
Nightmares from Japan: Top 10 J-Horror Films
Japan has been churning out nightmare fuel for decades, long before Hollywood got its grubby little hands on it and…
Japan has been churning out nightmare fuel for decades, long before Hollywood got its grubby little hands on it and…
Some movies are bad. Some movies are so bad they’re good. And then there’s The Room—a film so incomprehensibly awful,…
There are bad movies. And then there’s Manos: The Hands of Fate—a film so aggressively incompetent that it barely qualifies…
Not every sequel is a nightmare—well, at least not in the bad sense. Some follow-ups in the horror genre amplify…
Robert Eggers is the master of cinematic weirdness, and his Nosferatu proves he’s not done haunting our dreams. A reimagining…
Hard to believe it’s been 40 years since A Nightmare on Elm Street first invited us into Freddy Krueger’s twisted dreamworld.
Heretic takes religious horror into psychological thriller territory with a simple yet sinister setup.
Samurai Cop is one of those films that you can not believe is not a parody, this low-budget action movie is a glorious mess from top to bottom.
The Blair Witch Project is a film that’s as much about the experience as it is about the story. It became a cultural phenomenon, and for good reason.
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is a long-awaited sequel that brings us back to Tim Burton’s wonderfully weird afterlife, but not without a few hiccups along the way.
Beetlejuice is one of those rare films that sticks with you—not just because of how out-there it is, but because it’s so much fun while being totally bonkers.
In a genre historically dominated by slasher icons and supernatural spooks, Jordan Peele has emerged as a powerful, genre-defying force.