 Welcome to today's edition of Frightfully Forgotten, and we're going to continue our Part 4 trend. And we're going to talk about our favorites and what we think are the best Part 4s of horror movie franchises. Top 4 Part 4s. Halloween 4, which is probably one of our favorite Part 4 movies of all time. Probably one of the best. We have an episode completely dedicated to Part 4. You want to click the link and watch the full on retrospective of Halloween 4. If you haven't seen Halloween 4, it's basically Michael Myers has been in a coma for a decade. Since the events of Part 2. He's being transferred to a different hospital and he hears that he has a living relative. A niece whose name is Jamie, which wakes him up from the coma. Then he goes off to find and kill Jamie. So what makes Halloween 4 a good movie? It's the story. He learns of a niece, so another family member that he's got to go and kill. It's a good way to show what happened to him from the last movie. And then it's also a good way for him to get released back into the general public. One of my favorite things about this movie is the atmosphere. I really love the atmosphere and the look of the movie. The opening credits sets the tone for the movie so well. It's the most Halloween-feeling movie of them all. The characters are fantastic in this movie. The kills are fantastic in this too. They're dialed to the back a little bit. It's not so silly. Brute force in his hands. Yeah, because he's a strong man. There's not that much blood in this movie either, right? Which kind of hearts back to the first movie. And there's Hoffman in it. Lemus! Lemus! This brings us to our next one. And that's Friday the 13th part 4. It starts right after the third one, where they put him on the gurney, take him to the morgue. I guess he's dead. Comes to life and goes back to hunting and killing. But this time he has to take on a little bastard, Corey Feldman. This one, not as campy as the third one. Yeah, that's what I like about it. The third one is pretty campy. You've got the disco music, you've got the really defined, stupid characters. Like the hippie couple, the bikers, the jokester Shelley. Would you be yourself if you looked like this? Back to an actual serious tone. Yeah, exactly. Kind of more like the first and the second one, right? The kids, the group of kids who of course Jason goes off and kills. They do a really good job of like building all their characters. And you get to know them and you get to like them. And Crispin Glover's character, you really get to like that guy. Yeah, they're very defined. Yeah. Which is good. The kills are great. It's like one of the hallmarks of this movie. One of our favorite ones is when he just throws that woman out the window. He just happens to be at the window. You just wait like, what if she didn't come next to the window? You just kind of stand there. I'm just going to go and scale this to how this is. Maybe someone might be at this window if they are. I'm in luck. Yeah. And I'll just throw him out the window. He's all over the place. He's outside and then all of a sudden he's at the front door. Then all of a sudden he's like inside upstairs and then he's back outside. The effects in this movie are great and they're done by the master himself, Tom Savini. His hands. Disgusting looking. Yeah. His fingernails and they're all like monster hands. Yeah. I like that. I like that about it. They show his hands more than they show him. Right. Which is a good thing about the movie. They don't overplay and overshow Jason. You don't see him just walking around the woods like in the later movies. That's all he does is just walk. This has a great ending for a final chapter, for a part four. But it also leaves the window open a little bit with the Tommy Jarvis character. Our third favorite part four movie which is Land of the Dead. It's not credited as a part four. But it's the fourth movie in George Romero's zombie series, right? Yeah. So this takes place after Day of the Dead. And at this point civilization is kind of rebuilt itself. The zombie threat is still there but they're more of like pests. You know they're there but they're in the back of your mind. The basic plot is that there's a big like rich asshole played by Dennis Hopper. And he lives the good life. Anyone else lives in complete squalor. John Leguizamo's character steals dead reckoning and threatens to blow up the city unless he gets paid. Dennis Hopper's character sends the hero of the movie out to go and retrieve dead reckoning. And he's basically got to go back into the zombie apocalypse to get it. It's a very cool idea for a movie. I think it's the only movie I can think of that's a zombie movie that takes place when humanity has rebuilt itself. It's stable again. Yeah. In Day of the Dead it's at the point where civilization has collapsed, right? Completely, yeah. Money has no meaning anymore. In this one it's not trying to survive. Yeah. Now it's just making money and hoarding it and shit. George Romero with his superb social commentary. Yeah. Using the zombie apocalypse as that. In each Romero movie you see the zombies learn a little bit more and progress a little bit more. It's not just rehashing the same old thing, right? Yeah. It's creating more of a difficult adversary for the survivors. The humans are too busy fighting each other, but the zombies are working together. Exactly, yeah. And the humans just want to make money and shit, right? Yeah. To make money. Real money. To make big money. To make big bucks. The cast is great in this, right? Yeah. The cast and the characters. Tom Savini even makes a little cameo as his biker character from Dawn of the Dead. That's right, yeah. And that brings us to our last movie, Saw 4. We learned Jigsaw's dead. The guys doing the autopsies find a tape coated in wax and they play it and it turns out that Jigsaw's not done. He's going to continue the games. We also get introduced to the main character, Daniel Rigg. He's a cop. Jigsaw tells him, mind your own business. But he decides to play in Jigsaw's game. Exactly. And tries to save everybody. Yeah. And he just fucks everything up. If the main character just would have stayed home and went to bed, none of this bad shit would have happened. But no. Yeah. The moral of this story, right? Mind your own business. Yeah. Stay out of stuff that doesn't concern you. One of the highlights about this movie too is the traps. Yeah. And the kills are really, really good. They're attached to that motor and the chain's pulling them in. And one guy, he's got his mouth sewn shut. And the other guy has his eyes sewn shut. They still have to communicate in another way to get out of the trap. Yeah. But they don't. And they just try killing each other. Yeah. The girl with her hair caught and that contraptions a really good trap. Oh yeah. Or it slowly scalps her. A lot of cringe worthy stuff. The pedophile guy, he's got to like poke out of his own eyes to get out of the trap. The drug addict has got to push his face through his knives. The backstory showing what made John Kramer the way he is, right? And then showing like his traps from the beginning and they're not so great. And then the finality of it is that he dies. But they found a way to continue his legacy. And he's still playing games with people after he's passed on. Yeah. Which is very cool. That is neat. Yeah. And he's not just playing the games, but he's running the show somehow. Yeah. He's playing multiple games at once. Yeah. He's dead. So that's it. That's our top four part four movies to kick off season four of Frightfully Forgotten. If you have some of your favorite top four movies that we haven't mentioned yet, please let us know in the comments. We are going to mention more throughout the season. More part fours are going to pop up. There's going to be more part four themed episodes happening. Yep. So stay tuned. And of course, keep drinking.