Every year is a good year for horror. That used to just be a nice thing to say but even...
The ominous darkness, twisting trees, and dilapidated cabins of a forested wilderness have long been staples of horror. In fact,...
Folk horror opens the crypt of mankind’s most ancient fears, letting loose tales twisted in tradition and draped in dread. From eerie European landscapes to the haunted heartland of America, folk horror invites you to dig through the ditches and burn with the witches. Okay, but seriously. What’s unique about...
Listen up Folk Horror fans! There’s a new mythic monster in town calling out to you from those dark woods...
Hello again, Blair Witch fans! If you’ve read my review of the endearingly-inept Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2, you...
There have been countless imitations of The Blair Witch Project (1999) since its release, but if you think the found footage sub-genre has nothing new to offer, think again. A new indie production, Butterfly Kisses, aims to redefine found footage horror by spinning the concept into an interesting and multi-layered new...
As we count down the remaining days of summer, there’s something else we fiends are counting down to – Halloween....
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein has remained one of literature’s greatest stories. It almost poetic that a story about life after death...
UFO horror is an acquired taste. Found footage horror is an acquired taste. Luckily, Skyman–both a UFO film and a found footage film–has a juggernaut in its corner. The film is written, directed, and produced by Daniel Myrick, one-half of the duo who created The Blair Witch Project (1999), arguably...
Not since The Blair Witch Project has a found-footage movie been so cryptic about its origins. The severe lack of...
Jane Schoenbrun’s We’re All Going To The World’s Fair is exactly the kind of horror movie you hope for when you’re stuck...
Hold on to your camcorders, horror buffs! We’re delving into the shaky, grainy, panic-inducing world of found footage films. From forests filled with witches to daunting deserts harboring the inexplicable, found footage horror offers a spine-tingling realism that other genres can only dream of. So grab some night vision goggles...