Out There Halloween Mega Tape (2022) Poster

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8/10
Even better than the first, so much fun
TheBeardedWonder2 August 2022
Basically a tightened up version of the first WNUF but with 90d shows and commercials. It's honestly even more accurate to the time period somehow, this is some truly great stuff to watch with a smile the whole time.

Great work to the whole crew! Can't wait to see if there's a part 3. Do yourself a favor and track down the dvd or vhs if you can!
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6/10
Better than the first one
Blazehgehg4 November 2023
I watched "The WNUF Halloween Special" a few years ago with some friends and found it to be kinda boring. It was unflinchingly dedicated to simulating 1980's local TV, from the dry, awkward segments to the overbearing flood of fake commercial breaks. It was a better idea than a piece of entertainment.

The "Mega Tape" is more fast and loose, playing closer to a feature-length episode of Tim & Eric. The subject matter helps more, too -- "WNUF" featured a newscaster venturing into a supposedly haunted house looking for ghouls you knew he didn't really believe in, giving it a more self-serious tone.

Here, the targets are trashy daytime talk shows from the 90's and a Sightings-esque paranormal program called "Out There", giving them a much greater range of cheese to work with. There's a lot more actual jokes, too, leading to an end product that is wackier, funnier and more entertaining than the original WNUF.

I'm still not entirely sure I loved it, because at the end of the day it's long unedited stretches of "live" TV with all the commercials left in. Now, I like a good "they left the commercials in" VHS recording, but I like them because I'm nostalgic for things I remember. All the commercials in both WNUF and the Mega Tape are fake, so there's less to be nostalgic for beyond a general vibe, and that's present even without the ads. They seemed to have a lot of fun making their fake commercials, but interrupting your movie for constant non-sequiturs is some of the worst qualities of commercials without any of the real benefits.

That being said, it definitely wouldn't feel right if you chopped all the commercials out, so I don't think I have anything more valuable to say about that. It just is what it is I guess, but at least that means it's still more fun than The WNUF Halloween Special.
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7/10
Fun Nostaglia Follow Up
Reviews_of_the_Dead8 December 2022
This was one of the movies at Nightmares Film Festival that I was excited to see. I was a fan of the original, WNUF Halloween Special. When I heard that writer/director Chris LaMartina was doing a follow-up, I knew I had to see it. I also got to see the Nightmares Cut for its World premiere as well.

Synopsis: a daytime talk-show host finds herself placed on a new program and investigating a farmstead with a long history of alien encounters.

For this sequel, we are picking up where the last one left off. It is years after those events. We are watching a VHS tape that was recorded of a talk show during Halloween. It is hosted by Ivy Sparks (Melissa LaMartina) and these are reminiscent of Jerry Springer, Ricki Lake or like Sally Jessie Raphael shows. This one is also in the 1990s if I'm not mistaken. She has different guests on with spooky takes on different things.

Once that episode ends, we learn that it was cancelled. Ivy Sparks has joined a show called 'Out There'. This is like 'Unsolved Mysteries'. If memory serves, it is hosted by Perry Trenchard (Ted Geoghegan). The episode being shown is on Halloween. There is a cult that is like Heaven's Gate and believe that information has been provided to them that aliens are going to take them away that night. Aliens might also explain the events that happened that fateful night of the WNUF Halloween Special years ago.

Then sprinkled within are different commercials that reminded me of my childhood as well. This just gives it that touch of realism as well.

Now that should give you the gist of what this movie is doing. If you've seen the original, this is just like that one. Where I want to start is that I had fun with this one in a nostalgic way. The talk and investigation show reminded me of things I'd watch during my childhood. The commercials as well. Listening to LaMartina talk afterwards, I realize that we had similar upbringings with things that we watched. That adds fun to this movie for me.

Where I want to go to next would be that I like the shift. This time around we are getting two different shows on the same tape. For a certain age group, this is what we did with VHS and recording things. It is fitting as it is one of the last Ivy Sparks shows and then her joining on 'Out There'. They are building on what they did in the original where that was just the Halloween special. I don't know if this works as well though. It is fun, but it also doesn't necessarily do anything aside from hoping you enjoy this bygone era of television.

What I will say though is that they do an excellent job at capturing that feel. From the commercials that they created for this to the talk show and to the show that ends out what we are seeing. There are items that are being sold during the ads that I had growing up, or a version of it. There are in jokes with jingles or seeing a commercial, then seeing a quick news report that will follow up what we are seeing for the late evening news. I'd say that the acting was good in being these characters. I'll give credit to Geoghegan, Melissa LaMartina, Katie Hidalgo, Shawn Jones, Mikael Simpson and Michael Varrati. No one stands out, but they shouldn't. This is supposed to feel like a real show.

The last things that I'll then go into would be with the filmmaking. I think they do a good job at making this look like it is on a VHS. I'm glad they didn't go overboard. It can be hard to see since the quality of it is poor. That feels real. The look of the characters from their clothes to the hairstyles are on point. We don't get a lot in the way of effects, but what we do are cheesy. That fits the tone though of what they're going for so I won't knock that down. Other than that, the soundtrack is solid for what they needed as well.

In conclusion, I'm not sure if I enjoy this one as much as the original. That's not to say I didn't have a good time. I do think this is a bit tighter with the filmmaking so that is good. Capturing the feel of the era this is set is well done. I think that the performances are good for what they needed. This does meanders though as there isn't as strong of a story through it. I do like the tie in of Ivy Sparks. This won't be for everyone. I think this will hit the nostalgia for certain viewers and they'll enjoy the ride like I did.

My Rating: 7 out of 10.
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10/10
A perfect movie
BandSAboutMovies17 September 2022
Warning: Spoilers
If you haven't seen the WNUF Halloween Special, you should just stop reading this and do exactly that.

This spiritual sequel, directed and written by Chris LaMartina (Call Girl of Cthulhu, What Happens Next Will Scare You, WNUF Halloween Special) moves from the UHF past to the VHS, well, also past to inform of us of what happened next. But it's also so much more.

If you ordered from Video Search of Miami or were lucky enough to be part of a tape trading crew, this movie will delight your heart beyond belief. This mixtape of footage comes from Trader Tony's Tape Dungeon, a bootleg video operation that had been busted by the government and this release is to pay for Tony's release.

It starts with an episode of a talk show hosted by Ivy Sparks (Melissa LaMartina) that would completely fit into the world of Ricki Lake yet also retains its local channel feel. Where WNUF felt part of the time when UHF reigned supreme, this episode is when your local affiliate was just starting to lose its hold on media and give way to large networks, as Fox became the fourth network and all of the shows that you loved like local pro wrestling and horror hosts were replaced by infomercials. We may not have known it at the time, but we were in the saddest of timelines.

Now, WNUF is an ACE channel and Ivy Sparks now hosts the show Out There, which feels like the kind of wild 90s prime time specials Fox used to air when they were the outlaw-feeling network that put alien autopsies live on the air.

I really loved the darkness at the edge of the public service announcements, the callbacks to the fate of characters from the first chapter of this story and the dread that builds as a UFO cult gets closer to being called home. This may have been inspired by the world of thirty years ago, but it's literally the happiest I've been watching a movie this year.
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