She needs his help and wants to prove everything to Tim as well.

Kaylie has everything set up, including multiple cameras and alarms, and even a fail-safe plan with a kill switch should everything else prove fruitless. Tim is skeptical but can’t convince his sister that she is wrong, helpless to stop her as they both recall the events that led them to this point.

Oculus flips back and forth from the past to the present, which is a little confusing at first as both Kaylie and her mom have red hair. In the past, we watch as the family unit disintegrates,  including the father’s own obsession with the mirror, the mother’s fears that he is losing him to another woman, and the helplessness of the children to do anything. Kaylie is trying to induce the mirror to kill again, and she wants to get it on video.

Oculus is certainly not a bad film, and its director, Mike Flanagan, no stranger to the genre, having also directed such films as Doctor Sleep, The Haunting of Hill House, The Haunting of Bly Manor, and Ouija: Origin of Evil. I like Karen Gillan and have ever since she played Amy Pond. But I found her character offputting her, almost like she was sleepwalking through everything. Not sure if that was intentional or not, but I couldn’t like anyone in this film and that becomes problematic when you have no one to root for.

Perhaps I couldn’t get behind the idea of the mirror itself as an evil entity – or was it something inside the mirror? Was the movie creepy? That it was. Did it hold my interest? Not really. I know there are a lot of favorable reviews, so it comes down to a matter of individual taste. And that, after all, is what reviews are about. I just couldn’t really get into it, and thought it availed itself of rather common tropes. But decide for yourself. As for me, I’ll give this film 3 Stars.

Wednesday Briefs: November 1, 2023

Here is a list of all the authors flashing this week, along with a brief snippet from their latest free work. Click the link after the snippet to be taken to the complete story on the author’s home page.

Bad Karma and the Family Plan #92 (20.1) by Julie Lynn Hayes

Chip, aka the Florida Mangler, was being held in the Clay County Jail, in Green Cove Springs, Florida. His trial hadn’t happened yet, which was why he wasn’t in prison, and he was being held without bail, so I knew he wasn’t getting out any time soon. Under Florida law, a judge had the right to rule that a particularly violent crime warranted withholding bail, deeming that person to be a threat to society. Considering what Chip was accused of, that decision seemed to be a no-brainer.

Normally, according to what the website for the jail said,

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Book Review: Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation, Vol 3 by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu

Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation, Vol 3     

Author: Mo Xiang Tong Xiu

Publisher: Seven Seas

American release date: August 16, 2022

Format/Genre/Length: Paperback/Manga/LGBTQ+/Fantasy Romance/416 pages

Overall Personal Rating: ★★★★★

Reviewer: Julie Lynn Hayes

The Wen clan of Qishan have grown too big for their britches. They send an envoy to various clans whom they believe to be incompetent demanding they send at least twenty sect disciples to Qishan within three days for indoctrination. No one likes this but everyone obeys, including the Jiang clan, who send Wei Wuxian and Jiang Cheng among the others. Things go wrong from the beginning when, upon arrival, all the disciples are forced to give up their swords. Then there is Wen Chao, the youngest son of the clan leader, who is a nightmare of a different sort – an arrogant, spoiled bully who has probably never heard the word no in his life.

The disciples’ so-called education comes from one book in particular – Quintessential Records and Quotable Characters of the Illustrious Wen. As the name suggests, it’s all about the Wen Clan. They are told to read it, memorize it, and be able to quote it on command. To add insult to injury, the disciples are fed sparingly and forced to listen to Wen Chao make a speech every day, which they are required to applaud. He even rigs the Night Hunts to make himself look brave, taking credit for the work of the others.

Early one morning, the juniors are driven out of bed and pointed toward the location of the next hunt – Mount Muxi. They are told they are looking for a cave. Well-hidden, they finally find the cave and Wen Chao orders the juniors down first. He is accompanied by his “personal attendant”, Wang Lingjiao, who also thinks too much of herself. And by “personal attendant”, I mean mistress. Because of her relationship with the brat, she gives herself airs and feels she has the right to boss the others around. If the others don’t obey, there are consequences.  However, Wei isn’t just anyone and he doesn’t feel compelled to respect her.

At first the cave feels empty, but they quickly discover this is not the case at all, and they are all in danger. The cowardly Wen Chao and his subordinates quickly exit the cave – but when they reach the top, they cut the ropes they climbed up on, leaving the others stranded! Jiang Cheng discovers a possible exit, but they need to get past the beast. Wei Wuxian and Lan Zhan battle the creature while the others make their escape, but then find themselves unable to use the same strategy and can only sit hopelessly and wait for help to arrive.

Of course Wen Chao takes credit for the subjugation of the beast. But things go from bad to worse. One day the junior cultivators of Lotus Pier are flying kites when one is arrested. Who by they want to know? By the obnoxious one herself, Wang Lingjiao, who then descends on Lotus Pier with her entourage and demands Wei Wuxian and Jiang Cheng be punished. Madame Yu, Jiang’s mother, is polite at first, but when the girl goes too far, she puts her in her place and unleashes hell on earth. The frightened and cowardly girl summons Wen Chao’s personal bodyguard, Wen Zhiuliu, known as Core-Melting Hand. Madame Yu goes toe-to-toe with him, but not before sending off her son and Wei Wuxian – with whom she has always been at odds – off to safety. They can’t do anything and helplessly witness the destruction of Lotus Pier from their boat.

Wei Wuxian and Jiang Cheng take refuge for a few days under the noses of the Wens, with the assistance of Wen Ning and Wen Qing. Jiang Chenge is in a bad way, as his core has been melted, and he becomes despondent. Wei promises to help him and takes him to the mountain where his mother’s teacher lives, but they must part ways there. Wei promises he will wait for Jiang in a small village, but things go badly wrong for him when he encounters Wen Chao and his cronies, and suddenly no one knows where he is and fear the worst.

All this and so much more in the third volume of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation! The action changes from the present to the past, from what is to what was, all of which leads to what is happening now. The time Wei and Lan Zhan spent in the cave was terrifying yet exhilarating as they grow closer. What Wen Chao did afterward was so abhorrent, what he did to Wei. The fact that Wei was able to survive was amazing, but his ordeal left its mark on him, leading him down the path of demonic cultivation. As Wen Chao and his chippy discover to their dismay. When he is reunited with Lan Zhan, the latter realizes the change in him, but it helpless to do anything about it.

In the present is still the matter of the dismembered corpse. Lan Xichen is reluctant to think ill of his friend, but the evidence of wrongdoing is growing stronger. In a flash to the past, we see Wei’s arrival at Lotus Pier, after his rescue from the streets by Jiang Feangmian and his early rocky relationship with Jiang Cheng, who is jealous of his father’s attention to this stranger in their midst. But perhaps the highlight of this volume is the secret kiss, given when Wei Wuxian is blindedfolded and cannot see the other person. But of course we know who that is (the illustration gives it away too). I don’t remember this scene from the series, but that isn’t surprising, what with censorship in China, and their not being a huge fan of homosexuality.

Wei Wuxian’s change is what eventually leads to his “demise”. In the series, that scene begins everything, with Wei dropping to his death, despite Lan Zhan’s attempt to save him. That is dramatic license, as it doesn’t occur in the books, but it does make for a great start to a great series. I will be so sorry when I finish the last book. I am reading the fourth one now, only one left after that. The author weaves such a grand tale and populates it with intricate characters. It’s a fascinating read and one I highly recommend!

Saturday is Horror Day #137 – You Are Not My Mother

Reviewer: Julie Lynn Hayes

You Are Not My Mother

Char (Hazel Doupe) lives in North Dublin with her mother Angela (Carolyn Bracken) and her grandmother Rita (Ingrid Craigie). Life is tough for the young girl, with her grandmother in poor health and her mother often depressed and lying in bed. School is also hard and Char is often bullied because she doesn’t fit in with the other students. One morning, while taking Char to school, Angela announces that “she can’t do this anymore”, and later her car is found abandoned in a field. Char and Rita report her disappearance to the police, but little is done to find her.

A few days later, Angela returns, acting as if nothing has happened and all’s right with the world. But Char is suspicious of this “new” mother. Strange things happen, including the poisoning of Char’s Uncle Aaron. Char becomes friends with one of her former bullies, and confides the story of how her grandmother, believing her to be a changeling, placed her by a fire to get the real Char back. Her friend, Suzanne says the new Angela must also be a changeling and they have to repeat the fire ritual in order to get her real mother back.

I’ll just say this movie was not for me. It had nothing to do with it being a slow-paced, slow-burn kind of story, but I could never connect with it. Maybe because changelings are not a common theme here, I don’t know. But I couldn’t tell if the movie was really about changelings or about mental health issues, as it rather blurred the lines. The acting was good enough, but I was just not engaged. The film has a lot of positive reviews, but there are also others who did not like it. You’ll have to decide for yourself. I’ll give this movie 3 shaky Stars.