Horror Movie Review: The Curse of La Llorona (2019)
The Curse of La Llorona does nothing new and aside from the Latin American folklore villain, could be mistaken for any haunting horror ever.
The Curse of La Llorona does nothing new and aside from the Latin American folklore villain, could be mistaken for any haunting horror ever.
Annabelle Comes Home. Directed by Gary Dauberman, in his directorial debut, with a story by Dauberman and James Wan.
School of the Damned seems to want to be associated with the 1960 classic, Village of the Damned and 1964 follow-up Children of the Damned. However, misleading title, Britishness and mind-control aside, it has nothing to do with the two classic horrors.
With holidays around the corner, Riley and her friends prepare for a Christmas party. But when a masked stalker targets girls and goes on a killing spree, they decide to fight back.
Deathcember is made up of twenty four horror shorts that take a look at the darker side of the holiday season.
An anthology Christmas horror movie, Unholy Night is directed by Chris Chitaroni, Kristian Lariviere and Randy Smith.
Mickey & Jules are two amateur, petty criminals who are madly in love. After clumsily robbing a local gas station, they set off with the plan of leaving that lifestyle behind. Driving through the woods, their car runs out of gas. Jules spots a mailbox, and the couple discovers a large isolated house. What they find there will change their lives forever.
Yummy, a zombie horror comedy, doesn’t even try to freshen up the stink of the rotting flesh. Instead taking what we all know so well and making sure it’s as good as it could be. The end result is a fun zombie-romp with a deliciously dark ending.