Welcome to Saturday Morning Scares, where we check out cartoons for spooky kids! To celebrate October’s Sound of Screams theme here at Nightmare, today’s...
I’ve often wondered if my obsession for horror and true crime would ever come in handy in the real world....
What’s up, weirdos? Welcome to a special happy horror-days installment of Awfully Good, where we celebrate movies that aren’t conventionally attractive. It’s also Cold-Blooded Killers Month here at Nightmare on Film Street, so tonight’s feature *had* to be Jack Frost. Nothing is colder than a snowman with the soul of a serial killer....
New year, same apocalypse! This week on Nightmare on Film Street, the best horror movie podcast served with a side...
2018 was a big year for Joe Bob Briggs. His return with last year’s 24-Hour marathon on Shudder broke the...
Cocaine Bear hits theatre this weekend! And in preparation for what is sure to be a rock-em sock-em gore-ride, we’re taking a look back at some of cinema’s best bear attacks. Join usssss… There’s a reason why people say you should play dead if you ever encounter a bear in...
Director David Bruckner has an undeniable ability to craft eerie, slow-building scares and that talent is on full display in...
Kyle Edward Ball’s experimental debut feature Skinamarink is an eerie, elongated nightmare plucked straight from the mind of your childhood self....
The world is a pretty shitty place for most people, and in Véronique Jadin’s L’Employée du Mois (Employee of The Month) an overworked and underappreciated woman stands up for herself…by murdering her boss…….and several of her coworkers. For Inès, it just seemed easier to get away with murder than get...
I first came across Michael Peterson’s work when my friends and I watched his debut feature Lloyd the Conqueror for...
I’m all about horror films that explore ancient fables and mythical creatures/beings. In Lifechanger, we follow one of these such...
The Oak Room (2020) is a love letter to the gothic thrillers of the past, which is fitting, since the theme of the film is about the past catching up with you. In a cross between No Country For Old Men (2007) and Frailty (2001), the seedy bar stools of...