#revenge of the killer snowman
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horrororman · 9 days ago
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☃️ Notable films that were released on November 21st...
Frankenstein (1931)(US).
Diabolique (1955)(US).
Westworld (1973)(US).
The Boy Who Cried Werewolf (1973)(Bismarck).
The Wraith (1986)(US).
Predator 2 (1990).
Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Mutant Killer Snowman (2000)(video premiere).
Gothika (2003).
The Mist (2007).
#horror
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bootleg317 · 3 months ago
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JACK FROST Acrylic painting on 8x10 stretched canvas by me
@frostcorpsclub
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haveyouseenthishorrormovie · 6 months ago
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SUMMARY: The mutant killer snowman Jack Frost returns to kill more people during Christmas.
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moviesandmania · 2 years ago
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JACK FROST 2: REVENGE OF THE MUTANT KILLER SNOWMAN (2000) Reviews and overview
JACK FROST 2: REVENGE OF THE MUTANT KILLER SNOWMAN (2000) Reviews and overview
‘He’s Icin’ & Slicin’ Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Mutant Killer Snowman is a 2000 American comedy horror film written and directed by Michael Cooney and a sequel to his Jack Frost (1997). The movie stars Christopher Allport (Jack Frost; Savage Weekend), Eileen Seeley, Chip Heller, Marsha Clark, Ray Cooney, David Allen Brooks, Sean Patrick Murphy, Tai Bennet, Jennifer Lyons, Shonda Farr, Granger…
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darkdragon768 · 10 months ago
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Reblog for a bigger sample size!
You can gladly tell what YOUR favorite OST is in the tags!
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cronengirly · 11 months ago
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So I have a little holiday tradition I like to call
Jenny's Christmas Scare-a-Thon 🎄🔪☃️
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I started doing it last year with the first two Silent Night, Deadly Night films and Black Christmas.
I'm about halfway through this year's Scare-a-Thon, so I thought I'd share my list!
Silent Night, Deadly Night 3: Better Watch Out
Silent Night, Deadly Night 4: Initiation
Silent Night, Deadly Night 5: The Toymaker
Jack Frost (1997)
Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Killer Mutant Snowman
Christmas Evil
I'll be posting up a list on my Letterboxd (@ doomedjenny) after I've finished the Scare-a-Thon, I'll have more comprehensive thoughts there if you wanna check that out.
Lucky for me there are enough schlocky Christmas horror flicks that I'm in no danger of running out any time soon. Already working on my list for next year, so drop suggestions if you have any!
And have a happy holidays!!
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erosamur · 2 months ago
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How to Rate Films (my opinion).
10 of 10 - It's a masterpiece, where everything is perfect. Example: The Shawshank Redemption, The Godfather. 9 of 10 - It's a very good film, which is almost perfect, but has a few problems with the acting or script. Examples: Schindler's List, Forrest Gump, Pulp Fiction, Alien. 8 of 10 - A good film that often has an interesting script, but can have problems with the acting, effects or have questionable moments in the script. Example: The Dark Knight, Scarface, Jurassic Park, Joker. 7 of 10 - This film still looks good, but the script can have stupid moments, the acting almost believable and it has not bad effects. Examples: Poltergeist (1982), Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, Transformers, Independence Day. 6 of 10 - An average film, with good ideas and acting but a lack of budget. Or film can have a good budget, but the script and acting are kind of weird or not good. Example: Napoleon (2023), Van Helsing (2004), Alien Resurrection, Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw, Suicide Squad (2016). 5 of 10 - A film with a cliche script, which is not bad and not good. It's just boring. The acting of a main characters can be OK, but others have problems. This film often has weird effects. Example: Twilight (2008), Scooby-Doo (2002), Scary Movie 2, Green Lantern (2011), Jupiter Ascending, Ghostbusters (2016). 4 of 10 - An average film with a bad scenario or stupid acting. Here you can also see the weird work of a cameraman and a costume supervisor. It can still be watchable or even fun (so bad that it's good). Example: Street Fighter (1994), Jason X, Siberia (2018). 3 of 10 - A film with a bad script and bad acting. Cameraman and costume supervisor are also blind or something. This film is not fun at all. Example: The Crow: Wicked Prayer, Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Mutant Killer Snowman. 2 of 10 - Everything is bad. Film by people who do not have an idea how to make a movies, but somehow get a budget for their films. Example: Nemesis 5: The New Model, Rise of the Black Bat. 1 of 10 - This is not even a film. This is pure torture with a 5 kg potato budget. To be honest, this type of film just doesn't exist, or maybe someone has it in a private collection.
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supermarcey · 1 year ago
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The Tubi Tuesdays Podcast Episode 126 – Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Mutant Killer Snowman (2000)
The Tubi Tuesdays Podcast Episode 126 – Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Mutant Killer Snowman (2000)
The Tubi Tuesdays Podcast Episode 126 Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Mutant Killer Snowman (2000) Bede’s Pick Download HERE https://supermarcey.files.wordpress.com/2023/12/the-tubi-tuesdays-podcast-episode-126-jack-frost-2-revenge-of-the-mutant-killer-snowman-2000.mp3 Movie Starts Playing At: 00:09:56 Welcome to our podcast series from The Super Network and Pop4D called Tubi Tuesdays Podcast!…
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subsmissivetransbarbie · 1 year ago
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31 Days Of Christmas
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In 2022 i did a halloween marathon. This year we are watching (at the least) one holiday film for the entire month. Below the cut you will find the film's i have watched. I Will Reveal my rating's after the final film.
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer : A young reindeer Rudolph lives at the North Pole. His father is one of Santa's reindeer and it is expected that Rudolph will eventually be one too. However, he has a feature which is a setback and causes him to be ostracized: his red nose. Rating 2/5
A Muppet Christmas Carol : The Muppets present their own touching rendition of Charles Dickens' classic tale. Rating : Rating 4/5
The Mean One : In a sleepy mountain town, Cindy's parents are murdered and her Christmas is stolen by a bloodthirsty green figure in a red Santa suit. Rating 2 1/2 /5
Holiday In Handcuffs : A struggling artist working as a waitress kidnaps one of her customers to take home to meet her parents at Christmastime. Rating 3/5
A Christmas Story Christmas (2002) : Follows the now-adult Ralphie as he returns to the house on Cleveland Street to give his kids a magical Christmas like the one he had as a child, reconnecting with childhood friends, and reconciling the passing of his Old Man. Rating 2/5
The Family Stone (2005) : An uptight, conservative businesswoman accompanies her boyfriend to his eccentric and outgoing family's annual Christmas celebration and finds that she's a fish out of water in their free-spirited way of life. Rating 3/5
Krampus : A boy who has a bad Christmas accidentally summons a festive demon to his family home. Rating 4/5
Gremlins : A young man inadvertently breaks three important rules concerning his new pet and unleashes a horde of malevolently mischievous monsters on a small town. Rating 4/5
It's a Wonderful Knife : After saving her town from a psychotic killer, Winnie Carruthers' life is less than wonderful. When she wishes she'd never been born, she finds herself in a nightmare parallel universe where without her, things could be much, much worse. Rating 2/5
Jack Frost (1997) After an accident that left murderer Jack Frost dead in genetic material the vengeful killer returns as a murderous snowman to exact his revenge on the man who sent him to be executed Rating : 3/5
Jack Frost (1998) A father who can't keep his promises is killed in a car accident. One year later, he returns as a snowman who has the final chance to put things right with his son before he is gone forever. Rating : 4/5
Four Christmases : A couple struggles to visit all four of their divorced parents on Christmas. Rating : 2/5
Anna and the Apocalypse A zombie apocalypse threatens the sleepy town of Little Haven - at Christmas - forcing Anna and her friends to fight, slash and sing their way to survival, facing the undead in a desperate race to reach their loved ones. Rating 4 / 5
Home Alone : An eight-year-old troublemaker, mistakenly left home alone, must defend his home against a pair of burglars on Christmas eve. Rating : 3/5
Black Christmas (1974) : During their Christmas break, a group of sorority girls are stalked by a stranger. Rating : 5/5
Home Alone 2: Lost in New York : One year after Kevin McCallister was left home alone and had to defeat a pair of bumbling burglars, he accidentally finds himself stranded in New York City - and the same criminals are not far behind. Rating : 4/5
Black Christmas (2006) On Christmas Eve, an escaped maniac returns to his childhood home, which is now a sorority house, and begins to murder the sorority sisters one by one. Rating : 3/5
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation : The Griswold family's plans for a big family Christmas predictably turn into a big disaster. Rating : 2/5
Silent Night : Nell, Simon, and their 3 sons are ready to welcome friends and family for what promises to be a perfect Christmas gathering. Perfect except for one thing: everyone is going to die. Rating : 3/5
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Jack Frost 2 Revenge Of The Mutant Killer Snowman/Jack Frost Is Dead For...
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frostcorpsclub · 2 years ago
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foundonshelfpod · 2 years ago
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A Very Found on Shelf Christmas Dec 6th - Kirk Cameron's Saving Christmas Dec 13th - Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Mutant Killer Snowman Dec 20th - Christmas With Cookie Dec 27th - Trancers
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random-thought-depository · 2 years ago
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Uh, I browsed that Wordpress blog and the comments on its posts a bit and I saw a lot of "this person is likely a shitty alt-reichy" red flags (one of the most obvious examples: they think The Marching Morons was a prescient book). That doesn't necessarily mean all the science stuff on their blog is wrong (they might be one of those people who's got one or two crank beliefs but is otherwise a pretty solid scientist, this stuff is way above my metaphorical pay grade, and it's possible I'm simply misjudging them), but it does incline me to take just about everything they say with a grain of salt and be on guard against Gell-Mann amnesia.
That said, yeah, this was a major thing that made me skeptical about early Americas settlement theories: if there were humans hanging around in the Americas for tens of thousands of years before the Clovis people, I'd think we'd have found more signs of them. Yeah, yeah, fossils only show you what organisms were common, but by 50-20,000 years ago Homo sapiens was a pretty capable species; the sort of species that I'd expect would have become common pretty quickly.
I'd have put it down to the first Americans being a fishing/whaling/beachcombing culture who basically just lived on the shore, didn't know how to live inland and were not strongly motivated to colonize away from the shore, but those footprints are in New Mexico, pretty far inland, so I don't think that works.
They might have gone through a pretty tight genetic bottleneck getting to the Americas, maybe they were just too inbred to thrive or be very fertile?
The idea of humans not being able to consistently achieve ecological dominance over other large predators until (relatively) recently mentioned in those posts is interesting, but I'm kind of skeptical. I think the killer app for achieving ecological dominance over other large predators would have been capacity to imagine pre-emptive self-defense and delayed revenge and delayed killing of rivals with long (as in, days to years) planning horizons (combined with spears or maybe even just hand axes and clubs). You'd need to be very smart to understand and anticipate an enemy that could do that, and even a very physically formidable predator would be quite vulnerable to an enemy that imaginative and patient, so I think it'd be a basically undefeatable OCP for most predators that they could adapt to only by learning to avoid attacking humans. I'm trying to imagine what the minimum intelligence might be for a viable "Grendel" (predator that can habitually attack humans and survive), and I'm thinking intelligence of a human toddler combined with the physical power of a jaguar or a wolf might do it, so probably considerably smarter than a chimp, I guess (it occurs to me that Yeti/"Abominable Snowman" modelled as an Australopithecus offshoot with large carnivore ecological niche and physical power and toddler-like intelligence might be a viable and relatively plausible "Grendel"). Capacity to imagine pre-emptive self-defense and delayed revenge seems like something we probably got relatively early; like I said, I think something with the intelligence of a small human child would probably be able to strategize on that level.
One possibility that occurs to me:
"biology doesnt really "do" maintaining a low population over thousands of years. generally, you expand up to your carrying capacity, or you fizzle out."
Purely instinct-driven biology doesn't, but intelligence and culture might! You don't want to live inside the bust part of a classical predator-prey boom and bust cycle. If you're smart, you want to keep your population stable at a level well below the carrying capacity of the land with your level of technology, because a population at carrying capacity is a population at the edge of starvation. Humans are smart enough to realize this and regulate their own reproduction accordingly! Most obviously we can invent condoms and birth control pills, but you don't really need those to do it; once you've figured out that pregnancy is a consequence of PIV sex (something I bet we figured out pretty early) you can prevent unwanted pregnancies with even very simple and primitive technology, or technically no technology at all. You don't even need to stop doing social sexuality, there are a bunch of sex-like things you can do that involve little or no chance of pregnancy. Pleistocene people could totally have done it! Presently existing hunter-gatherers act in ways that suggest a consciousness of the need to regulate their own reproduction, e.g. long nursing periods that allow lactational amenorrhea to be used as birth control. If this is the explanation, the question would then shift to why this population control system broke down around the time of the great warming. New religion? Arrival of a new wave of immigrants with a different, more pro-natalist culture? The great warming itself disrupted the old fertility control culture which was an adaptation to the harsh conditions of the ice age?
Come to think of it, do we even know for sure that these mysterious, light-footprinted first Americans were Homo sapiens? Given how little we know about them, maybe they were a whole different species, with fundamentally different behavior? For example, maybe they had longer nursing periods than Homo sapiens, with proportionately lengthened lactational amenorrhea and birth spacing; that might have been a primitive trait of hominids! Maybe that explains Homo sapiens demographic "victory" over other hominids in general?
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This mystery is definitely going in my Blindsight fanfic notes as one of the things that becomes a lot easier to explain in a world where Blindsight vampires existed:
In Blindsight world the answer would be obvious and simple: the significant difference between the first Americans and the Clovis people was that the first Americans didn't have dogs! Vampires followed the first Americans across Beringia, and in the Americas kept their ancient law to not let the humans breed in great numbers. Then the proto-Clovis came, and the proto-Clovis had anti-vampire guard dogs, so vampires were less effective predators against the Clovis people (with anti-vampire guard/hunting dogs the Clovis people might even have begun to turn the tables, like water buffalo do with lions), so vampires were not able to control the numbers of the Clovis people through predation pressure.
i really like this series of posts about pre-clovis settlement in america. it talks about how the weird thing with pre-clovis is we seem *some* evidence of early humans, but not a lot! but biology doesnt really "do" maintaining a low population over thousands of years. generally, you expand up to your carrying capacity, or you fizzle out. and maybe humans didnt do as well pre-clovis because of differences in technology, or maybe differences in the environment, or etc etc, but it needs *some* explanation for why the carrying capacity was so much lower pre-clovis
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ollierachnid · 7 years ago
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Anyone remember that 1997 Jack Frost film? I wanted to rewrite it and Jack isn’t … a snowman in it.
This is him. Your local albino serial killer
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fanofspooky · 3 years ago
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He’s chillin and killin
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wonderweird · 6 years ago
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"I literally met him today!" in reference to Doug Jones. What.
YES YOU HEARD THAT RIGHT
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HE WAS AT A CONVENTION HERE SIGNING AUTOGRAPHS
HE IS A LOVELY FRIENDLY MAN AND TO BE HELD BY HIM WAS ONE OF THE BEST EXPERIENCES OF MY LIFE.
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