Horror Movie Review: The Devil’s Carnival (2012)
Directed by Darren Lynn Bousman and drawing from Aesop’s Fables. The Devil’s Carnival is on to a winner straight away, being a musical horror movie.
Directed by Darren Lynn Bousman and drawing from Aesop’s Fables. The Devil’s Carnival is on to a winner straight away, being a musical horror movie.
Written by James Hall and Oliver Frampton, with the latter also taking on directorial duties for his debut. The Forgotten is a British supernatural horror film.
Monsters in the woods – a tale as old as time. A Dark Path isn’t going to win any awards for originality. Unfortunately, it’s also not going to win any awards for entertainment or for being a satisfying horror movie.
For fans of extensive torture, mindless violence and plenty of blood and guts. Lasso delivers on all of those fronts. However, it lacks a well-told story, fleshed out characters and quality acting.
Scream of the Banshee is a SyFy original that takes the Banshee of Irish lore and gives it a different spin to middling results.
From the super-talented writer and director, Andrew J.D. Johnson and starring Julie Mainville comes Confessions of A Haunting. An under 3-minute short that will send a small shiver down the spine but is also saying something that is very easy to forget.
A softcore porno masquerading as a horror movie, Stormswept aims to be an erotic psychological thriller but misses the mark by some distance.
The Padre is retro-stylised, old-school gameplay-wise, horror game that does just about enough right to make it a decent play.