Tag: Movies
-
The Horror Begins Anew: “Welcome to Derry” Captures the Terror Beneath Small-Town Perfection

Stephen King masterfully tapped into the terrors of childhood with his terrifying novel, It. The face of this fear, Pennywise the Dancing Clown, became an iconic horror figure, unforgettable and frequently adapted for both television and film. Now, audiences are taken to the very origin of this terror: Derry, Maine. Pennywise Undisguised For those familiar…
-
“Goodboy: A Dog-Centric Horror That Struggles to Connect

Some films may seem promising in theory and on paper but require additional depth to truly resonate on a lasting level. Unfortunately, despite the hype surrounding the 2025 horror film Goodboy, it ultimately failed to live up to expectations. Cinematic Context “Goodboy” is a project by Ben Loneberg. It tells the story of a man…
-
Blood, Tension, Zombies—The Elixir Hits Different

“The Elixir” is one of those films that quietly sneaks up on you—unassuming at first glance. It found its way onto my watchlist during a casual scroll through Netflix’s latest horror releases. The simplicity of its title and the intriguing promise of “zombie horror” were reason enough to press play. The Fountain Of Fatality The…
-
From Calm to Carnage: High Tension’s Unrelenting Horror

Few things are more chilling than a serial killer—especially one who kills without any motive. That kind of senseless violence has always been one of horror’s most unsettling fascinations. When I came across “High Tension,” I remembered it being highly recommended within horror circles and decided to give it a watch. I went in completely…
-
Tusk: A Morally Twisted Fable with Visceral, Body-Horror

I’ve reviewed quite a few horror-themed works this season, but my most recent watch took me back to the early-mid 2000s—a film that’s often spoken of in horror circles as one of the most grotesque and unsettling experiences out there. Naturally, I had to see for myself. As a longtime fan of horror, both on…
-
Reel Horror: The Ed Gein Story

Most of us remember the moment we discovered that monsters weren’t just hiding under our beds—they walked among us. For generations, these human predators existed only as grainy photos on newspaper front pages or solemn reports interrupting our evening broadcasts. Today, we invite these horrors into our living rooms through dramatized series that dissect their…
-
“Terrifier 3” Turns Christmas Into a Blood-Soaked Nightmare”

Horror splinters into countless dark corridors: the shambling dread of zombie films, the primordial terror of creature features, the voyeuristic anxiety of found footage, the betrayal of one’s own flesh in body horror, the violation of self in possession narratives, the hunter-prey tension of slashers, and finally, the arterial spray of splatter horror—where “Terrifier 3”…
-
Check In If You Dare: “Haunted Hotel” Joins Animation’s Spookiest Lineup

Animation has given us some of our most cherished horror stories. Every October, viewers dust off classics like “Monster House,” “Coraline,” “It’s the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown,” “The Corpse Bride,” and “The Nightmare Before Christmas.” But full-length features aren’t the only way animators have scared us silly. Television series like “The Fright Krewe,” “Scooby Doo,”…
-
Brand Name, No Backbone: Amityville: Uprising Review

Horror films often fail to deliver the scares their genre promises. Some rely entirely on brand recognition, hoping audiences will show up based on a familiar title alone. These low-budget, poorly marketed franchise extensions are always gambles. For my month-long horror movie marathon—one film and review per day for twenty-eight days—I selected “Amityville: Uprising” (2022),…
-
When the Suit Becomes The Man: A Dive into Clown’s Grotesque World

Clowns have always occupied a peculiar space in cultural mythology—teetering between whimsy and dread. In cinema, they are often stripped of their playful veneer and reimagined as avatars of evil. When a film leans into this archetype, it either succeeds in burrowing into a viewer’s subconscious fear or collapses under the weight of cliché. With…