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Tag: Horror movies

  • 13 Horror Movies For Scaredy Cats | The Mary Sue

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    Do you hate horror movies, but need to compromise with a friend who loves them and figure out something to watch? Take it from me, a proud wimp when it comes to spooky season. Here are some horror movies that I survived and liked even though I generally hate the concept of horror movies.

    First, let me give you a sense of my taste. There’s nothing worse than someone who loves hot sauce telling you something is “not that spicy” and setting you up for failure. The same goes for scary movies. Thrillers are fine by me. Gothic romance is encouraged. I can handle a couple of jump scares per film. I won’t be happy about them, and may look them up in advance; but they won’t ruin the movie for me. I don’t seek out franchises like Saw, The Conjuring, Paranormal Activity, Smile, and/or Scream. Those artsy “elevated horror” movies that are popular these days? I take those on a case-by-case basis. Finally, I’m not ashamed to read the Wikipedia summary first and get spoiled if I’m feeling anxious.

    The truth of the matter is that some great cinema lies in the horror genre and I don’t want to deprive myself of those experiences. So, without further ado: please accept these recommendations.

    The Shining (1980)

    Shelley Duvall in
    (Warner Bros.)

    The benefit to shuffling your feet and waiting too long to watch classic horror movies is that you often end up absorbing the scariest parts through cultural osmosis. Going into The Shining, I already had a sense of the horrors Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) was going to induce on his family. I knew about some of the bloody visuals. There are a couple of jump scares, but none so bad that I couldn’t handle it. Ultimately, the scariest thing about this movie is how misogynistic its villain is even before he gets possessed. Watch this as an important piece of adaptation/the Stanley Kubrick canon and so that you can then watch Mike Flanagan’s delightful and safely spooky Doctor Sleep!

    Jaws (1975)

    man looking straight ahead on a boat
    (Universal Pictures)

    Another benefit to waiting around to watch horror movies is that the special effects are, in the 21st century, hokey enough that you can remove yourself if you really want to. I’m not saying the special effects are bad. Yes, the whole *thing* about Jaws is that Spielberg and his crew found the scary by not showing the shark. And it is a scary movie. Just not the type of scary I can’t handle.

    Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)

    Leatherface swinging his chainsaw during sunrise in The Texas Chain Saw Massacre.
    (Bryanston Distributing Company)

    This is probably, in my humble opinion, the scariest film on this list. I was required to watch it in graduate school and not happy about it. So, imagine my surprise when I actually enjoyed myself. The original film about teenagers on a road trip who encounter a family of cannibals and a chainsaw-wielding villain called Leatherface, directed by Tobe Hooper, is worth it. It uses a funny framing device that falsely claims it’s based on a true story. Because I was in a classroom, I started taking note of the tropes that have become synonymous with the slasher subgenre and started in this movie. That kept me from getting too scared. Finally, there’s a genuinely funny scene in the middle that perfectly parodies the American nuclear family. If I hadn’t sucked it up and watched the film, I would have missed out!

    The Cabin in the Woods (2011)

    Dana in Cabin in the Woods.
    (Lionsgate)

    Speaking of tropes and jokes, The Cabin in the Woods is so meta that you’ll forget to be scared for laughing. Even the jump scares break the tension in a way that when your heart rate returns to normal, it’s funny. The film is a parody of slasher movies, like The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, about a group of young people getting picked off one by one. Certain plot developments explain why this is happening and why the young people are making such poor choices in harm’s way. The film critiques why audiences are so obsessed with watching hot young people get tortured on screen. Since this isn’t my favorite genre to begin with, I appreciated the commentary. Finally, it doesn’t hurt that the characters are so lovable!

    Get Out (2017)

    daniel kaluuya as chris in Get Out
    (Universal Pictures)

    Jordan Peele’s directorial debut had such good word-of-mouth that I had to see it in theaters. There wasn’t a world in which I missed out on that cultural moment. For the most part, the viewing experience is more uneasy than scary. I can handle sitting in a pool of dread and microaggressions that feel like little drops of acid. The fact that there’s so much to chew on thematically is the icing on the cake. It’s funny too and the cast is killer. Quick storytime about scaredy cats like me: because I loved Get Out, I watched and adored Nope. But I’m still a little too scared to see Us, even though I know it will probably be fine. Something we have to reckon with when it comes to choosing which horror movies that do and don’t work for us is that sometimes the reasoning is irrational.

    The Dead Don’t Die (2019)

    Austin Butler as Jack in The Dead Don't Die
    (Focus Features)

    This horror comedy is my zombie entry on this list. You’re probably already familiar with zombie comedies like Shaun of the Dead and Warm Bodies. Check out this one next! Director Jim Jarmusch, who is also responsible a melancholy vampire hang called Only Lovers Left Alive, knows how to keep it weird. The humor is dry as a bone, and another meta element that creeps in over time and helps distance you from the gore and destruction going on everywhere.

    The Silence of the Lambs (1991)

    Jodie Foster in The Silence Of The Lambs
    (Orion Pictures)

    The Silence of the Lambs is a psychological thriller with some tense sequences and a few bloody moments. You can handle it. It’s mostly the story of a female detective working against the clock to solve a mystery with the help of a serial killer who respects her intellect. It’s about people who are good at their job. That kind of movie can be comforting, even if the characters are going through the horrors. And if you love that Hannibal Lecter guy, have I got a canceled-too-soon series for you.

    Alien

    Sigourney Weaver as Ripley holds Jonesy the cat in 'Alien'
    (20th Century Fox)

    What’s this science fiction movie doing here? WRONG! The first Alien is a textbook horror movie. It’s basically about a haunted house. Just replace “house” with “spaceship” and “haunted” with “stalked by a killer extraterrestrial who wants nothing more than to kill and/or impregnate you” and you get this movie. Characters get killed off, one by one, in a confined space. That’s a horror movie! Ripley, the icon played by Sigourney Weaver, is a final girl. The alien itself is plenty scary, so I do reccommend looking up the plot for this one beforehand if you’re not spoiler averse. However, IMHO the scariest thing about Alien is the crew’s unwillingness to listen to a woman who is right. They lowkey deserve what they get!

    Sinners

    a man fighting
    (Warner Bros.)

    For whatever reason, I find vampire movies more palatable than other spooky scary creatures. Maybe it’s because, after growing up with Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Twilight, True Blood and the 1994 Interview with the Vampire made me feel like an expert in the lore. I’m prepared for anything. Until 2025, that is! Ryan Coogler’s Sinners was a phenomenon when it was first released in April 2025 and will hopefully get some love at the Oscars in 2026. The film is gorgeously shot. I know that even though I got scared and looked down a few of times. That’s what second and third viewings are for! The soundtrack is perfection. Coogler uses the vampire as a metaphor for cultural appropriation and assimilation into society, and that barely scratches the thematic surface of the film or reveal who the *real* enemy is by the end.

    American Psycho

    A wall street business man wrapped in plastic contemplates an axe in "American Psycho"
    (Lionsgate)

    You might not know it by the way some people, namely men, idealize Patrick Bateman, but this is a satire. I personally found it impossible to be scared during this movie because I was laughing at the ridiculousness of the yuppie lifestyle that American Psycho sends up in every scene. Now that we live in a society that is desperately trying to be the conservative, capitalist, consumerist 1980s once again (largely thanks to a certain leader who Bateman himself idolizes in the film and Brett Easton Ellis’ original book) this movie hits especially hard.

    Crimson Peak

    Tom Hiddleston and Mia Wasikowska in a scene from 'Crimson Peak'
    (Universal Studios)

    If you’re digging Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, you have to watch Crimson Peak. Drop everything and queue it up. This is one of those movies that got kind of buried because it was marketed as something that it was not. It’s not a traditional horror movie, and therefore early audiences and some critics got mad. But it’s an excellent gothic romance that’s spooky, sexy, and feminist. It’s all kinds of thrilling, basically. The film Jennifer’s Body is another great example of feminist horror that was tragically misunderstood when released. Why don’t people know what to do with scary movies for the girlies?!

    Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022)

    Four friends in Bodies Bodies Bodies.
    (A24)

    Bodies, Bodies, Bodies on the other hand did seem to find the right audience. This black comedy directed by Halina Reijn (also responsible for Babygirl) plays with slasher flick conventions and class commentary. “Eat the rich” movies were especially popular around that time in recent history. The Menu did a similar thing in 2022, and might have been a skosh more popular in certain cinephile circles. The Menu is also a skosh scarier! Stick to Bodies, Bodies, Bodies for some Gen Z violence and dark chuckles.

    Trap (2024)

    Josh Hartnett in 'Trap,' the new thriller from M. Night Shyamalan'
    (Warner Bros.)

    As a scaredy cat, I mostly appreciate M. Night Shyamalan as a filmmaker from afar. There are a lot of his films that I’m avoiding for a reason, and prefer to read about rather than check out. I don’t like to be scared and I don’t like to be tricked. Treats only, TYSM! But once I got wind that Trap was a hoot and a half, I was sold. And it is! What if a serial killer was trying to be a good dad? How long can you justify rooting for him instead of against him? It’s such a fun ride, and scary only when it really needs to be.

    (featured image: Universal Pictures/Lionsgate/Warner Bros./Bryanston Distributing Company)

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    Image of Leah Marilla Thomas

    Leah Marilla Thomas

    Leah Marilla Thomas (she/her) is a contributor at The Mary Sue. She has been working in digital entertainment journalism since 2013, covering primarily television as well as film and live theatre. She’s been on the Marvel beat professionally since Daredevil was a Netflix series. (You might recognize her voice from the Newcomers: Marvel podcast). Outside of journalism, she is 50% Southerner, 50% New Englander, and 100% fangirl over everything from Lord of the Rings to stage lighting and comics about teenagers. She lives in New York City and can often be found in a park. She used to test toys for Hasbro. True story!

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    Leah Marilla Thomas

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  • Horror Movie Mothers Who *Tried* Their Best

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    I can’t even begin to fathom how difficult it is to be a mother. I’ll say it’s a thankless job that many women absolutely thrive in, and I’ll leave it at that. It should come as no surprise then that the passion and pressure which comes with being a mom makes for great horror content.

    We see it time and time again in the genre, these powerful women who – for better or worse – are just trying to be the best mother they can be.

    We’ve compiled a batch of these iconic moms. Some are in protection/survival mode, some are motivated by revenge, and some are just pure helicopter parents. But they’ve all got one thing in common… Maternal instinct.

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    Zach

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  • The Scariest Horror Movies Hitting Theaters This October

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    Coyotes, Frankenstein, Dracula, and Twilight.
    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Everett Collection (Aura Entertainment, Ken Woroner/Netflix, 1-2 Special), Summit Distribution

    It’s been a scary-good year for theatrical horror, including some of the biggest hits of 2025. Sinners, Final Destination: Bloodlines, Weapons, and 28 Years Later are just a few of the films that have frightened moviegoers. And yet, despite the tear the genre has been on, and despite its now being spooky season, there aren’t as many high-profile horror titles as as you might expect there to be this October. Horror, as one of the few (mostly) reliable box-office bets, has taken over the rest of the calendar, leaving the lead-up to Halloween feeling a little bit lacking on the big screen.

    But just because there isn’t a Sinners or Weapons out ahead of All Hallows’ Eve doesn’t mean that there isn’t something waiting to scare you at the theater. There are plenty of smaller flicks, a couple of rereleases, and one studio sequel playing on big screens. Browse our full guide below, because horror always hits harder when you’re seeing it with an audience. (And don’t worry — we’ve got a guide to all the horror you can stream this month too.)

    Sage and Diego have rented a fancy house at the secluded and ominously named Bone Lake for what they hope will be a romantic getaway. However, another couple, Cin and Will, show up claiming that they booked the house too. They decide the place is big enough for all of them, but the double date soon turns into a psychological nightmare full of secrets, seduction, and twisty, pulpy, thrilling violence.

    Justin Long, who recently killed it in the 2022 horror movie Barbarian, plays a man living in the Hollywood Hills with his wife (Kate Bosworth) and daughter when a pack of extra-violent coyotes attack. “Killer animal attack” is a tried-and-true horror subgenre, and even the bad ones tend to be enjoyable in their own way, though the fact that the titular canids in this movie sure look AI-generated is a bummer.

    You can’t teach an old dog new tricks, but you can make a new sort of horror movie starring a dog. Indy, a very expressive Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever, is a loyal dog whose owner’s house is haunted, and Good Boy follows the pooch from his perspective as he encounters the various supernatural scares lurking in the night. (A cat would simply say, “That’s none of my business.”) Good Boy premiered at South by Southwest to good reviews.

    Elisabeth Moss plays an aging actress who tries to revitalize her fading career by changing up her look with the help of a wellness mogul (Kate Hudson). However, something sinister is going on, and there’s a monstrous secret behind the makeover. If that sounds a little familiar, consider that Shell had the misfortune of premiering at film festivals the same year as The Substance, which covers similar ground. Most reviews from the time say that the film has its own merits, however, with strong performances and a killer ending.

    Trick ‘r Treat was unceremoniously dumped straight to DVD in 2009, but the film — an anthology set on Halloween night that tells interlocking spooky tales starring Dylan Baker, Anna Paquin, and Brian Cox — managed to become a cult classic regardless. It’s finally getting a theatrical release courtesy of Fathom Entertainment. Just make sure you follow the rules of Halloween. Otherwise, Sam, the creepy trick-or-treater with a bag for a mask and a sharp lollipop, will get you.

    Scott Derrickson’s 2021 movie, The Black Phone, was a surprise box-office success, so it shouldn’t be a surprise that it’s calling back. Black Phone 2 once again stars Mason Thames as Finney. Although he became the first person to escape the child serial killer known as the Grabber (Ethan Hawke), thanks in part to the titular phone that let him speak to the murderer’s previous victims, it seems the Grabber’s not done with him yet. That’s extra scary considering the Grabber died at the end of the last movie.

    Guillermo del Toro’s take on Frankenstein will hit Netflix on November 7, but it’s alllllliiivvveeeeeee in select theaters in October. Doesn’t GDT’s production design deserve to be seen on the big screen? Oscar Isaac plays the titular doctor, Jacob Elordi plays his creation, and Mia Goth, Felix Kammerer, Charles Dance, and Christoph Waltz co-star.

    George A. Romero unleashed zombies all night, dawn, and day, but now his daughter, director Tina Romero, has found a new frontier for the living dead: a queer club. Queens of the Dead, which stars Katy O’Brian, Jaquel Spivey, Riki Lindhome, and Jack Haven, has a group of drag queens and club kids coming together to slay while they’re slaying the undead when a zombie outbreak strikes Manhattan. It’s campy, as you’d hope, but like her dad, Romero knows how to make sure her zombie movie has teeth, too.

    From Neon, Shelby Oaks follows a woman, Mia (Camille Sullivan), who is attempting to find out what happened to her sister (Sarah Durn), who went missing 12 years earlier while she was doing some paranormal investigating of an abandoned town. When Mia heads to Shelby Oaks, she encounters new horrors and uncovers demonic memories from her childhood. The movie is a finale of sorts to a YouTube Channel called Paranormal Paranoids, which also starred Durn, though one doesn’t need to have watched the four-year-old video series before seeing Shelby Oaks.

    There have been a lot of Dracula movies, most of which more or less follow the same basic beats. Romanian director Radu Jude’s Dracula is not one of those “normal” Draculas. It’s a proudly gonzo comedy horror — brilliantly vulgar, silly, and singular moviemaking.

    Is Twilight a horror movie? Or is it just scary that it’s been 20 years since the first Twilight book came out? Edward Cullen doesn’t age, but you’re getting older. Something to think about. All four movies, Twilight, Eclipse, and both parts of Breaking Dawn, will be in theaters, one night only for each, starting October 29.

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    James Grebey

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  • Emma Thompson Produces Her Own Career Nightmare In ‘Dead of Winter’

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    Emma Thompson braves the frozen wilderness in “Dead of Winter,” a hackneyed horror film that traps the Oscar winner in subzero temperatures and an equally chilling screenplay. Courtesy of Vertical

    Like almost every other actor of renown in today’s diminished world of second-rate movies, Emma Thompson is forced to face the challenge of inventing her own projects to keep her film career alive. This now includes starring in a hackneyed, uninspired dime-a-dozen horror film called Dead of Winter. She also produced it herself. Times are bad all over.


    DEAD OF WINTER★ (2/4 stars)
    Directed by: Brian Kirk
    Written by: Nicholas Jacobson-Larson & Dalton Leeb
    Starring: Emma Thompson, Judy Greer, Marc Menchaca, Gaia Wise, Cuan Hosty-Blaney, Dalton Leeb, Paul Hamilton, Lloyd Hutchinson & Brian F. O’Byrne
    Running time: 97 mins.


    In this waste of a great actor’s talent and intelligence, she plays an aging, gun-toting hag unwisely revisiting an old fishing hole her late husband loved to spread his ashes. On a snowy road in the frozen wastes of northern Minnesota, her truck breaks down in a storm and when she hikes through drifts of ice up to her eyeballs seeking warmth and shelter in an abandoned shack in the wilderness, she finds a young kidnap victim handcuffed to a frozen basement pipe by a pair of married of demented killers (Judy Greer, especially menacing as the wacko wife) for reasons that are never convincingly explained. The movie is about the old woman’s futile efforts to save the girl from an endless series of assaults and tortures, narrowly escaping near death at every turn. It’s a preposterous story to follow, but thanks to the expertise of Emma Thompson, it keeps you interested.

    Shot, slashed, bleeding, and half frozen to death, she copes remarkably well, fortified by memories of her happy marriage and her ability to keep a fire going in a deserted cabin, medicate her gunshot wounds and sew the pieces of her arm together (“Just like sewing a quilt,” she quips through the pain.) The white backdrop of constant snow and zero temperatures also add to the intensity of the winter ambience with enough discomfort that your teeth will chatter just looking at it. The movie is a far cry from the star’s collection of elegant Jane Austen period pieces, but Ms. Thompson is always worth watching, even when she’s wasting her time—and ours.

    Unfortunately, the sloppy screenplay by Nicholas Jacobson-Larson and Dalton Leeb asks more questions than it answers, deriving most of its style from Fargo. Knowing the territory, why did Ms. Thonpson’s character choose the Midwest’s worst season to spread ashes from a dilapidated truck not safe to drive, even in the best weather? What did the kidnap victim do to get captured? Where are the vicious kidnappers going, and why? Director Brian Kirk does nothing to explain, elaborate or justify. Worse still, the two lunatic villains are identified as fentanyl addicts, but that doesn’t explain why the female half of the team goes through most of the movie with as many as five hypodermic needles at a time lodged in her tongue.

    What attracted such a fine actress as Emma Thompson to so much carnage in the first place is anybody’s guess. According to the end credits, Dead of Winter is set in Minnesota but filmed on location in Finland, Germany and Belgium, when all it takes is one snow-covered backyard in New Jersey.

    Emma Thompson Produces Her Own Career Nightmare In ‘Dead of Winter’

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    Rex Reed

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  • Can The Conjuring: Last Rites Conjure Up More Box-Office Milestones?

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    Our big winner.
    Photo: Giles Keyte/Warner Bros.

    Hail, Bathsheba, The Conjuring franchise had a killer opening weekend at the box office. Over the course of the post–Labor Day weekend of September 5, The Conjuring: Last Rights made $194 million internationally, per Variety. That means it beat out 2017’s It, which scored $190 million, to become the best opening ever for a horror movie. The film also had the best box-office weekend ever for a film in the Conjuring franchise, which includes not only other Conjuring films but also the successful film The Nun and three Annabelle movies.

    The movie’s wild success extends an all-timer run for Warner Bros.: The studio is now the first to have seven movies in a row debut at over $40 million, per Variety. The studio’s hot streak began with A Minecraft Movie, after which it scored consecutive hits with Sinners, Final Destination Bloodlines, F1, Superman, Weapons, and now Last Rites. That’s a lot of achievements in just one weekend. Below, find a list of every record The Conjuring: Last Rites could exorcise as it continues its run.

    By its third weekend, The Conjuring: Last Rites passed $322 million worldwide. It is now the highest grossing of the direct “Conjuring” films, beating out 2016’s The Conjuring 2. It has now also passed The Nun, which made $366 million in 2018. Big Annabelle is really, really big.

    Until now, Ryan Coogler’s Sinners was the highest-grossing horror movie of 2025 internationally, with $365 million total. The Conjuring: Last Rites has made $372.9 million globally in its third week, becoming the highest-grossing horror movie of the year.

    The highest grossing-horror movie of all time is the 2017 adaptation of It, whose opening-weekend record Last Rites already beat. Now, the question is if Last Rites will have the same legs as It. That movie ultimately made $702 million at the global box office. From here, The Conjuring will still have to magic up a significant sum to beat that high, but it’s already done it once. Don’t bet against Bathsheba.

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    Jason P. Frank

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  • Cinemark Has Fans Conjuring up Some Popcorn Outta That Anna-Bussy

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    Can we all just admit that it’s totally intentional at this point? These popcorn buckets are well out of hand. From the Dune 2 monster p*ssy to the glory hole Deadpool & Wolverine, there’s no limit to what perverted vessel we’ll be eating out of these days.

    With the latest installment of Annabelle’s story, The Conjuring: Last Rites hitting theaters on September 5th, studios had to up the ante.

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    Zach

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  • A Spooky Guide to All the New Horror Streaming in October

    A Spooky Guide to All the New Horror Streaming in October

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    This article will be updated throughout October as more horror offerings become available on streaming services.

    It’s the best time of year again! As the leaves start to fall and high temperatures drop, we turn to horror movies to kick off the seasonal shift — and the streamers answer the call. The powers that be at companies like Netflix, Hulu, and Peacock understand that horror has always been one of the top performers on streaming services, which is never truer than in the weeks leading up to Halloween. This year, almost every streaming service has an interesting new offering for anyone looking for a chill in their bones to match the one in the air. Some of these have already premiered at film festivals like Toronto and Fantastic Fest, while others are still tantalizingly unknown quantities. We picked out 12 of the most interesting ones for your calendar, with another 12 alternates for the real genre completists.

    October 3, Hulu

    It wouldn’t be October without Sarah Paulson haunting your streaming algorithms, but she’s actually not involved in the recent Ryan Murphy projects Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story or Grotesquerie. Instead, she’s leading a new Hulu original horror film that premiered at the end of the Toronto International Film Festival last month. Set in 1930s Oklahoma, Hold Your Breath is a story of a terrifying dust storm which a young mother asserts hides a supernatural entity that means her harm. It co-stars Emmy winner Ebon Moss-Bachrach (The Bear), and critics praised Paulson’s work out of Toronto. Of course they did. She almost never misses.

    October 3, Max

    Creatives keep returning to Stephen King’s second novel, now almost four decades old. Tobe Hooper made an underrated miniseries version in 1979, and the less said the better when it comes to the Rob Lowe take from 2004. This film version really sparked to life after the success of It in 2017, when every studio went looking for a King classic to remake. The Conjuring mastermind James Wan was attached as a producer from the beginning, as was writer-director Gary Dauberman, who wrote the two movies about the murderous clown. Starring Lewis Pullman of Lessons in Chemistry, the tale of a writer who returns to his hometown to find it overrun by vampires was actually shot years ago and was set to be released in September 2022. COVID reportedly delayed postproduction and then the notoriously weird things going on over at Max/WB appeared like they could bury this film forever à la Coyote vs. Acme. It seems like it took King himself asking questions in February 2024 to get the film a release date. It’s also worth noting that it opened the famous genre celebration Beyond Fest late last month, usually a sign that there’s something worthwhile about to drop.

    October 4, Netflix

    The biggest deal to come out of Sundance this year wasn’t for a clever comedy about a family coming to terms with one another — it was for the film that Netflix hopes will be the next huge horror hit for the streaming company. That’s why they paid $17 million for Greg Jardin’s It’s What’s Inside, though the director doesn’t exactly embrace the genre branding, telling producer Colman Domingo that “it’s a sci-fi thriller with jokes.” What’s the killer concept that broke the bank in Park City? At a pre-wedding party of close friends, one shows up with a body-swapping machine, leading to revelations, betrayals, and what Jardin calls “existential chaos.” The key to the film’s likely success is that it doesn’t sound like anything else on any of the streamers, and standing apart from the genre crowd is sometimes the best thing a new movie can do.

    October 4, Netflix

    Five years after the original took Netflix by storm, Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia returns with The Platform 2, a sci-fi-horror sequel that promises to expand on the many ideas brought up by the first movie. The Platform cleverly imagines a future prison system wherein vertical housing facilities include a massive platform that runs down their center and contains enough food for everyone to survive, presuming those close to the top leave enough for those close to the bottom. Of course, that’s not how society works. The Platform was a sharp, grisly piece of work that seemed extra dark as most of us watched it in the early days of the COVID lockdown — and there are so many directions in which a sequel can go, making this easily one of the most interesting original streaming productions of the entire year, not just October.

    October 10, Starz

    Ella Purnell has become a reliable force in television, first stealing scenes in Yellowjackets and then anchoring the gigantic Fallout for Prime Video. Her latest for Starz sees her in a new register in this adaptation of the book by C.J. Skuse about an ordinary woman who is pushed to extraordinary extremes by the many people around her who ignore her. Purnell plays Rhiannon Lewis, a bored, annoyed, average woman who struggles at work and in romance. Unlike most people, Rhiannon takes drastic, murderous action, eliminating those who have brought her life down. This U.K. import doesn’t really sound like anything else premiering this season, which might help turn it into the cult hit that Starz could really use this time of year.

    October 10, Peacock

    Even after two episodes premiered at Fantastic Fest, little is known about this promising new Peacock offering, but the pedigree is undeniably impressive. It’s a new series based on the novel Stinger by Robert R. McCammon, a big name in ’80s and ’90s horror. (It’s kind of a deep cut, but there’s an amazing episode of the ’80s reboot of The Twilight Zone called “Nightcrawlers” that was adapted from one of his short stories. There’s a reason it’s on this list.) It was produced by James Wan, the mastermind behind The Conjuring universe, and it stars Yvonne Strahovski (The Handmaid’s Tale) and Scott Speedman (Felicity), along with some other interesting character actors. It seems like the kind of project that’s going to be better appreciated the less we know about it, so let’s just say that it’s about a rural ranch in Georgia, where bad things start to happen. That’s enough for us.

    October 11, Shudder

    Benjamin Barfoot’s nightmare fuel was one of the few films at Fantastic Fest this year that was legitimately creepy, and it’s making a quick turnaround to Shudder to keep everyone up at night. Rupert Turnbull plays a young man named Isaac whose father dies in a car crash, leaving him alone at an isolated estate in the middle of nowhere with a stepmom who never really wanted to be a single parent. Before the domestic drama can really unfold, Isaac is visited by something that has the same head as his father. Elements of folk horror and science fiction blend into a singular vision, a study of grief that’s unlike anything else on Shudder right now. It’s a movie that will haunt you, especially when you’re alone late at night and you could swear you just heard or saw something that shouldn’t be there.

    October 18, Peacock

    Creative people will never tire of mining the awfulness of the satanic panic for horror or even dark comedy. It’s hard to be sure exactly where this one will fall on the genre spectrum, but the involvement of Julie Bowen and Bruce Campbell suggests it may be a little tongue-in-cheek in its telling of the disappearance of a varsity quarterback in small-town America in the 1980s. With townspeople convinced that the athlete was sucked up by the waves of satanism spreading across the country, a group of outcasts in a band named Dethkrunch decides to lean into the panic, turning the members into targets themselves. It sounds fun, and all eight episodes drop on Peacock on the same day.

    October 18, Shudder

    One of the best films of Fantastic Fest is a oner that owes a great deal to films like Victoria and [REC], but it’s also got the energy of a George A. Romero telling of the end of the world. Yeah, it rules. David Moreau, who wrote the awesome Ils (Them) from 2006, directs this truly bonkers movie that unfolds in real time over about 90 minutes of escalating horror. It starts when a bandaged, bloody woman jumps into the car of a young man named Romain. After she gets her blood all over him and promptly disappears, Romain starts to act, well, abnormally. But the party must go on. As whatever twitchy, zombie-esque disease this woman was carrying spreads, it becomes clearer that no one is making it out of this night alive. This is a smart, fast-paced movie that’s almost certainly going to become the kind of thing that someone tells you to watch after they discover it on Shudder. Get on the bandwagon early.

    October 18, Netflix

    Anna Kendrick proves herself to be a nuanced director with her debut, a film that’s closer to thriller than horror compared to most on this list, but it’s chill-inducing enough to qualify. Kendrick also stars as Cheryl Bradshaw, a woman who appeared on The Dating Game in 1978, where she was paired with a seemingly ordinary guy named Rodney Alcala. Later, it was revealed that Alcala was a serial killer, and Kendrick uses this encounter to unpack Alcala’s subconscious and how a culture that casually tosses off phrases like “get the girl” may feed into the worldview of the insane. It’s about systemic misogyny in a way that’s not preachy, and it’s a tightly wound thriller (only 94 minutes!) that will almost certainly become one of the biggest Netflix streamers of the year.

    October 18, Apple TV+

    Consider this a tasty appetizer before the full meal that will be Robert Eggers’s take on Nosferatu (in theaters on Christmas Day). The main reason to be excited about this fascinating project is the involvement of Doug Jones, the physically brilliant actor from HellboyThe Shape of Water, and Pan’s Labyrinth. He plays the title character in David Lee Fisher’s version of the 1922 silent original, shot scene by scene as the same story but with a new cast and green-screen technology designed to heighten the experience. It promises to feel old and new at the same time, something out of place, kind of like Nosferatu itself.

    October 21, Hulu

    Excuse me, did you say “sentient pumpkin”? Arguably the weirdest project of Spooky Season 2024, this original film is reportedly about a murderous pumpkin that stalks a group of young people on Halloween when they get stuck in a historical reenactment village. Will it be a comedy? Are we supposed to take a murderous pumpkin seriously? It’s too soon to tell, but major points for originality here. It might not be great, but it won’t be like anything else. Think twice before you carve yours this year. You wouldn’t want to make it mad.

    The Bad Guys: Haunted Heist (Netflix, October 3) — The hit books by Aaron Blabey were turned into a huge film for DreamWorks in 2022 but are becoming seasonal staples for Netflix as their 2023 holiday special is now joined by a Halloween outing.

    House of Spoils (Prime Video, October 3) — Oscar winner Ariana DeBose plays a rising chef who opens a new destination restaurant in a remote house that just might have ghosts on the menu.

    V/H/S/Beyond (Shudder, October 4) — If it’s October, there must be a new V/H/S. This one includes segments directed by Justin Long and Kate Siegel, from a script by her husband, Mike Flanagan.

    Caddo Lake (Max, October 10) — M. Night Shyamalan produces this original thriller about a missing girl near the titular lake, an actual hotbed of supernatural activity on the border between Texas and Louisiana.

    Mr. Crocket (Hulu, October 11) — A children’s-TV-show host in the ’90s comes out of TV sets to kidnap children and murder their parents in this Hulu original film.

    Family Guy Halloween Special (Hulu, October 14) — A Hulu exclusive special for the Griffin clan that features star du jour Glen Powell as the king of the annual Quahog pumpkin contest.

    American Horror Stories (Hulu, October 15) — Five new episodes in the AHS anthology series that include appearances by Michael Imperioli, Henry Winkler, June Squibb, Jessica Barden, and more.

    The Shadow Strays (Netflix, October 17) — Timo Tjahjanto is one of the craziest action directors alive, helming The Night Comes for Us and The Big 4, among others. His latest isn’t horror but has such a massive fake-blood budget that it qualifies for a list like this one.

    MaXXXine (Max, October 18) — Ti West closes out his trilogy with Mia Goth, which includes X and Pearl, available exclusively on Max.

    Trap (Max, October 25) — M. Night Shyamalan’s divisive latest lands on Max just in time for those looking to perfect their Lady Raven costumes for a Halloween party.

    What We Do in the Shadows: Season Six (FX on Hulu, October 22) – The final season of the hit FX show that’s basically “Real World With Vampires” launches just before Halloween.

    Hellbound: Season Two (Netflix, October 25) – The first season of this Korean nightmare fuel about creatures basically escaping hell aired way back in 2021 and finally returns to pick up the pieces three years later.

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    Brian Tallerico

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  • 30 Great Black-and-White Horror Movies Worth Revisiting

    30 Great Black-and-White Horror Movies Worth Revisiting

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    Photo: Living Dead Media, Paramount Pictures, Universal Pictures and Allied Artists Pictures

    This story originally ran in 2018 and is being republished for Halloween.

    For nearly as long as there have been movies, there have been horror movies. The genre was there from the start, luring in audiences who wanted to witness things they’d never thought they wanted to witness before. Vampiric monsters, ghastly apparitions, human abnormalities — they were all the stuff of nightmares a century ago, just as they are today.

    Many of the titles on this list of great black-and-white horror movie are well-known classics, others are smaller cult favorites, and a couple are recent works from directors who appreciate the potential power of black-and-white cinema. But they’re all worth revisiting this Halloween season.

    Widely considered the earliest example of horror cinema and the quintessential piece of German expressionism, Robert Wiene’s The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari is a stylized nightmare of sharp angles, abstract locations, diagonal staircases, and violent landscapes. The stark contrasts between the black-and-white colors are jarring to the eye, and add a layered intensity to the psychological delusions experienced by the audience. Perceptions of the world around are mangled by the visual stimuli, resulting in a horrific film that successfully captured the fear and mistrust of the isolated post–World War I culture that created it.

    Released at the height of German expressionist cinema, Nosferatu was an unauthorized adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula, and was almost lost forever after Stoker’s heirs sued over the adaptation and a court ruling ordered that all copies of the film be destroyed. Fortunately, a few copies of the film survived. Director F.W. Murnau was an innovator, combining built sets with real locations and adding a new layer of realism to the vampire tale, as well as trick photography to present Count Orlok as truly otherworldly. It’s an infamous work of art, and its messages about political unrest and illness epidemics serve as the beginning of horror as social commentary.

    By definition, Paul Leni’s The Man Who Laughs is not a horror movie, but a romantic drama not unlike The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Still, as a major influence on the later Universal Monster movies and the inspiration for the DC Comics’ illustrations of the Joker in the Batman comics, The Man Who Laughs’ legacy far surpasses its initial introduction as a German romance film. Largely due the startling features of the titular character (not to mention the looming gloom that surrounds him), the film’s imagery leaves the viewers with a deep level of dread.

    Among the most iconic of all black-and-white horror films, the talkies of Universal Monster Movies (Frankenstein, Dracula, The Wolf Man, The Mummy, The Invisible Man, Creature From the Black Lagoon, and Bride of Frankenstein) all established the building blocks for what would shape the modern horror film. Creatures were used as a vehicle to tell stories about xenophobia, sexuality, challenging God, questioning one’s identity, the inherent violence of mankind, and the fear of the unknown. Even in monochromatic tones, the Universal Classic Monsters painted worlds of horror, eliciting horror through trailblazing cinematic techniques rather than relying on the splatter or gore that would define the genre in later years.

    Banned in Britain until the 1950s and easily one of the genre’s most controversial and ethically questionable films, Tod Browning’s Freaks serves as an examination of the monstrous extremes of human nature, forcing audiences to question their preconceived perceptions of those that appear different than the “norm.” Browning was fresh off of the success of Dracula when he made Freaks. The final moment of the film remains one of the most shocking endings in pre-code horror history, and takes a stance now common in horror: that sometimes the worst monsters are those that walk among us, undetected.

    As one of the first examples of an “animals run amok” horror film, Murders in the Zoo was extremely graphic for its time, and remains to be a rather distressing film by even today’s standards, due in large part to the footage showing the depressing state of zoos in the 1930s. Animals are crying out for food and kept in iron-clad cages, and at one point, they legitimately fight one another. In the film, a maniacal zoologist grows increasingly jealous of his unfaithful wife and decides to utilize live animals as a weapon to achieve “the perfect murder.” Barely over an hour long, the film unsuccessfully tries to marry horror and comedy together, but does provide one of the most jarring opening sequences of a film from this era using a man’s mouth, a needle, and some thread.

    One of the first true low-budget horror success stories was also the saving grace of the financially failing RKO Studios. Perhaps the film’s greatest contribution is the iconic “bus scene,” a moment filled with such intensity that it serves as the premiere example of what would later become known as “jump scares.” It continues to serve as one of the most effective scares in horror history. Billed with a no-name cast and serving as the start of horror-producer extraordinaire Val Lewton’s career, Cat People was a revolutionary landmark in horror cinema.

    Satanism and lesbianism go hand in hand in another Val Lewton–produced masterpiece. Part noir, part horror film, The Seventh Victim is one of the first movies to treat women in horror as fully fledged people with their own thoughts and desires, allowing them full agency. The women are strong-willed, mouthy, and uncharacteristically bold in this pulp staple. Ultimately, it’s suggested that the power of these women comes from their participating in a Satanic cult, but since the film renders male participation to be all but useless, it deserves a rewatch by contemporary eyes.

    What is perhaps one of the first haunted-house films to treat ghosts as legitimate threats and sources of horror, the British-made flick has largely gone unnoticed by American audiences. That’s a crime: It’s one of the titles that Guillermo del Toro cites as having a major impact on his own filmography. The Uninvited boasts high-caliber acting performances and, crucially, practical in-camera ghost effects that rely on lighting, sound, and wind machines. It’s moody, it’s creepy, and while it may not deliver the scares today like it did then, a rewatch showcases an influence that can still be felt.

    Before horror anthologies became a subgenre of its own, there was Ealing Studios’ Dead of Night. Connecting five different stories from British filmmakers and a wrap-around, the film is a psychological creepfest and delivers what is arguably the best work of director Charles Crichton. In the film’s climactic ending, we’re introduced to a story involving a ventriloquist dummy that set the stage for just about every inanimate-object-that’s-actually-alive film moving forward. Even today, the cold, dead eyes of the sinister dummy serve as nightmare fuel.

    I’m possibly cheating to include this film on the list, but The Picture of Dorian Gray is one of the first to showcase black-and-white as an aesthetic choice rather than a filmmaking necessity; four-color inserts of three-strip Technicolor were used for Dorian’s portrait, utilized as a special effect in a black-and-white world. Having that isolated moment of Technicolor heightens the horror of seeing Dorian’s painting age while he himself remains youthful. The film is a triumph in deep-focus cinematography, and earned Angela Lansbury her second Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress (not to mention her first Golden Globe win in the same category).

    As interest and popularity in horror movies began to wane, studios struggled to breathe new life into what had been one of their most profitable sectors. Enter the horror-comedy. While plenty of old movies attempted to add levity to horror, Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein set the standard for horror-comedies and left an impact that’s still emulated decades later. By adding Bud Abbott and Lou Costello to pal around with established monsters like Lon Chaney Jr. and Bela Lugosi, Universal struck gold and spawned a franchise.

    One of the first of the 1950s “nuclear monster” films, and the first “big bug” feature, Them! was a monumental success for Warner Bros. pictures, and one of the best examples of what would become the science-fiction subgenre. Borrowing elements of horror as well as influence from the Japanese kaiju flicks, Them! is one of the earliest examples of genre fusion under the horror umbrella. The film avoids the tropes that would become popularized in later B-movie cinema, opting instead to treat the gigantic ant monsters as legitimate threats and presenting the horror as sincere.

    The unfortunate truth of Charles Laughton’s The Night of the Hunter is that this is easily one of the best horror thrillers ever made, and easily one of the most forgotten. It’s the sole directorial effort of Laughton and stars Robert Mitchum, a prominent anti-hero of the noir movement who often played second banana. However, The Night of the Hunter is compelling, visually stimulating, and downright thrilling. It’s a film that feels so far ahead of its time that it would play better for today’s audiences than it surely did during the mid-50s.

    Although not the best rendition of the Body Snatchers story, the original 1956 incarnation is one of the best examples of a sci-fi–horror film rooted in reality, preying on the human fear that we are far more vulnerable to destruction than we’d like to believe. Released at the peak of Cold War and Red Scare paranoia, the political roots of Body Snatchers were far less ambiguous than the films that came before it, and the film successfully solidified the relationship between politics and horror.

    Stream on the Roku Channel

    William Castle’s magnum opus, The House on Haunted Hill is one of the greatest haunted-house movies of all time. An eccentric millionaire played with perfection by Vincent Price offers $10,000 to anyone who can spend a night in the titular mansion, the site of a plethora of murders. The participants are faced by a ceiling dripping blood, a severed head, a vat of acid in the cellar, and the iconic skeletal apparitions that walk on their own. While a fantastic movie in its own right, The House on Haunted Hill’s more prominent legacy is rooted in Castle deciding to gear his horror films to a teenage market, a trend that horror films followed moving forward.

    Georges Franju’s ghastly yet dreamlike examination of the quest for physical perfection, the social value placed on women’s appearances, and guilt. Once a respected surgeon, Dr. Genessier now lives in isolation, experimenting on animals and helpless women lured to him by his faithful nurse and lover Louise. The film is startlingly graphic and drips with art-house elements that greatly influenced filmmakers that followed. Eyes Without a Face is presented in stark black-and-white, but the surreal visual imagery added a muted softness to the chaotic horror within.

    Master of horror Mario Bava began his career with Black Sunday, an Italian gothic masterpiece and easily his most celebrated work. With sex appeal, Bava builds a horrific landscape enhanced with slick camera work and intense black-and-white contrasts. The film plays around with both vampire and witch mythology, which eventually leads to a spiked mask being hammered into a woman’s face. The visual of Barbara Steele’s pale skin covered in deep, black holes has become an iconic image from classic horror, perfectly exemplifying her role as both attractive and horrific, desirable and revolting.

    Yes, it’s most influential horror film of all time. But it bears repeating: Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho was a true game-changer in horror cinema. The sight and sound of Marion Crane meeting her demise is synonymous with what one imagines when hearing the words “horror movie.” Psycho gave roots to the slasher films that were to come, not to mention completely disrupted the idyllic world of the 1950s. The quick-cutting editing technique paired with one of the greatest scores ever crafted and Norman Bates’s mania have solidified Psycho’s place in not just the horror canon, but the canon of all-time cinematic greats.

    Based on Henry James’s 1898 horror novella The Turn of the Screw, this remarkably unsettling psychological horror film from Jack Clayton continues to serves as one of the premiere British horror films. It’s also one of the earliest and best examples of the “creepy children” subgenre. The plot is on the heavy side: The Innocents plays with the mental anguish of a person desperately trying to make sense of the world around them while simultaneously dealing with their own emotional turmoil. The film’s iconic ending scored an X-certificate upon the first release, and theorists continue to this day to analyze the subtext of sexual repression, ghastly possession, and how the two intertwine.

    Hailed by many as an independent masterpiece, Carnival of Souls plays more like an extended version of an episode of The Twilight Zone than it does a true-blue horror film. A low-budget endeavour with art-house sensibilities, the film’s fear factor is rooted in its odd visual imagery and dramatic light play. Director Herk Harvery also plays the horrifying apparition that haunts the leading lady’s imagination, a manifestation of her repressed fears as a malevolent force that she cannot escape, try as she might. Carnival of Souls is dark, atmospheric, experimental and a disturbing look into full-blown mental break.

    B-movie master Roger Corman produced this Psycho knockoff, which is also the non-pornographic feature debut of director Francis Ford Coppola. With a noticeably rushed script that nonetheless provided moments of legitimate shock, Dementia 13 was almost universally panned by critics and audience members alike. However, the movie is an extremely important addition to the black-and-white horror canon if for nothing else its unashamed aping of Hitchcock’s masterpiece. From this moment forward, horror began to unapologetically borrow from films that came before — an early sign of the remake culture to come.

    While Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? launched the “hagsploitation” subgenre, it was Joan Crawford’s starring role in William Castle’s Strait-Jacket that perfected it. Some critics viewed the film as one of the worst ever made, but Castle’s theatrical gimmicks developed the film into an audience favorite, and Crawford’s turn as a psycho-biddy set the bar for so-called “washed up” actors retreating to horror films once their Oscar-bait roles had run their course.

    Despite being over 50 years old, Roman Polanski’s Repulsion remains one of the most disturbing films ever crafted. The first of his “Apartment Trilogy,” Repulsion is a psychological torture chamber of hallucinatory exploration. What begins as a calm and somewhat slow dissection of a characterless woman, quickly turns into a complete mental unraveling, a masterpiece in capturing the nightmare chamber that is an unwell woman with unchecked emotional traumas.

    The sole horror entry in Ingmar Bergman’s filmography, Hour of the Wolf is a psychological journey into the realm of perhaps the scariest world of all: the deep recesses of a human’s personal demons and existential turmoil. Every minute of this film is drenched in ominous dread, frequently crossing into the supernatural. Viewers are ambushed by jarring visuals and ambitious moments of cinematography (there’s a dinner scene that is downright remarkable), proving that what many believe is one of Bergman’s lesser works is, perhaps, one of his most interesting.

    George A. Romero is king of the zombies and the father of contemporary horror cinema, full stop. This low-budget, independent film from Pittsburgh completely revolutionized the horror genre and created a monster that has reigned supreme for the last 50 years. Before Romero, horror films were often set in faraway lands of isolation, but he brought horror to the suburbs, where families were only a monster outbreak away from meeting their demise. While he claimed until death that the casting of Duane Jones, an African-American as the lead role, was purely based on his acting talent, Romero’s decision to present a black protagonist is still one of the most radical moves in horror history.

    The debut of auteur David Lynch, Eraserhead is a surrealist and tantalizing slice of cinematic horror that combines excessive gore, eroticsm, brilliant black-and-white cinematography, melodramatic performances, excessively dark humor, and a healthy dose of gore. It’s truly unlike anything that came before it, and nothing has come close to matching its power since — the reveal of “the child” is one of the most traumatic visual scenes ever recorded in black-and-white.

    There are few directors working today with as distinctive or as impressive of a reputation as Ben Wheatley. Covering a wide spectrum of genres across his career, his horrific period piece set during the English Civil War is perhaps his greatest cinematic endeavor. It examines the psychological breakdown of men completely destroyed by war under the influence of hallucinogenic drugs. Written by Wheatley’s wife, Amy Jump, the dialogue serves as one of the strongest elements of the film, nestled with visually striking scenes of cosmic horror.

    Ana Lily Amirpour’s feature debut is an Iranian-American vampire-Western rife with rage-filled feminism. A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night is as beautiful as it is peculiar, and as fascinating as it is haunting. Her strength is in creating atmosphere, a change of pace for a monster genre that frequently thrives on high-octane thrills. The film feels like an erotic ’80s album cover come to life, and managed to breathe new life into one of horror’s oldest subgenres (see: the second film mentioned on this list).

    Both breathtakingly stunning and one of the most legitimately fucked-up films in recent memory — a feat made all the more impressive by the fact that it’s Nicolas Pesce’s debut feature. The film moves at a deliberate pace, slowly creeping under the skin of the viewers, and staying there long after the credits roll. The black-and-white cinematography only adds to its otherworldly aesthetic. The Eyes of My Mother is presented as an art film, but don’t be fooled: It’s a truly grotesque and emotionally jarring slice of cinema.

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    B.J. Colangelo

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  • ‘Speak No Evil’ Collapses in Carnage

    ‘Speak No Evil’ Collapses in Carnage

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    From start to finish, James McAvoy mesmerizes. Courtesy of Universal Pictures

    Remakes are odious, but Speak No Evil, while thoroughly unneeded and unasked for, is an Americanized remake of a 2022 thriller from Denmark that services its original material well, thanks mostly to a sprawling, contradictory and totally galvanizing centerpiece performance by James McAvoy. He’s the fine Scottish actor best known for his outstanding work in The Last King of Scotland and Atonement, not to mention his memorable Cyrano de Bergerac on the New York stage. In Speak No Evil, McAvoy plays the villain, over the top and all over the place, and he has such a blast doing it that you can’t take your eyes off him for a minute.


    SPEAK NO EVIL ★★★ (3/4 stars)
    Directed by: James Watkins
    Written by: James Watkins, Christian Tafdrup, Mads Tafdrup
    Starring: James McAvoy, Mackenzie Davis, Scoot McNairy, Alix West Lefler, Aisling Franciosi, Dan Hough
    Running time:  110 mins.


    Despite some updates by writer-director James Watkins and a lot of savage violence to make it more palatable for an American movie audience, the plot begins in basically the same way as it did two years ago: Louise and Ben Dalton (Mackenzie Davis and Scoot McNairy) are an American couple living in London with their daughter, Agnes (Alix West Lefler), who meet a friendly British family during a getaway in Italy. Paddy (McAvoy), his wife Ciara (Aisling Franciosi) and their mute son Ant (terrific young newcomer Dan Hough) are all so charming that the Daltons accept an invitation to visit them for a weekend at their rambling farm in the British countryside. Things begin oddly.

    Worried man and woman with their daughterWorried man and woman with their daughter
    Why don’t they just leave? They try. Courtesy of Universal Pictures

    Louise and Ben can’t hide their marital problems. Their daughter Agnes is almost 13 but still emotionally attached to a stuffed rabbit. Ben is an unemployed lawyer who feels emasculated by his inability to get a job in England. Paddy knows Ciara is a vegetarian but insists on feeding her a goose for dinner. Ciara pretends to perform oral sex on Paddy under the table. Louise is at first aghast by their role-playing, then annoyed when they lecture Agnes on how to behave publicly. Tensions turn to horror when Agnes and Ant, forced to share a bedroom, become intimate friends and the little boy confides in the little girl that the Daltons are not his parents at all, but two fiends who killed his real family, kidnapped him and cut out his tongue with a pair of scissors so he could never tell anyone the truth.

    Why don’t they just leave? They try. Horrified, the Americans plan to escape in the middle of the night and save Ant in the process, but somebody always does something stupid in horror flicks like this, so they all foolishly return to fetch Agnes’ stuffed rabbit. From here on, Speak No Evil loses its claim to reality and goes berserk in an assault on the senses that defies credibility and collapses in carnage. It’s all rather far-fetched and silly. The thrills are contrived but effective enough to make your hair stand on end. I had a good time watching it, against my better judgment. And I especially applaud the relentless one-man show that is James McAvoy, from start to finish. He’s mesmerizing.

    ‘Speak No Evil’ Collapses in Carnage

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    Rex Reed

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  • Metro Detroit’s Eloise Asylum haunted attraction opens for its fourth season of horror

    Metro Detroit’s Eloise Asylum haunted attraction opens for its fourth season of horror

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    The former Eloise Psychiatric Hospital in Westland was brought back to life in 2021, becoming one of Michigan’s largest and spookiest haunted attractions.

    Now, Eloise Asylum is getting ready to open doors on Sept. 28 for its fourth season of serious scares.

    With 48,000 square feet, two stories, and over 120 professional scare actors, guests can expect their hearts to race for over 45 minutes. One floor offers a high-tech horror experience typically seen in theme parks and immersive art exhibits, while the other is based on the original psychiatric history of the building.

    New this year, Eloise Asylum is hosting “Fandom Fridays,” where guests can meet Hollywood horror actors and paranormal YouTube stars, plus get exclusive autographs and photo opportunities. The lineup includes actors such as Douglas Tait of Freddy vs. Jason, Marty Klebba of Pirates and the Caribbean, and Lew Temple of The Walking Dead, among others.

    From Oct. 18-20, a special “Haunt or Hunt Weekend” is happening, featuring a one-hour ghost hunting tour across two rarely seen floors of the former asylum, led by paranormal investigators.

    To close out the season on Nov. 2, there will be a “High-Intensity Night,” where guests can “experience Eloise Asylum like never before.” The show will be more interactive, with guests being able to take part in the action, plus opt for higher intensity extras.

    Since opening, the attraction has faced criticism from some for making light of the real-world horrors that occurred when the building was a psychiatric hospital. Reverend B. Dangerous, a traveling performer, acknowledged such criticisms during an interview with Metro Times in 2022.

    “I’ve read different posts that are people talking about the suffering that happened here, and there was suffering,” he said. “I can’t take that away. But it was also a hospital to help some people. There was also good.”

    According to its website, a portion of the proceeds from the attraction benefit an on-site homeless shelter that was opened in another one of the former hospital buildings on the campus, “making your visit even more meaningful.”

    This season, Eloise Asylum is open from 7-10:30 p.m. every Friday through Sunday in October, as well as Sept. 28 and Nov. 2. The experience is open to those ages 12 and up.

    All special events require tickets separate from general admission.

    For more information, and to purchase tickets, visit eloiseasylum.com.

    Location Details

    Eloise Asylum

    30712 Michigan Avenue, Westland Detroit

    313-355-0721

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    Layla McMurtrie

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  • Turn That Frown Upside Down & Watch The Creepy New Trailer For ‘Smile 2’

    Turn That Frown Upside Down & Watch The Creepy New Trailer For ‘Smile 2’

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    Are you ready for Smile 2?

    Source: Paramount Pictures

    After giving audiences the creeps with his surprise smash Smile, filmmaker Parker Finn is back with Smile 2 which aims to elevate the modern Horror genre by taking the terror on tour with a global Pop star.

    Smile 2 asset

    Source: Paramount Pictures

    In Smile 2, Pop sensation Skye Riley (Naomi Scott) is gearing up for a world tour when she begins to experience increasingly terrifying events. As the horrors ramp up and the pressures of fame take their toll, Skye must confront her dark past to regain control of her life before it spirals out of control.

    Check out the creepy trailer below:

    Written and directed by Finn, the highly anticipated sequel stars Naomi Scott, Lukas Gage, Rosemarie DeWitt, Miles Gutierrez-Riley, Peter Jacobson, Ray Nicholson, Dylan Gelula, Raúl Castillo, and Kyle Gallner.

    In an interview with Julia Cunningham and Jess Cagle on SiriusXM’s The Jess Cagle Show, Gage revealed that there’s one scene that was so “gory” and “disgusting” that he threw up off-camera while filming.

    “It’s so terrifying,” he said. “It was the first time I’ve ever been on a set where I was genuinely afraid and I actually got sick to my stomach in one take.”

    “I didn’t think I would. I just, it was so gory and so disgusting,” he continued. “It’s legitimately that scary. I’m not even just lying. I’ve never been on something that truly terrified me. The crew was terrified filming because, I don’t know. Parker Finn is, he knows that genre so well.”

    Smile 2 brings its ghastly grins to theaters October 18, 2024.

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    Alex Ford

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  • ‘Alien: Romulus’ Review: A Damn Good Monster Movie

    ‘Alien: Romulus’ Review: A Damn Good Monster Movie

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    The Xenomorph in Alien: Romulus. Courtesy of 20th Century Studios

    Like the Terminator, Alien is a franchise in which no new installment stands a chance of being the best. The fight here is for third place, behind Ridley Scott’s chilling original and James Cameron’s action-packed sequel. Most of the subsequent efforts have catered to different tastes, leaning more towards cerebral science fiction (Prometheus), bleak character drama (Alien3), or goofy action schlock (Alien vs. Predator). With his first swing at the franchise, Alien: Romulus, director Fede Álvarez makes the daring choice to aim at the dead tonal center between Scott and Cameron’s twin masterpieces. The result is an adrenaline-fueled slasher movie in space that sacrifices the subtlety and creeping dread of the original for more shock, gore and thrilling, fist-pumping violence. It’s a shallower product than either of its inspirations, but it also has its own, distinct energy. It doesn’t totally jettison the franchise’s 45 years of baggage, but when it does, what’s left is a damn good monster movie.


    ALIEN: ROMULUS ★★★ (3/4 stars)
    Directed by: Fede Álvarez
    Written by: Fede Álvarez, Rodo Sayagues
    Starring: Cailee Spaeny, David Jonsson, Archie Renaux, Isabela Merced, Spike Fearn, Aileen Wu
    Running time: 119 mins.


    The setup for Romulus is reminiscent of Álvarez’s own calling card film, 2016’s Don’t Breathe. A group of twentysomethings born into poverty on a corporate-owned mining planet seize on an opportunity to escape their miserable lot. It should be a simple heist—slip aboard a derelict spacecraft, steal the equipment they need to journey to a nicer planet, get out before it crashes. But the vessel isn’t as empty as they’d presumed. There are terrifying monsters onboard intent on either gutting or impregnating them. Will any of these young hard cases live to see their better tomorrow?

    Leading this ensemble is Cailee Spaeny as Rain Carradine, the heist’s most reluctant participant and our obvious Final Girl. Spaeny gives a reliably solid performance, but the real star of the show is David Jonsson as Andy, a glitchy android who she sees as a brother. Andy was programmed to protect her when she was growing up, but now she’s become his caretaker. Their relationship is both charming and discomfiting. Andy adores Rain, but he’s programmed to. He’ll do what’s best for her at every turn, with a smile on his face, but is he also being exploited? It’s an interesting new wrinkle to the Alien franchise’s meditation on artificial intelligence, which has been depicted as either sinister or benign. As Andy, David Jonsson gets to play a little bit of both. The emotional core of Romulus is the way Rain and Andy are each transformed by their nightmare in space, and how it forces them to reevaluate each other.

    Cailee Spaeny and David Jonsson in Alien: Romulus. Murray Close/Courtesy of 20th Century Studios

    This isn’t to say that Alien: Romulus is a predominantly cerebral or even emotional experience. Far from it. After roughly 40 minutes of establishing the characters and setting up potential future calamities, Romulus becomes an unrelenting thrill ride that fulfills every last one of its wicked promises.

    Romulus leans harder into being a monster movie than any of its predecessors, and Álvarez and co-writer Rodo Sayagues seem committed to using the entire monster. Too many Alien sequels speed through the most viscerally terrifying part of the xenomorph’s bizarre life cycle, the “facehugger” stage represented by a skittering arachnid that latches to a victim’s head, forces its ovipositor down their throats, and implants them with their ultra-violent offspring. Romulus, by contrast, gives these little bastards nearly half the movie, allowing them their own chase and stalking scenes. As in Don’t Breathe, Romulus doesn’t move on to its next threat or premise until the last one is completely exhausted.

    Cailee Spaeny in Alien: Romulus. Courtesy of 20th Century Studios

    Álvarez shows admirable restraint in the introduction of the more famous eight-foot-tall adult xenomorph, treating it as an obscure new threat rather than an iconic character whose action figure stood on your cousin’s windowsill. There is a (hopefully, justified) assumption that this will be many viewers’ first Alien movie, and the effort to wring maximum suspense from the premise is valuable even to a longtime fan. The film does eventually make the typical third-act shift from horror to action, but until then, “scary” is prioritized over “cool.”

    Nevertheless. Romulus still indulges in some of the worst impulses of the “requel” or “legacy sequel.” An original Alien cast member is digitally resurrected for a small role, and they look absolutely awful. This is the first new Alien film under Disney’s ownership of the franchise, and it seems as if they simply cannot resist employing this technology at every opportunity, regardless of whether or not it adds any value to the story. There are a few other cringy, incongruous nods to the franchise’s legacy that distract from what is otherwise a fully satisfying and self-contained space slasher.

    The past decade has convinced audiences to expect less from Hollywood blockbusters, not just in terms of quality, but from how much of a story is told in each movie. At multiple junctures, Alien: Romulus teases a development that seems like a hook for a sequel or spin-off, but Álvarez doesn’t wait until the inevitable next Alien to play all of his cards. Romulus leaves nothing on the table. It is, for a change, an entire damn movie.

    Could this be a portent of the franchise’s future? Might the xenomorph—the perfect movie monster—become less like Michael Myers and more like a zombie or vampire, a terror that can be used to tell a variety of horror stories rather than as a foil to a handful of protagonists or as installments in a dense mythology? This possibility is as exciting as the film itself.

    ‘Alien: Romulus’ Review: A Damn Good Monster Movie

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    Dylan Roth

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  • ‘The Blair Witch Project’ at 25: The Influence of The Found-Footage Sensation

    ‘The Blair Witch Project’ at 25: The Influence of The Found-Footage Sensation

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    Heather Donahue in The Blair Witch Project. Getty Images

    After The Blair Witch Project made $248 million on a $35,000 budget, studios rushed to create the next found footage sensation. Now, at the film’s twenty-fifth anniversary, there’s much less in the way of direct formal imitation. But the movie’s triumphant demonstration that shoestring horror films can lead to big paydays, and its grungy willingness to show without ever explaining, has continued to inspire. The Blair Witch Project remains important for its gimmick, for its business model, for its craftsmanship, and for its audacity.

    Directors Eduardo Sánchez and Daniel Myrick’s high concept was to create a movie about the creation of a movie. The film is supposedly composed of footage discovered in the Maryland woods, shot by three would-be filmmakers creating a documentary about the legend of the Blair Witch. In glimpses from their own cameras, you see the three actors—Heather Donahue, Michael C. Williams and Joshua Leonard—wander into the woods and get more and more lost, and more and more angry with each other. 

    And then you see them slowly realize they’re not the only things out there. The movie’s most iconic scene is a so-close-you’re-up-her-nose selfie video shot of director Heather, apologizing to her colleague’s mothers in a trembling, weepy panic attack. “And this is where we’ve ended up and it’s all because of me that we’re here now—hungry, cold, and hunted,” she gasps, in terror and self-recrimination. It’s great (meta-) cinema.

    Dan Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez, co-writers, co-directors and co-editors of The Blair Witch Project. Getty Images

    The Blair Witch Project has many obvious predecessors. The shaky-cam horror in the woods conceit owes a debt to Sam Rami’s first Evil Dead film. Deliverance is mentioned explicitly in the film itself. The discovered document trope goes back at least to that famous epistolary novel, Frankenstein. And the irritating-kids-get-murdered-one-by-one is of course a slasher staple.

    But in embracing the micro-budget and the meta-narrative of gritty filmmaking, The Blair Witch Project created something new and extraordinary: a horror film virtually devoid of effects, mostly made up of three actors wandering around in the woods and shouting, which manages to be imaginative, suspenseful, and terrifying precisely because of how little you can see even when the cameras are on.

    Hollywood and horror are both eager to chase the latest profitable trend, and The Blair Witch project had many, many imitators. Of course, there was a sequel (Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2) organized just about as quickly as the studio (Artisan) could hire a van to ship people off to a nearby woods. 

    But there were also a range of efforts to tweak found footage for slightly different narratives and subgenres. Lake Mungo (2008) is a haunted house film; Cloverfield (2008) was a found footage monster film; Trollhunter (2010) was mockumentary; V/H/S (2012) was a found footage anthology film. Chronicle (2012) was—of all things—a found footage superhero film.

    Blair Witch didn’t just inspire individual films, though; it inspired entire business models. Blumhouse was founded in 2000, but it didn’t really become the studio we know today until 2007’s Paranormal Activity—a movie that adapted found footage to a story of demonic possession. Director Oren Peli shot the feature for $15,000—less than half of Blair Witch’s budget. Even with studio tweaks that cost $200,000, it far outgrossed its budget, drawing in $194 million and launching a hugely successful franchise. 

    Blumhouse returned to the found footage genre multiple times, with a range of variations. Creep (2014) is arty psychological horror; Unfriended (2014) is a screenlife horror film—a found footage variation in which all the action is shown entirely on a computer-screen group chat. But more important was the fact that Paranormal Activity established Blumhouse’s direction as a horror studio capitalizing on hot trends and exploitation concepts to create low budget hits. 

    Chloe Csengery and Jessica Tyler Brown in Paranormal Activity 3. Courtesy of Paramount Pictures

    Admittedly, and inevitably given the nature of the business model, a good number of Blumhouse films were utterly forgettable garbage (Truth or Dare—we shall not speak thy name.) But there have also been aesthetic and commercial successes. The Purge series has become one of the go-to cultural touchstones for discussing American Christofascism. And Jordan Peele’s Get Out (2017) is arguably the most important horror film of the last decade at least. The recent renaissance in Black horror, across multiple mediums, might not have happened at all, and certainly wouldn’t have happened in the way it has, without Blumhouse. And Blumhouse wouldn’t be the studio it is without The Blair Witch Project.

    The Blair Witch Project’s influence on the other big indie horror studio, A24, has been less obvious. But it’s there. One of A24’s early successful horror films, Robert Eggers’ The Witch, features mysterious woods and witches who are frightening in part because you don’t see much of them. Films like Talk To Me (2022) and Bodies Bodies Bodies (2022) are both low budget movies about young people making a series of bad decisions which end…well, badly.

    Amandla Stenberg, Maria Bakalova, Chase Sui Wonders and Rachel Sennott in Bodies, Bodies, Bodies. Courtesy of A24

    Halina Reijn’s Bodies Bodies Bodies is especially interesting to think of in light of Blair Witch’s legacy. It’s not a found footage movie, but its final gut-punch plot twist hinges on the protagonist’s finding gruesome video footage. The movie is about how a bunch of rich kids destroy each other because they’re too knowledgeable about horror tropes; they scare themselves to death. Including video footage as a plot point echoes Blair Witch, which is also about how being horror-film fans can be a risky proposition (especially if you happen to be in a horror movie.)

    Found footage horror films still get made; it’s an established subgenre with its own niche fans.  Blumhouse recently announced it’s planning a Blair Witch remake (without the participation of the original cast, who, unforgivably, did not benefit from the film’s massive financial success). More important than these direct homages, though, is that The Blair Witch Project’s approach, business plans, themes, and look have over the last quarter century become inseparable from the horror genre itself. Like the witch herself, you don’t have to see the film’s influence directly to know it’s there, just out of sight, ready to pounce.

     

      

    ‘The Blair Witch Project’ at 25: The Influence of The Found-Footage Sensation

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    Noah Berlatsky

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  • ‘MaXXXine’ Review: Throwback Horror Gets a Little Stuck In Its Hot Tub Time Machine

    ‘MaXXXine’ Review: Throwback Horror Gets a Little Stuck In Its Hot Tub Time Machine

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    Mia Goth and Halsey in MaXXXine. Justin Lubin/Courtesy of A24

    In 2022, A24 and writer-director Ti West delivered the one-two punch of X and Pearl, a pair of horror films about cinema, sex, violence and our cultural lust for fame. Produced back to back on a shoestring budget, the films’ box office success quickly prompted a larger-scale follow-up in MaXXXine, presumably the final chapter in the X trilogy. Though each movie stands on its own, together they create a loose sketch of the evolution of American cinema and its relationship with its audience, with each chapter painted in a style befitting its place in time. X is set in 1979 and follows an unexpectedly ambitious porn production, while Pearl is an origin story for the first film’s villain, a wannabe movie star in 1918. MaXXXine directs its lens at 1980s Hollywood, paying homage to both steamy adult-targeted thrillers and VHS “video nasties.” Though it’s a neat throwback that features a few memorable performances, MaXXXine imitates its period setting a little too well, prioritizing style and adding little substance to the series.


    MAXXINE ★★1/2 (2.5/4 stars)
    Directed by: Ti West
    Written by: Ti West
    Starring: Mia Goth, Elizabeth Debicki, Moses Sumney, Michelle Monaghan, Bobby Cannavale, Halsey, Lily Collins, Giancarlo Esposito, Kevin Bacon
    Running time: 104 mins.


    MaXXXine is set in amidst the home-video boom that brought unprecedented prosperity to both the horror and adult film industries. Maxine Minx (Mia Goth, reprising her role from X) has worked tirelessly to conquer the porn world, but her dreams of mainstream stardom may finally be in reach when she lands a leading role in a buzzy studio horror movie. The eve of her big break is haunted by two seemingly unrelated complications. A slimy private detective (Kevin Bacon) is threatening to expose her bloody past, and a serial killer is targeting those closest to her. But Maxine has never let anything stand between her and fame before, and she damn sure won’t let anything stop her now.

    This is by far the most flashy and star-studded entry in the X trilogy, with the first two films being produced for a cumulative $2 million dollars. In addition to Goth, whose star has only risen since 2022, the cast of MaXXXine includes Bacon, Elizabeth Debicki, Giancarlo Esposito and recording artist Halsey. Debicki plays to type as the steely and demanding filmmaker behind Maxine’s new movie. Esposito, on the other hand, gets an all-too-rare opportunity to play a broad character role rather than yet another imitation of his Breaking Bad villain Gus Fring. As Maxine’s agent Teddy Night, Esq., Esposito affects what is essentially an Al Pacino impression, and it’s delightful. For his part, Kevin Bacon steals practically all of his scenes as a Louisiana private eye with gold veneers, a thick accent and no scruples.

    Kevin Bacon in MaXXXine. Justin Lubin/Courtesy of A24

    Though Mia Goth is once again the center of the film, this is her least memorable performance in the trilogy. Maxine is shark-like in her single-minded pursuit of fame, but compared to her unhinged counterpart in Pearl, she’s a relatively bland brand of psycho.

    Even more than the other two chapters in the trilogy, MaXXXine imitates the filmmaking style of the era in which it’s set. West recreates the sweaty, voyeuristic erotic thrillers of Brian De Palma and the scale of MaXXXine’s climax has a whiff of Jerry Bruckheimer bluster to it. But beyond its novelty to film nerds (which seems to be the target audience), the ‘80s movie styling has only a handful of benefits. The pastiche provides cover for some very silly moments that one might expect from a Hollywood movie of its era but would be unlikely to accept today. The way that even dead women are judged by their looks in Hollywood movies and the greed-is-good celebration of individual material success invite the audience to note how out of place they seem in today’s cinema.

    Giancarlo Esposito and Mia Goth in MaXXXine. Justin Lubin/Courtesy of A24

    Otherwise, MaXXXine suffers from being only as interesting as the movies it’s borrowing from. X mimicked the look and next-level violence of Tobe Hooper’s Texas Chainsaw Massacre but added its own layers of shock and depth in its unsettling exploration of geriatric lust and the universal need to feel desired. Pearl’s old-timey aesthetic stood in hilarious contrast with its graphic violence and sexual content, allowing Mia Goth to crank her performance all the way up to a comical extreme. MaXXXine reflects back on the bygone VHS era of cinema and on the Satanic Panic that saw American fundamentalist Christians railing against the “deviants” in Hollywood, but doesn’t appear to have a lot to say about them, at least on first viewing.

    In some respects, experiments like MaXXXine offer the same rush of recognition to film buffs that something like The Super Mario Bros. Movie offers to gamers. What you’re excited about isn’t really the content of what you’re watching, it’s the validation of your own expertise. Whether the expertise being validated is urbane or retro, high- or low-brow, it doesn’t necessarily add any real value to the work. Quentin Tarantino’s movies stole shamelessly from a wide swath of sources that were precious to hip cinephiles, but in the end they ossified into something uniquely his. MaXXXine isn’t uniquely anything, and given the memorable weirdness of its predecessors, this is a disappointment.

    ‘MaXXXine’ Review: Throwback Horror Gets a Little Stuck In Its Hot Tub Time Machine

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    Dylan Roth

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  • ‘The Watchers’ Review: The Shyamalan Dynasty Gets Off To A Slow Start

    ‘The Watchers’ Review: The Shyamalan Dynasty Gets Off To A Slow Start

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    Dakota Fanning in The Watchers. Jonathan Hession

    It’s become a cliche to goof on that 2003 Newsweek cover that declared M. Night Shyamalan “The Next Spielberg,” just in time for his critical hot streak to cool off and plunge him into a decade-long drought. Instead, let’s start goofing on the way Night is becoming the next Coppola, hiring his close family as cast and crew in his occasionally self-financed productions in the effort to build a dynasty. Though they’ve been involved in M. Night’s projects for the past few years, 2024 marks the Summer of the Shyamalan Sisters, with both Saleka (age 27) and Ishana (age 24) stepping into the spotlight in front of and behind the camera, respectively. Saleka, a singer and songwriter, plays a massively successful pop star in M. Night’s latest feature, Trap, out this August. Ishana, an NYU Tisch graduate who has cut her teeth as a writer and director on her father’s Apple TV+ series Servant, has just made her feature directorial debut with The Watchers.


    THE WATCHERS (1/4 stars)
    Directed by: Ishana Night Shyamalan
    Written by: Ishana Night Shyamalan
    Starring: Dakota Fanning, Georgina Campbell, Olwen Fouéré, Oliver Finnegan
    Running time: 102 mins.


    Even as someone who frequently whines about nepo babies, I feel a little crappy opening a review of a filmmaker’s first feature by writing about her father. I actually have way more respect for the way Ishana and Night have clung together on the press tour, never obscuring the nepotism at play, than I do for the countless young actors or directors whose deeply entrenched Hollywood legacies you have to dig around for on Wikipedia. Like any kind of privilege, nepotism doesn’t sting just because someone gets opportunities that others don’t, but because those who benefit get so defensive when it’s suggested that favorable conditions contributed to their success. Wear that name! Own that privilege! Be a good sport for the jokes, then prove the doubters wrong. Make us believe you’d have made it if you’d been just another kid from Philly.

    But since I’ve gotten to this point in the review and have yet to go into any details about the film, you’ve likely guessed that The Watchers did not convince me of much. Worse, it is precisely what I’m sure the young director hoped it wouldn’t be—a pale imitation of her father’s patented style. The Watchers checks almost every box you’d expect from an M. Night film. It’s a twisty, high-concept mystery/dark fairy tale that follows a small cast across relatively few locations as they uncover each other’s secrets while spouting dialogue that sounds like it was written by a space alien. But The Watchers is missing the secret ingredient that transforms M. Night’s movies from weird, forgettable, self-indulgent fantasies into mesmerizing cinema: the mastery of blocking and camera movement that earned him the “next Spielberg” moniker in the first place.

    Olwen Fouéré, Oliver Finnegan, Dakota Fanning and Georgina Campbell in The Watchers. Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures

    The Watchers is based upon a novel by A.M. Shine with a premise that already sounds like a Shyamalan movie. A young pet shop employee with a dark past (Elle Fanning) is captured by strange, unseen beings who keep humans in a display cage and watch their behavior every night. But are she and the other three captives simply pets, or is there a more nefarious purpose behind it all? Like Signs, The Village, or Old (a movie I quite like, actually), it has the makings of a solid 30-minute Twilight Zone episode that overextends itself via a string of twists that each make the story less interesting. Like any good thriller, information is strategically withheld to build intrigue, but then it’s simply dropped in the audience’s lap with no impact at all. The characters are paper-thin, each reduced to essentially one trait that is explained by one underwhelming secret.

    There is, however, a single shot that shook me awake and had me performing the “Pointing Rick Dalton” meme in the theater. Fanning and another captive (Olwen Fouéré) are hiding in the roots of a rotting tree as one of the monsters passes above them. The camera begins on the two women, tilts quickly up to catch a glimpse of the skittering monster, and then slowly returns to its initial position, where Fouéré’s character now has a hand clasped over Fanning’s mouth, stifling a scream. “There it is!” I nearly exclaimed aloud for the two other filmgoers at my screening. “There’s that good Shyamalan shit!” I was not stirred from my slumber a second time.

    It is, of course, deeply unfair to expect cinematic mastery from a 24-year-old first-time director. People forget that before exploding onto the scene with The Sixth Sense, M. Night Shyamalan directed two other features that practically no one saw, even after he became Hollywood’s next big thing. Ishana Night Shyamalan’s first feature, released wide by Warner subsidiary New Line Pictures, is going to be critiqued more harshly by more outlets than most filmmakers’ work ever will be. That sucks, but that’s the other side of nepotism. The good news is that, as the offspring of a successful movie producer, Ishana Shyamalan is going to get another crack at directing a feature film if she wants it, regardless of whether or not the critical or box office response warrants it. You could call that deeply unfair, too, and she might very well agree with you. Fairness is not the issue here. The movie is bad. Her next one might be great. More artists should get the chance to try and fail like this, not just the ones with famous dads.

    ‘The Watchers’ Review: The Shyamalan Dynasty Gets Off To A Slow Start

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    Dylan Roth

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  • Before He Was Chased by The Strangers, Dallas’ Froy Gutierrez Loved Movies

    Before He Was Chased by The Strangers, Dallas’ Froy Gutierrez Loved Movies

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    Liv Tyler, Christina Hendricks, Lewis Pullman — what do all of these seemingly disparate actors have in common? They’ve all played characters tormented by the three masked villains of The Strangers film franchise…

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    Lisa Laman

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  • 15 most lovable stoner characters in the horror genre

    15 most lovable stoner characters in the horror genre

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    One of the greatest horror movie tropes of all time has got to be the mindless stoner who’s pretty much oblivious to everything going on around them. It’s a screenwriting tactic that’s worked for decades, and it doesn’t seem to be leaving the horror genre any time soon.

    We’ve compiled the 15 most lovable scary movie potheads from Chucky to Cabin Fever. All in celebration of those drug addicts that may or may not be gutted by the end of the film. Please enjoy.

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    Zach

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  • 20 Oscar-worthy horror films that were totally snubbed by the Academy

    20 Oscar-worthy horror films that were totally snubbed by the Academy

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    Sure, sure. The Academy Awards aren’t everything. It’d be silly to rank a movie’s worth based on whether or not it won any Oscars. But for too long now, the horror genre as a whole seems to have been altogether lumped and snubbed come award season.

    We’re all adults here, it’s easy to say that there are incredible movies (horror or otherwise) that have never won an award. But hell, I’m gonna defend this hill or die trying. Here are the greatest horror flicks that never got the recognition they deserved.

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    Zach Nading

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  • Social Bonding Through Movies: The Emotional Magic Behind Watching Films Together

    Social Bonding Through Movies: The Emotional Magic Behind Watching Films Together

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    Movies can be an excellent social bonding experience in a variety of situations, including first dates, family movie nights, group watches, couples therapy, and professional settings. Learn more about the emotional dynamics behind watching films together.


    Beyond being a source of entertainment, films have the power to foster social bonds and create shared experiences among individuals.

    Whether it’s getting together at a friend’s house on a weekend night, embarking on a first date at the theaters, or upholding a family tradition of watching the same movie during holidays, watching movies together is one of the most common ways we connect with others.

    But what’s the psychology behind these cinematic connections? Let’s dive into the many social benefits behind movie watching and how they can improve our relationships in a number of different social settings.

    Shared Experiences

    Every time you press “Play” on a new movie, you are starting a collective journey with whoever you are watching with. No one knows what will happen, so you are both entering the unknown together and experiencing it for the first time.

    Every film is a rollercoaster of different emotions – joy, laughter, surprise, fear, suspense, disgust, sadness, anger – and everyone is experiencing those emotions together as a “hive mind.” Research shows emotions are contagious, and when multiple people are experiencing the same emotion in unison, feelings are often amplified more than if you were just experiencing it by yourself.

    Movies create new shared experiences that mark new chapters throughout our relationship. “Remember that one time we saw Wolf on Wall Street? That was fun!” A memorable movie can become a distinct event in our relationship’s storyline, especially if it symbolizes a special day like a first date, birthday, or anniversary, giving us a positive memory to look back on and reminisce about.

    Watching movies together doesn’t require much work, it effortlessly creates a sense of unity among the people watching. Even if everyone hates the movie, it still creates a shared bond, “Wow, that movie was really stupid!” and then you can all laugh about it.

    Icebreaker and Conversation Starter

    Watching films together serves as an excellent icebreaker, especially in situations where individuals may be meeting for the first time or trying to strengthen new connections.

    The movie theater, often considered a classic venue for a first date, provides a natural conversation starter. After the credits roll, initiating a conversation becomes as easy as asking, “Did you like the movie? Why or why not?” Ask about favorite scenes or whether they’ve seen other movies featuring the same actor or actress.

    Use the film as a springboard into other topics to talk about. If you’re skilled at conversation threading, you should be able to take one thing from the film and branch off into more important subjects. If it’s a film about music, inquire about their musical preferences or whether they play an instrument. For sports-themed movies, explore their favorite sports or childhood sports experiences.

    Icebreakers aren’t exclusive to first dates; they’re equally helpful in building connections in various scenarios, whether it’s getting to know a coworker outside the office or deepening a friendship.

    One fair criticism of movies as a bonding experience is that you don’t get to do much talking during them. It’s a passive experience, not an active one. But there are also benefits to this: it’s a shared experience with little effort (no pressure, just sit and watch), and it gives you a convenient starting point for more meaningful conversation later on.

    Nostalgia and Tradition

    For many, watching films together is not just an occasional activity but a cherished tradition that spans multiple generations.

    Family movie nights play a pivotal role in strengthening the bonds between parents and children. Holiday film marathons, especially during festive seasons, elevate our collective spirit and enhance the joyous atmosphere. Revisiting favorite childhood movies creates a profound sense of nostalgia, keeping us connected to our past.

    One popular family tradition may be during Christmas, such as having A Christmas Story playing in the background as you decorate the tree or watching It’s A Wonderful Life every Christmas eve.

    These traditions are about more than just the movie; they’re about creating a whole family experience. Infuse your own unique twist by turning it into a game, baking homemade cookies before watching, or simply enjoying jokes and good company. The film itself is just one aspect of a complete family ritual and bonding experience.

    When families embrace these shared traditions, they contribute to a profound sense of belonging and unity. These rituals become the threads weaving together the fabric of family ties and friendships over long periods of time.

    Team Building and Group Bonding

    Beyond personal connections, watching films together can be an effective team-building activity in professional settings.

    Organizational unity can be difficult to achieve for many companies, especially when workers have radically different jobs and skillsets, often being assigned to work within one department of a company but being siloed off from the organization as a whole.

    Movie nights and film screenings can be an effective way to provide employees with a stronger sense of unity and camaraderie. Different departments that normally don’t see each other get to cross-pollinate and make connections with faces they don’t often get to see. Scheduled events like this can foster a team of teams mindset, helping to interconnect different departments into a cohesive whole.

    Perhaps certain movies depict an idea, philosophy, or mindset that an organization wants to embrace more of. Requiring every employee to watch a movie together is more than just making friends at work, it can also tap into a deeper meaning behind the organization’s mission and purpose.

    Couples Therapy

    Movies can serve as bouncing points to important conversations that need to be had between spouses and loved ones.

    It’s not always easy to bring up certain topics of conversation, but through film you can organically dive into subjects that otherwise wouldn’t get brought up in everyday discourse, like mental health, sex and intimacy, or experiencing grief after a tragedy or loss.

    It’s common for a couples therapist to recommend a specific movie to their clients. You may already know of a movie that you’d like to share with someone. You can also ask friends or seek recommendations online. Ask yourself, “What’s something I really want to talk about with my partner?” then “What’s a good movie that can introduce this topic?”

    A powerful film can help couples process their relationship more clearly. It shows the universality of humanity – you’re not alone with whatever you are going through – and brings ideas out in the open that need to be expressed or talked about.

    One exercise you can try together is to each take notes or fill out a movie analysis worksheet while watching.

    Communal Bonding and Bridging Social Divides

    On a larger scale, film watching can help bridge cultural and social divides, as well as be used as a tool for communal bonding.

    Social events such as public screenings, outdoor showings, movie festivals, or drive-thru theaters are great settings to watch a movie among a large and diverse group of people within your community.

    These days with easy access to streaming services at home, most people watch movies all by themselves, but there used to be a time when movie-watching was an intrinsically social activity done in public spaces.

    As we continue to see a decline in community feeling, movies may be one avenue to start bringing people together again as a cohesive group.

    One idea is for local organizations to throw more public events with film features to celebrate holidays or special events – or you can set up a projector on your garage door and invite some neighbors for a weekend movie watch.

    Conclusion

    Watching films together is more than just a passive form of entertainment; it is a dynamic social activity that brings people together, creating lasting bonds and shared memories.

    Films are universal connectors. Whether it’s with family, friends, or colleagues, the act of watching a movie together creates an automatic bond and sense of unity.

    Are you a big movie watcher? In what situations can use film watching to improve your relationships with family, friends, loved ones, or coworkers?


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    Steven Handel

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  • Thanksgiving: The Kickoff of Greed Season, Or: Eli Roth Gives America a Bitter Reflection of Itself in Ultimate Holiday Horror Movie

    Thanksgiving: The Kickoff of Greed Season, Or: Eli Roth Gives America a Bitter Reflection of Itself in Ultimate Holiday Horror Movie

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    In 2021, a horror-comedy called Black Friday was released to little fanfare. For, while its premise was solid, its execution was decidedly wobbly. When Eli Roth created the fake trailer for a slasher movie called Thanksgiving to be included in Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino’s Grindhouse double feature, released in 2007, perhaps he couldn’t have known that Black Friday would set the stage for the entire premise of the real movie. One that he realized, after seeing how well-received the fake trailer was, needed to be fleshed out and developed. For those few who might have had high hopes for the Devon Sawa-starring Black Friday, Thanksgiving does exactly what it couldn’t manage: makes a commentary on humanity’s capitalistic grotesqueries cresting at the outset of the lump of end-of-year holidays that begins with Thanksgiving (and, to confirm, the American tradition of post-Thanksgiving hyper-consumerism has spread throughout the world ever since the Cold War ended and the statement, “We all live in America now” took hold once capitalism “won” and communism “lost”). 

    Although Christmas is usually the holiday to get the most attention/play (ergo, an entire film genre centered around it that simply doesn’t exist for Thanksgiving), it is with the phenomenon of Black Friday—its own kind of American holiday—that the “season of giving” truly commences. Even as it ultimately means taking from everyone by plundering Mother Earth of its valuable and increasingly precious resources. And yes, it just so happens that Black Friday has become synonymous with Thanksgiving as the corporate overlords have seen fit to keep their stores open on Thursday night for those feeling ambitious enough after stuffing their faces and entering a tryptophan coma to buy some useless shit to give to their loved ones at Christmas. 

    Roth saw the empty space where Thanksgiving movies ought to be, lamenting that, after Halloween, it’s all family-oriented Christmas movies that get shoved down your throat. As a year-round horror fan, Roth couldn’t abide seeing this obvious lack in the holiday movie genre, especially with Thanksgiving being the emotionally tense, rife-with-carving-knives day that it is. To Roth, the real question was: how could someone not have seen how perfect it was for a horror movie premise until he came along? 

    In fact, long before the fake trailer he directed for Grindhouse, the blueprint for the movie was already there. Having grown up in Newton, Massachusetts, just forty-five minutes away from Plymouth, so-called birthplace of Thanksgiving and the location where Roth, naturally, chooses to set his stage (or table, if you prefer), the director was subjected to his fair share of Thanksgiving enthusiasm. So influenced by the holiday was Roth that, at thirteen, he and his friend, Jeff Rendell (the screenwriter of Thanksgiving), would try to come up with the best Thanksgiving-themed kills (some of which would show up in the eventual movie). In interviews about Thanksgiving, Roth stated things like, “[Thanksgiving] was the only major holiday without a killer” and “Growing up, I dreamed of writing a slasher movie like Scream or Halloween” (to be sure, Plymouth has the distinct feel of “small-town America” in the vein of the fictional Woodsboro or Haddonfield). Filling the void for that type of masked killer to suit Thanksgiving specifically was the role Roth was born for. And part of the reason it took him so long to finish Thanksgiving is because he wanted it to live up to the trailer that was so beloved. After all, it’s a lot of pressure to write a movie that was largely intended as a two-minute lark (on that note, Tarantino and Rodriguez do get a special thank you in the credits for allowing Grindhouse to serve as the launching pad for Thanksgiving). But, in his heart, Roth always carried the story of Thanksgiving. With key pieces and phrases from the trailer also materializing in the film (though sadly, “This holiday season, prepare to have the stuffing scared out of you” doesn’t enter the equation). This includes the punny catchphrase, “This year, there will be no leftovers.” And also, “The table is set.” A part of the voiceover in the trailer that reanimates as an Instagram caption warning the killer’s victims that they’ll be sitting at that table, dead or alive, soon enough. 

    As the voiceover of the fake trailer explains, “In the town of Plymouth, Massachusetts, the fourth Thursday of November is the most celebrated day of the year.” So celebrated, it seems, that the town even has special masks modeled after famed pilgrim and former governor of Plymouth Colony, John Carver. Needless to say, Roth was delighted to learn that Rendell had unearthed such a serial killer-y name in his research of Plymouth. How could they not take such a gift from the historical gods and use it to their advantage? Especially since no one gets more ardent about Thanksgiving as an “American institution” than Plymouth, where the “first” Thanksgiving took place among English colonists and the Wampanoag tribe. Or rather, that’s the “first” Thanksgiving that Sarah Josepha Hale chose to center the holiday around when advocating for it to become a national one. Unfortunately, there are no Hale masks to complement a John Carver one—that would perhaps be too “busy.” Because if classic slashers like the aforementioned Halloween and Scream have taught us anything, it’s that only one mask can serve as the iconography for a truly memorable horror movie. To that end, there are few things more horrific in America than insatiable consumerism. 

    However, as much as Thanksgiving is a story about the havoc gross consumerism causes, it’s also a story about the rage invoked among the hoi polloi when they see the flagrant privilege of others. For it’s not only bad enough to have privilege, but it’s even worse to flaunt it in front of the rabble. Which is exactly what Jessica Wright’s (Nell Verlaque) friends, Evan (Tomaso Sanelli), Gabby (Addison Rae), Scuba (Gabriel Davenport) and Yulia (Jenna Warren), do when they decide to go on a (not so) “stealth mission” to get Evan a new phone from RightMart, the store Jessica father, Thomas (Rick Hoffman), owns. Because it’s the type of uniquely American “one-stop shop” where you can buy, apparently, lipstick, a phone and a waffle iron. Indeed, the security guard tries to placate the evermore ravenous crowd by shouting, “The store opens in ten minutes, you’ll get your waffle iron!” And it’s true, the first one hundred customers to enter the store are promised a free waffle iron. The kind of promotion that corporate management never seems to understand will backfire spectacularly. 

    Thomas, the “big man in charge,” certainly doesn’t seem to, explaining to his family, “You know, we always do the, uh, midnight Black Friday, but people were showing up at six p.m. anyway, so…” When he’s complimented for his business acumen, Thomas insists, “Yeah well credit my beautiful finacée over there, it was her idea.” The “beautiful fiancée” in question is Kathleen (Karen Cliche…quite a name, by the way), the Meredith Blake-esque figure in Jessica’s life. And, from the moment we see their first exchange together, it’s clear they have a contentious rapport, with Kathleen criticizing Jessica’s sartorial choice and Jessica reminding her that she’s in her own house. “Don’t you mean ‘our house’ now?” Kathleen ripostes. But no, Jessica does not mean that, and it makes Kathleen’s fate all the more apropos (particularly as she was also the credited “brainchild” for opening the store on Thanksgiving instead of waiting until actual Black Friday. But, as RightMart employee Mitch Collins [Ty Olsson] puts it, “Let’s face it, Black Friday starts on a Thursday now. Even in Plymouth.”). Kathleen’s fate, as a matter of fact, was one foretold in the fake trailer from Grindhouse. Along with the shudder-inducing memory of the trampoline scene that also reappears in Thanksgiving. So, too, does a bloody parade scene—this one, of course, being much more polished. 

    It is during the Thanksgiving Parade that one might be the most convinced they know who the killer is. And throughout the tale, Roth and Rendell do manage to keep viewers guessing about who “John Carver” might be, just as it is the case in Scream with Ghostface. Though, the specific motive behind it isn’t as exciting as the general reason for why “John Carver” would go to all this trouble to, let’s say, set such an elaborate table. For when he finally gathers them all together, he explains why he only left this sect of his targets alive, shaming, “It wasn’t enough to get in the store early. You had to taunt everyone outside to show them how special you were.” Now, he plans to show the rest of the world just how special they truly are by livestreaming their murders (something about that smacking of Spree starring Joe Keery). Thus, insisting, “Every year, people will watch this video and think of your greed, and the people who died from it.” Of course, that’s a fitting “double meaning” kind of statement for a holiday that still largely ignores the greed of the colonizers who pillaged Native Americans’ land and killed them for it. All neatly repositioned and marketed as a day of coming together and forgetting about “differences” (caused by the bloodlusting avarice of “mild-mannered” pilgrims). 

    What the killer seems to underestimate is the collective short-term memory of the masses, which will soon allow them to go back to their regularly-scheduled, violent Black Friday competing next year (for online shopping hasn’t eradicated the physical contact sport that this “holiday” continues to invoke). Thus, his revenge, served too hot, as it were, proves to be rather unsatisfying for him on multiple levels by Thanksgiving’s conclusion. Because, once Gordon Gekko verbalized what Americans had been thinking all along—“Greed is good”—there was never going to be any unteaching of that message.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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