5 Of the Most Underappreciated Horror Icons
By: Brian Cotnoir
It’s October, that
magical time of year. The leaves are
changing colors, the air is ripe with the smell of pumpkin spice and apple
cider donuts, and everyone is so excited to start binge watching their favorite
horror film and dress up as their favorite horror movie icons for
Halloween. Yes, pretty soon the streets
will be crawling with people dressed as everyone from cult icons Freddy
Kreuger, Jason Voorhees, and Michael Myers to the more modern day Mr. Babadook
and Pennywise the Dancing Clown, and it got me thinking: why are these
characters considered so iconic, but others are relegated to obscurity and cult
underground status? What makes a Horror
character so Iconic? Is it the number of
films they appear in? Is it the number
of people the kill? Is it how they
kill? Or is it just a pure nostalgia
factor? Well for whatever reasons they
may be, every year it seems we give credit to the same Horror Icons, and leave
others hung out to dry, so today, I’m here to tell you who I think are 5 of the
Most Underappreciated Horror Icons, and why I think you should watch their
movies this Halloween instead of the clichéd classics.
1.) Daniel Robitaille a.k.a. Candyman from Candyman
This film that is very
loosely based off the short story
“The Forbidden” by another Horror legend, Clive Barker. The story follows a Grad Student named Helen
who is doing a thesis on Urban Legends and one of those legends in
particular—the legend of the Candyman—has her very interested. According to the legend, the Candyman was a slave
named Daniel Robitaille who fell in love with a white woman and once their love
was discovered he was chased out of town, had one of his hands cut off and
replaced with a rusty hook, and then was covered in honey and stung by like a
thousand bees, and then to top off this worst day ever they lynched him
too. So apparently, if you look in a
mirror and say Candyman 5 times and then shut off the lights and turn them on
again real quick (I may be messing up that whole origin story), Candyman will
appear and gut you from groin to gullet. Candyman is definitely a villain who has a
lot going on: part scary man with the hook for a hand, part Bloody Mary, and
part made of bees!...I don’t know if the rest of you are afraid of bees, but I
am so that makes him way scarier. I will
say that the films sequel “Candyman 2: A
Farewell to Flesh” gave him a more stable background story than the
original film, but nonetheless he still intimidating. Played by Actor Tony Todd with his deep voice
and swarm of lethal bees, definitely gives off an ominous presence. The first time we actually see the Candyman
is in a parking garage in the middle of the day. This is one of the few times I can recall a
Horror movie character being revealed in the daytime rather than at night.
2.) Pumpkinhead from the Pumpkinhead
films
Yeah, I know so many
people just think he’s a knock-off of H.R. Geiger’s Xenomorph creation from
Ridley Scott’s “Alien”. Who cares?
It’s awesome! Not only was the
creature created by Special Effects Genius Stan Winston, but Winston also
directed the film as well! Pumpkinhead is great movie monster. He’s a creature who gets resurrected by a
witch for people who want vengeance against people who have wronged them. Another thing that I think is cool about
Pumpkinhead is he doesn’t just get resurrected and then goes on the killing
spree and then returns to his slumber once it’s all done. If you call for Pumpkinheads help he’s going
to make sure you experience and witness the killings (telepathically at
least). That way you know the deed has
been done almost like a Hellaraiser
and E.T. hybrid.
3.) The Entity’s from It
Follows
So this film has only
been out for around 2 years so it would make sense why not many people would
consider them, but there’s also another valid reason...you can’t actually see
them, so yeah, it’s kind of hard to be afraid of something you can’t see. These
creatures don’t even have an official name, so I’m just referring to them as The Entities. So the entities are like the world’s scariest
S.T.D. They follow a person, appearing
taking many different forms and they only appear to the person they are trying
to kill, and the only apparent way to make them leave you alone (temporarily)
is to have sex with another person, and then they will be in pursuit of that
person until they are killed and then it gets passed on back to the person who
gave it to them. I may have done a
terrible job trying to explain them, but yeah, it’s still pretty scary. How do you fight against something that only
you can see and can take the form of anything around you? It could be your best friend, a random
stranger, an animal, or some other bizarre creature. How do you know what’s real and what
isn’t. The constant fear and paranoia is
enough to want to drive a person to contemplate suicide.
4.) S. Quentin Quale a.k.a. Dr. Satan from The House of 1000 Corpses
So the plot of Rob
Zombie’s cinematic debut starts off with group of young friends trying to find
the spot where a group of locals in the town of Ruggsville, Texas hung Mr. S.
Quentin Quale, or as he’s known in those parts Dr. Satan. Quale was trying to create a Super-Race of
Humans out of mentally ill patients at the Willows County Mental Hospital, and
well we don’t actually get to see Dr. Satan till almost the very end of the
film. When we do see him, he’s even more
terrifying than we ever could’ve imagined.
The reason I think people forget about Dr. Satan is because of his lack
of screen time, and the horrible things he does are pretty mundane compared to
the acts of violence enacted by the Firefly family, who own the land where Dr.
Satan enacts his experiments in an underground catacomb.
5.) Jame Gumb a.k.a. Buffalo Bill from The Silence of the Lambs
Did you know that
Hannibal Lecter isn’t the main villain in the 1991 Award Winning Horror classic
“Silence of the Lambs”? Because a lot of people seemed to be confused
about that. Hannibal isn’t the one Agent
Starling is pursuing; he’s already incarcerated when she first meets him, she
actually goes to see him to get advice on how to catch the films real villain,
Buffalo Bill. Lecter is in the film for less than 20 minutes, yet he is the one
most remembered from this film, and not the psychotic transgender serial killer
who likes to wear suits made out of women’s skins and pretend he’s a lady. To me Buffalo Bill is way more terrifying
than Hannibal. Think about it, to be
eaten by a cannibal, you have to already be dead. You’d put up one hell of a fight if someone
was trying to eat you, so your death would be quick and (probably) painless so
the cannibal can get their munch on. However,
Buffalo Bill needs to keep his victims alive for weeks, tormenting them and
torturing them psychologically and emotionally, and in the end he’s going to
take their skin. Yeah, I would say that
Buffalo Bill is way scarier. Plus I feel
bad for the actor who played him, Ted Levine.
It seems like everyone in this film got an Academy Award, but him. He wasn’t even nominated for Best Supporting
Actor. I think Mr. Levine got cheated.
Great article! I love that you included the entity from IT FOLLOWS! I'm wondering if we don't see more of these great icons on October 31 because their costumes would be kind of tough to pull off that they'd be immediately recognizable? Just a thought. Great list!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much :)
DeleteWell done! Just reading this article has me anxiously looking around corners and keeping the lights on!
ReplyDeleteThat's always the goal :)
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