Fantastic Fest continues to offer up quality content with its expectation-defying feature film “Girl” by actor/director Chad Faust.continue reading Fantastic Fest: Girl (2020)
Death of Me is a suspenseful and emotionally charged thriller that will keep you hanging on the edge of your seat. Darren Lynn Bousman’s newest film explores a darker side of Thailand’s mythology and offers a compelling argument about why you should always be careful what you drink in a foreign land.continue reading Reel Review: Death of Me (2020)
This week’s recommendation starts out as an unassuming film about a photographer tracking down a potential serial killer but soon goes off the rails as it dives into the absolutely insane mind of Clive Barker.continue reading Tubi Tuesday: The Midnight Meat Train (2008)
Drawn and Quartered returns to Fantastic Fest after a six year absence. Its return is a bombshell that challenges the audience on every level.continue reading Fantastic Fest: Drawn and Quartered (Shorts)
Premiering at this year’s virtual Fantastic Fest, Jill Gevargizian’s THE STYLIST — the feature adaptation of her acclaimed short film — is an intimate and horrifying portrait of a lonely woman with a deadly obsession.continue reading Fantastic Fest: The Stylist (2020)
New Zealand writer/director Roseanne Liang’s second feature film is a wonderfully crafted, surefooted, low budget juggernaut that never lets up. Where to begin with …continue reading TIFF 2020 Review: Shadow in the Cloud
Though We Summon The Darkness is clearly no masterpiece, this cheeky throwback slasher gives heavy metal and Alexandra Daddario the treatment they deserve.continue reading Movie Night: We Summon the Darkness (2020)
‘The Last Laugh’ doesn’t revolutionize the way in which modern horror is manufactured, but it does serve as a solid union between past and present genre fare.continue reading Reel Review: The Last Laugh (2020)
Inventive, though predictable, the dark thrills in writer/director Will Wernick’s No Escape are still very entertaining! Social Media has changed who we are as a culture, and this film will leave you wondering how your interaction with the digital world has made you evolve. Is it for the better, or for the worst?continue reading Reel Review: No Escape (2020)
A slasher love letter with a focus on diversity, “Murder in the Woods” doesn’t remotely reinvent the genre, but it is both entertaining and …continue reading Reel Review: Murder in the Woods (2020)
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