OCTOBER HORROR AND MY PERSONAL MOVIE TRADITIONS

It’s an odd thing to mention but traditions can be comforting and questionable all at the same time. To many October is just another month of the year. However, to others it’s the mark that in another thirty days is Halloween, a very Americanized holiday.

As a child, especially one such as myself who spent hours on end watching TV (more importantly, American TV), I would see TV turn into a 24-hour long horror programming for the month of October and be perplexed. I understood the idea of Halloween the same way I understood all other parts of American culture, through TV. The only problem was that I couldn’t understand how when October 31st came around I didn’t get to go have fun late at night getting free candy with all of my friends.

As usual I came to realize that this was all just a thing for the crazed Yankees to enjoy and that’s it. However, the horror film journey got into me for some reason or another and somehow whenever October rolls around I find it almost required for me to spend some time focusing my movie watching efforts on horror; a genre that for the most part I don’t enjoy that much.

This isn’t my only tradition. Generally come hell or high water I have three other traditions that I abide by:  always go and see a new release at the theatre on my birthday, whenever I’m on a holiday I must see a movie at the theatre on the last day of my break, and when the end of a year comes around I will do a marathon of films for the year in question for catch up, but the cap it off I end with one of the most panned film of the year that I’ve yet to see just before the New Year is around. These are all completely arbitrary but for some reason I’ve grown to love these traditions and when I fail to honour them I feel somewhat lost in my world of cinema.

Last year I watched for the very first time The Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978); the year prior I saw Halloween (1978) for the first time. This year I’ve planned out five horror classics that I’ve yet to see and I’m three down with two more to go and even outside of that I’m knocking off a horror film here and there. I’ve even gotten more classic recommendations which I’m considering for my Halloween night extravaganza (which will be small regardless thanks to me having a job and such).

Regardless of where these odd rituals come from they exist and they do their best to define a little bit of who you are. For me it proves how much of a movie nerd I really am, and even though I tend to pan horror films (especially those new releases) I still push myself to find those gems that my exist out there.

Let me know what your Movie Traditions are?

Andrew Robinson

This is my blog. There are many others like it, but this one is mine. My blog is my best friend. It is my life. I must master it as I must master my life. Without me, my blog is useless. Without my blog, I am useless. I must fire my blog true. I will. Before God I swear this creed: my blog and myself are defenders of my mind, we are the masters of our enemy, we are the saviors of my life. So be it, until there is no enemy, but peace. Amen.

  1. Steven Flores

    One tradition I have around May during the Cannes Film Festival that I've been doing for the past few years is hold a marathon of films that had played at the Cannes Film Festival. Right now, I'm going to try and do another one for October which is to watch all sorts of dark fantasy, horror, and suspense films.

    • Andrew Robinson

      Ye I've seen you're Cannes Marathons… never been a Cannes kind of guy, maybe one day I'll make it there… who knows.

      Do the dark fantasy thing man… some great films in that genre

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