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In this Movie Memory Machine: Five For mini-episode, Landen and Truman recommend five horror and comedy-adjacent films that better deliver on the potential Vampire in Brooklyn barely taps. These movies explore themes of Black identity, horror satire, and cultural storytelling—with sharper tonal control, more daring risks, and a better sense of who they’re for.
Films Discussed:
The People Under the Stairs (1991)
Def by Temptation (1990)
Tales from the Hood (1995)
Vamp (1986)
Coming to America (1988)
Topics Covered:
Black-led horror as cultural allegory (People Under the Stairs, Def by Temptation)
Satire and social commentary in Tales from the Hood
Stylish strangeness and gender politics in Vamp
Coming to America as a control group for Eddie Murphy’s star power and romantic fantasy
Why Vampire in Brooklyn didn’t commit to any of the directions these films excel in
Key Takeaways:
Black horror can be powerful and politically resonant when authorship is aligned with purpose
Genre hybridity works best when filmmakers actually want to make a hybrid—not check boxes
Coming to America gives Eddie Murphy the same romantic framing Vampire in Brooklyn denies him
The best horror comedies trust their tone—and know what they’re saying about the world
Listener Prompt:
Support the Show!
Become a Patreon supporter – For as little as $1/month, you get access to bonus content for all shows on the Grunt Work Podcast Network. Join at https://patreon.com/gruntworkpod
Leave a rating and review – On Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen.
Like, follow, and share on social media – We’re @MovieMemoryMachine on YouTube and @MovieMemoryPod on Letterboxd.
Tell a friend – Word of mouth is how we grow.
Join our Discord – Vote on whether films stay in modern memory or are left forgotten. Visit https://www.moviememorymachine.com for access.
Follow Us:
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In this Movie Memory Machine: Five For mini-episode, Landen and Truman recommend five horror and comedy-adjacent films that better deliver on the potential Vampire in Brooklyn barely taps. These movies explore themes of Black identity, horror satire, and cultural storytelling—with sharper tonal control, more daring risks, and a better sense of who they’re for.
Films Discussed:
The People Under the Stairs (1991)
Def by Temptation (1990)
Tales from the Hood (1995)
Vamp (1986)
Coming to America (1988)
Topics Covered:
Black-led horror as cultural allegory (People Under the Stairs, Def by Temptation)
Satire and social commentary in Tales from the Hood
Stylish strangeness and gender politics in Vamp
Coming to America as a control group for Eddie Murphy’s star power and romantic fantasy
Why Vampire in Brooklyn didn’t commit to any of the directions these films excel in
Key Takeaways:
Black horror can be powerful and politically resonant when authorship is aligned with purpose
Genre hybridity works best when filmmakers actually want to make a hybrid—not check boxes
Coming to America gives Eddie Murphy the same romantic framing Vampire in Brooklyn denies him
The best horror comedies trust their tone—and know what they’re saying about the world
Listener Prompt:
Support the Show!
Become a Patreon supporter – For as little as $1/month, you get access to bonus content for all shows on the Grunt Work Podcast Network. Join at https://patreon.com/gruntworkpod
Leave a rating and review – On Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen.
Like, follow, and share on social media – We’re @MovieMemoryMachine on YouTube and @MovieMemoryPod on Letterboxd.
Tell a friend – Word of mouth is how we grow.
Join our Discord – Vote on whether films stay in modern memory or are left forgotten. Visit https://www.moviememorymachine.com for access.
Follow Us:
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