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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book any horror film fan should be ashamed to be without!!
I bought this book as a supplement to research on a term paper. Wow, was I surprised!! This is the end-all be-all of horror film books. Mike Mayo is amazingly honest, and though there are some strange entries (The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed-up Zombies rates 3 stars), he never becomes defensive. He lists some excellent sources,...
Published on June 27, 1999 by Nathaniel Yapp

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars This Just Doesn't Cut It
I was given "Videohound's Horror Show" as a Christmas present the past year, and just finished working my through it the other day. I have to say I was really disappointed overall. As other reviewers point out so well, why are "Alice in Wonderland", "Platoon" and "Wizard of Oz" included here? There are so many movies that may have horrific elements in them, but they are...
Published on May 23, 2006 by Graboidz


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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book any horror film fan should be ashamed to be without!!, June 27, 1999
By 
Nathaniel Yapp "film geek" (Phoenix, AZ United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: VideoHound's Horror Show: 999 Hair-Raising, Hellish and Humorous Movies (Paperback)
I bought this book as a supplement to research on a term paper. Wow, was I surprised!! This is the end-all be-all of horror film books. Mike Mayo is amazingly honest, and though there are some strange entries (The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed-up Zombies rates 3 stars), he never becomes defensive. He lists some excellent sources, and as with all Videohound books, cross-indexes everything. Those movies that are not included are not included for good reason. Those movies that are included...well, let's just say this is the ultimate horror book.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars This Just Doesn't Cut It, May 23, 2006
By 
Graboidz (Westminster, Maryland) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: VideoHound's Horror Show: 999 Hair-Raising, Hellish and Humorous Movies (Paperback)
I was given "Videohound's Horror Show" as a Christmas present the past year, and just finished working my through it the other day. I have to say I was really disappointed overall. As other reviewers point out so well, why are "Alice in Wonderland", "Platoon" and "Wizard of Oz" included here? There are so many movies that may have horrific elements in them, but they are still not horror films. Even if you take those films out of the mix, the biggest issue I have with Mike Mayo's work, is that he is approaching and reviewing these films with a main-stream sensability. Mayo's approach to most of the films presented in this book are written as if for a non-horror fan audience. Most horror fans know what to expect with a "Halloween" sequel, we aren't looking for quality film making like "Shakespeare in Love". We just need to know if Michael is creepy, what's the body count, and are the special effects worth the ticket price? I was hoping to find some "new" titles here, but to be honest even a casual fan of the genre, will be pretty familiar with the movies listed here.
The one aspect of this book that I did like, was that Mayo was not into giving away spoilers. Rarely does Mayo spill the beans about any twists or shocks pertaining to any of the films he reviews, and that was a breath of fresh air.
As a horror fan I would recommend you check out "Legacy of Blood: a Comprehensive Guide to Slasher Movies" by Jim Harper instead of VideoHound's offering. "Legacy" doesn't cover nearly as many films, and sticks just to the Slasher genre, but it is well written, and features reviews written for horror fans by a horror fan. Jim Harper "gets" horror, and knows what a horror fan wants.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Nearly Indispensible, April 28, 2004
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This review is from: VideoHound's Horror Show: 999 Hair-Raising, Hellish and Humorous Movies (Paperback)
I bought this book right when it came out oh so many years ago. Since that time I've thumbed through it on countless occasions when I thought I'd seen everything there was to see...or had at least heard about it. This book invariably brought some film to my attention that I had some how missed before. In that regard this book it wonderful.

There are some flaws, though. The first is the authors rather lax definition of the horror genre. This leads to the Wizard of Oz being included along side the Wizard of Gore. Somehow that doesn't quite jive and it makes me wonder sometimes what honest to goodness horror movies got excluded to make room for these selections. Second, the author tends to keep things very mainstream. This gripe was answered some when I looked through the Videohound cult movie guide and saw that many of the more fringe titles I hoped to find in the horror guide were included there. Finally, the author's tastes skew very Anglo-American to the point where I don't think that European productions that aren't from the UK get a raw deal in his reviews. However, this is more of a difference of opinion with the author than an actual problem with the book.

On the whole this is very good pickup for someone new to the genre and a find that will reward even the most seasoned horror enthusiast.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book for anybody deeply into horror movies., November 6, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: VideoHound's Horror Show: 999 Hair-Raising, Hellish and Humorous Movies (Paperback)
One piece of advice: If you're squimish don't buy this book. It has graphic pictures and explistic reviews, all the things a horror film junkie loves. Mike Mayo does the best job at writing this book he rates the movies and will even make fun of the movies he didn't like. I can't spend one day without looking through the book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book has everything, a must have for horror fans, August 30, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: VideoHound's Horror Show: 999 Hair-Raising, Hellish and Humorous Movies (Paperback)
This book contains great reviews and bios of famous men and women of horror. It includes bios of everyone from Boris Karloff to Stephen King. The only minor complaint is that it does not have reviews of the Silent Night, Deadly Night movies or the Puppetmaster sequels. Other than that, this is an excellent book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A must for horror fans!, August 24, 1998
This review is from: VideoHound's Horror Show: 999 Hair-Raising, Hellish and Humorous Movies (Paperback)
Though boasting reviews of only 999 horror films (it's only downfall), this book contains loads of other information, an amazing glossary with cross references and a great design!
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A good book, but with some reviews that just don't belong., June 3, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: VideoHound's Horror Show: 999 Hair-Raising, Hellish and Humorous Movies (Paperback)
This was a great guide to horror movies, but there were some films included which simply did not belong at all. Example: Drop Dead Fred. Not only is it never even remotly frightening, (unless you're someone who can decide a film's scary simply by being awful,) it dosen't seem in anyway horror-based, not even as a spoof. Or how about the Darkman series? I loved those films, but how can you call them scary, or even horror-based? Otherwise, this was a great book with smart reviews and cool pictures and quotes. The mini-biographies are also fun to read.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Adequate General Guide, May 17, 2008
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This review is from: VideoHound's Horror Show: 999 Hair-Raising, Hellish and Humorous Movies (Paperback)
Nothing too special here. The author wanted to select 999 of the best horror movies, then curiously squanders a lot of those slots on mainstream films that in no way qualify as horror. He also covers a lot of sequels, most of which he despises, so it's not clear why he listed them at all.

For better or worse (and I prefer a little idiosyncracy in my reference books), he has his biases. The output from Universal Studios from the '30s and '40s is favored (along with anything else involving Karloff, Lugosi, and the younger Chaney), as are a lot of Hammer's early works. (And every single Stephen King movie to that time seems to be listed, too.) Slasher films are typically dismissed as formulaic dreck. The output of most of the Italian directors is given short shrift. And Mayo has a mortal fear of seeing children in jeopardy, so any film that suggests anything along that lines is seriously downgraded.

It could've stood one more editing pass to dial back on the repeated references to "Grand Guignol", "dead teenagers", and his inistence that approximately 717 movies influenced or ripped off "The X-Files".

As with other Videohound guides, it has massive indices and a sturdy bibliography. It's a handsome-looking book, although the page count is a bit bloated by overly generous margins. It's only ten years old, but as a pre-DVD work it's a bit dated.

It's certainly worth skimming through and keeping around as a general reference guide, but the selections are a bit odd, and sometimes his judgment is just a bit odd. I mean, when you're dissing the John Carpenter version of "The Thing", I just can't take you seriously.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A great historical overview, October 27, 2007
This review is from: VideoHound's Horror Show: 999 Hair-Raising, Hellish and Humorous Movies (Paperback)
This book covers films from the silents through the 90's. It includes a wide variety of horror movies, from early suspense films and classic monsters to slashers and a few films that only peripherally link to horror. The reviews are good reading, and include references to other viewing in a number of places. There are several good indexes also.

The only down side is that the book is a bit dated, not in content (any movie guide is dated as soon as it is released) but by being written before DVD's and widescreen TV's became the norm. This is a minor flaw, but I would love to see a new version of the book (hint, hint!)
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5 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Definitve Horror Reference Guide, July 10, 2003
This review is from: VideoHound's Horror Show: 999 Hair-Raising, Hellish and Humorous Movies (Paperback)
This book is unbelieveable! If you are a serious fan of horror movies, I can't see how you could ever be disappointed in this book.
999 of the most well known, (and some fairly obscure) horror flicks reviewed in concise, one-four paragraph summaries, and rated at the end from a 0-4 star, (WOOF!-Four Bone) rating. It contains cast, filmmakers, screenwriters, distributing companies and ratings for each film.
Filled to the brim with pictures, quotes, references, etc. Every couple of pages also has a Videohound Salutes section, where they take half a page to remember and honor certain actors, directors, and decades, and their special contributions to the horror genre.
The reviews are helpful, and informative, and I've rented countless movies based on this book's recommendations and have come away very satisfied. I tend to agree with almost everything the author writes about each movie I see, and as soon as I've seen a new horror flick, I make sure I immediately re-read what the book had to say to make comparisons with my own opinion.
The horror genre is huge, and so, naturally, in the interest of space, many movies couldn't find a spot on here, but most of those movies are obscure slasher flicks from the seventies and eighties, that nobody should care about anyway, (although, admittedly, I've seen 'em all.) Every significant film in the horror genre is in here, from the 1930's to about 1997.
There isn't any way I can possibly recommend this book enough!
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