The 2019 Fantasia Film Festival audience had no idea what was in store for them when they sat down to...
The uncomfortable silence of an awkward pause, the suspicion that someone might be talking about you when you leave the...
Perhaps one of the oddest films we’ve seen at this years Fantastic Fest is co-writer/director Ali Abbasi’s Border (Gräns). This film is a morbid, sometimes disgusting fairy tale set in a modern-day Sweden. Unfortunately, the less said about this movie the better, so apologies for being intentionally vague or withholding. Film Festivals...
Travis Stevens’ newest film A Wounded Fawn is super weird. On the surface, it’s a simple cat-and-mouse story between a serial...
I’ve seen too many slow burn creepers that over promise and under deliver to get excited when I read the...
DESCRIPTION: Welcome back to Nightmare Alley, the spooky sidestreet podcast in the Nightmare on Film Street feed! This week, your horror hosts Jon & Kim are joined by indie filmmaker Jordan Graham to chat about the making of his eerie, dread-injected slow burn Sator. As you’ll hear, Sator is an...
DESCRIPTION Join your horror hosts Jon & Kim as they close out their Vial Found Footage double-feature with a movie...
Sometimes all that’s needed to bring new energy to a well-trod genre is to inject some deceptively simple innovation into...
Writer/Director Anthony DiBlasi returns to a horror story very familiar to him in 2023’s Malum. A re-imagining of his 2014 feature Last Shift, Malum follows rookie police officer Jessica Loren (Jessica Sula) on her first shift on duty, guarding a decommissioned police station on it’s final night of service. This is no ordinary precinct, however....
The vibe heavy Folk Horror Enys Men is a story about a secluded wildlife volunteer falling deeper and deeper into madness...
The Oak Room (2020) is a love letter to the gothic thrillers of the past, which is fitting, since the...
It’s hard out there for a witch, as we can see in Lukas Feigelfeld’s feature film debut, Hagazussa. Set in a 15th century village, this film tackles the misogyny of superstition, its intergenerational impact, and a new perspective of vengeance. It is presented a series of progressively disturbing vignettes that...