Horror Movie Review: Ghosts of Hiroshima (2022)
Writer and director Brandon Walker has a strong concept and a rich history to draw from with Ghosts of Hiroshima but disappointingly delivers a lacklustre paranormal found footage horror.
Writer and director Brandon Walker has a strong concept and a rich history to draw from with Ghosts of Hiroshima but disappointingly delivers a lacklustre paranormal found footage horror.
From Foreverus Productions comes the horror short, Neighbor. Where a woman has to deal with everyone’s favourite thing, a noisy neighbor.
From director Stephen Hall, who co-wrote the story with Tim Reynolds, comes The Gates. A Victorian horror movie that is 30-minutes too long and fails to use the wonderful Richard Brake to his full potential. A figurative crime.
Looking and feeling like the TV movie it is, but being far better than expected, Nightmare at the End of the Hall comes from writer Nora Zucker and director George Mendeluk.
From writer and director Jeff Seemann comes Terror Trips, a horror movie that promises so much and fails to deliver on pretty much anything. An engaging story, good characters, scares, or a satisfying ending. Putting it simply, Terror Trips is not a good movie.
What the Waters Left Behind: Scars isn’t better or worse than the original. Its sits alongside it as another nasty slice of Argentinian bleakness.
From director Alexanderthetitan comes Barbie. No, not THAT Barbie. Rather a twisted and horrifying version that is a little over four minutes long.
Apparently based on an untold true story, director Andre Alfa and writer Stephen George set up an interesting concept for the former’s directorial debut but mishandle it by delivering something that is mostly forgettable. Even if it has moments that shine.