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  • ‘Clueless,’ ‘The Karate Kid,’ ‘Glory,’ ‘The Big Chill,’ ‘High Society,’ ‘The Grand Budapest Hotel’ Enter the National Film Registry

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    High Society, The Big Chill, The Karate Kid, Glory, Philadelphia, Clueless, The Incredibles, The Grand Budapest Hotel and the first mainstream documentary from Ken Burns have been inducted into the National Film Registry, it was announced Thursday.

    The Thing — the top title nominated by the public last year — White Christmas, Before Sunrise, The Truman Show, Frida, The Hours and Inception also are among the 25 “culturally, historically or aesthetically” significant works selected for preservation by the Library of Congress.

    Six silent films from 1896 to 1926 are in the class of 2025, as are four documentaries: George Nierenberg’s Say Amen, Somebody; Burns’ Brooklyn Bridge; Danny Tedesco’s The Wrecking Crew; and Nancy Buirski’s The Loving Story.

    There are now 925 films in the registry (selections began in 1989, and a film must be at least 10 years old to be eligible). The six-week government shutdown delayed the 2025 announcement by about a month.

    “When we preserve films, we preserve American culture for generations to come. These selections for the National Film Registry show us that films are instrumental in capturing important parts of our nation’s story,” acting Librarian of Congress Robert R. Newlen said in a statement. “We are proud to continue this important work … as a collective effort in the film community to protect our cinematic heritage.”

    TCM will screen a few of the inductees starting at 5 p.m. PST on March 19, with TCM host Jacqueline Stewart, chair of the National Film Preservation Board, introducing the films.

    Also considered were 7,559 titles nominated by the public. Nominations for 2026 will be accepted through Aug. 15 here.

    In an interview with the Library of Congress, Burns said that “with the exception of The American Revolution, which is a subject that predates photography, we’ve used the Library of Congress in every single film we’ve worked on. [For Brooklyn Bridge], I spent between eight and nine weeks, Monday through Friday, 8:30 to 4:30 in the paper print collection, filming on an easel with gloves and magnets.

    “When I think about the National Film Registry and all the films that are contained in it, I think of it as a giant mirror of the United States, reflecting back all of the complexity, all of the intimacy, all of the variety of the people and ideas and forces and movements that have taken place over our history. And you realize what an extraordinary repository it is.”

    Wes Anderson said he also took advantage of the LOC to create The Grand Budapest Hotel.

    “There’s a specific set of postcards in the Library of Congress Photochrome Prints collection. They’re photographs from the turn of the century and hand-tinted,” he said. “When we were first starting to figure out how to tell this story, the views and images that we were looking for, the architecture and the landscapes that we wanted, they don’t exist anymore.

    “We went through the entire Photochrome collection, which is a lot of images. We made our own versions of things, but much of what is in our film comes directly from that collection from the Library of Congress.”

    Here are the 2025 inductees in alphabetical order, with descriptions supplied by the Library of Congress:

    Before Sunrise (1995)
    Richard Linklater has explored a wide range of narrative storytelling styles while consistently capturing ordinary, everyday American life. However, his innovative use of time as a defining and recurring cinematic tool has become one of his most significant accomplishments. As the first film in his Before trilogy — each film shot nine years apart — Before Sunrise unfolds as one of cinema’s most sustained explorations of love and the passage of time, highlighting the human experience through chance encounters and conversation. With his critically acclaimed 12-year production of Boyhood (2014) and a new 20-year planned production underway, his unique use of the medium of film to demonstrate time passing demonstrates an unprecedented investment in actors and narrative storytelling.

    Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke in 1995’s ‘Before Sunrise.’

    Columbia/Courtesy Everett Collection

    The Big Chill (1983)
    Lawrence Kasdan’s Oscar best picture nominee offers an intimate portrait of friends reunited after the suicide of one of their own and features actors who defined cinema in the 1980s — Glenn Close, William Hurt, JoBeth Williams, Kevin Kline, Jeff Goldblum and Meg Tilly. This powerful ensemble portrays American stereotypes of the time — the yuppie, the drug dealer, the TV star — and deftly humanizes them. Through humor, tenderness, honesty and an amazing soundtrack, it shows formerly idealistic Americans making and dealing with the constant compromises of adulthood while buoying one another with uncompromising love and friendship.

    From left: Glenn Close, Kevin Kline, Meg Tilly, William Hurt, Tom Berenger, Mary Kay Place, Jeff Goldblum and JoBeth Williams in 1983’s ‘The Big Chill.’

    Courtesy Everett Collection

    Brooklyn Bridge (1981)
    Here Burns introduced himself to the American public, telling the story of the New York landmark’s construction. As with later subjects like the Civil War, jazz and baseball, Burns connects the building of the Brooklyn Bridge to American identity, values and aspirations. Released theatrically and nominated for an Academy Award for best documentary feature, this marked the beginning of Burns’ influential career in public media. More than just a filmmaker, he has become a trusted public historian. His storytelling presents facts, but maybe more importantly, invites reflection on what America is, where it’s been and where it’s going. His influence is felt not only in classrooms and through public broadcasting, but across generations who see history as something alive and relevant.

    Clueless (1995)
    A satire, comedy and loose Jane Austen literary adaptation dressed in teen-movie designer clothing, Clueless, written and directed by Amy Heckerling, rewards the casual and the hyper-analytical viewer as well. It’s impossible to miss its peak-1990s colorful, high-energy, soundtrack-focused onscreen dynamism, and repeated viewings reveal its unpretentiously presented, extraordinarily layered and biting social commentary about class, privilege and power structures. Heckerling and the incredible cast never talk down to the audience, creating main characters that viewers root for, despite the obvious digs at the ultra-rich. The film centers on Cher (Alicia Silverstone) as a well-intentioned, fashion-obsessed high school student who is convinced she has life figured out. In the age of MTV, the film’s popularity launched Paul Rudd’s career and Silverstone’s iconic-’90s status. The soundtrack, curated by Karyn Rachtman, helped solidify the film as a time capsule of clothing, music, dialogue and teenage life.

    “I’m often asked, how did I decide to make [Austen’s 1816 novel] Emma into an updated film, which is kind of backward because what I wanted was to write the kind of characters that really amused me, people that were very comfortable, ardent and optimistic,” Heckerling told the Library of Congress. “I would get up, read the news and then just want to cry and be depressed.

    “So, I thought, what if you really were always positive? How would that be? And what if you were doing things and you just knew that you were right? I remembered reading Emma when I was in college, so I reread it. It was like Jane Austen was pulling up from the grave and saying, ‘I already got it!’”

    Frida (2002)
    Salma Hayek produced and stars in this biopic of Frida Kahlo, adapted from the book Frida: A Biography of Frida Kahlo by Hayden Herrera. The film explores Kahlo’s rise as an artist in Mexico City and the impact disability and chronic pain from an accident as a young adult had on her life and work. The film centers on her tumultuous and passionate relationships, most significantly with her husband, painter Diego Rivera (Alfred Molina). Directed by Julie Taymor, it was nominated for six Oscars, including best actress, winning for makeup and original score.

    Salma Hayek in 2002’s ‘Frida.’

    Miramax/Courtesy Everett Collection

    Glory (1989)
    Described by Leonard Maltin as “one of the finest historical dramas ever made,” Glory portrays a historical account of the 54th Regiment, a unit of African American soldiers who fought for the North during the Civil War. Authorized by the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863, the regiment consisted of an all-Black troop commanded by white officers. Matthew Broderick plays the young colonel who trains the troop, and Denzel Washington (in an Oscar-winning turn) is among an impressive cast that includes Morgan Freeman, Cary Elwes and Andre Braugher. American Civil War historian James M. McPherson said the Edward Zwick-directed film “accomplishes a remarkable feat in sensitizing a lot of today’s Black students to the role that their ancestors played in the Civil War in winning their own freedom.”

    Morgan Freeman (left) and Denzel Washington in 1989’s ‘Glory.’

    TriStar Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

    The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014)
    This stands as one of Anderson’s most successful films and demonstrates his brand of unique craftsmanship, resulting in a visually striking and emotionally resonant story. As one of the most stylistically distinctive American filmmakers of the past half-century, he uses historically accurate color and architecture to paint scenes to elicit nostalgia and longing from audiences, while at the same time weaving in political and social upheaval. This is an example of Anderson as a unique artist who uses whimsy, melancholy, innovative storytelling and a great deal of historical research, all on display in this visually rich gem.

    From left: Paul Schlase, Tony Revolori, Tilda Swinton and Ralph Fiennes in 2014’s ‘The Grand Budapest Hotel.’

    Martin Scali/Fox Searchlight Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

    High Society (1956)
    Often referred to as the last great musical of the Golden Age of Hollywood, this features an all-star cast including Bing Crosby, Grace Kelly, Frank Sinatra and Louis Armstrong (and his band), along with a memorable score of Cole Porter classics. Set in Newport, Rhode Island, it showcases the Newport Jazz Festival (established in 1954) and includes a remarkable version of Porter’s “Now You Has Jazz.” It offers the first big-screen duet by Sinatra and Crosby, singing “Well, Did You Evah?” This was Kelly’s last movie before she retired from acting and married the Prince of Monaco; she wore her Cartier engagement ring during filming.

    From left: Bing Crosby, Grace Kelly and Frank Sinatra from 1956’s ‘High Society.’

    Courtesy Everett Collection

    The Hours (2002)
    Stephen Daldry weaves the novel Mrs. Dalloway into three women’s stories of loneliness, depression and suicide. Virginia Woolf, played by Nicole Kidman (who won an Oscar for her performance), is working on the novel while struggling with what is now known as bipolar disorder. Laura, played by Julianne Moore (nominated for best supporting actress), is unfulfilled in her life as a 1950s housewife and mother. Clarissa (Meryl Streep) is — like Mrs. Dalloway — planning a party, but for her close friend who is dying of AIDS. The film, based on Michael Cunningham’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, received nine Oscar nominations, including the one for best picture.

    Nicole Kidman in 2002’s ‘The Hours.’

    Paramount/Courtesy Everett Collection

    Inception (2010)
    Christopher Nolan once again challenges audiences with multiple interconnected narrative layers while delivering thrilling action sequences and stunning visual effects. Inception asks the question, “Can you alter a person’s thoughts by manipulating their dreams?” Taking almost 10 years to write, the film was praised for its aesthetic significance and Nolan’s ability to create scenes using cameras rather than computer-generated imagery. A metaphysical heist drama with an emotional core driven by grief and guilt, Inception offers a meditation on how dreams influence identity, and it resonates deeply in an age of digital simulation, blurred realities and uncertainty. The film earned $830 million at the box office and collected four Academy Awards.

    Joseph Gordon-Levitt (left) and Leonardo DiCaprio in 2010’s ‘Inception.’

    Stephen Vaughan/Warner Bros./Courtesy Everett Collection

    The Incredibles (2004)
    With an all-star cast and a memorable soundtrack, this Oscar-winning Pixar hit uses thrilling action sequences to tell the story of a family trying to live normal lives while hiding their superpowers. For the first time, Pixar hired an outside director, Brad Bird, who drew inspiration from spy films and comic books from the 1960s. The animation team developed a new design element to capture realistic human anatomy, hair, skin and clothing, which Pixar struggled with in such early films as Toy Story. The film spawned merchandise, video games, LEGO sets and more. The sequel was also a blockbuster, with both films generating almost $2 billion at the box office.

    Dash (voiced by Spencer Fox), Violet (Sarah Vowell), Mr. Incredible (Craig T. Nelson) and Elastigirl (Holly Hunter) in 2004’s ‘The Incredibles.’

    Walt Disney/Courtesy Everett Collection

    The Karate Kid (1984)
    An intimate story about family and friendship, this also succeeds as a hero’s journey, a sports movie and a teen movie — a feel-good picture, but not without grit. It offers clearly defined villains, romance and seemingly unachievable goals, but also an elegant character-driven drama that’s relatable and touching. A father who has lost his son meets the displaced son of a single mother and teaches him about finding balance and avoiding the pitfalls of violence and revenge. Race and class issues are presented honestly and dealt with reasonably. Our hero practices a lot, gets frustrated, gets hurt, but still succeeds. It’s as American as they come, and it’s a classic.

    “The magic of Pat Morita as Mr. Miyagi and me as the Daniel LaRusso character, that sort of give and take, that instant soulful magic, was happening from our first meeting,” Ralph Macchio told the Library of Congress. “Those scenes in Miyagi’s yard, the chores, the waxing on of the car, the painting the fences, the sanding the floor, all of that is now a part of cinematic pop culture. For me, the heart and soul of the film is in those two characters.”

    Pat Morita (left) and Ralph Macchio in 1984’s ‘The Karate Kid.’

    Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

    The Lady (1925)
    When this debuted in theaters, the silent film era had hit its stride, and this represents a powerhouse of artists at their peak. Director Frank Borzage was a well-established expert in drawing out intense expressions of deep emotion and longing in his actors. He did just that with the film’s lead actress, Norma Talmadge, also at the height of her career, both in front of and behind the camera. Talmadge produced The Lady through her production company and commissioned one of the era’s most prolific screenwriters, Frances Marion, to deliver a heartfelt story of a woman seeking to find the son she had to give up in order to protect him from his evil grandfather. The Lady was restored by the Library of Congress in 2022.

    Norma Talmadge in 1925’s ‘The Lady.’

    Courtesy Everett Collection

    The Loving Story (2011)
    Buirski’s acclaimed documentary gives an in-depth and deeply personal look at the true story of Richard Loving (a white man) and Mildred Loving (a Black and Native American woman) who were forbidden by law to marry in the state of Virginia in the 1960s. Their Supreme Court case, Loving v. Virginia, was one of the most significant in history and paved the way for future multiracial couples to wed. The movie captures the immense challenges the Lovings faced to keep their family and marriage together through a combination of 16mm footage, personal photographs, accounts from their lawyers and family members and audio from the Supreme Court oral arguments.

    The Maid of McMillan (1916)
    Known to be the first student film on record, this whimsical, silent romance was shot on campus in 1916 by students in the Thyrsus Dramatic Club at Washington University in St. Louis. Club members Donald Stewart (class of 1917) and George D. Bartlett (class of 1920) wrote the screenplay. The original nitrate print was rediscovered in 1982, and two 16mm prints were made; the original nitrate was likely destroyed at this time. In 2021, with funding from the National Film Preservation Foundation, one of those 16mm prints was scanned at 4k and reprinted onto 35mm, helping to secure the film’s survival and legacy.

    The Oath of the Sword (1914)
    A three-reel silent drama, this depicts the tragic story of two young lovers separated by an ocean. Masao follows his ambitions, studying abroad at the University of California, Berkeley, while Hisa remains in Japan, caring for her ill father. This earliest known Asian American film production featured Japanese actors playing Japanese characters and was produced by the Los Angeles-based Japanese American Film Co. Made when Hollywood studios were not yet the dominant storytellers of the American film industry, The Oath of the Sword highlights the significance of early independent productions created by and for Asian American communities. James Card, the founding curator at the George Eastman Museum, acquired The Oath of the Sword in 1963. The museum made a black and white photochemical preservation in 1980. In 2023, a new preservation reproducing the original tinting was done in collaboration with the Japanese American National Museum, and the film has become widely admired.

    Hisa Numa (left) and Tomi Mori in 1914’s ‘The Oath and the Sword.’

    Courtesy Library of Congress

    Philadelphia (1993)
    This stars Tom Hanks in one of the first mainstream studio movies to confront the HIV/AIDS crisis. In the film, law partner Andrew Beckett (Hanks) is fired when it’s discovered that he’s gay and has AIDS. He hires personal attorney Joe Miller (Denzel Washington) to help him with litigation against his former employer. Director Jonathan Demme was quoted as saying, “The film is not necessarily just about AIDS, but rather everyone in this country is entitled to justice.” The film won two Oscars: one for Hanks and the other for Bruce Springsteen’s “The Streets of Philadelphia”; the song’s mainstream radio and MTV airplay brought the film and its conversation around the HIV/AIDS pandemic to a wider audience.

    Tom Hanks and Jason Robards in 1993’s ‘Philadelphia.’

    TriStar Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection

    Say Amen, Somebody (1982)
    Nierenberg’s documentary is a celebration of the historical significance and spiritual power of gospel music. With inspirational music, joyful songs and brilliant singers, it focuses on the men and women who pioneered gospel music and strengthened its connections to African American community and religious life. Before production, Nierenberg, who is white, spent more than a year in African American churches and communities, gaining the trust of the performers. Restored by the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture in 2020, the film features archival footage, photographs, stirring performances and reflections from the father of gospel Thomas A. Dorsey and its matron Mother, Willie Mae Ford Smith. Nierenberg shows the struggles and sacrifices it takes to make a living in gospel, including criticism endured by women who sought to pursue careers as professional gospel singers while raising families.

    Sparrows (1926)
    As a silent actress, producer and American film industry pioneer, Mary Pickford in Sparrows represents her ability to master the genre she helped nourish: sentimental melodramas full of adventure and thrills, with dashes of comedy and heartfelt endings. Pickford plays Molly, the eldest orphan held within the swampy squalor of the Deep South, who moves heaven and earth to save the other orphan children from a Dickensian world of forced labor. The film takes some departures from the visual styles found in Pickford’s other films, invoking an unusual tone of despair while deploying camera angles and lighting akin to German Expressionist cinema. Sparrows was preserved by the Library of Congress in collaboration with the Mary Pickford Co. in 2020.

    Mary Pickford starred in 1926’s ‘Sparrows.’

    Courtesy Everett Collection

    Ten Nights in a Barroom (1926)
    Featuring an all-Black cast, this was produced in 1926 by the Colored Players Film Corp. of Philadelphia and is the earliest of only two surviving films made by the company. The silent picture is based on the stage melodrama adapted from the 1854 novel Ten Nights in a Bar-Room and What I Saw There by Timothy Shay Arthur. Released in 2015 by Kino Lorber as part of the five-disc set Pioneers of African-American Cinema, the compilation was produced by the Library of Congress in association with the British Film Institute; George Eastman Museum; Museum of Modern Art; National Archives; Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture; Southern Methodist University; and the UCLA Film & Television Archive. Preserved by George Eastman Museum.

    The Thing (1982)
    Moody, stark, often funny and always chilling, this science fiction horror classic from John Carpenter follows Antarctic scientists who uncover a long-dormant, malevolent extraterrestrial presence. The Thing revolutionized horror special effects and offers a brutally honest portrait of the results of paranoia and exhaustion when the unknown becomes inescapable. It deftly adapts John W. Campbell’s 1938 novella Who Goes There?, influenced Stranger Things and Reservoir Dogs and remains a tense, thrilling and profoundly unsettling work of cinema.

    Kurt Russell in 1982’s ‘The Thing.’

    Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

    The Tramp and the Dog (1896)
    This silent from Chicago’s Selig Polyscope Co. is considered director William Selig’s most popular early work. Filmed in Rogers Park, it is recognized as the first commercial film made in Chicago. Previously lost, it was rediscovered in 2021 at the National Library of Norway. It depicts a tramp who attempts to steal a pie from a backyard windowsill, only to be foiled by a broom-wielding housewife and her dog. This is one of the first known examples of “pants humor,” where a character loses (or almost loses) his pants during an altercation. The scene inspired future comedy gags showing drifters and tramps losing their pants to dogs chasing them.

    The Truman Show (1998)
    Before social media and reality TV, there was Peter Weir’s The Truman Show. Jim Carrey breaks from his usual comedic roles to star in this drama about a man who, unbeknownst to him, is living his life on a soundstage filmed for a popular reality show. Adopted at birth by a television studio, Truman Burbank grew up in the (fictitious) town of Seahaven Island with his family and friends (paid actors) playing roles. Cameras are all over the soundstage and follow his activities 24/7. Almost 30 years since its release, this continues to be a study in sociology, philosophy and psychology and has inspired university classes on media influence, the human condition and reality television.

    Jim Carrey in 1998’s ‘The Truman Show.’

    Courtesy Everett Collection

    White Christmas (1954)
    While the chart-topping song “White Christmas” was first performed by Crosby for Holiday Inn, its composer, Irving Berlin, was later inspired to center the song in this musical film. Crosby, along with Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney, Vera-Ellen Rohe and director Michael Curtiz, embedded “White Christmas” in American popular culture as a best-selling single and the top-grossing film of 1954, as well as regular holiday viewing throughout the decades. The story of two World War II veterans-turned-entertainers and a singing sister act preparing a show for a retired general, the film and its grand musical numbers were captured in VistaVision, the widescreen process developed by Paramount Pictures and first used for this movie.

    From left: Vera-Ellen, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney and Bing Crosby in 1954’s ‘White Christmas.’

    Courtesy Everett Collection

    The Wrecking Crew (2008)
    This documentary showcases a group of Los Angeles studio musicians who played on hit songs and albums of the 1960s and early ’70s, including “California Dreamin’,” “The Beat Goes On,” “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling” and “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’.” Through interviews, music, footage and his own narration, director Tedesco reveals how the Wrecking Crew members — including his father, guitarist Tommy Tedesco — were the unsung heroes of some of America’s most famous songs. Production on the film began in 1996, and the film was completed in 2008. Because of the high cost of song licenses, the official release was delayed until 2015, when a Kickstarter campaign raised more than $300,000 to pay for the music rights.

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    Mike Barnes

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  • Thomas Causey, ‘Dick Tracy’ and ‘Halloween’ Sound Mixer, Dies at 76

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    Thomas Dewitt Causey, Jr., a veteran production sound mixer who worked on films like “Dick Tracy” and “Broadcast News,” died on Sunday in Cathedral City, Calif., after a battle with a long illness. He was 76.

    His death was confirmed by his daughter-in-law, Crystal Causey.

    Causey worked as a sound mixer on over 85 films throughout his four decades in Hollywood. He was nominated for an Oscar for his work on Warren Beatty’s 1990 film “Dick Tracy.” His other major credits included “Gardens of Stone,” “The Fisher King,” “Bulworth” and “Defending Your Life.” He was also a frequent collaborator of horror icon John Carpenter. They made 11 films together, including all three “Halloween” films, “Escape from New York,” “Escape from L.A.” “The Thing,” “Big Trouble in Little China,” “Christine,” “Starman,” “Prince of Darkness” and “Village of the Damned.”

    Born in New Orleans in 1949, Causey fell in love with the business while working as a driver for the sound team of a British production that was shooting in Louisiana. That experience pushed him to purchase his first sound equipment with a $5,000 loan from his father, and he worked on local film shoots and recorded live albums for local jazz musicians. In 1977, he moved to L.A. with his wife to pursue a career in sound mixing. The move was spurred by a court ruling that opened up IATSE membership for any non-union sound mixer who worked at least 90 days on L.A. sets in the last year.

    Causey is survived by his wife, Christina Causey, his son, Jesse Causey, and his brother, Matthew Causey.

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    Jack Dunn

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  • Stores Have Decided That This Summer, Halloween Is Already Here

    Stores Have Decided That This Summer, Halloween Is Already Here

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    Beetlejuice Beetlejuice and Bluey fever join horror classics and spooky lore-inspired collections at major home decor retailers and seasonal pop-up giants Spirit Halloween and Party City.

    Halloween’s niche in horror fandom has expanded way beyond October 31, so it makes sense that home decor and goods inspired by scary movies, classic monsters, and supernatural legends are becoming more and more a staple of everyday life. Hey—if the comic book and sci-fi nerds do it all year, so can the spooky season folks. What’s so shocking, however, is that Halloween teases are now dropping so soon after July 4. In previous years, anticipation for stores to fill their shelves with orange-and-black delights got more of a chance to build, at least until back-to-school aisles were cleared. And while some retailers are apparently still checking the calendar—including Target, which has thus far kept its Halloween collection under wraps—if you visit the sites or even locations for the Disney Store, Lowe’s, Spirit Halloween, Home Depot, Party City, Michaels, At Home, and Joann, you can start shopping pumpkins, ghosts, skeletons, and more.

    © Spirit Halloween

    You’ll have to be quick though! Early-bird horror fiends are already raiding the aisles—as are re-sellers intent on snatching up any items with the potential to go viral and become the Halloween must-haves for 2024. That’s why so many are sold out in the middle of summer—though most will be re-stocked, so if you see something you can’t live without, get on those alerts so you’ll be first in line when it returns. And keep in mind what’s been dropped so far isn’t everything; there’ll be more as we get closer to fall. The Disney Store just started its release schedule with  The Haunted Mansion collection but has more planned in the coming weeks. And Beetlejuice stuff has begun to trickle out to retailers like Spirit Halloween—witness this giant inflatable at Party City of the circus carousel ghost with the most—but it’s worth noting that so far it’s only been product from the iconic first film. We have yet to see anything from Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, but it’s definitely coming. Tim Burton fans will be happy to learn that The Corpse Bride will be a huge feature at Spirit Halloween as will slashers like Scream and John Carpenter’s Halloween franchise. Home Depot will feature the Universal Monsters, the not-so-scary (but clear-cut kid favorite) Bluey, and more Nightmare Before Christmas with that 13-foot Jack Skellington animated statue (which we hope comes with a Sandy Claws outfit for Christmas).

    Michaels halloween
    © Michaels

    But what if you don’t need pop culture splattered all over your seasonal decor? Fans of supernatural folklore, witchy classic literature, kooky familiars, sentient pumpkins, and paranormal specters aren’t getting left behind either. Michaels, At Home, and Joann Fabrics have some deeply aesthetic collections of their own out to shop that aren’t IP at all but will make your abode feel supremely haunted. We particularly love the Midnight Moon and Haunted Forest collections at Michaels that harken to some classic monster and A24 atmospheric vibes. Then for those into astrology, traditional Halloween, and graveyard goth, definitely look into the drops at Joann and At Home (but shout out to these awesome Jack Skellington pieces). And lets not forget Lowe’s truly epic aquatic horror line. There’s a huge front yard Kraken that’s already hard to get your hands on, because who doesn’t want to release the Kraken for Halloween?

     

    There’s already something for everyone and picking a theme is going to be so hard this year! Let us know if you’ve managed to secure anything already or if you’re going to wait and show up only to find Christmas aisles in September. Don’t say we didn’t warn you.


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest MarvelStar Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Sabina Graves

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  • 10 Unforgettable Cult Movies You Can Watch On Netflix Today

    10 Unforgettable Cult Movies You Can Watch On Netflix Today

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    STARSHIP TROOPERS [1997]– Official Trailer (HD) | Get the 25th Anniversary 4K Ultra HD SteelBook Now

    Released in 1997 but somehow as timeless as ever, Paul Verhoeven’s sci-fi satire draws from the Robert Heinlein novel but adds its own slick, glossy blend of soap-opera drama, stylized storytelling, and buggy gore. Would you like to know more? Watch on Netflix.

    (This post originally appeared on Gizmodo.)

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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • Jamie Lee Curtis Produced Debra Hill Documentary to Begin Production

    Jamie Lee Curtis Produced Debra Hill Documentary to Begin Production

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    Hollywood Trailblazer: The Debra Hill Story, the Jamie Lee Curtis-produced documentary about the late writer/producer, will begin production with Causeway Pictures.

    Queen of the Hill

    The documentary is set to be directed by Irish filmmakers Jim McMorrow and Margaret McGoldrick, and it will tell the story of Hill, who wrote and produced many films with John Carpenter including Halloween and The Fog, as well as other movies such as Adventures in Babysitting, The Fisher King, and The Dead Zone.

    There are appearances by Jamie Lee Curtis, John Carpenter, Stacey Sher, David Gordon Green, Terry Gilliam, Lynda Obst, Kim Gottlieb-Walker, Andrea Berloff, Alan Jones, Kim Newman, and more in the documentary.

    Those involved with the film have said the documentary aims to shine a light on the prolific filmmaker, often dubbed “the godmother of indie filmmaking,” who was responsible for giving many in Hollywood today their first break.

    “The story of Debra Hill is a multi-faceted one. She was, and still is, an inspiration to filmmakers across the globe, and her legacy as a formidable, creative producer, mentor, trailblazer, and pioneer in cinema and environmental activism is an eternally relevant story,” Director Jim McMorrow said. ”It is a privilege to bring this to the screen for all of us that she shaped through her life and work.”

    The story was first reported by Deadline.

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    Neil Bolt

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  • Horror master John Carpenter is taking on TV with ‘Suburban Screams’ – National | Globalnews.ca

    Horror master John Carpenter is taking on TV with ‘Suburban Screams’ – National | Globalnews.ca

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    Master of horror John Carpenter, director of iconic movies Halloween, The Thing, Escape From L.A. and many others, is turning his distinctive gaze toward the small screen.

    In John Carpenter’s Suburban Screams, the six-episode anthology series explores the horrors that exist in our own backyards — the little, mundane things that we may not think of as scary but actually are. What goes on behind the closed doors of suburbia, the cookie-cutter homes in identical neighbourhoods locked in labyrinthine mazes of roads?

    Suburban Screams, in a sort-of true-crime documentary approach, aims to find out.

    As we gear up for Halloween, the series tells six chilling tales, each one allegedly based on a true story. Two are based in Canada. Carpenter executive-produces the series and is the director of one episode, The Phone Stalker, about a Long Island, N.Y., woman who has been incessantly stalked by an anonymous man since 2017.

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    The 75-year-old Carpenter also created the score for the series; that’s right, he’s not just a cinematic mind, but a musical one as well. (Over the past decade he has released five albums and has gone on world tours for his music.)

    Global News got on the phone with Carpenter for a brief chat about the series and composing horror and music.

    Global News: First of all, it’s a real honour to speak to you. I grew up in the ’80s and ’90s and watched a ton of horror movies. So thank you for everything.
    John Carpenter: Absolutely. My pleasure.

    I appreciate you for warping my young brain.
    Oh, well, I’m sorry about that. [Laughs]

    How did this particular series, Suburban Screams, come about?
    Well, we discovered it and it was offered to us, my wife [Sandy King] and I. It’s made up of true stories in which we focus on the survivor of some terrible ordeal — it could be supernatural, it could be real. I chose to direct one about a phone stalker.

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    I understand you directed that remotely?
    Yes. I was excited to do it because it was remote directing. We had a hook-up so that the cast and crew were shooting in Prague and I was directing from my living room here in Los Angeles.

    That is a sweet deal.
    Oh man, you know it.

    I read that you were doing it in the same place where you play video games as well.
    That’s right! [Laughs]


    John Carpenter directing an episode of ‘Suburban Screams’ from his home in L.A.


    Trae Patton/PEACOCK

    Why did you choose to direct that specific episode?
    I thought as a director, I could do something with it. I also found a really terrific actress, Julie Stewart, to play the lead, and off we went.

    You also composed the music for this show. Did you enjoy it as much as the direction element?
    Yes, I love it. I love it!

    The second coming of John Williams?
    [Laughs] Oh my god, please. No.

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    What I find really interesting about the show is how the simplest things are sometimes the scariest things. Suburbs can seem so clean and cookie-cutter, but there’s some sinister stuff when you get below the surface.
    They are, boy, sometimes they are! And the suburbs, yes, they can be a dark and scary place.

    In my job, you gotta make it scary, and it has to be done in a cinematic way. Anything can be frightening. Anything. As you can see, the world is a pretty frightening place. Pick your spot.

    Reality is scarier then fiction, especially now. How does horror live on despite all of these real-life horrors?
    Well, horror is a reaction, real horror is a reaction to stuff. Cinematic horror is a representation. It can be costume movies, it can be drama, it can be science-fiction, it can be all sorts of things. It doesn’t have to be pulled from the headlines, but sometimes one wants to get away from the headlines and have a catharsis on your own, have a scary experience maybe with somebody you love, or an audience, and be safe. That’s what horror provides.

    Modern horror has splintered into… I guess I’d call them subgenres. What are your thoughts on the fragmentation now?
    Horror is all about the story. Don’t even pay attention to that other stuff. Don’t worry about techniques like jump scares or stuff like that. Horror is the story you’re telling — what is the story about?

    And listen, evil is ancient. Nature has it, people have it. It’s everywhere, and it’s constantly with us. It depends on how we react to it, how we deal with it, how we tame it.

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    Catch ‘John Carpenter’s Suburban Screams’ on Showcase Wednesday nights at 10 p.m. ET. Subscribers can also stream on STACKTV.

    (This interview has been edited and condensed.)


    Click to play video: 'Getting spooky at Vancouver Horror Show Film Festival'


    Getting spooky at Vancouver Horror Show Film Festival


    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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    Chris Jancelewicz

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  • John Carpenter Hints That a ‘Thing’ Sequel Is in the Works

    John Carpenter Hints That a ‘Thing’ Sequel Is in the Works

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    John Carpenter‘s The Thing is widely considered one of the best horror movies of all time. It also has more than enough sequel potential. The original film tells the story of an alien that crash-landed at an outpost in Antarctica. Over the course of the film, the Thing is able to disguise itself as the station crew (and even animals) until it decides to strike. The movie has been praised for its amazing practical effects, its claustrophobic ambiance, and the sense of isolation it invokes in the viewer.

    At the end of the film (spoilers!), after wiping out most of the camp, the scientists that are left decide to blow up the whole building. They assume the Thing is planning to go into hibernation until a rescue squad arrives. They decide that there’s no escape for them, and it’s better to make sure the Thing doesn’t reach civilization. Kurt Russell’s MacReady, a pilot, seems to be the only one left. That’s when he’s approached by Keith David’s Childs, who went missing sometime earlier. The film ends with a tense standoff between them, with no resolution to the question of whether either of them is secretly the Thing in disguise.

    6. The Thing (1982)
    Universal

    READ MORE: The Best Horror Movies on Netflix

    There was a 2011 version of The Thing, directed by Matthijs van Heijningen Jr. and starring Mary Elizabeth Winstead, but that was actually a prequel that led up to the events of John Carpenter’s The Thing, not a sequel. And fans have been speculating for decades about what might have happened after the events of the original film.

    It sounds like maybe we could actually see what happened next after all these years. Carpenter recently appeared at a horror convention in Texas, where he was asked if Childs was possessed at the end of The Thing. He refused to answer — but for good reason, he said…

    I have been sworn to secrecy, okay, because there may be, I don’t know if there will be … there may be a Thing 2.

     

    That’s certainly not a guarantee of a project, and Carpenter could be alluding to something other than a film sequel. (Someone might be working on a Thing novel or comic or video game, for example.) But this is quite an intriguing development nonetheless.

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    Cody Mcintosh

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  • Halloween Ends, Evil Never Does

    Halloween Ends, Evil Never Does

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    A year after the events of 2018’s (rather lackluster) Halloween Kills, mild-mannered Corey Cunningham (Rohan Campbell) is asked to babysit a boy named Jeremy (Jaxon Goldenberg) on Halloween night. Usually employed by his parents, the Allens (played by Candice Rose and Jack William Marshall), to do yard work, Mr. Allen jokes that he hopes Corey’s a better babysitter than he is at yard maintenance. The joke turns out to be all too prescient as Jeremy starts to play a little game of hide and seek with Corey after warning him that Michael Meyers kills babysitters. Even “ugly-ass” ones like Corey. Panicked when he hears a series of doors opening and shutting after Jeremy goes missing from the living room, Corey follows the sound of Jeremy crying out for help into the attic. Once he’s lured there, Jeremy locks him in and starts taunting him about how, sooner or later, Michael is going to get him. As it turns out, Jeremy’s prediction will come true in ways he couldn’t have imagined. And will never be able to… for as Corey proceeds to kick the door repeatedly to open it, when it finally does, it causes Jeremy to fly over the staircase railing and plunge to his death just as the Allens arrive back home. Almost makes the sexist case for women being better caretakers, doesn’t it?

    Although Corey had big plans to go to college, wanting to use some of that babysitting money toward the funds, three years later, we see he’s still stuck in Haddonfield, working at his father Ronald’s (Rick Moose) mechanic shop and living at home. Much to the schadenfreude-oriented delight of his mother, Joan (Joanne Baron). Having turned into something of a DC villain origin story (think: Joker) at this juncture, we can see that the main focus of Halloween Ends will be on Corey’s “transformation”—from innocent youth to jaded adult to full-tilt evil entity. For many, that’s the main beef with this particular “final” installment (at least, as far as this trilogy is concerned). That it doesn’t focus “enough” on Michael Meyers. And yet, the entire purpose of Paul Brad Logan, Chris Bernier, Danny McBride and David Gordon Green’s script is to emphasize that Meyers remains omnipresent. Not just in the sense that he’s a boogeyman feared whether he’s truly around or not, but in the sense that evil never dies—it just transfers and reanimates (e.g., Stalin to Putin).

    This is something Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis, especially “on her game” throughout)—in all her wisdom about coming face to face with evil—can sense and recognize in Corey. But before she realizes this fact, it’s already too late. She’s quite literally dragged him into the doctor’s office where her granddaughter, Allyson (Andi Matichak), works as a nurse. Now living together, Allyson and Laurie have grown even closer after the death of Karen (Judy Greer) a.k.a. Allyson’s mother and Laurie’s daughter. Having sacrificed herself to Michael to spare Allyson in Halloween Kills, it’s a guilt she lives with every day. Much like the guilt Corey lives with, albeit of an entirely different variety. From the second they see one another in the office, it’s a guilt and sadness that connects them right away. And from that moment on, their relationship becomes the stuff of Lana Del Rey songs.

    At first, Laurie, who rescued him from the bullying torment of local high schoolers Terry (Michael Barbieri), Stacy (Destiny Mone), Billy (Marteen) and Margo (Joey Harris), is glad to see Allyson opening up to someone. That is, until she catches sight of Corey standing next to the bushes ominously outside her house the exact same way Michael did all those decades ago. In that instant, she understands that something evil has been born inside of Corey.

    But by that time, it’s already too late, for Corey has come to apologize to Allyson about the night before, when he completely went off on her for bringing him to a public space (namely, Lindsey Wallace’s [Kyle Richards] bar) for a Halloween party. Because the second he took off his scarecrow mask (you’re seeing where that little detail is going, right?) to go order more drinks, he runs into Mrs. Allen, who berates him for daring to have a good time. To display joy of any kind while she suffers every day over her loss. It’s this reminder that sends Corey into what will become a permanently dark place… one, it can be argued, that was likely always there behind the “sweet disposition.”

    Perhaps that’s why there’s a seemingly innocuous moment at the beginning of the movie when Corey grapples with the urge to pull a beer out of the refrigerator after Jeremy verbally abuses him or, instead, opt for the chocolate milk. At that point, when he’s still pure, he ends up choosing the chocolate milk—a very symbol of wholesomeness. Later on in the movie, at the convenience store, he buys some in a glass bottle that eventually shatters as he squeezes it in his hand, buckling under the rage of being bullied by the aforementioned quartet of high schoolers. Tired of his pariah status—seen by the entire town as a monster—it’s as though he decides to just fully embrace being one, since nobody will ever look past the myth of him being a kid killer anyway.

    It’s a sudden “fuck it” attitude that an encounter with Michael Meyers in a sewer beneath a Haddonfield bridge solidifies that night after leaving Allyson at the Halloween party. Meyers, who ordinarily kills anyone that he manages to entrap in that lair, lets Corey go, for “whatever reason.” But, of course, the reason is clear: evil recognizes evil. And it’s obvious he’s found a conduit to transfer his own to, perhaps finally sensing the frailty of his old age and wanting to ensure there’s a “successor.” Except that little theory is negated when Michael shows up to one of Corey’s killings (by now, he’s embraced wearing the scarecrow mask to do so) and seems to be competing with him in the kill—this being the least credible aspect of the storyline and its “universe.” Though some disgruntled viewers would say the entire story is a load of hooey. Not so. For the message behind Halloween Ends is a timelessly resonant one, especially as we watch the frequent swapping of world leaders that result in no change, just a different mask (see: British prime ministers). Fittingly enough, Halloween III: Season of the Witch was also among the least well-received in the Halloween series for its lack of Michael Meyers appearances (which, again, Halloween Ends has plenty of).

    In lieu of that, writer-director Tommy Lee Wallace put the focus on the idea of masks themselves, how people act when wearing them—and this time involving the ritual sacrifice of children. The special effects artist for the movie, Don Post, appropriately commented, “Every society in every time has had its masks that suited the mood of the society, from the masked ball to clowns to makeup. People want to act out a feeling inside themselves—angry, sad, happy, old. It may be a sad commentary on present-day America that horror masks are the best sellers.” And, undoubtedly, both Michael Meyers and Corey Cunningham (notice the alliteration in each name) are just another product of that commentary. The opening credits to Halloween Ends featuring a series of pumpkins with ever-changing faces of malevolence only further speaks to that motif: evil merely shifts from one husk to another, like an infection.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • ‘Halloween Ends’ Reviews Say the Series Should Be Laid to Rest

    ‘Halloween Ends’ Reviews Say the Series Should Be Laid to Rest

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    Unfortunately for fans of the Halloween franchise, it seems that The Shape should have just stayed in prison. The David Gordon Green trilogy has been nothing if not divisive, with a strong start, a middling middle, and apparently, a pretty disappointing ending. While John Carpenter gave this trilogy his blessing, either even he couldn’t save it, or he was mostly hands-off.

    In the new trilogy, Michael Myers is thoroughly conflated with the concept of evil itself. That was painfully made clear by the constant chanting of “Evil dies tonight!” in Halloween Kills. While conscious horror that functions as an allegory for real-world problems can be extremely effective in the right hands, it can also bore you to death. In Halloween Ends, it seems that the nature of cyclical and intergenerational trauma is put under the microscope. Just not in a particularly satisfying, or even logical, way.

    Here are a sampling of the early reviews of the film. Although there were a few positive notices, most were pretty negative:

    As you can plainly tell from this selection of reviews, critics are divided so far. If any consensus is to be gleaned at all, it’s that this movie is … odd. While some were shocked at the final outcome to the trilogy, others were extremely annoyed at what they considered to be an all-too-predictable ending. On October 14, you can head to the theater (or watch on Peacock) for yourself and form your own opinion.

    The 10 Worst Horror Movie Cliches Of All Time

    While the horror film genre has expanded immensely over the past few decades, there’s still some annoying stereotypes that just won’t go away. Here are the worst clichés in scary movie history.

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    Cody Mcintosh

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