
Let’s Scare Julie is a contemporary ghost story that subverts the tropes of gateway teen horror films while exploring the many ways our ghosts, and actions, can come back to haunt us.continue reading Reel Review: Let’s Scare Julie (2020)

Let’s Scare Julie is a contemporary ghost story that subverts the tropes of gateway teen horror films while exploring the many ways our ghosts, and actions, can come back to haunt us.continue reading Reel Review: Let’s Scare Julie (2020)

International Podcast Day with your MB Networkcontinue reading Ominous Interviews: International Podcast Day

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)

Fantastic Fest’s Secret Screener is one of the most action-packed action films ever made. Action U.S.A. (1989) is a thrill ride from start to finish that will leave you soaked in adrenaline.continue reading Fantastic Fest: Action USA (1989)

Fantastic Fest brings the immortal Countess Elizabeth Bathory back to life in the stunning new 4K restoration of Harry Kumel’s lesbian vampire classic DAUGHTERS OF DARKNESS.continue reading Fantastic Fest: Daughters of Darkness (1971)

Love is not often a many-splendored thing for most, but if it were it’d look a like Ben Hanscom’s selfless love for Beverly Marsh.continue reading Winter Fire: Ben Hanscom, Love, and “It”
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