Plus: So many John Carpenter collectibles, an Evil Dead Rise limited edition dvd, and Stranger Things merch hit. Who said Halloween was over?Plus: So many John Carpenter collectibles, an Evil Dead Rise limited edition dvd, and Stranger Things merch hit. Who said Halloween was over?
Inverse Daily
9 Years Later, One Of The Best Godzilla Movies Ever Just Got A Huge Upgrade
Toho
9 Years Later, One Of The Best Godzilla Movies Ever Just Got A Huge Upgrade

In the history of cinema there have been many notable monsters, but only one has earned the title the King of the Monsters. That moniker rightfully belongs to the one and only Godzilla, who has been a staple of the silver screen for more than 70 years. In all of those many decades, the King has appeared in dozens of feature films. Few — if any — are as harrowing as 2016’s Shin Godzilla, which is going to be even more harrowing thanks to a new 4K Ultra HD upgrade.

Earlier this year, GKIDS acquired the North American rights to the film from directors Hideaki Anno and Shinji Higuchi. Their first order of business? Re-release the modern kaiju classic on 4K. This is long overdue and a most welcome upgrade for longtime fans. It’s also an outstanding excuse for more casual fans to catch up with what is unquestionably one of the greatest Godzilla movies ever made, right up there with the original 1954 cinematic classic that started it all and the Oscar-winning, groundbreaking Godzilla Minus One.

Read our full review of Shin Godzilla.

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Physical Media 4Ever
Pre-Order 'One Battle After Another' on Blu-ray
$30
Pre-Order 'One Battle After Another' on Blu-ray
One of our favorite Paul Thomas Anderson movies — and movie of the year contender — ‘One Battle After Another’ is coming to blu-ray.
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John Carpenter's 'Lost Themes' Gets New Vinyl Release
$31
John Carpenter's 'Lost Themes' Gets New Vinyl Release
John Carpenter proves that you don’t need a film at all to evoke horror and dread. This 10th anniversary edition include a remastered album with new releases.
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'Evil Dead Rise' Gets A Limited Edition Release
$50
'Evil Dead Rise' Gets A Limited Edition Release
The bloody great seat-of-your-pants horror movie gets a limited release for those of us who just can’t get enough.
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More Cool Stuff
Stranger Things Benetton Sweatshirts
$55
Stranger Things Benetton Sweatshirts
This colorful sweatshirt is part of the "Stranger Colors of Benetton" line, a collection developed in collaboration with Amy Parris, the costume designer behind the Netflix series.
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Dunk Low x Stranger Things
$155
Dunk Low x Stranger Things
Nike is getting into the Stranger things game too with a revival of the 1987 Dunk Low. “This is the Dunk Low,” writes Nike, “but different, impossibly aged.”
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CIRCA 1994: Actor Sam Neill  in a scene from the New Line Cinema movie "In the Mouth of Madness " , circa 1994.  (Photo by Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
Michael Ochs Archives/Moviepix/Getty Images
The Oral History of 'In the Mouth of Madness,' John Carpenter's Misunderstood Cosmic Horror Masterpiece

John Carpenter’s In the Mouth of Madness may well be the greatest pure cosmic horror film of all time.

As a difficult genre to pin down by definition, cosmic horror (sometimes called weird fiction) often features the emergence of vast, powerful, sometimes reality-altering forces into our world, usually provoking an apocalyptic-grade threat. Much of cosmic horror is traced to the early 20th century writers H. P. Lovecraft and Robert W. Chambers and their influence on authors like Stephen King, Clive Barker, Thomas Ligotti, or Laird Barron is crystal clear. But on the big screen, you could say cosmic horror’s biggest influences began with John Carpenter’s The Thing.

In the 1982 sci-fi horror movie, a group of American scientists in a remote Antarctica research station stumble upon an alien of untold powers that can take over a biological body with little more than a molecule of its own. The apocalyptic threat this poses is clear, and the fact that it landed in the mostly unpopulated regions of Antarctica is a blessing — until it’s not. In its depiction of inhuman entities that threaten to escape its isolated locale and destroy all of global civilization, The Thing would set the stage for future apocalyptic cosmic terrors in the likes of Prince of Darkness, Event Horizon, The Void, Annihilation, and Underwater.

While The Thing is clearly Carpenter’s most influential work in this vein, it’s 1995’s In the Mouth of Madness that most completely renders the elements of cosmic horror on the silver screen. The rampage of cosmic terrors that come to reclaim our world, driving protagonist John Trent (played by a brilliant, anxiety-ridden Sam Neill) to the brink while warping reality into an apocalyptic hellscape, is straight out of Lovecraft (whose At the Mountains of Madness clearly inspired the title of Carpenter’s Madness). Even better, the film’s finale sees Trent realize Sutter Cane’s power has fully subsumed Trent’s own life and every event we’ve seen, making Madness the boldest exemplar of the genre’s reality-bending tendencies in film history. It’s a masterpiece — but one that doesn’t get the credit it deserves. It was far ahead of its time when the film premiered three decades ago, and it’s still at the forefront of cosmic horror film history.

To celebrate the film’s 30th anniversary, Inverse spoke to producer Sandy King Carpenter and members of the cast and crew to tell the story of In the Mouth of Madness. (Sam Neill and director John Carpenter declined to participate.)

Read our full oral history of In the Mouth of Madness here.

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