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Thursday, March 31, 2016

March Badness: Monster Madness - Round 2


Things are getting interesting in March Badness.  Who made the Sour 16?  Find out below.

Bioraptors (Pitch Black) vs Pale Man (Pan's Labyrinth)

Even though the Bioraptors are the main monsters of Pitch Black and Pale Man is only a small part of Pan's Labyrinth, there's just something about the latter that is extremely unnerving.  Maybe it's the eyeballs in the palms of his hands, or the gross, wrinkly skin.  Whatever it is, Pale Man is just too disturbingly vile to ignore, even against the cool Bioraptors.

Winner: Pale Man



Stripe (Gremlins) vs Pinhead (Hellraiser)

Both are very original, but Pinhead is a bit too human-like.  Stripe shows some personality, but he's definitely more monster than man and that makes the difference in this match-up.

Winner: Stripe




The birds (The Birds) vs The Basilisk (Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets)



If I had the choice of facing the birds or a Basilisk, it'd really be no contest - I'd take my chances against the birds without hesitation.  However, there's something to be said for the birds' power to intimidate and threaten just by being there.  It's this power that gives them the victory.

Winner: The birds



Velociraptors (Jurassic Park) vs Mothra (Mothra)

The raptors are cunning and sneaky, and that makes the difference here.  Mothra is a giant moth.

Winner: Velociraptors



Audrey II (Little Shop of Horrors) vs The Crawlers (The Descent)

Audrey II is just too much fun.  I mean she (or is it a he?) bullies and manipulates Seymour into doing horrible things, all so Audrey II can keep getting bigger and stronger.  The Crawlers just don't compare.

Winner: Audrey II



T-Rex (Jurassic Park) vs Frankenstein's monster (Frankenstein)



I like the big dinosaur from Jurassic Park, but Frankenstein's monster is in a league of his own.

Winner: Frankenstein's monster



Sharptooth (The Land Before Time) vs Pennywise (It)

The killer clown took down Predator in round one.  That's bad news for Sharptooth.

Winner: Pennywise



The Balrog (Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring) vs Gamera (Gamera)

Both have fiery powers, but the Balrog is a demonic beast and Gamera is a giant turtle.  I'm tempted to go with the turtle, but... I'm not sure I could really justify it.

Winner: The Balrog



The Kraken (Clash of the Titans) vs Flukeman (The X-Files)

Beasts of the sea (or sewer, in Flukeman's case) do battle here.  In an actual fight, the Kraken would almost certainly win, but Flukeman's creepiness gives him the upset win.

Winner: Flukeman



The Bugs (Starship Troopers) vs The Sarlacc (Star Wars: Return of the Jedi)



To avoid getting killed by the Bugs, you need some serious firepower.  To avoid getting killed by the Sarlacc, you just avoid its mouth.  The Sarlacc is cool, but the Bugs win this one.

Winner: The Bugs




Graboids (Tremors) vs The Nothing (The Neverending story)

The Graboids may eat humans and other animals, but the Nothing destroys everything in its path, literally creating more of itself.

Winner: The Nothing



King Kong (King Kong) vs The Brundlefly (The Fly)

Can a mutated fly-man take down the king?  Upset special: yes he can!

Winner: The Brundlefly



The Rancor (Star Wars: Return of the Jedi) vs The Blair Witch (The Blair Witch Project)

The Blair Witch can get by on spookiness surrounding her for only so long.  To fairly judge a monster, I've got to be able to see it.  I can see the Rancor, in all it's ugly glory, and so it wins this contest.

Winner: The Rancor



The Xenomorph (Alien) vs The Crites (Critters)

The Crites are mischevious but the Xenomorph is truly monstrous and a great blend of scary and cool.

Winner: The Xenomorph




Rhedosaurus (The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms) vs Hybrid spiders (Arachnophobia)



I'd take my chances with the dinosaur.

Winner: Hybrid spiders



Jaws (Jaws) vs Godzilla (Godzilla)

Two classics face off here.  Godzilla does more damage and seems a bit angrier, but Jaws' theme music gives him the slight edge.

Winner: Jaws



The Bracket

Here's where we are after two rounds:

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

March Badness: Monster Madness - Round 1


The wait is over... Round 1 March Badness: Monster Madness results are in.

ICYMI: Explanation / list of contenders

Bioraptors (Pitch Black) vs Leonard Betts (The X-Files)

Betts was creepy, and his regenerative powers were pretty cool.  But the monsters that lurked in the darkness of the alien world in Pitch Black were more powerful and terrifying than the mutant from X-Files.

Winner: Bioraptors



Pale Man (Pan's Labyrinth) vs The Hydra (Hercules)

Pale Man is a terrifying new creation, while the Hydra is a creature of mythological origin.  The newcomer has the edge, in my opinion, as Pale Man is just plain freaky.

Winner: Pale Man



Stripe (Gremlins) vs Terror Dogs (Ghostbusters)

Vicious creatures face off here in a fun round one match-up.  Both Stripe and the terror dogs underwent a transformation to reach their final state.  But the fact that Stripe was mischievous even in his "cute" phase and eventually became the leader of an entire army of gremlins makes the difference here.

Winner: Stripe



Rodan (Rodan) vs Pinhead (Hellraiser)



Two very different monsters go head-to-head here.  Rodan is a giant flying reptile, while Pinhead is the leader of extra-dimensional creatures who travel to earth to harvest souls.  Pinhead wins this one, despite the marvelous personality of Rodan.

Winner: Pinhead





The birds (The Birds) vs Fluffy (Harry Potter)

The looming presence of the birds creates a feeling of uneasiness that is not easily topped.  They may not be flashy, but the birds have a classic appeal and a clear advantage over the three-headed dog.

Winner: The birds



Monstro (Pinocchio) vs The Basilisk (Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets)

Giant whale vs giant serpent.  This time, the Harry Potter beast is the one with the advantage, as I just like the Basilisk better.

Winner:The Basilisk



Eugene Victor Tooms (The X-Files) vs Velociraptors (Jurassic Park)



Tooms is spooky, but the raptors are vicious and brutal killers.  They get the nod here.

Winner: Velociraptors



Mothra (Mothra) vs Mr Hyde (Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde)

It's a giant moth!


Winner: Mothra



Audrey II (Little Shop of Horrors) vs Clover (Cloverfield)

Clover does some serious damage to New York, but doesn't have a personality like Audrey II's. An evil plant that sings and eats people is just too good to pass up.

Winner: Audrey II



The Crawlers (The Descent) vs The Thing (The Thing)



I haven't seen The Descent, but I've seen a picture of a Crawler (above).

Winner: The Crawlers



T-Rex (Jurassic Park) vs Aragog (Harry Potter)

Though Aragog, a giant spider, is pretty terrifying to look at, he never actually harms anyone.  The T-Rex from Jurassic Park, on the other hand, eats his share of people.

Winner: T-Rex



Frankenstein's monster (Frankenstein) vs Werewolves (The Wolf Man, The Werewolf, An American Werewolf in London)

Both are classics, but I have to go with Frankenstein's monster here.

Winner: Frankenstein's monster



Sharptooth (The Land Before Time) vs Chernabog (Fantasia)

Chernabog may be the embodiment of evil, but Sharptooth goes after some adorable little dinos despite the fact that they would provide very little nutritional value to him.

Winner: Sharptooth



Pennywise (It) vs The Predator (Predator)

Evil clown or deadly alien hunter?  This is the first really tough decision in the tournament because I could see either of these creatures making a deep run, given the opportunity.  But only one can advance past round one.  Pennywise earns the victory here, based on his overwhelming creepiness.

Winner: Pennywise



The Balrog (Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring) vs Gmork (The Neverending story)

Flames: check.  Horns: check.  Awesomeness: check.  Gmork just doesn't match-up well here.

Winner: The Balrog



Christine (Christine) vs Gamera (Gamera)

Can Christine do this?


Winner: Gamera



Aquatic alien (The Faculty) vs The Kraken (Clash of the Titans)

Who's king of the water?  It has to be the Kraken.

Winner: The Kraken



Flukeman (The X-Files) vs The Blob (The Blob)

Somehow it's just hard to be too worried about a blob.

Winner: Flukeman



The Sandworms (Beetlejuice) vs The Bugs (Starship Troopers)



It would be bad enough to face one of the aliens from Starship Troopers, however, they often show up in endless waves.  The Sandworms are fun but they can't compete with the Bugs.

Winner: The Bugs



The Sarlacc (Star Wars: Return of the Jedi) vs Cesare (The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari)

You only see the mouth, but it's enough to know you don't want to go near the Sarlacc.


Winner: The Sarlacc




Giant crocodile (Lake Placid) vs Graboids (Tremors)

Graboids get the win based purely on originality.  I mean, giant worms with slightly smaller worms coming out of their mouths?  Giant crocodile, come back when you have smaller crocodiles coming out of your mouth.

Winner: Graboids



Ghosts (misc.) vs The Nothing (The Neverending story)

There are a lot of "good" evil spirits out there, but there's only one Nothing.

Winner: The Nothing



The Headless Horseman (The Legend of Sleepy Hollow) vs King Kong (King Kong)

This giant ape is not to be trifled with.

Winner: King Kong



Gill-man (The Creature from the Black Lagoon) vs The Brundlefly (The Fly)



One look at the Brundlefly would send anyone running screaming, even Gill-man.

Winner: The Brundlefly



Imhotep (The Mummy) vs The Rancor (Star Wars: Return of the Jedi)

The Rancor would gulp down Imhotep in one bite... maybe two.

Winner: The Rancor



Orcs (Lord of the Rings) vs The Blair Witch (The Blair Witch Project)

Parodies aside, who wasn't terrified the first time they watched The Blair Witch Project?

Winner: The Blair Witch



The Xenomorph (Alien) vs Zombies (Misc.)

Zombies are cool, but they just don't compare to the awesome creature from Alien.

Winner: The Xenomorph



Giant anaconda (Anaconda) vs The Crites (Critters)

The Crites have enough razor sharp teeth to make this not even a contest.

Winner: The Crites





Giant sharks (Deep Blue Sea) vs Rhedosaurus (The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms)



The giant sharks have the power of computer graphics, while the Rhedosaurus is really old school.  I've got to go with the classic here.

Winner: Rhedosaurus



The Silence (Doctor Who) vs Hybrid spiders (Arachnophobia)

Spiders win in a landslide.  Sorry, alien dudes.

Winner: Hybrid spiders



Jaws (Jaws) vs Cujo (Cujo)

All these other giant animals should take note of how Jaws, a true terror, does it.  Cujo is a menace but Jaws is a classic.

Winner: Jaws



Godzilla (Godzilla) vs Reavers (Firefly)

To most people, Reavers are terrifying, blood-thirsty killers.  To Godzilla?  Finger food.

Winner: Godzilla



The Bracket

After the first round, here's where we stand:

Friday, March 18, 2016

March Badness: Monster Madness


Some of them go bump in the night.  Some don't make a sound.  Others destroy cities.  But all the best monsters have a few things in common: the first time you see them, you get goosebumps.  You want to look away, but you can't.  Of course, you're rooting for the good guys to win (you are, right?) but you still can't help but enjoy when a superbly evil creature goes on a rampage.  This is March Badness: Monster Madness.

Last year was just the beginning.  The Joker was crowned the "Ultimate Baddie" in an epic tournament of villains.  This year, it's all about the monsters.  Whether alien, supernatural, man-made, or a freak of nature, I'm looking for the best of the beasts: the ugliest, meanest, most monstrous monstrosity.

The structure is the same as last year.  I have compiled a list of 64 monsters from film, literature, and television, and randomly seeded them in a single-elimination tourney for the ages.  I will select winners of each round, which will correspond (more or less) with the timing of the NCAA tournament.  This is all subjective, of course, so I welcome you to join in the fun and fill out your own bracket along with me.  I just ask that if you do share or comment, please be mindful of spoilers.  With that out of the way, let the badness begin!

The Contenders


Bioraptors (Pitch Black)

You're safe in the daylight.  But as soon as the lights go out, you better watch out.  These things are ugly and even meaner than they look.

Leonard Betts (The X-Files)

The first of several X-Files monsters on this list.  Betts appears to be a normal person until he gets decapitated and his headless body starts killing...

Pale Man (Pan's Labyrinth)



A thing of pure nightmares.  Even though he only has a few minutes of screen time, his ghastly image haunts you well after the movie ends.

The Hydra (Hercules)

When one head just isn't enough.

Stripe (Gremlins)

How could something that started off so cute and cuddly end up being so mean and ugly?

Terror Dogs (Ghostbusters)



Zuul and Vinz Clortho.  Gatekeeper and Keymaster.  Yikes and yikes.

Rodan (Rodan)

Like Godzilla, but with wings.

Pinhead (Hellraiser)

The name says it all. He's got pins in his head. That's messed up, am I right?


The birds (The Birds)

How much harm could one or two (or a thousand) little ol' birds do?

Fluffy (Harry Potter)

Hagrid has a tendency of collecting extremely dangerous animals as pets.  Fluffy, a giant, three-headed dog, is no exception.

Monstro (Pinocchio)

"He's a whale of a whale!"

The Basilisk (Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets)

Don't look directly into this giant serpent's eyes, else you be killed instantly.

Eugene Victor Tooms (The X-Files)



Tooms is a mutant who can stretch and elongate himself to fit through tight passages.  He uses this ability in order to kill people and eat their livers.  And to creep us the hell out.


Velociraptors (Jurassic Park)

Vicious and intelligent.  The tyrannosaurus may get more publicity, but the raptors are the true evil of the park.


Mothra (Mothra)

It's a giant moth.  Do with that what you will.

Mr Hyde (Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde)

You think you know a guy, then he transforms into a madman and kills you.

Audrey II (Little Shop of Horrors)



"Feed me, boy! Feed me now!"

Clover (Cloverfield)

The unknown can be scary, as the monster from Cloverfield proved.  We don't get a good look at the menace terrorizing New York until late in the movie.

The Crawlers (The Descent)

When Spelunking goes oh-so-wrong.

The Thing (The Thing)

How do you fight something that can look like anything?

T-Rex (Jurassic Park)



Big, loud, and very hungry.

Aragog (Harry Potter)

Another one of Hagrid's pets. Aragog is a giant spider. Need I say more?

Frankenstein's monster (Frankenstein)

A true classic.  Although really, I think he's just misunderstood.

Werewolves (The Wolf Man, The Werewolf, An American Werewolf in London)

Another classic supernatural being.  There are many different versions, but the key takeaways are the same.  Avoid full moons.  And always keep some silver bullets on hand just in case.

Sharptooth (The Land Before Time)

A Tyrannosaurus out for vengeance.

Chernabog (Fantasia)

This demon is the god of evil and death.

Pennywise (It)



A killer clown that lives in the sewers and comes up to hunt children.  No, thank you.

The Predator (Predator)

This alien travels the galaxy hunting species of other worlds for sport.  He also has some really cool gadgets and will blow himself up, if it comes to it.

The Balrog (Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring)

This creature can wield shadow and flame, and looks pretty awesome doing it.

Gmork (The Neverending story)



This giant wolf serves the Nothing and will do anything to kill the film's protagonist, Atreyu.

Christine (Christine)

A 1958 Plymouth Fury that comes alive and kills people.  Because why not?

Gamera (Gamera)

It's a giant turtle that can fly and shoot flames out of its arm and leg cavities.  That pretty much sums it up.

Aquatic alien (The Faculty)

The most terrifying part about the aliens from The Faculty is their ability to crawl inside someone's head and control them.

The Kraken (Clash of the Titans)

"Release the Kraken!"  That never gets old.

Flukeman (The X-Files)



Flukeman is a genetically mutated beast that inhabits the sewers and is generally horrifying.

The Blob (The Blob)

This alien life-form digests organic material on contact, growing bigger with everything (and everyone) it devours.

The Sandworms (Beetlejuice)

"Whoa, Sandworms. Ya hate 'em right? I HATE 'EM MYSELF!"

The Bugs (Starship Troopers)

"The only good Bug is a dead Bug!"

The Sarlacc (Star Wars: Return of the Jedi)

"In its belly, you will find a new definition of pain and suffering as you are slowly digested over a thousand years."

Cesare (The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari)

Cesare is the monster of one of the very first horror films ever made, so he has to be here.  Though you could argue that Caligari is the true "monster" as he controls Cesare and instructs him to kill.


Giant crocodile (Lake Placid)

Want to come face to face with a crocodile? No?  How about a 30 ft long crocodile?

Graboids (Tremors)



These giant, carnivorous worms hunt by sensing seismic vibrations.  So, tread lightly, OK?

Ghosts (misc.)

There are too many different variations on evil spirits to put them all in the tournament, so they hold one collective spot here.

The Nothing (The Neverending story)

It's literally nothing, and will cause all life and existence to cease if it wins.  What's scarier than that?

The Headless Horseman (The Legend of Sleepy Hollow)

No head? No problem.

King Kong (King Kong)

A giant ape with a soft spot for a pretty face.

Gill-man (The Creature from the Black Lagoon)



Another monster with a thing for human chicks.  But dating is tough when you look like Gill-man.

The Brundlefly (The Fly)

"Help me! Help me!"

Imhotep (The Mummy)

One simple spell and he can stop your heart.

The Rancor (Star Wars: Return of the Jedi)

What kind of pet do you have when you're a giant slug?  A Rancor.  The answer is Rancor.

Orcs (Lord of the Rings)

Armies of these creatures stand between the heroes of Middle-earth and victory.  I think I would have just given up.

The Blair Witch (The Blair Witch Project)

You never really see the Blair Witch, but it doesn't make her any less terrifying.

The Xenomorph (Alien)



Where do I start?  The second mouth?  The acid blood?  The "birthing" process?


Zombies (Misc.)

Slow-moving, frail, and unintelligent.  Weak monster, right? Remember that when there's a horde of undead closing in and you've just run out of ammo...

Giant anaconda (Anaconda)

I didn't say these are all from good movies, just that they're terrifyingly awesome monsters, ok?


The Crites (Critters)

They're basically little, demonic furballs.


Giant sharks (Deep Blue Sea)

It's amazing how many of these are just normal animals, but super-sized.

Rhedosaurus (The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms)

Before Godzilla, there was the Rhedosaurus.


The Silence (Doctor Who)



Creepy alien dudes in suits.  At least they're trying?

Hybrid spiders (Arachnophobia)

What happens when you breed a deadly Amazonian spider with a domestic house spider?  You don't want to know - trust me.

Jaws (Jaws)

*cue Jaws music*

Cujo (Cujo)

A rabid dog, on the loose, and out for blood.


Godzilla (Godzilla)

The original city-destroying monster.

Reavers (Firefly)

Protocol dictates that you shoot anyone being captured by Reavers, to save them from unspeakable horrors.  And then you run. Run far away.

The Bracket

Download here (I suggest using landscape orientation if you wish to print a hard copy).