avclub-bde03a31feb6259716046ea17db6e426--disqus
nuclearhobbit
avclub-bde03a31feb6259716046ea17db6e426--disqus

Not exact, but my list looks something like this:

Yeah I've never listened to them but I probably should.

Milk Music and Dead Confederate are two great bands that are clearly influenced by grunge and late 80s SST bands like Dino Jr.

That glam band analogy is an excellent point.

Yeah, I got all the way into the comments until I figured that out. Even then, it wasn't until I saw a comment that I made two years ago and suffered through some very heavy confusion that I realized what was going on.

Never read or seen anything Twilight related, but I did drive through Forks a couple years ago on a really long drive that took me from Seattle to Olympic National Park, down the coast through Aberdeen, and on to Portland. And yes, there was Twilight stuff everywhere. The town itself is a little depressing, but

Yep, that was another creepy one.

Yeah, I thought that picture looked familiar.

I first was familiar with this thanks to the "In a Dark Dark Room" series of books, the memory of which still terrifies me today:

Watched a bunch of movies for the first time:

Yes, I read it after seeing the movie (not immediately after, but after a year or two) and it is also great. Possibly better than the film, though again, I didn't experience them close enough together for an accurate comparison.

How 'bout a bumper sandwich, boogerlips?

I just rewatched the "Night on Bald Mountain" sequence from Fantasia last night. I'm assuming it's one of the scenes you're referring to. It was always one of my favorites, but definitely creepy when I was a kid.

I never noticed it looking silly, even after many viewings, until someone else pointed it out. Now it bugs me, too.

I'd happily forgotten she was ever on the show until now.

I just started Eraserhead last night for the first time, but only had time to watch the first 15 minutes. Happy to know what I have to look forward to now…

This. I loved most of the casting choices for the film (Rickman, Rockwell, and Freeman especially), but the actual film was so incredibly boring that I didn't even finish it. It would have been more fun to watch if it had been a horrible train wreck of a movie.

I'm getting a collection, so I'll just plow through much of what is in there. Probably start with "At the Mountains of Madness" and "Call of the Cthulhu" and go from there.

Yeah, the book I got from the library is a huge Poe collection. I'm unsure how much of the unfamiliar material I'm going to dive into, as some of it seems pretty dense. Reading "Ligeia" for the first time now, but mostly I've been sticking to the classics. I'm open to recommendations.