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Before you MELT from the Louisiana heat, see if YOU CAN WIN Walt Handelsman’s latest Cartoon Caption Contest!

July 3, 2022 by www.theadvocate.com Leave a Comment

Heat Index

It’s not the heat… It’s the heat index! This summer just started, and it’s already been a scorcher. Add in the usual Louisiana humidity and it can feel like we’re melting!

So, what’s going on in this cartoon? You tell me. Be witty, funny, crazy, absurd or snarky—just try to keep it clean. There’s no limit on the number of entries.

The winning punchline will be hand-lettered into the word balloon and run on Monday, July 11th in our print editions and online. In addition, the winner will receive a signed print of the cartoon along with some other cool stuff!

Some honorable mentions will also be listed.

To enter, simply type your punchlines into the form below or email your entries to [email protected] .

DON’T FORGET! All entries must include your name, home address and phone number. Cell numbers are best.

THE DEADLINE FOR ALL ENTRIES IS THURSDAY, July 7th AT MIDNIGHT.

Can’t see the form below? Click here .

Good luck, everyone!

Best—Walt


Filed Under: Opinion, The Advocate opinion, walt_handelsman, win contest canada, new yorker cartoon caption contest, cartoon contest india, Cartoon Caption Contest, win contests online, win contest for money, win contest singapore, win contests canada, Cartoon Caption, Cartoon contest

Ganesh Kumar lashes out at AMMA leadership

July 3, 2022 by www.thehindu.com Leave a Comment

The simmering discontent within the Association of Malayalam Movie Artistes (AMMA) over its alleged soft stand towards producer and actor Vijay Babu, accused of raping of a young actor, came to the fore yet again with actor and MLA K.B. Ganesh Kumar lashing out at the AMMA leadership over Vijay Babu being given special treatment.

In an open letter to actor and AMMA president Mohanlal on Sunday, he said that the organisation had taken different approaches to Dileep and Vijay Babu, though both were accused of crime of similar nature.

“The action taken against Dileep should be applicable to others too. Vijay Babu and Dileep, facing similar allegations, were treated differently by the organisation. The AMMA official page was used to share a video of Vijay Babu making a “mass entry” to the AMMA general body meeting. Mohanlal should stop being silent about these issues. It is disappointing that he did not correct Edavela Babu who claimed that AMMA is a club. He should remain vigilant against those who pull the strings from behind the scenes. I have no personal enmity towards Vijay Babu. I have even canvassed votes for him in the previous AMMA elections,” said Mr. Ganesh Kumar in the letter.

Different issues

He said that actors Jagathy Sreekumar, Bineesh Kodiyeri and Priyanka had unnecessarily dragged into the issue. Bineesh had been an accused in a case related to an economic offence, which could not be compared to a case related to alleged sexual assault of a woman.

He said that he was forced to write an open letter since there had been no response from Mohanlal’s side to letters that were sent previously in July 2018 and January 2021 regarding certain undesirable tendencies in the organisation.

“Several members, who wish to air their concerns regarding various issues, are remaining silent because of the fear that they would lose opportunity to act in films and also would be deprived of other benefits. I have chosen to become the voice of those who are opposed to the authoritarian elements who have hijacked AMMA because I do not have any such fears. Mohanlal, as AMMA president, should answer for the serious diversion from the organisation’s stated policy in recent times,” he said.

Resignation

Following Vijay Babu’s participation in the AMMA general body meeting last week, Mr. Ganesh Kumar had said that the accused should resign from AMMA and stay away from it until his name was cleared. After allegations were raised by a young female actor, Vijay Babu, who was an AMMA executive committee member, had expressed his willingness to “temporarily stay away” from the committee until his innocence was proven. AMMA later issued a press release saying that it had “accepted his request”. Within two days, three members of AMMA’s Internal Complaints Committee resigned in protest against the organisation not demanding his resignation.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Kerala, Malayalam cinema, kb ganesh kumar, mohanlal, open letter, AMMA, Vijay babu, Dileep, Edavela Babu, open...

Our ancestors had no power… no problems either

April 29, 2012 by www.thehindu.com Leave a Comment

Power holidays and outages have become the order of the day. People who face eight-hour blackouts are demanding that everyone else should suffer the same fate. The demand for power is going up. But production is not increasing proportionately. Blackouts are only going to increase in duration. Citizens should learn to live with the outages.

During unscheduled power cuts, the lady of the house bemoans that the overhead tank has not been filled and chutney for the meal is not ready.

During my school days, I spent many summer vacations with my grandparents in a village in Kerala. I had first-hand experience of how my elderly relatives survived without electricity.

My grandfather taught me the great epics and how to read and write Malayalam. Those lessons were taught during daytime. My grandparents woke up early in the morning so that enough daylight was available for all daily chores.

Water was drawn from a well in the backyard. No electric motor was employed. For taking bath, we went to the village pond. Clothes were dipped in the pond, pummelled on the granite steps and rinsed. No washing machine or water heater.

My grandmother used firewood for cooking. No microwave, mixer and grinder were employed in the kitchen. Masala and chutney were prepared with manual stone grinders. Smoke billowed from the kitchen on rainy days because of wet firewood. A chimney partly vacated the smoke.

The puja room had lamps made of brass. Gingelly oil with cotton wicks were used to light the lamps for puja. My grandparents recited religious scriptures either from memory or by reading books under the oil lamps. No need for electricity.

Dinner was eaten early at sunset, so that no activity took place at night under a kerosene lantern. Even when electricity came to the village, the voltage was so low that bulbs were no challengers to the lanterns. Since my grandparents had grown up without electricity, the introduction of electricity in the village and their house never made any difference to their daily life. The low voltage only made the bulbs conk out early, a drain on the wallet.

After dinner, we sat on the veranda, chatted for some time and went to bed early. We used hand fans, made of palmyra leaves, until we fell asleep.

An employee of the village panchayat went round lighting kerosene lamps at street-corners. That was more of an official requirement than of any use to the villagers. Hardly anybody stirred in the dark and if people were forced to go out for any reason, they would carry lanterns which withstood rain and winds.

We are now used to electric power and if power fails, we feel miserable. Maybe, we can recall how our ancestors managed and grin and bear the misery caused by power-cuts.

If mosquitoes come buzzing around, we can follow our ancestors’ methods. They burned incense and dry neem leaves in a coconut shell and warded off the pests. If any mosquito evaded the smokescreen and disturbed our sleep, we would employ our hands to slap and silence the intruder. The method is tried successfully in many households even today after they have exhausted chemical pesticides and electric devices.

If there is no water supply from the tap, a rope and bucket can be employed to draw water from the sump or well. It will be good for the muscles and bones. Children should be encouraged to do their homework in daylight. It will be good for the eyes and for peace of mind

Housewives should keep a small manual stone grinder in the kitchen so that cooking need not be interrupted by a sudden outage. If all good men learn to live with the inevitable power shortage, the men in power will be spared the curses of frustrated citizens.

(The writer’s email ID is [email protected]

gmail.com)

Filed Under: Uncategorized Open Page, power cuts, list 4 significant problems with nuclear power plants, activity 3.2.3 fluid power practice problems, stages power meter problems, 2002 silverado power window problem, 2004 chevy tahoe power seat problem, bard power port problems, dell monitors power save mode problem, problems of wind power

40 Movies and TV Shows to Watch If You Like

July 3, 2022 by www.vulture.com Leave a Comment

Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos by Universal Pictures, Showtime, Warner Bros. and Fox Network

Are you ready to go beyond the Upside Down?

Stranger Things , Netflix’s Zeitgeist-y ’80s sci-fi–horror series, is one of the most popular and acclaimed TV series of the past decade. It’s also a love letter from its co-creators, the Duffer brothers, to the genre movies they grew up watching — E.T. , Close Encounters of the Third Kind , The Goonies , and more — which contain a magic they hoped to re-create. The giant final episodes of the show’s fourth season have finally dropped, but if you find yourself wanting more, why not sate your Stranger thirst by watching the works in its (jugular) vein?

That’s where this list comes in. Below, you’ll find 40 movies and TV series that exist in Stranger Things ’ twilight zone, spiraling outward from its most obvious and direct inspirations and influences to neglected and forgotten flicks that deliver on the Duffer bros’ promise. Read on, log in, and stream away … if you dare…

The Stranger Things canon

E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)

If the films of Steven Spielberg are Stranger Things ’ Bible, E.T. is its John’s Gospel: It may be less directly influential than other films in terms of the show’s surface-level horror-film aesthetic, but it has the heart and soul that moved people more than its more straightforwardly spooky analogues — and which ST is clearly attempting to evoke. From its sinister government agents in hazmat suits to its iconic bicycle imagery to its general suburbs-gone-weird vibe to its ultimate emphasis on warming hearts over chilling spines (though it remains deceptively creepy and paranoid), this story of the little alien who fell to Earth is the Stranger Things source code.

Available to rent on Amazon and iTunes
Amazon
iTunes

The Goonies (1985)

One of the all-time great populist collaborations, this teen-adventure classic was written by Chris Columbus ( Gremlins, Home Alone, Harry Potter ) and directed by Richard Donner ( The Omen, Superman, Lethal Weapon ) from a story by Spielberg himself. Starring showbiz scions Josh Brolin, Sean Astin, and Martha Plimpton and featuring tween superstar Corey Feldman as comic relief, its story of a gaggle of dirt-broke kids on the trail of pirate treasure in the Pacific Northwest posited a world of discovery and danger literally beneath its characters’ suburban feet. Sound familiar?

Available to stream on HBO Max
HBO Max

Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)

Spielberg’s sci-fi breakthrough trafficked in some of the same “cover-up and conspiracy” mentality that Stranger Things has utilized as a Watergate by way of The X-Files bit of flavoring. Beyond that, though, it’s a story of an everyday parent awed by evidence of other worlds, and like Stranger Things , it uses children menaced and abducted by these forces as emotional linchpins. A recent theatrical rerelease has given its dazzling visual effects (by 2001 and Blade Runner ’s Douglas Trumbull) and five-note theme (by all-timer John Williams) a new grip on our collective imagination.

Available to rent on Amazon and iTunes
Amazon
iTunes

Poltergeist (1982)

“They’re heeeeere …” At the same time Spielberg was working on the wholesome science-fantasy of E.T. , he was also collaborating with Texas Chainsaw Massacre auteur Tobe Hooper on this nightmarish demolition of the Reagan-era nuclear family. Starring Craig T. Nelson and JoBeth Williams as wealthy young parents raising three children in a suburban development, its tale of an increasingly malevolent haunting centering on their angelic young daughter Carol Anne (Heather O’Rourke). Stranger Things borrows a lot from its toolbox, from the mother desperate to rescue her missing child to an electronic method of communication with the Other Side. The mother-daughter material here is white-hot with emotion, particularly when you factor in older investigators played by Beatrice Straight and Zelda Rubinstein; unlike Stranger Things , Poltergeist directly indicts the American Dream, laying the blame at the feet of the rapacious real-estate developer who built the family home. (James Wan, director of Insidious and The Conjuring , owes his entire career to this movie.)

Available to stream on HBO Max
HBO Max

Stand by Me (1986)

Stranger Things has two dads: Steven Spielberg and Stephen King. While the Master of Horror’s supernatural stories are undoubtedly a major influence on the show, it’s director Rob Reiner’s adaptation of his resolutely realistic coming-of-age story “The Body” that seems most directly responsible for the banter between its young male characters. A period piece set in 1959, it stars a killer quartet of child stars — Corey Feldman, River Phoenix, Wil Wheaton, and Jerry O’Connell — as friends who discover a dead body and learn a lot about life in the process. Stranger Things’ scenes of the gang traipsing along train tracks are pulled directly from this beloved drama.

Available to rent on Amazon and iTunes
Amazon
iTunes

It (2017) and It Chapter Two (2019)

Arguably Stephen King’s masterpiece, It could not possibly be more directly analogous to Stranger Things : It’s about a bunch of boys and a single girl facing off against a horrible monster. King’s original novel was a period piece, like Stand by Me , and its original 1990 TV miniseries adaptation followed suit, featuring Tim Curry as the shape-shifting clown entity Pennywise in a career-high performance. The more recent blockbuster theatrical adaptation changes the time frame to the 1980s, hitting the same nostalgic sweet spot as Stranger Things. The presence of young actor Finn Wolfhard in both certainly helps, to the point where many younger viewers feel It ripped off Stranger Things instead of, arguably, the other way around.

Available to stream on Netflix and HBO Max
Netflix
HBO Max

Firestarter (1984)

It’s neither one of King’s best books nor one of his most highly regarded film adaptations, but from its superpowered young female lead (Drew Barrymore) to her origin in shadowy government experiments, Firestarter has a whole lot in common with Stranger Things . It’s hard to imagine Eleven without this pyrokinetic protagonist as her forerunner.

Available to rent on Amazon and iTunes
Amazon
iTunes

Carrie (1976)

If Nancy were Stranger Things ’ psychic superweapon rather than Eleven, you might have wound up with something close to Carrie . One of the all-time great King adaptations, it’s based on his debut novel about a religiously repressed teen outcast who discovers she has incredible telekinetic powers, but wants nothing more than to fit in — until bullies provoke her into a murderous rampage. Directed by the ’70s “New Hollywood” scene’s number-one Hitchcock acolyte, Brian De Palma, and written by Larry Cohen, who would also pen the It mini-series, it’s considered a masterpiece in its own right. But Stranger Things fans might consider doing a double feature with De Palma’s other psychic thriller, 1978’s The Fury .

Available to stream on Amazon Prime
Amazon

Halloween (1978)

The third member of Stranger Things ’ holy trinity, writer-director-composer John Carpenter made his mark on the show in a number of ways, from his increasingly influential synthesized scores to the autumnal “hell comes to the suburbs” vibe of this landmark slasher film. While its teen characters are a more mature demographic than Stranger Things’ , Winona Ryder’s Joyce Byers and Natalia Dyer’s Nancy Wheeler feel like they could be the older and younger sisters of star Jamie Lee Curtis’s “final girl.”

Available to stream on AMC+
AMC+

The Thing (1982)

Halloween has its place in the horror canon, but for my money, this is Carpenter’s masterpiece: a claustrophobic sci-fi nightmare set deep in the Antarctic, in which Kurt Russell leads a cast of character actors to rival 12 Angry Men against a shape-shifting alien designed by Rob Bottin and Stan Winston. Without this film, the Demogorgon would not exist, period.

Available to rent on Amazon and iTunes
Amazon
iTunes

A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)

Wes Craven’s supernatural slasher flick launched almost as many sequels as imitators, thanks to the for-the-ages work of actor Robert Englund as its knife-gloved killer Freddy Krueger. (He’s a way less wacky guy in the original than he becomes in subsequent installments, for what it’s worth.) Its lack of polish really shows when you’ve seen enough other movies of its kind, but when it clicks? Hoo boy, Craven and company stumbled across a deep, fetid swamp of teenage terrors. While Johnny Depp getting swallowed by his bed and vomited forth in a geyser of blood is its most memorable scare, a shot of Freddy’s hand prodding the wall of the film’s “final girl” Nancy like a membrane eventually found its way into Stranger Things , as did the heroine’s name (and pajamas!).

Available to stream on Netflix and HBO Max
Netflix
HBO Max

Aliens (1986)

As horror movies about maternal anxiety go, few can top James Cameron’s flawless action-horror sequel to Ridley Scott’s tense and terrifying sci-fi classic. The scene in which Ripley (Sigourney Weaver) rescues the young orphan she’s come to care for from the viscous alien hive was repurposed by Stranger Things into the climactic beat for its corresponding characters, Joyce Byers and her long-lost son, Will. And by both name and nature, the Demogorgon and Xenomorph have a lot in common. Stranger Things ’ Paul Reiser co-stars as one of cinema’s greatest slimeballs, by the way.

Available to rent on Amazon and iTunes
Amazon
iTunes

Akira (1988)

Directed by Katsuhiro Otomo from his comic-book series of the same name, Akira was one of the most successful and influential anime films of the decade; in America, it was, for many years, almost the only game in town. Many of Eleven’s powers and their visual signatures stem from this dystopian thriller about young bikers who get mixed up in their government’s weaponized psychic-power program in the sprawling city of neo-Tokyo. If you’d prefer to watch Eleven wreak havoc without a gaggle of adorkable dudes in tow, this is the movie for you.

Available to stream on Tubi
Tubi

The Monster Squad (1987)

Directed by cult favorite Fred Dekker ( Night of the Creeps ), who co-wrote the script with future screenwriter and script-doctor extraordinaire Shane Black ( Lethal Weapon, Predator, Iron Man 3 ), this zippy, creepy action-horror gem reads like The Goonies vs. Universal’s Dark Universe . Featuring redesigns of classic fright-film icons Dracula, Frankenstein, the Wolfman, the Mummy, and the Creature from the Black Lagoon by the great Stan Winston — the makeup effects and creature-design genius behind The Thing, The Terminator, Predator, Aliens, Jurassic Park and more — it’s got a foul mouth and a good heart, a combination that went out of style until Stranger Things and It brought it back.

Available to stream on Starz
Starz

The Lost Boys (1987)

All due respect to Near Dark and Fright Night , but Joel Schumaker’s stylish horror comedy about a band of goth-metal-surf-punk California vampires and the guys (and girl) who team up to stop their reign of terror is hands down the best vampire movie of the 1980s. With a vibrant cast from across the entertainment spectrum — Kiefer Sutherland! Dianne Wiest! Edward Herrmann! Barnard Hughes! Jason Patric! Jami Gertz! Corey Feldman and Corey Haim! — and a murderously good soundtrack (including the shirtless sax anthem “I Still Believe,” the inspiration for Jon Hamm’s SNL skit “Sergio”), it may well be the most enjoyable “teens vs. monsters” flick on this list, which is saying something.

Available to rent on Amazon and iTunes
Amazon
iTunes

The Breakfast Club (1985)

While there’s nary a supernatural note to be heard (give or take a Weird Science ), the ’80s high-school dramedies of auteur John Hughes are still an integral part of Stranger Things ’ DNA. Ferris Bueller , Sixteen Candles , Pretty in Pink : It’s a long list, and The Breakfast Club takes the top spot. With a killer Brat Pack cast, it uses a bunch of sturdy teenage stereotypes — jock, nerd, princess, burnout, etc. — and turns their day in detention into memorable movie magic. Chances are good the Hawkins gang would see a bit of themselves in Hughes’s cast of characters.

Available to rent on Amazon and iTunes
Amazon
iTunes

Similar Stranger Things vibes

Super 8 (2011)

Nominally one of the few J.J. Abrams projects that didn’t entail him adapting other people’s ideas (cf. Lost, Mission Impossible, Star Trek, Star Wars, Westworld ), this nostalgic popcorn movie is nevertheless just as indebted to the work of Steven Spielberg (who produced it) as The Force Awakens is to George Lucas. If you get through Stranger Things and think “Y’know, I sure could go for another modernized riff on the old-school ideal of good-hearted small-town folk beset by forces beyond their understanding,” give this one a try.

Available to stream on HBO Max
HBO Max

Jaws (1975)

While Spielberg’s maritime monster-movie masterpiece helped inaugurate the blockbuster business model that has dominated Hollywood for more than 40 years, it didn’t define its aesthetic the way his subsequent films did. Indeed, watching Jaws now feels like going to church on Christmas Eve and hearing old, semi-sacred songs — that’s how powerful and sublime it is in its classical simplicity. Actor David Harbour’s Hawkins police chief Jim Hopper owes a whole lot to Roy Scheider’s Chief Brody, a family man doing his damnedest to protect the people of his town while fearing what will happen if he admits the true danger they face. From the “ Vertigo Shot” closeup on Brody during an unexpected shark attack to the “we’re gonna need a bigger boat” jump-scare to Robert Shaw’s legendary USS Indianapolis monologue (“Anyway, we delivered the bomb”), this movie contains moments of the rawest, purest genre-film power.

Available to stream on Peacock
Peacock

Ghostbusters (1984) and Ghostbusters: Afterlife (2021)

With the same level of shamelessness you either loved or hated during its first season, Stranger Things 2 features its quartet of kid heroes dressed up in Ghostbusters ’ gray-brown jumpsuits and proton packs. It’s hard to get too judgmental about it. While elements of the film’s gender politics have aged poorly, it remains one of the tightest combinations of big-idea science fiction and down-and-dirty belly laughs ever put onscreen — thanks largely to co-writer and star Dan Aykroyd, both a Saturday Night Live original cast member and a real-life paranormal expert. The film’s sequel-slash-reboot, Ghostbusters: Afterlife , relocates the action from New York City to the Midwest and features Finn Wolfhard, proving that when it comes to Stranger Things and artistic influence, “the door swings both ways.”

Ghostbusters (1984) is available to rent on Amazon and iTunes
Amazon
iTunes

‘Ghostbusters: Afterlife’ (2021) is available to stream on Starz
Starz

Invasion of the Body Snatchers ( 1978)

Nearly as strong a remake of its 1950s creature-feature source material as John Carpenter’s The Thing was a few years later, Philip Kaufman’s contemporary classic shares many of those films’ hallmarks: a killer cast (Donald Sutherland, Veronica Cartwright, Leonard Nimoy, Jeff Goldblum, Brooke Adams), grotesque body-horror creature designs, and an atmosphere of relentless paranoia. The sentient-plant biology of the Demogorgon owes a hell of a lot to the so-called “pod people,” as does the horticultural hellscape of the Upside Down.

Available to stream on Pluto TV and Tubi
Pluto TV
Tubi

Scanners (1981)

Though less frequently cited as an influence on Stranger Things than Spielberg, Carpenter, or King — most likely because he’s not as much of a mainstream talent — David Cronenberg casts a long shadow over Hawkins. Scanners was a breakthrough film for the cerebral, perverse Canadian horror filmmaker, chronicling a war between corporate-controlled telekinetics/telepaths and their rivals in a murderous rebel underground. In a way, it can be read as a prequel about what might have happened had Eleven truly gone rogue. Its exploding-head scene is still one of the most gorgeously gross sights in the history of the genre.

Available to stream on HBO Max
HBO Max

Lost (2004–2010)

Before Stranger Things , before Game of Thrones , there was another runaway small-screen science-fantasy phenomenon. Lost is the original mystery-box TV series: a pulpy and propulsive romp that crosses “stranded on a deserted island” survival stories with an overarching time-and-space-warping story line that constantly twisted, turned, and raised new questions. In the pre-binge TV world, fans tuned in for the answers week after dizzying week. The divisive ending didn’t stop co-creators J.J. Abrams and Damon Lindelof from conquering Hollywood. Stranger Things ’ ever-expanding scope owes a lot to this one.

Available to stream on Hulu and Freevee
Hulu
Freevee

The X-Files (1993–2002) and The X-Files (2016–2018)

And before Lost , there was The X-Files , Chris Carter’s paranoid paranormal thriller. The show starred David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson as FBI Agents Mulder and Scully (their “will they, won’t they” energy was off the freaking charts), an odd couple — he’s a true believer, she’s a skeptic — tasked with investigating cases too weird for the bureau to handle otherwise. The show famously mixed monster-of-the-week outings with episodes that built up the show’s dizzying conspiratorial mythos; Stranger Things is kind of an “Oops! All Mythos” remix of the X-Files approach. A long-awaited revival arrived a few years ago, and there are two X-Files feature films for further investigation.

Available to stream on Hulu and Freevee
Hulu
Freevee

Gravity Falls (2012–2016)

Looking for more family-friendly fare for when you and yours make it through Stranger Things ? You can’t beat Gravity Falls , Disney’s animated answer to The X-Files . Over the course of two tight seasons, creator Alex Hirsch’s cast of kids explore the paranormal mysteries of the titular town, which range from silly to sinister. In an era of ambitious animated series for kids, this is one of the most accomplished of the bunch.

Available to stream on Disney+
Disney+

Advanced Stranger Things studies

Twin Peaks (1990–1991) and Twin Peaks: The Return (2017)

And before The X-Files , there was the granddaddy of them all: David Lynch and Mark Frost’s groundbreaking mystery-comedy-horror-soap-surrealist masterpiece Twin Peaks . An antecedent to Mulder and Scully, Agent Dale Cooper (a brilliant Kyle MacLachlan) headed to the small logging town of Twin Peaks to solve the murder of high-school homecoming queen Laura Palmer. Over 25 years after the show’s unceremonious cancellation by ABC, it returned for a stunning third season on Showtime, directed in its entirety by Lynch, adding genuine avant-garde touches to its continued exploration of the supernatural forces swirling around Laura’s killing. The Black Lodge may strike me down for putting it this way, but think of it as Stranger Things for grown-ups.

‘Twin Peaks’ (1990–1991) is available to stream on Paramount+
Paramount+

‘Twin Peaks: The Return’ (2017) is available to stream on Showtime
Showtime

The Brood (1979)

Once you get past Scanners , there are other Cronenberg films you might cite as Stranger Things –esque before you hit this one; the parasitic slugs of Shivers , the membranous message-from-the-other-side effects of Videodrome, and the conspiracy/telepathy combo of The Dead Zone could conceivably move those movies to the front of the line. But I’m going with The Brood for several reasons. For starters, it’s anchored by the best lead performance in any of Cronenberg’s pre-mainstream films, thanks to the magnetic he-man machismo of Oliver Reed as an experimental psychotherapist. (Much love to Jeremy Irons, Jeff Goldblum, and Viggo Mortensen, but he’s still my favorite Cronenberg leading man.) But most important, this movie comes across like the dark-side version of Joyce Byers’s narrative: Instead of trying to rescue her child from supernatural forces, Samantha Eggar’s ignored and institutionalized mother character is channeling her frustration into creating murderous new offspring.

Available to rent on Amazon and iTunes
Amazon
iTunes

Altered States (1980)

A fascinating slice of sci-fi psychedelia, this singular collaboration between writer Paddy Chayefsky ( Network ) and director Ken Russell ( The Who’s Tommy ) did not end well for the two artists. But it influenced Stranger Things in at least two distinct ways: The maverick researcher played by William Hurt subjects himself to sensory-deprivation experiments similar to those that help Eleven unlock the voidlike pathway to the Upside Down, while the stunning title sequence by Richard Greenberg ( Alien, The Dead Zone ) was a direct reference for the series’s own memorable opening credits.

Available to rent on Amazon and iTunes
Amazon
iTunes

The Exorcist (1973)

You can’t talk about troubled-tween horror, superpowered 12-year-old girls, or, really, any modern populist-genre filmmaking whatsoever without talking about William Friedkin’s immortal story of demonic possession. Adapted by William Peter Blatty from his novel of the same name, it’s one of a handful of films — also including Peeping Tom, Psycho, Night of the Living Dead, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Jaws, Halloween, and Alien — that establish the grammar of contemporary horror filmmaking. Its emotional depth and willingness to be appalling while still appealing to the broadest possible audience may well make it the most influential of the lot.

Available to stream on the Roku Channel
Roku

Dark (2017–2020)

Though it earned a lot of comparisons to Stranger Things in its early episodes — the two shows share a network and, at least in part, a nostalgic ’80s setting — the German import Dark is, well, a lot darker than the Duffer brothers’ series. Spanning several generations, it focuses on a group of families at the center of a mysterious, Möbius strip–like time anomaly that threatens not just their small town but the entire world. If you want something new to binge on Netflix once you make it through that season-four finale, this one’s for you.

Available to stream on Netflix
Netflix

Donnie Darko (2001)

As Stranger Things ’ characters have aged, Richard Kelly’s simultaneously overrated and underrated high-school mind-bender Donnie Darko becomes a more and more direct touchstone for the show’s supernatural teen angst. An ’80s throwback long before that era became one of Hollywood’s favorite aesthetics to mine, DD sees something uncanny in the blue skies, green lawns, and stonewashed jeans of its setting and era — something strange enough to rewrite the rules of reality itself. Plus its stellar soundtrack (it’s the movie that brought Gary Jules’s cover of Tears for Fears’ “Mad World” to the masses) paved the way for big Stranger Things needle drops such as Max’s beloved “Running Up That Hill.”

Available to stream on HBO Max
HBO Max

Hellraiser (1987)

Written and directed by “splatterpunk” auteur Clive Barker (adapting his own novella, The Hellbound Heart ), this BDSM-influenced landmark pushed horror’s evolution toward the extreme by introducing Pinhead, one of the all-time-great monster designs, to an unsuspecting world. Shot on a small budget and starring a cast of primarily unknowns (the biggest name, Andrew Robinson, played the Scorpio killer in Dirty Harry — he’s the goddamn good guy in this thing), it has Halloween season atmosphere to burn and visceral, blood-and-guts creature effects any modern-day effects house would kill to re-create digitally. If you’re ready to kick Stranger Things ’ training wheels off, this wild ride is waiting for you.

Available to stream on Tubi
Tubi

The Last Unicorn (1982)

One of the most beautiful, melancholy, magical, and genuinely adult animated features in American film history. This adaptation of fantasist Peter S. Beagle’s novel comes to us courtesy of Rankin/Bass Productions and Japanese animation studio Topcraft — the former responsible for the stop-motion Christmas classics Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town , the latter eventually evolving into Hayao Miyazaki’s Studio Ghibli. Together, they produced the J.R.R. Tolkien cartoons The Hobbit and The Return of the King, plus this gut-punch of a film, about a unicorn who becomes trapped in the body of a young human woman. With a body-horror subtext worthy of Cronenberg and a ridiculously impressive voice cast (Mia Farrow, Jeff Bridges, Christopher Lee, Angela Lansbury, and Alan Arkin), it’s like a cross between Stranger Things and a story from the Dungeons & Dragons game its characters play.

Available to stream on Tubi and YouTube
Tubi
YouTube

Paperhouse (1988)

Directed by Bernard Rose — who would later adapt Hellraiser writer-director Clive Barker’s short story “The Forbidden” into the acclaimed urban-horror film Candyman — this harrowing supernatural/surrealist film centers on an 11-year-old girl who discovers her dreams and drawings are coming to life and consuming her reality. She’s got to figure out how to take charge and reassert control. Paperhouse is what I think of when Stranger Things is at its best.

Available to stream on YouTube
YouTube

Let the Right One In (2008)

Recast the relationship between Eleven and Mike Wheeler as a tragedy instead of a heroic fantasy, and you might wind up with this morbid proto-romance between a bullied kid and the young vampire who simultaneously befriends, protects, and uses him. There’s stuff going on here about abuse and loneliness, for characters of all ages, that digs way deeper than anything Stranger Things has done; if Netflix’s series is a 101 entry-level course, this is graduate work.

Available to stream on Showtime
Showtime

It Follows (2014)

If you feel Stranger Things ’ older-teen dynamics deserve further exploration, It Follows might be the movie for you. David Robert Mitchell’s slow-burn horror film centers on a small group of teenagers being stalked by a supernatural entity; the only way to escape death at its hands is to have sex with someone else, making them the thing’s new target. Stranger Things ’ reluctance to punish young people for sexual activity is one of its few bona fide innovations. It Follows subverts that generosity, asserting that, yes, it’s fine to have sex, and, yes, awful things may happen to you anyway.

Available to stream on Netflix
Netflix

Under the Skin (2013)

Am I comfortable saying this is the best movie on this list? Yes. Am I comfortable asserting it’s one of the best movies ever made ? Again, yes. Jonathan Glazer’s bone-scrapingly dark sci-fi-erotic-horror film stars Scarlett Johansson as a woman who picks up random men and invites them back to her place, at which point … well, honestly, I’d rather not say, just to spare you the spoilers. Stranger Thing s’ deep-black psychic void, and its telepath Eleven’s progress through it, is swiped so directly from this movie that your head’ll fuckin’ spin — but since the movie’s thesis is how easy it is to use people for your own ends, that’s weirdly fitting.

Available to stream on Showtime
Showtime

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Meet the regional Youtubers who are making their presence felt

July 2, 2022 by indianexpress.com Leave a Comment

When Chennai-based Mohammed Irfan (28) started his YouTube channel ‘Irfan’s View’ back in 2015, he had to take a loan to buy a cell phone to shoot his videos. He had no fancy camera or laptop, but he wanted to create vlogs in Tamil with a focus on food and was inspired by bigger YouTubers such as Casey Neistat. Irfan has come a long way since then with over 3 million followers. He now posts videos of his travel in Emirates First Class and lunching with Tamil stars such as Vijay Sethupathi. He’s also part of a growing league of regional YouTubers from India who’ve seen their subscriber basis grow multifold in the past few years.

“When I started there were not many viewers for the content that I uploaded. After 2018, the views picked up. Especially after Jio came and more people got cheaper internet,” he tells indianexpress.com .

Some of the other regional creators also spoke about this spurt in their user base, post-2018. In fact, as India’s internet consumption and access continues to increase, especially post-2016 after Jio’s entry brought down mobile data prices. A recent report by Bain & Company states that long-form videos (LFVs) are viewed by nearly 400 million users and saw 1.5 times growth from 2018 to 2020 .

Now creators have more confidence in running their channels with regional language content. “When I was started in 2017, YouTube was not that popular. People who had smartphones didn’t have great net speed,” remembers 26-year-old Sandy Saha from Kolkata. But the growth he has seen in the past three years convinced him that it was possible to run the channel with just Bengali content.

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According to Indrani Biswas, who runs the ‘Wonder Munna’ channel which has over 3 million followers, if one wants to reach the masses, regional content is a must. “The regional market might seem like a very small niche. But if you want to connect to the audience, you can’t just do it with Hindi or English content,” she says.

For sisters, Niharika (22) and Niveditha Manne (21) from Sangareddy, Telangana starting their channel the ‘Niha Sisters’ was a leap of faith they took a year back. They have already crossed more than 6,00,000 followers, yet another sign that the audience wants content in their language.

When the duo started, they focused on imitating content from Telegu’s Big Boss Season 2. “We just recreated the scenes from Telugu Big Boss… we didn’t expect the outcome. We got a great response in just 24 hours; 10k-20k views for a starting video, which is rare. After the end of the season, we started creating content with relatable stories so people can connect with them,” Niharika says.  The sisters have decided to ensure their content includes both Andhra and Telangana content, and are getting a good response from both states.

But the discovery of regional content is not limited to just audiences who speak the same language as some have experienced. Hyderabad-based creator Harsha Sai (23) is hoping to expand his audience beyond his regular Telugu viewers. Sai — who has over 5.5 million followers — mostly posts videos of himself carrying out grand gestures and helping others. The latest video includes one of him opening a petrol pump and another is of him helping a poor family.

“My videos are being dubbed in all five languages in India. I have a channel in Hindi, Tamil, Kannada and Malayalam in addition to Telugu,” he says. In Sai’s case, it is almost like a movie production approach. “We are spending so much on the production, everything is very high budget. To make one minute’s worth of content on YouTube, I’m spending on an average of two lakhs sometimes, which might be higher also in some cases,” Sai explains. He insists his videos are not to impress the audience, but rather to encourage them to do something good themselves.

However, regional creators have other challenges to fight. There’s a lower cost per 1000 impressions (CPM) for Indian creators vis-a-vis other countries — CPM is the amount of ad revenue that YouTubers can earn per thousand views on their videos.

Also Read | For Indian creators, YouTube Shorts is the path to more followers and views

According to Irfan, while CPM rates have improved over the years, especially from when he started, he’s hoping it will get even better in the future. “Of course, having a huge audience makes a big difference. Only with better CPM can I make these videos. The Emirates video cost me a huge sum of money. I can’t make those if I didn’t earn enough,” he adds.

And there’s also social acceptance. For ‘WonderMunna’ getting the audience to accept a woman doing comedy in Bengali was not easy initially. She would get a lot of negative comments, deriding her work, and asking her not to play the role of a guy. “But it has improved from 2017. The kind of comments I used to get, has changed now.”

In Sandy’s case, being an LGBTQ+ creator meant getting plenty of homophobic comments early on. “I was initially depressed that people are abusing me for my sexuality, my gender, or my attire. Friends also told me not to upload videos. People were not really accepting my content earlier on. But day by day things are changing, people have started to understand it’s our sexuality, our choice,” Saha said adding that in his experience the negativity has gone down somewhat.

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