List of SWAT Kats: The Radical Squadron episodes. The following is a complete list of episodes for SWAT Kats: The Radical Squadron, a television cartoon series created by Christian and Yvon Tremblay. SWAT Kats: The Radical Squadron premiered on TBS Superstation's The Funtastic World of Hanna- Barbera block in the United States on September 1. January 6, 1. 99. American Horror Story: Murder House (originally titled as American Horror Story) is the first season of the FX television series American Horror Story, aired between. ![]() The series consists of a total of 2. This brings the total number of broadcast episodes to 2. There were also three episodes in production at the time of the series' cancellation as well as two that never made it past the concept stage. Suicide Squad Harley Quinn Bat SWAT Plush Roleplay Weapon - Factory Entertainment - Suicide Squad - Roleplay - We're bad guys, it's what we do. Factory Entertainment. Developer Bloober Team has earned a reputation for creating creepy horror games. They’ve mastered the use of off-putting sound and visual cues to layer on the fear. The first season consists of thirteen episodes; the second season consists of twelve episodes. The bulk of the series was written by either Glenn Leopold (1. Lance Falk (6 episodes). Jim Stenstrum contributed two episodes, while David Ehrman, Von Williams, Eric Clark (with Lance Falk), Mark Saraceni and Jim Katz all contributed one episode. Lance Falk's ideas were usually very ambitious and very inventive and this usually met with the studio executives telling him to change his ideas to something more simple, such as making the Aquians . The following is a complete list of episodes for SWAT Kats: The Radical Squadron, a television cartoon series created by Christian and Yvon Tremblay.![]() The reason why is not exactly known, but the show's violence, declining viewership and its inability to move merchandise have been cited as the most likely causes.! They have never been aired and none of them were ever completely finished. Succubus!: Also known as . This episode would mark the return of Turmoil from Season 2's fifth episode, . Harley Street (the alien- mutated scientist from . Viper in creating havoc in Megakat City. This episode was supposed to tell us about the fate of Dr. Harley Street who was supposedly killed in the first- season episode . They did not even enter the production or animation stage. Cold War: According to Lance Falk, one of Hanna Barbera's writers, Rex Shard (who last appeared in . This episode was supposed to mark Rex Shard's comeback. This was supposed to be the first appearance of a villain named . Viper's mutagens backfires and turns Lt. Feral into a . Konway gets her back to normal. Viper and the Metallikats in a bid to eliminate the SWAT Kats once and for all. Retrieved June 1, 2. Retrieved June 1. Retrieved June 1. Retrieved June 6, 2. Summary & Script Retrieved on June 0. Tv. com: Turmoil II: The Revenge Episode Description Retrieved on June 1. Tv. com: Doctors of Doom Episode Description Retrieved on June 1. Tv. com: Cold War Episode Description Retrieved on June 1. Tv. com: Blackout Episode Description Retrieved on June 1. Tv. com: The Vampire She- Kat Episode Description Retrieved on September 1. Blowout! Summary & Review Retrieved on June 0. Top 2. 5 Horror Movies of All Time - IGNContinued from Page 1. George Romero practically created the zombie movie genre single- handedly in 1. Night of the Living Dead. Ten years later he refined the formula with Dawn of the Dead. Far bigger, gorier, and funnier than its predecessor, Dawn of the Dead remains Romero's definitive work. Whereas Night featured a small cast of survivors holed up in a remote farm house, Dawn opens with a glimpse of a major metropolitan area falling to chaos during the zombie outbreak. It isn't long before our four heroes are forced to leave town and barricade themselves inside a shopping mall. But as it turns out, the undead hordes still retain enough of their old selves to feel the need to shop and consume. The true brilliance of Dawn is how it combined straight- up zombie carnage with a healthy dose of satire and social commentary. At the end of the day, are modern Americans really so different from the shambling undead? They crave warm flesh; we crave i. Phones. It's a message that was somewhat lost in the enjoyable but inferior 2. Scene to watch with the lights on: The opening battle scenes in Dawn of the Dead provide a telling picture of just how far society has crumbled since the zombie outbreak. SWAT teams storm an apartment building in urban Philadelphia, battling confused, angry residents and eventually hungry zombies. A SWAT member even commits suicide after being forced to gun down an attacking zombie. By 1. 98. 4 the slasher movie had been done to death (excuse the pun). Just how many masked killers could you see before fatigue set in? But Wes Craven had a brilliant twist on these types of films. First, he created a killer, Freddy Krueger, who instantly stood out from the rest of the pack. His face was burned beyond recognition, but Freddy wore no mask and didn't stay silent. In fact, he had plenty of cruel taunts for his victims. More importantly, his domain was the dream world, where he could stalk and terrorize without any rules to bind him - - if you ran away from him, he could just as easily be waiting for you as you approached. There was nowhere to hide from Freddy because we all have to sleep sometime, right? Featuring a more down to Earth and relatable group of young characters than most slasher films, A Nightmare on Elm Street made a huge impact upon its release, thanks to its excellent conceit and amazing villain, and Craven's talent at building tension and delivering the goods in his murder scenes. And with Freddy, Craven gave us one of the most popular, durable and recognizable movie characters of all time. Scene to watch with the lights on: When Freddy gets a hold of Tina in her dream, we suddenly realize just how big the stakes are, as her sleeping body is pulled up into the air, and four fatal cuts rip into her. The fact that she's dragged along the ceiling, screaming, before she dies, as her boyfriend looks on in horror, only adds to the shock of the scene. When American horror movies began to stagnate in the 1. Hollywood began looking at Asian cinema for new ways to scare the pants off viewers. Ring emerged as one of the best efforts in Japan's growing horror lineup, so it was only natural that Dream. Works chose to remake it as 2. The Ring. The concept for The Ring is simple and effective. An unsuspecting viewer watches a tape full of creepy imagery and a creepier girl. One week later, they're found dead from sinister but mysterious causes. And when our lovely heroine becomes the latest viewer, she has only days to save herself and her family from this deadly curse. The Ring is one damned creepy movie, and that's why it's so effective. Director Gore Verbinski loads his adaptation with plenty of haunting imagery even while the tension seems always just at the boiling point. Even hardcore fans of the original were pleased to see The Ring diverge from the source material in some ways and take full advantage of its larger budget. Hollywood hasn't always found success in mimicking Japan's horror gems, but they certainly hit gold with The Ring. Scene to watch with the lights on: It's tempting to list the final encounter between the undead Samara and Noah as the scariest moment in The Ring. After all, nobody likes seeing a ghostly girl crawling out of their television set. But it's an earlier scene in the film that left us most unsettled - - watching that frakkin' videotape! David Cronenberg's very R- rated, very intense and very excellent remake of The Fly puts Jeff Goldblum in the role of Seth Brundle, a scientist who invents telepods meant to change the world. Instead, they change him into a man- fly monster when a fly accidentally gets trapped in one of the machines as Seth teleports from one pod to the other. The script, performances and Howard Shore's tremendous score work together to create a horror opera, one full of dark twists and practical creature effects scares. Once all the gore and vomiting- on- food- to- eat- it settles, we realize we've just watched a tragedy about a scientist who accounted for everything save nature finding a way to remind man not to play God. This house may now be . Just pick anything. How about the guy who tears his own face apart or the malicious clown doll that loves to strangle or the vengeful zombies coming out of the swimming pool? This movie will hit you from every direction and leave you cowering in the corner. An alien with the ability to take the form of any life that it absorbs infiltrates an Antarctic research base, and soon the 1. John Carpenter's best film has itself planted on either side of the horror and sci- fi movie lines. The Thing plays fair within both genres, but leans more toward horror. The movie takes it time setting up the rules of the creature living amongst our heroes, while more importantly establishing each character - - from Windows to Mac. Ready to Mac. Ready's beard - - as people we actually worry about. Such attention to character and pacing feels like a lost art at times in the current genre climate. The practical special effects hold up better than you'd think (save for the stop- motion Blairmonster), and Kurt Russell gives one of his best performances as team leader Mac. Ready. Any self- respecting movie fan should have this in their library. Scene to watch with the lights on: Sure, your eyes will scream like a little girl when the head of a victim sheers itself from its burning corpse and spider- walks away. But the scariest bit involves the Thing assimilating dogs and revealing a mouth (best described as a flower made out of tongue petals) moments before it slime- claws its way out of sight. Psycho can be seen as the film that birthed the slasher genre and Texas Chainsaw Massacre was an integral step in its progress, making things more visceral. But it was Halloween that truly defined this subgenre in horror, inspiring a million sequels, rip- offs, imitations and homages. Take an instantly identifiable holiday, add in a chillingly silent, unstoppable masked killer and a feisty, resourceful heroine and you have Halloween.. It's no wonder Michael became a horror icon and that fans rebelled when he didn't appear in Halloween III. After all, Michael Myers and Halloween - - both the film and the actual holiday - - are now forever intertwined. Scene to watch with the lights on: Laurie Strode is trying to hide from Michael Myers, and crouches down inside a closet. She manages to tie the door shut, but that's not going to stop Michael, who begins smashing the door in, causing light to shine in and for Michael's spooky mask to come into plain view of the understandably terrified Laurie. In 1. 96. 8, director George Romero took the frightening idea of . Sure, some films have made their zombies run fast and tried to explain the whole dead- alive deal with a virus, and that's all fine. But nothing will ever beat the basics. With this one film, Romero was able to tap into everything we're afraid of: death, desecration of the flesh, cannibalism, brainwashing, disease and hopelessness. There's also a stinging underlying social message about racism, media and paranoia where viewers got to learn that they could be just as dangerous and cruel as the mindless hordes of undead they were hiding from. Scene to watch with the lights on: The scene when the mother discovers her little daughter, Karen, down in the basement, eating her own father for lunch. That's right. Brains might be on the menu, but the way to a man's heart is through his actual heart.
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