A unique angle at the Vampire sub-genre featuring an underrated eighties punk band and a decent amount of blood and nudity. A Vampire comes …continue reading The Daily Dig: Pale Blood (1990)
Tobe Hooper follows up “Texas Chainsaw” with a wandering plot that is extremely stylized and filled with prophetic horror history. The owner of a …continue reading The Daily Dig: Eaten Alive (1976)
A typical 80’s ooze-fest, there is nothing outstanding about the film besides the fact that it makes you feel the era. After the death …continue reading The Daily Dig: The Kindred (1987)
A true-crime tale that actually softens reality, directed by one of the most influential and groundbreaking Women in cinema history. Two men pick up …continue reading The Daily Dig: The Hitch-Hiker (1953)
With zombie make-up that looks like it was done by a high school student, this early Al Adamson film still brings charm. A soldier …continue reading The Daily Dig: Blood of Ghastly Horror (1967)
A before its time twisted family slasher that isn’t quite good enough to be a cult classic but holds a credit roll of Hall …continue reading The Daily Dig: The Unseen (1980)
The first adaptation of Peter Straub’s work is rich with meaning and tone and beautifully shot, though it’s short on the scares. A grieving …continue reading The Daily Dig: The Haunting of Julia (1978)
An example of how far nepotism and coat tails can take you; we end up with unwatchable, derivative horror, with nonsensical dialogue. A pseudo-Frankenstein …continue reading The Daily Dig: Mind Ripper (1995)
A guilty pleasure starring two fan-favorite actors and an equally impressive dog performance written and directed by the writer of “Child’s Play”. A dog …continue reading The Daily Dig: Man’s Best Friend (1993)
Years before taking the genre by storm with “The Descent”, Neil Marshall reinvented the werewolf sub-genre with the criminally underrated “Dog Soldiers”. In 2005, …continue reading Hallowed Halls of Horror: Dog Soldiers (2002)
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