Hello, and welcome to another episode of The Good, The Bad, and The What!? The show in which we discuss three films that we have deemed "good," "bad," or "what!?" within a subgenre, theme, motif, director or actor's filmography, and more!
This week, Ryan and Chris dive into three slasher films that revolve around the setting of a movie theater or stage theatre. We start with 1987's "Stage Fright," a gnarly Italian slasher from Dario Argento protégé Michele Soavi that continuously up's the ante, keeps you guessing, and uses its setting to its advantage. A film that does not use its setting to its advantage is 1984's "Blood Theatre," an amateurish horror/comedy from Rick Sloane ("Hobgoblins") that's light on horror and even lighter on laughs. Finally, we pivot back to Argento (who produced and co-wrote) and Michele Soavi (who directed "additional scenes") with Lamberto Bava's 1985 film "Demons," which keeps the goopy gore and Claudio Simonetti score pumping but makes almost no sense narratively.
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