Spoilers and Unrealistic Expectations

By Ethan Rodgers Posted Saturday Dec 13, 2025

Filed under: Epilogue, EthanIRL 9 comments

DISCLAIMER: I will not be spoiling anything for anyone in this post. This is a post whining about spoilers and I try not to be THAT big of a hypocrite. So feel free to read without worry.

Recently the first part of the final season of “Stranger Things” came out and I was excited to watch it, but I’ve been sick for a month now. I wanted to enjoy the watch and trying to enjoy a show while I’m mostly deaf from a bad double ear infection and sniffling the whole time kind of takes away from a viewing experience. So I waited. I waited and I waited and I waited until I made a mistake that I make pretty much every day. I got on TikTok. Only this time there were greater consequences than brainrot.

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Wednesday Action Log 12-10-25

By Issac Young Posted Wednesday Dec 10, 2025

Filed under: Epilogue, Action Log 16 comments

Another uneventful week.

Still playing Slay the Spire here and there. I’ve only beaten ascension level 13 over the whole week, and I don’t know how long it’ll take to beat the next one.

I’m starting to think that I should invest in a new game. The only game I bought this whole year was Balatro.

What’s everyone else doing?

 

 


 

Horror Slasher Evolution: Halloween Returns

By Paige Francis Posted Monday Dec 8, 2025

Filed under: Epilogue, Paige Writes 8 comments

Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers was released for Halloween of 1988. The movie’s selling point is in the name. 1982’s Halloween 3: Season of the Witch did not continue the story from the first two films. Neither does it have anything to do with the rest of the Halloween franchise beyond the production and some thematic elements. I have already talked about John Carpenter’s desire to make the Halloween films a yearly anthology series, with each movie sharing only the Halloween holiday as connecting tissue. Carpenter had not wanted to continue the story from the first movie; in fact he made “The Shape” more human and less of a conceptual avatar in Halloween II just so he could kill that character off. At least, that’s my reading of what has been related. John Carpenter and his partner, Debra Hill only agreed to return for Halloween III on the condition that the story had nothing to do with the first two movies, a stipulation executive producers Moustapha Akkad and Irwin Yablans accepted. Even then, Carpenter and Hill only worked as producers; arranging talent and resources.

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DM of the Rings Remastered CXLII: Rank Bribery

By Peter T Parker Posted Sunday Dec 7, 2025

Filed under: DM of the Rings Remaster 9 comments

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An Idiot’s Analysis of A Film: The Long Walk

By Ethan Rodgers Posted Saturday Dec 6, 2025

Filed under: Epilogue, EthanIRL 1 comments

I don’t go to the movie theater anymore. I never was a fan of spending a decent chunk of money on a single watch of a movie, then spending a small fortune on snacks and a Coke. Add on top of that the several experiences of annoying audiences ruining the atmosphere of great movies and I was ready for an excuse to stop going to the theaters. Then came the pandemic and the bottom fell out of the movie screening industry and earlier streaming debuts of movies. Now, most of the time you couldn’t pay me to go. However there are movie debuts that tempt me to go back. The release of “The Long Walk” was one such movie.

I’ve always loved Stephen King adaptations. From the masterpiece that is “The Shining” to the batshit insanity that is “The Langoliers” I find something to enjoy in most of them. There’s a warmth and particular charm to his characters that is hard to describe but you definitely know it when you see it. Maybe the copious amounts of cocaine imbibed while writing his characters just forces its way through even when it’s been filtered through another layer of interpretation. Regardless, I can’t read so enjoying his stories in book form is impossible for me. So when I saw a video discussing the “The Long Walk” prior to its release, I got very excited.

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Horror Slasher Evolution: What Is Freddy Krueger?

By Paige Francis Posted Monday Dec 1, 2025

Filed under: Epilogue, Paige Writes 2 comments

We have talked about how two of the three major franchise slasher villains started out: Michael Myers was real in a manner-of-speaking, but was more of an idea; while Pamela Voorhees and later her son Jason were very straight-forward human serial killers. Freddy Krueger, from A Nightmare on Elm Street, deserves some deeper analysis. Until you get to the final scene of the first movie, Fred Krueger is a now-dead child murderer (the script, even to the point of shooting as far as I can tell, explicitly called him a child r***ist but real-life events during production prompted the change). His appearance in the dreams of the children (keep in mind all of the major characters in the film ARE WRITTEN as mid-teenage…15 and 16 years old) is *implied* to be a form of psychic emanation caused by the collective trauma of THEIR PARENTS. The people who burned Fred Krueger alive when his murder case was thrown out before conviction on a technicality. This is born out, more-or-less, when Nancy confronts Krueger, telling him he doesn’t scare her anymore (shades of “You have no power over me!”) She turns her back on Freddy and he poofs into nothingness as he lunges toward her.

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