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"Pelts" is the sixth episode of the second season of Masters of Horror, first aired on 1 December 2006. The director is Dario Argento, and it based on a short story by F. Paul Wilson. The film is a story about supernaturally beautiful raccoon pelts (called "pine lights") that cause anyone who seeks to profit by them to commit horrendous acts.
The show followed an anthology series format, with each episode featuring a one-hour film directed by a well-known horror film director. In 2009, Chiller began airing the show on their Sunday evening line-up of shows, and in 2010, Reelz Channel began airing episodes of Masters of Horror edited (despite keeping its TV-MA rating) and with ...
Pages in category "Masters of Horror episodes" The following 22 pages are in this category, out of 22 total. ... Pelts (Masters of Horror) Pick Me Up (Masters of Horror)
"Pelts" " Pro-Life " is the fifth episode of the second season of the American anthology television series Masters of Horror . Directed by John Carpenter , the episode stars Caitlin Wachs as a pregnant girl who seeks to abort an unborn demon within her, while her gun-toting father ( Ron Perlman ) tries to prevent her from doing so.
Dario Argento (Italian: [ˈdaːrjo arˈdʒɛnto]; born 7 September 1940 [2]) is an Italian film director, screenwriter and producer.His influential work in the horror and giallo genres during the 1970s and 1980s has led him to being referred to as the "Master of the Thrill" [3] and the "Master of Horror".
Horror master George Romero is at the peak of his game in this darkly-funny but gory film that proves nobody's immune to a stake through the chest. 'Dracula (1979) Dracula!
Holiday fiend Krampus may have already gained some notoriety in the U.S. thanks to pop-culture portrayals such as the eponymous 2015 cult holiday horror film, but the malevolent half-goat, half ...
His short story "Pelts" was adapted into the season 2 episode of Masters of Horror titled "Pelts". Short stories "Definitive Therapy" (published in The Further Adventures of The Joker) and "Hunters" (published in Soft and Others) were adapted as short films. [10] [11]