Connect with us

Misc

Ornaments of Gold: A Night at The Boulet Brothers’ Dragula World Tour

Published

on

Outside The Novo in Downtown Los Angeles, it’s the Met Gala of the Mad, and the air is steamy with anticipation. Some are grinning ear to ear, while other unbothered Monsters are strutting through security decked out like Final Fantasy baddies on their path to the final boss. For many, seeing the Boulet Brothers and their Uglies live is the point of no return. It’s the evening of May 3rd, 2022, and I am here to bear witness to the unholy Season 4 World Tour. The small screen of Shudder will soon transpose into reality, and my wildest fantasies will be made incarnate. Not to sound like an overly enthused Maddelynn Hatter, but…are you fucking kidding me?!  Drinks are flowing, and the crowd’s energy is electric when the lights dim. A familiar score begins to play, and the Boulets speak: “Calling all misfits and witches, and monsters and outcasts….” A night of drag, horror, filth, and glamour has begun.

In addition to our malevolent hosts and the Final Four of the season (Dahli, Sigourney Beaver, Saint, and Hoso Terra Toma), the US tour features special appearances by franchise Monsters who are local to each city; this means LA is blessed with the presence of Season 2’s Kendra Onixxx & it’s winner Biqtch Puddin, as well as Bitter Betty of Season 4. Between these seven legends and the Boulets themselves, it’s no wonder the night is brimming with such an eclectic setlist ranging from Siouxsie and the Banshees to Carly Rae Jepsen and Megan Thee Stallion. If you’ve ever wondered what it’s like to watch one of the show’s entrance floor shows firsthand, this tour is your answer – you are in it and almost feel like one of the many guest judges who have had a seat at the table. This is not only attributed to the otherworldly performances but also to the sleek and sexy production values that animate the stage. Audio/visual spectacles introduce each act and often play a part in the action, props, and special effects are used in artful ways. Even something as simple as seeing “SIGOURNEY BEAVER” plastered onscreen behind the glamazon herself is beyond.

Following a heartwarming introduction by Dracmorda and Swanthula – clad in their classic black and red latex with head fixtures that would make Medusa blush – the festivities are underway. The Boulets bookend the show’s major acts with performances of their own, and what a privilege it is to finally see them in the flesh. To watch them traipse around the stage and drop fireballs in a baroque Siouxsie-accompanied number, and let literal sparks fly in their post-apocalyptic outfits from Season 2 is a dream come true. In this way, the tour is also a living museum, showcasing iconic outfits – and even performances – from the show and its Monsters that any viewer will immediately recognize and applaud.

Each of the Final Four is introduced with a clip package highlighting memorable moments and quotes from the season before performing lip-syncs in their quintessential styles. Sigourney catapults the show into action with a bloody striptease and later slays the house down to a remix of “Heads Will Roll” in her Marie Antoinette-inspired dress from the Monsters of Rock floor show; Saint elicits screams of ecstasy from the crowd as a luscious Leatherface vibing her “body-ody-ody” on full display; Hoso is a deranged popstar from the wrong side of Sesame Street performing “Daisy” by Ashnikko; Dahli serves a hellish version of Freddy Mercury while they slink around the stage as Sweet Tooth to Wax Fang’s “Majestic” only to eventually perform the sexiest undead rap anyone’s ever seen. We’re even treated to wild reenactments of the show’s Nosferatu Beach Party and Monsters of Rock challenges. This is truly a night for the fans.

And while much can be said about the illustrious Final Four, the special guests unique to LA did not hold back, either. First up is Bitter Betty, who ravages the crowd in her Terminator gone to Westworld lewk from Season 4’s “Weird Wild West” floor show. Not many can pull off a transition from Dolly Parton to Ozzy Osbourne’s “Crazytrain,” yet Betty’s schizophrenic presence pulls it off with ease. Her time on Season 4 may have been polarizing, but it’s clear why she’s one of the Boulets’ chosen few. Kendra Onixxx likewise shocks the crowd, making love to the stage and the audience as a bloody bride who begins her honeymoon early. I’m not quite sure what sticky substance is on her head after she snatches off her wig, but she uses the stringy goo to great effect, giving her performance some filthy texture. Finally, Season 2 winner Biqtch Puddin becomes that final girl in one of my favorite performances of the night. Backlit with scenes featuring the women of horror we all adore, Biqtch simultaneously defeats a hunky and hulking Michael Myers while lip-syncing “Cut to the Feeling.” It’s pure camp and has the crowd absolutely gagging.

Advertisement

Fifteen sublime performances later, the Boulets bid adieu to their Monsters and ravenous fans in bulging and bloody nightgowns appropriately reminiscent of an Old Hollywood boudoir, and I finally catch my breath. Having already completed a UK leg, it’s clear everyone involved has this production on lock, and I cannot commend them enough. As a massive fan of the show, the Boulet Brothers’ Dragula World Tour is a spectacle like no other and no doubt worth the price of admission. Even for those who’ve never watched a single episode, it’s like seeing a Vegas revue in Hell – what’s not to love? And so, as I walk out of The Novo clutching my “Hello Uglies” fan, I realize all of my screaming has altered my voice to somewhere in the middle of Kathleen Turner and Lindsay Lohan. I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Alex Warrick is a film lover and gaymer living the Los Angeles fantasy by way of an East Coast attitude. Interested in all things curious and silly, he was fearless until a fateful viewing of Poltergeist at a young age changed everything. That encounter nurtured a morbid fascination with all things horror that continues today. When not engrossed in a movie, show or game he can usually be found on a rollercoaster, at a drag show, or texting his friends about smurfs.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Misc

Get Ready for the HPTV ‘Blue Velvet’ Giveaway!

Published

on

Now that we’ve wrapped up season 1 of Twin Peaks, taken a short break, and returned with a special episode covering Blue Velvet, it’s time to have a small giveaway.

If you haven’t been keeping up with HPTV, now is the perfect time to binge all of season 1, before we head into season 2 of Twin Peaks! Check it out here!

Last weekend, while walking the grounds of the Horror Press estate, I came across a severed ear. I was surprised because I hadn’t noticed if any writers were missing any. Instead of picking it up and bringing it to the cops, I decided to bring it inside and use it like a paperweight. Jeffrey Beaumont, eat your heart out.

Anyway, this inspired me to check our walk-in Blu-ray closet and pick something special to giveaway.

Enter Our Blue Velvet Giveaway!

For this special giveaway, we have a copy of Blue Velvet (1986) on Blu-ray. This copy happens to be the Criterion Collection version.

Advertisement

Blue Velvet is a psychological thriller directed by David Lynch. It follows Jeffrey Beaumont, played by the legendary Kyle McLachlan, who makes a grim discovery in his quaint suburban town. This leads him down a seedy path that exposes him to the dark underbelly of his hometown.

HOW TO ENTER

Entering is easy. Just follow the steps below!

Step 1. Make sure to FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM!
Step 2. LIKE the giveaway post!
Step 3. Tag a friend who loves all things David Lynch!
Step 4. Leave HPTV a review and DM us a screenshot! 

Seriously, no review, no entry!

The giveaway will begin on Friday, 05/03/24, and end on Monday, 05/13/24.

Advertisement

When the winner is selected, we will reach out via DM. If the winner does not respond within 24 hours, we will randomly select another winner.

WHAT YOU’LL WIN

The winner of our giveaway will receive a brand-new, Blu-ray copy of Blue Velvet (1986) from the Criterion Collection. This edition contains several special features, such as:

  • New 4K digital restoration, with 5.1 surround DTS-HD Master Audio soundtrack on the Blu-ray, both supervised by director David LynchA
  • lternate original 2.0 surround sound­track T
  • The Lost Footage, fifty-three minutes of deleted scenes and alternate takes assembled by Lynch
  • Blue Velvet’ Revisited, a feature-length meditation on the making of the movie by Peter Braatz, filmed on-set during the production
  • Mysteries of Love, a seventy-minute documentary from 2002 on the making of the film
  • Interview from 2017 with composer Angelo Badalamenti
  • Lynch reading from Room to Dream, a 2018 book he coauthored with Kristine McKenna
  • PLUS: Excerpts by McKenna from Room to Dream

So head over to our Instagram, follow our account, like our giveaway post, tag a friend who loves Lynch, and make sure you leave us a review for your chance to win!

**Giveaway entries are limited to addresses in the United States.**

**All entries must be 18 or older to enter**

 

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Misc

‘Saw the Musical’ and Putting the Queerness of ‘Saw’ Into Words (and Songs)

Saw the Musical’s very existence makes me happy. It’s nice to see a horror movie that was initially dismissed as mindless “torture porn” by many critics be reimagined as something silly and joyous and, most importantly, unabashedly, unquestioningly queer. It’s the thing many queer people already knew Saw to be, even if we didn’t quite have the words to articulate it. Saw the Musical: The Unauthorized Parody of Saw is playing in Los Angeles through April 7 and New York City through June 23, with a national tour kicking off in April. For tickets and tour dates, visit the website.

Published

on

I was guesting on an episode of my friends’ podcast, It Came from the Midwest, recently when one of the hosts, Aryn, asked me to talk about the queerness of the Saw franchise. I’m not going to lie: I fudged it. My mind went blank. Despite writing for a living, I momentarily lost the ability to translate a deeply held belief into words. If it had been Jigsaw asking me the question against the clock, I would have lost my test. Game over, bitch.

Aryn, thankfully, is more benevolent than Jigsaw. After listening to me waffle for several minutes, she stepped in to voice what I was struggling to communicate.

“I don’t even think you have to say it necessarily, because I feel it,” she said. “It’s there. You can sense it. You just know it’s different.” 

Saw is a Queer Franchise, IYKYK

Aryn is right: the Saw franchise is different, as are the most memorable characters from its world. Take the angry, apathetic loner Adam Faulkner-Stanheight (Leigh Whannell in Saw), an artsy boy on the outskirts of society who puts his trust in all the wrong men and gets attacked by a monster in the closet. Or what about that monster herself, Amanda Young (Shawnee Smith in Saw 1–3 and Saw X), who steps into her full lesbian power (and haircuts) after having a major reawakening? And how can anyone watch Dr. Lawrence Gordon (Cary Elwes) putting his hand on Adam’s cheek during the climax of Saw — Adam sobbing uncontrollably, their faces inches apart, lips quivering, Dr. Gordon making a solemn promise to come back for him — and not see it as the tragic conclusion of an enemies-to-lovers arc? (Cue Elle Woods throwing chocolates at the screen with a cry of “Liar!” How could you, Larry?) 

There’s just something about the Saw franchise that speaks to the queer community, and the franchise has taken notice. When Jigsaw hit theaters in 2017, the team promoting the tie-in blood drive — a tradition dating back to the very first film — ran an ad campaign called “All Types Welcome” to protest the Food and Drug Administration’s discriminatory abstinence rule for LBGTQ+ blood donors (a rule that wouldn’t be revised for another six years). By the time Saw X rolled around last year, the iconic Billy puppet was announcing “yes I stun” from Saw’s official Twitter profile. Over on TikTok, meanwhile, fans were speculating why the Lionsgate account would post a video featuring Jigsaw killer John Kramer (Tobin Bell) framed in the colors of the Bisexual Pride flag

Advertisement

Of course, we don’t need the marketing team to tell us that Saw is queer, because as Aryn so sagely articulated, we just know. The fic writers know it. The fan artists know it. And the creators of Saw the Musical: The Unauthorized Parody of Saw most definitely know it, too. 

Saw the Musical : A Play Where the Subtext Can Become Text

Created and produced by Cooper Jordan, from a book by Zoe Ann Jordan and with music and lyrics by Anthony De Angelis and Patrick Spencer, Saw the Musical wastes no time letting us know that Adam and Dr. Gordon would be in one another’s pants immediately if only those darn chains weren’t keeping them apart. Adam is recast as a slutty himbo twink with a pocket full of condoms and a head full of cotton wool and dirty thoughts. As for Dr. Gordon, he’s no longer just a distant father with a penchant for stepping out on his marriage. Now, he’s a horny closeted bisexual who cares more about his furniture than his family and who won’t pass up an opportunity to bend over a resident, portrayed by a blow-up sex doll.

Chain these versions of Adam and Dr. Gordon together in a bathroom and the sexual tension doesn’t so much build as explode. It’s camp, it’s raunchy, and it can only end in — spoilers, but duh — a surprisingly sweet on-stage kiss. Perhaps if the bathroom set didn’t look like hepatitis waiting to happen, it might have gone even further. Then again, Dr. Gordon is bleeding out at the time. It is based on Saw, after all. 

I was front and center for Saw the Musical off-Broadway in New York City around Halloween 2023. My editor asked me if I wanted to write something about it not long after and I agreed, but whenever I opened my laptop to do so, the words just wouldn’t come. 

It was the podcast all over again. Sometimes something is just so obvious that you can’t find the queer forest for all the gay trees. 

Advertisement

I think that what I most wanted to say but didn’t know how was that Saw the Musical’s very existence makes me happy. It’s nice to see a horror movie that was initially dismissed as mindless “torture porn” by many critics be reimagined as something silly and joyous and, most importantly, unabashedly, unquestioningly queer. It’s the thing many queer people already knew Saw to be, even if we didn’t quite have the words to articulate it. 

As director and choreographer Stephanie Rosenberg told NPR, the musical is “a love story that… people have wanted for 20 years.” We felt it. We could sense it. Saw the Musical just turns our intuition (and the film’s subtext) into text. Sometimes in the form of funny songs. 

Saw the Musical: The Unauthorized Parody of Saw is playing in New York City through June 23. The national tour kicked off in April. For tickets and tour dates, visit their website.

Continue Reading

Horror Press Mailing List

Fangoria
Advertisement
Advertisement