Did You Know?
Followed by
References
a plant is used as a means of treating lycanthropy
uses horror-movie conventions as an inspired metaphor for puberty
The abrupt ending, as the monster dies, is a direct stylistic reference to the ending of American Werewolf in London.
curse as in werewolf and as in menstruation
When Ginger is originally dragged off, we are given a shot of Brigitte running into the forest shouting, "Ginger! Ginger!" exactly like the shot of Heather (in BWP) running into the forest screaming, "Josh! Josh!". Same jerky handheld camerawork and lighting etc. Also, the scene where Brigitte slowly descends into the basement (multiple landings and everything) tearfully muttering, "Sam?" (much like Heather does at the end of BWP, muttering, "Mike?").
Referenced in
poster on wall
There is a shot of a woman screaming 'Baxter' after her dog is killed by the Beast of Bailey Downs, directly followed by a shot of a dog identical to Burgundy's dog Baxter. Ron Burgundy screams Baxter in the same way after Baxter is punted off the bridge. There is also a reference to bears being able to smell menstruation in Ginger Snaps, this is echoed by Brick's objections to Veronica Corningstone in Anchorman.
Ginger... snaps.
Robert Englund mentions it.
Features
Featured in
Clips from movie used in episode.
On the TV
Clips are shown from the movie as an example of the overall topics of the documentary.
there are a few audio clips from the first movie and some quick clips from it
Nightmare in Canada includes clips from and discussions of the film




