Every Serial Killer Live Next Door To Someone. This brilliant tagline is echoed in every paranoia-fueled scene of Summer of ’84. Directed...
The dust may have settled from this year’s edition of Sundance, but we here at Nightmare on Film Street are...
For many, being or becoming a parent can be scary. For the young couple in Still/Born, parenthood is downright terrifying. Still/Born, the directorial debut from talented writer/director Brandon Christensen, is a wickedly fun horror romp with blood-pumping scares and shockingly smooth production. The film follows a couple trying to raise their newborn child...
The indie survival film Mohawk is an violent cat and mouse game of revenge, colonialism, and the casualties of war. The film follows...
Mary Shelley, Haifaa Al-Mansour’s new biopic focusing on the life of Frankenstein‘s creator, is a bit like the titular writer’s famous...
What if the disconnect that exists between you and your online identity became so great, that you lost control of your own existence? If that’s a brand of existential dread you subscribe to then Cam is a movie that may have you rethink some of the personal information you’ve been...
Slender Man, for millions of fans, is the king of Creepypasta, but Slender Man is not the film they’ve been waiting...
Jim Hosking’s oddball comedy An Evening With Beverly Luff Linn helped open the 2018 Fantastic Film Festival in Austin, Texas following the...
Jeremy Saulnier’s cold, brooding film Hold The Dark premiered to eager audience in the hot swelter of Austin’s Fantastic Fest 2018. Saulnier has made a name for himself in genre film by exploring the brutality and reality of characters in perilous situations. 2016’s Green Room gave us a taste for blood and we cheered...
I’ll admit, other than appreciating the odd festival where you’ll find me buzzing in the corner of a beer tent,...
I could spend hours talking about why I love 1941’s The Wolf Man. There’s the makeup, the cast (Lon Chaney...
The Universal Monsters have been scaring audiences worldwide for nearly a century. They stand as Hollywood’s homecoming for Horror, pioneering the genre with special effects unlike anyone had ever known. Every passing generation has embraced the Universal Monsters and for the first time ever, thirty of the most iconic films...