Shudder’s April releases are here and there’s some great options for horror fans!
Shudder’s April releases are here and there’s some great options for horror fans!
Samuel Goldwyn Films announced today that they have acquired festival award-winning horror film Head Count.
Larry Fessenden’s latest had its world premiere at What the Fest?! in NYC and I was lucky enough to see it. Come see how this stitched up story of Gods and Monsters turned out.
Just Friends is a fun and funny Dutch romantic comedy about two guys from different cultures falling in and out and in love together. Romantic comedy fluff, sure. But that’s just what I need.
Division 19 is full of fantastic world-building but lacking a cohesive narrative to pull it together.
Who else wants to lick frosting off of Ford’s hairy chest?
If there were ever a movie that reeks, it’d be Relaxer. A stoner comedy set on the cusp of Y2K, this might be the grossest movie I’ve experienced in a long time.
Hampered by a presumably low budget and filled with *terrible* CG, Critters: A New Binge still managed to have me cackling while shaking my head at the absurdity. Find out why in my review…
Lizardmen! Aliens! Beyoncé! Hairy butts! And….Henry Rollins?? The second episode of Now Apocalypse spirals down some rabbit holes. I always knew Beyoncé was too good to be of this earth, but a lizardwoman? Find out in my recap…
Stunningly filmed and audacious in its subject matter, Knife+Heart is essential queer cinema and has quickly become my favorite film this year, so far.
In this first episode recap, we meet our four lost souls, trying to make it in LA. What follows is a lot of sexy time and apocalyptic foreshadowing. Oh, and a lizard…thing. Read on!
Messy and slow, but completely moving, Starfish is a meditation on grief and deep depression that really hit home for this reviewer.
Check out this crowdfunding campaign for an 80s horror doc! This will be the only way to get your hands on it.
A very brisk creature feature mashed with what could have been an interesting character drama, Between the Trees just didn’t do it for me.
The first five episodes of Now Apocalypse are a sexy, funny and fun examination of the apocalyptic dating scene in LA, with hints of a darkening conspiracy on the horizon.
An uneven thriller set in the early 90s on a gay cruising trail, Devil’s Path has enough twists and turns to keep you interested, even as the characters won’t.
Level 16 subverts YA expectations with a decidedly dark story that surprised and thrilled me.