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The Horror Double Bill

The Horror Double Bill

著者: Craig Johnson
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Welcome to The Horror Double Bill, where we pair classic and modern horror films to explore the dark, the horrifying and the bizarre. Inspired by the legendary BBC2 horror double bills of the 1970s and 1980s, each week we discuss two films that share twisted themes, unsettling atmospheres, or strange connections—whether it’s psychological terror, gothic chills, ultra-violence, sci-fi or absurd black comedy.

From the shadowy corridors of black and white classics to the paranoia-fueled chaos of the 21st-century, we take a deep dive into what makes these films memorable and the social context in which they were made. Expect discussions on film history, censorship, director profiles, folklore, and cultural anxieties, with a dry British wit (well, I think I'm funny) and a love for horror in all its forms.

Subscribe for unexpected pairings, and a celebration of horror as a feeling—not just a genre.


New episodes every Sunday.


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📧 thehorrordoublebill@gmail.com


© 2025 The Horror Double Bill
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  • Episode Four: And Soon The Darkness (1970) & The Hitcher (1986)
    2025/06/08

    Episode 4 – The Horror Double Bill: And Soon the Darkness (1970) & The Hitcher (1986)

    In this episode of The Horror Double Bill, we explore two chilling roadbound nightmares that turn travel into terror. First, we examine And Soon the Darkness (1970), a sun-drenched British thriller where isolation in the French countryside gives way to dread. Then, we dive into The Hitcher (1986), a haunting, nihilistic American horror-thriller in which a lone driver picks up far more than he bargained for on the open road.

    Both films use beautiful yet empty landscapes to generate feelings of isolation, and in this episode we discuss the use of space, cinematography, casting, and production stories, as well as the original critical reception and later re-evaluation of both films.

    sources used for this episode:

    And Soon the Darkness

    StudioCanal Blu-ray (2021 edition):
    https://www.studiocanal.com/

    British Film Institute (BFI):
    https://www.bfi.org.uk/features/and-soon-darkness-daylight-thriller

    Little White Lies retrospective:
    https://lwlies.com/articles/and-soon-the-darkness-1970-retrospective/

    Film Stories article:
    https://filmstories.co.uk/features/and-soon-the-darkness-1970-british-thriller/

    Hammer and Beyond blog:
    https://hammerandbeyond.blogspot.com/2012/06/and-soon-darkness-1970.html

    Newspaper archives: The Guardian, The Times, The New York Times,

    The Hitcher

    The Hitcher (1986) – Second Sight Films 4K UHD Blu-ray Special Features (2024) : Interviews with Robert Harmon, Eric Red, C. Thomas Howell, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Mark Isham, and John Seale:

    https://secondsightfilms.co.uk/

    "The Hitcher - How do these films get made" - feature included in the Momentum special edition DVD release.

    Chris Broughton, “How we made chiller classic The Hitcher,” The Guardian, Oct 7, 2024:
    https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2024/oct/07/rutger-hauer-chiller-classic-the-hitcher-thomas-howell

    Roger Ebert, “The Hitcher,” Chicago Sun-Times review, 1986
    https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/the-hitcher-1986#:~:text=%E2%80%9CThe%20Hitcher%E2%80%9D%20grants%20the%20Hauer,movie%20is%20diseased%20and%20corrupt.

    Newsweek review by Jack Kroll (quoted in Los Angeles Times, 1986)
    Daily Variety & The Hollywood Reporter reviews (1986), quoted in Los Angeles Times

    https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-02-23-ca-10847-story.html

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    📧 thehorrordoublebill@gmail.com

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    1 時間 5 分
  • Episode Three: Frightmare (1974) & Possum (2018)
    2025/06/01

    The Horror Double Bill Episode Three: Frightmare (1974) & Possum (2018) British suburban gothic, moral outrage, and the horror of family values.

    This week on The Horror Double Bill, we’re digging into the unsettling world of British horror with a pairing that’s as psychologically disturbing as it is politically charged: Frightmare (1974), directed by Pete Walker, and Possum (2018), the bleakly brilliant debut from Matthew Holness.

    Join us as we chew over themes of madness, repression, and inherited trauma, exploring how these two films capture a peculiarly British horror – one rooted in decaying institutions, Victorian legacies, and a deep distrust of the family unit. We also cast a critical eye on 1970s Britain, from Mary Whitehouse and the Festival of Light to the eerie legacy of public information films and the uncanny weirdness of kids’ TV.

    Subscribe for more deep-dive horror analysis each week.

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    📧 thehorrordoublebill@gmail.com

    artwork by Justin Parker
    📸 jpkr_illustration

    A Gun for George by Matthew Holness: https://youtu.be/Fq0xt_gbVH0?si=EV_TxxWEVeUf-GB2

    Sources used for this episode:

    Frightmare:

    • Making Mischief: The Cult Films of Pete Walker by Steve Chibnall
    • English Gothic: Classic Horror Cinema 1897–2015 by Jonathan Rigby
    • Nightmare Movies by Kim Newman
    https://youtu.be/nrJNpitX-Fc?si=5PNxx36KdpSNFpGQ
    https://youtu.be/1Rn3t0CsIiU?si=dUCwoXYBdwo7LRRX
    https://youtu.be/L2nGhSZRXRE?si=-ppxESgGEmOsi87g
    https://youtu.be/O2piqstEaTI?si=H-XOt-pnyZ-KwL2j
    https://youtu.be/oswUssXzFlY?si=xR4owVtVEO5TyUTL

    Possum:

    • Film4 (2018) Interview with Matthew Holness
    • Essay: “Waking up, is it?”: Childhood Trauma, Repression, and Freud’s Uncanny in POSSUM (Father, Son, and Holy Gore, by C. H. Newell) : fathersonholygore.com/2019/04/10/essay-waking-up-is-it-childhood-trauma-repression-and-freuds-uncanny-in-possum/#:~:text=He%20uses%20the%20Uncanny%20to,if%20that's%20at%20all%20possible.
    https://youtu.be/c8Hkh1yYX7g?si=J4aSRI2hC-64FUtM
    https://youtu.be/_BskDyQra1o?si=RzXkltifcbv8x7Ad

    #cultcinema #britishhorror #1970shorror #petewalker #possum #frightmare #exploitationmovies #horror #podcast

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    1 時間 1 分
  • Episode Two: The Leopard Man (1943) & Four Flies on Grey Velvet (1971)
    2025/05/25

    The Horror Double Bill Episode 2: The Leopard Man (1943) & Four Flies on Grey Velvet (1971) Guilt, madness and the Italian Giallo

    Welcome to The Horror Double Bill, where horror is a feeling, not just a genre.

    In this episode, we delve into The Leopard Man (1943), a moody psychological thriller from producer Val Lewton. Then we leap into the stylised paranoia of Dario Argento’s Four Flies on Grey Velvet (1971)

    We explore the legacy of Val Lewton’s “suggestive horror,” the evolution of giallo cinema, and how both films capture dread through style, sound, and suggestion.

    Subscribe for more horror pairings, cult film deep dives, and a bit of film history

    Sources used for this episode:

    The Leopard Man:

    Dreams of Darkness by J.P. Telotte
    Val Lewton: The Reality of Terror by Joel E. Siegel
    Icons of Grief: Val Lewton’s Home Front Pictures by Alexander Nemerov.
    Fear: The Autobiography of Dario Argento

    Four Flies on Grey Velvet

    Four Flies on Grey Velvet by Luigi Cozzi
    Broken Mirrors, Broken Minds by Maitland McDonagh
    Dario Argento: The Man, the Myths & the Magic by Alan Jones.

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    📧 thehorrordoublebill@gmail.com

    artwork by Justin Parker
    📸 jpkr_illustration

    #HorrorPodcast #TheLeopardMan #FourFliesOnGreyVelvet #Giallo #DarioArgento #ValLewton #ClassicHorror #PsychologicalThriller #HorrorDoubleBill #FilmAnalysis #CultCinema

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    1 時間 6 分

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