evilinsanemonkey: Marshall Teller and Dash X from Eerie Indiana making eyes at each other (Eerie: Dash/Mars)
[personal profile] evilinsanemonkey
It is Femslash February (I'm a few days late, I know, life got weird...) and I thought it would be fun to offer a challenge to all of us Eerie fans to write some femslash for this fandom!

No formal prompts, just a general celebration of all the wonderful F/F pairing possibilities* in Eerie Fandom!

I've added a new collection on AO3 if you'd like to use that when posting!

(*Genderswapping characters counts)
froodle: (Default)
[personal profile] froodle
The laundry on the rotary dryer outside the Straitjacket Lady's house had been there for days. It had rained, and mould was starting to grow on some of the pretty cotton sundresses that hung limp and slimy from the clothesline.

Marshall stood on the curb, the failing toes of his Sky Monsters Double Bubble X-Treme Rocket Jumps just brushing the unmown grass of her lawn, an undelivered copy of the Eerie Examiner clenched in one hand.

He should go check on her. If not for the sake of his overarching weirdness investigation, then in his role as newspaper delivery boy...


Ongoing Verse: Trusted Associates Inc

Read more... )
froodle: (Default)
[personal profile] froodle
A middle-aged woman in a floral dress came out of the house, a plastic tub full of newly-washed laundry balanced on one hip. Marshall could just see the over-long arm of a straitjacket dangling over the lip of the basket.

"Oh, hello," she said. "I see you're admiring my wishing tree. Lovely, isn't it?"

"It's amazing," said Marshall. "How'd you get the jelly jars so clean?"

"Oh, you scour them with pixie sludge," she said, setting her burden down and beginning to peg up an array of matching, bright-white socks. "That's what I'm wishing for - more pixies to wash with."

Ongoing Verse: Trusted Associates Inc

Read more... )
froodle: (Default)
[personal profile] froodle




froodle: (Default)
[personal profile] froodle
It's Tuesday, so today you get a choice between two prompts. Pick one, combine both, pit them against each other - on Tuesday, you choose!

This week, your options are:

Eeriemat versus Straitjacket Lady
froodle: (Default)
[personal profile] froodle


















froodle: (Default)
[personal profile] froodle




































froodle: (Default)
[personal profile] froodle
It's Tuesday, so today you get a choice between two prompts. Pick one, combine both, pit them against each other - on Tuesday, you choose!

This week, your options are:

Straitjacket Lady versus Miss Eerie
froodle: (Default)
[personal profile] froodle
Director Joe Dante felt right at home. The man who brought us "Gremlins" I and II and "The 'burbs" is no stranger to the weird and wonderful hiding behind simple suburban facades. He was behind the camera for an episode of NBC's new fantasy adventure series "Eerie, Indiana," which premiers tonight.

As Dante stood in the living room set of a modern home, he stared intently at the monitor as the actors went through a scene. Suddenly, he howled eerily like a lone wolf on a wind-swept hill. On cue, a haunted look crossed the face of actor Omri Katz (who plays lead character Marshall Teller) as he went past the camera.

Just another typical day in the neighborhood.

"This show has a sensibility very similar to the movies I've been making," Dante said as he took a break. "It's a little off-kilter, it's got kids in it and a certain weird "Twilight Zone-y" quality that's fun."

And that's just what writers-creators Jose Rivera and Karl Schaefer are aiming for.

"Part of the appeal of doing something like this for someone like Joe, who's used to doing maybe an eighth of a page a day, is that we're doing six or seven pages a day. It's fast, and a lot more different that feature work," Schaefer said. "We're looking for a strong visual style because we're trying to make a little feature every week."

Dante isn't the only feature director tabbed for work. Upcoming episodes will be directed by Todd Holland ("The Wizard"), Tim Hunter ("River's Edge"), Ken Kwapis, Bob Balaban ("Parents") and Sam Pillsbury.

For the two young producers "Eerie" is cutting new ground. Rivera, originally a playwright, spent last year in London on a Fulbright Scholarship. Schaefer was the creator of the short-lived "TV 101." The two met through their agents and decided to combine their off-beat efforts. Rivera had an idea for a teen-oriented anthology a la "Twilight Zone" and Schaefer was toying with a modern-day Tom Sawyer who lived in his imagination.

"We've got something very unique, and yet recognizable, " Schaefer said. "It draws on icons that everyone in America can relate to like Tupperware and Elvis."

Rivera said " 'Eerie, Indiana' is a pop culture junkyard. Everything that sort of falls off the front page of the National Enquirer rolls down to Eerie."

"It's a like a magnet or a drain for all the weirdness," Schaefer added.

The show's title, Schaefer said, "just sort of welled up from our subconscious, as if it's always been there. There are actually two Erie, Indianas, but spelled like the lake."

So, what's "eerie" about this small, seemingly normal town in Middle America? Katz's 13-year-old character Marshall Teller and his young 10-year-old friend Simon Holmes (Justin Shenkarow) see things that nobody else pays attention to because they're too busy. For examples: When everyone sees an old man in a bathrobe, Marshall sees Elvis. When a woman puts laundry on a clothesline, Marshall sees her hanging up a straitjacket.

Rivera said the foundation of the show is psychological and it's not a special effects extravaganza. "These stories are based on real adolescent fears, a real incident from which a fantastic element occurs. There's always an ambiguity, so we're never sure whether it happened or not.

"Adolescence is as much a nightmare as it is fun."

Katz said he sees his role as easy to play because he's past the character's age of 13 (he's 15).

"This is a kid's show and it's a lot more fun to do (he previously played J.R. Ewing's son on "Dallas"). Marshall is very imaginative. He and Simon are the only ones who notice what's really going on in town."

Shenkarow agreed. "I get to go on adventures every week. Sometimes they're weird and scary and sometimes they're fun."

Although he feels a lot of himself is in Simon's personality, he added, "I'd like to be more like my character than I am in person because he has so much fun. I'm not into sneaking into houses and stuff like that."

Back on the set, Joe Dante peered down at a kennel of dogs whose plans to take over the world can only be heard through a pair of retainers worn by a teen-ager.

He shook his head. "Suburbia has changed a lot since 'Leave it to Beaver.' "

"Eerie, Indiana" premieres tonight at 7:30 p.m. on NBC.
froodle: (Default)
[personal profile] froodle
So, [livejournal.com profile] eviinsanemonkey had the excellent idea of a weekly challenge, to go up on Sundays, because when it first hit the air, Eerie, Indiana used to come on at 7.30pm on Sunday night. I'm too impatient to wait that long, so our weekly prompts will go up just after midnight GMT on Sundays.

Today's prompt is STRAITJACKET

Profile

eerieindiana: (Default)
Eerie Indiana

June 2025

M T W T F S S
      1
2345678
910 1112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30      

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 12th, 2025 08:15 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios