Sadie Sink gets up to some ‘stranger things’ in this trailer for Netflix’s ‘Fear Street Part 2: 1978’

The first in the trilogy, Fear Street Part 1: 1994, hit Netflix on July 2 and felt like a typical slasher film geared toward teens. Now Netflix returns with the second installment, Fear Street Part 2: 1978, which looks just…

Untitled Horror Movie review: A horror-comedy satire with lots of potential

Tech horror (Zoom horror? iHorror?) has found its satire friend in a new cheeky low-budget horror-comedy, Untitled Horror Movie. The title of the movie speaks for itself as to how grounded in seriousness the film takes this scary genre. As…

Resident Evil’s 15 Best Villains, Ranked

For over 25 years, the Resident Evil series has brought players deep into the depths of horror and bioweapons. Zombie outbreaks, corrupted village folk, super-powered executives, and large mutated monsters are barely a few of the creatures to be defeated.…

‘Things Heard & Seen’ review: A bonkers ending saves this film’s predictable and uninteresting beginning

It’s rare that a film starts as bad as this one does and still manages to stick the landing. Things Heard & Seen begins as a typical haunted house story riddled with cliches but somewhere along the way, the film…

‘Separation’ review: Let go of it for a better life

Although his face is as regal as can be, Jeff (Rupert Friend) is not the king of the brownstone in Separation, the newest horror film from William Brent Bell. No longer a successful comic book artist, and from there a…

Women & Horror: ‘Marlina the Murderer in Four Acts’ is a genre-bending victim-avenger story from director Mouly Surya

Marlina the Murderer in Four Acts is at first glance a convergence of cinematic influences. Set in a rural Indonesian town, the story follows the recently widowed Marlina’s (Marsha Timothy) journey after she murders a band of thieves and rapists in self-defense when they invade her home. The film, with its simplistic narrative divided neatly into four acts, is less about the moral gaze and more about visual and aural rhetoric, recalling the works of Sergio Leone and others that make up the “spaghetti western” genre.

A Nightmare Wakes review: Every book lover’s worst nightmare

Writers and filmmakers love to latch onto Mary and Percy Bysshe Shelley’s love story like it’s the ultimate tragic romance. A forbidden love between a 16-year-old and a married 21-year-old (which may or may not have been consummated in a…