
Based on the lovable baby from the IT'S ALIVE trilogy, this new toy will keep your children entertained for hours* before it kills them!
*Actual hours of entertainment before death may vary
your happy childhood ends here!
Based on the lovable baby from the IT'S ALIVE trilogy, this new toy will keep your children entertained for hours* before it kills them!
*Actual hours of entertainment before death may vary
INDELIBLE SCENE(S):
I was an easily scared kid, so horror movies were off limits which was fine by me. I was allowed to watch sci-fi, and since my dad was a huge Trekkie I was exposed to that stuff all the time and I was fine. That is until I saw STAR TREK 2: THE WRATH OF KHAN. Chekhof is captured by Khan, and Khan sticks some disgusting worm in his ear to control him. This freaked me out for a long time, and I used to try to sleep with my hands over my ears to protect myself. I can watch horror movies now but that worm thing I still have a problem with.
INDELIBLE SCENE(S):
When SUSPIRIA first came out, I remembered seeing the trailer for it on TV. All you would see is a woman brushing her hair from behind and her singing, "Roses are red, violets are blue, the iris is a flower…..(something, something) SUSPIRIA!! After that, every time it came on, my sister and I would run from the room. Needless to say, since my mom was a horror lover we ended up seeing it at a matinee. I was 9 and my sister was 6.
Editor's note: That "something, something" was "The iris is a flower…that will mean the end of YOU!" as far as trailers and TV ads go this is one of the creepiest ever. Check it out!
Somewhere within the bowels of Kindertrauma mansion lies a room. A room that even Aunt John is blissfully unaware of…
INDELIBLE SCENE(S)
Hey look! Kindertrauma was mentioned in RUE MORGUE magazine (Dec. issue #74), how great is that? We'd just like to thank the fine folks over there for thinking of us (especially one Monica S. Kuebler)! We're very proud to be singled out in such an illustrious not to mention very cool publication!
Back in the day, there was a short series of old school horror story anthologies called SCARY STORIES TO TELL IN THE DARK. Now, if the stories didn't scare you shitless as a kid (and they usually did), then Stephen Gammel's horrifying illustrations sure as hell got the job done. To this very day, there's a particular drawing that I can't bring myself to look at. The story was about a girl whose nightmare was coming true, and the illustration was that of a hideously obese woman with thin gangly arms, oily black hair, tiny black eyes, and an enormous smile. It doesn't sound so bad when I describe it, but trust me, it's pretty damn traumatizing for an eight year old. The book is sitting in my bookshelf as I type, and there's no way I'd take it out at night.