? The 100 best horror movies of all-time? The best monster movies of all-time? The 31 best serial killer movies of all-time? The 40 best cult movies of all-time
blu Rise Of The Zombie movies
This sing-along zombie apocalypse, one of a mind-boggling seven movies Japanese director Takashi Miike released in 2001, may not have the sticking power of Audition. But any film inspired equally by Night of the Living Dead and The Sound of Music deserves your attention. Yes, the zombies do sing.
After watching this Spanish found-footage horror (and its delightfully unhinged sequels), you might think twice about your next holiday to Barcelona. Following a group of firemen and a film crew stuck in an apartment building, things quickly descend into bloody chaos. The claustrophobic nature of its single location, as well as the terrifying night-vision sequences and unexpected supernatural elements, will leave you chilled to the core. This is zombie-horror at its most inventive, gripping and scary.
Evil Dead Rise tells a twisted tale of two estranged sisters, played by Alyssa Sutherland and Lily Sullivan, whose reunion is cut short by the rise of flesh-possessing demons, thrusting them into a primal battle for survival as they face the most nightmarish version of family imaginable.
Together, our cast share stories of indie filmmaking adventures and the horror movies they love in a nostalgic love letter to a fantastic era of cinema, capping the critically-acclaimed, fan-favorite In Search of Darkness trilogy with a bang.
Satanic Panic Spreads: Unfounded concerns about rampant Satanism affecting children and teens through movies and music, fueled by far-right evangelical activists. Our cast, including Robert Englund (Actor - A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise), William Ragsdale (Actor - Fright Night II), and David Dastmalchian (Actor - The Suicide Squad) discuss how this only increased the success of demonic-themed/Heavy Metal content in horror!
Explore A World of Horror - In Search of Darkness: Part II gives world horror films the recognition they deserve, including the films and legacy of Italian legends such as Lamberto Bava, Lucio Fulci, and Dario Argento, and movies from Spain, Hong Kong, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, and beyond. Plus director Shinya Tsukamoto joins our cast to discuss the making of his cyberpunk horror cult classic Tetsuo: The Iron Man.
Our digital release of ISOD3 is for backers only, and pricing our film on Vimeo at the maximum Vimeo allows ($2000) discourages unauthorised purchases from non-backers and helps keep the experience exclusive.
Voodoo-Cursed Souls are cosmetic items for every class that transform them into zombies. They make the classes appear decayed and rotting, with dull green skin color. At least two of every class' limbs have exposed bones. In addition, Scout, Soldier and Heavy have some of their internal organs exposed, Engineer is missing most of his shirt and chest flesh, Sniper has his brain exposed under his hat, and Pyro and Spy have only their skeletons remaining. The souls also give special voice lines for the Scout and Soldier.
Robert Eggers excels at making weird, disturbing movies set in the past; movies that appear to perfectly invoke the aesthetic and atmosphere of the era they're portraying. Following "The Witch" and "The Lighthouse," Eggers is headed to 10th century Iceland with "The Northman," telling the tale of a Viking warrior (played by Alexander Skarsgård) who sets out to avenge his murdered father. While "The Northman" isn't exactly a horror film, it's certainly loaded with plenty of horrific elements, and Eggers' relationship with the genre makes this a film horror fans are going to want to seek out.
"The Hole in the Ground" director Lee Cronin is ready to unleash some fresh Deadites with "Evil Dead Rise." Original "Evil Dead" grandaddies Sam Raimi and Bruce Campbell are on board as executive producers, and this entry is considered to be canonical with the original franchise (and not the 2013 "Evil Dead" remake). But it's not going to be more of the same. While the other "Evil Dead" movies take place in secluded, rural settings, "Evil Dead Rise" is set in a Los Angeles apartment building, where two sisters have to deal with all sorts of unspeakable horrors after they discover the cursed book known as the "Necronomicon Ex-Mortis."
This list is designed for people who have just recently started getting into South Korean horror movies as well as those who have been fans of K-horror for years. It includes a variety of films ranging from the most popular and widely acclaimed masterpieces to fun hidden gems you might not have heard of. To help guide you in finding something new to watch, the list is broken up into the three major horror-related film genres South Korea is famous for.
The Wailing is a gore-filled horror film about a police officer investigating a series of murders in a small rural town. The perpetrators of the crimes all appear to suffer from some sort of horrible illness, but the locals have a different idea about what (and who) is behind the deaths. The Wailing is a great combination of mystery and bloody action, and its aggressively possessed monsters make it a perfect film for fans of movies like The Evil Dead (1981).
Consider that the one vaguely interesting moment in the film has to do with inner-city hood Kyle (Tyrese Gibson) revealing his inner good-guy by trying to save a toddler from a horde of zombie Shakers, then consider that nothing I just said makes any sense at all. Legion is a high-concept error. It has one idea in its head and instead of going somewhere fearful and trembling with it, it stages a cage-match between Michael and brother Gabriel (Kevin Durand), here armed not with horn but with a mechanical mace and bulletproof wings. Eat your heart out, Wim Wenders! Ending with the same portentous voiceover as The Terminator and leaving a single after-image, that of the great Doug Jones--dressed as an ice-cream vendor--turning into a spindly, spidery creature (it, again, makes no sense in whatever lore there is in the film, but what the hell), Legion proves that the biggest crime a movie like this can commit is having the temerity to have potential. It never would have been good, what with its awful acting, writing, and action--but squandering this probably accidental appearance of balls concerning the shortfalls in this 17th-century conception of an idle God only compounds its complete inadequacy with heartbreak.
Also regrettably, director Stewart and various cast and crew gather for a picture-in-picture film-length supplement that's really pretty nifty from a technological standpoint but is an ordeal to sit through for the wide gulf separating what the creative types think they've produced (and avoided) from the evidence unspooling beneath their proud proclamations. It's cool, let me reiterate, but it decorates an ultimately unworthy product. Stewart talks about the difference between surprise and suspense in the least interesting exposition since Hitchcock closed the book on any discussion of the terms in 1962; the whole time all we're thinking is that Legion looks and acts like a cheap piece of shit that wouldn't know what to do with a budget if it had one. F/X work is gone over in agonizing detail, as if anyone in the digital age is remotely amazed by the trickery employed in the creation of these little fantasies, and there's a lot of praise for the actors as well--indeed, it's full of words despite that there isn't much to say about the picture. Most disappointing is probably the filmmakers' complete lack of insight into the motivations of their God, either because nothing was ever sussed out on that front or because they're all too pussified to say anything. Called "Bringing Angels to Earth: Picture-in-Picture," this special feature also includes storyboards for a car chase/crash sequence that was done infinitely better in the shitty Jeepers Creepers sequel.
New to the Criterion Collection in 2021, this film edited and directed by Ramin Bahrani and co-written with Bahareh Azimi is a coming-of-age story set in the section of Queens known as the Iron Triangle. Ale is determined to provide a future for himself and his older sister (Isamar). Non-professional actors filled the cast and excelled. Cinematography by Michael Simmonds (see also The Lunchbox).Sunset Boulevard (1950) DVD & Blu-RayDirector Billy Wilder escaped the rise of fascism in the 1930s and became a Hollywood legend for his use of satire to highlight societal ills. Joe Gillis, a dead Hollywood screenwriter, narrates the story of his demise and that of the faded silent film star Nora Desmond. Watch at home and join the virtual discussion in February! 2ff7e9595c
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