Powered by RedCircle DESCRIPTION: We’re kicking off Nightmare on Film Street’s Reaper Madness Month with two Stephen King tales that...
DESCRIPTION: It’s that time again film fans. That special time of year when the entire community pulls together to celebrate...
DESCRIPTION Hello again horror fans and welcome back to Nightmare Alley, the spooky little sidestreet podcast in the Nightmare on Film Street feed. This week your horror hosts Jon & Kim are joined by director Mimi Cave and writer/producer Lauryn Kahn to discuss their super funny, totally gory film Fresh....
Saddle up, horror fans! This week on the Nightmare on Film Street horror movie podcast, Kimmi and Jon are diving...
DESCRIPTION: Hot Patootie, Bless my Soul! We’re taking a trip over to the Frankenstein place on this week’s episode of...
Powered by RedCircle DESCRIPTION Join your Nightmare on Film Street horror host Kimmi and Jon for another TITLE OF TERROR! That is- a title that’s really, really dope. This week, we’re heading to the countryside for a bit of peace and quiet in Let’s Scare Jessica to Death (1971)! This...
Powered by RedCircle DESCRIPTION We’ve always known kids are scary. They’re plotting, devious, and short enough to hide behind...
DESCRIPTION: In celebration of Nightmare on Film Street’s month-long salute to horror movie re-imaginings and resurrections, we’re focusing our attention...
DESCRIPTION Vrummm-vrum-v-v-v-vruummm! Loosely translated: It’s chainsaw time, horror fans! Join your hosts Kim and Jon as they gas up, and cut down one of the most controversial remakes of the early 2000s, on this week’s episode of Nightmare on Film Street. Tobe Hooper’s The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) is...
DESCRIPTION: You don’t have to be a music-obsessed serial killer straight out of a horror movie to enjoy this week’s...
DESCRIPTION You know what the Leatherface franchise is missing? Okay sure, a bar of soap… but the correct answer is-...
She’s Alive! Join your horror hosts Kim & Jon as they embark on the macabre masterpiece of life after death that is James Whale’s Bride of Frankenstein (1935). Despite only appearing for only a few short minutes, The Bride has eclipsed Frankie and the Mad Scientists as THE face of...