

Its frenetic and fun, with moments of gut-churning body-horror but in its depiction. Catch it while its on tv and you'll like the practical effects of the movie as well as the memorable music by Howard Shore. Deep, dark, grown-up sci-fi that eschews outer space action for. Coming out the same year as Aliens and produced by Mel Brooks, The Fly became Cron's highest grossing movie ever and spawned a sequel which didn't do well but became a cult classic in its own right and there are talks of another remake, this time with CGI and a bigger budget. In 1986, director David Cronenberg, who made heads explode in Scanners and made video horror with Videodrome and changed political horror in the film version of The Dead Zone, would take great risks remaking a 1950s b movie classic, The Fly, by casting Jeff Goldblum as the main character and Geena Davis as his love. John Carpenter's The Thing, while it underperformed at the box office, became a favorite on home video and a cult classic.


What the critics really loved was the remakes of horror movies lured to younger audiences who never saw the originals. Halloween would have a sequel and many more, and Freddy Krueger started a long running franchise by Wes Craven. During the 1980s, horror was rising, with Friday the 13th started the decade with a bang, with sequels, parodies, and ripoffs in its path.
