A soundtrack can make or break a movie. There are some iconic films out there with equally iconic soundtracks, and...
Tone Deaf is funny, scary and has something to say.
The Pierce brothers The Wretched recently held it’s Word Premiere at the 2019 Fantasia Film Festival, introducing the world to new Witchy rules and Witchy powers. “The vampire,” Brett Pierce shares with us, “has been developing over so long” with very specific strengths and weaknesses, but the traditional Witch is not a monster...
The religious dark drama Nothing But the Blood – written and directed by Daniel Tucker—depicts a fundamentalist takeover of a...
Serving as the debut feature for actor turned director Dave Franco, The Rental sets out to “do for home-sharing what...
Prano Bailey-Bond’s Censor is a mind-bending examination of the Video Naty hysteria that gripped Britain in the late 1980s. The film features a brilliant performance from Niamh Algar (Raised By Wolves) as Enid Baines, a prim-and-proper film board censor with a tortured past. She’s kept the lip sealed on that...
A beach getaway sounds like a dream, right? As the world turns and it feels like every part of our...
Still/Born is new independent horror movie that has been making waves on the film festival circuit, taking home awards such as...
One of the many great things about horror films is their ability to come in all shapes and sizes, styled to fit vastly different tastes. Patrick White’s teen thriller Queen of Spades is specifically tailored to a young, emerging horror audience who needs a late night scary movie to watch with...
“Christmas carolers…I hate Christmas carolers.” Mrs. Deagle, myself, and everyone else. We are near concluding End of Days month here at...
Anything for Jackson is one of those films that calmly takes the tried and true exorcism and possession sub-genres and...
Ahockalypse conjures a unique breed of the zombie-comedy genre into interesting territory, blending horror, comedy and sports. Merging the bloody-fisted punches of Goon (2011) with the parody of Shaun of the Dead (2004), Ahockalypse disregards the allusions and instead offers a more explicit approach to delivering its raunchy humor. Hence the play...