Following up on the success of quirky Groundhog Day-inspired slasher Happy Death Day (2017) and it’s quantum follow up Happy Death...
A quick heads up: if you haven’t checked out Part One of States of Horror, go ahead and read it...
Sometimes all that’s needed to bring new energy to a well-trod genre is to inject some deceptively simple innovation into it. In the case of haunted house films, the subgenre has been explored and re-explored in horror until it would seem we’ve seen every possible variation several times over. More...
Halloween is right around the corner and for a lot of people, that means one thing: haunted houses and mazes....
I’ve been sick as a dog this past week after bringing home a bug from my horror adventures at PanicFest....
Found footage is an acquired taste among horror fans. Some of us love it (meeee), and some of us absolutely detest it. The latter camp (even though they are utterly incorrect), often complains of low-level scares, not enough escalation with its horror elements, and being too stingy with its monsters....
With its release of the series The Society, Netflix has in some ways stoked the shrinking flame that is young...
Serving as a direct sequel, The Gallows: Act II is a sharp departure from the original. For the most part,...
Family secrets come back to haunt in Daniela Carvalho and Ale McHaddo’s Deep Hatred. A good lesson we can all learn after viewing: Find better, collaborative ways to solve your differences that don’t involve drowning. Another good lesson: Don’t throw your trash in the lake. R-e-c-y-c-l-e. Deep Hatred begins when Cindy (Sara Drust) returns...
You’ve seen “Onyx The Fortuitous” on Youtube where he hijacks news reports with his odd personality and motormouth. Now he...
Listen up Folk Horror fans! There’s a new mythic monster in town calling out to you from those dark woods...
Hold on to your camcorders, horror buffs! We’re delving into the shaky, grainy, panic-inducing world of found footage films. From forests filled with witches to daunting deserts harboring the inexplicable, found footage horror offers a spine-tingling realism that other genres can only dream of. So grab some night vision goggles...