The Little Shop of Horrors (1960) is the movie for this Sunday’s “monsterdon” watch party over on Mastodon, our fediverse sibling!
- Just start watching that movie this Sunday, August 17, 2025 at 9pm ET / 8pm CT / 6pm PT which is 1am Monday UTC
- and follow #monsterdon over on mastodon for live commentary. For example, you can follow that hashtag here: https://mastodon.social/tags/monsterdon
- I usually open two web browser windows side-by-side on a computer. But you could follow the mastodon commentary on a phone app while watching the movie on TV or something.
How to watch the movie:
- NOTE: we will be watching the version made in 1960, not a later one
- tubi (availability varies by country): https://tubitv.com/movies/382527/the-little-shop-of-horrors
- youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mj_17y6i4O4
- uBlock Origin adblocker on Firefox should work for those tubi and youtube links
- archive: https://archive.org/details/the-little-shop-of-horrors-1960-full-movie-hd-1080p-1080-x-1440.mp-4-converted
- someone usually streams it on https://miru.miyaku.media/ at that time
- if you want to pay and/or watch ads, look here: https://nobraincellsleft.github.io/JustWatch-Search/title/tm63837
… the film is a farce about a florist’s assistant who cultivates a plant that feeds on human blood. … the film employs an original style of humor, combining dark comedy with farce[8] and incorporating Jewish humor and elements of spoof.[9] The Little Shop of Horrors was shot on a budget of $28,000 (equivalent to $298,000 in 2024). Interiors were shot in two days, by utilizing sets that had been left standing from A Bucket of Blood.
…
The film’s critical reception was largely favorable. On review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes it has an approval rating of 92% based on reviews from 12 critics.[41] Variety wrote, “The acting is pleasantly preposterous. […] Horticulturalists and vegetarians will love it.”[42]Jack Nicholson, recounting the reaction to a screening of the film, states that the audience “laughed so hard I could barely hear the dialogue. I didn’t quite register it right. It was as if I had forgotten it was a comedy since the shoot. I got all embarrassed because I’d never really had such a positive response before.”[6]
In his book Comedy-Horror Films: A Chronological History, 1914-2008, Bruce G. Hallenbeck called the film “one of Corman’s gems, an idea that was born on ‘a night out on the town’ that’s every bit as looney as it sounds.” He cited the hilarious performances delivered by the ensemble cast and Corman’s strong results while working under the self-imposed pressures of a cheap budget and a fast shooting schedule.
I saw this last night for #Comedon (by chance, two different watch parties chose the same movie the same week).
I was a bit wary of another Roger Corman comedy after The Raven last week, but this holds up much better (IMHO).
No old guys fingerlasering each other, though ;)
A b-movie classic. ♥️
Wait so the one with Rick Moranis is not the original!