The Wombles, and other fictional bands more terrifying than anything AI is coming up with

COMPUTERS may be generating nightmare fuel images and weird non-existent bands, but humans are perfectly capable of creating disturbing musical horrors on their own. As these acts prove.

The Banana Splits

It’s not hard to pin down what’s wrong with this apparent pisstake of The Monkees and other heavily curated 60s pop acts. There’s Bingo’s forever-fixed psychotic grin. Then there’s the Five Nights at Freddy’s costumes that surely sat rotting in an NBC cupboard for decades, perhaps cursed or infested with rabies. Something must have caused the actors to behave with that hellish demented mania. Extreme hyperactivity, we can all agree, is a great example for small kids.

Alvin and the Chipmunks

It’s sad but inevitable that the invention of easily-sped-up magnetic audio tape would lead to these human-like rodents squeaking their irritations decades later. Even more harrowing is the way they’ve maintained their chokehold on popular culture, generating crap films and arming a young Kanye West with chiptune effects to soundtrack actual parties. Were the Chipmunks a contributory factor in Kanye’s descent into madness and Hitler-worship? Clearly ‘yes’.

Gorillaz

At face value, Damon Albarn’s foray into comics with his flatmate sounds like a harmless drunken idea we’d all have, only he actually did it and could write decent tracks. Dig deeper and there’s a lot of insidious shit beyond the devil-worshipping bassist, like a cartoon singer with no eyes that claimed to have got off with the real Rachel from S Club 7, and reanimating Shaun Ryder as if they were on a mission to give delayed-onset PTSD to drug-addled old Madchester ravers.

Dr. Teeth and the Electric Mayhem

In this unasked-for Muppet band, savage beast Animal was obviously the drummer, while the other band members included spoofs of Janis Joplin, and, oddly, a variety of tiresome jazz pricks. If you stare at the bandleader’s top hat and shaggy beard for too long, he slowly morphs into Noddy Holder in a terrifyingly random blurring of fiction and reality that’s far more alarming than Shrimp Jesus.

Crazy Frog

With hindsight, AI brain rot fusing animals with other shit doesn’t seem so bad compared with this Swedish assault on noughties culture. The wanker amphibian’s antics and ding-dong f**kery have seeped into everyone’s brain like a parasite eating away any fond memories we had of Eurodance. He was even given a penis by his creator – a cruel joke even the most humourless supercomputer wouldn’t come up with.

The Wombles

Elisabeth Beresford’s Wimbledonians were cute and cuddly to begin with, but then songwriter Mike Batt decided to dress himself up as a monstrous Orinoco resembling a yeti, with a Tomsk who stared at kiddies with cold, dead, bulging eyes like Momo. As such it’s hard to see the festive cheer when they crop up on yet another Channel 5 Britain’s Favourite Christmas Songs countdown playing Wombling Merry Christmas. It’s unclear what their link to Christmas is in the first place, unless they brought baby Jesus a gift of rubbish.

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The top five Halloween movies to start your kids on the tragic path to being a goth

HALLOWEEN is the perfect time for a spooky film with the kids. But could it inadvertently lead to them becoming goths? Think twice before settling down with these…

Hocus Pocus (1993)

A film that doesn’t just encourage girls to dabble in the occult – thanks to zombie character Billy Butcherson it’s where many of them first developed an attraction to lanky, pale-skinned goth boys, resulting in crushes on Edward Scissorhands in their teens and Nick Cave in their 20s. Which is harmless until they start bringing home weird goth boyfriends you might have to talk to. Where are the film censors when you need them?

Beetlejuice (1988)

Given how popular the character Wednesday has become, you may think The Addams Family is the ultimate piece of goth queen propaganda. But Winona Ryder as Lydia is serving the goth cause far better in this film. It’s easy to be goth when everyone in your family is one, true goth is about being the only person wearing black in a world full of colour, and dealing with creepy older guys hitting on you. Although they’re not usually ghosts.

Coraline (2009)

Not as jovial as The Nightmare Before Christmas but not as shit as The Corpse Bride, Coraline is more subliminally goth and teaches your kids that suburban life is boring and escaping to a subculture of bleak, button-eyed self-indulgence is better than working for the rest of your life writing articles for a gardening catalogue like Coraline’s dad does. Hmm. As you’ll probably be telling your own teenage goth children in years to come, pretending to be a f**king vampire doesn’t pay the bills.

The Witches (1990)

Another witchy watch, with an important and worthwhile message – ugly people are bad. It also introduces young children to the joy of practical effects without having to watch Labyrinth and field awkward questions about David Bowie’s bulge. Angelica Huston’s transformation is regarded as genuinely terrifying, and if you’re in the mood for more horror, just read Roald Dahl’s comments about Jews.

Pan’s Labyrinth (2006)

It’s rated 15 and in a different language but still good. There’s more an atmosphere of goth than explicit instructions to be one, but girls will empathise with the young heroine. There’s some pretty graphic violence in it, but it’s award-winning art violence teaching you about fascism or something and anyway the eyeball-hand-man is cool. And frankly it’s tame compared to the 80s movies you grew up on. You were allowed to watch Robocop and you turned out fine, apart from a burning lifelong desire to shoot someone in the balls with a big gun.