But we were gratified to see that many of our cherished beliefs were echoed by Roth and his co-hosts Rob Zombie and The Walking Dead producer Greg Nicotero. Yes, the towering werewolf from The Howling is the scariest ever put on screen. Beyond a doubt, John Carpenter’s The Thing, which was close to universally panned upon release, is a top tier thriller. We’re anticipating the segment on ghosts, the focus of Sunday night’s series finale. We imagine these were saved for last because viewers are most interested in the subject, a curiosity that derives from the fact that many people actually believe ghosts exist. We expect the episode to discuss such old and new classics as The Haunting, The Shining, The Ring, and The Woman in Black. We’ll see. But no spoilers, please. If you’re in the States you can watch it before we do, whereas we’ll have to (totally legally, we swear) download it the next day. But whenever you watch it, the show has been a nice treat for horror aficionados.
Eli Roth and AMC make History with a seven part look at horror cinema.
AMC, Eli Roth's History of Horror, Return of the Living Dead, 28 Days Later, Incubo sulla città contaminata, Nightmare City, The Thing, Near Dark, The Lost Boys, The Howling, The Shining, The Woman in Black, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Get Out, It, Let Me In, Let the Right One In, The Haunting, The Ring, Eli Roth, Danny Boyle, Rob Zombie, Teri McMinn, John Carpenter, television, horror