Okay, does anyone have a favorite #HorrorMovie that came out in the last year? (or yearish. I'm not going to say no to a recommendation because the movie's from 2022)
My preferences tend to be towards supernatural or sci-fi horror, but I'll take a good basic slasher from time to time.
I'm an A24 type person too, so weird indie films are especially good. Bonus points if it fucks with your head and makes you confused about what's real and what's not.
If you love horror movies please give my daughter's TeenHorrorCast a listen. She's so right that she, as a girl, had a really different take (and the right take I think) on this film than I did at first, and she changed the way I thought about it completely.
Look at that wonderful monster claw clutching a steering wheel. This is the kind of moment this monster fan lives for, and it comes from The Night Caller (1965).
Re-watched SEVEN FOOTPRINTS TO SATAN (1929) for the first time in 30 years, and for the first time in a good print with English intertitles. It seems that Abraham Merritt wept when he saw what had been done to his novel, and I can’t blame him, especially given the ending.
Full Review #Link Below--- This Suitable Flesh (2023) Review Has Dirk Diggler Now Working In An Ice Cream Store Where It’s Always Cold! Also, Children Find Him Off-Putting!
Efficient if unspectacular workplace #horror a la Severance or Mayhem, but in Swedish.
It doesn't take long before the killing begins as what was supposed to be a groundbreaking for a shopping mall/team building weekend turns into a race for survival as someone(s) decides this conference could use some dead bodies to spice things up.
Pretty straightforward #slasher with characters you don't care about whether they live or die and a killer with some really cumbersome headgear.
Most of the kills are adequate and there aren't too many dead spots to choke the runtime.
If you have a fetish for dead Swedes then this is right up your alley, or GRAND as they say in Sweden.
This is a Swedish film? How is there not a Skarsgard?
I had to move because my old instance is shutting down, so I guess I have to introduce myself all over again. I'm Amy, sometimes also known as Amelia and "that one weird girl"
What passed for "horror" in the 1980s was insipid and derivative with unimaginative & predictable plots. (All the camp teen impossible to kill killer movies). Yet perfectly sane and intelligent people think of them as "classics." Want a REAL psychological horror film? Try The Other (1972), Night of the Living Dead (1968) , 1999's The Sixth Sense, or Jordan Peele's Us.