March 27, 2026
Cutting Deep into Horror | Someone’s Watching Me! (1978) John Carpenter Hidden Gem Breakdown

John Carpenter’s Someone’s Watching Me! (1978) is one of the most overlooked thrillers in his filmography, and this week on Cutting Deep into Horror, Henrique Couto and Rachael Redolfi dig into the tense, creepy made-for-TV shocker Carpenter made right before Halloween.
The film stars Lauren Hutton, David Birney, and Adrienne Barbeau, and turns anonymous phone calls, apartment paranoia, and stalker dread into a slow-burn nightmare that still lands. The movie was produced by Warner Bros. Television and aired on NBC on November 29, 1978.
In this episode, Henrique and Rachael get into why the movie works so well as a pre-Halloween Carpenter thriller, how it builds suspense out of invasive attention and helplessness, and why its made-for-TV roots actually sharpen the tension instead of softening it. They talk about Lauren Hutton’s strong lead performance, Adrienne Barbeau’s memorable supporting turn, the movie’s stalking setup, its uneasy humor, and the way it taps into fears about privacy, vulnerability, and not being believed. They also explore why this one deserves a much bigger reputation among fans of 1970s horror, psychological thrillers, and John Carpenter deep cuts.
Inside this episode:
Year: 1978
Director: John Carpenter
Starring: Lauren Hutton, David Birney, Adrienne Barbeau
Runtime: 97 minutes
Where to watch (U.S., this week):
Hoopla and available to rent or buy on Amazon Video, Apple TV, and Fandango at Home.
🎧 LISTEN NOW and subscribe for spine-tingling horror stories every week!
🎉 Unlock exclusive bonus episodes and support the show on Patreon!
👉 WeeklySpooky.com/Join
📬 Contact Us / Submit Your Horror Story!
🎵 Music by Ray Mattis 👉 Check out Ray’s incredible work here !
👨💼 Executive Producers: Rob Fields, Bobbletopia.com
🎥 Produced by: Daniel Wilder
🌐 Explore more terrifying tales at: WeeklySpooky.com
The film stars Lauren Hutton, David Birney, and Adrienne Barbeau, and turns anonymous phone calls, apartment paranoia, and stalker dread into a slow-burn nightmare that still lands. The movie was produced by Warner Bros. Television and aired on NBC on November 29, 1978.
In this episode, Henrique and Rachael get into why the movie works so well as a pre-Halloween Carpenter thriller, how it builds suspense out of invasive attention and helplessness, and why its made-for-TV roots actually sharpen the tension instead of softening it. They talk about Lauren Hutton’s strong lead performance, Adrienne Barbeau’s memorable supporting turn, the movie’s stalking setup, its uneasy humor, and the way it taps into fears about privacy, vulnerability, and not being believed. They also explore why this one deserves a much bigger reputation among fans of 1970s horror, psychological thrillers, and John Carpenter deep cuts.
Inside this episode:
- why Someone’s Watching Me! feels like a missing link between Carpenter’s early work and Halloween
- how the film turns phone harassment, surveillance, and apartment living into effective horror
- why Lauren Hutton makes such a compelling lead
- the importance of Adrienne Barbeau’s Sophie and the film’s unusually progressive character dynamics for 1978
- why the movie’s TV-thriller format gives it a different but very effective rhythm
- how Carpenter creates tension without needing nonstop violence or spectacle
Year: 1978
Director: John Carpenter
Starring: Lauren Hutton, David Birney, Adrienne Barbeau
Runtime: 97 minutes
Where to watch (U.S., this week):
Hoopla and available to rent or buy on Amazon Video, Apple TV, and Fandango at Home.
🎧 LISTEN NOW and subscribe for spine-tingling horror stories every week!
🎉 Unlock exclusive bonus episodes and support the show on Patreon!
👉 WeeklySpooky.com/Join
📬 Contact Us / Submit Your Horror Story!
- Twitter: @WeeklySpooky
- Facebook: facebook.com/WeeklySpooky
- Email: WeeklySpooky@gmail.com
🎵 Music by Ray Mattis 👉 Check out Ray’s incredible work here !
👨💼 Executive Producers: Rob Fields, Bobbletopia.com
🎥 Produced by: Daniel Wilder
🌐 Explore more terrifying tales at: WeeklySpooky.com














