 Hello and welcome to our season finale Q&A episode for Frightfully Forgotten, but first of all, what are we drinking? Ghosts of Mars in. Mmm, I take it it's a Mars in here. You betcha. Before we get started, we'd like to give a shout out to some other YouTube channels that are just kind of getting started. We've been around for a while, but you know, some channels you should definitely check out. 80s Horror Central. Mm-hmm. His reviews are very fun and funny and he keeps them quick and short and to the point. The Hap Horror Show, they're kind of like the American counterpart for us. There's two buddies chilling out with a couple of drinks and talking about movies. Rainbow Fright, remember to check out her channel. And of course, Shadow Alley Productions. Adam from Shadow Alley finally shipped us a mask. Uh-huh. Last year's Q&A, he asked us, if I sent you guys a mask, would you make a horror movie short? And he lived up to his end of the morning. Yeah, I didn't think he would. He sent us his cool alien-type mask, which he's actually going to be manufacturing and start selling. You may be getting a horror movie short coming your way in the next year or so. Fuck YouTube. Very good name. Yeah. He asked us, what was the most nostalgic movie that the two of us... Gonna share. Yeah, kind of share between us. We did cover this in one episode, but we'll answer it again. That one for the both of us together was the three amigos. I think so, yeah, definitely. That goes way back to when I had first moved to the city and almost instantly we became friends and that was like one of the first movies that we can both remember watching. Yeah, kind of bonding over. Yeah, playing and everything, jumping off the couches and stuff. And we do have a Tales from the VHS vault episode on three amigos, so make sure to check that out too. That's right, that's a pretty fun episode too. Fuck YouTube, but also like to know, what's our favorite horror anthology movie? That's a tough one. Yeah, yeah. I'd say the original Tales from the Crypt. That one is my favorite. That one is pretty good. Because all the stories are really solid. Yeah. There's also that one from the 80s with Emilio Estevez called Nightmares. I actually haven't seen that one. Oh, that one's really good. That one's really good. And I remember seeing that on TV way back too. Trick Our Treat is actually very good too. I really like that one. I was gonna watch it again this Halloween and just didn't get around to it. There's so many movies to watch. Right, great. And I haven't seen that. Oh yeah? Nope. That's good. Check that one out. We both have some movies to watch. Fuck YouTube also asked, what's the most overrated horror movie from the 80s that we both can think of? We agree on this one wholeheartedly too. That's right. It is Poltergeist. It has got to be the most overrated. I can't stand Poltergeist. Neither can I. I tried rewatching it again recently and it's like, this is just a fucking Star Wars commercial. Like, it's just George Lucas and Steven Spielberg jerking themselves off and then poor Toby Hooper had to kind of be stuck in the middle, it seems. Yeah, yeah, exactly. And like, even the effects in that movie, they're great. They're top-matched, but they don't, they don't hit the mark. Like, you know, you're seeing like, oh, there's a lightning flying around and all that shit flying around in the room and stuff. And it's just, it seems to fall flat. Like, for me anyways, it's like, it's not all that scary. No, it's not scary. I don't like haunting movies that are so over the top, where it's beyond the point of being believable. Like, when you talk to real people who say they've encountered ghosts or some sort of haunting in their house, they don't say that, you know, like, the house is all blowing up and stuff. I don't know, it's just subtle things that are scary. You know, it's exactly, you know, people getting sucked into TVs and shit like that. It's just too unbelievable to make it scary. You know, it's gotta be believable to make it scary, because you gotta think, oh, that can happen to me. Dave Anderson would like to know what is the best horror comedy that pulled off both the horror and the comedy aspects? And again, that's a very tough one, and there's two to come to mind. My favorite horror comedy of all time is Return of the Living Dead. Not to say that it's scary, no movie has really scared me all that much, but I think it just pulls off the horror and the comedy both perfectly, balances it perfectly. Yeah, exactly. Another one that comes to our minds, too, is Evil Dead 2, right? It's kind of like a symphony almost, you know, they did a really good job marrying the two together, right? I remember you saying you thought that when you first saw Evil Dead 2, you found it scary when you were a little kid. Yes. Yeah, so then, yeah, that pulled off the horror, too, for you, as a kid, and the comedy. He also wants to know if there's a horror genre we can't stand. Personally, I'm really not a fan of the whole torture porn thing, like the hostile movies. Yeah. I didn't mind the first couple of saws, but they're a bit more cerebral than just gore. Also, not a fan of the whole ring and grudge-style movies. This doesn't do it for me. Yeah. I don't find it scary. The whole torture, the whole snuff film kind of deal, I'm not into. There's a movie called Martyrs that I watched. Yeah. I'm not into that at all. Yeah. It's just way too much for me. The next one is by Mr. Jack Lanterns, and he asked us something that was non-horror related. He asked us what was our favorite TV sitcoms. We don't want to just kind of cop out, right? Because it is. Because it is a cop out, but I'd have to say personally for me it's Seinfeld. Just because the rewatchability, you know, we can watch those episodes at the gazillion times and still find them funny. Exactly, and they're so relatable too, right? If I were to pick something else besides the obvious, I would say Curb Your Enthusiasm as a second. And also I love the monsters too. I love Curb Your Enthusiasm too, but if I would have to pick another one, it would probably be Mash for me. I love Mash. Mash, it's great. How many seasons is Mash run? Nine or eleven? Eleven. Jesus. Alan Alda, his hair is all dark, and he's all young in the first season. Then you go to the last one, it's all grey, it's all old and haggard and shit. The Korean War lasted for three years. This isn't three years, man. Yeah, exactly. He also asked us what our favorite Stephen King adaptation is. That again is a tough one. Yeah, that's a good one. As far as Stephen King movie that I can just always keep watching and watching and watching and never get bored of would have to be Christine. This is my favorite Stephen King movie. Not to say it's the most faithful adaptation, it isn't. It's just my favorite Stephen King movie. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Yeah, you know, I'd have to agree. It depends on how you look at it though. Like what's our favorite shirts, Christine? What's the best? Maybe The Shining? Yeah, even though again, it's really not like the book, but it is a great movie. Yeah, we watched it here not too long ago. And after re-watching it, you just realize how much of a masterpiece that movie is, regardless of how faithful it is to the source material. It's just a good fucking movie that made for TV miniseries of The Shining actually wasn't all that bad. I kind of didn't mind it besides that fucking kid. I was just gonna stand that kid. Well, that's a perfect example of kids ruining things. You better fucking make sure you got a kid who can act. Yeah, I know, yeah. A bad kid actor who can ruin a movie easy. You can stand by me, it's fucking great. Green Miles, great, Shawshank Redemption. I'd say some of the better movies that are based off of Stephen King books are non-horror. So I think I'm gonna pronounce this right, I'm not sure, but CodyW1 who also has a YouTube channel and he's kind of really into all sorts of things. He kind of reviews horror movies, talks a lot about Doctor Who and his question I guess would be more for me because Justin didn't watch Doctor Who. I'm not a huge fan, I like the old stuff, but you know. He would like to know what our favorite classic Doctor Who stories are and I could talk forever about this, but if I were to kind of pick like an era would definitely be the Tom Baker era, which I love. For nostalgia purposes, I'd say his last season, that whole like e-space trilogy and then Legopolis and then when he finally regenerates and then going into like Peter Davison's first couple of stories where he's going through all the regeneration trauma, that's kind of like my favorite nostalgic Doctor Who stories. I like the drinking stories from Tom Baker. Yeah, yeah, yeah. More so. The next one is from Ron Moore and he asked us who would win in a drinking contest between Adam and Jason. Well, Ron, I don't know who the fuck this Jason guy is, but you know what, you're out. We can't answer that question because who's Jason? Don't know, don't care. Farret78 would like to know what is our favorite David Cronenberg movie and again, I'm going to cop out and save the fly as far as a movie that I've watched so many times and will always watch and just the rewatchability of it's great. Farret, choose one that isn't going to be the obvious answer. It would be the Brood. It would be like my second favorite Cronenberg movie. That would be mine too. Yeah, I love the Brood. Yeah. Oh man, it's just, it's so good that that end where she's all pregnant and gives birth to that weird thing and like, oh fuck, Oliver Reed in it too. Famous Boozer. Our favorite Boozer. Him and Tom Baker, our favorite Boozers. Grumpy Andrew from Grumpy Andrew's Horror House, so check out his channel too. I'm quite sure he talked about those early Cronenberg movies and he does mention that the Brood is like the first one that kind of really is a really good movie. One of the reasons is it finally has a really good lead actor in it. Right. Which is Oliver Reed, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Before that is this shitty Canadian guy. Exactly, yeah, they feel so generically Canadian before that. The next one is from Sean Martin and he wanted to know if we were to build the ultimate horror movie who would we pick to do the directing, the music and who would be the actors that would star in it? And what monster would be the main monster in it. Yeah. That's a tough one. Yeah. William Friedkin would probably be the best director for such an undertaking. John Carpenter would be almost on par. Almost, yeah. But we would pick him to do the music. The creature from the Black Lagoon would make a good kind of monster to have a comeback and get like a remake or something like that, you know, to be featured because everyone else has had their shot. Actors, well, of course. Tom Atkins. Tom Atkins would have to be in it. Bruce Campbell would have to make a cameo. Yeah, possibly like Ted Raimi. Yeah. Yeah. Adrian Barbol, you know, she hasn't been in it. She'd be old but she'd be like a more of a grandma figure. Daniel Harris would really get in there because she needs some work. That's right. Gonzalo Valdez would like to know if we're familiar with director Barry J. Gillis. Barry J. Gillis in his infamous, infamous, bad, bad movie from 1989 called Things. By chance, I happened to watch Things a week or something before we got these questions. So it's just by complete chance. Oh yeah, I just got lucky. That has got to be one of the worst fucking movies I've ever seen in my life. But it's so bad where it's, you can't look away. It's like a car crash. I finished watching it the whole way through and it's like, what was that? Like, oh my God, how did this get released? It's one of those things. It's so bad where you're like, this has to be intentional. And I tried to do some research on it and there's no clues anywhere of anyone saying, yeah, we're making a bad movie on purpose. It's like, this is supposed to be serious. It's like, oh man, that makes it even worse. The next one is from Sophie Baker and she wants to know all about my pug Bailey. Bring her on. Let's bring her on. She's sleeping just over there. Snoring. Snoring. And licking. So there is Bailey. Yeah, this is Bailey. She's been in a few videos. How old is Bailey? 10. 10, eh? Yeah, she's getting up there, poor thing. New dog years, what is that? 70, I think. Isn't it times 70? 70, yeah. You don't look like you're no 70. So there she is, yeah, and she's a real sweet girl. I'm sure she'll make an appearance in some future episodes. Oh yeah, and some outtakes too. So the next and final question is from 80s Horse Central and a few other people because a lot of people kind of asked the same question, so we kind of just blumped it into one. Specifically, 80s Horse Central wanted to know what movies scare us as a kid so much we had to turn off in the middle of it. I remember vividly Children of the Corn. That's right. Not finishing that movie past that diner scene. Yeah, yeah, and then we started watching it again and then remember where the kid gets hit when he walks out from the cornfield and we turned it off for good. Yeah, and I didn't watch that movie again for years and years until I was older. Oh man, that soundtrack is fucking killer. It's scary, yeah. We also did a VHS Tales on that too if you want to click the link above and we also talk a little more about that in the review we do of Children of the Corn as well. And on top of that, a lot of other people asked like just what was a movie that genuinely scared us, that terrifying movie. And you know, that's a really tough one because I don't really find movies all that scary. No, I love horror movies, but not because they're scary because they're entertainment. There's been moments in movies that used to scare the shit out of me as a kid like in Stand By Me when they find the body, that part would always scare me because he looks so dead. Another part used to scare me too, and again, it's not a scary movie, it's in Phantom of the Paradise. Well, two parts where he gets his face crushed in the record press, and then at the end where he gets unmasked and you see how disfigured he is, that part used to scare me too, his eyeballs all kind of hanging out, his big hole in his face. That whole movie creeped me out. You feel so bad for him and I remember the first time I saw it. It's like, oh my god, what a poor guy. Aw, man. And the thing I think that did it for me was the teeth, and they pulled his teeth out and put those silver ones in. Not much in the way of slashes or monster movies scared me, but anything supernatural or to do with ghosts scared the shit out of me. A lot of TV shows really scared me, like a lot of the ghost anthology shows. True stories. Haunted lives with Bobby Mackie's Music World, Die Game. They cut reenacting it and then over here in the washroom I put my hands in the war space in the washroom, and then very violently the guys all like, just wrecking the bathroom trying to reenact what happened. The trash can came and very violently, yeah, he's all smashing everything up. Those kind of shows were scary. I remember in search of, depending on the episode would kind of creep me out, depending on what the content was, and of course the unsolved mysteries was creepy, depending on the episode. Those Nostradamus shows where they're always predicting the end of the world. Those were fucking scary. Nostradamus, those reenactings. He's got that ball. He's got his book or whatever. Yeah, I remember when my dad would like kind of like, oh there's some Nostradamus thing just watch it. They were always on. I'd be like, I'll go upstairs and play or something. I feel like listening about the end of the world right now don't get pressing. It's funny because all of those shows banked on the fact that the world was going to end at the year 2000. And when it didn't happen we never saw another Nostradamus show again. I have that Nostradamus beer. He's all predicting on the front of it. You'll get pissed drunk from drinking. I think that's it. That brings an end to our season finale Q&A. We actually get to relax and hang out after the video shoot because we usually shoot like a bunch of videos at once and then by the time that's done it's like okay gotta go now or whatever. So we can actually hang out now and have some drinks and watch some horror movies. Exactly. And usually like whoever's place it is, like if we're at my place I'll usually drink more and then at them I gotta go now it's like wait I have one more drink it's like no no no I gotta go. I gotta drive. The other way around too. So we're gonna enjoy ourselves. So until next time and until next year keep drinking.