Itās baaaack! After making its debut in August, Horrorās Greatest has returned for more clips and chat about horrorās most beloved sub-genres. Season one dug into Stephen King adaptations, giant monsters, Japanese horror, horror comedies, and tropes and clichĆ©s (with an emphasis on slasher films)āleaving plenty of room for more. This time, itās animal attacks, film scores, hidden gems, space horror, and killer dates.
A lot of the talking heads repeat; itās pretty clear Horrorās Greatest filmed both (or who knows how many) seasons back to back, and the list of interviewees again includes David Dastmalchian, Kate Siegel, Joe Hill, Jonah Ray Rodrigues, Gigi Saul Guerrero, Alex Winter, Tananarive Due, and the Boulet Brothers, among others. Itās an engaging group of people involved in the actual creation of horror films and media, with scholars, authors, critics, and programmers sprinkled in. Everyone clearly shares a deep love and appreciation for the genre.
As before, the editing is brisk and the clips well-curated, with stop-motion interludes and in-episode asides that break up the discussion in fun ways. One example is the dueling lists of best and worst horror-movie pets in the āAnimal Attacksā episode; you can guess where Cujo falls on that ranking. Though there is some overlap between episodesāJaws comes up a lot, for instanceāthereās enough to cover that Horrorās Greatest doesnāt feel like itās repeating itself or stretching itself too thin.
Since season one focused on slightly more obvious categories, season two is able to get even weirder, which allows Horrorās Greatest to traverse some less-familiar turf. This is a bonus for the viewer who gets the chance to learn about more offbeat films, as well as a bonus for the talking heads, whoāespecially in the āHidden Gemsā episode, which is a fun inclusionāget to enthuse about overlooked favorites, which include a lot of vintage and international selections, as well as should-be cult classics.
The strongest episodes are probably āAnimal Attacks,ā which delves into how Jaws launched a wave of copycats but also inspired a taste for films that blend serious-minded environmental concerns and ānature strikes backā themes with, like, alligators leaping out of sewers and PCP-crazed zoo animals; and āHidden Gems,ā though that might just be my excitement over seeing praised heaped upon the relatively obscure likes of Letās Scare Jessica to Death and The Psychic. That episode in particular feels like youāre getting canāt-fail viewing recommendations from a friend who has seen every movie, except that friend is Shudder (and indeed, a lot of the titles are available to stream there after you finish Horrorās Greatest).
āKiller Datesā might be the least successful, just because it has the murkiest through-line. It bobs from Carrieās prom nightmare to Get Outās meet-the-parents nightmare to the fact that movies like Terror Train and Jenniferās Body haveā¦ hook-ups and relationships and romance elements existing alongside their body counts. It just doesnāt feel as cohesive as the other episodes, which works against it.
Along those lines, by widening its focus a bit, Horrorās Greatest season two does tend to drift beyond what many fans might consider strictly āhorror.ā Thereās a lot more sci-fi included, even outside the āSpace Horrorā episode, and the show makes some assertions that might be controversial to some. You may be able to expand your definition of horror to include, as Horrorās Greatest would like you to, the 1985 Martin Scorsese film After Hours, about one manās hellish night out in New York City. Or you may not, especially when there are so many āIām horror, and proud of itā types of films left out of the conversation.
Perhaps thatās why weāve got fingers crossed for a third season? The five-episode second season of Horrorās Greatest begins today, December 31, on Shudder, with weekly rollouts Tuesdays through January 28.
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