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The Cats of Ulthar

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  Book : The Cats of Ulthar Rating: ***** "It is said that in Ulthar, which lies beyond the river Skai, no man may kill a cat..."     A man gazes upon his cat as he lies in front of the fire, and reminisces about the tales of cats told back throughout history. The secrets they hold, the families related to him throughout jungles and Africa, the ways they are worshipped, and how "he", the cat, is "more ancient than the Sphinx, and remembers that which she hath forgotten."     In June of 1920, horror author H.P. Lovecraft wrote the short story The Cats of Ulthar , and was one of his most favorite works he wrote - and it ended up being one of my favorites too. A short story of only two and a half pages, I was surprised at how much I got out of it. How enchanted I was, and also how creeped out I got from a small number of paragraphs. The way it is written, the story that follows - especially the ending, and the mental image it leaves behind in you has made it ...

Let The Right One In

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Movie : Let The Right One In Rating: ***** "Are you a vampire?" "Would you like me anyways?"     When an individual thinks of vampires, one of the first outlines that make out the outline is an individual named Dracula, taken from the 1897 novel of the same name, Dracula, by Bram Stoker. Irregularly shaped humans, lavishly old castles, speaking fancily, maybe even shape-shifting, but also crafty, and sinister, tricking their victims on their own into death more horrible than they could ever imagine. Thomas Alfredson's 2008 film Låt den rätte komma in , or in English, Let The Right One In , (based off the 2006 novel of the same name by John Ajvide Lindqvist - which I will also be reviewing), takes all of these ideologies about vampires, modernizes them, and in some cases, throws out a lot of old stereotypes we think about vampires to date. With a beautiful plot, elegant music, and cinematography, this has to be on a watchlist for any horror enthusiast.      ...

Grave of the Fireflies

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  Movie : Grave of the Fireflies Rating: ***** "September 21st, 1945. That was the night that I died."      The words spoken above are the words first heard through the narrative of the main character of the series in the first ten seconds of the movie, ten-year-old Seita, as he falls to the floor weakly in a wrecked train station, and with his last breath, muttering the name of his four-year-old sister, Setsuko. Seconds later, a train station employee digs through the boy's pockets and finds a rusted candy tin, and, after tossing it out in the war-stricken field outside, the lid pops out, and spills out a small amount of bone and ash into the night. Fireflies then start to rise slowly like a reverse rain as a small girl's spirit springs from the can, and, after realizing the girl is Setsuko, and seeing the two join hands, walking away together into the rising glowing insects, the viewer knows how the movie has ended, and yet, wonders how it could have ever gotten th...

Pan's Labyrinth

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  Film : Pan's Labyrinth  Rating:  ***** "To obey, just like that for the sake of obeying, without questioning, that's something only people like you can do, Captain."     Darkness. A few agonized breaths struggling to breathe come into the soundwaves. A female voice hums a sweet lullaby. A paragraph sets the stage of Spain, 1944, in the aftermath five years after the Spanish Civil War. Drops of blood start to drip upwards of the cliff wall. We see the dirty, bloody hand of a young girl, Ophelia, taking her last breaths. A long ribbon of blood is dripping backward into her nostrils, and her pupils dilate as the narrator starts the prologue as the camera zooms into her eye.     Guillermo Del Toro's 2006 Spanish film, Pan's Labyrinth , is my favorite film of all time. Not only for its amazing cinematography, its plot, soundtrack, and or symbolism, but also the large sense of meaning and wonder it leaves you feeling. A film for adults, it feels like somet...