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After giving it some thought, I think Tank Girl is the gritty reboot of Barbie.
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 01:11 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 08:52 |
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Ahahaha she has the murder axe
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 03:51 |
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CommissarMega posted:Ahahaha she has the murder axe kens going to be on the receiving end of some domestic abuse
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 05:38 |
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So is Barbie going to alternate between being a shaken emotionally vulnerable shrinking violet in cutscenes and a relentless killing machine in gameplay? Will she also be subjected to the oddly gruesome death scenes that the new games have a fetish for? Barbie's Island Adventure spinoff.
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 06:24 |
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Hey now, at some point she also becomes a relentless killing machine in cutscenes.
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 10:20 |
Anyone else think the face looks like Milana Vayntrub? Anyway, I had a dream that reminded me of a Goosebumps book that, if not terrible, was at least terribly weird. The premise was that all the kids in this small town were disappearing, and at the end the protagonist learned that he and all the other kids were dogs that had been turned into humans by mad science so that childless couples could have babies, except now it was wearing off. So at the end, the kid is a dog again, and happy about it because being a dog pretty much owns, and his "parents" bring home a baby from the hospital that has eyes just like their old cat. Like I said, weird.
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 16:19 |
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Senior Woodchuck posted:Anyone else think the face looks like Milana Vayntrub? I remember that book. It was hosed up. I also remember the beginning implied that the weirdness was due to the kids using expired self-tanner? Why would you want a cat baby anyway. Everybody knows cats don't feel love.
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 16:29 |
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My favourite thing about Goosebumps books (which was commonplace in all the rip-offs, really, up to and including Star Wars: Galaxy of Fear) was when a chapter would end with a character hearing, seeing or suffering something gruesome, then start the next one by bluntly stating it was something innocuous. e.g. "I stepped into the old abandoned house and heard a blood-curdling scream. <CHAPTER BREAK> But it was only a cat or something." The best one was one where a guy has his mind swapped with that of a bumblebee as part of a parody of The Fly, where one chapter ends with him narrating, "But before I could do anything, a dragonfly appeared as if from nowhere and bit me in two!" then the next one starts, "Wow, that was a weird daydream. I'd better be careful of dragonflies!"
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 17:48 |
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the goosebumps books were nearly all ghostwritten and looking back it's really funny how little of a poo poo everyone involved in their production gave about anything
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 18:00 |
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Oxxidation posted:the goosebumps books were nearly all ghostwritten and looking back it's really funny how little of a poo poo everyone involved in their production gave about anything If I remember right, they had some cool covers, though. The Vampire Breath one, in particular, spooked me as a kid.
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 22:41 |
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My favourite was the one where the family goes on to vacation to a Monster Theme Park and everyone who works there is an Actual Monster. Like there's just a whole community of monsters who get joy out of working at a theme park for humans. I also really liked the one where the two kids were at the one kid's dad's theme park testing out his scary rides that were just impossibly real and oh god they're going to die! And then it turned out the kids were robots built to test how scary the ride was, because building incredibly realistic android kids is definitely more cost-effective and sensible than finding actual children to test your new attractions. I vaguely recall one with a girl who had some thing that gave her wishes, and all the wishes went terribly of course. In the end she gave the wish-thing, whatever it was, to her worst enemy/bully. And I remember in the TV show adaption, the vain bully wished to be beautiful forever or something and turned into a statue. In the book, though, the bully immediately wished to get rid of the protagonist by turning her into a bird. That's cold, and also a way better and more straightforward wish than anything the protagonist had made, and even as a kid I was pretty sure that the reason all her wishes had gone wrong was because she was a loving idiot.
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 23:12 |
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Was there one where some kids accidentally ended up at a summer camp where the counselors worshipped a sentient blob of jelly or did I dream that one
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 23:23 |
I had one of the CYOA Goosebumps books that took place at a deadly amusement park. Almost every choice you made would end in death or eternal torment, from being O-Ren Ishi'd by animatronic dwarves on a mine coaster to being turned into an animatronic astronaut on the space coaster to picking the wrong slide and sliding forever. It also had cameos by stuff like Monster Blood and Slappy. At the same time I had an Outer Limits book that was about a group of 4 preteens who all woke up to find that they were the only humans left on Earth, but with alien invaders in space suits taking samples around them. The twist is that they were all kids who had godlike reality-warping powers and were actually in a mindscape they instinctually created on an uninhabited moon when they were sedated and woke up, and the male and female lead decided to create Eden and live on the moon forever instead of being mind wiped and returned to Earth through the wormhole the scientists were using. chitoryu12 has a new favorite as of 23:36 on Feb 19, 2018 |
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 23:33 |
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Oxxidation posted:the goosebumps books were nearly all ghostwritten and looking back it's really funny how little of a poo poo everyone involved in their production gave about anything They had a formula and they were sticking to it. I guess the assumption was that kids would only read a couple before moving on and they didn't expect someone to sit down and read through the entire series. One twist ending I remember being egregiously bad was the one where the kid becomes best friends with an invisible alien but the twist ending was that the "alien" was human and the kid was an alien!
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 23:45 |
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But humans aren't invisible.
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# ? Feb 19, 2018 23:58 |
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Oxxidation posted:the goosebumps books were nearly all ghostwritten and looking back it's really funny how little of a poo poo everyone involved in their production gave about anything I'm pretty sure they weren't ghostwritten, you can just churn out a ton of books when you never have to revise or have your 'plot' make 'sense'.
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 00:23 |
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girl pants posted:Was there one where some kids accidentally ended up at a summer camp where the counselors worshipped a sentient blob of jelly or did I dream that one There were like eight of those, including at least one of the CYOAs.
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 00:30 |
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Tunicate posted:I'm pretty sure they weren't ghostwritten, you can just churn out a ton of books when you never have to revise or have your 'plot' make 'sense'. Um if they weren't ghostwritten how come they were so spooky?
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 00:49 |
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Kuiperdolin posted:But humans aren't invisible. Maybe they were homeless.
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 02:19 |
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Tunicate posted:I'm pretty sure they weren't ghostwritten, you can just churn out a ton of books when you never have to revise or have your 'plot' make 'sense'. A lot of them were. But R. L. Stine is a very nice guy and by all accounts pleasant to work with, which is not at all the norm in work-for-hire situations.
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 04:12 |
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AlbieQuirky posted:A lot of them were. But R. L. Stine is a very nice guy and by all accounts pleasant to work with, which is not at all the norm in work-for-hire situations. IIRC the main goosebumps series was all by him, and he wrote each book in about a week. The millions of spinoffs were often ghostwritten.
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 04:59 |
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My favorite Goosebumps book as a kid was the one where the girl discovers her local creepy librarian is in fact a monster, a freaky gross one at that, and nobody believes her. Then at the end, Her parents invite the guy over for dinner, then reveal themselves to be a family of vampires that eat the monster!
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 05:09 |
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I forget what book it was, but it was some young horrory thing I think, where there was a genuinely disturbing scene of like, the protagonist's family all sitting at the dinner table eating moldy chicken bones, and they were all skeletons, or something. It might have been something with an Edward Gorey cover, or maybe I'm just remembering that because that aesthetic basically embodies tween horror books for me.
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 07:39 |
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I remember I had some books as a kid that I won in a competition (pretty much a prize draw in retrospect) that had horror themes, one set was for ages 4-8, the other was ~10-14. I've forgotten what the books were but I recall one was about a ghostly schoolteacher stuck in her ways who was eventually defeated by getting her addicted to learning software (I think the idea was extreme culture shock combined with severe overstimulation).
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 08:56 |
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Did Stine do a bunch of young adult horror books as well? I remember the covers looking like Goosebumps but the two I read at my cousins were just about teenagers loving stabbing the poo poo out of each other and both of them had a lot of dead animals too.
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 14:14 |
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Maybe "Fear Street"? I believe he started writing that series of books before Goosebumps even, and they're aimed more at the teen market. Though after Goosebumps he's also done "The Nightmare Room" which is kinda in-between the two audiences, more like the tween and early teen market.
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 14:24 |
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Kuiperdolin posted:But humans aren't invisible.
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 15:43 |
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Still a more realistic body shape than some of the old games.
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 16:23 |
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Tunicate posted:IIRC the main goosebumps series was all by him, and he wrote each book in about a week. I was thinking of all the books with Goosebumps in their name as part of Goosebumps. Stine is certainly prolific personally, but he's also a brand.
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# ? Feb 20, 2018 20:41 |
Kuiperdolin posted:But humans aren't invisible. In the Goosebumps universe, anything is possible.
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# ? Feb 21, 2018 15:45 |
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There was a goosebumps titled the ghost next door and it was about how this girl has these new neighbors who moved in overnight and they're spoOoOoOoky ghosts and then the first chapter starts with the girl dreaming her house was burning down and yeah ok the twist is obviously that she's the ghost so I don't need to read this book now
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# ? Feb 21, 2018 19:17 |
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Choco1980 posted:Maybe "Fear Street"? I believe he started writing that series of books before Goosebumps even, and they're aimed more at the teen market. Yeah, Fear Street was the teen/YA series that he did. I recall that they were actually pretty good, I had a big collection of them. The author's notes in one book R.L. Stine admitted that he originally gave everyone a name starting with the letter M and his editor had to find+replace all of them.
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# ? Feb 21, 2018 20:45 |
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For all their goofiness, there were some great nuggets of horror in Goosebumps. Especially when it wasn't trying to do elaborate stories, and just gave you "evil [noun]" Evil cuckoo clock. Evil polaroid camera. Evil silly putty. Evil typewriter. Evil ventriloquist dummy. Evil...kitchen sponge. 20 years later, I'm still mildly annoyed that Monster Blood IV didn't actually contain any loving Monster Blood. It wasn't even green!
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# ? Feb 21, 2018 21:44 |
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Djeser posted:I forget what book it was, but it was some young horrory thing I think, where there was a genuinely disturbing scene of like, the protagonist's family all sitting at the dinner table eating moldy chicken bones, and they were all skeletons, or something. Probably John Bellairs, he did a lot of (good) young-adult horror books with Gorey covers:
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# ? Feb 21, 2018 22:26 |
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Strom Cuzewon posted:For all their goofiness, there were some great nuggets of horror in Goosebumps. Especially when it wasn't trying to do elaborate stories, and just gave you "evil [noun]" You just gave me flashbacks to the first Goosebumps book I ever read. God drat i forgot that I once literally read a book about an evil sponge.
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# ? Feb 21, 2018 22:59 |
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Strom Cuzewon posted:For all their goofiness, there were some great nuggets of horror in Goosebumps. The one I remember probably wasn't even intentional; it's from one of the books in the "Goosebumps 2000" line from the late 90s, in which the main character is a mischievous kid who plays a prank on a mean old man on Halloween and escapes by jumping a ravine. On the other side, he finds a part of town he's never been to and quickly realises it's full of ghosts and monsters and tries to escape. He goes back to the ravine and sees a dead body at the bottom, and realises that he died trying to jump it at the start of the book. And he's thrilled! Because now he's a ghost and he gets to go and haunt his (presumably grieving) family.
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# ? Feb 21, 2018 23:10 |
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Wait wait wait... What the gently caress is Star Wars: Galaxy of Fear???
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# ? Feb 21, 2018 23:55 |
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Penpal posted:Wait wait wait... What the gently caress is Star Wars: Galaxy of Fear??? Goosebumps for Star Wars. A force sensitive kid and her brother go on adventures and get attacked by creepy crawlies at every single planet they stop at.
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# ? Feb 22, 2018 00:16 |
Gravid Topiary posted:Probably John Bellairs, he did a lot of (good) young-adult horror books with Gorey covers: I read all those books as a kid and loved them so much. I should see if i can dig them all up again.
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# ? Feb 22, 2018 00:48 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 08:52 |
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Arcsquad12 posted:Goosebumps for Star Wars. A force sensitive kid and her brother go on adventures and get attacked by creepy crawlies at every single planet they stop at. I read them all. No idea if they were any good. I remember a haunted theme park and a planet that eats people.
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# ? Feb 22, 2018 00:57 |