Few traditions in cinema are more sacred than horror sequels. The first film was haunting, refreshing, groundbreaking, and made a ton of money, so now it’s time to repeat the success until the wheels come off. Were they pre-installed from the beginning, or did they just show up somewhere along the way and the audience just accepted them as gospel?
What aspects were in the original recipe and which were added to spice things up later? It’s time to dive into that question about iconic bits from six long horror series. Bits might look like basic text, but they weren’t actually inserted until a little later.
The iconic walk of Frankenstein’s monster
The Frankenstein movies were the bread and butter of the Golden Age of Universal Horror, and were the culmination of two great films by James Whale (frankenstein When bride of frankenstein,) a very solid turn starring Basil Rathbone (Frankenstein’s son) and descend rapidly to cheaper and clunkier initiatives. Boris Karloff, who played the classic monster in his first three films, delivered such a thoughtful and tragic performance that the iconography that remains is a man holding his arms up as he limps awkwardly across the castle set. It is a little strange that it is the iconography of .
The image that defines this character wasn’t actually set until the final moments of the fourth film. Ghost of Frankenstein. (Short synopsis: The monster played here by Lon Chaney Jr. has had his brain replaced by his good-natured sidekick Igor, played with boisterous malice by Bela Lugosi. This allows him to talk and plot, but thanks to a medical malpractice, he’s clean The monster spends the film’s final minutes fumbling, and then, in the sequel, frankenstein meets werewolfhe appears with his arms outstretched.
In subsequent films, Wolfman fight or not, no one mentions that he is now blind. frankenstein house Also Abbott and Costello meet FrankensteinSo Frankenstein’s walk that comes to define the period not only didn’t happen until the end of the fourth film, but it’s part of the plot point that the subsequent films couldn’t remember.
jason’s hockey mask
If there’s one item on this list that’s stuck in the horror trivia record, it’s this one.At first Friday the 13th, it is Pamela, the mother in Jason’s sweater, who is doing the killing. In the second film, Jason finally makes an appearance, but he’s wearing overalls and a burlap sack over his head. It’s only the third film that he takes the hockey mask comic relief character and decides. that is Appearance to maintain. Since then, Jason has been irreversibly bound to that particular mask and has come to represent the entire slasher genre.
However, this ubiquity detracts from how cool Jason looks, so nurturing is still important part 2Saggy and unkempt, Jason actually feels more like a guy hanging out in the woods outside a summer camp than the brand name he evolved into.It’s also fun to have relatively few machetes part 2 — Jason’s general toolkit is pretty diverse here, and the weapon he uses at the climax is My Bloody Valentine– Wind pickaxe.
godzilla as a good guy
When Godzilla appears in the original 1954 film, it is an atomic nightmare incarnate. It is a nuclear holocaust death and mass devastation brought to life in the form of unstoppable creatures, threatening Japan with raging hellfire so uncomprehensible and unreasonable.And in the 1955s Godzilla re-attacks, most often by wrestling another monster to knock things over. This first sequel sets the template for most of the Godzilla movies to come.Godzilla is the heavyweight champion of the monster division, ready to brawl with any challenger.
Even if Godzilla fought other monsters, that doesn’t mean the roles were reversed the moment something wanted to defeat them. More like a frightening landlord of a country coming to evict new monster tenants than a defender. Its children represent the beauty of nature and Godzilla represents the beauty when it is on fire.
It’s not until the fifth film. Three-headed monster GhidorahGodzilla, forced to team up to tackle an extraterrestrial dragon, actually transitions into hero mode. One must plead with Godzilla to be friendly for change.From now on, the big lizard can only hope that Japan will forget about the whole “I am dying” stage.
Freddy Krueger one-liner
Freddy Krueger, the dream-invading villain from A Nightmare on Elm Street series, has always been a small scam. I love to torture people, Freddy’s Revenge, it’s clear he has a keen sense of sarcasm. A character with a drinking problem? Freddie skewers them with a toothpick and swallows them with a giant martini while winking at the audience: “Drink responsibly!”
you get the idea.
However, it wasn’t always this big. Freddy’s acceptance of puns has only become a defining part of his character. dream warrior, the third film. Nearly every Freddy murder comes with some sort of wordplay or one-liner that transforms him into a novel icon and late-night host alike, and actor Robert Englund has been at every turn in the character’s evolution. One of the few horror stars to master the stage, he’s a natural fit.
pin head name
Pinhead is one of the hole-in-one horror designs. No notes needed. It’s even more interesting that he wasn’t given an actual name when he joined the Pantheon of Freddy, Jason, and Michael. Hellbound Heart, and the first film credits him as “Lead Cenobite”. This is probably a moniker that doesn’t look good on the poster.Barker later called him “The Priest of Hell” and really hated the name Pinhead.
So where did “Pinhead” come from? It appears in the credits of Deeply Underrated Hellbound: Hellraiser IIbut the first time someone calls him Pinhead happens in the third film, and the name is kind of a joke. (They are now known simply as “priests”.)
leatherface name
Texas Chainsaw Massacre Part 2 A maddening dark comedy and comically brutal slasher film, it takes everything that seemed subtle in the original and turns the volume up to deafening levels. In short, it’s beautiful and recognizes that it can’t really surpass the original’s terrifying spookiness. Forgive me and I will not try. He also names them: Sawyers.
If you’ve only seen the original released 12 years ago part 2, and the name sounds unfamiliar, and for good reason—no one actually has a name in the first film. Oddly enough, “Cook” (or “Old Man” as it’s mentioned in the script) asks Leatherface: wait for baba? It seems to be referring to my younger brother who is hitchhiking. I don’t blame you if you haven’t heard it — it’s barely audible with all the screams.
However, that brother was never called “Bubba” again in the 1974 original, and the name was carried on by the sequel to Leatherface himself, with his now-deceased brother being called “Navins” Sawyer. Now, it could be that Cook referred to him as “Bubba,” like “your brother,” which is common Southern colloquialism, but funny in the context of the wider series. Sawyer is brought into the third film, but by the fourth film the family had become known as the equally blatant Slaughters. You see, this is the chronicle of America’s most precious carnivorous Texan. This is important.