Have you ever said, “I don’t want to get Final Destination’ed” or is that just me? Final Destination (2000) is...
After a seemingly endless parade of false starts, fans of the beloved horror comic series Locke & Key finally have...
Ant Timpson’s Come To Daddy hits select theatres and VOD February 7th, just in time to give your sappy Valentine’s love affairs a vicious wallop. On the surface, the story is a black comedy about a young man trying to reconnect with estranged father but at it’s core, Come To Daddy is one...
The final episode of a series is a tricky one to successfully produce. It can make or break an ensemble...
For some, a black cat is a bad omen. But in the world of Johannes Nyholm’s (Jätten) newest film, Koko-di...
The deadly game that destroyed the lives of five high school students is far from over in the first half of Light as a Feather‘s sophomore season. Except this time, the death curse has been passed on to someone else. And the only way to save the new host is...
The 2019 Fantasia Film Festival is home to surprising and shocking cinema and their Fantasia Underground program is the showcase...
Opening the 2019 Fantasia Film Festival Underground program this year was a surprising indie film, and one of the festival’s...
I’ll Take Your Dead from Black Fawn Films tells the tale of William (Aidan Devine, TV’s Impulse), a widower raising his daughter, Gloria (Ava Preston, Critters Attack!) in a hostile, gang-filled environment. If you’re not familiar with Black Fawn Films past offerings, flicks like Bite (2015), The Heritics (2017) and...
Two films deep, I’m pretty sure we can crown Ari Aster with the [Paimon] crown as king of grief-stricken cinema....
Director Adam Mason’s (I‘m Just F***ing With You) portrait of a broken patriarch enters the world of Blumhouse and Hulu’s...
Brandon Christensen’s Still/Born was named Scariest Feature at the 2017 Overlook Film Festival. His second feature Z celebrated its world premiere at the 2019 Overlook Film Festival debuting a new terrifying monster masquerading as the imaginary friend of a young child. Nightmare on Film Street’s Kimberley Elizabeth said in her review of the...