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Six Times Rock Artists Collided With Horror Behind the Camera

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Horror movies and rock music are a match made in Hell.

The two outcasts have been tied together for decades for their showmanship, energy, and revelry in darker themes and imagery. Both offer a sense of escapism, too. It’s only fitting that they often overlap, with rock artists crossing over into horror on screen. Sometimes, rock artists draw inspiration from the genre and set out to create their own horror features.

The latest to do so is Powerman 5000’s Spider One with directorial feature debut AllegoriaAllegoria, also written by Spider One, tells of “a group of artist’s lives becomes unwittingly entangled as their obsessions and insecurities manifest monsters, demons, and death.”

Krsy Fox (Frank), Adam Busch (“Buffy the Vampire Slayer”), Bryce Johnson (“Pretty Little Liars”), and Scout Compton (Halloween) star in the musician’s horror movie debut.

Allegoria is available now on VOD and Shudder. For the release, we salute six times rock artists collided with horror behind the camera!


XX – St. Vincent

Annie Clark, known professionally as St. Vincent, co-wrote and directed “The Birthday Party” segment in the horror anthology XX. Melanie Lynskey stars in the darkly comedic tale, which sees a housewife scrambling to pull together a birthday party despite a tricky corpse situation.


Dark Floors – Lordi

The Finnish metal band with an affinity for monsters broke out in 2002 before winning 2006’s Eurovision Song Contest. In 2006, frontman Mr. Lordi came up with a story for the feature horror movie, Dark Floors, starring the band as monsters terrorizing a hospital. Heavy metal and monsters collided on screen and behind the scenes for this one.


Studio 666 – Foo Fighters

Rock & Roll Hall of Famers Foo Fighters used horror as a vehicle for a movie about their band. Trying to inspire creativity for the Foo Fighters’ tenth album instead winds up summoning demons from Hell in this one, offering up an entertaining and bloody horror-comedy that serves as a band spotlight first and foremost. Band members Dave Grohl, Taylor Hawkins, Pat Smear, Chris Shiflett, Rami Jaffee, and Nate Mendel star in and produced the horror comedy, which is based on a story idea by Grohl.


The Breach – Slash

The Breach

Rue Morgue Magazine founder Rodrigo Gudiño helms his second horror feature that adapts a gory, Lovecraftian story by author Nick Cutter. It centers on a retiring police chief drawn into a grisly murder investigation, leading him to a house of unspeakable horrors. The film is executive produced by Guns N’ Roses guitarist Slash, who is also the co-producer of the score. It’s Slash’s second outing as a horror movie producer; he previously produced 2013’s Nothing Left to FearThe Breach premiered at the Fantasia Film Festival, so expect a release date soon. Also, look for Rush’s Alex Lifeson in a small role.


Strangeland – Dee Snider

The rock musician and Twisted Sister singer didn’t just star in Strangeland as Captain Howdy, the creepy sadist who lures teens through the internet; he wrote and produced it. The concept for Strangeland stems from a song on Twisted Sister’s Stay Hungry album. The movie developed a cult following over the years, so much that sequel talks persist today. If that’s not enough to prove his horror mettle, Snider is helming a new horror movie this year.


House of 1000 Corpses – Rob Zombie

Rocker Rob Zombie’s directorial debut employs a mishmash of cinematic inspirations, and the film’s dark house conception brings a very atypical, vivid aesthetic to the period. A group of friends traveling the backroads of Texas searching for urban legends on All Hallows Eve in 1977 find more than they bargain for when they cross paths with the sadistic Firefly clan. The gritty handheld footage of the Firefly clan-inflicted torture against the pristine neon haze of Spaulding’s dark ride and Dr. Satan’s underground layer is just as manic as the Firefly family. Zombie’s debut didn’t just inspire a trilogy but kickstarted an enduring career as a horror filmmaker.


Spider One’s Allegoria is available now on VOD and Shudder.

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Co-Host of the Bloody Disgusting Podcast. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon and SeriesFest.

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Stephen Graham Jones on Final Girls, Small Town Horror, and ‘The Angel of Indian Lake’ [Podcast Interview]

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What does it mean to be a final girl? Can it really be as straightforward as staying alive until the sun rises? Picking up the knife, the machete, the abandoned gun and putting down the killer? Or is it something more? Could it mean stepping into a position of power and fighting for something larger than yourself? Or risking your life for the people you love? Could it be that anyone who bravely stands against an unstoppable force has final girl blood running through their veins?

Jennifer “Jade” Daniels has never seen herself as a final girl. When we first meet the teenage outcast in Stephen Graham JonesMy Heart is a Chainsaw, she’s lurking on the fringes of her her small town and educating her teachers about the slasher lore. She knows everything there is to know about this bloody subgenre, but it takes a deadly twist of fate to allow the hardened girl to see herself at the heart of the story. In Don’t Fear the Reaper, the weathered fighter returns to the small town of Proofrock, Idaho hoping to heal. But a stranger emerges from the surrounding woods to test her once again. The final chapter of this thrilling trilogy, The Angel of Indian Lake, reunites us with the beloved heroine as she wages war against the Lake Witch for the soul of the town. She’ll need all the strength her many scars can provide and the support of the loved ones she’s lost along the way.

Today, Shelby Novak of Scare You to Sleep and Jenn Adams of The Losers’ Club: A Stephen King Podcast sit down to chat with the award-winning author about the concluding chapter in his bestselling Indian Lake trilogy. Together they discuss the origins of Jade’s beloved nickname, life in a small town, complicated villains, and all those horror references that made the first two novels fan favorites. Jenn reveals how many times she cried while reading (spoiler: a lot), Shelby geeks out over the novel’s emotional structure, and all three weigh in on their favorite final girls and which entry is the best in the Final Destination franchise.

Stream the heartfelt conversation below pick up your copy of The Angel of Indian Lake, on bookshelves now. Bloody Disgusting‘s Meagan Navarro gives the novel four-and-a-half skulls and writes, “Proofrock has seen a copious amount of bloodshed over three novels, but thanks to Jade, an unprecedented number of final girls have risen to fight back in various ways. The way that The Angel of Indian Lake closes that loop is masterful, solidifying Jade Daniels’ poignant, profound legacy in the slasher realm.”

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