In Aaron B. Koontz’s The Pale Door, a gang of outlaws bite off more than they can chew after a simple...
This year, Fantasia Fest saw its share of movies that pushed the boundaries of reality. However, none of them did...
Happy holidays, everyone! What better way to celebrate in true horror-loving fashion than by streaming one of Shudder’s latest additions, the 1989 French home invasion movie Deadly Games (also known by its original French title 36.15 Code Père Noël). Written and directed by René Manzor, Deadly Games examines a fateful...
The peaceful sanctity of a beach house can be an escape from the vile indecencies of reality. However, it can...
Indie horror filmmaker Travis Stevens (Jakob’s Wife) returns with his latest feature A Wounded Fawn, hitting Shudder Dec 1. Shot...
If you ever worked in an office, then you know that feeling: Sitting at a desk, closed off in a cubicle, realizing you’re wasting your life for a company that doesn’t care about you and that you’ve become everything you hated as a teenager. The only thing that gets you...
Watching Christmas horror movies is a proud tradition for spooky fiends looking to escape their post-Halloween blues and the agonizing...
With its impressive film library and unabashed passion for the genre, it would seem Shudder is perfectly poised to produce...
Welcome to Awfully Good, where we celebrate dumb and trashy movies! In keeping with this month’s Monster Mash Month theme here at Nightmare, and with today’s date, today’s feature presentation is 1981’s Saturday the 14th. It’s a goofy little horror comedy with a lot to howl about, but we’ll get to that in a...
Dennison Ramalho’s feature debut The Night Shifter is a macabre and maniacal tale of morality and vengeance from beyond the grave. Heavily...
The Brothers Grimm and the like laid the groundwork for modern storytelling. From damsels in distress to wicked parental figures...
Watching horror anthologies is a great way to expose yourself to the styles of multiple directors. Nightmare Cinema is the latest to offer five visions of fear. David Slade’s segment stands out from the rest, not only because it’s entirely in black-and-white, but for its cerebral twists and turns. This...