Horror Movie Review: The Unfamiliar (2020)
The Unfamiliar looks to take the tired ‘paranormal’ themes of modern horror and add some new twists. Does it succeed?
The Unfamiliar looks to take the tired ‘paranormal’ themes of modern horror and add some new twists. Does it succeed?
Drawing from the likes of The Mist and Invasion of the Body Snatchers, The Beach House nails some aspects of what it is going for. Namely atmosphere and dread.
If there is one thing that Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein has in bucketloads, it is style. If there is one reason to watch this re-telling, it is for how beautiful it is at times. You’ll need that reason because there aren’t many others.
Sister Tempest sees director/writer Joe Badon outdo himself in the strange department resulting a film that is stylish as hell but lacks some of the substance seen in his previous work.
An iconic movie way that goes beyond its ‘video nasty’ tag. Blood Feast is the work of legendary splatter master, Herschell Gordon Lewis. A film that is considered to be the first ‘splatter’ movie and was impressively successful.
A flawed horror movie, Black Mountain Side’s biggest issue is that it doesn’t some to know what kind of movie it wants to be.
A very early slasher horror, The Haunted House of Horror is a very British 1969 film that was directed by Michael Armstrong. It stars Frankie Avalon and Jill Haworth, who along with some of their friends, head off to a supposedly haunted mansion in the English countryside.
The total lack of originality in Hollows Grove hurts it. It hurts it really bad. This isn’t just bemoaning the fact that it’s just another paranormal horror. Rather bemoaning the fact that it’s just another paranormal horror with a film crew in yet another abandoned building where bad things happened.