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Five Outer Space Horror Movies to Stream This Week

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space horror planet of the vampires

If the buzz around the upcoming horror movie Amityville in Space indicates anything, it’s that horror fans have an insatiable curiosity when it comes to catapulting horror franchises or icons into space. Or maybe it’s that the final frontier opens up the limitless potential for the horror to get weird. Either way, this week’s streaming picks salute the cosmos, with five outer space horror movies that bring the horror and quirky eccentricities in equal measure.

These space-set movies run from sci-fi westerns to found footage nightmares to genre-defying existential dilemmas. As always, here’s where to watch them all this week…

For more Stay Home, Watch Horror picks, click here.


Prospect – Hulu

space horror prospect

Less outright horror and more western sci-fi thriller, Prospect offers fantastic world-building. Moreover, it demonstrates you don’t need a massive budget to deliver great sci-fi experience, favoring character work over special effects-driven spectacle. The plot sees a teen girl and her father arrive on a remote alien moon on a job contract to harvest rare gems. Between rival prospectors, the moon’s ruthless inhabitants, her father’s greed, and the atmosphere’s poisonous spores, survival becomes a daunting concept for the teen. Prospect stars Pedro Pascal, Yellowjacket’s Sophie Thatcher, and Jay Duplass.


High Life – Hoopla, Kanopy, Showtime

The first English-language feature by Claire Denis (Trouble Every Day) also happens to be a genre-bender. Told in a nonlinear format, High Life follows a group of death row criminals given a second chance at life by working on a mission to extract energy from a black hole. The deep-space isolation and the psychological turmoil it brings are enough for anyone to process. The criminals are then subjected to experimentation by the doctor, who’s fixated on creating a baby through artificial insemination. Yes, it’s as disturbing as it sounds, and that doesn’t even begin to cover how weird it gets. A headier sci-fi horror film that eschews convention or any easy answers, this is for the more avant-garde cinephiles.


Europa Report – Kanopy, Prime Video, Roku

A found footage film that recounts the fictional tale of a space crew’s mission to Jupiter’s fourth-largest moon. Simplistic and measured in pacing, Europa Report favors claustrophobic tension. It’s minimalism at its best, with a bleak narrative befitting of deep space horror stories where everything can and does go wrong. Think The Blair Witch Project meets The Abyss; it’s a more meditative approach through found footage. For those looking for something wholly unique and underseen, this one delivers. 


Planet of the Vampires – EPIX, Paramount+

Two interplanetary ships are on an expedition exploring the furthest recesses of space when they pick up a distress beacon from a nearby planet. The crew of one vessel becomes possessed upon entering the planet’s atmosphere, rendering them homicidal as they turn on each other. The survivors learn that they’re far from the first species to set foot on the planet and succumb to its mysterious force. If this plot sounds familiar in any way, that might be because Planet of the Vampires actually played a significant influence on space horror classic Alien. Italian maestro Mario Bava directs the film with his usual vivid, lush aesthetic.


Event Horizon – HBO Max

event horizon space horror

The definitive haunted house in space horror movie. Set near Neptune in 2047, the ill-fated crew of the Lewis and Clark spaceship is sent to answer a distress call from the Event Horizon after it’d been missing for seven years. They soon discover that the ship went to hell and back, literally, and it’s gained sentience. Laurence Fishburne leads as Captain Miller, but Sam Neill steals the film as the Event Horizon’s designer-turned-evil villain. Where we’re going, we won’t need eyes to see.

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon, SeriesFest, and Popcorn Frights Film Fest.

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Editorials

‘The Vampire Lestat’ Concert Event Launches New Season With The Ultimate Expression Of Fandom

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Beacon Theatre's The Vampire Lestat Marquee The Vampire Lestat Concert

There are thousands of passionate fans decked out in gothic chic and champing at the bit like feral creatures. They’re screaming for Lestat, a legendary vampire-turned-rock star, as if the entire crowd has been glamored into submission.

The entire experience is magic, but not because some supernatural thrall has been activated. What’s going on is even more special. It’s the power of the effusive fandom that’s been authentically assembled by AMC’s sublime Immortal Universe, namely Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire, now, The Vampire Lestat.

The Vampire Lestat is far from the first Anne Rice adaptation, and it’s not as if there’s been a lack of erotic vampire material for audiences to sink their teeth into. On June 2nd, during a one-night-only spectacle, New York City’s prestigious Beacon Theatre shook from Sam Reid’s bravado performance and an audience full of adoring fans who had already memorized Lestat’s songs.

It’s clear that The Vampire Lestat just hits differently than its predecessors. It’s become more than just a TV series at this point, and this opulent display of ego, swagger, and pure sex is the perfect way to premiere the new season and give back to the fans who helped make Interview with the Vampire/The Vampire Lestat such a breakout success. It’s exactly the sort of hyperbolized hedonism that would make Lestat cackle.

The Vampire Lestat Rolling Stone Cover

For all intents and purposes, AMC has successfully created the illusion that this concert/premiere is just one of the many destinations on Lestat and his band’s 54-stop tour that is simultaneously playing out on this season of television. It’s such a sophisticated and thorough level of interactive fan engagement that the audience doesn’t just understand, but also manages to accentuate through its involvement.

It’s a level of seamless synergy that’s not unlike the give-and-take relationship of vampire and victim. 

Before the concert started,LeStanswere sitting in the Beacon and flipping through a fake Rolling Stone issue with Lestat emblazoned on the cover, complete with interviews with the undead frontman inside. Other fans were admiring the vinyl pressing of Lestat’s EP as they walked past a section of undead band merch. Fandom and fantasy blur together, and it all becomes this elaborate, immersive experience. Fan celebration, erotic gothic fantasy, and a lavish rock concert transform into one beautiful thing.

To this point, AMC Global Media’s Chief Content Officer and President of AMC Studios, Dan McDermott, introduced the event by reiterating to fans,You are the heartbeat of the series.That’s abundantly clear on nights like this as that heartbeat collectively pulses to this performance. In terms of how AMC engages with The Vampire Lestat’s fans, it’s as bold a reinvention as the season itself.

This intuitive gamble speaks to AMC’s creativity in this department and a fandom that is eager to seize such opportunities. It’s the same innovation that led to zombie walks for The Walking Dead and real-life Los Pollos Hermanos restaurant pop-ups from Breaking Bad. It’s a great way to pump up the audience for The Vampire Lestat and then maintain that enthusiasm for the whole season.

The Vampire Lestat's Sam Reid as Lestat at Beacon Theatre.

For most series, a rocknroll concert just doesn’t make any sense as a promotional tool. The Vampire Lestat finds itself in a very unique position where it can deliver an excellent concert at an iconic theater, but also use it to showcase The Vampire Lestat’s music by Daniel Hart (who was shredding on stage alongside Reid and the rest of their band) and, more than anything, Sam Reid’s endless charisma.

The way in which Reid feeds off of the crowd’s energy, modulating his performance and giving different sections of the Beacon life, is a perfect distillation of the series’ thoughtful relationship with its audience and how it’s become such a breakout success for AMC. AMC Studios President Dan McDermott emphasized that the fans are the reason that the show is still here and why an event like this is even possible. It’s rare to see a series in which every single cog in the machine is so perfectly attuned to its fans. Reid’s fans already cheer whenever they see him, so why not translate that to a concert setting?

It’s clear in this season of television that Reid was born to be a rock star, but it’s surreal to see him effortlessly command the stage — and the audience — at every step of the concert. He recites Shakespeare monologues and bitches out Armand between songs, all while the audience screams in support. For the duration of this concert, Reid is Lestat, and he’s given thousands of fans a memory that’s as immortal as any vampire.

Now bring on the encore and get this show on the road!

 

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