Created by Vexed Enigma, POP!: Horror City Bundle is the first entry in a brand new series of character and environment sets. Focusing on the dark and gritty life in the modern 90's, the pack is built for modern RPGs, survival horror action, casual adventure and more. With the inclusion of multiple tile sets and character variations, this large pack is a must-have for everyone.
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Made for use in both RPG Maker VX Ace and MV, this pack contains tiles and characters inspired by 70s and 80s Summer Camp horror. Built with love for modern RPGs, Survival Horror games, Adventure games and more, Slasher Forest features 16 new Hero Characters and 4 Creepy Killers.
The film starts with the screen fading to black and oversized, disembodied female lips appear overdubbed with a male voice,[29][33] establishing the theme of androgyny to be repeated as the film unfolds.[34] The opening scene and song, "Science Fiction/Double Feature", consists of the lips of Patricia Quinn (who appears in the film later as the character Magenta and as 'Trixie the Usherette' in the original London production, where she also sings the song) but has the vocals of actor and Rocky Horror creator, Richard O'Brien (who appears as Magenta's brother Riff Raff). The lyrics refer to science fiction and horror films of the past and list several film titles from the 1930s to the 1960s, including The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951), Flash Gordon (1936), The Invisible Man (1933), King Kong (1933), It Came from Outer Space (1953), Doctor X (1932), Forbidden Planet (1956), Tarantula (1955), The Day of the Triffids (1962), Curse of the Demon (1957), and When Worlds Collide (1951).[10]
Unfortunately, Gray's central young character isn't as sympathetic or likable as the talented filmmaker must have intended, and the constant lecturing about white guilt among liberals is delivered in all caps, with exclamation points.
Young Banks Repeta does a fine job tackling a heavy load as the central figure in Gray's story: one Paul Graff, who in the Queens of 1980 is about to start his first day of school as a sixth grader at P.S. 173, where Paul is more interested in drawing comic-book characters and clowning around than paying attention to the rigid Mr. Turkeltaub (Andrew Polk), one of those Movie Teacher characters who seems to hate children and the very idea of real education. Paul makes fast friends with fellow mischief-maker Johnny (Jaylin Webb), a Black student who is bussed in to school every day - but time and again, it's Johnny who takes the fall whenever the two get into trouble, in or out of school. As Johnny's hot-tempered father, Irving (Jeremy Strong), says after one such incident for which Paul will get away scot-free, "Be grateful when you get a leg up. You make the most of your break and do not look back."