Media Highlights: The Best of the Best

Since starting my media highlights, I thought there are now so many of them per post I’d look back on the last six months of these round-up posts (Nov-April) and let you know what I think my main highlights have been in all categories. Let’s go for the top 5 in each, as there are way too many for me to pick otherwise!

I haven’t got 6 months of Musical Greetings yet I don’t think, as I started this a bit later.

Top 5 Books of the Last 6 Months (Nov-Apr)

This was hard to narrow down, and I think that there were lots of great reads. I didn’t include short stories in this top 5 selection, as there are WAY too many of those to set against the novels and novellas. They get their own section below.

  • What The Fog Conceals by R.A. Marno (ARC, released by Salt Publishing 15th August 2026). An absolutely brilliant work of Northern Irish Gothic, based on a real incident.
    ~
  • Linghun by Ai Jiang. A modern Chinese-Canadian gothic ghost story, described as ‘literary horror’. Serious, rich, multi-layered grief horror.
    ~
  • The Devouring by A.M. Shilling (ARC read, now released). Fast-paced thriller with a Lovecraftian twist, and a married couple as the protagonists. He’s an assassin, she does autopsies… I was really intrigued by this one so I reached out to the author and Shilling will be featured in an Author Spotlight in the summer, so you can hear more about this book from the author directly!
    ~
  • Loving Safoa by Liza Wemakor. A Black lesbian vampire novella! If you like Jewelle Gomez’s The Gilda Stories, you’ll definitely like this, I think. I loved this, especially the community-centred, hopeful ethos, and the sweet lesbian love story at its core. Read my full review here.
    ~
  • Black Velvet by Fox N. Locke. This was a surprise highlight for me, as I don’t usually read YA coming-of-age stories, but this one really hit for me. It is a contemporary paranormal YA coming-of-age story that is so deeply small-English-town messy and grounded, despite being about ghosts and necromancy. Set the year of the London bombings (07/07/2005), it tackles queerness, transness, bigotry, fear, and suicide ideation, as well eating disorders and grief.
  • Top 5 Short Stories/Anthologies of the Last 6 Months (Nov-Apr)

    I read some standout single author collections and some great short stories, so narrowing it down was pretty hard. My picks are fairly predictable, but I stand by them.

  • We Are Here to Hurt Each Other by Paula D. Ashe. This is a re-read of some of the stories in this collection, like “Jacqueline Laughs Last in the Gaslight”. Some of these stories showcase some of the best prose I’ve ever read in any genre.
    ~
  • Skin Thief by Suzan Palumbo. Another re-read, and another Neon Hemlock offering. This is one of my favourite short story collections by a single author; Paula D. Ashe’s visceral We Are Here To Hurt Each Other is the other. Palumbo’s collection is a wonderfully dark ride through Canadian and Trinidadian folklore, queer experiences, and immigrant experiences, filled with elements of intersectional identities, and a rich tapestry of perspectives.
    ~
  • “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
    ~
  • “Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad”, by M.R. James
    ~
  • Skin Folk by Nalo Hopkinson. I’ve had this one on my TBR for ages, ever since my Red Riding Hood post from Feb 2024. I finally dived in, two years later. This is a single-author collection of original short fiction, like We Are Here to Hurt Each Other and Skin Thief. I would recommend reading the review by Casey the Canadian Lesbrarian for some really well-thought-out considerations of this collection.
  • Top 5 Podcasts/Audiodramas of the Last 6 Months (Nov-Apr)

  • Algernon Blackwood BBC Radio Drama Collection – I really enjoyed this one although the bouncy intro and credits felt very incongruous compared with the stories! But it has a lot of good ones in here. The Internet Archive has 4 of his John Silence stories for free, if interested!
    ~
  • Just Chills: Short Scary Stories – I love Taesha Glasgow’s voice, and she has some great stories to listen to here, all classic ghost stories.
    ~
  • HorrorBabble – a great resource for short horror fiction and classic Weird tales, all published in various magazines of the 1800s-1950s, so the author demographic is predominantly white and male.
    ~
  • Shadows at the Door – a great audiodrama podcast, with a mix of original stories and some classics. I like the format of this one, with the drama first and then a discussion afterwards.
    ~
  • The Weird Library podcast – a good mix of classic and original stories, was on a hiatus and is now picking back up. Unlike the others, this one specialises in Weird Fiction specifically.
  • Top 5 TV Shows of the Last 6 Months (Nov-Apr)

    If I included my comfort series, then it would be the same ones every time. I’m excluding the ones I continuously rewatch, like Delicious in Dungeon, The Apothecary Diaries, and Haunted Hotel.

  • Yaratılan/Creature (2023) written & directed by Çağan Irmak, based on Mary Shelley’s novel Frankenstein. – Turkish 8-part series, my November rewatch that spilled into December. One of my favourite series. I wrote a post on it when I watched Del Toro’s Frankenstein.
    ~
  • The Other Bennet Sister (2026-) dirs. Asim Abbasi, Jennifer Sheridan; writers Janice Hadlow (novel), Sarah Quintrell (9 eps), Maddie Dai (1 ep). I succumbed to this, and really enjoyed it. The hype is deserved. I think I would like the novel, even though poor Mary at Netherfield Hall… I had to fast forward that song, poor love. She was definitely giving me aro-spec/demi & autistic vibes. I liked that rep.
    ~
  • Fallout (2024-), created by Geneva Robertson-Dworet and Graham Wagner, which I loved. Absolutely amazing. One of my oldest friends has been a massive fan of the games for years, and when we were housemates he had a display cabinet of the figures for Fallout and Bioshock in our living room – those were my introduction to the games and the worlds!
    ~
  • खौफ/Khauf [“Fear“] (2025-) created & written by Smita Singh, dirs. Pankaj Kumar and Surya Balakrishnan. Hard-hitting, woman-centred Hindi Horror series. This weaves issues of rape trauma and the prevalent issue of sexual violence against women in modern-day Delhi with a supernatural horror plotline. I really like that this was created, written, and co-directed by women – I also liked Kumar’s work on Tumbbad, so I thought this worked well.
    ~
  • Hazbin Hotel definitely belongs up here, and it isn’t one that I rewatch for comfort, so it’s included. I played the S02 Hazbin Hotel soundtrack on loop for over a week. The theology is all over the place, so don’t go in expecting anything coherent, or for it to be doing anything interesting or new with it, they are just fun cartoons. I enjoy the story and the characters enough, and the fantasy worldbuilding, that this aspect (theology) doesn’t bother me. I really enjoy Helluva Boss as well, but I think Hazbin Hotel is slightly better.
  • Top 5 Films of the Last 6 Months (Nov-Apr)

    This was super hard to narrow down, but I went for the ones that stood out for me in each month. I think that Ghost Stories for Christmas should be given a special mention, but I can’t include the entire series of short films!

  • Izvod: The Witch’s Swamp (2025) dirs. Oleg Taravkov and Alexey Plakhotnikov. Something I just happened to find on YouTube. It was posted there by the filmmakers, who made this on a microbudget of US$28K, and it’s amazingly good for the money and the fact this is their first film. It’s a Slavic mythology-inspired folk horror, completely indie-funded. Highly recommend this – the English subs are really good, and it’s worth a look. I had to add it Letterboxd.
    ~
  • Bring Her Back (2025) dirs. Michael Philippou, Danny Philippou. I really liked Talk To Me by the same directors, and this one was a real mind fuck as well. Deeply upsetting in places. I had to fast forward scenes, literally can’t watch some of that. Next level diabolical. New to me this year.
    ~
  • Dark Waters (1993) dir. Mariano Baino. If you enjoyed Soavi’s The Church (1989), this is definitely one for the watchlist. It goes harder in a few places. One of the most disturbing family reunions I’ve seen. New to me this year, but I’ve rewatched it 3x already, once with the director’s commentary.
    ~
  • Mother of Flies (2025) dirs. John Adams, Zelda Adams, and Toby Poser. An absolutely incredible achievement in indie filmmaking, honestly. A really touching folk horror/body horror film about cancer, grief, faith, and loss of children. The visuals are really striking and vivid. There is a LOT of graphic baby death (stillbirth and necromancy).
    ~
  • Sauna (2008) dir. Antti-Jussi Annila. I didn’t know what to expect, but this is a dark historical drama with supernatural and psychological horror elements. It’s an interesting piece of Scandinavian Gothic, I think, very atmospheric and well paced. I have this on Blu Ray and I’m really glad I bought it. Not keen on the English language title, ‘Rising Evil’, though…
  • See all 6 Media Round-ups

    Media Highlights: The Best of the Best

    I began my media round-ups in Nov 2025, so I thought I’d do a media highlight post of my Top 5 books, short stories/collections, TV shows, and films from Nov-Apr. Find out what made the ultimate cut!

    by cmrosensMay 25, 2026May 24, 2026

    April 2026 Media Round-Up

    Everything I’ve watched, read, and listened to in April! Skim the highlights, or expand the details to see the full lists.

    by cmrosensMay 4, 2026May 1, 2026

    March 2026 Media Round-Up

    Everything I’ve read/watched/listened to in the month of March!

    by cmrosensMarch 31, 2026March 31, 2026

    February 2026 Media Round-Up

    What I read, listened to, and watched in the month of February! Skim the highlights, or expand the details to see the full lists and my thoughts.

    by cmrosensFebruary 28, 2026March 14, 2026

    January 2026 Media Round-Up

    My monthly media round-up for January 2026 – all the books, podcasts, tv shows, and films I’ve been enjoying this month!

    by cmrosensFebruary 1, 2026February 1, 2026

    December 2025 Media Round-Up

    My monthly media round-up for December 2025 – all the books, podcasts, tv shows, and films I read/listened to/watched this month.

    by cmrosensDecember 30, 2025March 14, 2026

    November 2025 Media Round-Up

    I’m starting a new monthly series where I post a round-up of all the media I’ve watched/read/listened to for the previous month. Here is November’s media round-up!

    by cmrosensDecember 5, 2025January 26, 2026 #BookReview #filmReview #mediaRoundUp #tvReview

    April 2026 Media Round-Up

    And that was April! I’ve spoken a bit about how it went on a personal level in my newsletter and in my Writing Round-Up, so I won’t repeat that here.

    I’ve definitely needed a lot of comfort stuff this month, and ways to manage stress and emotional turbulence. It’s been tough, friends, honestly. April was a month with a significant funeral in it, and there’s more to do around that than say goodbye. So, here’s everything I’ve watched, read, and listened to this month. Skim the highlights, or expand the details to see the full lists.

    We’ll kick off with my album of the month, but some of my own stuff is included as I sold a story to The Weird Library podcast in March, and that was my first read/listen of April. Check it out below, under “Books/Audiobooks”.

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    Musical Greetings

    Again, my one true love remains rock in all its subgenres, from glam to Anatolian psychedelic, and it would get pretty boring if I listed the same playlist and artists every month. I’m still listening to the exact same playlist I made in January for all my commutes and walks, with a mix of upbeat tunes from rock to indie pop to disco to Eurovision classics (Ma-ia-hii, ma-ia-hoh, Ma-ia-hoo, ma-ia-haha), so nothing new there.

    However… tell me why I’m addicted to this Qobuz-curated playlist of SWANA Electro? I reckon this is my Playlist of the Month.

    Before this randomly appeared on my Qobuz feed, I had no idea who any of these artists are. I still honestly don’t know who they are, but I do quite like the tracks I’ve heard from KARABA/DJ Karaba, Aziz Konkrite, and the French-Algerian collective, Acid Arab, especially! This was a banging playlist to whack on and close out Easter Sunday.

    Books & Audiobooks

    All the books I eye-read/ear-read this month. It’s been a bit lean where this is concerned, but it’s also been a tough month, so I’m just going with the flow. There have been some gems though.

    The Devouring by A.M. Shilling – ARC read.

    Fast-paced thriller with a Lovecraftian twist, and a married couple as the protagonists. He’s an assassin, she does autopsies… I was really intrigued by this one so I reached out to the author and Shilling will be featured in an Author Spotlight in the summer, so you can hear more about this book from the author directly!

    Throughout their marriage, Jason and Ayana’s lives always ran parallel but never entwined. It’s the perfect arrangement. He’s free to pursue his dangerous yet lucrative career as an elite assassin, and she can focus on conducting autopsies for the city’s forensic center.

    But after Jason spares a witness to his latest murder, he becomes the prime suspect in his own brother’s homicide. While he hunts for the real killer, Ayana discovers an impossible illness in one of her cadavers. The couple quickly identify an unsettling connection between the two events—one steeped in religious fanaticism and occult conspiracy.

    Jason and Ayana must learn to work together, using their wits, lies, and criminal connections to uncover the truth behind a mysterious cult and exact revenge. But human enemies are the least of their concern. Beyond the boundary of their world exists a cosmic threat of apocalyptic proportions, and it is trying to break through.

    The Wasp Factory by Iain Banks.

    I actually gave this a 3* rating on GR, but it’s deserving of a highlighted place in the media round-up on the grounds that I think it will stay with me for a long time. It’s a classic of transgressive horror for a reason, and the closest I really go to splatterpunk/extreme (which is, not very).

    Full review here.

    Frank – no ordinary sixteen-year-old – lives with his father outside a remote Scottish village. Their life is, to say the least, unconventional. Frank’s mother abandoned them years ago: his elder brother Eric is confined to a psychiatric hospital; and his father measures out his eccentricities on an imperial scale. Frank has turned to strange acts of violence to vent his frustrations. In the bizarre daily rituals there is some solace. But when news comes of Eric’s escape from the hospital Frank has to prepare the ground for his brother’s inevitable return – an event that explodes the mysteries of the past and changes Frank utterly.

    The Weird Library podcast is one I’ve known about for a while, but they had a long hiatus at one point. However, as I had my story Overexposure included at the start of the month, it was time to revisit it! I HIGHLY recommend the other stories they narrate! Episode art & narration by Bridgette Brenmark.

    Expand to see the episodes I’ve listened to. Links are to YouTube. Search for the episodes on the platform of your choice.

    TV Shows & Mini Series

    All the shows and mini-series I caught this month. I’ve got to be honest, Fallout has lost a lot of its appeal. With the Doomsday clock at 85 seconds to midnight on 07th April, and a family funeral on the 20th… I thought I’d watch something light.

    The Other Bennet Sister (2026-) dirs. Asim Abbasi, Jennifer Sheridan; writers Janice Hadlow (novel), Sarah Quintrell (9 eps), Maddie Dai (1 ep).

    I succumbed to this, and really enjoyed it. The hype is deserved. I think I would like the novel, even though poor Mary at Netherfield Hall… I had to fast forward that song, poor love. She was definitely giving me aro-spec/demi & autistic vibes. I liked that rep.

    Mary leaves her sisters’ shadows to find herself, embarking on a journey from Meryton to London and the Lake District. Her quest for independence leads to an unexpected love story in Regency-era England.

    Danjon meshi/Delicious in Dungeon (2024-) based on the manga by Kui Ryôko, main director Yoshihiro Miyajima.

    A comfort re-watch! I’ve seen the whole series over and over, but I put it back on this month (again) for a comfort thing.

    Can sisters be reincarnated from dragon meat? Laios and his friends Marcille and Chilchuck delve into an endless dungeon in search of his fallen sister, fighting monsters, starvation, and corruption.

    How To Get To Heaven From Belfast (2026-), created by Lisa McGee.

    I absolutely love Irish dark comedies. This one is also top notch. Really loved the mystery element, the characters, and the humour. Plus: Bronach Gallagher is, once more, an absolute gem.

    Three lifelong friends reunite after the death of an old classmate turns a wake into a dark mystery. They embark on a thrilling adventure across Ireland, piecing together enigmatic truths amid complicated lives.

    Varney the Vampire, or, the Feast of Blood (2016), dir. John F. Carroll (John Benjamin Faust) and David McCullars (1 ep). Written by Thomas Preskett Prest and James Malcolm Rymer, and adapted by John Benjamin Fasut (as John F. Carroll).

    I really liked this low budget/microbudget adaptation of the Penny Dreadful story. Demented Features on YouTube has a complete run of it (02:15:55) and I really liked it as an amateur production with short episodes of around 5min each. I like that they used the original dialogue, or tried to adapt it so that the dialogue fits the period.

    https://www.youtube.com/live/zlOFN-rKNmE?si=nNHvRYBQ1izx_fda

    Varney the Vampire follows the exploits of Sir Francis Varney, a vampire that infiltrates the Bannerworth family in attempt to reestablish his own aristocracy.

    • 1670 (2023-) written by Jakub Ruzyllo, dirs. Maciej Buchwald and Kordian Kadziela. Polish humour is something I don’t usually vibe with, the same as French drama, but I still watch Polish comedies and French dramas and find things I like. This is a good one, and it’s funny, but it wasn’t my favourite watch of the month. I only watched a few episodes, and I’m not sure I’ll finish the series, but I’m including it here as I kind of enjoyed the episodes I watched.
    • Ghosts: Three Miles Up (1995) dir. Lesley Manning. This was an episode of the BBC Ghosts series, a series of ghost story adaptations. I’ve therefore put this under TV Shows rather than films, although each episode is a standalone. I really liked the original short story by Elizabeth Jane Howard (read for 2025 Scare A Day challenge). I really liked the way this was adapted and changed for film. I think making the MMCs brothers with mother issues and arrested development worked with Sarah’s character, although it is much more subtle in the short story version. I also liked the addition of a terrible childhood trauma backstory, and the mystery whistle trope which was very M.R. James. All in all I thought this was a decent Ghosts episode. HOWEVER: some really nasty and unnecessary 90s fatphobia comes out in an argument between the brothers. Very disappointing from a woman writer (Monique Charlesworth) and female director (Lesley Manning) as an addition to Howard’s original story, but unsurprising for the 1990s.
    • West Country Tales: The Sabbatical (1982) dir. John King, written by
      Josephine Poole, and based on an anonymous entry to the series. [S01 E01] This is one I think I missed in my original post on West Country Tales, and this makes 10 available episodes rather than 9! It’s been uploaded by a different user, 5PY Heritage, so may be from another recording. I have edited my original post on this series accordingly. This one features Keith Barron as a vicar haunted by fear of the devil, who goes on sabbatical to a quiet English country village, only to be haunted in a more literal sense.

    https://youtu.be/DZLC3dMGowM?si=VTV6hMkbkAF0_YcK

    Films

    All the films I watched this month! Most were for catharsis. Especially cathartic films got rewatched. The ones I liked best are highlighted; the list of all the films I finished watching is below. (I have not included DNFs). An obscene amount of male directors this month, so I’ll need to rectify that in future.

    Pretty Lethal (2026) dir. Vicky Jewson.

    This was fun. I loved the ballerina solidarity developing across class divides, and the fact that being a dancer is tough and painful, and these girls are athletes. I really loved Uma Thurman’s performance in this as well. The dance/fight scene was funny, fun, vicious, and enjoyable. A good double bill with Abigail or Livide, I think, or any film where the dancers are the dangers.

    Blood, sweat and tutus.

    A troupe of ballerinas find themselves fighting for survival as they attempt to escape from a remote inn after their bus breaks down on the way to a dance competition.

    The Void (2016) dirs. Jeremy Gillespie, Steven Kostanski.

    One of the my favourite Canadian horror films, and one of my favourite cosmic horror films full stop. It’s gory, fucked up, and full of body horror and tension. The hospital setting lends itself to a lot of that drama! I love the concepts and the monsters, and the creepy backwoods cult. Just great. To this day I can’t fully watch Beverley and the scissors.

    There Is a Hell. This Is Worse.

    In the middle of a routine patrol, officer Daniel Carter happens upon a blood-soaked figure limping down a deserted stretch of road. He rushes the young man to a nearby rural hospital staffed by a skeleton crew, only to discover that patients and personnel are transforming into something inhuman. As the horror intensifies, Carter leads the other survivors on a hellish voyage into the subterranean depths of the hospital in a desperate bid to end the nightmare before it’s too late.

    Sauna (2008) dir. Antti-Jussi Annila.

    I didn’t know what to expect, but this is a dark historical drama with supernatural and psychological horror elements. It’s an interesting piece of Scandinavian Gothic, I think, very atmospheric and well paced. I have this on Blu Ray and I’m really glad I bought it. Not keen on the English language title, ‘Rising Evil’, though…

    Cleanse Your Sins.

    It is 1595. Brutal wars have just ended in an uneasy peace between Protestant Sweden and Orthodox Russia. We focus on the spiritual defeats of two conquered Finnish brothers, one a hardened near-psychopathic war hero, the other a gentle scientist in an age with no use for such men. They find themselves in the swampy interior, demarcating the new border with a unit of sadistic Russians.

    Livide/Livid (2011) dirs. Alexandre Bustillo, Julien Maury.

    French films are pretty hit and miss for me, and so are films by this director duo. I’ve seen 4/8 of Bustillo’s films so far, and 4/10 of Maury’s. This one is a gorgeous Gothic Fantasy take on vampirism and the ‘Mark Gone Bad‘ horror subgenre, where 3 would-be thieves pick the wrong house to rob. Witchy, gory, weird, loved it.

    A Twisted Nightmare!

    Lucie, Ben and William search an old woman’s home for a hidden treasure and they encounter a series of supernatural events that change them forever.

    They Live (1988) dir. John Carpenter.

    In the ‘Greed is Good’ era, John Carpenter made this film – and it’s pretty accurate for today, too. A good double-bill with Yuzna’s Society (1989) for the socio-political critique of the USA. I really like Carpenter’s films, and this was one I haven’t seen yet. Part of the Wake up, Sheeple! subgenre.

    You see them on the street. You watch them on TV. You might even vote for one this fall. You think they’re people just like you. You’re wrong. Dead wrong.

    A lone drifter stumbles upon a unique pair of sunglasses that reveal aliens are systematically gaining control of the Earth by masquerading as humans and lulling the public into submission.

    악마를 보았다/I Saw The Devil (2010) dir. Kim Jee-woon.

    I tend to really enjoy South Korean cinema, especially their Horror stuff, and I liked A Tale of Two Sisters (2003) by the same director, and I like Choi Min-sik in things I’ve seen him in, so I thought I’d give this one a go as well. It did not disappoint! It has a long runtime (145min) but it also has a lot going on. I wasn’t bored, and I didn’t notice the time!

    Abandon all compassion.

    Kyung-chul is a dangerous psychopath who kills for pleasure. Soo-hyeon, a top-secret agent, decides to track down the murderer himself. He promises himself that he will do everything in his power to take vengeance against the killer, even if it means that he must become a monster himself.

    Dark Star (1974) dir. John Carpenter.

    I love the ’70s attitudes here, which is very much like, if we went to space, a lot of really stupid bullshit would happen. It has some real Spike Milligan and M*A*S*H vibes to it, in how bleakly funny it was. I really enjoyed it. I really liked the alien beachball – very cute.

    Bombed Out in Space with a Spaced Out Bomb!

    A group of scientists are sent on a mission to destroy unstable planets. Twenty years into their mission, they have to battle their alien mascot as well as a “sensitive” and intelligent bombing device that starts to question the meaning of its existence.

    The Prince of Darkness (1987) dir. John Carpenter. Back to my roots with the Apocalypse trilogy – I’ve rewatched In The Mouth of Madness more than this one, I think, and I’ve seen The Thing so many times! I fancied evil sentient green goo and more Donald Pleasance.

    Before man walked the earth…It slept for centuries. It is evil. It is real. It is awakening.

    A priest discovers an ancient canister containing a strange liquid in an abandoned church. When a group of graduate students and scientists are tasked with studying it, they unknowingly unleash an evil force waiting to destroy all of humanity.

    Blue Blood (1973) dir. Andrew Sinclair.

    What a ride this was. Oliver Reed and Derek Jacobi are amazing in this, and I’m very glad I watched it. This is basically what my character Wes would be like as a father, and it was fairly horrifying. Really enjoyed Meg Wynn Owen’s performance, along with Fiona Lewis and Anna Gaël… I think this was partly based on the real-life Alexander Thynn, 7th Marquess of Bath, who was in a polyamorous relationship with his wife and wifelets? Pretty sure Anna Gaël was one of his wives?

    Who was possessed by the Devil at Longleat?

    A debauched young aristocrat entrusts the running of his country house to Tom, the butler, on whom he depends absolutely. Before long the servant begins to dominate his master, to the alarm of the newly hired German nanny who senses sinister, demonic intent in Tom’s control of the house.

    Infini (2015) dir. Shane Abbess.

    I don’t care what anyone says about this film, this one really got me. It’s an Australian Sci-Fi body horror, like Event Horizon meets Annihilation, but with an ending I really enjoyed. I actually got emotional.

    Search. Rescue. Destroy.

    A search and rescue team are transported through deep space to a distant mining colony to save the sole survivor of a biological outbreak. During their mission, they find a lethal weapon which is set to arrive on Earth within the hour.

    • ఈశా/Eesha (2025) dir. Srinivas Manne. Supernatural horror. A disappointing start to the month, but not so bad I DNF’d. An Indian film in Telegu, which I don’t hear often, but it really didn’t work for me. I did like the friendship dance, the Swami, and the premise, and the last 20mins of the climax, but the effects let it down a bit.
    • The Bluff (2026) dir. Frank E. Flowers. Historical pirate action/drama. Nothing amazing here, but if you like pirate films such as Cutthroat Island (1995) and want more female captains like Geena Davis, you might get on with this. It’s got a more diverse cast, and the action’s alright.
    • Dark Parasite (2023) dirs. Luca Boni, Marco Ristori. A low budget Italian Sci-Fi Horror, and I think the acting may have been a bit better if the actors hadn’t all had to speak in English; their own language(s) may have sounded more natural? Some casual racism too (from the American character). But overall, for a low budget film, it’s not the worst I’ve seen, and it’s a good concept. Added it to my When the Hideout/Mark Goes Bad horror list.
    • Kill List (2011) dir. Ben Wheatley. Weird Horror. This was a miss for me, but a narrow miss. I really enjoyed the dynamic between Jay and Gal, and I don’t mind the ad libbing style of naturalistic dialogue, but there was something a bit flat about it. I also liked the escalation of the three acts, and the final scene was horrifying (and abrupt!). I’d say definitely give this a watch; it didn’t quite do it for me, but it might hit the spot for you.
    • The Howling (1981) dir. Joe Dante. A classic werewolf film! This is a rewatch, and it’s never been a 4*+ film for me, but it also is one I like to revisit now and again. My favourite werewolf films are Dog Soldiers and Howl, so while I do like how these guys transform, and the werewolf sex in the woods, it’s just a bit too slow-paced for me personally. I never feel 100% gripped by it, and the nice News Lady looks like a Bichon Frise, but it’s one I’ll put on now and then.
    • Escape From New York (1981) dir. John Carpenter. Didn’t quite do it for me as an action film or as a dystopian film, not sure why as I really loved The Duke’s aesthetic and the chandeliers on the cars, and I liked Snake but he was just a bit… bland? Donald Pleasance did a good job as the President, but I wasn’t feeling it with the stakes. Maybe I wasn’t in the mood, or I was just too tired. I think I’ll rewatch this later and see if my opinion changes.
    • Assault on Precinct 13 (1976) dir. John Carpenter. Like Escape From New York, this one didn’t quite work for me. I can see how shocking the ice cream van scene was to a lot of people, but I didn’t get enough of the gang later to really push that home. I loved that Stoker and Leigh survived. I think because the first Action/Suspense seige type film I saw was Sin City, and then I got into action/gangster films like Taxi Driver, Pulp Fiction, Reservoir Dogs, and also I really liked Dog Day Afternoon, I don’t know… I think I just wanted a bit more from the gang itself and some more developed ideas and dynamics within the precinct group. I might just need to watch it again and try to see what its fans see in it.
    • Big Trouble in Little China (1986) dir. John Carpenter. I don’t have the nostalgia around 1980s Fantasy that others do, but the expositional dialogue was funny, there were some good one-liners, and the fantasy stuff was fine, but to be honest, I think I prefer Chinese and Hong Kong fantasy and US/UK Sword and Sorcery. I’m feeling like Carpenter’s stuff is very hit and miss for me depending on the genre.
    • The Beast in the Cellar (1971) dir. James Kelley. I really enjoyed this, not quite enough for it be a highlight, but I liked the interplay between the two sisters, and the isolation of the old house. I did guess what was going on, and I wish we had more of the “Beast” POV, and maybe more of the backstory earlier? But it’s a pretty good film of this type.
    • Urban Ghost Story (1998) dir. Geneviève Jolliffe. I liked this one – it’s a gritty story of Glasgow council flats, social services, and poltergeists. Again, not quite a highlight for me, as I think there were a few things that didn’t quite gel, but I really did like it.
    • Galaxy of Terror (1981) dir. Bruce D. Clark. I DNF’d a number of options from the 1950s before I hit on this one, an 80s Sci-Fi reminiscent of Alien meets Event Horizon, but with a sort of… Krull twist. It wasn’t great, and I didn’t pay a lot of attention to it (I’m pretty ill this week), but it wasn’t a DNF, so it goes on the list.
    • Apex (2026) dir. Baltasar Kormákur. I really enjoyed Kormákur’s Beast (2022) with Idris Elba, so I thought I’d give this Australian wilderness survival cat-and-mouse a go. I wasn’t as gripped by this one as I was by Beast, but it wasn’t bad. I liked the premise and I liked Taron Egerton’s character a lot (no surprise there). I also enjoy Charlize Theron in things.
    • Pandorum (2009) dir. Christian Alvart. This one was pretty good, another survival in space Sci-Fi Horror with some good tropes I enjoy. Not a highlighted watch for me, but I liked it.
    • Sunshine (2007) dir. Danny Boyle. Star-studded cast and some great performances that really lifted this, although the science of it got very woolly and hand-wavy beyond suspension of disbelief. A bit too daft for a highlighted watch, and it took itself too seriously to lean into that. I liked it though! There were some great moments!
    • Sphere (1998) dir. Barry Levinson. Another star-studded cast, with a terrible end for Queen Latifah. What a way to go. This one is also pretty daft, and unintentionally funny (are eggs spheres?? Don’t worry, these ultra venemous snakes attacking you are nocturnal, so they’re only dangerous at night). I liked it, but not as much as I enjoyed Infini. Not quite a highlight. Sorry Samuel L. Jackson.

    Previous Media Round-Ups

    April 2026 Media Round-Up

    Everything I’ve watched, read, and listened to in April! Skim the highlights, or expand the details to see the full lists.

    by cmrosensMay 4, 2026May 1, 2026

    March 2026 Media Round-Up

    Everything I’ve read/watched/listened to in the month of March!

    by cmrosensMarch 31, 2026March 31, 2026

    February 2026 Media Round-Up

    What I read, listened to, and watched in the month of February! Skim the highlights, or expand the details to see the full lists and my thoughts.

    by cmrosensFebruary 28, 2026March 14, 2026

    January 2026 Media Round-Up

    My monthly media round-up for January 2026 – all the books, podcasts, tv shows, and films I’ve been enjoying this month!

    by cmrosensFebruary 1, 2026February 1, 2026

    December 2025 Media Round-Up

    My monthly media round-up for December 2025 – all the books, podcasts, tv shows, and films I read/listened to/watched this month.

    by cmrosensDecember 30, 2025March 14, 2026

    November 2025 Media Round-Up

    I’m starting a new monthly series where I post a round-up of all the media I’ve watched/read/listened to for the previous month. Here is November’s media round-up!

    by cmrosensDecember 5, 2025January 26, 2026

    #BookReview #mediaRoundUp #MovieReview #tvReview

    February 2026 Media Round-Up

    And that was February! My Writing Round-Up for this month is here.

    February was LGBT+ History Month here in the UK; February was chosen for this because it honours the repeal of Section 28 in Feb 2003. You’ll find a theme going on with some of my books as a result, but I’ve been reading whatever grabs me rather than consciously this month, but also with an eye on US Black History Month (February) as well.

    I visited a friend who is well into true crime and history podcasts, so I’ve also gone on a non-fiction spree this month as well. I’ve separated podcasts out this time as a result, as I’ve been listening to a slightly wider variety of them this month.

    You can let me know your thoughts on any of these you’ve heard/read/seen in the comments!

    Table of Contents

  • Musical Greetings
  • Books & Short Stories
  • Podcasts
  • TV Shows & Mini Series
  • Films
  • Musical Greetings

    I would say the artists/bands I’ve listened to the most this month are: Meek, The Struts, Måneskin, and Demi Levato. I really need upbeat tunes with a strong beat for walking and motivation, especially for housework and things like that!

      I am also appreciating a 400-track playlist of Anatolian Psychedelic Rock.

      Qobuz magazine also introduced me to Tigran Hamasyan and his Armenian contemporary jazz/Armenian folk albums, The Bird of a Thousand Voices, and his latest album, Manifeste, via their “Album Release of the Week” feature (06 Feb). I’m so glad I found this, I never would have discovered this genre of music or this artist via Spotify’s algorithms as it’s not at all something I normally listen to.

      I would say this is definitely the most interesting new-to-me thing I’ve listened to this month.

      Best album I’ve heard this month:

      Album: The Bird of a Thousand Voices (2024) – details

      Artist: Tigran Hamasyan

      Genre: Progressive rock, Jazz fusion, Armenian folk music

      Interview with Hamasyan’s filmmaker partner, Ruben Van Leer: Holland Festival Interview.

      On to the main event, however! Here’s a round-up of everything I’ve been reading, listening to, and watching, over this last month. Highlights are in the main sections, and you can expand the details dropdown for full lists.

      Books & Short Stories

      For this month, I’ve opted for a fair number of queer books; bonus points if there are historical fiction elements within them. I’ve read some non-fiction this month as well, so it’s split into two sections for non-fiction & fiction this time!

      I’ve read a few short story collections this month too, and I’ve highlighted my favourite stories from this read-through. You can expand the details section to see what they were. As I’m not sure if highlights are picked up by screenreaders, or how well the highlights show up for other readers, I’ve also put an asterisk in front of the titles.

      Non-Fiction

      The Life and Struggles of Our Mother Walatta Petros by Galawdewos (1672) eds. and trans. Wendy Laura Belcher and Michael Kleiner (2015).

      We’ve had this one on the shelf for a while; it has some really interesting insights into same-sex desire at this time through the things recorded about Walatta Petros, and the introduction has some fascinating points on the collaborative nature of the translation. I really love the photographs of the manuscript illuminations, which are printed in colour.

      The Life and Struggles of Our Mother Walatta Petros: a seventeenth-century African biography of an Ethiopian woman (1672) tells the story of an Ethiopian saint who led a successful nonviolent movement to preserve African Christian beliefs in the face of European protocolonialism. When the Jesuits tried to convert the Ethiopians from their ancient form of Christianity, Walatta Petros (1592–1642), a noblewoman and the wife of one of the emperor’s counselors, risked her life by leaving her husband, who supported the conversion effort, and leading the struggle against the Jesuits. After her death, her disciples wrote this book, praising her as a friend of women, a devoted reader, a skilled preacher, and a radical leader. One of the earliest stories of African resistance to European influence, this biography also provides a picture of domestic life, including Walatta Petros’s life-long relationship with a female companion.

      Richly illustrated with dozens of color illustrations from early manuscripts, this groundbreaking volume provides an authoritative and highly readable translation along with an extensive introduction. Other features include a chronology of Walatta Petros’s life, maps, a comprehensive glossary, and detailed notes on textual variants.

      Fiction

      Loving Safoa by Liza Wemakor.

      Another Neon Hemlock novella. This one is Black lesbian vampires! If you liked Jewelle Gomez’s The Gilda Stories, you’ll definitely like this, I think. I loved this, especially the community-centred, hopeful ethos, and the sweet lesbian love story at its core. Read my full review here.

      When schoolteacher Cynthia gets a tattoo at a block party in 1991 Flatbush, she doesn’t realize she’s embarking on a life-changing romance with an immortal Ghanaian vampire. Cynthia’s affair with Safoa weaves together stories from nineteenth century Ghana, late twentieth century New York and a near future reality in Maryland that defies the utopian/dystopian binary.

      Black Velvet by Fox N. Locke. I really enjoyed this one. It is a contemporary paranormal YA coming-of-age story that is so deeply small-English-town messy and grounded, despite being about ghosts and necromancy. Set the year of the London bombings (which took place 07/07/2005), it tackles queerness, transness, bigotry, fear, and suicide ideation, as well eating disorders and grief.

      After a near death experience, a troubled young trans man is haunted by the ghost of Elvis Presley. As if that wasn’t enough, he soon discovers he can bring things back from the dead.

      Set in 2005, Black Velvet follows emo music obsessive Aaron Phillips as he navigates a barely breathing music career, a fraying romantic relationship, and fragile mental health seven years after the disappearance of his dad. Wracked with academic ennui, depression and gender dysphoria, Aaron and the afterlife will have to get reacquainted before he can finally find solace.

      A powerful exploration of love, loss, and queerness, Black Velvet balances the supernatural with the agonies and apathies of confronting adulthood in the MySpace era.

      Perfect for adult millennials who grew up when My Chemical Romance and Fall Out Boy were at the height of the cultural zeitgeist.

      For fans of The Lovely Bones, Cemetery Boys, Life is Strange, and Turtles All The Way Down.

      Skin Folk by Nalo Hopkinson.

      I’ve had this one on my TBR for ages, ever since my Red Riding Hood post from Feb 2024. I finally dived in, two years later. This is a collection of original short fiction, so I’ve listed them in the details section below and highlighted my favourite stories. I would recommend reading the review by Casey the Canadian Lesbrarian for some really well-thought-out considerations of this collection.

      Stories in the collection, click to expand.

      I really liked all the stories, and so the highlights are almost all the book; it was actually hard to decide which I liked best over the others. I think this is just my first reading opinion. If I re-read this collection another time, I may highlight a different set of stories, or have one that stands out above all the others which didn’t before. But here are my first-time impressions, the ones that stood out to me in this initial read through, and the ones that lingered persistently in my mind afterwards. It’s not the ones I thought it would be!

      “Riding the Red”

      *”Money Tree”

      *”Something to Hitch Meat To”

      “Snake” (CW: peadophilia)

      “Under Glass”

      “The Glass Bottle Trick”

      *”Slow Cold Chick”

      *”Fisherman”

      *”Tan-Tan and Dry Bone”

      *”Greedy Choke Puppy”

      “A Habit of Waste”

      “And the Lillies-Them-A-Blow”

      *”Whose Upward Flight I Love”

      “Ganger (Ball Lightning)”

      *”Precious”

      The award-winning author of Brown Girl in the Ring and Midnight Robber presents a powerful new collection of short fiction that draws on the folklore and legends of the Caribbean in sensual and disturbing tales that capture the dark worlds of the soucouyant (vampire) and lagahoo (werewolf). Original.

      Bump in the Night by Lara Kinsey.

      This one is a 20pg F/F Victorian London set short story that I have read before and enjoyed. I wanted something sweet, light, and spicy, and that’s what you get here. It is very short, but I think just long enough. I am always happy to infer and intuit things in parts where stuff isn’t explicitly stated, and my mind usually fills in the gaps at breakneck speed, so the length really isn’t a problem. A comfort re-read for when all I want is a girl banging a ghost.

      Wallflower Agnes has spent too many seasons with no proposals in sight. A little magic is just what she needs. But divination is a tricky business. The flickering candlelight has her jumping at shadows.

      She didn’t ask for a scrappy thief in her kitchen, ogling her in her nightclothes and making her head spin. But Flash’s wicked proposition captures her attention. Can Agnes bargain for a brighter future? And at what price?

      4,000 words ending in Happily Ever….Afterlife.

      Skin Thief by Suzan Palumbo.

      Another re-read, and another Neon Hemlock offering. This is one of my favourite short story collections by a single author; Paula D. Ashe’s visceral We Are Here To Hurt Each Other is the other. Palumbo’s collection is a wonderfully dark ride through Canadian and Trinidadian folklore, queer experiences, and immigrant experiences, filled with elements of intersectional identities, and a rich tapestry of perspectives.

      Stories in the collection – click to expand

      The highlights from this read are different to previous reads; the following stories are the ones that really struck me for some reason in this specific read-through.

      *”The Pull of the Herd”

      *”Personal Rakshasi”

      “Her Voice, Unmasked”

      “Of Claw and Bone”

      “Propagating Peonies”

      *”Kill Jar” (original novelette)

      *”Tessellated”

      *”Laughter Among the Trees”

      “Apolepisi: A De-Scaling”

      *”Tara’s Mother’s Skin”

      *”The Bride”

      *”Douen”

      ONE OF BOOK RIOT’S BEST BOOKS OF 2023

      The stories in this collection of dark fantasy and horror short stories grapple with the complexities of identity, racism, homophobia, immigration, oppression and patriarchy through nature, gothic hauntings, Trinidadian folklore and shape shifting. At the heart of the collection lie the questions: how do we learn to accept ourselves? How do we live in our own skin?

      Cover illustration by Mia Minnis. Cover design by dave ring.

      Where the Dead Brides Gather by Nuzo Onoh.

      A book group read. I had a lot of thoughts about this, but I’m not sure how to phrase any of them. I know I liked it a lot, and I was really drawn through Bata’s story. I don’t know if I liked it more than Amos Tutuola’s My Life in the Bush of Ghosts or not. I didn’t like it as much as Vagabonds! by Eloghosa Osunde. I definitely want to read more by Onoh.

      A powerful Nigeria-set tale of possession, malevolent ghosts, family tensions, secrets and murder from the recipient of the Bram Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement and ‘Queen of African Horror’.

      Bata, an eleven-year-old girl tormented by nightmares, wakes up one night to find herself standing sentinel before her cousin’s door. Her skin, hair, and eyes have turned a dazzling white colour, which even the medicine-man can’t heal. Her cousin is to get married the next morning, but only if she can escape the murderous attack of a ghost-bride, who used to be engaged to her groom.

      Through the night, Bata battles the vengeful ghost and finally vanquishes it before collapsing. On awakening, she has no recollection of the events. And when the medicine-man tries to exorcise the entities clinging to her body as a result of her supernatural possession, Bata dies on the exorcism mat. There begins her journey. She is taken into Ibaja-La, the realm of dead brides, by Mmuọ-Ka-Mmuọ, the ghost-collector of the spirit realm. There she meets the ghosts of brides from every culture who died tragically before their weddings; both the kind and the malevolent. Bata is given secret powers to fight the evil ghost-brides before being sent back to the human realm, where she must learn to harness her new abilities as she strives to protect those whom she loves.

      Occupying Bodies – an anthology of body horror short stories compiled by Bernardo Villela and edited by Dean Shawker (Black Hare Press).

      I dipped into my author copy (my story in here is called ‘Along the Xylophone Road‘) to check out the other stories in this collection, and I found a few that I liked! I won’t do the highlighted faves here, because I haven’t finished it yet.

      Podcasts

      I’ve also listened to two story podcasts this month; HorrorBabble again for the classic short stories, and Shadows at the Door for classic and original stories as audiodramas, rather than narrations. Again, you can expand the details section and see which episodes I’ve listened to, and which I especially enjoyed (these are highlighted and asterisked). I’ve separated these out from the books this time as I read quite a lot this month, and I didn’t watch a lot of TV!

      I listened to one non-fiction podcast, which was Behind the Bastards, just the one mini-series, which was a story on the Zizians. I appreciated the format, and might listen to a few more of their stories.

      Non-Fiction

      I visited some friends and we had a few days hanging out and crafting and listening to Behind the Bastards, specifically their 4-part story on the Zizians. This story is absolutely wild. I liked the format of the podcast and I might well listen to more.

      Fiction

      HorrorBabble was again a key feature of this month! Click on the details below to see which stories I listened to. My faves are highlighted. Full warning: there is so much 19thC racism, ableism, and all the other -isms in so many of these…

      List of all the HorrorBabble episodes listened to in February (highlighted ones are faves)

      “The Death of Halpin Frayser” by Ambrose Bierce (35:17)

      “Demons of the Sea” by William Hope Hodgson (24:08)

      *“Tony and the Beetles” by Philip K. Dick (31:37)

      “A:B:O” by Walter de la Mare (writing as Walter Ramal) (42:16)

      *”The Screaming Skull” by F. Marion Crawford (01:10:54)

      “The Empty House” by Algernon Blackwood (40:06)

      *”The Ebony Frame” by Edith Nesbit (31:41)

      “It Will Grow on You / A Tale of Body Horror” by Donald Wandrei (28:04)

      “The Dweller in the Gulf” by Clark Ashton Smith (42:50)

      *”All Cats are Grey” by Andre Norton (17:55)

      “The Vaults of Yoh Vombis” by Clark Ashton Smith (53:22)

      “An Occurence at Owl Creek Bridge” by Ambrose Bierce (28:56)

      “Three Skeleton Key” by George Toudouze (29:02)

      “In the Forest of Villefére / A Tale of Lycanthropy” by Robert E. Howard (09:52)

      *”The Waxwork” by A.M. Burrage (18:13)

      *”The Pendulum” by Ray Bradbury (14:46)

      *”The Festival” by H.P. Lovecraft (22:40)

      *”The Signal-Man / A Classic Ghost Story” by Charles Dickens (27:56)

      *”Sredni Vashtar” by Saki (14:41)

      *”The Disinterment of Venus” by Clark Ashton Smith (20:01)

      *”The Red Lodge / A Classic Ghost Story” by H. Russell Wakefield (33:13)

      *”Far Below / A Lovecraftian Tale of the New York Subway” by Robert Barbour Johnson (38:21)

      *”The Trap” by H.P. Lovecraft and Henry S. Whitehead (01:00:51)

      *”The Thing in the Cellar” by David H. Keller (17:41)

      *”The Statement of Randolph Carter” by H.P. Lovecraft (19:15)

      *”The Cat-Woman” by Mary Elizabeth Counselman (14:51)

      *”Lost Hearts” by M.R. James (27:17)

      *”The House Among the Laurels: A Carnacki, the Ghost-Finder Story” (44:33)

      *”The Black Kiss / A Weird Tale of the Sea” by Robert Bloch and Henry Kuttner (52:49)

      “Church in the Jungles” by Arthur J. Burks (14:25)

      *”The Invaders” by Henry Kuttner / A Cthulhu Mythos Story (45:01)

      *”The Black Crusader” by Alicia Ramsey (38:01)

      *”The Hanging Stranger” / Horror meets Sci Fi by Philip K. Dick (38:51)

      Shadows at the Door has been recommended to me so much now that I’ve dived in this month. I’m really loving it. Episodes listened to are below in the dropdown list, and my faves are highlighted. I also really like the chat after each performance; I’ve had some interesting takeaways from each one so far.

      Shadows at the Door episodes listened to in February (highlights are faves)

      *”Leave a Light on For Me” by Mark Dixon (54:34)

      “The Devil and Tom Walker” by Washington Irving (54:00)

      *”Let Sleeping Gods Lie” by Gemma Amor (57:54)

      *”The Signalman” by Charles Dickens (49:36)

      *”Winter Wings” by Christopher Long (01:07:23)

      *”Pit Village” by Mark Dixon (01:02:59)

      “Number 13” by M.R. James (57:33)

      “Quicksilver Spirit” by Pete Alex Harris (01:10:38)

      *”Silent Warnings” by Mark Dixon (01:09:19)

      TV Shows & Mini Series

      I didn’t really watch a lot of these this month but I’ve had fun with the ones I did watch. Not so much “fun” in the case of the documentaries, but I appreciated them, and found them really compelling and powerful.

      Documentaries

      Escaping Twin Flames (2023) dir. Cecilia Peck.

      God what a trip. I went through this because ‘Twin Flames’ is a concept mentioned in Onoh’s book, Where the Dead Brides Gather, and I had no idea it wasn’t just a cutesy New Age concept. This documentary was recced in book club, and… oh no. It’s a whole thing. Check for trigger warnings before watching.

      Explores the story of Jeff and Shaleia Divine, the leaders of Twin Flames Universe, who sell online classes that guarantee harmonious union with your destined partner, a controversial online community that preys on people looking for love.

      Death Cap: The Mushroom Murders (2025) dir. Gil Marsden.

      I watched this for the fungi, although I’m not into true crime generally! I think it’s a well-made documentary, but it does highlight how ghoulish reporting on these cases can be, and I felt kind of icky watching it, although I got more and more drawn in.

      A deadly beef wellington at a family lunch in Gippsland, Australia killed three and critically injured one. Erin Patterson, a suburban mom, was later convicted for the incident.

      Fiction Series

      Dark Shadows (1991) created by Dan Curtis.

      I’ve seen a lot of the original 1960s version (also created by Dan Curtis) and have some of the DVD box sets of a few seasons before Barnabas appears, and after. I’ve also seen the 2012 film, which Tim Burton ballsed right up (although I did laugh at the Carolyn werewolf reveal, which is a nod to the original show). This, however, is worth a watch of all 12 of its 90min episodes, and deserved that Emmy award. Sad that there’s no S02; only one plotline gets sort of resolved.

      Victoria Winters comes to Collinwood, an isolated mansion in Maine, to work as a governess, but soon finds herself drawn into a strange world of vampires, ghosts and curses.

      Fallout (2024-) created by Geneva Robertson-Dworet and
      Graham Wagner.

      I caught up on Season 02 this month, after starting it in January. Really enjoying it. It’s made me want a series based on Bioshock! And I also really wish I could access the Silent Hill franchise from somewhere, but most of the films aren’t streaming in the UK that I can see? Anyway, I really enjoyed S02.

      In a future, post-apocalyptic Los Angeles brought about by nuclear decimation, citizens must live in underground bunkers to protect themselves from radiation, mutants and bandits.

      Clarice (2021-) created by Alex Kurtzman and
      Jenny Lumet.

      I know it hasn’t been renewed or officially cancelled, and it can’t feature Hannibal, but you know what, he’s got his own show. This is a fine police procedural with a main character suffering from PTSD, developing her character as a separate person. It also addresses the problematic stuff in Silence of the Lambs with a trans character played by Jen Richards, a trans actress, which was discussed a lot online at the time. I was happy with how the series ended, even though there’s space for more.

      A look at the personal story of FBI agent Clarice Starling, as she returns to the field about a year after the events of The Silence of the Lambs (1991).

      Films

      Highlighted films with posters were my favourites this month. I have a complete list of all the films I watched in the details below; click to expand and see the full list.

      倩女幽魂 / A Chinese Ghost Story (1987) dir. Tony Ching Siu-Tung.

      Retro Action Fantasy-Horror that I found – a fab piece of Hong Kong cinema. Some fantastic 80s effects and body horror moments, enjoyable action sequences, and very funny. I can see why loads of people like it or are really nostalgic about it.

      Old Evil is coming to collect the bride.

      A naïve young tax collector for the imperial government winds up spending the night in a haunted temple. There he falls in love with a beautiful woman who, unfortunately, is dead. With the aid of a powerful Daoist Swordsman, he must defeat undead hordes, overcome a sinister Tree Demoness, and descend to the pits of hell, to fight for the spirit he loves.

      When A Stranger Calls (1979) dir. Fred Walton.

      Ok so on my first watch, years ago, it didn’t really grab me. This time around I’m much more impressed. While the 1st act is essentailly a tight standalone short horror film, The 2nd act takes that and tears it apart, and has a much more nuanced take on mental illness and the inherent issues of societal rehabilitation than you’d expect; the 3rd act wraps it up and robs you of the usual sense of justice/catharsis. I think this is a good double-bill with Psycho II, for pretty much the same themes.

      Every babysitter’s nightmare becomes real…

      A student babysitter has her evening disturbed when the phone rings. So begins a series of increasingly terrifying and threatening calls that lead to a shocking revelation.

      (This blurb is literally a description of the first 20mins only. Then the rest of the film happens.)

      Deep Rising (1998) dir. Stephen Sommers.

      This is my 6th Sommers film, and it was entertaining. Sadly, as it’s the 1990s, the best characters are the ones who do not survive, mainly because they are Black, Asian, British, and Aussie. Nevertheless, the action scenes were fun, and the last 10secs of the ending made me laugh so hard I gave it an extra star. On my Letterboxd list: Crime Doesn’t Pay: ‘When the Hideout/Mark Goes Bad’ Horror

      Full scream ahead.

      A group of heavily armed hijackers board a luxury ocean liner in the South Pacific Ocean to loot it, only to do battle with a series of large-sized, tentacled, man-eating sea creatures who have taken over the ship first.

      Vestige (2023) dir. Joseph Simmons. 13mins runtime.

      A really tight short film about grief and growing up with parental absence, which twists into Weird Fiction/Sci-Fi Horror yet still manages to hold the slowburn feel and emotional impact. I enjoyed this a lot; always up for a bit of Yorkshire Gothic/Weird.

      A young boy searches for answers after his dad goes missing at sea, but after discovering a strange fossil on a Yorkshire beach, he thinks it could be the missing piece of the puzzle.

      Event Horizon (1997) dir. Paul W. S. Anderson.

      A rewatch – the day I decided on a Sam Neill double-bill. This is one of my all-time favourite films. I absolutely love this concept and the way the ship looks like a monster in the poster, like a weird metal flying dragon thing. This is my favourite ‘haunted house in space that wants to kill you’ film, I think.

      Infinite space. Infinite terror.

      In 2047, a group of astronauts are sent to investigate and salvage the starship Event Horizon which disappeared mysteriously seven years before on its maiden voyage. However, it soon becomes evident that something sinister resides in its corridors.

      In the Mouth of Madness (1994) dir. John Carpenter.

      Sam Neill double-bill! I thought going for Posession as a triple threat would be too much in one day. Now, I do love The Thing and Prince of Darkness, but I think that this one is possibly my personal favourite of the three, or at least the one I rewatch the most out of them all. I really like it.

      Lived any good books lately?

      An insurance investigator visits a small town while looking into the strange disappearance of a popular horror novelist. He soon finds that the impact of the author’s books is far more than inspirational.

      Pitch Black (2000) dir. David Twohy.

      New to me, but I watched this twice this month. I wasn’t into Sci Fi or Action when this came out originally, and definitely not Horror. Now, I’m not sure I will ever be normal about it. I’m watching the trilogy in preparation for Riddick IV: Furya to be released, slated for this year. This is my fave out of the 3 – see the “Details” section below for my thoughts on the others.

      Don’t be afraid of the dark. Be afraid of what’s in the dark

      When their ship crash-lands on a remote planet, the marooned passengers soon learn that escaped convict Riddick isn’t the only thing they have to fear. Deadly creatures lurk in the shadows, waiting to attack in the dark, and the planet is rapidly plunging into the utter blackness of a total eclipse. With the body count rising, the doomed survivors are forced to turn to Riddick with his eerie eyes to guide them through the darkness to safety. With time running out, there’s only one rule: Stay in the light.

      The Whisperer in Darkness (2011) dir. Sean Branney.

      A rewatch. I really enjoy the way this is shot as a 1950s Golden Age of pulp Sci-Fi sort of film. I think that’s a really innovative way to get around the fact that the Mi-Go are basically… really shit monsters, and to make them not shit, you have to invest loads in costume design, animatronics, CGI, whatever. Here, they look fine, because they’re meant to look shit. Genius.

      In the deepest woods of the most remote hills… a dark mystery BEYOND BELIEF!

      Folklore professor Albert Wilmarth investigates legends of strange creatures in the most remote hills of Vermont. His enquiry reveals a terrifying glimpse of the truth that lurks behind the legends.

      Vari/The Shadow (2024) dir. Jaak Kilmi.

      Estonian historical crime thriller/horror, new to me. I watched the first 5mins and decided I was going to like it. It’s not often someone living with unmedicated schizophrenia is a sympathetic protagonist in this genre. This is very much in the same vein as The Pale Blue Eye, Raven’s Hollow, and Gogol, but slower, and without any supernatural elements. I would have liked a few more scenes with the killer, I think.

      A poet. A madman. A detective.

      Juhan Liiv, a struggling poet and an unlikely detective, solves gruesome murder cases in Estonia, the Wild West of the crumbling Russian Empire in the 1890s. Investigations take him to miserable dwellings of the local Estonian peasants, luxurious castles of German nobility that have sworn allegiance to the Czar, and to the depths of ancient forests where witchcraft is still practiced. Juhan is fighting crime and his own inner demons. He is considered mad and pronounced crazy. But by standing for justice and truth, at the end of the day, he is the sanest of them all.

      Mother of Flies (2025) dirs. John Adams, Zelda Adams, and Toby Poser.

      An absolutely incredible achievement in indie filmmaking, honestly. A really touching folk horror/body horror film about cancer, grief, faith, and loss of children. The visuals are really striking and vivid. There is a LOT of graphic baby death (stillbirth and necromancy).

      When a young woman faces a deadly diagnosis, she seeks dark magic from a witch in the woods… but every cure has costs.

      Other films watched in February: not highlighted but not DNFs, all enjoyed in some way.
      • Scarecrows (1988) dir. William Wesley. I would watch this again; there is no explanation given for anything, but the camera lingers on a photograph in the farmhouse of 3 men with rifles, the three crosses in the graveyard, the main 3 scarecrows, and the generator, which seems to be important regarding the scarecrows’ animation. I reckon there’s enough in that to work out some sort of backstory by yourself. On my Letterboxd list: Crime Doesn’t Pay: ‘When the Hideout/Mark Goes Bad’ Horror
      • Rites of Spring (2011) dir. Padraig Reynolds. I’ve watched 3 of 6 Reynolds films now, and this isn’t the best of the 3. It’s a messy dovetail of a story that fails to really pull the ending together. There was more we could have done; I felt there was a lot of good stuff here, but it never quite got to shine. Rachel never got to confess her work mistake to Ben who was fired for it, which would have deepened the interpersonal drama; the folk horror elements weren’t fully embraced, or combined. The ending fell very flat for me. That said, I can see myself watching this again if I’m in the right mood and forget some of it. On my Letterboxd list: Crime Doesn’t Pay: ‘When the Hideout/Mark Goes Bad’ Horror
      • The Chronicles of Riddick (2004) dir. David Twohy. I liked this, I didn’t quite like it as much as Pitch Black, and I think Twohy was a bit too ambitious in its scope. This would have been a really good film if it had focused on the prison break at Crematoria, and expanded on the characters in and out of the prison, so we got a better sense of who Jack/Kyra was, and got more invested in the prisoners and mercenaries. It didn’t really need the Necros frame, as that was very Krull meets Conan and Beastmaster in space, with a splash of Flash Gordon (aah-aaah). I am really liking the worldbuilding and the action in these, though, and this one had a lot I like. It certainly had a load of great actors including Dame Judi Dench, but I can see why some people didn’t like it. This feels like a video game or book series, but it’s an original story; I think it definitely deserves a lot of kudos for that, to be honest. It’s got such a great feel to it. Sure, it’s also derivative, but it’s fun.
      • Riddick (2013) dir. David Twohy. Again, this was fun, and back to its roots of survival on a hostile planet, but I didn’t think it was quite as fun as Pitch Black so it doesn’t get to be a highlight. Also, I didn’t like the implication at the end that the lesbian character wouldn’t fuck men except Riddick, and I choose to believe she was joking and nothing happened. I did like the wrap-up of the Johns storyline from Pitch Black. Again, a decent cast.
      • Osiris (2025) dir. William Kaufman. No, sorry, this one wasn’t for me. We opened still making unidentified “Middle Eastern” coded Muslims fighting the Yanks the bad guys, which I’m pretty much over, and then it was fairly run-of-the-mill from there. The action was pretty decent, it was watchable, the alien design was totally fine, and I liked the spaceship labyrinth setting, but ultimately nothing special and it fell flat for me. I enjoyed it enough to keep watching and not DNF.
      • Devil’s Knot (2013) dir. Atom Egoyan. I liked this one. I’m not sure I liked it enough for it to be a highlighted film, but I definitely thought it was a bunch of good performances. I’m not sure that I got enough of any one element in the film that would have made it a great film. It felt like there was a lot that could have been done with this that it shied away from? I’m not sure. But I thought it was decent for the heavy subject matter.
      • Dracula: A Love Story (2025) dir. Luc Besson. So, I had decided not to watch/rent this, but some friends streamed it while I was there, so I ended up watching it anyway. Firstly, I didn’t fancy yet another Dracula adaptation. Secondly, Besson has been accused of rape, sexual harrassment, sexual misconduct, and of grooming a 12yo girl. Thirdly, I’m not into French cinema in a huge way, I don’t by any means dislike it, but it’s not something I vibe with the most. That said – Dracula is not objectively a bad film. It’s campy fun where the CGI was notably not where the money went. It has a recognisable but pretty solid script with lines taken from the novel and from the wider Dracula mythos, and owes a great deal to Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (2006), an adaptation of the Patrick Süskind novel. It has a Danny Elfman score that riffs offWojciech Kilar‘s score for Coppola’s version, which in turn was riffing off John Williams‘s score for John Badham’s Dracula (1979). It was aesthetically pleasing, there was a lot going on, and I did enjoy it as an attempt at romantic tragedy rather than a horror film. That said, there were, as expected, things I just didn’t like about it and didn’t vibe with as much. Close to being a highlighted one, but just fell short for me.
      • Setan Alas! / The Draft! (2023) dir. Yusron Fuadi. Not my fave concept but it’s a fun take on the ‘stuck in a loop’ sort of film. In this one, five students are trapped in an old villa, and are then unable to escape it… because their lives are being written and revised by someone writing a movie script. It’s supremely meta, where they get stuck with continuity errors, plot holes, and all sorts of things that really mess up their lives. Dead friends come back to life after being inexplicably murdered, and rewrites fuck with their perception of time and reality. It’s such a good idea, but I guess it didn’t work for me so much. It’s a Sci-Fi Horror, it has some great moments, but I sadly didn’t enjoy it as much as I wanted to.
      • Black Goat (2026) dir. David Hinds. So – overall, this is a reasonable British indie horror. If you’ve seen a lot of indie British horror, you will have an idea of where to place your expectations. Start a bit low – no, too low, raise them slightly. No, too high, lower them a bit. Up a bit. Down a bit. Perfect. There we go. In all seriousness – not the worst acting, not the worst SFX, not the worst plot, not the worst script. Black guy dies first – sigh. It’s just focusing on two brothers from there, Ben and Mike, and Ben’s reluctant mission to get water samples from a mysterious pond for the Forestry Commission. It’s fairly predictable, but that’s why we watch these sorts of films, isn’t it? Sometimes I don’t need shining bouts of directorial genius, I want to watch two men hiking in the woods and avoiding talking about the important stuff, like their fraternal relationship, and Mike’s drinking. And along the way – evil cosmic goatman. Why not.

      #BookReview #filmReview #mediaRoundUp #MovieReview #tvReview

      January 2026 Media Round-Up

      Here’s my January round up of all the media I’ve read/watched/listened to this month! I’m going to try and keep this to the highlights, but I usually DNF things I’m not enjoying and they don’t get counted. Positivity only in this space! …Although the content itself may be not so positive.

      As a bonus, I’m going to let you know my favourite song of the month too. I’ve just switched from Spotify to Qobuz, a music streaming service based in France, as Qobuz pays artists more per track while still costing the same, and also has a much better sound quality. Most of my playlist content has transferred over fine, but the one artist I was devastated is not fully on there yet is Felix Hagan.

      There is one song of his on there currently though: Happy Songs (2025), from the brand new album of the same name which smashed its goal on Kickstarter. I’m really hopeful that the whole album will drop on Qobuz as well.

      Happy Songs by Felix Hagan is definitely my favourite song from the start of the month. LISTEN ON QOBUZ

      As I go on my Qobuz journey, I’ll be looking for new music to replace the tracks I loved to listen to on Spotify but that aren’t on Qobuz yet, and finding (I hope) new obsessions. I’ll be adding this into my media round-up just for fun!

      On to the main event: books, shows, and films. This month I’m experimenting with highlighting my favourites, and listing everything else. I was off sick this month, so there’s a lot of them.

      Books, Audiobooks, Story Podcasts

      These are the highlights of what I’ve read/listened to this month. I’ve been really spoiled for ARCs! That’s one really lovely bonus of offering the author spotlights – the small presses that get in touch with me for their authors sometimes offer a reader copy for me to frame the interview questions around.

      (I never ask for this and I do not expect it, and frankly, I couldn’t ever read one per author! But for the small presses, I know they’re going to be in genres I already like and would want to read, so I often accept these if offered.)

      Best Friends Bury Bodies by C.M. Rosens.

      You know what, I’m counting this. I read this cover-to-cover for the revisions and edits, and it’s a 78K novel, so this is on my round-up.

      When their search for a missing music star leads to murder, how far will his old friends go?

      Midsomer Murders meets The Forty Year Kiss. A contemporary mystery with middle-aged polyamorous bisexual second chance romance.

      Sarah believes she’s happy with her life despite never really dealing with her partner’s sudden death six years ago; her job is fine, her friends are supportive, her girlfriend Sammie is amazing. But when her estranged soulmate, Bas, reaches out after a 12 year absence, Sarah’s carefully cultivated rut is thrown into chaos.

      Her best friends are all for tracking down the prodigal member of their close-knit group, who drifted away from them when he got famous, spiralled into addiction, then disappeared. But finding a long-lost 1990s rock star is the least of their worries, when it catapaults them into the middle of a murder investigation in the sleepy Surrey village where he’s been recovering.

      With skeletons falling out of every closet, and lives upended everywhere they turn, what will they do when another body shows up, and both Sarah and Bas are implicated?

      I got an ARC of Dianna Gunn‘s Gothic Fantasy novel, Woman of Sorrow and Blood. This is a sensuous, bisexual, sapphic vampire tale, set in richly built world of pleasure, pain, and power. I really enjoyed it, and read it fairly quickly; poor Alma is not very quick on the uptake, bless her, but there’s a decent climax and I was very satisfied with the ending. This one squeaked in right at the end of the month; I just finished it in time for this post! Read my full review.

      When 18-year-old Alma is invited to live with Nightfather and pursue the Pleasures of Power, she’s determined to win his affection and ultimate gift: eternal life.

      Yet life in the House of Night is not what she expected. Nightfather spends all of his time alone with Nightmother, leaving his second wife to rule with an iron fist. The servants brought from Alma’s home are hollowed out versions of their former selves. Others—including Alma’s own mentor—have disappeared entirely.

      Alma buries her suspicions and throws herself into attending to the Daughter of Night, an extraordinary woman who requires special care.

      When Nightfather calls upon Alma at last, she begins to see that his eternity is not a reward but a trap—and that it is not him, but the woman he calls his daughter, that her heart longs for. But tragedy lurks in every corner, and sometimes the only escape is death.

      Once Upon A Song by Nadine Bells – an ARC Read from Quill & Crow Publishing. I got into this book a lot more from the midpoint, and as it took off into the resolution and climax, I really enjoyed it. This Snow Queen retelling was fairly well done, although there were elements I personally didn’t vibe with. If you’re looking for a quick, lightweight and entertaining Gothic read, this is one to look out for and pre-order from your local store or library. Read my full review.

      Welcome to the Hôtel de Neige. Let yourself be swept away by its grandeur and glamor, but beware…the cold may swallow you whole.

      When lonely waitress Ana lands a job as a singer at the prestigious Hôtel de Neige, she believes it to be the beginning of her fairytale. Yet she soon finds that in those eerie halls, the line between Cinderella story and Gothic nightmare blurs. Sinister dreams cause her to sleepwalk, a ballerina makes ominous threats, and a phantom in white haunts the hotel—and Ana.

      As Ana discovers that the hotel’s last singer lost his life under mysterious circumstances, she needs to decide if happily-ever-after is worth it. She knows she cannot trust her secretive colleagues or the charming but elusive hotel manager, Dimitri. All Ana ever wanted was to belong, but at the Hôtel de Neige, that may mean never leaving again…

      The Dreaming of Man by Nikoline Kaiser. I got a copy from Neon Hemlock Press.

      I love “Innsmouth” stories, and this is one of the better ones for sure. It has a trans man protagonist and plays with Shakespeare as well.

      “An eerie, anxious read, crawling with tentacles of loss, regret, and uncanny coincidence. Nikoline Kaiser’s voice recalls the timbre of a rotting, bygone place and time while remaining fresh and crisp. A true joy for lovers of the weird!” —A.Z. Louise, author of Off-Time Jive

      After receiving a letter telling him terrible news, Doctor Lawrence Cooper visits the small harbor-town Osmund in search of answers. Though something is clearly wrong there, Lawrence keeps finding reasons to stay: the sake of a young girl he meets, and to get to the bottom of his one-time lover’s suspicious death.

      And the longer he stays, the more Lawrence is drawn into Osmund’s peculiar mysteries.

      Cover Illustration by JJ Epping.

      Death Valley Blooms by S.M. Mack is an interesting novella out with Neon Hemlock Press, a queer ecohorror about the inevitability of the landscape and the desert claiming its dues. It’s a tragic meditation on bodily autonomy and the survival of a landscape that uses humanity to thrive, but will outlast them.

      Death Valley Blooms is a breathtaking, atmospheric novella that explores hard-hitting topics such as gendered inheritance, mourning, and sacrifice with an impressively light touch. S.M. Mack’s writing is full of humor and sobriety, which held my attention from start to finish. If you enjoy stories that bridge meditative, slice-of-life scenes with fast-paced action, this book will not disappoint.” — Liza Wemakor, author of Loving Safoa

      Every decade or so, vast quantities and varieties of wildflowers bloom all at once in Death Valley. But unbeknownst to the wider world, these super blooms are powered by a woman’s life. Mar Ramse lost her mother to Death Valley as a teenager and would give anything to break her family’s curse, but now the desert whispers its call to her. However, she still has a single ace up her sleeve: neither she nor her brother will ever have children. Is it enough for the desert to release its grip on her family? 

      Cover illustration by Rose Meyer. Cover design by dave ring.

      Some classics in here, and new content by narrator Ian Gordon. This is a compilation of a number of stories, and Vol 1 is available on YouTube.

      I have not finished this one yet.

      The HorrorBabble podcast is one I’m listening to a lot, just to get a short story fix as that’s all I can really concentrate on currently. I don’t enjoy every classic story they read out, but I really like the range of tales I’m listening to and the classic authors I’m able to access via their podcast. I usually listen before bed for an hour or two, or while I’m doing housework or something.

      Click for the list of HorrorBabble episodes I’ve listened to: short stories by classic horror and weird fiction authors, with their runtime (min:sec). I have highlighted my favourites.

      “Two Black Bottles” by H.P. Lovecraft & Wilfrid Branch Talman (29:51)

      “The Dance of Death” by Algernon Blackwood (25:04)

      “The House of Cards: A Thomas Chadwick Story” by Malcolm Ferguson (33:42)

      “The Red Room” by H.G. Wells (26:06)

      “The Spectre Priestess of Wrightstone” by Herman F. Wright (13:26)

      “A Ghost/The Tale of a Haunted Chateau” by Guy de Maupassant (16:47)

      “Mr. Hyde-and-Seek: A Thomas Chadwick Story” by Malcolm Ferguson (24:14)

      “Stranger at Dusk” by Malcolm Murchie (42:16)

      “The Mandrakes” by Clark Ashton Smith (17:13)

      “The Lurking Fear” by H.P. Lovecraft (54:44)

      “The Gateway of the Monster: A Carnacki, the Ghost-Finder Story” by William Hope Hodgson (51:20)

      “The Horror from the Mound” by Robert E. Howard (45:19)

      “The Thing from the Barrens” by Jim Kjelgaard (37:00)

      “Chickamauga” by Ambrose Bierce (17:31)

      “The Crawling Chaos” by H.P. Lovecraft (20:09)

      “Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad”, by M.R. James (45:57) – listened to x2 because it’s so funny.

      “A Suspicious Gift” by Algernon Blackwood (26:38)

      “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (38:28)

      “Catnip” by Robert Bloch (27:06)

      “To Build a Fire” by Jack London (38:32)

      “The Hound” by H.P. Lovecraft (21:55)

      “An Unnatural Feud” by Norman Douglas (35:20)

      “Caterpillars” by E.F. Benson (19:23)

      “The Shining Pyramid” by Arthur Machen (52:30)

      TV Shows & Mini Series

      I’ve highlighted the shows I’ve really enjoyed this month, and listed the other shows I watched below the highlights. The highlighted ones are my favourite watches. Expand the details of my other watches below these, so you can see the other shows & random Marple/Poirot episodes I watched.

      Started the month catching up on Fallout (2024-), created by Geneva Robertson-Dworet
      and Graham Wagner, which I loved.

      Absolutely amazing. One of my oldest friends has been a massive fan of the games for years, and when we were housemates he had a display cabinet of the figures in our living room – those were my introduction to the games and the world! I’m not fully caught up yet.

      In a future, post-apocalyptic Los Angeles brought about by nuclear decimation, citizens must live in underground bunkers to protect themselves from radiation, mutants and bandits.

      Year of the Rabbit (2019) an 8-part mini-series directed by Ben Taylor and written by Kevin Cecil and Andy Riley that got cancelled over funding issues. It is a rewatch and a comfort watch, as it makes me laugh out loud every episode.

      Mabel (Susan Wokoma) demanding to be made a policewoman/Lady Fuzz: “When you adopted me you said you wanted the best for me!!”

      Chief Inspector (Alun Armstrong): “I was mostly thinking about hats!”

      Detective Inspector Rabbit, a dedicated, tough, thick, and oft-inebriated Victorian copper, sleuths his way across London with his two young partners: a doofy rookie and a brilliant Black policewoman no one ever believes.

      Haunted Hotel (2025-) is a rewatch, another comfort show! I hope there’ll be another season soon. Just a really fun cartoon, with lots of family scares.


      A single mom with two kids operates a haunted hotel, aided by her late brother’s ghost who believes they can have ingenious ideas despite his ethereal state.

      West Country Tales (1982-1983). I loved the 9 available episodes I saw on YouTube, I think these are the only ones left out of the 14 that were aired.

      This post, Remembering West Country Tales, has a full episode breakdown, including the missing episodes, courtesy of Steve Calvert.

      I’ve listed the 9 episodes below, with each title linked to the YouTube video! Click to expand.

      The Poacher – I liked how slow this was, just like you were listening to an older man in the pub tell you a story from his younger days. It did keep me interested all the way to the end, and I really liked the idea of meeting Pan/the Devil in the woods.

      The Breakdown – I switched my brain off for this one and didn’t try to guess where it was going, but just sort of let it carry me onwards. The twist is an obvious one, and it’s based on a fairly common/well-known urban legend (or rural legend?) but it’s one I liked. Not scary at all, just good company and a bit unsettling.

      White Bird of Laughter Tor – this is a sad one, based on another fairly well-told folktale (I think, or ballad – but anyway I’ve heard a few variants of this one before) of a poor girl and her ill-fated romance. You have the sense of sad dread as you know where it’s going.

      The Visitor – not a pleasant one, concerning two women and their competition for the life and love of a little toddler. A mother’s fear of usurpation, but also of the dangers posed by the people closest to you, regarding your child.

      The Beast – I watched this one first, and really enjoyed it. It was a great episode. It’s much more folk horror in essence, and has the elements of the Beast of Bodmin Moor about it, much more of a Creature Feature than the others.

      Miss Constantine – my personal favourite. This starts off with a dreamy vibe, where you meet an old lady who seems to be confused, perhaps has Alzheimers or dementia, and believes that she is being harrassed by ‘the young people from the Social’, who have moved into her home and refuse to leave. There is, of course, nobody there; at least, nobody the local vicar can see… or is there?

      With Love, Belinda – a very sad one about the loss of a child, and its impact on the parents and surviving sister, Belinda. The ghostly return of the little boy heralds a series of strange happenings and a change in Belinda’s behaviour, causing the mother especially great distress. The ending, however, is not tragic, and rather sweet.

      To Wit To Woo – a medieval tale of an unloved wife, who is tricked by a witch into various methods of making her husband love her. This one was sad and also funny, but I just felt really sorry for the poor woman.

      Ring a Ring a Rosy – a feral autistic-coded girl who likes to kill things occasionally, out of curiosity, gets herself a boyfriend, and her mother starts worrying about the lad’s safety after they appear to have an argument and he disappears. But is she worried about the right thing? I didn’t know how to feel about this one, but it’s another sad one.

      Agatha Christie’s Seven Dials (2026), created/written for the screen by Chris Chibnall and directed by Chris Sweeney, is a 3-part drama that just got released on UK Netflix, and I really loved it. In fact, it’s given me some thoughts about parent/child dynamics I’d like to write, or at least think about. It’s very silly fun, which I’m fully on board with.

      In 1925, a country house party prank turns deadly. Lady Eileen “Bundle” Brent investigates the chilling murder plot. Lady Caterham and Superintendent Battle assist in solving the country house mystery that changes Bundle’s life.

      Miss Scarlet and The Duke (2020-) created by Rachael New, is a fun Victorian-era detective show I like to both rewatch and catch up on. I really love the period lady detective genre, like Miss Fisher, and Miss Scarlet has a few seasons under its belt to go through. S06 came out in December; I’ve watched up to S05.

      When Eliza Scarlet’s father dies, he leaves her penniless, but she resolves to continue his detective agency. To operate in a male-dominated world, though, she needs a partner – step forward a detective known as the Duke.

      Other Episodes & Mini-Series watched (click the + sign to expand)

      These aren’t all in the order I watched them; I’ve grouped the Marple and Poirot episodes together, bookending the list. It’s all a bit random but it made some weird sense to me when I was typing this up.

      • Miss Marple: The Body in the Library (1984) dir. Silvio Narizzano, screenplay by T.R. Bowen. I do love the old Miss Marple series with Joan Hickson, and this is one I’ve seen so many times. This was originally a 3-part mini-series, but it’s available now in one single feature. It’s not my favourite book either, but it’s one I’ve re-read a lot.
      • Agatha Christie’s Marple: The Body in the Library (2004) dir. Andy Wilson, dramatised by Kevin Elyot. They very bravely* changed the ending of this one, and departed from the original reveal to bring it up-to-date, but this just succeeds in falling into the ‘evil lesbians’ trope, preying on younger girls. Still, sapphics on screen in 2004… I don’t enjoy the Bantrys’ dynamics as much in this one, either. We can still be feminists looking for women to be their own people, and love our husbands very much. Overall, I think I prefer T.R. Bowen’s adaptation.

        *I am British, this is not a compliment
      • Miss Marple: A Murder is Announced (1985) dir. David Giles, dramatised by Alan Plater. I prefer the way the book character Mitzi is treated in this dramatisation, name changed here to Hannah which makes her not only Eastern European but Jewish-coded, although she is not explicitly Jewish in the text or in the episode. Even so, there’s a lot of anti-Eastern European prejudice in evidence. It’s a good adaptation though, and has one of my favourite lesbian-coded couples as ‘companions’. Also, so many autistic-coded women in this one. A village full of them.
      • Miss Marple: Pocket full of Rye (1985) dir. Guy Slater, dramatised by T.R. Bowen. The nursery rhyme one! Originally a 2-parter, and then shown as a single feature-length episode. It has one of my favourite character actors, Selina Cadell, as Mary Dove. Sadly, this one is really forgettable, except for the nursery rhyme killings.
      • Miss Marple: Nemesis (1987) dir. David Tucker, dramatised by T.R. Bowen. This is a good story, and one I haven’t seen a lot. I really enjoyed it, and it has a good few twists and turns. I love the three sisters, the random bus tour of historic homes and gardens, the locations used, and also Miss Marple having a nap on a bench. She’s elderly, let her sleep in a garden and stop bothering her with ice cream cornets.
      • Mrs Amworth (1975) dir. Alvin Rakoff. Based on the E.F. Benson short story, adapted by Hugh Whitemore. A good ’70s short, 29mins runtime. I really enjoyed this one! I do like the gnat plague heralding the vampire, which is a bit different to the usual vampire fare. I’m not sure what this was part of, I think it was part of a series or anthology originally, but it’s on YouTube as a standalone, courtesy of What the Folk‘s channel.
      • The Lost Will of Dr Rant (1951) dir. Laurence Schwab Jr., based on M.R. James’s story, The Tractate Middoth, and dramatised by Doris Halman. 30mins runtime. This is a US production, and possibly the first time that an M.R. James story was adapted for the screen! It was for the “Lights Out” series, and it’s pretty good. I really liked it, and it still stands up against the 2013 Mark Gatiss adaptation.
      • The Incredible Dr Baldick: Never Come Night (1972) dir. Cyril Coke. Another one courtesy of the What the Folk YouTube channel, this was the pilot of a series that never got aired/made, and is now a standalone feature. It seems that Terry Nation, its creator, wanted to replace Dr Who‘s Doctor with a folk horror version who went around the country in his steam train The Tzar, a mobile home and laboratory, solving paranormal mysteries. It stars Robert Hardy in the titular role, and I’m really sad this was never a series as planned. The pilot is really worth a watch.
      • Stones (1976) dir. Graham Evans. An episode of The Mind Beyond (BBC2 Playhouse), focused on the weird properties and then-shadowy history of Stonehenge. Available on YouTube via What the Folk‘s channel. This one is a full hour. Lots of stuff around ancient languages and the connection between written langauge and druidic power. It’s a bit dry for me, centering on a Tory minister’s scheme to move Stonehenge to London’s Hyde Park, and the subsequent discovery of an ancient language hidden on the spines of a 3-volume 17thC set of books about the stone circle. It has some positive Welsh rep in it, which is a nice change, and picks up towards the end with the involvement of the children.
      • A Place to Die (1973) dir. Peter Jefferies. This is a Thriller episode, Season 1 Episode 7, available on YouTube via What the Folk‘s channel. Creepy rural English village alert! This is a pre-Wicker Man folk horror, in which the lovely doctor’s wife, Tessa Nelson (Alexandra Hay), becomes the focus of the villagers’ obsession, and uncovers a sinister cult at work.
      • Poirot: The Adventure of the Clapham Cook (1989) dir. Edward Bennett, adapted by Clive Exton. I had no idea these were 1980s, I had them in my head as all being 2000s! But no – this is one of the much earlier episodes, and Suchet ran as Poirot for a hugely long time, 1989-2013. I enjoy the early series, for sure. I liked Exton’s original ghost story for Ghost Stories for Christmas, Stigma (1977), and this adaptation manages to be domestic and fun, and held our attention. This was a birthday watch since we were too ill to go and celebrate as planned. We stayed in and watched Seven Dials on Netflix, and then some Poirot. NOTE: Some very dated casual racism (towards Chinese immigrants).
      • Poirot: Triangle At Rhodes (1989) dir. Renny Rye, adapted by Stephen Wakelam. This plot reminds me of Evil Under the Sun, and I get it confused with that one all the time. That’s because, I guess, Evil Under the Sun is the full-length version, while this is a short story. There are the star-crossed couples and the domestic drama between husbands and wives in each, and so they are fairly easy to confuse!
      • Poirot: Problem at Sea (1989) dir. Renny Rye, adapted by Clive Exton. Some thoroughly unpleasant people having a terrible time on a cruise, with Hastings and Poirot along for the ride. This is another of the short stories adapted for the first season, which has that glossy bigger budget feel. I did really enjoy the two girls, they were fun.
      • Poirot: The Cornish Mystery (1990) dir. Edward Bennett, adapted by Clive Exton. I liked this one, it’s another short story adaptation, and it works well as a feature. Again, I really enjoy Exton’s scripts and the dynamics he writes, and how Christie’s characters come alive on screen. Poor Mrs Pengelley.

      Films

      My films of January 2026: the highlighted ones with posters are all my top rated watches. I’ve watched a total of 40 films this month, from 1933-2025, and a range of short films and feature-length ones. Letterboxd has counted the 5 Miss Marples I logged as films, but I’ve counted those in my TV show watches, so they don’t appear here.

      Expand the details below this highlighted list to see the full list of films I’ve seen this month! I’ve enjoyed all of them in some way. They aren’t in any particular order.

      Foxes (2011) dir. Lorcan Finnegan. 17mins runtime.

      I loved this little short, on YouTube via the Screen Ireland channel. It’s really atmospheric and unsettling, and I did like the ending. Also: some cracking fox shots, and lovely, eerie shots of the housing estate and its uniformity.

      A young couple trapped in a remote estate of empty houses and shrieking foxes are beckoned from their isolation into a twilight world – a world of the paranormal or perhaps insanity.

      The Sacrifice Game (2023) dir. Jenn Wexler.

      This is one of my favourite Christmas movies, which I didn’t actually watch over Christmas this year (boo to me), but was the first film I watched in 2026. I really love how it ends. If you want to know what I’m like as a person, this film contains most elements I enjoy to watch. Draw your own conclusions.

      This Christmas, raise a little hell.

      Christmas break, 1971. Samantha and Clara, two students who are staying behind for the holidays at their boarding school, must survive the night after the arrival of uninvited visitors.

      Strange Harvest (2024) dir. Stuart Ortiz.

      Mockumentary with interviews and found footage that I really enjoyed. Cosmic horror that is actually well done. New to me.

      He isn’t hiding, he’s waiting.

      Detectives are thrust into a chilling hunt for “Mr. Shiny”—a sadistic serial killer from the past whose return marks the beginning of a new wave of grotesque, otherworldly crimes tied to a dark cosmic force.

      Bring Her Back (2025) dirs. Michael Philippou, Danny Philippou

      I really liked Talk To Me by the same directors, and this one was a real mind fuck as well. Deeply upsetting in places. I had to fast forward scenes, literally can’t watch some of that. Next level diabolical. New to me.

      Family requires sacrifices.

      Following the death of their father, a brother and sister are sent to live with a foster mother, only to learn that she is hiding a terrifying secret.

      Clown in a Cornfield (2025) dir. Eli Craig.

      Based on the Adam Cesare novel. US-set Hot Fuzz with clowns and teen protagonists. Gay rep (yay). Only Black teen in the friend group is the first one to die (boo). Modern teens dying because they don’t know how to use a rotary phone or drive a manual (“stick”) vehicle is so funny to me. Teach your kids these basic life skills.

      Are you a friend of Frendo?

      Quinn and her father have just moved to the quiet town of Kettle Springs hoping for a fresh start. Instead, she discovers a fractured community that has fallen on hard times after the treasured Baypen Corn Syrup Factory burned down. As the locals bicker amongst themselves and tensions boil over, a sinister, grinning figure emerges from the cornfields to cleanse the town of its burdens, one bloody victim at a time.

      Morgiana (1972) dir. Juraj Herz.

      A rewatch for me – Morgiana is the name of the cat, whose fate is a major plot point. I really enjoy this one. We get a lot of cat-eye-view shots as well, moving around the house and seeing things from the cat’s POV.

      Jealous of her vapidly “good” sister’s popularity, poisonous Viktoria doses pretty Klara’s tea with a slow-acting fatal substance. As the latter grows hysterically weak, the former finds success increasingly compromised by guilt, blackmail, and the pesky need to kill others lest she be exposed.

      Dark Waters (1993) dir. Mariano Baino.

      If you enjoyed Soavi’s The Church (1989), this is definitely one for the watchlist. It goes harder in a few places. One of the most disturbing family reunions I’ve seen. New to me, but I’ve rewatched it 3x this month, once with the director’s commentary.

      A New Wave of Horror

      After the death of her father, a young woman travels to a remote convent on an island in the Black Sea to find out why her father funded it for years.

      O’r Ddaear Hen/From the Old Earth (1981) dir. Wil Aaron.

      LEAVE THINGS ALONE school of horror, which deserves its place here for its place in Welsh cinema history, as much as for its addition to the 1980s weird films, like the Tales of the West Country series. New to me.

      As William Jones digs in the garden of his council house he finds a strange looking stone head. During the night his wife has horrible dreams, forcing William to move the head out of the house. In turn, he takes the head to an archaeologist at Bangor University who is an expert on Celtic artefacts and trying to dig up the remains of the Celts elsewhere. In order to try and understand the head, he goes home with her but things start to go wrong at night there as well, bringing the horrors of a half-human half-animal creature to the housewives. One by one the archaeologist’s family is horrified leading to death and another sacrifice to the ancient gods of the Celts.

      The Endless (2017) dirs. Aaron Moorhead, Justin Benson.

      I like this duo – I enjoyed Spring (2014), and I think this film is even better. It might be one of my favourite timey-wimey cosmic horror Sci-Fi films now. New to me.

      Time is a prison.

      Two brothers return to the cult they fled from years ago to discover that the group’s beliefs may be more sane than they once thought.

      King Arthur: Legend of the Sword (2017) dir. Guy Ritchie.

      This is a comfort rewatch of my favourite Arthurian film. It has everything I enjoy about Ritchie films, plus it’s an action-fantasy. Arthur’s basically a gangster, which is all kings really are. This is actually my (almost) perfect fantasy film. Himself reckons Guy Ritchie should do a version of Preiddeu Annwn/The Spoils of Annwn, which is literally a heist story. That would be amazing.

      From nothing comes a King

      When the child Arthur’s father is murdered, Vortigern, Arthur’s uncle, seizes the crown. Robbed of his birthright and with no idea who he truly is, Arthur comes up the hard way in the back alleys of the city. But once he pulls the sword Excalibur from the stone, his life is turned upside down and he is forced to acknowledge his true legacy… whether he likes it or not.

      Underwater (2020) dir. William Eubank.

      Another comfort rewatch, which I really enjoy. This one did the deep sea walk across the seabed being attacked by monsters before Meg 2. This is a Cthulhu/Deep Ones mythos film, one of THE best entries into that subgenre made so far.

      7 miles below the ocean surface something has awakened

      After an earthquake destroys their underwater station, six researchers must navigate two miles along the dangerous, unknown depths of the ocean floor to make it to safety in a race against time.

      Crow Hollow (1952) dir. Michael McCarthy.

      A new-to-me British Gothic thriller, with a blushing bride (she’s known him a week), and three batty old aunts to contend with. My favourite genre of British Gothic is three old women up to no good. Available on YouTube.

      A new bride tries to survive multiple attempts on her life in a dark mansion, while her husband refuses to believe that she in danger.

      Panna a Netvor/Beauty and the Beast (1978) dir. Juraj Herz.

      A favourite comfort watch, and one I finally own on disc. I love it so much.

      I have so much to say about this, but I won’t do that here, I’ll save that for a full post or something.

      Julie, the youngest daughter of a bankrupt merchant, sacrifices her life in order to save her father. She goes to an enchanted castle in the woods and meets Netvor, a bird-like monster. As Netvor begins to fall in love with Julie, he must suppress his beastly urge to kill her.

      The Bench (2024) dir. Sean Wilkie.

      This is an indie Scottish film that took 17 years to make, and finally got snapped up by Amazon. I have to say, I really enjoyed it. It’s a good old-fashioned slasher, made by people who clearly like slashers, and there are lots of nice moments and meta nods in it.

      The twist is fairly predictable, but I don’t need it to be clever, I just want a fun 75mins of people having relationship drama then running around and screaming. Both our killer (Gareth Hunter) and my hero Tommy (Chris Somerville) were very Ricky-coded to me. Any film where I say “That’s my son!” twice gets an extra star.

      Over 300,000 people go missing in the UK every year. Most are never found.

      A breakdown. A kind invitation. A cabin with a bloody past. Alex and her newfound friends face a nightmarish reality as they are picked off one by one, drawn to the sinister bench below. Inspired by low-budget horror films of the 1970s.

      An Cailleach Bhéarra (2007) dir. Naomi Wilson. 8mins runtime. Available on YouTube via Screen Ireland’s channel.

      A lovely 8min folklore short, with a large scale puppet and some great animation.

      “The Cailleach was dependent on this one thing… every hundred years she must get back to the water and immerse herself so that she might become young again.”

      This film is an interpretation of fragments of the ancient myth of the “cailleach”, old hag, otherworld female, mother earth, sovereignty queen, or witch. Told using a large scale puppet and actors moving through real landscape.

      Other Films Watched

      Films and standalone shorts watched in January (click to expand)
      • Until Dawn (2025) dir. David F. Sandberg. It’s based on a video game I haven’t played but can see the appeal of. I really liked the aesthetics of the house, the monster design, and the concept. I also enjoyed the dynamics between the characters, but I lost interest in the middle.
      • It Feeds (2025) dir. Chad Archibald. This is like a darker, feature-length film version of the US show, Medium. It has a very strong mother/daughter relationship and a good ending, fine for an afternoon viewing, but I don’t think I’d watch this again.
      • The Wyrm of Bwlch Pen Barras (2023) dir. Craig Williams. 17min runtime, a really good short film. We don’t see the wyrm herself, but hopefully we all know what a wyrm/really big fucking snake-dragon looks like. I would watch this short film again.
      • The Innsmouth School for Girls (2023) dir. Joshua Kennedy. This is a rewatch, not a favourite or anything, but sometimes I get an urge to watch it again. It’s one of the better Deep Ones/Innsmouth entries, and I think it’s definitely worth a look.
      • Dark Light (2019) dir. Padraig Reynolds. This is a rewatch – again, not a highlighted favourite, but one I occasionally feel in the mood for. It’s a pretty competent Sci-Fi-Horror, with monstrous humanoids rather than aliens, and I do enjoy the central mother-daughter drama.
      • The Barbarians (1987) dir. Ruggero Deodato. A rewatch – accidental, I was doing stuff with the TV on in the background, this came on, and I didn’t turn it off and ended up watching the whole thing. As entertaining as the last time, not one I would ever dedicate my concentration to, but it’s ’80s Sword and Sorcery for comforting background company on a rainy day.
      • The Spiritualist/The Amazing Mr. X (1948) dir. Bernard Vorhaus. I liked this one; I watched it for Turhan Bey and Lynn Bari. It’s a good psychological, Supernatural Explained noir, although for goodness sake her husband has only been dead for two years and everyone is pressuring her to move on and remarry, leave her alone. Westerners not knowing how to process grief is not a 21stC phenomenon. Available on YouTube.
      • The Return (1973) dir. Sture Rydman. 30mins runtime, a made-for-TV British short; this is a pretty good Gothic ghost story, very atmospheric and melodramatic. It is based on stories by A.M. Burrage and Ambrose Bierce. A 2-person cast, which really works for the atmosphere and sense of claustrophobia in the house setting. Available on YouTube.
      • The Ghoul (1933) dir. T. Hayes Hunter. This one made me laugh, I did enjoy it for 80mins of excitable young people shouting at each other. Is it culturally sensitive to anyone? No, not in the least. I really liked the enemies-to-partnership thing the cousins had going on, though; Betty was great. This is what 1930s feminism looked like.
      • Moss Rose (1947) dir. Gregory Ratoff. An absolutely wild melodrama murder mystery/thriller, with Vincent Price as a policeman, and the worst faux-Cockney accents I have ever heard. Some fascinating class discussion though.
      • Darklands (1996) dir. Julian Richards. I watched this again for a review I’m writing for Divination Hollow, and to see how the Director’s Cut (6min shorter) fares against the original version I watched in 2023, the year the Cut was released. This is… something. I have a whole post on it already, where I missed the antisemitism of the Lilith imagery of a character called Rebecca, on top of everything else it’s doing. Anyway, the new essay on this will be potentially cross-posted, but Divination Hollow will get it first.
      • Deváté srdce/The Ninth Heart (1979) dir. Juraj Herz. The third Herz film I’ve seen this month, this is one I also own on disc (thanks to the Severin Films Folk Horror Compendium). I didn’t like this as much as Panna a Netvor, but the hair was amazing. I don’t think it was a highlighted watch for me, but I do think I’ll be watching it again, and maybe this will grow on me.
      • The Fall of the House of Usher (1960) dir. Roger Corman. I’m not a massive Poe fan but I do like his work, and I do like a few of the adaptations of it. This is much more of a comfort rewatch for me just because of Vincent Price. I know there are loads of versions of it and I haven’t seen them all, but this is not a bad film. It was written by Richard Matheson, and I tend to enjoy his scripts.
      • A Child’s Voice (1978) dir. Kieran Hickey. An Irish made-for-TV short, 29mins runtime. Very much in the vein of Ghost Stories for Christmas, and strongly reminiscent of Mark Gatiss’s original story, The Dead Room (2018) which has a very similar premise and main character. It was a one-off, not part of a series or anthology, and only shown on UK TV once in the 1980s.
      • The Circle (2017) dir. Peter Callow. I’ve seen this one before and I vaguely remembered it was low budget and not awful, and I fancied the folk horror feels. It’s a Scottish set one, and I want to watch more Scottish horror where possible, like The Isle, Get Duked!, Dog Soldiers, Outcast, and Little Bone Lodge. The Irish horror scene is really flourishing, but Wales and Scotland are behind. A lot of that is budget and investment, so I’m on the lookout for more films by Scottish filmmakers. I don’t know if Callow is Scottish, but it does make some good use of the landscape and isolation of the islands!
      • Tattiebogle (2017) dir. Douglas Kyle. Made for £101.99, this was the start of a rabbithole I fell into while looking for more Scottish Horror. Douglas Kyle seems to have a production company, ChaosBox Productions, which has a YouTube Channel. He has a 62-episode no-budget Sci-Fi series, The Pandora Men, and several features and shorts. This is one of the features, made over 8 days in the cast & crew’s spare time. I really appreciate no-budget / microbudget films made by people having a lot of fun, and this is absolutely that. It’s an ecohorror/folk horror slasher, made in Aberdeenshire.
      • The Ghillie Dhu (2024) dir. Douglas Kyle. His latest short feature, roughly 37mins runtime. This attempts to be about anxiety disorder and, I guess, the horror of being consumed by your traumas and disorders, married with the Scottish folktale of the Ghillie Dhu.
      • The Yird Swine (2020) dir. Douglas Kyle. This isn’t on Letterboxd yet, I need to add it. The link is to IMDB instead. This has the same core cast, with another cast member from The Pandora Men series, Myla Corvidae (he/they), originally from Cardiff! This was a fun one too. The pacing wasn’t as good as Tattiebogle, but I really liked it. Everyone was obviously really enjoying themselves making it. I think if you’re into this side of amateur indie filmmaking, you should check out these films.

      DID YOU MISS ANY?
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      A SELECTION OF THE MOST RECENT ROUND-UPS IS BELOW:

      January 2026 Media Round-Up

      My monthly media round-up for January 2026 – all the books, podcasts, tv shows, and films I’ve been enjoying this month!

      by cmrosensFebruary 1, 2026February 1, 2026

      December 2025 Media Round-Up

      My monthly media round-up for December 2025 – all the books, podcasts, tv shows, and films I read/listened to/watched this month.

      by cmrosensDecember 30, 2025December 29, 2025

      November 2025 Media Round-Up

      I’m starting a new monthly series where I post a round-up of all the media I’ve watched/read/listened to for the previous month. Here is November’s media round-up!

      by cmrosensDecember 5, 2025January 26, 2026

      #BookReview #filmReview #mediaRoundUp #tvReview

      December 2025 Media Round-Up

      Introduction

      I’ve decided to do a thing each month where I do a round-up of the media I’ve watched/read/listened to. This is the round-up for December 2025, with books, films, and TV shows. This has ended up as quite a lot of films and tv, as I was ill for a lot of December, and couldn’t focus on books or writing. I ended up on the sofa trying to stave off boredom.

      The amount of stuff I got through this month while ill made me wonder if I should break up posts in future to make them easier to read. I’m not sure about the format for months where I watch loads of films, like this one, so just for now, I’m posting it as a list of films watched each day, following my Letterboxd Diary.

      I’m not sure how that will work when/if I do the 100 Horror Movies In 92 Days challenge, as Aug-Oct will be very film-heavy. We’ll see!

      Anyway, here we go with my December media round-up.

      Books & Audiobooks

      Linghun by Ai Jiang. A modern Chinese-Canadian gothic ghost story, described as ‘literary horror’. Serious, rich, multi-layered grief horror.

      WELCOME HOME.

      Follow Wenqi, Liam, and Mrs. in this modern gothic ghost story by Chinese-Canadian writer and immigrant, Ai Jiang. LINGHUN is set in the mysterious town of HOME, a place where the dead live again as spirits, conjured by the grief-sick population that refuses to let go.

      25 Gifts of Terror by Boris Bacic. Read one story per day like an advent calendar.

      25 Gifts of Terror is an advent-style 25 short horror stories read in 25 days, with the final story on Christmas. A perfect gift for a horror reader.

      Audiobook: HorrorBabble’s Diary Horror. A “found footage” anthology, containing 15 stories written in diary format, including Ian Gordon’s 2020 audio tape diary story.

      There are some good ones in here, and I got on with the narration. Lovecraft gonna Lovecraft though, so brace for his stories.

      We Are Here to Hurt Each Other by Paula D. Ashe. This is a re-read of some of the stories in this collection, like “Jacqueline Laughs Last in the Gaslight”. I did not re-read all the stories.

      With these twelve stories Paula D. Ashe takes you into a dark and bloody world where nothing is sacred and no one is safe. A landscape of urban decay and human degradation, this collection finds the psychic pressure points of us all, and giddily squeezes. Try to run, try to hide, but there is no escape: we are here to hurt each other.

      Audiobook: Algernon Blackwood BBC Radio Drama Collection – I got this one and I’m finding the bouncy intro and credits very incongruous compared with the stories! But it has a lot of good ones in here. The Internet Archive has 4 of his John Silence stories for free, if interested!

      A collection of strange and fantastical tales from Algernon Blackwood, plus bonus documentaries.

      TV Shows & Mini-Series

      • Hazbin Hotel & Helluva Boss – USA-made animated muiscals in the same universe. I’ve been binging these and watching them on repeat. I played the S02 Hazbin Hotel soundtrack on loop for over a week. The theology is all over the place, so don’t go in expecting anything coherent, or for it to be doing anything interesting or new with it, they are just fun cartoons. I enjoy the story and the characters enough, and the fantasy worldbuilding, that this aspect (theology) doesn’t bother me.
        ~
      • Yaratılan/Creature – Turkish 8-part series, my November rewatch that spilled into December. One of my favourite series. I wrote a post on it when I watched Del Toro’s Frankenstein. This is written and directed by Çağan Irmak, and I really like the ending, the framed narration, and also that we see Captain Ömer freed from his own destructive ambitions and obsessions as a result of hearing the tale and meeting Ziya and Ihsan. I really love that, because you don’t get to see what happened to the Captain very often.
        ~
      • La Révolution – French 8-episode TV series from 2020, in which the future inventor of the guillotine discovers a disease that’s causing the aristocracy to murder commoners. It was described as Kingdom meets Brotherhood of the Wolf, but it’s not zombies, it’s revenants. I really enjoyed it. I watched the French original with English subs, so I can’t comment on the dub quality. Unfortunately, it didn’t get renewed, and ends on a cliffhanger – so make up your own ending if you watch it. It can end any way you like.
        ~
      • Queen Mantis – Korean 8-part thriller, heavy on domestic violence and CSA, and based on the French series La Mante. This has the same reveal but tackles it a bit differently? I haven’t seen them both to compare, and I doubt I will, but I’m going to have to do this in inline spoilers for the warnings.
      Queen Mantis/La Mante Spoilers

      This Reddit discusses whether La Mante (the original French series) is transphobic. The Korean drama version is the same plot, and falls back on the same reveal. The police immediately switch pronouns for her when they learn she is a woman, and interview trans women in clinics where there is an attempt to humanise and at least partially distance the Korean trans community from the killer. The killer introduces herself with her old name at one point, and the trauma of her abusive childhood and watching The Mantis kill her abusive father was what set her on this path, although she was already killing cats and dogs in the neighbourhood, so it’s very explicit in the Korean series that the trauma (a) was the direct cause of her gender dysphoria; she was not abused because she was a trans girl, she was abused because her father was a piece of shit, and (b) she was already exhibiting signs of antisocial behaviour and killing vulnerable creatures. I haven’t seen La Mante to compare this. I’m also relying on subs and I don’t speak Korean, so that’s what I picked up from the subtitles!

      • Midwinter of the Spirit – an ITV (UK) mini-series (3 parts) from 2015. It’s based on the second Merrily Watkins book by Phil Rickman, adapted for the screen by Stephen Volk, where crime meets ancient English folklore with a rural vicar (Church of England) protagonist. I bought the first book, The Wine of Angels, an absolute doorstop, way back in the 2010s and have had it through house moves on my shelf for the last 10-15 years. I may finally read it, as I’d like to read this series now I’ve seen the ITV adaptation of Book 2. I think you can start the series anywhere, but it’s one of those where you get the character arcs if you read in order.
        ~
      • Ordeal by Innocence – a Prime Original / BBC (UK) mini-series (3 parts) from 2018. An adaptation of Agatha Christie’s standalone novel, written by Russell Lewis. I have to say I do enjoy the de-centring of the best-known detective personalities in these standalone adaptations, like And Then There Were None, and The Pale Horse. The 2007 Marple series with Gwendoline McEwan in the titular role adapted Ordeal by Innocence as part of the Marple mysteries, just as the 2010 Julia McKenzie Marple co-opted The Pale Horse as a Marple mystery, but I really like that this one kept it as a detective-free standalone, with a really tight focus on the family itself, and let the characters breathe on their own. I also like that it’s a lot darker than the Marple versions as a result.
        ~
      • Crooked House – a BBC (UK) mini-series from 2008, comprising of 3 half-hour episodes that is on Prime UK as a single 90 min film. It’s one of the Christmas Ghost Stories for the BBC, written by Mark Gatiss and directed by Damon Thomas. The segments go through the grim history of Geap Manor, with some nice touches and spooky atmospheric moments. This one is a rewatch, but I’d forgotten almost everything about it, so virtually new. I think I must have seen this when it originally aired, or not long afterwards, it’s that hazy.
        ~
      • The Pale Horse – a BBC (UK) 3-part mini-series from 2020, the standalone novel adaptation by Sarah Phelps, who also adapted And Then There Were None (2015) and did an outstanding job, and dir. Leonora Lonsdale. I can’t remember the actual book, and I very much enjoyed the Julia McKenzie Miss Marple episode that co-opted this one as a Marple mystery. This is such a good, dark, bleak version. Rufus Sewell is perfect as Mark Easterbrook, who is a really interesting choice for a protagonist, and an absolute shit. I love Sean Pertwee as Inspector LeJeune. This is just a great one. It as close to folk horror as Christie gets.
        ~
      • Ghosts – the UK version, just for some of the festive episodes and the last series which I couldn’t remember seeing. I absolutely love this series, it’s so funny and at the same time makes me cry buckets. I avoided the last series for ages because I knew I’d cry. (I absolutely loved Yonderland as well by the way, which is also by the same people, and it’s so weird to see Martha Howe-Douglas (Fanny) as the Chosen Mum in modern clothes.)

      Films & DVD Collections

      03 Dec:

      • The Mean One (2022) dir. Steven LaMorte. An annual rewatch now to get me in the mood for the festive season. Daft romance! Brutal murders! The Gr–een Mean One!
        ~
      • Krampus (2015) dir. Michael Dougherty. Another annual rewatch, and I even remembered to log it on Letterboxd this year. It’s my festive, family-friendly (or at least, there’s a family in it) film to get me in the Christmas spirit. Or else.
        ~
      • Izvod: The Witch’s Swamp (2025) dirs. Oleg Taravkov and Alexey Plakhotnikov. Not a Christmas film, but something I just happened to find on YouTube. It was posted there by the filmmakers, who made this on a microbudget of US$28K, and it’s amazingly good for the money and the fact this is their first film. It’s a Slavic mythology-inspired folk horror, completely indie-funded. Highly recommend this – the English subs are really good, and it’s worth a look at any time of year. I had to add it Letterboxd.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nbY4HZ2poWY

      04 Dec:

      • អក្ខរាវិរុទ្ធ/The Spell (2019) dir. Amit Dubey. Not a Christmas film, and again found on YouTube. This is a Cambodian horror in Khmer with English subs, and although it’s a fairly predictable haunted house/ghost possession tale, it is one of the best quality Cambodian horrors I’ve seen, and I do want to highlight it as Cambodian cinema needs more international love and support! TW: suicide by drowning (opening sequence).

      https://youtu.be/Oy811KpDCBU?si=S_GKkyDRyogb_K0c

      • To All A Goodnight (1980) dir. David Hess. I was off work sick and desperately scrolling all the Christmas films of all genres I could find, and literally couldn’t find anything I wanted to watch. Then I found this: the first time a killer in a Santa suit ever appeared on film. This is the only groundbreaking thing about the film – it’s a very run-of-the-mill slasher, but it’s a new-to-me Christmas one. I felt it was too long and the action wasn’t tight enough, but it was fine.
        ~
      • Cinderella’s Revenge (2024) dir. Andy Edwards. I really liked his film Punch (2023). Tis the season for pantomimes based on fairy tales, and I did really enjoy the insanely gory Cinderella’s Curse (2024) dir. Louisa Warren. So here we are with this Cinderalla story, which opens with one of my fave songs, ‘Cinderella Snapped‘ by Jax. It’s downhill from here – her chariot is a fucking orange Tesla, and she’s chauffeured by Elon Musk. Grim. But I did like the innovation of getting famous designers from the modern-day to design her dress and so on, without it “just” being magic. And I did like the masked vengeance thing.
        ~
      • Jack Frost (1997) dir. Michael Cooney. I was too tired and ill to really have fun with this, but it’s a good one for the background. It has ridiculous genetic science, a killer snowman, and some fun Christmassy kills.

      05 Dec:

      • Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale (2010) dir. Jalmari Helander. Another rewatch, for when I want a fun, dark, good quality film I’m guaranteed to enjoy. I do feel very weird about the ending though.
        ~
      • Mercy Christmas (2017) dir. Ryan Nelson. High Fliers films are very hit and miss. They are all generally low budget, but they have some bangers like Cannibals vs Carpet Fitters, and I’m now adding Mercy Christmas to that list of hits, but it does fall back on lazy writing at some points – and they didn’t need to kill off the Black guy. 3.5 stars overall. Fun casual cannibalism film.

      10 Dec:

      • Amanti d’oltretomba/Nightmare Castle (1965) dir. Mario Caiano. Gothic Horror that leans into the full drive-your-wife-mad-on-purpose territory. It has frog serum (mixed with the blood of a young woman) that changes an old scheming housekeeper young again, a mad scientist Count with a laboratory in his castle, and Barbara Steele playing identical step-sisters, but we don’t need to dwell on details or bother our little heads with pesky questions. I love watching Gothic films in winter for the atmosphere. The dafter the better.

      https://youtu.be/Wwu0xQNXgic?si=GTZOiQEcxZfPlZge

      • She-Wolf of London (1946) dir. Jean Yarbrough. A psychological horror in which we have a family curse, a woman who kills men at night in a park. Very solid Universal film, and I really loved June Lockhart’s performance in this. This is one I listed in my Werewolf Films 1910-1949 post. There’s a lot of British class dynamics going on here, which I really enjoyed. You can see from films like this one, and obviously George Cukor’s Gaslight (1944) where the later 1960s Gothic films got a lot of their ideas… also what a great evil monologue! This is what you get when there’s no man in the house…

        I can also see, for someone who saw this and Gaslight at the Pictures and then saw a 1960s Italian Gothic, why they might say “They don’t make ’em like they used to.” Facts, love. Facts.

      https://youtu.be/5jIJZ0iQGHc?si=ezCzEGVhiGoejMfe

      • Gaslight (1944) dir. George Cukor. After the psychological manipulation of She-Wolf of London, I felt like I wanted to see the seminal film in psychological horror, from which the subgenre really took off on screen. I cannot for the life of me remember if I’ve seen this before or not, so I’m counting it as a first watch. This was based on Patrick Hamilton’s thriller play of the same name, first produced in 1935, and I’d like to see that performed one day! It’s being put on in Harrogate Studio Theatre this year by the Woodlands Drama Group. Really enjoyable thriller. I really liked the colourised version.

        My husband and I have a joke that due to my complete lack of object permenance, he could be fiddling with gaslights and god knows what else for months, and my complete denial and blinkers about everything would drive him mad instead.

      https://youtu.be/h5hdtwn-yLg?si=TmjVWmAPTrekYxXj

      11 Dec:

      • The Phantom Light (1935) dir. Michael Powell. Based on Australian-British writer Evadne Price’s novel, which was adapted for the stage by Evadne Price and Joan Roy Byfield. It’s actually a crime thriller rather than a ghost story. It’s also pretty short (75 mins runtime) so you shouldn’t expect too much of the plot or character development, it is just atmosphere and nuts and bolts mystery plot with mildly spooky trimmings, and some nice monologue/dialogue moments.

        This is set in Cymru/Wales and falls back on the usual stereotypes: old women in steeple hats and shawls who can’t or won’t speak English, singing fishermen, and supersititious/dangerous/’weak-minded’ locals. The accents are bad, and the only actual Welsh I heard was ‘nos da’ which means good night, said in the middle of the day. I’m not convinced that what I heard her say before that was actually Welsh at all. In other words: pretty typical of how Cymru and her people are usually portrayed in media that want to use it as an otherworldly, Gothic, or ‘uncivilised’ setting. See also: House of the Long Shadows, The Old Dark House, and the way T. Kingfisher perpetuates these outsider attitudes in her book The Twisted Ones, especially in the dismissive and mocking way her FMC talks about Cymraeg (the Welsh language).

      https://youtu.be/wVfqTJZi4AU?si=YZvViLOxWlfbQZDc

      12 Dec:

      • Wake Up Dead Man (2025) dir. Rian Johnson. Really enjoyed this one, which looks at religious cults of personality and how they operate in the US Catholic Church and intersect with US Conservativism. I really loved the other two as well, and how they punch up not down. I also liked the dynamic of Blanc & Fr. Jud, and I enjoyed the way it was played, more as complimentary differences rather than an antagonistic contrast. I loved the locked room mystery, the cast, and the twists and turns. I especially liked the use of sunlight in this one to light characters’ faces when they reveal truths, or when something was happening inside them, and people cast in shadow when the truth is being obscured or nefarious things are afoot.
        ~
      • Tre nøtter til Askepott/Three Wishes for Cinderella (2021) dir. Cecilie A. Mosli. A favourite of mine, and a lovely winter rewatch. I don’t have the nostalgia attached to the ’70s original but I love that too. This one fills in some gaps, doesn’t go with the ‘fat lady as comic relief’ trope in the ball, and gives us a cute gay romance AND an older couple’s romance in the distant background, and I think, overall, it’s the one I prefer. Definitely a good one for when I’m unwell – basically most of December.
      Why I Prefer this Cinderella [Spoilers]

      I prefer this version of Cinderella to the version I grew up with, I think. It’s got more of the Ever After vibes where they get to know each other first, but also because the wishes come from magic acorns, there’s no, “Where the fuck has this witch bitch been while she was going through shit” that I get every time the fairy godmother appears.

      It also takes out that weird Anglo-American Protestant work ethic, and removes all that ‘if you just persevere when people treat you badly and work hard enough, your dreams/prayers will come true because you’ve earned it’ nonsense.

      I vibe much more with this version of the tale, because she gets the acorns thanks to several people she has already met, an owl she has already befriended, and a mix of fate and luck (you choose).

      I also love that she’s not alone in this one. She has friends among the older servants who take care of her and look out for her, and she is grounded in that community, despite the treatment she receives from her stepmother. She retains her kindness and strength through their care for her, not [only] because she’s inherently virtuous.

      I feel bad for Dora, who is also a victim of her mother, but is complicit in Askepott’s mistreatment due to her own flaws and weaknesses. The world is full of sad, lonely, insecure Doras, and I have some sympathy for them. There’s a moment where Dora and Askepott are bonding over Dora getting ready for the ball, and then Dora only laughs at Askepott because that’s what everyone else is doing. Before she decides to give a short laugh herself, she looks visibly uncomfortable, recognising this as a choice she has to make. She doesn’t choose her stepsister. When her mother is stripping Askepott in the barn, Dora can’t look at her, she’s in the background looking down and looking miserable. She’s a weak character, and she’s awkward, spoilt, and not very socially adept, but she’s not ‘ugly’ or ‘evil’.

      Her mother puts Dora on a diet of only beans and lentils for the ball, and that scene is meant to be cringe-humour, but after watching Den stygge stesøsteren/The Ugly Stepsister (2025) dir. Emilie Kristine Blichfeldt, I will never hear her stomach rumbling in the same way again.

      She appears to enjoy bossing Askepott around as an unhealthy means of gaining agency, when what she clearly needs is friendship from a peer. She recognises this at the end of the film, and finally, pushed too far by her mother’s unhinged plans that put everyone in danger, Dora finally stands up to her, which hints at the possibility of an upward trajectory for her character arc. “All” she does is tell her to shut up and refuse to free her, but baby steps, Dora. Baby steps. She also gets asked for a dance at the end by one of the prince’s men who isn’t put off by her awkwardness, and that’s also a lovely moment for her.

      Also, right at the end, the last dress in the acorn isn’t Askepott’s mum’s wedding dress as in the 1970s original. It’s her own dress, so she can find the prince as herself. I really love the moment of disappointment and insecurity where she drops the last acorn and looks down and is like, “But… this is just me”.

      It also works as her first acorn dressed her up as a younger version of her dad, and the second one dressed her up in her mum’s ballgown. So the third one worked really well to be her own clothes at the climax of her identity reveal, after her stepmother strips her and locks her in the barn.

      The climax is also pretty good with some peril on a bridge, and at least in this one, the prince doesn’t leave two women in a freezing bog to make their own way out or drown trying. He needs to be rescued in this one. I think this is much better as a bonding experience for them, and also Askepott gets to use her archery skills to do it. The relationship and its development is centred over the marriage aspect at the end, so you see them riding off and having fun together rather than the big royal wedding ending. You don’t even see them kiss – she leans in and then says he has to catch her first, and they race off into the snow, echoing their first horserace when they met. I like that, too. Personally, that really worked for me.

      • La Belle et la Bête/Beauty and the Beast (2014) dir. Christophe Gans. I really love this one. It’s a French fantasy version with a framed narrative, and a lot of family background that you don’t normally get. It follows and expands on Cocteau’s version in that way, I think, which I really like. This is one of my top 3 versions: Panna a Netvor is my top one, and then I think Fanga and this one trade places for second and third depending on my mood. Today I wanted this one for the merchant family subplot and their dynamics.
      Why The Version is One of My Favourites [Spoilers]

      Firstly, while a lot of criticism is around the lack of development around the romance, I do get that, and I would also like more, but I think there’s enough in there if you’re looking for it. She’s pretty into the thrill of their back and fore thing, and the resistance dynamic they have. That’s all in her expressions, and the little moments. I also think she falls in love with the man the Beast is and was through watching his interactions with his late wife in her dreams – in learning about her story, and seeing what sort of man he was when he was with her, and then how he is now. She is definitely well into him by the dance scene. It’s just very French, in a way that doesn’t translate well for Anglo audiences?

      I really like that the curse transforms him into a lion-Beast because he was a hunter, and his crime was [unknowingly] killing his fairy wife in her deer form, after promising not to hunt that specific deer. Keeping his promises to Belle shows that he has learned his lessons there, and she won’t let him off learning that lesson just because of Feelings. She makes it very clear from the start, where she grabs a knife to defend herself, that he is stuck there with her as much as she is stuck there with him. It also means, when she runs away after seeing him devour a deer in the tower in front of his portrait, she’s also running because he previously said she could see her family, then he took it back. And there’s the almost kiss on the ice lake. I would love more of that, but there’s also the family plot to get back to, and I enjoy that as well.

      I also love that it is as much about Belle discovering what happened to his wife, as it is about her relationship with him. There isn’t a rivalry or a wicked fairy/virtuous human dichotomy set up. It feels like they could have been friends if they knew each other, and her respect for the Princess’s grave reflects her respect and care for her late mother’s statue in the garden of the family’s city house.

      This one has very cute critters in the castle, called Tadums. They’re the beagles that got transformed when the castle was enchanted. I love that for them. I definitely prefer it to having the servants transformed into inanimate objects that reflect their duties (Disney).

      I do like Cocteau and Herz’s approach of having actors be parts of the furniture, like having smoke-ring blowing faces emerging from the fireplace, hands rising out of the table to serve, and very creepy figures on the four poster bed, and there being no explanation for it. Here, there are no servants, only magic and the Tadums, which are not amazing CGI, but very, very cute.

      Meanwhile, rather than the servants being transformed, his hunting buddies get turned into statues, and not by an enchantress, but by the god of the forest, his nymph-wife’s father.

      I also like that the merchant class is seen as materialistic, weak, silly, corrupted by wealth and high society frivolities, and obsessed with social status. The father shares these qualities with his children, but Belle’s redeeming feature is that she likes life in the country, and prefers to live off the land with vegetables and livestock. Her willingness to be a working rural girl and not a member of the city elite is what sets her apart. She’s more grounded, more virtuous, and less selfish as a result.

      Meanwhile, her reckless brother Maxime has got himself in debt to the notorious ruffian Perducas, and we have a subplot of Perducas and his gang (including his tarot-reading mistress, Astrid) going after the Beast’s castle to raid it for its riches, once they learn of Belle’s return from there with jewels. (Her brother takes a gemstone to Perducas to pay him off, and Perducas then decides to raid the castle, thinking it’s empty). This is much more interesting for me in terms of family dynamics and dramatic tension than Gaston’s subplot in the Disney version.

      This bit of drama leads to a fun fantasy battle showdown. I do love that there’s an attempt to save Astrid by the fairies, and to give her the chance to save her lover, simply because she loves him, and not because he’s a good guy. He very much proves he is not. It’s not Astrid’s fault that they all die. It’s very much his. That’s the really sad part. Perducas suffers for Astrid’s death (a destroyed statue falls on her) and not heeding her warnings – he transforms into a twisted tangle of briars.

      I love also that saving the Beast is a group effort at the end; she gets her brothers and some of Perducas’s remaining men to carry him into the tank of enchanted healing water in the tower, and they fight off the forest while she focuses on him, and the enchantment is broken with a tear, not a kiss. Very faithful to the original tale in that regard!

      In the end, when we get Vincent Cassell back from the enchantment and death, he joins her in the country cottage and fully embraces the country life, no longer a prisoner of his curse, or his privilege.

      The framed narrative is revealed to be Belle telling her children the story of her own family, from their fall from grace to their current pastoral idyll, as their father (Cassell) returns home. The siblings all get happy endings, but doing something decent. The dad becomes a florist (appropriate, with the roses that Belle is now growing), the brothers become book publishers, the sisters get married to twin brothers, so they remain close. Also, the Tadums come back as beagles, and also live in the country house with them all.

      The final scene is Belle and her now-human husband kissing in the rose garden, and he’s wearing some good honest working man’s clothes, no longer a hunter or a warrior or a noble, but fully embracing the working class gardening life. I kind of love that for them.

      15 Dec:

      • Black Christmas (1974) dir. Bob Clark. This hasn’t been available to stream in the UK for ages that I could find, so I was really pleased to finally find it. I’ve seen the updated remake. I thought for the longest time this one was US-made but it’s Canadian, but that’s probably because I saw the US version (2019) dir. Sophia Takal first. I think I prefer this original version; I got what the remake was trying to do, but it was too heavy-handed about it for me, in the way US-made stuff often is, but that’s just my opinion. There are some genuinely good creepy moments in this original version that I found genuinely unsettling, and it has that weird 70s vibe that I enjoy. I think the central premise translates really well too, and has aged pretty well.

      16 Dec:

      Today, I cracked open my Christmas present from last year, the DVD collecton of the BBC’s Ghost Stories for Christmas, 1968-2010, produced by the British Film Institute. My rankings for the films are on Letterboxd.

      I watched Discs One and Two today, and you can check out my full review of the DVD here.

      17 Dec:

      I really enjoyed the Ghost Stories for Christmas DVD, and they’re short enough that I can watch one on my lunch break, and get through lots more after work. The director introductions do give some plot spoilers, but I really think they add to the story experience. Today I got through Discs Three, Four, and Five.

      Again, you can read my full review on this DVD here.

      18 Dec:

      Disc Six of the Ghost Stories for Christmas DVD today!

      • Classic Ghost Stories (1986) dir. David Bell – 70min runtime, comprising of 5 short episodes where actor Robert Powell performs dramatic readings of 5 M.R. James tales: “The Mezzotint”, “The Ash-Tree”, “The Rose Garden”, “Wailing Well” and “Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad”.
        ~
      • Spine Chillers (1980), episodes dir. Marilyn Fox – only 3 stories from this series, the 3 M.R. James stories: “The Mezzotint” (11mins), “A School Story” (11 mins), and “The Diary of Mr Poynter” (11 mins). All the remaining available episodes can be found on the Internet Archive.

      I finished the DVD! And wanted more! So I found some!

      • A Ghost Story for Christmas: Woman of Stone (2024) dir. Mark Gatiss. An adaptation of Edith Nesbit’s story, Man-Size in Marble, by Mark Gatiss. I loved Nesbit’s children’s stories growing up, like The Railway Children and Five Children and It, but her horror stories are pretty good too. This one is more about domestic violence and the deep roots of patriarchal oppression. I’m not sure what I made of this one. I think I’ll read the original and see how that goes.
        ~
      • A Christmas Carol: A Ghost Story (2022) dir. Adam Penford, a televised version of the stage play of Charles Dickens’ classic, A Christmas Carol, adapted by Mark Gatiss. This is a pretty funny version, but also pretty chilling; I loved the staging of the ghosts and the three spirits were fantastic. It also made me cry in parts. I remember being absolutely terrified of the Ghost of Christmas Future as a child, and this version didn’t disappoint. I loved the use of puppets and the staging was great. I think this adaptation might actually be one of my favourite versions of the story. Also, I appreciated that they cast an ambulatory wheelchair user as Tiny Tim, it was good to see a disabled actor in the role.

      19 Dec:

      • A Ghost Story for Christmas: Count Magnus (2022) dir. Mark Gatiss. I really like this M.R. James story, and I was really pleased to find that this was adapted for the Ghost Story for Christmas series. Lawrence Gordon Clark had a script for this all ready to go, but he couldn’t film it due to lack of budget, so it never got made in the original series. This is is Mark Gatiss’s adaptation of the story, and I think it works well. I wasn’t disappointed with this one.
        ~
      • A Ghost Story for Christmas: The Tractate Middoth (2013) dir. Mark Gatiss. Another M.R. James, not one I’ve read, and I liked the casting and the atmosphere. It’s another sinister treasure hunt/puzzle mixed up in supernatural stalker shenanigans, which is a lovely combination that James did so well. Although a variation on a Jamesian theme, it’s a good variation, and I enjoyed Gatiss’s adaptation of it.
        ~
      • A Ghost Story for Christmas: The Dead Room (2018) dir. Mark Gatiss. I think this one is an original story from Gatiss, with Simon Callow playing actor Aubrey in a haunted recording studio. This is a Haunted by the Past one, with a question around whether it is ghosts or memories, playing with the auditory element of the job, and Aubrey’s hallucinations. This worked okay for me, and it got at the sexual repression I think you can find in James’s work if you’re looking for it, foregrounding and centering it. I liked it, but not one of my favourites.
        ~
      • A Ghost Story for Christmas: Martin’s Close (2019) dir. Mark Gatiss. This is another M.R. James adaptation, again written for the screen by Mark Gatiss, and it’s not a straight sort of period piece adaptation, but this time we get a narrator for the framed narrative, Simon Williams, playing Stanton, who narrates the historical tale directly to the camera and as a voiceover. It’s a blend of the Robert Powell / Michael Bryant style narrations, with cut-aways to the historical trial. I think this worked fine, and Peter Capaldi does a great job of the attorney role. I liked that Ann Clark was played sympathetically and as an autistic girl, and I haven’t read this one either but I hope that she’s not comic relief or written as an ‘oddity’.
        ~
      • A Ghost Story for Christmas: The Mezzotint (2021) dir. Mark Gatiss. After hearing two versions of this story (Robert Powell’s narration, and the Spine Chillers episode with Michael Bryant), I’m very, very happy that this one got adapted. This has been moved forwards (the original story was published 1904) to 1923, which gives it a more Christie-esque vibe to me, but gives it that Golden Age Detective feel of a sinister mystery. This is a genuinely creepy story and one of my favourites, so I loved it. I also liked that I can compare Powell’s mezzotint prop with this one! I did like the choice to genderswap the servant character, as otherwise it’s just 4 blokes is a room. I also enjoyed the choice to link the mezzotint mystery to the mysterious family history of our main character. I get what they were going for with the ending, but… I’m kind of wishing they didn’t show us so much.
        ~
      • The Wolf of Snow Hollow (2020) dir. Jim Cummings. I thought I’d go for a feature-length film after all the shorts, and as this one has been on my watchlist for a while, I thought it would be a good one to go for. It’s a police procedural werewolf film in the snow; why not. It’s meant to be a horror-comedy? But I don’t vibe with this sort of blunt humour really, so for me, a lot of what was meant to be funny didn’t land. It was fine, though, and it pulled together at the end with some elements I appreciated.
        ~
      • The Death of Snow White (2025) dir. Jason Brooks. These gory updates of classic tales are my guilty pleasure. I loved Cinderella’s Curse (my favourite so far?), and this one was full on cheap body horror all the way through. Everyone is in Ren Faire costumes, and the queen is outstanding. The pursuit of beauty is accompanied with horrific experimentations, the eyelash sewing, teeth replacement, leeches, blood magic, and hacking up peasant girls. It’s pretty good, and I found it funny, and it had some amazing moments. The butterfly. Amazing. Naked mirror demons. Amazing. I enjoyed this one.
        ~
      • The Vampire Lovers (1970) dir. Roy Ward Baker. Somehow, the only one of the Karnstein trilogy I thought I hadn’t seen? I’ve seen both Twins of Evil and Lust for a Vampire (several times). This is the one that actually tried to base the plot on Le Fanu’s Carmilla, with a lot of familiar faces in the cast, and some gorgeous dresses. I actually remember a lot of scenes but not the whole film, so it turns out… yes I have seen it before? But ADHD I guess. Anyway, this is a good one.
        ~

      20 Dec:

      • Pale Horse (2024) dir. Pearry Reginald Teo. This is trying to be a modern Gothic, romantic, thing. The point is to watch a beautiful man with his shirt off painting, but there’s a lovely she-demon, and he’s sold his soul to make Art. It’s got a good premise, it looks good, but the sound mixing is atrocious. This feels like a less erotic version could be a YA Dark Romance bestseller, to be honest, but also if it went full-on Mandy with the visuals it could have been 80% better. I actually liked the ending though – a bit weak in execution, but I do like a tragic failure.

      23 Dec:

      • The Traveler (2010) dir. Michael Oblowitz. A Christmas Eve thriller with Val Kilmer, slaying in every sense. If Die Hard is a Christmas film (it is), then so is this one. I’ve seen Die Hard so many times I just fancied another gory thriller set at Christmas to shake things up! The ending of this one is a bit of a let-down, and is incredibly USian about it in the process (see spoilers below) but overall very enjoyable. I would rewatch this 100%, I don’t think the ending spoils it for me.
      Spoilers for The Traveler

      The extra-judicial torture and murder of a drifter who comes after the cops seeking revenge is justified at the end by the revelation he actually did kill the main cop’s daughter. So the little girl comes back to reveal the drifter’s name (like Rumplestiltskin, who also was after children in the fairy tale), and this enables the cop to break his power and shoot him. He’s already dead but guns always work when you have the right mystical knowledge.

      Another interesting point is when he runs outside there are 2 doors: one is the Hard Eight bar with dice on the sign. One is a door in shadow that has a red neon sign saying JESUS SAVES above it. He runs into the bar. So you can read this as a complete rejection of Jesus and religious morals and Christian ethics, but he is saved anyway, because cop ethics/being a cop who is justified in his heinous actions, trump Christian ethics. He’s of course saved by the ghost of his innocent little daughter, which centres his position as Father in US family life over and above actual ethics and morality.

      This film seems to subscribe to the idea that a man in a position of power can do anything and get away with it if (a) he can justify it to himself, and (b) he’s doing it for his kid, who then supernaturally rewards him for it as a seal of approval.

      There is no coherent belief system in this film, of course, it’s not really thought through, or even about that. But that betrays the unexamined cognitive dissonance and central shallow thinking about ethics that the writer (Joseph C. Muscat) and director have, while pandering to (who they assume could be) their potential audience demographic. So that’s a total mess, because the film doesn’t actually present a coherent belief system, and plays with conflicting elements and vibes.

      Because the drifter turns out to actually have been evil, this is played as some sort of redemption arc for that cop? If we’re going ‘saved by grace’ here, it’s the grace of his dead kid, not Jesus, which has been explicitly rejected (whether this was intentional by the writer/director or not) by making him go through the other door. So it’s a deeply secular ‘redeemed by family’ message, again, whether intentional or not.

      That probable lack of intent is pretty normal for a lot of films that play with these themes on a surface level only, and it usually results in these sorts of internally incoherent ideas. I think it’s really telling about the cultural norms and assumptions of the writers/directors when this happens, as when you don’t think about what you’re saying, you fall back into your own cultural set of norms by default, and when you take a step back, they don’t make any sense in the context of the story you’re telling. They do, however, reveal quite a lot about what these writers/directors subconsciously or consciously think about certain things, and I find that equally fascinating.

      I deeply regretted that we didn’t get a decent kill for the detective at the end – but apart from that, Val Kilmer is the best thing in this film. Worth a watch for the super close-ups of his face and little smirks.

      24 Dec:

      • A Ghost Story for Christmas: The Room in the Tower (2025) dir. Mark Gatiss. This one is genuinely good – even people who don’t like Gatiss’s adaptations think this one is good. E.F. Benson’s story, The Room in the Tower, came out in 1912, so before either of the Wars, but this adaptation was set during the Blitz in the 1940s, and that enabled a few tweaks to be made to the original, which ends with the coffin being dug up. I really liked the addition of the framed narrative, and the tension supplied by the bombing above them. I also liked the ending. E.F. Benson shows us the vampiric ghoul as well, and neither the original nor the adaptation explains why the main character is the focus of these dreams and apparitions. I’ll be honest: the original doesn’t do much for me, but the adaptation really worked to creep me out.

      I think for January I’ll just post the highlights of the month, or these posts will get VERY long each time!

      See you then for another monthly media round-up, and I’ll be posting my Year in Review as an Indie Author tomorrow.

      #BookReview #filmReview #mediaRoundUp #tvReview

      November 2025 Media Round-Up

      I’ve decided to do a round-up of my media consumption for each month, with a film & TV post and a books & podcasts post. For the months where I don’t watch/read/listen to a lot, I’ll condense to a single post for everything.

      November was a pretty lean month honestly, so I’ll do a single post as my round-up!

      Books – November

      All of Us Murderers by K.J. Charles

      All of Us Murderers by K.J. Charles
      Published: October 7, 2025, Poisoned Pen Press

      The lush Gothic drama of Crimson Peak meets the murderous intrigue of Knives Out with an LGBTQIA+ love story to die for from award-winning author KJ Charles.

      WHO WILL SURVIVE LACKADAY HOUSE?

      When Zeb Wyckham is summoned to a wealthy relative’s remote Gothic manor, he is horrified to find all the people he least wants to see in the world: his estranged brother, his sneering cousin, and his bitter ex-lover Gideon Grey. Things couldn’t possibly get worse.

      Then the master of the house announces the true purpose of the gathering: he intends to leave the vast family fortune to whoever marries his young ward, setting off a violent scramble for her hand. Zeb wants no part of his greedy family―but when he tries to leave, the way is barred. The walls of Lackaday House are high, and the gates firmly locked. As the Dartmoor mists roll in, there’s no way out. And something unnatural may be watching them from the house’s shadowy depths…

      Fear and paranoia ramping ever-higher, Zeb has nowhere to turn but to the man who once held his heart. As the gaslight flickers and terror takes hold, can two warring lovers reunite, uncover the murderous mysteries of Lackaday House―and live to tell the tale?

      Really enjoyed this Gothic romp with an ADHD protagonist and a lot of playing with classic Gothic novels, tropes, and themes.

      What the Fog Conceals by R.A. Marno (ARC Read)

      What the Fog Conceals by R.A. Marno
      Publication Date: 15-Aug-26 with Salt Publishing

      In What the Fog Conceals, R. A. Marno delivers a taut, quietly devastating debut that lingers in the mind long after the final page. Set in a remote Irish estate shadowed by silence and omission, the novel unearths the emotional archaeology of a family haunted less by ghosts than by what they refuse to name.

      Blending literary precision with Gothic unease, Marno explores the weight of memory, the corrosive nature of secrecy, and the quiet violence of complicity. This is a story where atmosphere presses in like weather, where grief hides in architecture, and where the past is never quite buried — only waiting to return.

      Perfect for readers drawn to elegant psychological fiction and the slow unravel of long-held truths, What the Fog Conceals marks the arrival of a striking new voice.

      In What the Fog Conceals, R. A. Marno creates a deeply moving and quietly assured narrative of unstoppable resurfacing memory, the unexorcisable haunting of history, and the ultimate, unsuppressable power of a landscape – a heritage both natural and constructed — that is as inescapable as mortality. This debut is not only a wonderful addition to Northern Irish Gothic fiction, but a must-read for all those who love slow burn Gothic Horror.

      I got an ARC and left an honest review, which is being used as an official blurb.

      Films & TV – November

      For TV shows watched in November, there were 3 main ones:

      Hazbin Hotel which dropped a new season; Helluva Boss, set in the same universe, which I watched all of straight after; Creature (2023) which is the Turkish version of Frankenstein.

      These three are comfort shows for me, and I really enjoy them.

      For films, I guess I was all filmed out after #100HorrorMoviesIn92Days ended, so I didn’t watch a lot. Here are the few I did watch:

      KPop Demon Hunters (2025) dirs. Chris Appelhans, Maggie Kang.

      I can see why people love this one. I really enjoyed it and the songs are really catchy.

      Frankenstein (2025) dir. Guillermo del Toro.

      Loved this one. I wrote a post comparing the way Del Toro adapted the novel to the way Çağan Irmak adapted it for his 8-part series. Read that here.

      I followed the film up with Frankenstein: The Anatomy Lesson (2025): the behind-the-scenes documentary.

      बारामूला / Baramulla (2025) dir. Aditya Suhas Jambhale.

      Set in Kashmir and focused on the struggles there, with supernatural forces and a crime thriller plot.

      And that’s a wrap on November! Pretty lowkey, I’ve been busy and unwell, which will likely be a theme into December.

      Let’s see what the festive season brings me, and I’ll share it with you!

      #100HorrorMoviesin92Days #BookReview #filmReview #mediaRoundUp #tvReview