Celluloid Screams 2015 Review: He Never Died (2015)

By Ben Bussey Perhaps the greatest pleasure of the film festival experience is sitting down to watch a movie of which you have little to no advance knowledge, and wind up being taken totally unawares. Going into Sheffield’s Showroom Cinema for the Celluloid Screams screening of He Never Died, I basically knew nothing other than […]

Toronto After Dark Review: The Interior (2015)

By Keri O’Shea The first thing we find out about James (Patrick McFadden) is that he’s a guy who wears a cheap work suit like it’s doing horrible violence to him. He’s stressed, miserable, and what’s more, he’s not in good health either: suffering from double vision, numbness in his hands, and other symptoms which […]

Review: Night of the Living Deb (2015)

Review by Quin There is certainly no shortage of film titles consisting of puns. These films tend to either be porn films or comedies; but more accurately, parodies. Edward Penis Hands. Shaun of the Dead. Womb Raider. Poultrygeist: Night of the Chicken Dead. You get the idea. Well, now you can add Night of the […]

Review: Some Kind of Hate (2015)

By Ben Bussey My fellow horror fans, we have a firm contender for the best worst film of 2015. Just in case we need to make the distinction, I don’t mean to say Some Kind of Hate is a flat-out bad movie; those are the ones that tend to just leave you utterly cold and […]

Trick or Treat: Tales of Halloween (2015)

By Nia Edwards-Behi The recent resurgence in anthology horror films seems to have slowed down this past year or so. However, with Tales of Halloween, the subgenre’s given a bit of a shot in the arm, taking on a different format to other anthologies which string together a series of shorts with only a very […]

Review: Crimson Peak (2015)

By Tristan Bishop I think it’s fair to say that Crimson Peak is one of the most eagerly awaited horror films this year – Guillermo Del Toro’s first venture into darker territory since 2006’s Pan’s Labyrinth was bound to get people excited. Those of us who were left dismayed by the cancellation of his HP […]

Review: The Sand (2015)

By Ben Bussey Getting a bunch of pretty young people, dropping them in a single location and killing them off one by one has long been the standard for low-budget horror. Should you so happen to make that single location somewhere interesting and unusual, and make the deaths similarly distinctive, then you just might be […]

Review: The Slashening (2014)

By Tristan Bishop The Slashening cost $6,000 to make. It’s a horror comedy ‘tribute to Halloween, Black Christmas and Slumber Party Massacre’. It’s distributed by Troma. It’s called The Slashening. The signs aren’t great, really, are they? I may have said it before, but I don’t enjoy writing damning reviews of low budget films that […]