At work the other day, everyone was a-buzz, talking about this new movie called Cocaine Bear. And if you haven’t heard of it yet, you may be thinking that “cocaine bear” is some new slang for a large, hirsute drug dealer, like Scarface only with a hairy back and long beard. Yet you would be wrong, as wrong as I was when, as a child, I was obsessed with sharks and begged my mother to let me stay up late and watch a movie about a loan shark, believing the plot centered around a solitary hammerhead. No, Cocaine Bear is based on a true story about an actual bear who takes cocaine, gets addicted, and goes on a drug-fueled rampage. It’s A COMEDY. And my only question is Why? But this isn’t the only example of a movie involving an animal doing things it wouldn’t normally do. For instance, there’s Snow Shark: Ancient Snow Beast, which gives a whole new meaning to the phrase “fish out of water story”, because this shark is IN THE SNOW. Well, at least its head is in the snow—the budget was only $7 000 and the producers didn’t have enough money for an entire mechanical shark, so you only ever see the head. I’ve seen Snow Shark and it was predictably and outrageously terrible—one critic said it “excels at being mostly forgettable” which isn’t true because I only saw it once and I still remember how awful it was. I have not, however, seen any of the follow-ups: Sharknado, Sand Sharks, and Avalanche Sharks, the synopsis of which states “a bikini contest turns into a horrifying affair when it is hit by a shark avalanche.” Obviously.

Of course, this new trend of putting animals in bizarre situations takes a back seat to another trend—that of integrating classic stories with sci-fi/fantasy scenarios. For instance, a few years ago when I was living in Toronto, my brother and I saw Pride and Prejudice…And Zombies. I didn’t know what to expect with the movie. Pride and Prejudice is one of my favourite novels, and when it was originally written, there was nary a hint of zombie within its pages. I figured it would just be a cheesy excuse for blood and gore, wrapped in an Edwardian cloak. I was actually pleasantly surprised that not only was the original storyline intact, the integration of the zombie storyline was well-done and not illogical at all. Well, except for the fact that there were ZOMBIES. You can never really get away from the illogic of that. Still. But then my brother told me that there was another Jane Austen rewrite called Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters, and I was like “WTF? Now we’re really stretching it. I’ve read that book, and it took place mostly on the moors–there was literally one scene that took place near open water, so are they land-based sea monsters? And then there was Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, where the 16th President of the United States, when he’s not governing a country, kills the undead. And the two best things about this movie are 1) it was heavily criticized for being ‘overly serious’ and 2) when I googled it, the second hit was “Is Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter a documentary?” and you know a LOT of people have searched that for it to come up right away.
Anyway, it occurs to me that maybe I should hop on this bandwagon, and I came up with a few ideas of my own for integrated storylines.
1) Gone With The Wind and Chupacabras: On the eve of her debutante ball, the vivacious Scarlet O’Hara finds herself defending Tara, and her inept suitors, against a swarm of small, spiky, bear-like, goat-sucking creatures. Casting aside her idyllic plantation upbringing, she devotes the remainder of her life to protecting the South, declaring “I’ll never go swordless again!” With the help of the dashing Rhett Butler, and her devoted servants (“I don’t know nuthing ‘bout killing chupacabras, Miss Scarlet! But I’ll learn!”), she drives back the chupacabra hordes with nothing but her trusty sabre and her wit. Her job is, of course, made easier by the almost complete lack of goats in Georgia. Ultimately, however, she is betrayed by Rhett Butler, who unbeknown to anyone, is the Chupacabra King and is planning to take his minions to the North. When Scarlett finds out, she’s appalled:
Scarlet: Rhett, if you go, where shall I go? What shall I do?
Rhett: Frankly, my dear, I don’t give a damn.
Scarlet: Well, f*ck you then. Prissy, hand me my sword. It’s time the Chupacabra King lost his crown.
2) Citizen Kane, Sasquatch Slayer: On his deathbed, Charles Foster Kane, newspaper tycoon extraordinaire, and a bit of a d-bag, utters his final words: “Rosebud”. No one knows what it means. His private life was a mystery; however, throughout the film, via the use of tabloid-esque newsreels, it is slowly revealed that he had another calling aside from the news business: to hunt down and slay every Sasquatch in the country. Taken in as a child by a millionaire, William Thatcher, Kane is trained in the art of surveillance and becomes noted, and ridiculed, for his numerous Sasquatch sightings. He builds a “scandal sheet” empire, based on stories about alien invasions, government conspiracies, two-headed babies, and the Kardashians. All the while craving respect and legitimacy, he turns to hunting Sasquatches in order to prove to the world that he’s not a madman. He runs for governor, with the campaign slogan “The truth is out there” and posters featuring blurry photos of Bigfoot. After a devastating loss at the polls, he builds a fantastical estate, “Xanadu”, where he lives in isolation until his death. Once the contents of the estate are inventoried, it is revealed that “Rosebud” is the name on a glass showcase found in a hidden room on the estate. It contains a stuffed, 6 foot-tall, ape-like creature.
3) The Wizard of Jackalopes: A young, mid-west farm girl gets caught in a hurricane and finds herself in a strange land. After cavorting and singing with a group of tiny, hard-drinking people, she meets a couple of witches, one good, but a little creepy and passive-aggressive, and one who seems to be bad, but whose redeeming quality is that she loved her dead sister whose crushed body lies under the farm girl’s flying barn. The bad witch vows vengeance and disappears in a cloud of red smoke. The farm girl, whose wide-eyed innocence quickly becomes super-annoying, teams up with a robot, a zombie, and a griffin in order to make their way to the Emerald City and meet a wizard who can solve all their problems. After a series of misadventures, they are confronted by the bad witch and her army of jackalopes, giant rabbits with fierce teeth and deer antlers, and are forced to fight to the death. They all die. (I have to stop here, because when I was a kid, there were so many commercials in The Wizard of Oz that the damn movie was over three hours long, and I always fell asleep at about the half-way point. I have no idea how it actually ends.)
So there you have it—fresh ways to look at the classics. I also have another idea about an FBI agent, traumatized from a childhood attack by killer lambs, who is chasing her serial killer nemesis, an unhinged talking ram who calls himself The Mutton Man, but it’s not “fleshed out” yet, haha.

Spoiler Alert on the Wizard of Oz….. it was all a dream!
The movie must have been long, though, because I had my shelf critters reenact the entire thing and had to post it in 16 parts. And my take was about as insane as your jackalope idea was….
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It was the poppy fields that got me every time!
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I really want to read #3 and not just because (spoiler alerts) the film version of The Wizard of Oz ends with “It was all a dream!” But in the original book Oz is a real place, which is why it spawned so many sequels and remains fertile ground for reinterpretation—even more fertile than the sunflowered fields of Kansas.
The whole crazy animals genre really is something. There’s also Black Sheep which is set in New Zealand although it’s mostly memorable for not having Hobbits. But I guess Tolkien’s works already have so many bizarre creatures adding crazed zombie sheep would be overdoing it.
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Zombie sheep? Now that’s worth seeing, I’m sure! Ken reminded me that I forgot about the flying monkeys in The Wizard, but I said I actually didn’t–they just weren’t realistic enough to mention (Lol!)
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Yes! I would watch all the new films you propose here–for sure. I did see Cocaine Bear–and it was everything I hoped it would be. I have never seen Snow Shark, but I really, really have to now!
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Oh, you have to see Snow Shark–it’s just as ludicrous as it sounds, and well worth it for the laughs!
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How about Wuthering Heights and Frankenstein? Ha! I love your take on this film genera! As always you come up with some great ideas. I’ve seen Abraham Lincoln; Vampire Hunter and surprisingly I liked it. Have you heard of The No Sleep Podcast? I was listening to it and thought, Suzanne’s short stories would be perfect on this! Anyway, I thought of you when I started to listen to it.
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I really liked the Lincoln movie too; surprisingly good for a documentary lol! I’ll have to check out that podcast!
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It will take me much too long to formulate a response. Maybe after coffee.
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I’ll be waiting;-)
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These vaguely remind me of the Benji movie franchise–Benji, Benji’s Very Own Christmas, Benji III–a Call to Arms, A Bullet for Benji, and finally, A Uniroyal for Benji, a cunningly contrive psychodrama in which Benji does not appear and which takes place around a greasy spot in the middle of a busy L.A. intersection, produced in a bid to placate angry fans after A Bullet for Benji as well as raking in a surprisingly tidy profit.
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Is A Bullet For Benji the one where he’s an elite assassin whose owner is killed and his car is stolen, then he takes revenge on the Russian mobsters who did it, and then they take revenge on him by putting a bounty on his head, resulting in a no-holds barred shoot-out on the streets of New York City? Great film.
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We went hunting for Cocaine Bear in Redbox, failed. Returned and watched “The Fare” (Prime) and was pleasantly surprised. There was a supernatural aspect to it, walking-dead? I’ll let you decide.
Some movie mashup ideas triggered by your post:
• Willie Wonka and the Island of Doctor Moreau
• Lord of the Castaways
• An American Tail of Mice and Men
Then I thought, let’s ask ChatGPT… It could essentially do this forever. I picked the clever ones out of the first 20:
* Pirates of the Jurassic Park
* Beauty and the Hobbit
* Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Rising
* Back to the Terminator Future
* The Godfather of the Rings
* The Shawshank Inception <<< I think this one won
* Jurassic World War Z
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“Let me make you an offer you can’t refuse, my preciousssssss…” Lol!
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Ha, these sound like great ideas to me!
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I liked the Lincoln movie(s) as well. But if you have many hours you don’t care about wasting, I DO recommend the Sharknado series. As long as you go into it with your tongue firmly in your cheek, they have moments of hilarity.
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Well, as everyone who knows me knows–I love sharks! I’ll give them a try!
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I think you have some winners there, Suzanne. They sound better than some of the movies that were actually made and consumed!
I will never watch Cocaine Bear. I can just imagine all the stupid Americans who are going to start poisoning wildlife. And their pets. I was forced to sit through Lincoln killing vampires (because my husband is ten). Fortunately, I had a good book to distract me. 🙂
Thanks for the laugh!
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Yes, I think Cocaine Bear, which was apparently based on a true story, might set up some terrible precedents, as if people need any more reason!
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Actually, the Sharknado movies are pretty fun.
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I’ve heard this! Time to check them out!
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We all make our own movie…named Life…though the plots and characters differ.
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I submit for your consideration the movie, “Timmy’s Revenge,” in which Lassie lures five rogue KGB agents into a deep well and then refuses to rescue them, and Timmy hot-wires the agents’ Yugo and he and Lassie drive to New York City, where a gunfight organically occurrs when Lassie is pulled over by local police and can’t produce a valid driver’s license–in a panic, Timmy begins waving around an AR-15 he has stolen earlier from June Lockhart’s dressing trailer and an already tense situation is exacerbated when the Yugo backfires, triggering said gunfight.
OH yeah–at some point Bruce Willis climbs up out of a manhole. That’s it. Not sure why.
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I’d watch it!!
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It seems I am unable to make a comment “stick.” Not sure why I’m even writing this one.
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Not sure why that worked. Others did not . . . hmm . . . it’s all very weeeird.
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I’ve been having trouble with WordPress comments lately😞
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For what it’s worth, the failed comments all had on common that they contained pasted text and weren’t all just typed out in the little window–such as this one.
Seems like this happened on your blog one time before.
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I found them in spam—weird. I’ll restore them!
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Uh oh. I sent many, trying to get one to stick. Just sent another one, slightly modified. Oh well, as long as we’re all having fun.
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I just realized they had the word tra*ler in them–I have that word blocked because of all the spam from tra*ler and c*mper companies!
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Oh. Migod. That’s kind of hilarious right there. Traylor. Whoduhthot?
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Well, my comment also disappeared. Eaten like a dog chowing down my homework. C’est la vie.
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I like the idea of developing a character arc for Boo Radley as he slowly emerges as the foremost zombie killer of Maycomb County, leading to the final, gripping scene where he must decide what to do as he confronts Dell, who was converted to a Zombie early in the film.
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That’s perfect, almost like it was lifted right out of my own head. Cool.
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Which one? I just replied to your Flintstone one!
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I swear, it vanished before my eyes. Great, the net is trying to gaslight me. Or maybe it’s just your dang blog… Hmmm…
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🤣🤣
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-giggles- No! Not watching any of those. 😀
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But they all got 5 star ratings!
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lmao – no accounting for….
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clearly you’re onto something – my hand’s raised among those who prefer your ideas to originals 🙂
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Thank you!❤️
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Suzanne: This is so funny — I literally spit coffee reading it — but I don’t imagine you fully appreciate just how spot-on some of this is. I guarantee you s**t like this has absolutely been pitched at meetings in Hollywood.
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Omg, those are hysterical!
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I like your thinking on this. When “Pride and Prejudice…and Zombies” came out, I thought “To Kill A Mockingbird…and Zombies” would tell a terrific story about Scout and her father, and Boo. Also, I think there’s room for “Fred Flintstone, Werewolf Hunter”.
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Yabba dabba ow-oooooh!! 🤣🤣
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LOL
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I LOVE the idea of Citizen Kane: Sasquatch Slayer, especially with the slogan “The Truth is Out there.”
I realized, after seeing the list of sharks movies, and not having seen one of them, that I live a very sheltered life.
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