Killer Collectibles highlights five of the most exciting new horror products released each and every week, from toys and apparel to artwork, records, and much more.
Here are the coolest horror collectibles unveiled this week!
Trick or Treat Vinyl Soundtrack from Real Gone Music
Rock and roll will never die with Trick or Treat’s original motion picture soundtrack being reissued on vinyl for the first time since its initial release in 1986. Real Gone Music will release it on October 7.
The score is composed by Fastway, the British heavy metal founded by former Motorhead guitarist “Fast” Eddie Clarke and featuring Flogging Molly frontman Dave King on vocals. It’s pressed on “Hellfire” colored vinyl, limited to 2,000.
Stranger Things Prints from Netflix
Butcher Billy created artwork for all nine chapters of Stranger Things’s fourth season, giving retro-inspired designs to some of the most memorable moments — from Max’s “Running Up...
Here are the coolest horror collectibles unveiled this week!
Trick or Treat Vinyl Soundtrack from Real Gone Music
Rock and roll will never die with Trick or Treat’s original motion picture soundtrack being reissued on vinyl for the first time since its initial release in 1986. Real Gone Music will release it on October 7.
The score is composed by Fastway, the British heavy metal founded by former Motorhead guitarist “Fast” Eddie Clarke and featuring Flogging Molly frontman Dave King on vocals. It’s pressed on “Hellfire” colored vinyl, limited to 2,000.
Stranger Things Prints from Netflix
Butcher Billy created artwork for all nine chapters of Stranger Things’s fourth season, giving retro-inspired designs to some of the most memorable moments — from Max’s “Running Up...
- 8/26/2022
- by Alex DiVincenzo
- bloody-disgusting.com
I’ll confess. I have a real mushy soft spot for Heavy Metal music. Back in the ‘80s, in my teen years, my buddy Nick and I would crank the latest from Kiss, Scorpions, Judas Priest, Cinderella, etc. And there’s something specifically about Metal tailored to teenagers – that heightened sense of drama we feel at that age, the hormonal urges, and the need to push back against ‘society’. (Right – but please give us our allowances to consume products, okay?)
But Metal also equated with power, which was aligned with evil, and before long, many parents came up with the notion that Metal was Satan’s music. (Is the Pmrc still a thing? Brr.) Well, marketing is marketing, and few Metal bands fought the label (hell, some even embraced it). So it seemed the timing was right for that satanic safe haven, the Horror Film, to meet up with the...
But Metal also equated with power, which was aligned with evil, and before long, many parents came up with the notion that Metal was Satan’s music. (Is the Pmrc still a thing? Brr.) Well, marketing is marketing, and few Metal bands fought the label (hell, some even embraced it). So it seemed the timing was right for that satanic safe haven, the Horror Film, to meet up with the...
- 7/9/2016
- by Scott Drebit
- DailyDead
It’s the month of October. It’s Halloween. No, not the day itself, but tis the season. That means we need to focus on some truly excellent 80’s horror surrounding our beloved holiday. Sure we could give the rehash job to Halloween and its subsequent sequels, but that’s not entirely in spirit of the game although I can assure you that I’m working on something that focuses on the Carpenter magnum opus. Today we’re going to focus on some horror flicks that are about Halloween, but aren’t John Carpenter’s Halloween. Let’s talk about The Day After Halloween, Trick or Treats, Lady in White in our first It Came From 1980X triple feature offering. Each of these movies incorporates something of the Halloween spirit and only one of them actually gets any street cred for being an honest to goodness creep out. There’s...
- 10/15/2012
- by Jimmy Terror
- The Liberal Dead
By Erin Lashley, MoreHorror.com
In the 80s, rock music and horror movies went together like acid washed jeans and feathered hair. The trouble is, even though many horror movies had awesome rock soundtracks, the movies that specifically featured rock musician characters as heroes or villains varied wildly in quality. Although the rock horror movie has mostly gone the way of the 80s, I’m not sure any other type of music will ever have such a successful love affair with horror. I can’t picture people turning up for a movie called Pop Divas of the Apocalypse, or Death by Dubstep, or even Bloody Pit of Techno Bastards. But what do I know? I’m still stuck in the 80s. Here are 10 of the movies that are stuck with me.
Rocktober Blood (1984)
Billy (Tray Loren) is a rock star, and also kind of an a-hole, so nobody is real...
In the 80s, rock music and horror movies went together like acid washed jeans and feathered hair. The trouble is, even though many horror movies had awesome rock soundtracks, the movies that specifically featured rock musician characters as heroes or villains varied wildly in quality. Although the rock horror movie has mostly gone the way of the 80s, I’m not sure any other type of music will ever have such a successful love affair with horror. I can’t picture people turning up for a movie called Pop Divas of the Apocalypse, or Death by Dubstep, or even Bloody Pit of Techno Bastards. But what do I know? I’m still stuck in the 80s. Here are 10 of the movies that are stuck with me.
Rocktober Blood (1984)
Billy (Tray Loren) is a rock star, and also kind of an a-hole, so nobody is real...
- 8/4/2012
- by admin
- MoreHorror
If you have yet to hear of Lynam, consider yourself on notice, and let this be your baptism by fire.
Forged in the city of Birmingham, Alabama, the band has made a name for themselves via a pair of critically-acclaimed albums, the second of which will see a major reissue on August 18th courtesy of Mascot/Megaforce when Tragic City Symphony hit's retailers everywhere.
With the album getting the push it deserves, we thought this would be the perfect time to check in with frontman Jacob Lynam to talk a little horror. Welcome to the 22nd installment of Fangoria Musick's Lists Of Doom!
Taking a break from a relentless string of shows throughout the deep south, Jacob shared his thoughts on ten fright flicks that still strike fear into his guitar-wielding heart.
1. A Nightmare On Elm Street 3 - Dream Warriors (1987) - I absolutely love the Nightmare On Elm Street series.
Forged in the city of Birmingham, Alabama, the band has made a name for themselves via a pair of critically-acclaimed albums, the second of which will see a major reissue on August 18th courtesy of Mascot/Megaforce when Tragic City Symphony hit's retailers everywhere.
With the album getting the push it deserves, we thought this would be the perfect time to check in with frontman Jacob Lynam to talk a little horror. Welcome to the 22nd installment of Fangoria Musick's Lists Of Doom!
Taking a break from a relentless string of shows throughout the deep south, Jacob shared his thoughts on ten fright flicks that still strike fear into his guitar-wielding heart.
1. A Nightmare On Elm Street 3 - Dream Warriors (1987) - I absolutely love the Nightmare On Elm Street series.
- 8/15/2009
- by no-reply@fangoria.com (James Zahn)
- Fangoria
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