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Episode 262: Re-Animator

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Manage episode 503758088 series 3426320
Content provided by Darren Smith, Michael Avery and Guests, Darren Smith, and Michael Avery. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Darren Smith, Michael Avery and Guests, Darren Smith, and Michael Avery or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

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Re-Animator (1985), directed by Stuart Gordon, is a cult-classic horror-comedy that blends gore, dark humor, and science fiction. Loosely based on H.P. Lovecraft’s serialized story Herbert West: Reanimator, the film follows medical student Herbert West, played by Jeffrey Combs, whose obsession with conquering death drives him to develop a glowing green serum that can reanimate the dead. His experiments, conducted with fellow student Dan Cain (Bruce Abbott), spiral into grotesque and chaotic results as corpses return with violent, uncontrollable impulses.

What sets Re-Animator apart is its unapologetic embrace of outrageous gore effects combined with tongue-in-cheek humor. From severed heads to rampaging cadavers, the film pushes boundaries with practical effects that remain shocking and entertaining decades later. At the same time, it never loses sight of its satirical tone, poking fun at both the arrogance of scientific ambition and the conventions of horror cinema. Barbara Crampton’s character, Megan Halsey, provides a tragic emotional anchor, though she too becomes caught in the film’s increasingly bizarre and macabre spectacle.

Critically, the movie occupies a unique space in 1980s horror. While contemporaries like The Evil Dead and A Nightmare on Elm Street also mixed humor with horror, Re-Animator leaned harder into black comedy, creating an outrageous energy that set it apart. Jeffrey Combs’ performance as Herbert West has since become iconic, capturing both the manic brilliance and chilling amorality of the character.

Though not a mainstream hit upon release, Re-Animator quickly developed a strong cult following. It spawned sequels, inspired comic books, and cemented Gordon’s reputation as a director willing to push horror into daring, taboo-breaking territory. Today, it stands as a quintessential example of “splatter” cinema, simultaneously disturbing, funny, and inventive, a film that embodies the fearless experimentation of 1980s genre film making.

A clear 6/10 for us from a period in film where every movie was a banger. In this episode we give it the love it deserves.

  continue reading

265 episodes

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iconShare
 
Manage episode 503758088 series 3426320
Content provided by Darren Smith, Michael Avery and Guests, Darren Smith, and Michael Avery. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Darren Smith, Michael Avery and Guests, Darren Smith, and Michael Avery or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Send us a text

Re-Animator (1985), directed by Stuart Gordon, is a cult-classic horror-comedy that blends gore, dark humor, and science fiction. Loosely based on H.P. Lovecraft’s serialized story Herbert West: Reanimator, the film follows medical student Herbert West, played by Jeffrey Combs, whose obsession with conquering death drives him to develop a glowing green serum that can reanimate the dead. His experiments, conducted with fellow student Dan Cain (Bruce Abbott), spiral into grotesque and chaotic results as corpses return with violent, uncontrollable impulses.

What sets Re-Animator apart is its unapologetic embrace of outrageous gore effects combined with tongue-in-cheek humor. From severed heads to rampaging cadavers, the film pushes boundaries with practical effects that remain shocking and entertaining decades later. At the same time, it never loses sight of its satirical tone, poking fun at both the arrogance of scientific ambition and the conventions of horror cinema. Barbara Crampton’s character, Megan Halsey, provides a tragic emotional anchor, though she too becomes caught in the film’s increasingly bizarre and macabre spectacle.

Critically, the movie occupies a unique space in 1980s horror. While contemporaries like The Evil Dead and A Nightmare on Elm Street also mixed humor with horror, Re-Animator leaned harder into black comedy, creating an outrageous energy that set it apart. Jeffrey Combs’ performance as Herbert West has since become iconic, capturing both the manic brilliance and chilling amorality of the character.

Though not a mainstream hit upon release, Re-Animator quickly developed a strong cult following. It spawned sequels, inspired comic books, and cemented Gordon’s reputation as a director willing to push horror into daring, taboo-breaking territory. Today, it stands as a quintessential example of “splatter” cinema, simultaneously disturbing, funny, and inventive, a film that embodies the fearless experimentation of 1980s genre film making.

A clear 6/10 for us from a period in film where every movie was a banger. In this episode we give it the love it deserves.

  continue reading

265 episodes

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