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1[[quoteright:310:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/creepshow_poster_02_7632.jpg]]
2[-[[caption-width-right:310:The Most Fun You'll Ever Have...BEING SCARED!]]-]
3
4In 1982, {{horror}} author Creator/StephenKing teamed up with zombiemeister Creator/GeorgeARomero and special effects wizard Creator/TomSavini to make ''Creepshow'', an anthology {{film}} that paid homage to 1950s horror comic books like ''ComicBook/TalesFromTheCrypt'' from Creator/ECComics. It featured an all-star cast (including Creator/LeslieNielsen, Creator/EdHarris, pre-''Series/{{Cheers}}'' Creator/TedDanson, Creator/HalHolbrook, Adrienne Barbeau, Creator/EGMarshall, and Creator/StephenKing himself) and told five stories:
5
6#"Father's Day": Many years ago, Bedelia Grantham's (Creator/VivecaLindfors) wealthy, abusive, and domineering father Nathan (Jon Lormer) made her life a living hell, even going so far as to have her lover killed just so he could keep her under his thumb. That Father's Day, she proceeded to bash her father's head in with a marble ashtray as he yammered loudly for his cake. Seven years later, the rest of the Grantham family, including newly-made in-law Hank (Harris), gather together at the family estate on Father's Day, the anniversary of the murder. Unfortunately for the Granthams, you can't keep a hungry man down. Nathan still wants his cake, and not even death itself is going to keep him from getting it.
7#"The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill": Backwoods redneck Jordy Verrill (King) thinks his financial woes are solved when he witnesses a meteor crash-land on his farm, intending to sell it to the local college for a small fortune. After splashing a bucket of water on the meteor to cool it off, it splits in half, revealing a strange liquid that Jordy innocently dumps into the ground. Despite his setback, Jordy resolves to try and fix the meteor in the morning. Unfortunately for Jordy, the meteor turns out to contain some rapidly-growing alien plants that not only spread all over his farm, but also on his body. Based on King's short story "Weeds".
8#"Something to Tide You Over": Wealthy control freak Richard Vickers (Nielsen) learns that his wife Becky is having an affair with well-to-do beach bum Harry Wentworth (Danson). When he confronts Harry about the affair, he plays a recording of a terrified Becky begging Harry to come save her. He soon lures Harry to his private beachfront estate, and once there, he forces Harry to jump into a hole in the sand, whereupon Richard buries him up to his neck. To make matters worse, Richard has buried Harry below the high-tide line, ensuring that he'll drown when the tide comes in. As a final insult, he even shows Harry live footage of Becky suffering the same fate before he drowns. Richard is certain that once they drown, his problems will be solved. Unfortunately, Richard never took Harry's vow of revenge seriously, and ends up receiving a visit from two scorned lovers from beyond the grave. Or rather, from the bottom of the sea.
9#"The Crate": At the prestigious Horlicks University, janitor Mike Latimer (Don Keefer) finds an old, dusty crate underneath a basement stairwell. The crate also catches Mike's interest when he discovers that it has been stored underneath the staircase for over a century and supposedly contains specimens of an "Arctic expedition". He notifies biology professor Dexter Stanley (Creator/FritzWeaver) about the find, and invites him to the basement to help him open it. Once opened, the crate is revealed to contain a shaggy, diminutive, and ferocious creature. After the monster kills and eats Mike, the frightened Professor Stanley enlists the help of grad student Charlie Gereson. After the monster also kills and eats Charlie, Dexter goes to his colleague and fellow professor Henry Northrup (Holbrook) for help. Henry turns out to be married to an abusive and alcoholic shrew of a woman named Wilma (Barbeau and her cleavage), and upon hearing Dex's story, he decides that a flesh-eating monster is a rather tempting alternative to divorce. Adapted from a short story of the same name.
10#"They're Creeping Up on You!": Upson Pratt (Marshall), a miserly, racist, germophobic business tycoon, hates pretty much everybody. He spends much of his time conversing with his hard-working subordinates through the phone, treating them all like dirt and insects while he rules his multinational business empire from his sterilized, germ-proof penthouse. One night, George Gendron, one of Pratt's employees, informs him that a business rival, Norman Castonmeyer, ended up committing suicide after Pratt took his company out from under him. Pratt actually reacts joyously to this news, but soon after, he soon begins finding cockroaches, which he fears more than anything, crawling all around his apartment. He also gets a message from Norman's widow, Lenore, who furiously berates him for what happened to her husband. It all comes to a climax when a rolling blackout hits Pratt's building, and the cockroaches begin to overwhelm him, swarming by the thousands.\
11
12In addition, the movie also has a FramingDevice of a young boy named Billy (Creator/JoeHill) who reads the eponymous ''Creepshow'' comic while enduring abuse from his father, Stan (Creator/TomAtkins). Thankfully, Billy manages to get the last laugh.
13
14It had a less well-received (but still mostly good) sequel, ''Film/{{Creepshow 2}}'', which was followed by the unofficial and nowhere near as popular ''Film/{{Creepshow 3}}''. The film would inspire other EC Comics-style horror anthologies such as ''Series/TalesFromTheCrypt'' and ''Series/TalesFromTheDarkside''.
15
16A 12-episode [[Series/{{Creepshow}} series]] aired on Shudder streaming service, beginning September 26, 2019. Here is the official [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=inzsKlVR_N8 trailer]]. In addition to more adaptations of King himself, the series also boasts stories from Creator/JoeHill, Creator/JoeRLansdale, Creator/JoshMalerman, and more.
17
18!!! ''[=Creepshow=]'' is the {{Trope Namer|s}} for:
19* FluffyTheTerrible (via Creator/TomSavini nicknaming the monster in "The Crate" "Fluffy")
20----
21!! "The most fun you'll have being troped":
22[[foldercontrol]]
23
24[[folder:General]]
25* AbusiveParents:
26** Nathan Grantham ''is'' the (literal) dad from Hell.
27** Billy's father in the framing story is a real scumbag. This one you can check off on the [[DrinkingGame/StephenKing Stephen King Drinking Game]].
28-->'''Stan:''' That's why God made fathers.
29* AdaptationDistillation: Though it's not an official adaptation ([[Film/TalesFromTheCrypt and there were such films already]]), many feel Romero and King perfectly captured the spirit of the old EC comics, right down to the movie being deliberately over the top and full of [=Narm=].
30* AssholeVictim: By the bucket-full. Tragically subverted in ''The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill'' - Jordy is a decent man who has done nothing wrong.
31* AuthorAppeal: Stephen King adores Creator/ECComics, and this project (and the related comic book tie-in) is his homage.
32* BackFromTheDead: Considering who made this, it's pretty much a given.
33* {{Bathos}}: True to the old comics, this movie is ''swimming'' in it.
34* BloodyHilarious: The movie's goriest scenes are generally played for laughs.
35* BodyHorror: It ranges from mild to severe, depending on the story.
36* BreakTheHaughty: What happens to the wicked characters when they're about to get their just desserts.
37* TheCameo: Character actor and frequent Carpenter collaborator Creator/TomAtkins appears in the film's framing segments as Billy's abusive father Stan.
38** Richard's wife Becky is played by Gaylen Ross, Francine from "Dawn of the Dead".
39** Frequent Romero collaborator John Amplas, who also appeared in "Dawn of the Dead," plays the zombie version of Nathan Grantham.
40* CreatorCameo: Aside from King as Jordy, Creator/TomSavini is one of the garbagemen in the closing segment of the framing story.
41* CulturalStereotypes: Jordy is a dumb redneck, and all of the rich folks (particularly Upson Pratt) are total dicks.
42* DisproportionateRetribution: A big theme of the movie, in keeping with its '50s horror comic inspiration. Characters ranging from truly innocent (Jordy, Hank) to utterly evil (Richard, Upson) meet horrible fates with little regard for what's really deserved.
43* DysfunctionalFamily:
44** Billy's dad Stan routinely beats him to the point the kid, a budding psychopath, snarls "I hope you rot in Hell" when he leaves, and pours himself a beer to unwind; the mother, meanwhile, is completely ineffectual and cowed, at most asking if Stan was "a little hard on him" and saying he "didn't have to" hit him.
45** The Granthams are a sniping, [=WASPy=] bunch who hang around making passive-aggressive comments to each other when they're not gossiping about family secrets.
46* EightiesHair: Ubiquitous. Adrienne Barbeau's haircut in this movie could be used in a textbook.
47* EmpathicEnvironment: Justified in that it's a comic book. Even the ''frames'' change mood.
48* TheEndOrIsIt: Like the EC Comics that inspired this movie, a few of the self-contained stories end this way just for fun.
49* EvilOldFolks:
50** If Nathan Grantham's tombstone is to be believed, at the time of his murder in 1972, he was ''104''. Part of the reason he was so controlling of Bedelia was because he was left dependent on her after a stroke, and Sylvia muses in a deleted scene that he "simply would not die" and he "made a pact with the Devil, or somebody" just to avoid handing over his fortune.
51** Upson Pratt, a miserly old coot who's persisted in business for decades and made a lot of enemies along the way.
52* FreezeFrameBonus: Oh, so much. It's fun to pause the video to read the letters page or some of The Creep's {{Deadpan Snark|er}}ing, with enough puns to put the Crypt Keeper to shame. For example, at the end of ''The Crate'', in the final comic book frame the Creep snarks, "Oh, Henry. You didn't think you could ''drown'' your fears that easily?"
53** Combined with RewatchBonus, freeze framing the film in between the second and third stories makes it easier to notice that [[spoiler: the send-away for the voodoo doll has already been cut out.]]
54* IdiosyncraticWipes: Several scenes transition from live-action to comic book art, in accordance with the FramingStory premise that the audience is "reading" the stories from Billy's wind-riffled comic.
55* KickTheSonOfABitch: Bedelia Grantham and Henry Northrup murder, respectively, their father and wife, and in both cases it's presented as a very bad thing to do... but it's very hard to feel sorry for their loathesome victims.
56* LargeHam:
57** Creator/StephenKing pretty much [[ChewingTheScenery devours the entire set]] and then tops it off with a plate of salad.
58-->'''Jordy:''' METEOR SHIT!
59** Nathan Grantham is pretty hammy, too, at least before he comes back.
60** Richard goes from ColdHam to LargeHam when he gets LaserGuidedKarma.
61* LaserGuidedKarma: Several examples, most notably:
62** Sylvia, who [[spoiler:helped Bedelia cover up her murder of her father to spilt his fortune amongst the family, ends up as his Father's Day cake.]]
63** Richard, who [[spoiler: left his wife and her lover buried up to their necks in the sand, has the same done to him.]]
64** Upson Pratt, who compares all of society to cockroaches and is delighted over his causing a man to commit suicide, [[spoiler: has cockroaches pour out of him from the inside.]]
65** Billy's father, who slaps him over reading a comic. [[spoiler: By the end of the film, his throat is feeling awfully sore.]]
66* MoodWhiplash: The film swings from horror to comedy and back in the blink of an eye.
67* MythologyGag: At the end of "The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill," we see a signpost reading "CASTLE ROCK 5."
68** Horlicks University, where the action of "The Crate" takes place, is the same college where Arnie's parents teach in ''Literature/{{Christine}}''.
69** Jordy's complaint about "Verrill luck" always being bad is accurate. He's one of a long line of people with the last name "Verrill" who has died in some horrible way, shape, or form in Stephen King's works.
70* OneSteveLimit: Averted. There are two Henrys (although one of them goes by Hank) and two Richards in the movie.
71* OurZombiesAreDifferent: Despite this being directed by George Romero, the zombies in this movie don't follow those of the classic Romero movies. Richard even tries to shoot Harry and Becky in the head, but it's a NoSell.
72* RuleOfScary: Neither the way the zombies are re-animated, nor how Fluffy was able to survive for many years without needing food, nor the cockroach invasion against Pratt are given good explanations. They just happen because they have to.
73* SelfDeprecation: Despite this being a [[Film/NightOfTheLivingDead1968 George A. Romero]]-directed movie with zombies in it, they don't [[OurZombiesAreDifferent die from a headshot.]]
74* SequelHook: In two of the segments. [[spoiler:"Fluffy" smashes his way out of his box and escapes at the end of "The Crate," and at the end of "The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill," the alien weeds are still growing and headed for civilization.]] (Ultimately subverted by ''Film/Creepshow2'', in which none of the stories have anything to do with the ones in this film.) It was fairly common for old '50s horror comics to end this way, though.
75* ShoutOut:
76** "The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill" was loosely inspired by Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival's "It Came Out Of The Sky," a song where a farmer finds an object that fell from space (though the plot of the song is otherwise very different) - the main character in the CCR song is named Jody, which of course sounds similar to Jordy. In addition, the title of the segment is a play on Music/BobDylan's song "The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carrol," and as noted above, Creator/HPLovecraft's story "Literature/TheColourOutOfSpace" is also a clear influence.
77** The stenciled text on Fluffy's crate reads "SHIP TO HORLICKS UNIVERSITY VIA JULIA CARPENTER...ARCTIC EXPEDITION JUNE 19, 1834." At the time, Creator/JohnCarpenter was shooting ''Film/TheThing1982'', which is set in [[MysteriousAntarctica Antarctica]]. Carpenter was also the director the Stephen King adaptation ''Film/{{Christine}}'', which featured Horlicks University. [[ProductionPosse A lot of people involved in this movie had worked with Carpenter before]], to the point where it's honestly easy to forget that he wasn't involved in ''Creepshow'' at all.
78** At the beginning of "They're Creeping Up on You!" the ragtime music that was used in ''Film/{{The Evil Dead|1981}}'' can be heard on Pratt's jukebox.
79** Bedelia's murdered lover Peter Yarbro could be a tip of the hat from King to his fellow horror novelist Chelsea Quinn Yarbro.
80** The two new teachers in "The Crate" are named Richard and Tabitha. They are named after Creator/StephenKing's wife, Tabitha, and his writing alter-ego Richard Bachman, according to King himself.
81* TheVerse:
82** Horlicks University (the setting of "The Crate") is where Arnie Cunningham's parents teach in ''Literature/{{Christine}}'', and it's also where Deke, Laverne, Randy, and Rachel go to school in [[Film/Creepshow2 "The Raft."]] There's even a passing mention in ''Literature/{{Christine}}'' (the book, not the movie) of Mike, the janitor eaten by "Fluffy."
83** The radio broadcast at the end of "The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill" makes a clear reference to Castle County, another mainstay of King's universe.
84[[/folder]]
85
86[[folder:The framing story]]
87* AlcoholicParent: Stan pours himself a beer after disciplining his son, as per the Creator/StephenKing DrinkingGame.
88* ChekhovsGun: During one of the quick transition sequences that shows additional pages in the comic, there's a brief shot of a [[MailOrderNovelty mail-in ad]] for a VoodooDoll with that order cut out, but it's quickly passed by as the film moves on to the next segment. [[spoiler: This comes into play at the very end, when it's revealed that Billy already sent away for the doll, and uses it to kill his father as revenge for throwing his comic out at the beginning of the film.]]
89* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: Stan's [[MoralGuardians moral guardian]] attitude in the framing story is a pretty overt reference to the real-life scare around the '50s horror comics that inspired this film.
90* FantasyForbiddingFather: Stan, to an abusive degree (he even thinks it's his God-given right to slap his kid!).
91* {{Foreshadowing}}: When Stan complains about the subject matter of the ''Creepshow'' comic, he mentions "things coming out of crates and eating people, dead people coming back to life," and "people turning into weeds", giving the audience a hint of what's to come.
92* FramingStory: Quite obviously, this one focusing on the friction between a boy and his father over the former's love of horror comic books.
93* HorrorDoesntSettleForSimpleTuesday: Judging by the jack o'lantern in the family's window, this story takes place around Halloween.
94* KickTheSonOfABitch: In the end, [[spoiler: Billy tortures his abusive father with a VoodooDoll that he mail-ordered from an ad in the comic that his father threw out.]]
95* KidsShouldntWatchHorrorFilms: Invoked and ultimately defied, where Stan's insistence that his son avoid horror comics is presented as abuse rather than genuine concern.
96* MoralGuardians: Stan berates Billy for reading the titular comic [[{{Hypocrite}} in spite of keeping a secret]] PornStash, and then smacks him for calling him out on it. He later justifies his actions by saying that the comic was so full of horrifying material that could cause damage to him, ignoring the fact that his abuse would cause ''much'' more harm in the long term than a comic book could.
97* ScarySkeleton: The Creep appears as a rotting skeleton when he visits Billy.
98* WouldHurtAChild: Billy's father slaps him across the face for reading horror comics, talking back to him, and snooping through his things.
99[[/folder]]
100
101[[folder: Father's Day]]
102* AmbiguouslyGay: The prissy and catty Richard has stereotypically gay mannerisms and does not have a romantic partner during his visit, unlike his sister. It's never confirmed that he's actually gay, but he mentions that he doesn't like Hank, the only other male character in the story.
103* AsYouKnow: An interesting variation, as Bedelia telling her dead father about his murder and the cover-up while she sits by his grave, which also informs the ''audience'' everything ''we'' need to know about why he's going to do what he's going to do ''later''.
104* AxCrazy: Nathan takes too much damn fun in sadistically offing his family members after he comes back.
105* TheBadGuyWins: While the rest of the Grantham family weren't saints themselves, Nathan kills them one by one after he comes back as a zombie, and the segment ends with him finally getting his "[[OffWithHisHead cake]]."
106* BigOMG: Richard reacts to the sight of Sylvia's icing-covered head on a platter with a comical "'''[[ChewingTheScenery OOOOOHHH MMMYYY GHHHAAAOOOOOOAAAAAHHH!!!]]'''"
107* BigScrewedUpFamily: The Granthams, a bickersome and snide collection of idle rich formerly under the control of their patriarch Nathan, and now implicitly by Sylvia. It's an open family secret that Bedelia killed Nathan for his abusive, manipulative ways, and none of them intend to do a thing about it.
108* BlasphemousBoast: Sylvia claims that Bedelia is "older than God."
109* BludgeonedToDeath: Nathan was killed when his daughter grabbed a marble ashtray and slammed it right into his head.
110* BrattyFoodDemand: The viewers are shown just how annoying Nathan was in life so that we aren't sad when he dies, by showing him banging on the table for what's implied to be '''hours''', screaming at Bedelia and hurling insults at her while demanding his Father's Day cake.
111* DeathByLookingUp: Hank falls into Nathan's grave and gets pinned under Bedelia's dead body. He can only lie helplessly on his back, looking up, as the top of Nathan's monument is telekinetically pushed into the grave... directly on top of his head.
112* DecapitationPresentation: On a ''Father's Day cake'', no less.
113* DroppedABridgeOnHim: Or in this case, [[spoiler: a headstone. Creator/EdHarris is well known to audiences now, and his character's somewhat anticlimactic death after seemingly waiting a full minute for a headstone to be pushed onto his skull is a bit of a surprise, especially because the audience would assume that, because he's only married into the family, Hank is one of the people at the gathering that Nathan would have the LEAST issue with.]]
114* EvilGloating: "It's Father's Day... [[DecapitationPresentation And I got my cake]]... ''Happy Father's Day!'' ''[[EvilLaugh HA HA HA HA HA HAAAAA!]]''''"''
115* EvilLaugh: Nathan [[{{Sadist}} chuckles to himself]] after crushing Hank with his tombstone, and laughs maniacally after scaring Cass and Richard with Sylvia's severed head as the story ends.
116* FanDisservice: Ed Harris ''disco dancing''.
117* GhostlyGoals: "I want my cake!"
118* GoryDiscretionShot:
119** Peter Yarbro's injuries after being shot point-blank with a shotgun are never shown, just the body falling back into the water, but it's quite clear he's dead. A deleted scene, also included in the comic adaptation, was filmed with Bedelia identifying him at the morgue, and the corpse has a bloody swath blown through the right side of his face.
120** [[spoiler:Hank getting squashed by the tombstone is done in a series of cuts; he yelps, and the film cuts to the stone falling down in the foreground while Nathan watches in focus in the background.]]
121* HorrorDoesntSettleForSimpleTuesday: It's Father's Day, and Nathan wants his cake.
122* HuntingAccident: Bedelia's beau Yarbro was (supposedly) a victim of this, courtesy of her father.
123* IdentifyingTheBody: A deleted scene has Bedelia identifying Yarbro's body at the morgue, whom her father had shot to keep Bedelia to heel. This is one of the reasons she bludgeons her father to death with that ashtray (the other being his goddamn incessant wailing and the banging he made with his cane when he was upset, especially when he wanted his [[TitleDrop Father's Day]] cake).
124* IdleRich: Most of the Granthams.
125* LibationForTheDead: Bedelia inadvertently does this when she knocks over the whiskey she was drinking on her father's grave. Nathan comes back for revenge immediately after this.
126* MadnessMantra: "Where's my cake? I want my cake!"
127* MakeItLookLikeAnAccident: How Bedelia's father was killed. It's appropriate as well, as her father had her lover murdered the same way.
128-->'''Aunt Bedelia:''' Sylvia fixed it all! Ashtray back in place! Chair overturned! A fall, Daddy, a bad fall. Nobody could catch us! Nobody! You taught me, you taught Sylvia! You taught us all!
129* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane: [[spoiler:Nathan's tombstone moves forward in a halting, maliciously slow way to crush Hank; Grantham, meanwhile, stands aside and beckons at him, at which point the stone finally topples. Is he controlling it somehow, or just mocking the soon-to-be dead man?]]
130* NeckSnap: Nathan kills Sylvia with the ultimate neck-snapping kill, with no effort whatsoever.
131* NiceGuy: Hank, the only in-law among the Granthams. Unlike his wife and her brother, who are absolute snobs, he doesn't do or say anything malicious or morbid. He was naturally curious about the story of Nathan's murder, and the only reason he went out to the graveyard is to see if Bedelia was okay.
132* OlderThanTheyLook: Despite being "older than God," Bedelia actually looks a decade younger than Sylvia, her niece.
133* OneTrueLove: Bedelia's lover Yarbro had no interest in her father's money, just Bedelia.
134-->'''Bedelia:''' You shouldn't have killed Peter! He was a man, see, a real man! Everything I wanted, he wanted ''for me!''
135* OpenSecret: The murder of Nathan Grantham, which has become a well-known family story in the present day.
136* PayEvilUntoEvil: In life, Nathan was a cruel, spiteful, and perpetually jealous SpoiledBrat of a man, but that isn't to say that his relatives are any better. His returning from the grave to give them their just deserts could easily be seen as a case of this trope.
137* PeekABooCorpse: Sylvia goes into the dark kitchen to find Mrs. Danvers, the cook. She finds her, all right...
138** Hank also meets Bedelia by way of falling into an open grave and finding her strangled corpse.
139* RevenantZombie: Nathan Grantham, in case it wasn't obvious.
140* RiseFromYourGrave: Again, Nathan Grantham. Oddly, it looks like he was buried without a coffin only a few feet down.
141* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: Somewhat subverted. Nathan doesn't come back from the dead to get revenge, so much as he does to just get his Father's Day cake. We say "somewhat" because [[spoiler: he settles for ''Sylvia's head'', complete with icing and candles.]]
142** To say nothing of him [[spoiler: sadistically killing his entire known family and an in-law that had nothing to do with him just because he's there]].
143** Possibly played straight with [[spoiler: the Grantham's cook Mrs. Danvers, who overheard Nathan's murder yet presumably never told the police.]]
144* RuleOfSeven: Nathan comes BackFromTheDead seven years after his murder... and he ''still'' wants that Father's Day cake he never got.
145* ScarySkeleton: When Nathan rises from his grave to begin his cake-motivated killing spree, his zombified corpse is almost entirely skeletal, with bits of dirt, mold, decaying flesh, and maggots clinging to his bones.
146* SinisterSweetTooth: Nothing will stop Nathan from getting his cake. Not even death...
147* TheSociopath: After what he does to [[spoiler: Hank]], it's safe to say Nathan has zero empathy.
148* ThisIsForEmphasisBitch: Nathan slips in a few when he's screaming at Bedelia for his cake. She calls him out on it when sitting at his grave, mocking him in the process.
149* TooDumbToLive: Hank lies underneath Nathan's tombstone for almost a full minute before the zombified Nathan gets around to squishing his head with it, far too long to just chalk up to being paralyzed with fear. Poor guy must not have had the "fight or flight" reflex.
150* UnPaused: Nathan crawls out of his grave, still ranting, "I want my cake! It's Father's Day! I want my cake!"
151* VillainHasAPoint: Nathan's ranting and raving about his family being "vultures." While Bedelia seemed innocent enough (until a certain "accident"), it's clear that the Granthams have always been smarmy, spoiled people who keep kissing up to the main heir to the family fortune. Such is the case with Richard, Cass, and Sylvia, who blithely overlook the murder. The latter even disguised the killing as an accident to steal Nathan's wealth and divvy it amongst the family.
152* TheWatson: Hank. As an outsider to the Grantham family, he gives Sylvia the perfect opportunity to explain the backstory.
153* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: What became of Cass and Richard? The film doesn't answer the question directly, but the comic book adapation states that Nathan proceeded to "blow out their candles".
154[[/folder]]
155
156[[folder: The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill]]
157* AlienKudzu: The green "meteor shit" is an extra-virulent example, being able to spread over living creatures as easily as soil.
158* AteHisGun: [[spoiler:Jordy blows his head off as the growth overwhelms him, finally managing to do something right]].
159* BornUnlucky: Jordy, according to the man himself. He's not wrong. [[spoiler: Apparently, the luckiest thing to happen to him is that his shotgun ''did'' put him out of his misery.]]
160* CameFromTheSky: The meteor that lands in Jordy's backyard.
161* ComicallySmallDemand: Jordy plans to profit from the meteor by selling it to the local college for $200.
162* DespairEventHorizon: Jordy reaches it while talking to his father's ghost, lamenting that not getting into the tub at this point would only delay the inevitable.
163* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler:Poor Jordy.]]
164* TheEndOrIsIt: After Jordy's suicide from the plants that thrive on water:
165-->'''TV Weather Forecaster:''' And in today's weather: Well, not much for the outdoor types, but you farmers are going to love this. The current 30-day forecast released by the US Meteorlogical Station in Portland, calls for moderating temperatures and lots of rain. Castle County is going to turn green so fast in the next month, that it's going to be almost miraculous.
166* HalfWittedHillbilly: Jordy is very much the stereotypical dumbass redneck, played with over-the-top gusto by Stephen King himself. Nevertheless, he is possibly the most sympathetic character in the whole movie.
167* {{Homage}}: While most of the movie is an obvious ShoutOut to EC Comics, this segment also functions as one to Creator/HPLovecraft's ''Literature/TheColourOutOfSpace''.
168* INeedAFreakingDrink: As the plants grow on Jordy, he ransacks his liquor cabinet for a half-full fifth of Popov, dumps it in a pitcher of O.J., uses the bottle to stir it, and sits down to watch TV with his extra-large screwdriver.
169* IdiotPlot: An InUniverse example. Jordy's story only works because he's ignorant, stupid, and desperate, and he even acknowledges near the end that jumping in his bathtub, even though it will relieve his horrible itching, will still mean his death.
170* IndulgentFantasySegue: Jordy has a few of them throughout the segment, playing through various possible outcomes regarding the meteor.
171* LighterAndSofter: While Jordy's ultimate fate is inevitably tragic, his segment is the most-lighthearted in the film, with his LargeHam mannerisms and over-the-top fantasy sequences, and the fact that there's practically no blood or guts whatsoever.
172* NetworkSignOff: Jordy's TV is left on while Jordy drunkenly falls asleep. The blaring signoff tone wakes him up, allowing him to see that the alien growth has reached his living room and has grown further on his own body.
173* NotOfThisEarth: Jordy's meteor.
174* PlantPerson: The alien plants grow so rapidly over the course of a single night, that Jordy becomes a walking, talking lump of greenery, before he puts himself down with a shotgun.
175* SpoilerTitle: Would you care to guess what happens at the end of the story?
176* StealthPun: When Jordy wakes up after briefly falling asleep in his chair, the moss-like alien growth has spread throughout his farm. While he's taking all this in, the film adaptation of ''Literature/HowGreenWasMyValley'' can be heard on his TV set.
177* TheyWouldCutYouUp: Jordy almost calls a doctor about the alien growth on his hand, but he reconsiders when he imagines that the "cure" will be to chop off his afflicted fingers. Without anesthetic.
178* YouWontFeelAThing: "This is going to be ''extremely'' painful, Mr. Verrill..."
179[[/folder]]
180
181[[folder: Something to Tide You Over]]
182* BadassBoast: As the tide rolls in, Harry looks at the camera Richard set up to record his death and lets this fly:
183-->'''Harry:''' ''Richard!'' I'm gonna get you! You hear me, Richard? '''''YOU HEAR ME, RICHARD?!''''' I'm going to get you [[CurseCutShort f...!]]
184-->[a wave washes over his head, cutting him off abruptly]
185* BadPeopleAbuseAnimals: At one point, Richard kicks a crab away from Harry when it approaches his face.
186* BigBrotherIsWatching: Richard is obsessed with cameras and video equipment, having decorated his beach house with a myriad of surveillance equipment.
187* BoomHeadshot: Richard tries this on Harry and Becky. Unfortunately for him, they aren't ''that'' kind of undead.
188* ColdHam: Richard, played by Leslie Nielsen, manages to be hammy while just wearing a smirk, for the most part.
189* DefiantToTheEnd: An insane Richard demonstrates this, as he receives his KarmicDeath.
190--> ''[[spoiler:I, CAN HOLD MY BREATH-- FOR A '''LOOOONG''' TIME! HAHAHAHA!]]''
191* [[EvilDetectingDog Evil Detecting Fish]]: The fish in Richard's aquarium become panicked and agitated when the undead Harry and Becky enter his house.
192* FanDisservice: Harry is played by the exquisitely handsome Ted Danson, but the viewer only sees him [[spoiler: buried up to his neck in sand left to die, and then as a waterlogged zombie.]]
193* FauxAffablyEvil: Richard puts on a friendly façade as he's extracting his revenge. He talks to Harry almost like he's meeting an old friend he hasn't seen in a while, all while arranging to bury him and drown him as he gloats about how he's also currently in the process of murdering his wife.
194* GunsAreWorthless: Richard tries to shoot the waterlogged corpses of Harry and Becky as they invade his home, but they [[NoSell aren't bothered]].
195* IKnowYoureWatchingMe: Harry's last words.
196* IfICantHaveYou: Richard admits to Harry that he never really loved his wife, but she belongs to ''him'', and he ''keeps what he owns''.
197* ImmuneToBullets: Harry and Becky each take point blank [[BoomHeadshot rounds to the head]] and barely even flinch.
198* IronicEcho: When [[spoiler: the now undead Harry and Becky return]] to get revenge on Richard, they repeat many of the same phrases he said to them, such as [[spoiler: "We dug a hole for you," and "Don't panic!"]]
199* LaughingMad: Richard goes mad with fear and begins laughing hysterically when he realizes the undead Harry and Becky are ImmuneToBullets, and it continues when he gets his LaserGuidedKarma.
200* MyGodYouAreSerious: Harry to Richard when the latter (in his own twisted way) keeps his word about Harry being able to see Becky, while explaining that he's going to die: "Oh my God. You ''are'' insane!"
201* OhCrap: Harry, when the biggest wave yet comes right at him, and he realizes he is soon to be submerged completely.
202-->'''Harry:''' Oh my God...
203* OffscreenTeleportation: Harry and Becky are able to pull off a ''textbook'' example of this when they return from the dead.
204* PlantPerson: The zombified Harry and Becky appear as though they were made of seaweed, even bleeding greenish-black blood.
205* PsychicPowers: The zombified Harry and Becky are able to manipulate devices in Richard's house without touching them.
206* RevenantZombie: Harry and Becky are very ''soggy'' revenants once they return from the grave.
207* SandNecktie: Richard does this to Harry and Becky on seperate occasions. [[spoiler:Richard himself gets the same treatment by the story's end.]]
208* SmugSnake: Richard Vickers. Even before we realize he's a murderous psycho, he's already an amazingly smug asshole.
209* TheSociopath: Richard, who gets sick enjoyment out of watching people who have crossed him die a slow, torturous death.
210* SympatheticAdulterer: Harry and Becky, because Richard clearly does not care about his wife at all, and his harsh punishment for the two is solely out of the principle of "What's mine is mine."
211* TogetherInDeath: Harry and Becky, in a rather tragic way.
212* VillainousBreakdown: When Richard discovers that he can't kill Becky and Harry, nor can hide from them, he breaks down into a [[LaughingMad hysterical laughing fit]] before being dragged off to the beach to suffer the same fate he gave them.
213* YouCantKillWhatsAlreadyDead: Richard tries to kill Harry and Becky again by shooting them in the head, only for them to NoSell the bullets and continue shambling after Richard. They both even outright tell Richard that he can't kill them because they're already dead.
214* YoureInsane: Harry to Richard. Then Harry realizes he ''is'' insane. Richard ''knows'' he's insane, ''and doesn't give a shit.''
215[[/folder]]
216
217[[folder: The Crate]]
218* ActorAllusion: During his first ImagineSpot, Henry, played by Creator/HalHolbrook, uses a [[Film/MagnumForce .44 Magnum]] to off his wife.
219* AnimalAssassin: Henry plans to use "Fluffy" (the beast in the crate, whatever it might be) to kill his shrewish wife Wilma.
220* AnimalisticAbomination: Fluffy looks more like a baboon than anything else, but is clearly some kind of supernatural entity or at least biologically alien, capable of surviving for over a century [[SealedEvilInACan inside a crate with no food or water]]. [[spoiler:It also escapes from the crate after an undisclosed period of time when it's thrown into the quarry, though it's unclear whether the thing even needed to ''breathe'', or if Henry just really pissed it off.]]
221* AwfulWeddedLife: Protagonist Henry is married to Wilma, an abusive, alcoholic shrew of a woman, and he loathes being married to her so much that he fantasizes about killing her.
222* BigEater: Staying locked up in a crate for so long must have played hell on Fluffy's appetite, because it tucks away two full-grown men and still has enough room to fit Wilma for dessert.
223* BlackHoleBelly: Referenced when Henry and Dexter marvel at how Fluffy can eat so much so quickly, yet still fit into its crate.
224* BoomHeadshot: Henry shoots his wife right between the eyes in an ImagineSpot, prompting everyone at the party to applaud him.
225* ChekhovsGag: Henry notices Dexter apparently talking privately with an attractive blonde grad student at the party. His phony story meant to lure Wilma into Fluffy's maw has him fabricating an incident where Dexter attempted to rape a young grad student and needed her to calm the traumatized girl down.
226* CountryMatters: Billie drunkenly lets one of these slip during the faculty party, leading the shocked guests listening to her to excuse themselves and leave. This is dubbed over in most releases, replaced with the less-vulgar "crotch".
227* DomesticAbuse: Billie's treatment of Henry is a shining example of emotional abuse.
228* TheEndOrIsIt: Fluffy is seen bursting out of the crate after Henry's dumped both of them into a quarry. It looks pissed, and Henry's probably going to get a very unfriendly visitor in the near-future.
229* EveryoneHasStandards: Subverted. Henry baits his wife Billie to come to the location where the killer Arctic beast is located by writing a letter asking her to come help a student that was apparently nearly raped by his friend Dexter. Billie reads the letter with glee about having more gossip ammunition on Dexter and arrives faking being concerned. [[BatmanGambit Just as planned]].
230* FluffyTheTerrible: A meta-example in that the ape-like creature is never actually referred to by this name in-universe, but being named "Fluffy" by the production crew is what led to the [[TropeNamers trope's name]].
231* HatedByAll: The guests at the faculty gathering can't stand Wilma as much as Henry does, even asking why she keeps getting invited.
232* HenpeckedHusband: Henry is completely under the thumb of his shrewish and domineering wife Billie. Whenever she's around, he spends his time mindlessly agreeing with her and [[ImagineSpot fantasizing about killing her]]. He eventually decides to make these fantasies a reality with the help of Fluffy.
233* HeterosexualLifePartners: Henry and his best friend Dexter remain close into middle-age, even happily playing chess together following [[spoiler: Billie's murder]].
234* HongKongDub: There's a very obvious ADR insert where Billie refers to an advice columnist as "that etiquette crotch," while the disgusted faces of the other party guests show [[CountryMatters why the line was edited later]]. The unedited line can be seen in the film's deleted scenes.
235* IndulgentFantasySegue: Henry has a couple of them where he imagines himself offing his wife.
236* KarmaHoudini: Henry gets away with murdering his wife. Although Fluffy escapes, there's no indication that it can or otherwise would seek him out. However, the text in the comic book afterward implies that it's going to come after him before long.
237* KickTheDog: Billie gives Henry an immsensely spiteful TheReasonYouSuckSpeech right before she gets devoured. She spends so much time insulting him, though, that she doesn't notice the flesh-eating AnimalisticAbomination right behind her, [[LaserGuidedKarma which promptly grabs her and kills her]].
238-->'''Wilma''': Same old Henry; afraid of your own shadow! You know what, Henry, you're a regular barnyard exhibit. Sheep's eyes, chicken guts, piggy friends... and ''shit'' for brains! No good at departmental politics, no good at makin' money, no good at makin' an impression on anybody, and no good at all in BED! When was the last time ya got it up, Henry? Huh? When was the last time you were a ''man'' in our bed? Now get outta my way, Henry, or I swear to God you'll be wearin' your balls for earrings!
239* KillerSpaceMonkey: Fluffy, the crate monster, looks like a [[Creator/HPLovecraft Lovecraftian]] baboon. In King's original short story, it was more like a badger or wolverine, as befits its Arctic origins.
240* LousyLoversAreLosers: Wilma, a shrewish wife and overall {{Jerkass}} of the most supreme caliber, mentions that her belittled husband Henry is "no good at all in bed" as part of her overall insulting of how much of a loser she thinks he is (oblivious to the notion that ''she'' and her abhorrent attitude are likely the very reason for his lack of arousal).
241* MyFriendsAndZoidberg: Henry tells Dexter about how he got rid of Fluffy while it was still full of the remains of the victims, but then corrects himself, saying that it contained the remains of "Two human beings and Wilma."
242* NamedByTheAdaptation: The original short story the segment is adapted from has Dexter never catching the name of the doomed janitor (something he regrets). The movie gives the janitor the name Mike Latimer.
243* SealedEvilInACan: Fluffy, which has been dormant under the stairs since 1834 and is somehow still alive when the crate is finally opened.
244* SlippingAMickey: Henry slips sleeping pills into Dexter's drink to knock him out so he can go to the lab, clean up the carnage, and set up his plan to dispose of his wife.
245* ThrowEmToTheWolves: Henry pulls this on his harpy of a wife Wilma, courtesy of Fluffy the crate monster.
246* TomboyishName: As Wilma will tell you, "Just call me Billie, everyone does!" Her spunky nickname does ''not'' make her endearing.
247-->'''Henry:''' [[IronicEcho Just tell it to call you "Billie"!]]
248* VillainProtagonist: Henry is a more morally grey one, a SympatheticMurderer and victim of emotional DomesticAbuse. We may not agree with his actions, but we can understand them, and he gets an apparently happy ending as a KarmaHoudini... [[spoiler: although a few threads are [[TheEndOrIsIt still left hanging.]]]]
249* YouHaveToBelieveMe: Dexter to Charlie, the grad student. Charlie doesn't at first, but when he finally finds proof that Fluffy ate the janitor, it decides to eat Charlie next.
250[[/folder]]
251
252[[folder: They're Creeping Up on You!]]
253* AteHisGun: Norman Castonmeyer, a business rival of Mr. Pratt, went out this way after Pratt completely took over his business and left him with nothing. According to his wife Lenore, his eyes looked so dead and soulless before he went to his room and blew his brains out. What's even worse, [[TheSociopath Pratt is delighted to hear this news!]]
254* ButForMeItWasTuesday: Discussed. Upson Pratt has ruined so many lives, possibly thousands, that receiving Leonora Castonmeyer's threatening phone call doesn't even bother him; it just annoys him that she has his unlisted number and now he's going to have to change it. The only reason he recognizes her out of everyone else he's wronged is because he's just received news that Norman committed suicide.
255-->'''Mrs. Castonmeyer:''' I just called to tell you what a monster you are, Mr. Pratt... and how I will rejoice when you're finally dead!\
256'''Pratt:''' Lots of people are going to rejoice when I'm dead. Who are you?
257* ComedicSociopathy: Upson Pratt, period. His conversation with the wife of a man who committed suicide after Pratt stole his business out from under him starts with him asking who he's talking to, and while identifying herself, Upson just smiles before saying her name like an old friend he hasn't seen in a while. There's also him pretending to play a violin while she describes how emotionally destroyed her husband was before he killed himself, after which Upson ''calls him stupid to his own widow!!''
258-->'''Mrs. Castonmeyer:''' He came home... and his -- and his eyes... his eyes were so dead... I asked him what was wrong. What could be so bad to make his eyes look that way? And the only words he could say... was your name! Ten minutes later... (''sobbing'') I heard the shot!
259-->'''Pratt:''' Yes, George Gendron told me ol' Norman went out with a bang!
260-->'''Mrs. Castonmeyer''': How many men have you destroyed?! How many men have you ''killed'', you monster?!
261-->'''Pratt:''' Only the stupid ones. Only the ones who handed me a knife and then stretched out their throats. Only the ones who, if you'll pardon the expression, fucked up!
262* CorruptCorporateExecutive: Upson. His quip upon hearing the person whose company he bought right out from underneath him has committed suicide?
263-->''"Wonderful! Now we won't have to offer the old fart a seat on the board of directors."''
264* CreepyCockroach: The segment revolves around these.
265* DeathByRacism: Mr. Pratt, metaphorically. He compares minorities and others unlike himself to cockroaches. Guess how he dies?
266* DrivenToSuicide: Pratt's hostile takeover of a company drives business rival Norman Castonmeyer to suicide, which absolutely ''delights'' him.
267* {{Jerkass}}: Upson Pratt, on top of being one of the most genuinely evil characters in the film, is also just a really mean person.
268* MindScrew: Unlike the other stories, this segment lacks even a ''whisper'' of explanation. The cockroaches seemingly appear and disappear at will, and the ending teases that the whole nightmare may have happened in Pratt's head, [[spoiler: until the roaches come bursting out of his body.]] The phone calls Upson has with Lenore Castonmeyer suggest she might have somehow put a curse on him for driving her husband to suicide, but even this is tenuous.
269* ModernMinstrelsy: Invoked by Mr. White, the black handyman in Pratt's building, who sarcastically puts on a very minstrel-sounding voice when he's talking to Pratt, a cruel, bigoted, white man. He drops the voice when he's trying to be completely serious.
270* NoCelebritiesWereHarmed: Upson is basically an evil version of Creator/HowardHughes.
271* PoliceAreUseless: Pratt tries to call the police when the cockroach swarm overwhelms him, but they're unable to be of any help due to the rolling blackout that struck the city moments ago.
272* PoliticallyIncorrectVillain: Having already been established as a ''really'' bad guy, Pratt cracks a couple of racist comments to Mr. White, his building's black repairman.
273* RuleOfSymbolism: Pratt equates those "beneath" him (in the most racist, classist, and elitist way) with cockroaches. The parallels are made more evident in the early script and the comic book adaptation, where Pratt looks at Mr. White through his camera peephole and briefly recoils as he sees and hears a giant, magnified roach.
274* TheSociopath: Upson, so very much. The news of Norman Castonmeyer's death absolutely ''delights'' him.
275* SoundtrackDissonance: While Lenore is tearfully recounting her husband's final, tragic moments, Upson Pratt plays a light, upbeat musical number on his jukebox. It can be justified because from his perspective, this is good news.
276* TechnicallyASmile: Mr. White's smile is all Upson can see of him through his door's peephole. Mr. White, however, is mockingly humoring the old man when he rants about cockroaches and how everyone is out to get him.
277* VillainousBreakdown: Pratt freaks out when he sees his sterile apartment swarming with cockroaches.
278* VillainProtagonist: Pratt. His segment is almost a one-man show [[note]]Aside from a few voices over the telephone, the only other human being who actually appears is Mr. White, the repairman, and even he is only ever shown from behind or distorted through a peephole[[/note]] featuring E.G. Marshall as one of the most spectacularly unlikable characters imaginable. In true EC fashion, he is a rotten human being who gets exactly what is coming to him.
279* WhiteIsPure: Pratt's apartment is all white, stating that he's always keeps it clean. When the cockroaches start to invade his apartment, he panics and tries to hide from them only to be swarmed by the insects, resulting in [[spoiler: a fatal heart attack]].
280* WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes: Upson is utterly disgusted by bugs of all sorts, and his whole apartment becomes filled cockroaches as a sort of punishment for being such a wicked person.
281[[/folder]]

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