Horror Movie Review: Hostel (2005)
Written and directed by Eli Roth, Hostel stars Jay Hernandez, Derek Richardson, Eyþór Guðjónsson, and Barbara Nedeljáková.
Written and directed by Eli Roth, Hostel stars Jay Hernandez, Derek Richardson, Eyþór Guðjónsson, and Barbara Nedeljáková.
Coming out the same year as the excellent cave-related horror, The Descent, The Cave had a much larger budget and a cast that included some well known names. It should have wiped the floor with The Descent but ultimately failed at the box office and is regarded as a below average movie.
For many this is where the ride started to get rocky but is Saw II really as bad as many would have you believe? The short answer is no but the long answer requires more analysis.
Ice Queen (also known as Avalanche Run) has three writers credited. One of which is director Neil Kinsella, which is not a good sign. It screams of half-baked ideas, rewrites and when the end result is Ice Queen everyone involved should feel a little embarrassed.
If you’re familiar with David DeCoteau as a director, you’ll already have an idea of what Killer Bash will be like. His range varies from terrible to passable with Killer Bash firmly sitting in the middle. However, his movies are often remembered for the homo-eroticism, something that also ranges from subtle to over the top.
A SyFy original *shudder*, Chupacabra: Dark Seas was directed by John Shepphird who co-wrote it with Steve Jankowski. It stars John Rhys-Davies, Giancarlo Esposito, Dylan Neal, and Chelan Simmons.
Lucy Lawless and vampire bats. No, it’s not an episode of Xena: Warrior Princess but a 2005 TV movie called Vampire Bats. Hold on tight, this is a rough watch.
Way before The Conjuring 2 creeped movie audiences with its demonic nun, an unknown Spanish-made horror came out that has somewhat of a similar premise.