Tobias Nölle (2016)

In the information age, aren’t surprises great? Though the film may have premiered to some lukewarm reviews, everyone lost their collective stuff earlier this year when it was announced the low-key, somewhat-anticipated horror movie “The Woods” was, in fact, a Blair Witch sequel. The announcement came so close to the release of the film that there was no time for rampant speculation on the plot; no time for myriad spoiler leaks and internet debates; just enough time for audiences to go in naïve to the story and soak up the pure experience of it.

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Linden Ashby (2016) #audio

I was born in 1987, and while most five-year-olds were watching Tale Spin... scratch that, I watched my fair share of Disney Afternoon too, but outside of the main mouse's impeccable programming, there was one thing that occupied most of my evenings. The game was Mortal Kombat, and I was obsessed. I was totally the kid that instead of learning how to ride a bike, spent weekends perfecting fatalities and hunting the ever elusive Reptile.

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Don Coscarelli (2016)

In terms of horror franchises, Phantasm has had one of the more protracted—and interesting—histories. When it hit screens in 1979, Phantasm was unlike anything many audiences had seen outside the realm of Eraserhead. The story of two brothers trying to outwit an evil mortician resurrecting the dead for use in extradimensional slave labor, the film worked according to its’ own dream logic and eschewed the rising slasher trend in favor of eerie, trance-like sequences.

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Herman Raucher (2016)

Mention the name Herman Raucher to most people today, and they’ll probably respond with a blank stare—perhaps ask if he’s a politician, or a German philosopher, or maybe an athlete on a team you don’t follow in a sport that isn’t really your scene. That’s a shame—because forty years ago, in that fantastically turbulent era we’ve only ever been able to explain as “the seventies,” Herman Raucher was one of the names in popular entertainment. Few celebrities today can boast of the success he enjoyed—the 1971 film Summer of ’42, penned by Raucher and based on his own adolescence, became a cultural touchstone that won an Oscar and was the 6th highest grossing film of the year.

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Charles Band (2016)

In an age that’s become defined by rapidly changing technology and fly-by-night dot—com startups, perhaps no other business has had so short a shelf life, yet so big an impact, as the video store. The era of the rental chain was relatively short, especially if you only consider the years that it really enjoyed as a cultural mainstay. Though mom and pop stores became a localized phenomenon in the late 80s, the ritual of Friday night at the video store didn’t really develop until the early 90s; by the time Netflix delivered its’ billionth DVD in 2007, Blockbuster and Hollywood Video had already ceased to be places of any significance for anyone but those who’d grown up with them.

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Todd Solondz (2016) #audio

While I've seen most of Todd's library, I can honestly say I am not a fan of the Solondz-verse. Sure, he has a voice, and I can appreciate that, but his movies make me feel as if I am being punched in the stomach while my parents get divorced. Maybe you're a glutton for punishment, but I'm not.

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Dr. Shannon Walker (2016)

On a balmy day in June, 1983, the Space Shuttle Challenger lifted off from Launch Complex 39 in Titusville, Florida. While launches had become a regular event since the advent of the shuttle program, the Challenger was unique this day in that carried on board not just human beings but the hopes and dreams of an entire generation of young women. Among the crew was Sally Ride, a thirty-two-year old physicist and the first American woman to go into space.

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