Horror Movie
Blurb
The monster at the heart of a cult 90s cursed horror film tells his shocking and bloody secret history. Slow burn terror meets high-stakes showdowns, from the bestselling author of A Head Full of Ghosts and The Cabin at the End of the World.
Summer, 1993 – a group of young guerrilla filmmakers spend four weeks making Horror Movie, a notorious, disturbing, art-house horror film. Steeped in mystery and tragedy, the film has taken on a mythic, cult renown, despite only three of the original scenes ever being released to the public.
Decades later, a big budget reboot is in the works, and Hollywood turns to the only surviving cast member – the man who played 'the Thin Kid', the masked teen at the centre of it all. He remembers all too well the secrets buried within the original screenplay, the bizarre events of the filming, and the crossed lines on set.
Caught in a nightmare of masks and appearances, facile Hollywood personalities and the strangeness of fan conventions, the Thin Kid spins a tale of past and present, scripts and reality, and what the camera lets us see. But at what cost do we revisit our demons?
After all these years, the monster the world never saw will finally be heard.
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Ian.1
Doesn't ever quite feel like a "horror" novel until the last five pages of the book - which unfortunately are the most interesting pages of the book. Can come off a bit pretentious (even though that's definitely the intention in many cases, narratively) and the "screenplay" portions of the book don't make real-world "sense," since much of the character studies and philosophizing done in the "screenplays" are things that an audience wouldn't be privy to, especially since the "characters" in the screenplay have relatively short, meaningless dialog that doesn't convey any real emotions nor motivations. All-around not necessarily a "bad" book, but it's one that I won't be sad if it gets lost in a move.
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