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“Quiet town, peaceful, low maintenance. It can stay that way,” says a federal agent to the sheriff of the small town at the center of the ABC drama “The Crossing.” Yeah, good luck with that. In TV and movies, crazy, creepy, sci-fi, monster movie junk always goes down in quaint, tiny, Middle American suburbs far more often than it does in a big city. Who has time for aliens in New York? Give me a full on invasion or nothing. Leave the odd-goings on and the mysterious, unsolved disappearances to the town folk. This list charts the history of America’s fictional small towns from kind of creepy to David Lynchian-grade bananas.
ABC
Collinsport, Maine – “Dark Shadows” (1966)
The classic soap “Dark Shadows” started out as just the story of a woman trying to trace down her wealthy family’s mysterious roots in the fishing town of Maine. Things only really got weird when, 10 months into the show’s run, cousin Barnabas Collins shows up and reveals he has a vampire curse.
Cabot Cove, Maine – “Murder, She Wrote” (1984)
It might not have been Cabot Cove that was so weird but that murder and mystery seemed to follow Jessica Fletcher wherever she went.
Derry, Maine – “It” (1990)
Clowns are already creepy. Evil demon clowns that eat children in sewers? I’ll visit Derry in between Pennywise’s 30-year intervals thank you very much.
Twin Peaks, Washington – “Twin Peaks” (1990)
It doesn’t get weirder than this. David Lynch’s surreal twists on melodramatic soap operas and crime procedurals have left audiences scratching their heads to this day.
Cicely, Alaska – “Northern Exposure” (1990)
Not all creepy TV towns have to be filled with murder and aliens. The perfectly eccentric weirdos of Cicely, Alaska stayed strange for six seasons and 110 episodes.
Eerie, Indiana – “Eerie, Indiana” (1991)
“Eerie, Indiana” proceeded the small-town oddities of “X-Files” and “Buffy” and was a ratings bomb. But the show was a mysterious, underrated gem about a teen who collected evidence of strange goings-on in an Indiana town where no one seemed to notice or mind.
NBC
Bellefleur, Oregon – “The X-Files” (1993)
The truth is out there – way out there in Oregon to be exact. “The X-Files” pilot established the mythology of the show in the small town of Bellefleur. As soon as Mulder and Scully show up, they encounter bizarre turbulence, an unexplained ash on the ground and a trip to a psychiatric hospital where the patients are all alien abductees.
Fox
Sunnydale, California – “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” (1996)
Isn’t that just how it always goes? You call your town “Sunnydale” and then it winds up on the site of a demonic gateway called Hellmouth before it eventually sinks into the Earth?
Fox
Bon Temps, Louisiana – “True Blood” (2008)
Just because everyone’s a vampire doesn’t mean they can’t still all be southern gentleman and belles who like good Louisiana cooking with a bottle of Tru Blood to wash it down.
HBO
Rosewood, Pennsylvania – “Pretty Little Liars” (2010)
These teen girls just want to have a normal high school life and go to prom, and before long they’re being harassed by the sinister “A,” investigating their friend’s disappearance and even digging up graves. This show is insane, so much so that it even spun off into another small town for “Ravenswood.”
ABC Family
Hemlock Grove, Pennsylvania – “Hemlock Grove” (2013)
Face it, if you’ve got Bill Skarsgard and his demonic smile in your town, you’re already well over your creepy quota.
Netflix
Vermilion Parish, Louisiana – “True Detective” (2014)
Whatever southern charm or bayou spirit you would usually find in Louisiana is gone in the first season of “True Detective,” which grimly examined themes of philosophy, religion and more toxic forms of masculinity amid a web of occult murders.
HBO
Bemidji, Minnesota – “Fargo” (2014)
The movie “Fargo” is famously not really set in Fargo, North Dakota, and the show follows up on that tradition, with all roads leading back to the title town. The first season of the FX series takes place in Bemidji, Minnesota, known for its statue of Paul Bunyan and Babe the Blue Ox.
FX
Jupiter, Florida – “American Horror Story: Freak Show” (2014)
Jupiter, Florida was already creepy even before the freak show arrived. This season of “AHS” is set in 1952 and is complete with conjoined twins, bearded ladies and a clown going around murdering people.
FX
Wayward Pines, Idaho – “Wayward Pines” (2015)
Word to the wise: if you’re a federal agent going to any small town, don’t be as naive to think you’ll only be there a short time, or that you’ll even make it out of there alive. “Wayward Pines” is a perfect example of this age old trope.
Fox
Hawkins, Indiana – “Stranger Things” (2016)
Hawkins is small, but clearly not small enough that anyone cares what happened to Barb!
Netflix
Riverdale – “Riverdale” (2017)
It’s not explicitly stated where Riverdale is located. Though it’s filmed in Vancouver, the same as the fictional Rosewood in “Pretty Little Liars,” but it’s revealed that Riverdale is in Rockland County, which is a real place in upstate New York. Regardless of where it’s set, the new CW series has salaciously subverted the original Archie comics for some engrossing, sexy weirdness.
The CW
Nothing is quite what it seems in these communities
“Quiet town, peaceful, low maintenance. It can stay that way,” says a federal agent to the sheriff of the small town at the center of the ABC drama “The Crossing.” Yeah, good luck with that. In TV and movies, crazy, creepy, sci-fi, monster movie junk always goes down in quaint, tiny, Middle American suburbs far more often than it does in a big city. Who has time for aliens in New York? Give me a full on invasion or nothing. Leave the odd-goings on and the mysterious, unsolved disappearances to the town folk. This list charts the history of America’s fictional small towns from kind of creepy to David Lynchian-grade bananas.
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