Horror Movie Review: The Nest (2021)
The Nest (also known as The Bewailing) promises an unsettling experience that combines fear, anxiety, and body horror. A promise that it fails to live up to, even if it does enough to be a memorable watch.
The Nest (also known as The Bewailing) promises an unsettling experience that combines fear, anxiety, and body horror. A promise that it fails to live up to, even if it does enough to be a memorable watch.
A horror comedy from writer and director Justin Miller, Sleep. Walk. Kill. is almost a good film. One that rises above its ‘no-budget’ look and feel to deliver something fresh and interesting, but fails to land enough laughs and goes on for far too long.
There’s nothing wrong with a slow-burn movie, but Chatterbox takes that to such an extreme, its pace might be better described as lethargic.
Directed by Timothy Woodward Jr. and written by Patrick Stibbs, The Call has plenty to be positive about. Visually arresting, an intriguing story, and some great performances. Yet, the overall product ends up being unmemorable because it is trope heavy and runs out of steam in the final third.
Inspired by the Grindhouse revenge horrors and thrillers from the 1970s (I Spit On Your Grave/The Last House on the Left) with a touch of satanic supernaturalism, Hell Nurse is a grubby and gory film.
Don’t Look Away is one of those really frustrating horror movies that starts off strongly and slowly gets worse as it goes on. Committing the sin of giving its villain basic rules to follow, then throwing them out the window as the film grinds to a halt.
Written and directed by Kameron and Scott Hale, Free to a Bad Home is an anthology horror where every story links together and the wraparound serves more as a prologue and epilogue.
Inspired by the likes of Humanoids from the Deep and Creature from the Black Lagoon, Splatter Beach is a horror comedy that comes from the Polonia brothers, Mark and John.