Macabre...ish Cults, Classics & Horrors
Macabre...ish Cults, Classics & Horrors

Macabre...ish Cults, Classics & Horrors

Kimberly

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Episodes

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Here we chat with the people who make the movies we love. Old and new, big budget and small. We celebrate the classics, cults and horrors. Find more movies at www.macabreish.com, as well as macabre_ish on IG .

Recent Episodes

The Blade Cuts Deeper director Gene Dolders
JAN 1, 2026
The Blade Cuts Deeper director Gene Dolders
<p>Gene Dolders’ love of cinema began as a bonding activity with his Mom (though he ran out of the theater a couple of times!) and during the era of the video nasties, his brother acquired a copy of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and that, to this day, is one of his favorite films, including Nightmare City by Umberto Lenzi. He started writing scripts very young and by 15, he had the format down. Originally Gene wanted to be a special effects artist but amended that because he couldn’t draw or model clay, so he pivoted to camera work.</p><p><br></p><p> Unable to get into film school, Gene headed to  college and with help from his multi media instructor, he landed his first job at a video production company. There he worked as a camera man and editor. After a while, because of his love of Asian cinema, he move to Hong Kong for a year and taught English and the year in Hong Kong turned into a decade of moving around Asia. There he did some camera and post production work while still teaching English. It wasn’t until 2016 that he returned to England.</p><p><br></p><p>He started his company Barbra Green Digital in 2018. And while his full time job is cinematographer, he started with a few short films and then he was ready for his first feature, The Blade Cuts Deeper, co-written by him and his friend Alex (AJ Ballard). The film was made over a week with a lot of favors, some good location deals and a low 5 figure budget. </p><p><br></p><p>Gene talks about submitting his film to festivals and tells the story about how he got distribution.  He also talks about working on Blood Stream as the director of photography and also having his own segment. So keep an eye out for that anthology!</p><p><br></p><p>Carlos, Gene and I were in fan mode toward the end talking about documentaries such as Mancunian Man and horror movies such as Shelby Oaks, The Dark and the Wicked and Predator Badlands. We also talked about indie filmmakers taking chances and the guerrilla marketing of the 80s and 90s and how it helped build horror fandom and film success.</p><p><br></p><p>This is another fun one and if you haven’t yet, support indie filmmakers and watch The Blade Cuts Deeper! And maybe leave a review.</p><p><br></p><p>Find us:</p><p><br></p><p>Kimberly at <a href="http://www.macabreish.com/">http://www.macabreish.com</a> and IG and Tiktok @macabre_ish. <a href="https://linktr.ee/macabre_ish">https://linktr.ee/macabre_ish</a></p><p><br></p><p>Carlos Ibarra on IG @jekyl6669 and</p><p> <a href="https://www.fillintheblanksproductions.ca/">https://www.fillintheblanksproductions.ca/</a> </p><p><br></p><p>Gene Dolders:</p><p><br></p><p>https://bgdigital.org</p><p><br></p><p><a href="https://www.imdb.com/name/nm8969674/?ref_=ext_shr_lnk">https://www.imdb.com/name/nm8969674/?ref_=ext_shr_lnk</a></p><p><br></p>
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72 MIN
J. Horton, director of The Apex Predator Club & A Hard Place
NOV 30, 2025
J. Horton, director of The Apex Predator Club & A Hard Place
<p>Director Jason Horton has a life long love of film and he and his Mom bonded over them. Instead of sports, he was into cinema. He’s from Indiana and he had a rough start, he did substances, joined a band and dropped out of school. But Jason eventually regrouped, got his GED and after getting an offshore job at 24, with his brother, he saved up enough for college. Jason went to the University of New Orleans, he wanted to be a lawyer but changed his mind after checking out the film scene and seeing the opportunity, he joined the undergrad film program, instead.</p><p><br /></p><p>After graduating in 2003, Jason directed his debut feature, Rise of the Undead. He and a friend pooled their money and made it happen. He got a distributor and while they didn’t make any money, Rise of the Undead, did make it on to the shelves of Blockbuster. This was the era of Katrina and so Jason moved from New Orleans to LA. He hoped that opportunities would be plentiful and that because he directed a movie and it was in Blockbuster, he would be a shoo-in but no, it was hard. He was back to working at Starbucks again. </p><p><br /></p><p>After a while, he did get something in the film industry, his first gig there was as a behind the scenes videographer. And through those connections came opportunities. Jason’s next project was an anthology called Edges of Darkness. It also made it to Blockbuster with a huge dvd release, it did better than the first one. But once again, Jason didn’t see much in the way of profit on it. He was still working full time at Starbucks. </p><p><br /></p><p>It wasn’t until around 2012 when Monsters in the Woods was released that he finally quit Starbucks for good. He was instead, directing, editing, doing camera work etc. for other people. It still wasn’t a lot but it was industry work.</p><p><br /></p><p>After a while, Jason started directing documentaries just as the movie business started taking a turn and the movie on demand (MOD) model was no longer as lucrative as it once was. Movies that were once making 6 figures on Amazon, were now lucky to make, five. So for 4 or 5 years, all he made were documentaries.</p><p><br /></p><p>He’d outgrown the micro budget film model and wanted to get back to narrative filmmaking and so he found crowdfunding. His first campaign made $80,000 for a film called Craving. The experience was so good that he did it again for A Hard Place. The next one, he collaborated with the Mahal’s to fund his monster movie, The Apex Predators Club. </p><p><br /></p><p>Jason talks about what has made his career, building community through the work and returning to conventions. And then he talks his most ambitious project yet, The Apex Predators Club. It’ll be out next year, 2026, keep an eye out!!</p><p><br /></p><p>To find J. Horton’s filmography:</p><p><br /></p><p><a href="https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1862032/?ref_=ext_shr_lnk">https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1862032/?ref_=ext_shr_lnk</a></p><p><br /></p><p>J. Horton's youtube:</p><p><br /></p><p><a href="https://m.youtube.com/@JHorton">https://m.youtube.com/@JHorton</a></p><p><br /></p><p>And find me, Kimberly:</p><p><br /></p><p>  <a href="http://www.macabreish.com/">http://www.macabreish.com</a> and IG and Tiktok @macabre_ish. <a href="https://linktr.ee/macabre_ish">https://linktr.ee/macabre_ish</a></p><p><br /></p>
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45 MIN
Filmmaker Adam Deyoe, director of Dead Season & Decade of the Dead
OCT 31, 2025
Filmmaker Adam Deyoe, director of Dead Season & Decade of the Dead
<p>Part 2</p><p>After Dead Season, Adam and Enzo, started making cartoons (Oishi High School Battle) and it was one of the biggest shows on youtube, at the time, with billions of views. And it ran for 3 seasons for Smosh. Then they got the band back together for Yeti 2! When it was time to start work on Decade of the Dead, it was rough and expensive from the beginning with a quarter of the budget going to cøvid protocols. Adam co-directed Decade of the Dead with Fairai Branscombe Richmond, in the jungle, in 100 degree heat, wearing essentially, hazmat suits. And it was miserable. </p><p><br></p><p>Decade of the Dead took 8 years from start to finish, it began as a Dead Season series and evolved into a sequel. One of the potential options for a location was at the facility of a Hawaiian cult but that fell through and so they settled on Oahu, then people started getting sick. Including their Producer who was so ill he was put on a respirator and then production was canceled. So in the mean time, Adam went back to writing and made a short in honor of a disabled friend he lost. And his producer, Brian Spicer (Briscoe County Jr.), he made 3 movies and when it was time to film Decade of the Dead again, he doubled the funding and gave Adam access to his equipment house.</p><p><br></p><p>And as awesome the extra infusion of funding was, Adam couldn’t be away from his kids and quit the production. He was supposed to be replaced by his co-director Fairai, who’s native to the island. Unfortunately, they would lose their funding if Adam quit so he had to gut it out. </p><p><br></p><p>Adam and Fairai shared the movie, two A units shooting in tandem, everyone pounded out the production, essentially two movies, one action, one horror, made at the same time. Adam barely slept or ate for a month and a half. It was brutal but they made it happen. A point of pride is all of the FX were practical, all of the explosions etc. is real. </p><p><br></p><p>To add to the already grueling production was extortion and if they didn’t have a native Hawaiian on their crew, it would’ve been worse than they got. Oh and a tropical storm blew in while they were filming on the water. It was all bad. </p><p><br></p><p>Ok, not all bad. Some of Decade of the Dead has sets from movies you’ve seen and will probably recognize because they were abandoned and used by other productions, including this one. </p><p><br></p><p>While waiting to make his next film, Adam is  making a retro video game based on Yeti A Love Story, an adventure game and nod to Monkey Island, a full circle moment. And since his day job is in visual fx and animation, he’s right at home.</p><p><br></p><p>So many of Adam’s friends who were in his indie low budget Yeti films, are pretty successful right now and you’ve likely seen their shows. From Joe Mande (Hacks, Parks & Recreation) to Adam Malamut (Universal Basic Guys) all started in the Yeti films and at least some of them, want to make more.</p><p><br></p><p>Decade of the Dead is full of easter eggs so keep an eye out while you’re watching (now on Tubi) and while you’re there, check out the prequel, Dead Season and Yeti: A Love Story if you are a fan of low budget, adult  horror. </p><p><br></p><p>Adam mentions a long list of names, movies and series, find them on my website in the linktree below. Thanks so much for supporting indie film and this podcast! </p><p><br></p><p>Find Macabre…ish Cults, Classics & Horrors Podcast wherever there are podcasts. </p><p><br></p><p><a href="https://linktr.ee/macabre_ish">https://linktr.ee/macabre_ish</a></p><p><br></p><p><br></p><p>Find Adam Deyoe:</p><p><br></p><p><a href="https://pro.imdb.com/mobile/name/nm1951858/?ref_=ext_shr_lnk">https://pro.imdb.com/mobile/name/nm1951858/?ref_=ext_shr_lnk</a></p><p><br></p><p>And find us:</p><p><br></p><p>Carlos Ibarra on IG @jekyl6669 and</p><p> <a href="https://www.fillintheblanksproductions.ca/">https://www.fillintheblanksproductions.ca/</a> </p><p><br></p><p>Kimberly
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44 MIN
Adam Deyoe, director Dead Season & Decade of the Dead
OCT 31, 2025
Adam Deyoe, director Dead Season & Decade of the Dead
<p>It's Halloween season and we have a great episode for you with a delightful human being, Adam Deyoe, if you've seen Dead Season, they you already know his work. And he made a sequel just for you, Decade of the Dead, it's on tubi, check it out. He'll really appreciate that! </p><p>Filmmaker, Adam Deyoe’s love for horror and film started in childhood with a game called Monkey Island and as a movie rental store clerk called Video Revolution in Concord, Massachusetts. All of his old video store buddies either moved to New York or out to LA with him, all in pursuit of a career in film, after college. And it worked out for many of them, (his friend from those days, Rob, just edited the new Naked Gun movie!)</p><p><br>But let’s go back…</p><p><br>Adam’s first foray into filmmaking was in high school, where he made two ‘bad’ movies, after graduation he went to film school. At Emerson, Adam made The Mental Dead, his first zombie film (Look out for the re-mastered re-release!). That was also the first film he sold,  it was bought buy the man who made Splatter Farm, Todd Michael Smith. Soon, Adam also made a movie called Street Team Massacre, released only online through Troma.</p><p><br>After college, Adam and a college friend, Eric Gosselin made four feature films (Yeti: A Love Story, Another Yeti Love Story: Life on the Streets, Street Team Massacre and Psycho Sleepover)</p><p><br>Then, another friend, from another video store, named Matt Manjourides (who makes low budget horror films and is the producer of The Last Drive-in with Joe Bob Briggs) is an FX guy that helped Adam study up on zombies by getting him to watch Fulci horror in preparation for his first zombie feature, The Mental Dead. Matt also had a hand at helping another of Adam’s films, Yeti: A Love Story, get a little nudge toward success at Troma, unbeknownst to Adam.</p><p><br>At the time of the making of Yeti: A Love Story, Adam met filmmaker John Waters, he used to read Adam’s scripts and they became friends for a time.</p><p><br>Yeti was made during the time of MySpace and random people from there were excited to be nude in a very adult, very low budget and very Yeti movie. And a lot of Adam’s college friends. who were also in this movie, all moved to LA together. And unfortunately, because of the state of the industry recently, some have moved away.</p><p><br>Adam talks about the Yeti fandom, the changing landscape of LA and the rapidly changing business of film and then his feature Dead Season. He talks about scouting out the island where he was housesitting for filmmaker, John Cameron Mitchell (director of Short Bus and Hedwig and The Angry Inch), the island was Viajes, in the Bermuda Triangle. While there, someone said they should make a zombie movie, instead on the intended comedy, Boat, Island and that zombie movie was Dead Season. The only other film ever shot on that island was Lord of the Flies.</p><p><br>With his partner, Enzo, Dead Season was green lit and written within a month. Adam talks about a pretty major scam that bankrupted the production before they even started. He talks about the scramble to fund the film and still having to deal with this thief and their nonsense, during filming. That same person also told a lie about a permit, and that lie could have cost the cast their lives. (This story is crazy!)</p><p><br>After all of that, the film made it to its screening, hosted by a friend and something went wrong with the way it played. If this film didn’t do well or sell, Adam and Co were moving back home. This was a hail mary. With luck on their side and being in the wake of the first season of The Walking Dead, they hit the jackpot.</p><p><br>Years later, just as Adam is ready to film Decade of the Dead, it was canceled due to the pandemíc and the sudden hospitalization of his producer. And so for a year and a half, he waited (and made a stop motion short!) but it wasn’t over, soon pandemic or not, the film was greenlit.<br>This is just part 1… c
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61 MIN
Appalachian Horror Chat w/Andrew K. Clark author of Where Dark Things Rise
SEP 16, 2025
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62 MIN