Shudder’s comprehensive “Home for Halloween” line-up this October features the premiere of Dario Argento’s giallo return, ‘Dark Glasses,’ and much more.
Every Halloween, horror fans are presented with a murderer’s row of options when it comes to the perfect place to binge on bloody buffets of seasonal content. Horror programming is unavoidable during this time of year, but some channels and streaming services go above and beyond in terms of what they offer their audience. At this point, acclaimed horror movies and episodes of television shows are the bare minimum and the most promising streaming services find ways to truly celebrate this haunting holiday. Shudder never disappoints when it comes to horror’s biggest holiday, but 2022’s “Home for Halloween” celebration puts past years to shame.
Shudder (also available on AMC+) loves to celebrate the spookiest season of the year in special ways and “Home for Halloween” features a number of exclusive premieres as well as original series and specials. This includes a “House of Psychotic Women Collection,” which is in commemoration of Kier-La Janisse’s deep dive into onscreen female paranoia and neuroses in the horror genre. Shudder adds nearly ten more films into an already robust examination of gender and genre that includes titles like May, Footprints, and Resurrection.
Joe Bob’s Haunted Halloween Hangout also returns for the fourth edition of Shudder’s ongoing Halloween tradition. October 21st welcomes the latest celebration and commentary of horror cinema with a mystery line-up of films and a surprise guest who will help Joe Bob and Darcy usher in everyone’s favorite holiday. Shudder’s other in-house horror expert, Samuel Zimmerman, the streaming service’s head of programming, will once again offer personalized recommendations from Shudder’s library via Shudder’s Halloween Hotline (914-481-2239), each Friday in October from 3:00-4:00pm (ET). And fans of Joe Bob can also enjoy him as one of many experts featured in Shudder’s popular new countdown show, The 101 Scariest Horror Movie Moments of All Time.
Even Shudder’s “Ghoul Log,” the streaming service’s annual take on Christmas’ Yule Log, will undergo an extra-special makeover this season. The previous versions of the 24/7 streaming jack-o’-lantern ambience setter, The Ghoul Log, Return of the Ghoul Log, and Night of the Ghoul Log return to Shudder, but 2022’s contribution is created by the renowned special effects team at Academy Award-winning Phil Tippett’s Tippett Studios to celebrate Shudder’s release of stop-motion epic, Mad God.
One of the most exciting “Home for Halloween” premieres on Shudder this October includes a new release from genre legend, Dario Argento. Dario Argento is a prolific filmmaker whose name is practically synonymous with the heightened theatrics of horror’s giallo subgenre. Argento helped revolutionize bloody murder mysteries and while the director has flirted with different genres of film, Dark Glasses returns Argento back to his gory giallo roots. Dario Argento’s Dark Glasses marks the filmmaker’s first movie in a decade and Shudder is proud to host the horror movie’s streaming debut this October 13th. Dark Glasses presents an unconventional story of obsession, vanity, and murder that showcases a rejuvenated Argento in what feels like a compilation of the director’s greatest hits.
Dark Glasses is Argento’s first film since 2012’s Dracula 3D, but it’s very much a return to form for the director and proof that he’s still full of terrifying tricks. The movie stars Ilenia Pastorelli as Diana, an escort who becomes the target of a crazed serial killer. Diana survives the bloody altercation, but finds that her old way of life is forever shattered after she emerges from the incident without her sight. Now vulnerable in ways that she never thought possible, Diana scrambles to prevent the ominous obsessive from finishing off what he started. Diana’s only friend in this freshly dark world, a young boy named Chin (Xinyu Zhang), becomes an unlikely ally in their fight for survival. Full of tense setpieces, bloody battles, and a uniquely encumbered woman in crisis who simultaneously finds empowerment, Dark Glasses is what Dario Argento fans have been waiting for.
Dario Argento’s Dark Glasses is one of the most exciting additions to Shudder’s staggering “Home for Halloween” lineup, but the streaming service offers an abundance of Argento’s creepiest cinematic contributions for consumption. Argento’s films first started to receive major acclaim during the 1970s, but he’s a director who consistently provokes fresh ideas in the versatile genre. Argento’s profound use of color, gender dynamics, and mysterious gloved assailants who wield big blades have gone on to define giallo storytelling.
Shudder includes an eclectic mix of Argento’s most successful endeavors–like Demons 2, Deep Red, and Inferno–while also catering towards some of the director’s more obscure gems like Phenomena, Trauma, and Tenebrae. While only a fraction of Argento’s impressive 20-movie filmography, Shudder’s curated selection is still one of the best places to indulge in the director’s oeuvre. October’s “All Hail Argento” celebration also adds Opera and The Stendhal Syndrome to the library. These titles are sure to satisfy the seasoned Argento aficionados as well as the newcomers who are eager to experience more of the director’s special brand of horror after dipping their toe into Dark Glasses.
Here are all the Dario Argento movies streaming on Shudder for Halloween 2022…
The Cat o’ Nine Tails (1971)
“A newspaper reporter and a retired, blind journalist try to solve a series of killings connected to a pharmaceutical company’s top-secret experimental research projects, and in doing so, they become targets of the killer.”
Argento’s second feature film and the middle chapter in his “Animal Trilogy,” The Cat o’ Nine Tails is a hard-boiled whodunnit that lacks the supernatural touches that would go on to dominate many of the director’s subsequent films. The movie prioritizes tension over Argento’s typical bloody crime scenes and it’s an exciting exercises in minimalism for a director who’s still putting together his toolbox of skills.
Deep Red (1975)
“A jazz pianist and a wisecracking journalist are pulled into a complex web of mystery after the former witnesses the brutal murder of a psychic.”
Deep Red is Dario Argento at the top of his game in every department as the director mixes magnetic camerawork with heightened gore and extreme characters who are brought together through supernatural trauma. Deep Red also marks the first of Argento’s collaborations with actress, Daria Nicolodi, as well as the band Goblin, who go on to compose the score for many of the director’s most memorable films.
Inferno (1980)
“An American college student in Rome and his sister in New York investigate a series of killings in both locations where their resident addresses are the domain of two covens of witches.”
Argento’s Suspiria is considered to be mandatory giallo viewing, but its thematic successor and the second installment in the “Three Mothers Trilogy,” Inferno, brings just as much to the table. The film slowly turns into a game of cat and mouse with the demonic Mater Tenebrarum, all of which concludes on a haunting note that will linger with the viewer long after the movie’s over.
Tenebrae (1982)
“An American writer in Rome is stalked and harassed by a serial killer who is murdering everyone associated with his work on his latest book.”
Tenebrae marks Argento’s much-celebrated return to pure giallo horror after experiments with the supernatural through films like Suspiria and Inferno. Tenebrae succeeds as a straight murder mystery, but Argento engages in a fascinating self-aware commentary on the nature of giallo and the type of audiences that are drawn to it. There’s plenty of metatextual analysis of the genre and its common themes of voyeurism, the celebration of violence, and the dark duality that makes up humanity. This all turns Tenebrae into a gory affair, albeit one that has something to say.
Phenomena (1985)
“A young girl who has an amazing ability to communicate with insects is transferred to an exclusive Swiss boarding school, where her unusual capability might help solve a string of murders.”
Phenomena stars a young Jennifer Connelly in one of her very first roles and the film turns into an unconventional friendship between Connelly’s Corvino and Inga, a chimpanzee, who are united through trauma and abandonment. Slick POV segments, brilliant misdirection, and a truly disturbing use of insects all make Phenomena soar. Thankfully, Shudder offers Phenomena’s proper full release as opposed to the edited-down version, known as Creepers, that was first available in the United States.
Opera (1987) – Premiering October 10th
“A young opera singer is stalked by a deranged fan bent on killing the people associated with her to claim her for himself.”
Opera is a means of storytelling that’s frequently filled with tragedy, but Argento is the perfect filmmaker to combine the elegance of this artform with the brutality of murder. The framework of a troubled Macbeth production lends itself to many inventive murders, not to mention the movie’s infamous “eye needles,” which hurts just to think about. Opera makes sure that Argento left the 1980s on a note so high that only a soprano could hit it.
Trauma (1993)
“A young man tries to help a teenage girl find the serial killer who murdered her parents before the killer comes after them.”
A rare Argento offering that’s both directed and set within the United States, 1993’s Trauma still carries all of Argento’s trademark trappings and doesn’t feel like an Americanized production. Trauma also stands out among Argento’s other films due to special effects guru Tom Savini’s work on the movie, including the construction of the film’s signature murder weapon, an electric-powered wire garrote. Oddly enough, while still vintage Argento, Trauma also bears a heavy resemblance to Brian De Palma’s psychosexual thrillers, right down to the score being composed by Pino Donaggio.
The Stendhal Syndrome (1996) – Premiering October 10th
“A young policewoman slowly goes insane while tracking down an elusive serial rapist/killer through Italy when she herself becomes a victim of the brutal man’s obsession.”
Inspired by his own experience as a child of entering a fugue state while in the presence of art in the Parthenon, Argento’s The Stendhal Syndrome is a powerful offering from the ’90s that often goes overlooked. In one of Asia Argento’s first performances where she’s directed by her father, she brings a painful realism to her psychologically tortured character. The Stendhal Syndrome resorts to Argento’s standard bloody tricks, but the movie’s fascination with art elevates it to more than just a meditation on trauma. It’s also the first Italian film to make use of CGI, which culminates in some stunning visual illusions as Argento embraces a new filmmaking tactic.
Regardless of one’s viewing strategy and giallo judgments, Shudder’s “Home for Halloween” guarantees that audiences won’t have to worry about what to watch this October.
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