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Robtober 2017

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I put together a big schedule of horror films, most of which I haven’t seen before. Films, dates, and times (all subject to change) are listed for any friends who want to join me, and ticket links are included for public screenings. The schedule is also available as a handy Google calendar and as a Letterboxd list.

Below the schedule you can find a bit about how it’s curated as well as a roundup of more horror happenings in NYC. Hope you have a horrific month!

Super Dark Times

Kevin Phillips (USA, 2017)

Mother!

Darren Aronofsky (USA, 2017)

78/52: Hitchcock’s Shower Scene

Alexandre O. Philippe (USA, 2017)

The Void

Jeremy Gillespie, Steven Kostanski (USA, 2016)

It

Tommy Lee Wallace (USA, Canada, 1990)

Cloverfield

Matt Reeves (USA, 2008)

10 Cloverfield Lane

Dan Trachtenberg (USA, 2016)

Raw

Julia Ducournau (France, 2016)

The Final Terror

Andrew Davis (USA, 1983)

Häxan

Benjamin Christensen (Sweden, 1922)

Faust

F.W. Murnau (Germany, 1926)

Frankenstein’s Army

Richard Raaphorst (Netherlands, USA, Czech Republic, 2013)

Flesh for Frankenstein

Paul Morrissey (Italy, USA, France, 1973)

Frankenstein’s Bloody Terror

Enrique L. Eguiluz (Spain, West Germany, 1968)

Zombieland

Ruben Fleischer (USA, 2009)

Kill, Baby, Kill

Mario Bava (Italy, 1966)

The Hitch-Hiker

Ida Lupino (USA, 1953)

Demon

Marcin Wrona (Poland, 2015)

Vampyr

Carl Theodor Dreyer (Germany, France, 1932)

Cronos

Guillermo del Toro (Mexico, 1993)

Freaks

Tod Browning (USA, 1932)

XX

Roxanne Benjamin, Karyn Kusama, Annie Clark, Jovanka Vuckovic (Canada, USA, 2017)

The Old Dark House

James Whale (USA, 1932)

Killer Klowns from Outer Space

Stephen Chiodo (USA, 1988)

Happy Birthday to Me

J. Lee Thompson (USA, 1981)

The Hidden

Jack Sholder (USA, 1987)

976-EVIL

Robert Englund (USA, 1988)

Final Destination 2

David R. Ellis (USA, 2003)

The Killing of a Sacred Deer

Yorgos Lanthimos (UK, Ireland, USA, 2017)

Canoa: A Shameful Memory

Felipe Cazals (Mexico, 1976)

Fiend Without a Face

Arthur Crabtree (UK, 1958)

The Uninvited

Lewis Allen (USA, 1944)

How it’s curated

  1. Dip into my ongoing Letterboxd list of Robtober contenders (private, for now) to see if anything jumps out at me.
  2. Cursory web search for lists of recently-released horror movies in case anything interesting escaped my notice.
  3. Check the latest version of TimeOut’s 100 Best Horror Films (as of this writing, the current version has 18 I still haven’t seen).
  4. Scan the various streaming services I periodically subscribe to: Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, Shudder, FilmStruck.
  5. Check local repertory theaters for their upcoming film programs (more about that below).
  6. Put all the contenders in a spreadsheet. Comparing metadata helps me put together what I hope is a fairly diverse program, with at least one film from every decade since the 1920s, and a variety of nationalities and subgenres represented.
  7. Assemble the calendar, beginning with theatrical screenings (whose dates and times I can’t control) and then filling in the the space around them with home viewings.

More horror happenings in NYC

I’m lucky to live in New York City, which, perhaps now more than ever, is an embarassment of riches for cinefiles. Here’s a list of most of the horror-oriented repertory film programs happening in the city this month.

Alamo Drafthouse

  • Dismember the Alamo: “This Alamo Drafthouse tradition is a four-film mystery horror movie marathon that delivers 1001% fun directly to your degenerate soul.”
  • Terror Tuesday: “This eclectic series spans all centuries, covering everything from seminal horror treasures to undiscovered D.I.Y. monster-blasts.”
  • The Tobe Hooper Funhouse: Here we celebrate the legacy of this cinematic pioneer from the sweaty, pulpy horror of Texas Chain Saw Massacre, to the sexy, space vampire schlockbuster Lifeforce.
  • Video Vortex: “Ultra-obscure, ultra-bizarre movies from the fringes of the universe. And beyond.”
  • Weird Wednesday: “A one-way ticket to the edges of reality where imagination and commercial excess dance on the graves of common sense and decency.”

BAM

  • Holy Blood: Mexican Horror Cinema: “Brimming with cinematic invention, these high water marks of the genre are among the wildest, freakiest, and most unique horror movies ever made.”

Metrograph

  • Giallo × 3: “When the Sexual Revolution hit the stronghold of Catholicism, there was bound to be a hell of an explosion—and in Italian pop cinema, this explosion was called giallo.”
  • Written by Stephen King: “It is in honor of the fecund, warped mind of the man from Bangor, Maine, then, that Metrograph presents a ghoulish parade of cinematic King adaptations.”

Nitehawk Cinema

  • A Nite to Dismember: “Starting at midnight and continuing until after dawn, we’ll screen five films based on the classic books you love (or have never actually read).”
  • Halloween at Nitehawk: “This year, we’re just going to shut up and play the hits. Welcome to all ghosts, crazies, witches, and monsters.”
  • Mario Bava Mondays: “The grandfather of Italian horror cinema who ignited the giallo movement and the subsequent American Slasher films.”
  • Midnite Movies: “Spanning all of our series, here’s all of Nitehawk’s midnite screenings located in one convenient place.”
  • New Horror: “Like their predecessors, these films tackle class, gender identity, and race in way that shows us both where we are and how far we, perhaps, haven’t come.”

Quad Cinema

  • Comin’ at Ya! 35mm 3-D: “With today’s 3-D fully digitized into lockstep with DCP, the Quad takes a look back at some of the more arcane, quixotic, and disreputable uses of the process in the early ’80s over/under boom.”

Various Locations

  • Brooklyn Horror Film Festival: “A competitive international film festival showing nothing short of the best in badass genre film. The directors of BHFF are committed to celebrating the art of horror filmmaking and are focused on pushing horror’s boundaries to challenge the genre’s preconceptions.”

All posts in this series

Robtober 2011

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I try to watch as many horror films that I haven’t seen before as possible.

Hostel

Eli Roth (USA, Czech Republic, 2005)

Three backpackers head to a Slovak city that promises to meet their hedonistic expectations, with no idea of the hell that awaits them.

Saw

James Wan (USA, 2004)

Two men awaken to find themselves on the opposite sides of a dead body, each with specific instructions to kill the other or… See more →

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Robtober 2012

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I try to watch as many horror films that I haven’t seen before as possible.

Corman’s World

Alex Stapleton (USA, 2011)

A documentary on DIY producer/director Roger Corman and his alternative approach to making movies in Hollywood.

Not of This Earth

Roger Corman (USA, 1957)

An alien agent from the distant planet Davana is sent to Earth via a high-tech matter transporter. There, he terrorizes Southern California in an attempt to acquire blood… See more →

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Robtober 2013

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I try to watch as many horror/suspense films that I haven’t seen before as possible. This is the first year the films were somewhat carefully selected and scheduled in advance. They span seven decades and eight countries. Dates and times (subject to change) are listed for any friends who want to join me.

Don’t Look Now

Nicolas Roeg (UK, Italy, 1973)

A married couple grieving the recent death of their young daughter are… See more →

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Robtober 2014

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I try to watch as many horror/suspense films that I haven’t seen before as possible. Dates and times (subject to change) are listed for any friends who want to join me.

The Devil’s Backbone

Guillermo del Toro (Spain, Mexico, 2001)

After Carlos – a 12-year-old whose father has died in the Spanish Civil War – arrives at an ominous boys’ orphanage, he discovers the school is haunted and has many dark secrets which… See more →

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Robtober 2016

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I put together a sizable schedule of horror/thriller/exploitation films, most of which I haven’t seen before. Dates and times (subject to change) are listed for any friends who want to join me. Also available as a handy Google calendar!

Don't Breathe

Fede Álvarez (USA, Hungary, 2016)

Three delinquents break into the house of a war veteran who is blind to steal his money. However, they discover that the man is not as defenseless as… See more →

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Robtober 2017

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I put together a big schedule of horror films, most of which I haven’t seen before. Films, dates, and times (all subject to change) are listed for any friends who want to join me, and ticket links are included for public screenings. The schedule is also available as a handy Google calendar and as a Letterboxd list.

Below the schedule you can find a bit about how it’s curated as well as a roundup… See more →

Go to this post

Robtober 2018

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I put together a big schedule of horror films, most of which I haven’t seen before. Films, dates, and times (all subject to change) are listed for any friends who want to join me, and ticket links are included for public screenings. The schedule is also available as a handy Google calendar and as a Letterboxd list.

This year, Michael Myers’ imminent return to the big screen has inspired me to binge my way… See more →

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Robtober 2019

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I put together a big schedule of horror films, most of which I haven’t seen before. Films and dates (all subject to change) are listed for any friends who want to join me, and ticket links are included for public screenings.

This year, I’ve set aside a weekend to plow through the entire Nightmare on Elm Street series (I’ve only ever seen the first three). I’m also finally finishing off (the current version… See more →

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Robtober 2020

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I put together a big schedule of horror films to watch, focusing mostly on ones I haven’t seen before. It’s usually a mix of home viewings and public theatrical screenings, and the schedule is published both for posterity and for the sake of anyone who might like to join me. This year, sadly, the pandemic will keep me out of theaters, and guests won’t be able to join me for home viewings. But… See more →

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Robtober 2021

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I put together a big schedule of horror films to watch, focusing mostly on ones I haven’t seen before. The schedule, a mix of theatrical screenings and home viewings, is published for posterity and for the sake of anyone who might like to join me.

This year’s batch is a little less focused than usual, drawn from new releases, repertory screenings in Philadelphia, recent additions to Time Out’s “100 Best Horror Films,” Criterion… See more →

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Robtober 2021 Design Notes

The making of a custom-designed blog post

Robtober is what I call the horror movie binge I do every October. After I redesigned my site in 2017, I started documenting the event each year with a horrifically custom-designed blog post, getting a little more elaborate each time. This post goes behind the scenes of the 2021 edition.

The data

I generate my site with Jekyll, and a custom-designed post like Robtober gets its own unique layout file. To keep things tidy, all the… See more →

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Robtober 2022

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I broaden my cinematic horizons by putting together a big schedule of horror movies I haven’t seen yet. Alas, this year’s plans have been upended by my abduction, and for some reason, my mysterious captors aren’t interested in money. Instead, their ransom demand is that people watch the movies I’ve scheduled. These dudes seem like they mean business, so if you can help me out, I’d really appreciate it. But if you’re too… See more →

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Robtober 2022 Design Notes

How to design a ransom note

Happy Halloween! Here are a few quick notes about this year’s design for Robtober, my annual horror movie marathon.

The ransom letters

The ransom note concept for the title screen came to me in the middle of the night, and I don’t remember if it was inspired by something specific. But in my subsequent research, I read the entire Wikipedia article about the murder of JonBenét Ramsey, so if that’s a knowledge hole your pub… See more →

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Robtober 2023

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I put together a big schedule of horror films to watch, focusing mostly on ones I haven’t seen before. The schedule, a mix of theatrical screenings and home viewings, is published for posterity and for the sake of anyone who might like to join me.

I’ll often use this month as an opportunity to catch up on a franchise, and this year, for reasons surpassing understanding, the new, tenth installment of the Saw… See more →

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Robtober 2024

A month’s worth of movies to help you stay awake

Every October, I put together a big schedule of horror films to watch, focusing mostly on ones I haven’t seen before. The schedule, a mix of theatrical screenings and home viewings, is published for posterity and for the sake of anyone who might like to join me.

This year I seem to be nostalgic for the age of Satanic panic, as I’ll be doing concurrent, chronological deep dives on The Exorcist and The Omen, two… See more →

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