Horror Movie Review: Mansion of the Doomed (1976)
Mansion of the Doomed is a schlocky slice of 70s exploitation horror that has some notable moments and an overall grim and grubby feel.
Mansion of the Doomed is a schlocky slice of 70s exploitation horror that has some notable moments and an overall grim and grubby feel.
Directed by John Lyde, written by Kurt Hale, and starring Corey Sevier, Eve Mauro and Jasen Wade, Osombie has to be a comedy horror, right? Right!? RIGHT!?
Directed by Bridger Nielson, Kinderfanger stars Angel Theory, Dmitrious Bistrevsky, Aiden Burkett, and Andi Chapman.
A ‘no-budget’ horror-comedy, Fangs Out is as cheap as they come. Every single part of it. Directed by Dennis Devine, who shares writing credits with Drake Cola and Randy Oppenheimer, Fangs Out is not a pretty film.
Written by Geno McGahee and directed by Louis DeStefano, Amityville Emanuelle does the surprising thing of actually trying to tie this movie’s horror into the original events, both real and imagined.
Called The Brotherhood III: Young Demons, and changing up the formula for something a little more horror, this latest entry is not only the weakest entry in the series so far, it’s also not befitting of the ‘b-movie’ name that DeCoteau is so famous for.
Once again, it is time to quiver in fear at the sight of cornfields rustling in the wind. Except this Children of the Corn movie is a reimagining of the story, and not a remake.
Described as a horror comedy, but missing the mark on both fronts, Lake Placid should have been the spiritual successor to the 1980 movie Alligator. Instead, it’s a boorish, plot-hole ridden, and disappointing watch with a baffling cast.