October: (Not So) Spooky Season

Howdy folks,

It’s Halloween, and while in previous years I have wholeheartedly embraced the Spooky Season (with a month-long programme of horror movies and a general sense of joy and excitement), this year has been decidedly un-spooky.

The Usual

Given my absolute lack of time for anything this year, I gave up on doing a Shocktober programme pretty early – I didn’t have the wherewithal to curate a month of horror movies, design a booklet and actually sit down to watch them all. By my count, I’ve watched a grand total of 4 horror movies this month – Matriarch (which was great), the Hammer Horror version of The Mummy, The Rule of Jenny Pen (which I saw as the secret movie at Sheffield’s fantastic ‘Celluloid Screams’ festival and which was absolutely fantastic) and Immaculate (which I also enjoyed). I’ll talk more about those a bit later on!

On the plus side, things are feeling a bit less overwhelming – I had my assessment for the Data Analyst apprenticeship I’ve spent the past 13 or so months working on alongside my day job, and found out that I passed that with flying colours and a Distinction, so that’s a big weight off my mind. I’ve largely completed the fulfilment for Secrets of the Majestic (and have just sent an update out about that) and can hopefully relax a bit now and get excited for the launch shenanigans at Thought Bubble, and all the Brigantia Vol. 2 books are printed and piled up in my house so I can start fulfilling that campaign in earnest. Essentially it’s just admin work to be done on both those projects, and that’s great because I can switch my brain off a bit and just get things packaged up!

Currently the only thing on my slate for next year (and beyond) is SENGOKU with Andrew Browne – and that’s all written, so we just need to get a pitch together and see if there’s any interest. I’m excited to see how the pages come together (and looking forward to running yet another Kickstarter campaign for it because no publishers are interested..!)

The Record

• Logo designed and 12 pages lettered for Of Ichor & Bone (Asa Wheatley/Sammy Ward/JP Jordan)

Asa’s shared the cover with my logo design on it and pages for the story will be hitting his Patreon, so head on over and subscribe to that if you want to read a chivalric fantasy/horror one-shot comic influenced by Dark Souls, The Green Knight and more. We’ve made some strong stylistic choices with the lettering so I’m hopeful that it works for people!

Cover for Of Ichor & Bone by Asa Wheatley, Sammy Ward, JP Jordan, Chris Mole and Claire Napier. A female knight is wrapped up by a plant-like tentacle monster.

The Tunes

We’re starting off a bit softer than usual with a new track from Canadian “nicest man alive” Devin Townsend, from his new album ‘PowerNerd‘ (great title, fun album). Next is a blast from the past with the remastered version of this track from Mastodon’s excellent Crack the Skye album – I know the original back to front and this definitely sounds a bit crisper and bigger. Blood Incantation are up next with a track off their (wild) new album – I’ve listened to it twice and I still don’t really think I can describe it effectively! Haunt are up next with some throwback heavy metal and a suitably spooky album cover, followed by my favourite track from my favourite band’s best (IMO) album – I’m incredibly excited to see The Ocean playing this (and the rest of Pelagial) live tomorrow at Damnation Festival, it’s basically a perfect album for me. MASTER BOOT RECORD are up next to pound the cobwebs out of your brain with their very heavy electronica/chiptune death metal, and they’re followed by Japanese “brutal blackgaze” from Kokeshi – a Spotify discovery that I’ve enjoyed a lot this month. Woe are an American black metal band that I supported with Ba’al this month in London – very nice guys, and mammoth tremolo picking skills on show here. Lastly, we’re closing things out with two softer cuts – the BBC Proms version of Dog Days Are Over by Florence + The Machine (I highly, highly recommend you watch the full Symphony of Lungs performance on iPlayer/YouTube because it is absolutely spellbinding and had me tearing up more than once – a truly magical experience!) and some classic Pink Floyd with Comfortably Numb, after a friend put it firmly in my head. Definitely not the worst pair of earworms to have to contend with!

Quick Hits

It’s a new section! I’m going to do some micro-reviews for the horror movies I watched this month, because this is my newsletter and nobody can stop me 😤

Film poster for the movie Matriarch.

Matriarch (2022): definitely a slow-burn/tension horror rather than a jump scare one, but very effective at it – Kate Dickie remains undefeated in the category of “terrifying and eldritch mother figures”, capping off a trifecta that includes The Vvitch, The Green Knight and now this. I enjoyed the folkloric elements too, and some gross practical effects to boot.

Film poster for The Mummy (1959)

The Mummy (1959): You know exactly what you’re getting with a Hammer Horror picture, and Peter Cushing/Christopher Lee never disappoint. Not scary in the slightest, but Lee does a great job using his physicality and size to overpower his victims and certainly looks creepy enough!

Film poster for The Rule of Jenny Pen

The Rule of Jenny Pen (2024): This absolutely fucking shook me. Set in a care home in New Zealand, where an arrogant and self-important judge (played by Geoffrey Rush) has been sent after suffering a debilitating stroke. I don’t want to spoil it for anyone because it’s so new, but John Lithgow is incredible as one of the other (creepy doll-toting) patients. The utterly crushing horror of essentially being jailed in your own body, reverting back to childlike behaviours and wasting away at the end of your life with nobody listening to you or believing you ruined me. It could have done with about 25 mins shaving off the runtime, but I wholeheartedly recommend that you seek this one out!

Film poster for Immaculate.

Immaculate (2024): Sydney Sweeney stars as a young American nun who travels to a sinister convent in Italy for a new start. Not as much OTT Catholicism as I might have liked (but my bar for that sort of thing has been thoroughly skewed by the Blasphemous games, which I love) but it definitely ratchets up the unpleasantness as things go from bad to worse. Sweeney is also very good – I think this is the first thing I’ve seen her in although she seems to be everywhere at the moment, and she throws herself into the more gruesome bits with gusto. The last scene in particular is HEAVY (in a good way!) Overall a solid movie, and at 89 mins it didn’t overstay its welcome at all.


That’s all from me for this month, I’ve rambled enough – enjoy your All Hallow’s Eve whatever you’re doing with it, and thanks for reading!

All the best,

Chris

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