Horror Movie Review: Thorns (2023)
With Thorns, director Douglas Schulze has done a fantastic job of marrying religious dogma with an apocalyptic story, while also delivering on horror and gore.
With Thorns, director Douglas Schulze has done a fantastic job of marrying religious dogma with an apocalyptic story, while also delivering on horror and gore.
Written and directed by Tyler-James, The Loch Ness Horror asks the eternal question – what if The Loch Ness Monster was real and it was deadly?
Based off a Twitter thread created by Buzzfeed writer Adam Ellis in 2017, in which he describes his encounter with a ghost, Dear David is a ghostly goings-on horror movie. One that has a solid premise and a good lead actor, but falls apart when it comes to telling a coherent and frightening story.
The strengths of Faceless comes from a compelling horror mystery that keeps you guessing right up to the very end, and its ability to blur the lines of reality. Not only does the main character wonder what is real, but so does the viewer.
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.
It doesn’t get more Halloween-y than this. 10/31 is an anthology horror movie consisting of five tales from different creators.
The paranormal universe that is The Conjuring movies continues with the sequel to the spin-off based around the scary looking demon nun from The Conjuring 2. It’s The Nun II, the sequel to the 2018 movie, The Nun, and the eighth instalment in The Conjuring universe.
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.