I was late seeing this one. But since watching, I have found myself thinking about the tale and the creatures featured in it. I know it got mixed reviews, but I found it pretty interesting, and definitely creepy.
Click below for the trailer...
I was late seeing this one. But since watching, I have found myself thinking about the tale and the creatures featured in it. I know it got mixed reviews, but I found it pretty interesting, and definitely creepy.
My mother's mother was a cool lady. She passed away when I was about eight, but she was perfectly placed in those formative years to introduce me to the joys of everything spooky. She would visit on some Saturday mornings, with her pack of cigarettes and dressed like someone who was in a rockabilly band. She'd bring us cool toys like rubber skeletons or a neat blood-dripping candle skull. She'd also let us watch horror films. Creature Double Feature to be exact. Those days were glorious. She was someone who was the opposite of my parents. Someone who seemed to realize that a lot of life was silly and shouldn't be taken too seriously.
I almost forgot it was Alien Day.
My recommendations for horror movies are few and far between these years (for obvious reasons [most stink]). The Invisible Man was one of those rare exceptions where you didn't get to the end and wonder what went wrong with the world. Rare also was the fact that it was well-reviewed at the time of its release (something that didn't happen with one of my favorite modern horror films CANDYMAN [it didn't stink]).
We watched this terrific film last night and I wanted to recommend it to anyone looking to add something a little different to their Christmas season lineup. It's ahead of its time in the portrayal of witchcraft and the supernatural and loaded with great performances. Click below to get a brief intro by Sam Hamm on Trailers from Hell.
Man, I miss the days of main stars who were over forty (and fifty). Do shows even have memorable themes anymore? I honestly couldn't answer that.
We watched this 1981 sequel recently and I'm not sure if it's because I'm getting older or what, but the middle part, those slow scenes inside the hospital, no longer troubled me. It felt slow, but not in a bad way. It felt like the late hours of the night on Halloween, right before November 1st.
We watched this atmospheric and quite spooky film the other night. Been seeing a lot of people slagging on it online, and it's baffling. In a film world where we get horror movies with over-the-top gore, soulless characters, weak dialogue, and terrible CGI, I will never understand how the average horror fan can get so toxic when they see something like COBWEB.
This fantastic documentary needs to be on everyone's annual Halloween watch list.
The final nightmarish scenes from The Black Hole are below. Imagine seeing this as a young child at a friend's house, on a VCR. His family is sitting in the living room, excited that a Disney film has just been brought home from Four Star Video at the local strip mall. Surely, it'll be just like Star Wars.
Total repost, but this actually might be the singular greatest horror montage on the internet. And it has a very neat and bittersweet ending featuring the late David Warner.