Horror Movie Review: Ghoul School (1990)
Trying way to hard to be a ‘so bad it’s good movie’, the only thing Ghoul School accomplishes is being bad. Oh so very bad.
Trying way to hard to be a ‘so bad it’s good movie’, the only thing Ghoul School accomplishes is being bad. Oh so very bad.
Will Red be able to survive the Slasher House and find out why she was put in it? Will anyone care by time the credits roll?
Initially All Cheerleaders Die might appear to be nothing but a cookie cutter ‘mean girls horror’ lacking imagination. However, stick with it as what we have here as a wild ride of a movie that tries its hardest to subvert tropes and expectations.
From Matt Sears (director) comes a cosmic horror short entitled ‘The Sky’. A wonderful, gorgeous, surprisingly emotional and unsettling horror.
Behold the 1981 horror movie, Demonoid or Demonoid: Messenger of Death. A bland, poorly acted and far too serious horror movie about a demonic hand.
One of the most impressive things about Wyatt Michael’s fantasy horror, The Goblin is how minimalistic it is. Yet, it draws you in to the point where all of that is forgotten. Instead the focus becomes on the immense effort put in by everyone to captivate with its dark fantastical fairy-tale.
Written and directed by Corrado Farina and based on the Guido Crepax Valentina comic series. Baba Yaga stars Carroll Baker, Isabelle De Funès and George Eastman.
You can spot a SyFy movie a mile away most of the time. Low-budget, laughable effects, bad acting and a hilariously silly story, it’s the hallmark of a SyFy movie. All of that can apply to the frankly shockingly bad, Beast of the Alamo aka Chupacabra vs. The Alamo.