Horror Movie Review: 10/31 Part 3 (2022)
10/31 Part 3 sticks to the formula set out by the previous two entries, being a collection of horror shorts all based around the spooky season.
10/31 Part 3 sticks to the formula set out by the previous two entries, being a collection of horror shorts all based around the spooky season.
A marked improvement over the first even if it follows the same formula, 10/31 Part 2 is another anthology. A collection of unconnected horrors that all share the theme of Halloween.
It doesn’t get more Halloween-y than this. 10/31 is an anthology horror movie consisting of five tales from different creators.
Pet Sematary: Bloodlines sees Paramount dragging the corpse of this franchise, burying it in the shallow depths of their personal cursed ground, and gleefully watching as it drunkenly staggers around afterwards. All while expecting it to make a ton of money with its shambolic performance.
Overly long and convoluted, On Halloween attempts to refresh the killer clown subgenre of horror but falls short in many important areas. Written and directed by Timothy Doyle, On Halloween stars Giselle van der Wiel, Aaron J. March, Telen Rodwell, and Terry Serio.
Written by Austin Frosch, who co-directed it Paul Dale, Killer Kites is a great example of how a ‘micro-budget’ horror flick can stand out simply because it refuses to take itself seriously at any point.
The Exorcist: Believer is the sixth instalment in the franchise to date, and while it’s not the worst entry (say hello Exorcist II: The Heretic), it’s an extremely bad movie.
Promising more than it can deliver, but still proving to be an effectively tense and mysterious blend of a thriller and a horror, Arctic Void comes from director Darren Mann, who co-wrote the story with Jay Kirk and William Paul Jones.