If it possible to be both a serial slasher and a family man? Bloodline from Blumhouse Productions and director Henry...
Perhaps one of the oddest films we’ve seen at this years Fantastic Fest is co-writer/director Ali Abbasi’s Border (Gräns). This film is...
Hell Fest is an upcoming slasher flick set in an amusement park that people have been buzzing about all summer. But the main attraction has to be the inclusion of horror icon Tony Todd (Candyman, Final Destination, Night of the Living Dead). We had a few minutes to chat his...
Dennison Ramalho’s feature debut The Night Shifter is a macabre and maniacal tale of morality and vengeance from beyond the grave. Heavily...
For the first few minutes of Assassination Nation I thought I might groan and eye roll my way through the...
Inspired by a Twitter back-and-forth that went viral, You Might Be the Killer is an ambitious meta-horror comedy that seeks to poke a stick at standard slasher fare. (I’m all for original source material, and Twitter seems to be ripe with horror content creators these days. [Oh heyyy]Â Just a few...
Jim Hosking’s oddball comedy An Evening With Beverly Luff Linn helped open the 2018 Fantastic Film Festival in Austin, Texas following the...
Slice is a small movie with big dreams and aspirations. It’s the directorial debut of first time director Austin Vesely,...
Being a true horror fan means developing a certain taste for trashy cinema. It’s like cheap beer; you know it’s terrible, but you can’t get enough of it. Camp Death III in 2D is pure trash and proud of it. Despite what the title might suggest, there are no previous...
As one of the first people to see the completed Halloween film, I’m going to do my absolute best to...
It’s rare that a movie comes along that completely upends your expectations. Relaxer is one of those films. The latest...
Ahockalypse conjures a unique breed of the zombie-comedy genre into interesting territory, blending horror, comedy and sports. Merging the bloody-fisted punches of Goon (2011) with the parody of Shaun of the Dead (2004), Ahockalypse disregards the allusions and instead offers a more explicit approach to delivering its raunchy humor. Hence the play...