Though the title promises Poe, the story delivers Lovecraft. “The Shadow Over Innsmouth” crops up here and there. The rest follows the heir to the eponymous location possessed by the evil spirit of his ancestor, who resumes efforts to summon evil forces from another dimension. Vincent Price is the main draw of this otherwise largely forgettable production. Mildly amusing
Thursday, October 30, 2025
Saturday, October 11, 2025
Review – The Fear of Darkness
Anytime horror and psychiatry mix, there’s a good chance that a big part of the plot will turn out to be pure hallucination. Throw in a hearty dose of DMT, and there’s almost no chance that anything we see will be anything but imaginary. This production has a few interesting visual twists, so it’s a shame they were wasted on a largely non-functioning story. See if desperate
Book Review – Fall of Civilizations
Fall of Civilizations: Stories of Greatness and Decline by Paul M.M. CooperMy rating: 5 of 5 stars
Arguably this book could have been shortened to “greed.” Or at least some of the chapters could have been effectively summarized as “Rome” or “Spain.” And yet the fascinating parts of the deaths of civilizations lie in the details, here copiously supplied by the author. I particularly loved the range of dead societies covered by the text, from the ancient to the nearly modern, from the places everyone’s heard of to whole civilizations frequently omitted from high school history texts. Paul M.M. Cooper’s writing is engaging, neither frivolous nor academically stuffy. Though it took me awhile to get through it, I enjoyed the experience.
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Thursday, October 9, 2025
Book Review – Pox Romana
Pox Romana: The Plague That Shook the Roman World by Colin ElliottMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
Colin Elliott serves up an exceptionally thorough consideration of the Antonine plague, the world’s first pandemic to leave a written historical record and a contributing factor to the end of the Pax Romana period in Roman history. It’s amazing that such a relatively short book can include careful (and unfortunately occasionally repetitive) study not only of the disease itself but also its complex interrelationship with climate, famine, war and social mismanagement, all of which proved to be a deadly combination in the later years of the reign of Marcus Aurelius. This is worth a read for anyone with an interest in the history of either Rome or epidemiology or both.
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Sunday, October 5, 2025
Book Review – More Weight: A Salem Story
More Weight: A Salem Story by Ben WickeyMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
As one of untold thousands of people who appeared in a high school production of The Crucible, I was curious to see the actual story unfold in sequential art format. Ben Wickey has a gift for both words and images, which works wonders for the parts of the narrative devoted to the judicial murder of innocent people. I particularly enjoyed the clear visual distinctions between victims and perpetrators alike, most helpful in cases where the names and circumstances are often hard to tell apart. I even liked the interludes where Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wander the streets of Salem musing philosophically. The meandering, repetitive outro ended things on a down note, but otherwise this was a great read.
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Friday, October 3, 2025
Review – 28 Years Later
A quarter century (give or take) later, Danny Boyle’s rage zombies still hold dominion over the UK. Only now they’ve grown larger, more naked and considerably more boring. There seem to be three or four different stories going here, none of which meshes especially effectively with the others. See if desperate
Review – Censor
I’m actually kinda impressed by movies where even on first viewing you can pinpoint the exact moment when they go completely off the rails. I won’t spoil it, but it’s pretty obvious. The story – film censor for the British government gets caught up in the bloody violence from a “video nasty” – had potential, and the art direction recreates mid-80s in the UK quite well. But despite getting off to a good start, by the end it’s too random and ridiculous to care about. If nothing else, this should serve as a reminder to me that the “leaves Prime in less than a day” warning message isn’t necessarily a good reason to watch a movie. See if desperate
Review – Halloween Party
The generative AI strings for this one must have been something like “college students Halloween computer virus.” And though most of the tech in the story appeared to be fairly current, some of the elements (pixellated screens for the virus, computer science students who are exclusively male incels) seemed at best retro and at worst incongruous. The result is a movie that wasn’t terrible but missed a lot of opportunities to be better. See if desperate
Wednesday, October 1, 2025
Review – Gaslit
Though the cast of this latest take on Watergate includes several familiar faces, the real star of the miniseries is the art direction. The recreation of the hideous mid-century tastes of the upper class in the early 1970s is spot on. Despite the fresh perspective from Martha Mitchell’s point of view, this is yet another iteration of the time-worn trope that the whole affair was roughly akin to the plot of a Three Stooges movie. If we could get past the notion that stupid things are automatically harmless, we wouldn’t be in a lot of the mess we’re in now. Mildly amusing