Horror Movie Review: Lord of Misrule (2023)
Written by Tom de Ville and directed by William Brent Bell, Lord of Misrule reimagines the 16th century British folklore Christmas tradition as something far more sinister.
Written by Tom de Ville and directed by William Brent Bell, Lord of Misrule reimagines the 16th century British folklore Christmas tradition as something far more sinister.
Malice: Nu Gui comes from writer Chaz Fenwick, who co-directed the 45-minute film with Gustavo Diaz. Combining the modern world (specifically Brisbane, Australia) with the Chinese folklore surrounding the Nu Gui.
When Evil Lurks is a strong example of horror genre-bending that has a compelling story, using unoriginal elements to create something fresh, and levels of gruesome horror that is simply unforgettable.
Suitable Flesh comes from writer Dennis Paoli and director Joe Lynch, and is based off the 1937 H. P. Lovecraft short story, The Thing on the Doorstep.
Horror isn’t scary any more. Found footage is the worst. Hell House LLC Origins: The Carmichael Manor does a damn good job at proving those statements wrong.
Jamie travels back in time to 1987. Once there, she pairs up with her mother to catch the sweet 16 killer during their original spree and return to her timeline before she is trapped in the past forever.
Brynn finds solace within the walls of the home where she grew up until she’s awakened one night by strange noises from unearthly intruders.
Don’t Look Away is one of those really frustrating horror movies that starts off strongly and slowly gets worse as it goes on. Committing the sin of giving its villain basic rules to follow, then throwing them out the window as the film grinds to a halt.