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In this episode, May sits down with Ariel Baska, founder of the film festival Access:Horror and accomplished horror filmmaker. Ariel and May explores the topic of medical gaslighting in horror through Ariel's own film, Our First Priority, as well as The Entity and A Cure for Wellness. There is also more information on Access:Horror in the episode, …
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Horrorspiria is once again organizing film screenings in conjunction with Suns Cinema DC. The theme this summer is TROPIGOTH -- a collection of underseen films from Latin America. Clinton and May preview each film -- no spoilers! The series includes Diablo Rojo (PTY), Bacurau, and Santa Sangre. First screening is on June 28th!…
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In this episode, May sits down with Dr. Valeria Villegas Lindvall, Senior Lecturer in the Aesthetics Unit at the University of Gothenburg. Valeria's dissertation, Wicked Women and Witches: Subversive Readings of the Female Monster in Mexican and Argentinian Horror Film, explores gendered monstrosity in Mexican and Argentinian visual culture: La Llo…
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Horrorspiria is finally organizing our first film screenings in conjunction with Suns Cinema DC. This first showcase focuses on “queer fears” through the lens of The Lost Boys, Alucarda, and The Bloodettes. Clinton and May preview and expand on each film and their relationship to queerness. Come out on October 5, 19, and 26 to Suns Cinema in DC!…
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In this episode, May talks with film critic and author, Josephine Maria, about dance and horror films. They discuss ballet as a site of body horror through both versions of Suspiria (1977 & 2018) and The Red Shoes (1941) as well as more possibilities for horror and dance to fuse. The episode is currently streaming on Anchor, Apple Podcasts, Google …
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In this Spotlight episode, May sits down with Final Girls Film Festival Berlin founders, Sara and Eli, to learn more about the groundbreaking festival. Final Girls Film Festival showcases horror cinema that’s directed, written, or produced by women and non-binary filmmakers. The festival and its team is committed to creating space for female (trans…
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In this episode, May sits down with Amber, creator of the HornBloodFire podcast and a horror critic from the UK. Amber and May discuss one of their favorite foreign horror movements -- the J-Horror wave. In this episode, some films discussed are Onibaba, Hausu, Tetsuo: The Iron Man, Ringu, Ju-On: The Grudge, Battle Royale, and more. The episode is …
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In this episode, May and Clinton watch critically-acclaimed horrors around the world that they missed in 2021 — “critical leftovers.” May and Clinton discuss Gaia, The Boy Behind the Door, Malignant, Coming Home in the Dark, and Lamb. The episode is currently streaming on Anchor, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Breaker, PocketCasts, and R…
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In the first crossover episode for Horrorspiria, May interviews Jonny & Aileen, creators and hosts of ¡UY QUE HORROR!, a Latinx horror movie podcast. In this episode, Jonny & Aileen discuss the inspiration behind the podcast, their backgrounds spanning Brazil, Nicaragua, Bolivia, and Honduras, and as a group, Jonny, Aileen, & May discuss the joys, …
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In this episode, May sits down with Amy Harris, PhD researcher and teacher from De Montfort University in Leicester, UK. Amy specializes in women-made British horror, a topic she has written about in the new anthology, Bloody Women: Women Directors of Horror, and what she studies as part of her dissertation. In this episode, Amy discusses the shift…
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In this episode, May talks with actor and aspiring filmmaker, Jazz Echevarría, about werewolves and werewolf films. Inspired by Craig Ian Mann's 2020 book, Phases of the Moon: A Cultural History of the Werewolf Film, May and Jazz try to grow an appreciation for the werewolf and their depiction in cinema since the 1940s. They discuss The Wolf Man, I…
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In this episode, May sits down with Tuğçe Kutlu, PhD candidate, writer, and researcher from Ankara University. Tuğçe specializes in studying grief in horror, particularly Anglophone films, which is what she wrote her dissertation about. In this episode, Tuğçe explains her dissertation in depth, which looks at Midsommar, Hereditary, The Woman in Bla…
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In an episode from the 2021 vault, May and Clinton discuss horror-comedies as they relate to spoofs, parodies, and satires. To explain the concept, May and Clinton review Phantom of the Paradise, One Cut of the Dead, and What We Do in the Shadows (series). The episode is currently streaming on Anchor, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Break…
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In an episode from the 2020 vault, May and Clinton go through 3 Netflix series from India, South Korea, and Colombia. We discuss the themes and metaphors present in each of these historical-horror-themed series. We look at The Green Frontier, Kingdom, and Betaal. The episode is currently streaming on Anchor, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify…
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In this episode, May sits down with Horrorspiria's first international guest, PhD candidate from University of Liverpool: Rhys Jones. Rhys specializes in studying the abject in horror, which has led him to many intersections of queer theory, psychoanalysis, and horror. In this episode, May and Rhys look at The Lighthouse, Raw, The Dragula Brothers,…
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Black horror is Black history. In this episode, May gives a brief rundown of that history before sitting down with Black genre filmmaker and professor, Nikyatu Jusu. They talk about Nikyatu's upcoming work on her feature film, her Sundance-nominated vampire short, Suicide By Sunlight, but most of all, Nikyatu provides a unique perspective of active…
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On this episode of Horrorspiria, Lisa comes back on the pod for an in-depth look at the film business. Also an academic at George Mason, Lisa is an independent film producer with a background ranging from anti-piracy law for major studios to microbudget productions, which is the majority of her work now. We discuss the nooks and crannies of all tho…
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In our first episode of 2021, May sits down with Horrorspiria favorite and one of Maryland's pride and joys: Eric Allen Hatch. Known for his past as programmer at the Maryland Film Festival, his essays in various publications, and his cinema memes which have caught the retweets of the powerful and obscure, Eric goes into detail about how his "baby"…
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May and Clinton return to their (and America's) roots by looking at America's first wave of horror films: the Pre-Code era. This is where the monster movies started, this is where horror as a genre in American film history started; all while William Hays was feverishly trying to shut down avenues of filmmaking centered around these salacious topics…
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Getting back in the analytical grind of things, May and Clinton discuss three international genre films with the theme of hunter vs hunted. The very essence of this theme is the foundation of slasher films, but what sets these three films apart is how the prey subverts the expectation of the predator. We look at three films made across the globe - …
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Happy International Women's Month! In our first quarantined episode, May and Clinton discuss four lesser-known female-directed horrors from the last 50 years. What does the female gaze look like in a typically misogynist genre? Does it exist? We look at four different films made in four very different decades in order to examine the nuance of the m…
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In their first director retrospective, May and Clinton look at Bong Joon-ho's entire filmography. Arguably the best genre filmmaker currently working, they discuss each of his films from Barking Dogs Never Bite to the Oscar-winning Parasite and how the director has influenced genre cinema globally since his 2000 debut. The episode is currently stre…
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In the first analytical episode of season 2, May and Clinton look at American films that are set in foreign lands or have foreign protagonists. The transnationalist influence of global cinema is the guiding force behind the expansion of horror and science fiction as a legitimate genre worldwide. American films are considered the country's most valu…
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In the second episode of season 2, May and Clinton discuss their top 10 favorite American horror films. Look out for our American perspective of foreign culture episode up very soon! The episode is currently streaming on Anchor, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Breaker, PocketCasts, and RadioPublic.…
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In the season 2 premiere of Horrorspiria, May and Clinton discuss their top 10 favorite foreign horror films. From Asia to Latin America to Canada, we cover our personal favorite films to begin our new season. The episode is currently streaming on Anchor, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Breaker, PocketCasts, and RadioPublic.…
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In the season finale of Horrorspiria, May and Clinton discuss the monstrous feminine through 3 different films. The monstrous feminine is a theory first proposed by Barbara Creed which analyzed the role of abject women and monsters through lore and film. What do these gendered monsters convey through the works they're included in? In this episode, …
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May and Clinton discuss theme of nationalism through 3 different horror films, exploring how the metaphors are relayed through script, setting, dialogue, and, plot. Starting with Red State in America, they look at the lens of nationalism through South Korea and Iran as well. How do different filmmakers explore xenophobia with horror tropes and what…
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In our fourth bonus pod, May discusses her favorite film, Donnie Darko. The 2001 film is directed by Richard Kelley. It is an original story written when he was 23. She discusses why it is her favorite film as a special memorial episode to pod-cat, Darko. The episode is currently streaming on Anchor, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Breake…
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May and Clinton discuss film distribution within the horror and international markets through Altered Innocence, a niche distribution company specializing in subversive queer films. With special input from renowned film producer, Lisa Thrasher, and information from Altered Innocence's CEO, Frank Jaffe, the current state of film distribution is esta…
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May and Clinton discuss the Korean horror wave, touching on its initial history and focusing on three of its most well-known exports. Starting from the very first Korean film screened in America in 2003, the wave was less hyped than its sister cinema from Japan. However, there exists a specific nuance centered around the Korean concept of han that …
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May and Clinton discuss the horror cinema output of Latin America in the first part of a multi-part mini-series. There are 21 Spanish-speaking countries in the world and 19 of those 21 reside in what is largely considered Latin America. All of the countries, regardless of location, share an intrinsic colonial link to Spain. In this mini-series, we …
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In our first bonus pod together, May and Clinton discuss their immediate reactions to Knife + Heart. The 2018 French film is directed by Yann Gonzalez with a score done by M83. It takes place in 1979 Paris where a serial killer is targeting gay porno actors. The episode is broken down into 2 parts for those who don't want spoilers!…
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May and special guest, Gabi, discuss the Final Girl trope, a term coined by horror theorist Carol Clover in 1992. The trope involves the final female character in a film left to her own devices to confront the (usually male) killer, especially against the backdrop of her own trauma. Both of them chose two different films to examine in closer detail…
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In our second bonus pod, Clinton discusses one of his favorite horror films, The Last Circus. The 2010 film is directed and written by Álex de la Iglesia. It concerns the dealings of a circus in 1937 during the Spanish Civil War. He discusses why it is one of his favorite films as well as the implications of its success and influence.…
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May and Clinton discuss giallos, an Italian horror movement from the 60s and 70s. It is a thriller-horror genre that includes a myriad of elements from many genres including crime fiction, horror, erotica, and psychological thrillers. While the movement was short-lived, it had a second life in America with the advent of home video entertainment. Si…
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May and Clinton discuss vampires through the lens of international films. Ever since its introduction in gothic folklore, the vampire has been a symbol for human despair and existential dread. Certain ambiguities link the vampire with other creatures of abjection like the monster or the madman, though beauty tends to be what distinguishes the vampi…
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May and Clinton discuss the first major horror movement: German Expressionism. German Expressionism arose as a response to the savagery and inhumanity experienced during World War I. As the German public reeled from the Allies' draconian terms of surrender, the movement was a barometer for measuring an era's cultural anxieties. In this episode, May…
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