As a fervent fan of anything Alien (1979), I was initially sceptical about Director Alexandre O. Philippe’s documentary, Memory: The Origins of Alien. I...
The rate at which Shudder continues to deliver exclusive films is both impressive and exciting for horror fans looking for...
Horror Anthologies are hard to nail. Though always entertaining and delightful, few can hold enough steam to carry an audience eagerly through each segment. Often utilizing different directors throughout, Horror Anthologies — like V/H/S and ABC’s of Death — can lack consistency and a thematic throughline, making the segments feel...
When you think of the least threatening forms of entertainment, board games are likely to be at the top part...
Vincenzo Natali’s In The Tall Grass will be released to the streaming world October 4, 2019 but Austin, Texas horror fans were...
Justin Benson and Aaron Moorehead’s Synchronic celebrated its US premiere at Fantastic Fest 2019 simultaneously shattering reality and presenting a world that honors some of our darkest truths. If you’re planning to skim read this article, doing your best to avoid any key plot details because you just want to...
Few films dare to brave a simple premise. With Hollywood building CGI skyscrapers of Superheroes and Transformers, one has to...
Joe Begos’ VFW came barreling down on Fantastic Fest 2019 like a grizzled and gory gang fight that very nearly...
As fans, we know that creating an effectively scary horror film is a near miracle. It is also rare to make a comedy with genuine laughs. Trying to make a movie that does both is nearly impossible. So, it’s not much of a criticism to say Corporate Animals had a...
Barbara Crampton is a name synonymous with some of the biggest cult-hit films like Re-Animator, From Beyond, Chopping Mall, Beyond...
Richard Stanley’s Color Out of Space crash landed at Fantastic Fest 2019 with the sole intention of blowing minds and scaring the...
Taika Waititi’s Jojo Rabbit celebrated it’s US Premiere at the 2019 Fantastic Film Festival, wrapping audiences in a warm and hilarious blanket of emotional satire. Our very own Kimberley Elizabeth said “JoJo Rabbit, and films like it, force us to look at the past with a renewed and reinvigorated horror...