Finally, a family animated movie with characters that include housekeeping witches, zombie Mozart's, and a skeleton Mariachi band. From Sony Pictures, Hotel Transylvania went through 5 directors until it landed on Genndy Tartakovsky (Dexter's Laboratory, Star Wars: Clone Wars). Dracula (Adam Sandler) has a strict no humans allowed policy at the Hotel Transylvania, preserving it under all costs to remain the sanctuary of the undead, monsters, and displaced freaks of the living world. So when an American backpacking tourist voiced by Andy Samberg (SNL) stumbles upon the hotel, Drac must disguise the human as Frankenhomie, whose monstrous appearance is more acceptable for the special weekend guests: Frankenstein and his bride, the Mummy, and the Invisible Man. The few hip hop/pop song numbers are intrusive, where for the sake of appealing to the masses, an alternative soundtrack would have married sound and visuals in better harmony. For a vampire who has impeccable taste in decor, hearing Dracula rap is painfully unnecessary, yet we must remember that it was the human that brought this music to the monsters. Tartakovsky's delicate, hand-drawn, cartoonish style animation of beautifully stitched back together bodies, combined with the gothic backdrop makes Hotel Transylvania visually interesting; and the comedy is also on-point. There is just enough spook for the adults in the audience to sink their teeth into.
Gather 'round ghoulies. Come into the light. Let me tell you a story revolving quite possibly the best horror film ever made: Poltergeist (Steven Spielberg, 1982). The following information are facts, based on actual events that happened to many of the cast involved in the Poltergeist movie trilogy. Six cast members died deaths shrouded by mystery or tragedy, while the other cast is said to be "cursed." So why were they cursed? Remember the scene (pictured above) where JoBeth Williams is swimming in a muddy pool of bodies? Production decided to use real human cadavers as props because it was allegedly cheaper than using prop skeletons. The Poltergeist cast and crew thereby cursed by the angry spirits of the deceased used in the making of the 1980s box office hits. Actors and actresses in the Poltergeist trilogy who died untimely deaths are: Dominique Dunne , who played older sister Dana in the first film, was strangled to death by her abusive boyfriend in 1982,
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