We join the march to giveĀ Jennifer’s Body its long overdue flowers. We discuss the outdated stereotypes of horror audiences, the intense and complicated friendships between teenage girls, and how the filmmakers got done dirty by the media. Turn it up.
Episode 04.11: Possession
We could not in good conscience call ourselves a psychological horror podcast if we did not, at some point, discuss Possession, and now it’s time. Infidelity, esponiage, losing one’s mind in a subway, sex with eldritch horrors. There’s a lot to discuss. Gird your loins.
Episode 04.10: Picnic at Hanging Rock
It’s summer for us at Quiet Little Horrors, so it’s the perfect season to picnic, loll dreamily on the lawn, and disappear into an ancient, mysterious rock formation, never to be seen by humans again. We get metaphorical with our coming-of-age theme while discussing 1975’s Picnic at Hanging Rock.
Episode 04.09: Hatching
This month we’re looking at some bloody coming of age tales, beginning with the 2022 Finnish film Hatching, which is half weirdly adorable creature feature and half what damage girls have do to deal with their inherited demons.
Episode 04.08: The Mafu Cage
We continue our discussion of twisted sisters with this overlooked gem of 1970s psychological horror: The Mafu Cage, featuring Carol Kane and Lee Grant as a pair of codependent siblings who drag each other past the point of repair.
Content warning for implied animal harm (nothing graphic) and incest.
Episode 04.07: Sisters
This month we’re taking on a couple of films about the relationships between twisted sisters, starting, appropriately enough, with Sisters, from Brian De Palma in 1972. We discuss women who cause trouble, women who aren’t believed, and women who might not be what they seem.
Episode 04.06: You Are Not My Mother
And we’re back! Apologies for the interruption in regular podcast programming. But we return with the second half of our discussion of modern Irish horror and a look at Kate Dolan’s 2021’s film You Are Not My Mother, which twists expectations of metaphorical folklore in fascinating ways.
Episode 04.05: Irish Horror
Our first episode of March is a springboard into the quietly blossoming world of contemporary Irish horror film. We discuss the emerging genre, its deep roots in folklore, and two representative recent films: 2015’s The Hallow and 2022’s Mandrake.
Episode 04.04: The Brood
We continue our Cronenberg discussion with one of his thorniest films, psychologically speaking: 1979’s The Brood. Thesis statement: emotions are real and powerful and if you don’t process them properly, murderous rage babies will result.
Episode 04.03: The Fly
It’s David Cronenberg season here at QLH. We kick off a pair of episodes on his extensive, intensive, and twisted body of work (see what we did there) with 1986’s The Fly. We discuss the film’s connections to the original, disease metaphors, and the unbearable oddness of being Jeff Goldblum.