The Universal Monsters have been scaring audiences worldwide for nearly a century. They stand as Hollywood’s homecoming for Horror, pioneering...
Nightmare on Film Street, a horror movie podcast and one of the leading Film/TV Review Podcasts on Apple Podcasts and...
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 cartoon is about a monster band. Folks, put your paws together for Groovie Goolies! Groovie Goolies is a cartoon from the early 1970s that follows pop-rockers The Monster Trio and their friends at Horrible...
It’s Alive! IT’S ALIVE!! Join your horror hosts Kim & Jon as they embark on the next monsterific segment of...
A beach getaway sounds like a dream, right? As the world turns and it feels like every part of our...
Filled wall-to-wall with handmade puppets, Frank & Zed is the kind of movie you could watch with the whole family if it weren’t for all the gory decapitations and bloody curdling screams. Puppets are torn limb from limb, slimy brains are turned into lunch, and felt faces are ripped apart in an...
It might surprise you to learn that the goriest movie at the virtual Nightstream Film Festival was a movie comprised...
What’s up weirdos? Welcome back to Awfully Good, where we celebrate movies that maybe go a little bit uncelebrated. Tonight’s...
On the 200 year anniversary of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, veteran horror director Larry Fessenden set out to retell the story in a modern setting, with a completely unique approach. Unlike so many of the film adaptations that places the doctor and his struggles at the forefront of the story, Fessenden’s Depraved is...
The 2018 Overlook Film Festival was proud to host the world premieres of several highly anticipated films this year. Among...
It should be said at the top of this review – that I am an impatient viewer. I don’t like...
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein has remained one of literature’s greatest stories. It almost poetic that a story about life after death should continue to be so relevant and relatable some 200 years later. The mad doctor’s creation, though tragically monstrous and very un-human, spends his short life experiencing the most human...