About me

I've been writing stories for years. I think I'm a good writer and I'm willing to bet you'll feel the same way. So here they are. Enjoy them, comment on them, tell your friends about'em, reblog them, retweet them, reread them. I have four stories in my archive so far:
"One day on the Mountain", a story of Lycanthropy, a father, and a son.
"The Boy", a story of a very ambitious and sociopathic fifth grade boy.
"The Easy Girl, A story of infidelity and unpaid sexual debts. This story is very dark.
"Brick The Mighty", a story of an aging superhero.
Although this is primarily a blog of horror, I also write about things that are important to me. I have more stories tucked away; they just need editing. There's even a few novels. There will be more to come.
PS. Feel free to leave a comment. I love comments.

Saturday 10 September 2011

The Video Stores of the '80's

A Classic, need I say more?


I saw this and all the sequels. Not sure why.

    Does anyone remember video stores?

    I don't mean DVD; I mean VHS cassette rental stores. Before blockbuster, there were many of them. Some of them were even privately owned, if you can believe that.


    Back then, in the mid-eighties, we weren't able to order something off the internet. We had to walk, take the bus, or get on our bikes to find a movie to watch. We would rent two or three with pooled money, stop at a grocery store to buy snacks, and ride home with them dangling off the handle bars in plastic bags that threatened to rip open, for we had yet to learn that plastic bags were bad. No, it wasn't that bad. It was actually kind of nice. 

   If you wanted Romance, Drama, Family, or comedy, you could find that in all the rows that went up and down the store. That was fine; that was easy - just mosey up and down until you found something that was available (it wasn't always available and sometimes you had to do with something else, horror of horrors), or something that everyone agreed was worth trying.

   But if you wanted horror, you had to go to a special booth set up in the corner. Often plastic and paper-mache ghouls had been plastered all over it, or dozens of grey little tombstones. You'd walk in, aware that light from the regular world was filtering in through the little slits in the booth's corners, and choose.

   It wasn't just eighties horror that was available. There was the older stuff from the sixties and seventies, as well. Andy Warhol's Frankenstein ("To find life you must fuck death… through the GALL BLADDER!"), Andy Warhol's Dracula, The Claw, The original Night of The Living Dead. For the eighties there were the Nightmare on Elm Street movies, All the Howling movies, Child's Play, The Evil Dead movies, Phantasm II( for some reason the first one was never around. Ever). If you were lucky, or perhaps unlucky, you'd very occasionally come across a video store stupid enough to rent you one of the famous Italian 'holocaust' movies, such as Cannibal Holocaust, which was so impossibly gross and and yet low-budget that to this date many people think it's a genuine snuff film. My mother would have had me committed and my friends arrested if she knew some of the things we had been watching. 

  If you wanted porn - well, they had a room for that, too. It was an entirely separate room, and you even before you could sweat the idea of the clerk asking you for ID, you had to emerge from that room with your chosen flick( a title like Orifice Party, or Hannah Does her Sisters) and maybe your English teacher would be there with his family for their movie night. Luckily, we had a friend, a buddhist who believed in past lives, who simply was not bothered by what anyone thought, and we had him brave that counter, which was often staffed by girls from school. But I won't get into eighties and seventies porn. There are other blogs for that, run by people who are far more knowledgeable. 

   This was my adolescence. While it was not technically advanced as today's internet, Netflix, get-what-you-want-when-you-want-it, I loved it. We were still able to have fun, to get into trouble. If you did something secret, it stayed secret because it never went electronic. If you didn't want to answer the phone, you let it ring and the person bothering you gave up. 

   This was the eighties. There is way more, and when I'm in the mood I'll tell you more. For the latest generation, it's just as exotic and alluring as the sixties, and perhaps it's not the hairsprayed, velcro, paisley embarrassment I used to think it was. 

    I'm a child of the eighties and I'm proud of it. 

5 comments:

  1. Do you remember a movie called chopping mall? Total b movie! But I watched it along with pumpkin head...the evil dead cover made me think of that!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I remember Chopping Mall. How about I Dismember Mama?

    I actually liked the first Pumpkinhead, thanks to Lance Henriksen. He was also in a wonderful 1987 vampire film called Near Dark.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Near Dark was stinkin' awesome! Came out around the same time as Lost Boys if I recall (maybe a little after) and put it to shame. No hairsprayed vampires in THAT movie.

    Fun post. My post for this week is actually 10 horror movies that scared the bejeezus out of me. Hope you get to check it out.

    Oh, and the first Phantasm was always missing because it, too, was awesome and people liked to make it part of their personal collection.

    Paul D. Dail
    www.pauldail.com- A horror writer's not necessarily horrific blog

    ReplyDelete
  4. I loved Maniac Cop.. LOL

    I remembered here in Toledo.. there used to be a video store name CoCoNuts... that's where i rented this b movie named Stepfather II..

    Stepfather is one of all-time favorite movies.. I miss those days...

    ReplyDelete
  5. Stuff was available then, but you had to work a little harder to find it, so it wasn't over-available.

    Now, everything's available, and it gets downloaded for free, copied, stored on drives with 5000 other titles (many unwatched), and the viewer speeds through it.

    The value of movies has been denigrated by these processes. It's unfortunate.

    ReplyDelete