Children of the Corn: Runaway is the tenth installment of the long running folk horror franchise that was started in...
In 1987 The Monster Squad introduced a generation of young horror fans to the Universal Monsters. For those kids (yourself included I...
Slender Man, for millions of fans, is the king of Creepypasta, but Slender Man is not the film they’ve been waiting for. Though it’s named for a monster of the internet age, Slender Man is so utterly generic that it feels like someone wrote a horror movie script, filled it with...
Netflix just unleashed The Haunting of Hill House and what you discover within its walls may take you by surprise. I admit...
The Mexican possession film The Inhabitant (El Habitante) recently celebrated it’s North American premiere at the 2018 Toronto After Dark Film...
The Universal Monsters have been scaring audiences worldwide for nearly a century. They stand as Hollywood’s homecoming for Horror, pioneering the genre with special effects unlike anyone had ever known. Every passing generation has embraced the Universal Monsters and for the first time ever, thirty of the most iconic films...
If there’s one subgenre of horror so malleable that it can mold itself to any theme, vampires would be the...
“It’s almost spooky season!” is something I would say to someone who hasn’t yet started their spooky season. (Hey, for...
Chelsea Stardust has had a pretty killer year. She’s had not one, but two feature-length projects come to fruition. With Hulu’s Into the Dark: All That We Destroy we saw her explore the concept of modern motherhood. And then, we were introduced to the upper crust Mill Basin chapter of...
Gothic vampire horror seems to never go out of style. Even now, a new Victorian adaptation of Dracula is heading...
What’s up weirdos? Welcome back to Awfully Good, where we celebrate movies that maybe go a little bit uncelebrated. Tonight’s...
Dracula is king among monsters. We’ve worshipped him in the pages of Bram Stoker’s classic novel, and we’ve groveled at the feet of the films inspired from it; Bela Lugosi’s turn in the quintessential Dracula (1931), the unofficial but inspiring Nosferatu (1922), and Francis Ford Coppola’s callback Bram Stoker’s Dracula...