Monthly Archive for April, 2009

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Paper Model: Proxima Centari by Jerom

Sometime I look up at the sky and I spend some time thinking about the universe and my place in it. I consider how small and insignificant my life might seem to the universe. Just another monster. Sometimes, I wonder about monsters on other planets. Of course, I know the truth about that but I’ve been sworn to secrecy by the Agents. I could tell you but my web host would be shut down within minutes of posting the real truth. So for now I’ll just say that IF there were alien monsters, and IF they were interested in taking over the Earth, then sleeping with a shotgun under your pillow wouldn’t help save you OR your little doggie from the coming terror.

On the plus side, you can have fun while the clock ticks down (that is IF the clock is ticking.) Here’s a great alien monster paper model to bide the time. This might be my favorite horror model yet, and it is very easy to make. It’s the Papertoy Proxima Centauri by Jerom. He has a great blog filled with cool paper models, especially monsters. If you want to download this model to make it yourself, don’t miss the high res copy – look for the link marked ICI.

I had a little extra fun with this model and put a white LED in it. So that it would light up from inside. Check it out.

Proxima Centauri Paper Model by JeromPictured here is a terrifying alien paper model

Here at Dark in the Dark, we don’t just do book reviews. We also do horror paper toys, or whatever you call them: Paper Models, Papercrafts, or Paper Toys.

Proxima Centauri Paper Model by JeromAlien Paper Model in its Horrifying Embryonic Stage

I feel the same way about paper models that I do about origami. With both arts there is a sweet spot between complexity and simplicity. Most of us don’t have the skills or patience of brain surgeons. And very few of us are going to get paid to sit around and put together paper models (although of course a monster can always dream.) This model is definitely over on the simple side, taking only about 15 minutes to build, but ends up being really cool.

Proxima Centauri Paper Model by JeromHorror Papertoy with the lights on.

I have something of a backlog of paper toys to make and post, unfortunately. In the past I’ve posted three different Pyramid Head paper models. Here is the first Pyramid Head Papercraft. Here are model number two and toy number three. I’ve also posted a Hieronymus Bosch Monster Paper Model. Hopefully I’ll get some more posted soon. Maybe the next time I’ll post some paper model building tips.

Proxima Centauri Paper Model by Jerom

Proxima Centauri Paper Model by JeromMore terrifying views of Jerom’s Proxima Centari Paper Toy

Here’s the rig I built into the bottom of the paper model to hold the LED light. So the light goes into the hole there and then slides over into the slot which holds it. The other holes there are so light comes out of the bottom of the toy. Obviously, I photoshopped the wires out of the above pictures. The wires hang out of the bottom. I should come up with something more permanent.

Proxima Centauri Paper Model by JeromIt looks like we’ve got ourselves a girl alien paper model here.

Question: What’s more terrifying than one alien paper model glowing in the dark?
Answer: Waking up the next morning to find two of them! Ah! Ah! Ahhhhhh!

And then they ate me. (OK. OK. No they didn’t.)

Two Alien Paper Toys

Update – We’ve gotten some attention and have been featured on Superpunch and Nice Paper Toys dot com. Thanks everybody!

Monster Music Monday: Blank Frank

Brian Eno * Blank Frank * 1973

Blank Frank is the messenger of your doom and your destruction
Yes, he is the one who will set you up as nothing
And he is one who will look at you sideways
His particular skill is leaving bombs in people’s driveways.

Blank Frank has a memory that’s as cold as an iceberg
The only time he speaks is in incomprenesible proverbs
Blank Frank is the siren, he’s the air-raid, he’s the crater
He’s on the menu, on the table, he’s the knife and he’s the waiter.

Brian Eno on Brian Eno

Pin up of the Week: Horror Stories August 1937

Horror Stories 1937 08-09

Horror Stories 1937 08-09

darkinthedark does not claim copyright on these images. If you are the copyright holder and object to their presence here, please contact me and I will remove them.

* Search for Shudder Pulps on eBay *

Cornerstone Book Publishes “Weird Horror Tales” Anthology by Michael Vance

Weird Horror Tales by Michael VanceCornerstone Book Publishers, who publish Masonic and esoteric books, selected pulp fiction, art literature, limited children’s books, and poetry collections, has released an anthology of horror fiction by author Michael Vance. With a cover by artist Keith Birdsong, Weird Horror Tales is an homage to shudder pulps from the ’20s, ’30s, and ’40s.

Sounds good, right? Here’s the press release:

Something big just got bigger.

Legendary cover artist Keith Birdsong has painted the cover for “Weird Horror Tales”, an homage to pulp magazines from the ‘20s, ‘30s, and ‘40s “Weird Tales” and “Horror Stories”. The collection was written by Michael Vance, and is now available.

Birdsong is famous for his extremely realistic covers for “Star Trek” novels, featuring the actors from the movies and television series. He has also done work for “Star Wars”, the cyberpunk role-playing game “Shadowrun”, and children’s books like “The Halloween Hex”. In addition, Birdsong’s work has been featured in films, on Hamilton Collection collectors’ plates, and on U.S. Postage stamps.

“Vance offers up thirteen tales of Lovecraftian horror with a deft sense of suspense and heart-pumping terror,” said Ron Fortier, editor of the title. “Earl Geier’s art for these stories is as stark and brutal as a cold knife’s edge. His grasp of terror is second to none, and delivers nightmarish scenes with incredible, horrific feelings. Whereas Keith Birdsong’s cover is simply creepy to the max. It is a work of intense imagination that will pull you into this collection like a twisted siren’s song.”

“My stories are founded on the premise that there is something larger than our narrow view of reality,” said Vance. “Each interconnected story shares setting, history, prominent families, and a macro plot. The stories also focus on the Azrealites, a religious cult that works tirelessly to reinstate that ‘Other’ on Earth through science and the occult.”

These stories about the fictional town of “Light’s End” in Maine have been published in dozens of magazines in three countries, including “Dark Corridor”, and have also been recorded by renowned actor William (“Murder She Wrote”) Windom.

The interior illustrations are by artist Earl Geier who is best known for his horror, fantasy and science fiction artwork. In the role playing game industry, his work includes art for “Battletech”, “Call of Cthulhu”, and many others. He has illustrated books for “Cemetery Dance” magazine, Chaosium, Gryphon and Subterranean Press. For comic book, he’s had work published by Dark Horse Comics, Comiczone, Now, Innovation and DC Comics Paradox.

Vance has written for national and international magazines, and as a syndicated columnist and cartoonist in over 500 newspapers. His history book, “Forbidden Adventures”, has been called a “benchmark in comics history”. He briefly ghosted an internationally syndicated comic strip, wrote his own strip and several comic books. He is listed in the Who’s Who of American Comic Books and Comic Book Superstars.

The publisher of “Weird Horror Tales”, Cornerstone Book Publishers also publishes Masonic and esoteric books, selected pulp fiction, art literature, limited children’s books, and poetry collections. For more information about Cornerstone, go to www.cornerstonepublishers.com.

Airship 27 packages and publishes anthologies and novels in the pulp magazine tradition.

In the past, Airship 27 has released “Witchfire”, a series of “Captain Hazzard” pulp thrillers, more pulp fiction in “Brother Bones” and “Secret Agent X” and the WWII/SF thriller “The Light of Men”. For more information on Airship 27, go to www.airship27.com.

Book Review: Good Fairies of New York

The Good Fairies of New York by Martin Millar

Welcome to another book review at Dark in the Dark. Today’s subject is good fairies.

Make no mistake, good fairies are a plague. There are lots of kinds of fairies. First, when you think of fairies, I hope you’re thinking of the sort that are described in traditional fairy tales. They are enchanted and don’t age at the same speed humans do. To us they appear to be human-sized, but in reality size and space don’t really mean much to them. They might inhabit an enormous castle under a rock in your garden. These are the kind of faery that are sort of mad or perhaps even dangerous, and are really best left alone. In addition there are, of course, the dark faeries. They wear lots of red lipstick and black clothing that makes them look skinny. They also have bat wings instead of the standard fairy butterfly wings. Dark fairies mostly spend their time looking sexy.

Finally, there is the kind of fairy who is more like a pixie and these are the kind that Arthur Rackham illustrated. They are miniature twig-like creatures with butterfly wings, tiny boobs, high cheekbones, and strange long noses. These are “good fairies” and you better wish you never see one because they only show up when something horrible has happened (or is about to happen.)

For example you might be visited by a good fairy if you are twelve years old and you get a splinter of an evil mirror embedded in your eye. Let’s say the splinter of evil mirror makes everything that is sweet and lovely in the world look like horror and blood, and you wander off in madness. Then your little sister sets out to find you and she is kidnapped by a smelly troll who insists that she either marry him or end up as his next roast. Your sister begs the troll to release her and he agrees, but only if she can clean his floor by the next morning. She tries her best but no matter how she cleans, the floor only gets dirtier and dirtier. That’s because the troll has cheated and enchanted the floor so it never gets clean. So your sister sits at the window and cries and cries because she misses you and she doesn’t want to marry a troll and bear his children or end up on a spit over a fire with an apple in her mouth. When something like this happens, you and your sister are due for a visit from a good fairy.

Of course it doesn’t have to be that complicated. For example, let’s say that your father is a woodsman, and your mother dies, and then your father marries a horrible stepmother who brainwashes your father and orders him to take you out in the woods, cut you into pieces for the wolves and crows in the forest to eat, and bring back your still-steaming heart so she can make a stew. If this happens you should say “Hello good fairy!” because you are guaranteed a visit.

I can keep giving examples like this over and over because it happens all the time, but the point is that good fairies are a plague. Unless maybe you’re a cute fluffy bunny rabbit that nothing bad could ever happen to.

I have to admit that after the first fifty pages of this book I was so annoyed with it that I put it down and started reading something else. In the end, I was glad that I gave it another go, but I can only recommend it with reservations.

The Good Fairies of New York would end up making a good Hollywood movie. Imagine the movie Enchanted (the 1997 movie starring Amy Adams) but instead of having everything bright and gay, where even the homeless people are adorable, make it like Kurt Vonnegut might write it. So Enchanted but with a heroine with Crohn’s disease and a colostomy bag. Oh, and good fairies. Of course the good fairies have to show up because the heroine has Crohn’s disease, has been mistreated, and is in peril.

The good fairies (there are two of them) are a large enough part of the story that they might be the main characters. They want to be like the Ramones or the New York Dolls. They dye their hair and get drunk and talk frankly about sex. They have been run out of their fairy homeland because of their obnoxious Rock and Roll fairy fiddling, and on a crazy drinking binge they end up in New York City. Here are some of the things they find there:

  • The already-mentioned attractive and sad artist girl heroine with Crohn’s disease.
  • Her jerky ex, who is putting on a production of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
  • The overweight jerk who lives across the street. He thinks he wants to learn how to play the violin, but really he needs to learn the true meaning of love.
  • Ethnic fairies (Italian, African, and Chinese.)
  • A lot of cute homeless people.
  • A lot of meaningless drinking.

Take these ingredients and mix vigorously with a lot of petty fairy squabbling, an unlikely romance, some lucky breaks, some unlucky breaks, and a faery cultural revolution, and you’ll end up with a book a lot like this.

The canned good fairy “outrageousness,” gratuitous boozing, and cute homeless people really got under my skin. However, if you can get past these annoyances, the book is a fun read. Besides the “ethnic” faeries, there are some delicious twists on fairy history and mythology. For example, good fairies have to do good or they get bad karma instantly. One of the fairies does something really bad by accident and spends the next chapter or so having horrible accidents. This was very pleasing to me.

The book treads a fine line between reality and fantasy, which is what makes me think of the movie Enchanted. Sometimes sad or bad things happen, and then other times there is magic in the world. When the going gets real tough, though, look out for good fairies.

Creepy Factor: 0 out of 5
Suspense Factor: 2 out of 5
Weird Erotic Tension Factor: 0 out of 5
Funny and/or Strange Factor: 4 out of 5

Final result: Wow my book review grading system made this book look bad so I added a new grading measure to the mix. I liked this book enough that I would probably read something else by Millar. But if you’re not into fairy tales and fantasy I would recommend you steer clear. Can I also complain to you, dear reader, that I have not read a book with any Weird Erotic Tension Factor since Lair of the White Worm? Folks, it was written one hundred years ago! What is wrong with the world?

Have you read this book? Has something horrible enough happened to you that you got a visit from a good fairy? Can anyone please suggest a horror book with some steamy erotic scenes? I know they’re out there and I need something to ease my aching heart from being love-sick over Coraline’s Other Mother. My love letters to her keep being returned – marked “undeliverable.”

The Good Fairies of New York – Martin Millar – Illustrations by Dave McKean – Tor Fantasy – 2008

The Good Fairies of New York on Amazon

Thanks for reading another one of my book reviews. Hopefully next time I review a nice juicy horror novel. I’m working on it! See you next time!

The flying monkeys let our technician out for a minute and he snuck away into the light of day. Thanks for your patience during this difficult transition.
I ated Tinkerbell.

Fhtagn Spoken Here.

... the attic, a vast raftered length lighted only by small blinking windows in the gable ends, and filled with a massed wreckage of chests, chairs, and spinning-wheels which infinite years of deposit had shrouded and festooned into monstrous and hellish shapes.
The Shunned House
H.P. Lovecraft




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