Based on the Deadendia graphic novels by Hamish Steele - who also serves as executive producer and writer on the show - Dead End: Paranormal Park offers a perfect blend of horror and heart, with a welcome slice of authentic LGBTQ+ representation onscreen and behind the scenes. Still, a job’s a job, so along with his neighbor Norma - a superfan of the park’s original owner, the mysteriously absent Pauline Phoenix - Barney and Pugsley become something between tour guides and paranormal investigators, facing down the park’s infestation of things that go bump in the night (and the occasionally-animated theme park mascot). Turns out, the tourist trap Dead End actually is a portal to hell, and his first night on the job involves dodging becoming a human sacrifice, battling an arch-demon, and ends up with his beloved dog Pugsley gaining the ability to speak. Haunted houses are just hokey gimmicks for rubes, right? That’s what Barney thinks when he applies to work at one, desperate for any job that would help him move out of his mother’s house. This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |