[Film Review] Beaten to Death (2022)
Review, Film Review, Horror Ariel Powers-Schaub / Senior Contributor & Admin Assistant Review, Film Review, Horror Ariel Powers-Schaub / Senior Contributor & Admin Assistant

[Film Review] Beaten to Death (2022)

Horror films love to ask the question, “What would you do if you were stranded in an unfamiliar area, and had to rely on the kindness of strangers?” And Beaten to Death (2022), written and directed by Sam Curtain, screams this question.

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[Film Review] FrightFest: The Moor (2023)
Review, Film Review, Horror Ariel Powers-Schaub / Senior Contributor & Admin Assistant Review, Film Review, Horror Ariel Powers-Schaub / Senior Contributor & Admin Assistant

[Film Review] FrightFest: The Moor (2023)

Chris Cronin’s The Moor (2023) is a sad and scary exploration of how childhood trauma can haunt you later in life. While horror fans have seen dozens of films about trauma over the last decade or so, The Moor does something fresh. It’s a horror movie that relies on a traumatic event to kick off the action, not a movie about trauma that is also frightening.

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[Film Review] FrightFest: Transmission (2023)
Review, Film Review, Horror Ariel Powers-Schaub / Senior Contributor & Admin Assistant Review, Film Review, Horror Ariel Powers-Schaub / Senior Contributor & Admin Assistant

[Film Review] FrightFest: Transmission (2023)

Written and directed by Michael Hurst, Transmission (2023) is the story of the weird stuff you used to see on late-night TV. Framed as something an old man saw while flipping channels one night, Transmission tells a few seemingly disconnected stories that end up intertwined when the film is finished.

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[Film Review] FrightFest: Here For Blood (2022)
Review, Film Review, Horror Ariel Powers-Schaub / Senior Contributor & Admin Assistant Review, Film Review, Horror Ariel Powers-Schaub / Senior Contributor & Admin Assistant

[Film Review] FrightFest: Here For Blood (2022)

Babysitting has got to be the most dangerous job in horror films. Across subgenres, those who provide childcare coverage for parents are at the mercy of horror film villains, both human and supernatural. But what if the babysitter was ready for a fight? Here for Blood (2022), directed by Daniel Turres, answers that question.

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[Film Review] Tokyo Horror Film Festival: Idol Never Dies (2023)
Review, Film Review, Horror Amber T / Contributor Review, Film Review, Horror Amber T / Contributor

[Film Review] Tokyo Horror Film Festival: Idol Never Dies (2023)

Comedy splatter legend (and the mastermind behind such Criterion classics as Zombie Ass: Toilet of the Dead and Mutant Girl Squad) Noboru Iguchi’s IDOL NEVER DiES played as the main feature of the inaugural Tokyo Horror Film Festival, which took place on July 1 in Tokyo’s Nakano ward. The festival also featured an exclusive Q&A with director Iguchi himself.

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[Film Review] New York Asian Film Festival: Back Home (2023)
Review, Film Review, Horror Amber T / Contributor Review, Film Review, Horror Amber T / Contributor

[Film Review] New York Asian Film Festival: Back Home (2023)

Despite what a particularly vocal subset of haters might crow online, horror has always explored the well-solidified connection between familial trauma and the supernatural. Countless horrors spanning all eras, from Don’t Look Now to Relic, have propounded the idea that far scarier than any ghost, ghoul or demon are the scars your family can leave on you - in the case of Nate Ki’s Back Home, both literally and physically.

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[Film Review] The Breach (2023)
Review, Film Review, Horror, Sci-Fi Leyla Hamedi / Contributor Review, Film Review, Horror, Sci-Fi Leyla Hamedi / Contributor

[Film Review] The Breach (2023)

Isn’t it great that there’s now an almost universally accepted shorthand for spooky, interdimensional stories that play with the fabric of time and often introduce creatures the simple mind cannot fathom? Instead of writing all that out, we just say “Lovecraftian Horror” and the avid viewer can fill in the blanks themselves.

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[Film Review] The Empty Space (2023)
Review, Film Review, Horror Melanie Moyer / Contributor Review, Film Review, Horror Melanie Moyer / Contributor

[Film Review] The Empty Space (2023)

Andrew Jara Continues to evolve with The Empty Space (2023). Andrew Jara’s delve into the complexities of grief blends the warnings of Pet Semetary with the discomfort and unease of psychological horror using the good bones of a clearly personal script to weave a tale of trauma, isolation, and self-initiated freedom.

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[Film Review] New Religion (2022)
Review, Film Review, Horror Amber T / Contributor Review, Film Review, Horror Amber T / Contributor

[Film Review] New Religion (2022)

Since premiering at last year’s FrightFest, Keishi Kondo’s New Religion has been at the top of every Japanese horror fan’s watchlist. In his directorial debut, Kondo has created less of a straightforward horror movie and more a living, breathing thought experiment, fluttering in the midst of moral philosophy and asking an enraptured audience to reckon with the timeless, unanswerable question: what makes a human? Spine? Collarbone? Ribs? Hair? History?

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[Film Review] The Seeding (2023)
Review, Film Review, Horror Alix Turner / Contributor Review, Film Review, Horror Alix Turner / Contributor

[Film Review] The Seeding (2023)

I love horror films set in the daylight. Sometimes stark, dry sunshine can be more chilling than darkness, and even more so when combined with the lonely expanse of a desert. Barnaby Clay’s debut feature film, The Seeding (2023), takes these elements and asks us to contemplate what it would take to survive in that environment, and what kind of people might thrive there.

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[Film Review] Stephen King on Screen (2023)
Review, Film Review, Horror Iona Smith / Senior Contributor & Events Organiser Review, Film Review, Horror Iona Smith / Senior Contributor & Events Organiser

[Film Review] Stephen King on Screen (2023)

Since Brian de Palma’s stellar triumph with his adaption of Carrie in 1976, people have been keen to turn Stephen King’s stories into film and television, with varying success. Some are incredible blockbusters, which the author himself hates (sorry Kubrick, King despises The Shining) whilst others are quietly released miniseries that become cult favourites (here’s looking at you 1990’s IT).

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