Guillermo Del Toro’s Frankenstein: A Pre-Watch Confession
Let’s get this out of the way first… I haven’t seen Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein yet.But before I hop onto […]
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Let’s get this out of the way first… I haven’t seen Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein yet.But before I hop onto […]
From Pennywise to Art the Clown, modern horror’s greatest monsters all wear makeup. Here’s why today’s generation has turned to the circus for its nightmares.
Ever buy a “New 4K Restoration” and feel like you’re watching a Blu-ray in disguise? This is your guide to spotting the real deal… no OLED required.
Ever notice your favorite horror flicks look a little too bright, too smooth, or too dark? Your TV might be betraying you. Here’s how to calibrate it so The Thing, The Witch, and every nightmare in between look film perfect.
Directed by Freddy Krueger himself, 976-EVIL might be one of the most gloriously 80s horror films ever made. Demons, dial tones, and drippy atmosphere, it’s a forgotten gem that deserves a place on your late night watchlist.
Death’s back, baby and he’s still got perfect timing.
Final Destination: Bloodlines (2024) revives everything that made the franchise fun: absurdly elaborate kills, Rube Goldberg-style chaos, and Tony Todd’s voice whispering from the void. It’s part nostalgia trip, part adrenaline rush — proof that even after twenty years, Death’s still running the show.
Martin Landau wasn’t a “horror actor” like Vincent Price or Christopher Lee, but when he stepped into the genre, he elevated it. From the fiery preacher in Alone in the Dark to his Oscar winning turn as Bela Lugosi in Ed Wood, Landau proved that madness could have meaning.
Six killer horror flicks from before the world went sideways; The Ruins, Laid to Rest, Splinter, The Cabin in the Woods, Malignant, and Housebound. Forgotten gems that prove pre-COVID horror still slaps.
Horror snobs who brag they’ve never been scared by a movie? Go to hell. Modern horror still works, it’s just waiting for you to meet it halfway. A raw look at why fear isn’t dead, audiences are just too numb to feel it.
Freddy Krueger wasn’t just a slasher, he was the 1980s. He cracked jokes, haunted dreams, and showed up everywhere from MTV to lunchboxes. While Jason and Michael lurked in the shadows, Freddy owned the spotlight. Here’s why the dream demon ruled the decade… and how he got buried under the sands of time.