Horror Movie Review: Asylum: The Lost Footage (2013)
The documentary/found-footage combo that Asylum: The Lost Footage employs isn’t an inherently bad idea. It has been done well a few times but when it’s this lazy, few will want to bother again.
The documentary/found-footage combo that Asylum: The Lost Footage employs isn’t an inherently bad idea. It has been done well a few times but when it’s this lazy, few will want to bother again.
Kyle and Rachel Massy are taking part in a reality TV show that documents the 9th month journey of their pregnancy. However, something else is awaiting the birth eagerly too.
Six women reunite to rekindle their friendship having experienced an horrible event that left them scarred. The past is going to come back to haunt them though in The 6th Friend.
Amityville: Mt Misery Road is a horrendous watch. Horrible acting, shockingly poor dialogue, painfully boring and about as scary as Dora the Explorer.
Char Man is a found footage documentary that sees three men set out to create a fake documentary about the Ojai Vampire. It doesn’t go to plan but as luck would have it, the trio stumble across a different legend. The legend of the Char Man.
Flicker has guts. Written and directed by Aaron Hendren and starring Katy Houska, Babak Tafti and Kate Schroeder. It’s a quirky, sometimes amusing and well-acted low-budget horror flick.
Ripping off every slasher horror from the 80s, Valentine is a boorish and sub-par horror that confuses what a twist can be.
A SyFy original *shudder*, Chupacabra: Dark Seas was directed by John Shepphird who co-wrote it with Steve Jankowski. It stars John Rhys-Davies, Giancarlo Esposito, Dylan Neal, and Chelan Simmons.