Horror Movie Review: Tooth Fairy: Drill to Kill (2022)
Once again, directed by Louisa Warren (with a screenplay by Ben Daly), Tooth Fairy: Drill to Kill is a slight step back for the franchise but is still notably better than the first three films.
Once again, directed by Louisa Warren (with a screenplay by Ben Daly), Tooth Fairy: Drill to Kill is a slight step back for the franchise but is still notably better than the first three films.
Miss Leslie’s Dolls was released in 1973 and subsequently disappeared having been thought to be lost. Until 2018 when Network Distributing restored and released it. Now, everyone can experience the uniquely dated, brazenly bizarre and undeniably entertaining film.
A western horror blend, Night of the Tommyknockers tells a tale as old as time. A load of monsters are unleashed when greed gets the better of man.
It’s back to the 80s with a familiar but entertaining slasher horror. Girls Nite Out was directed by Robert Deubel, and stars Julia Montgomery, Suzanne Barnes, Rutanya Alda, and Hal Holbrook.
Written & directed by Vince Lopez, Red Christmas (not to be confused with the other Red Christmas that came out the same year starring Dee Wallace) is a micro-budget holiday slasher with a certain amount of lovableness to it.
Written and directed by Shaky González, and starring Tolo Montana, Thure Lindhardt and Zlatko Buric. One Hell of a Christmas is an apt title as if you watch it this festive season, you’ll have one hell of a bad time.
Written and directed by Alexander Ray Williams, A Quarantined Christmas is a minimalist Christmas horror that makes up for the lack of festive cheer by telling an effective paranoia-laced story.
Written by Joe Knetter, directed by Rebecca Matthews, and starring Beatrice Fletcher, Christophe Monplaisir, Julie Stevens, Andy Dixon, Patrick Bergin, May Kelly, and Stephen Staley. A movie called Nutcrack Massacre should not be this boring, yet here we are.