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Tag Archives: horror
Movie Review: Different century, new setting, same old “Wolf Man”
Universal futzed around with rebooting its classic werewolf horror franchise “Wolf Man” for years, and delayed releasing the latest finished film as well. Perhaps they were hoping more time would pass and we’d all forget the many other incarnations of … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged film, horror, leigh-whannell, movies, wolf-man
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Movie Review: Zombie Apocalypse is the least of This Cali Hamlet’s problems — “Hemet, or the Landlady Don’t Drink Tea”
The line between a “Z-movie,” a “zero stars” on the one-to-four-star scale, and a very bad one-star C or B movie usually comes down to intent. Did they set out to make a film this awful? Was their motivation or … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged hemet, horror, movie-review, movies, Reviews, zombies
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Classic Film Review: Sarandon, Delany and Dafoe, as Schraeder’s “Light Sleeper” (1992)
Paul Schrader, the screenwriter of “Taxi Driver” and “The Last Temptation of Christ” and writer-director of “Cat People,” “American Gigolo” and “Light of Day” never really went away. But this most spiritual, Calvinist and cerebral filmmaker had his years in … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged horror, movies, paul-schraeder, susan-sarandon, willem-dafoe
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Classic Film Review: “Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror,” Murnau invents the Vampire Movie (1922)
It has been many years since I had seen the original “Nosferatu: A Symphony in Horror,” an “inspired by ‘Dracula’” vampire film that truly invented “the vampire movie” when it came out in 1922. In this historic silent masterwork the … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged dracula, first-vamire-movie, horror, movie-review, movies, nosferatu, robert-eggers
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BOX OFFICE: “Mufasa” and “Sonic” wrangle, “Nosferatu” and “A Complete Unknown” make their Holiday Week/Weekend marks
“The Lion King” prequel “Mufasa” and “Sonic the Hedgehog 3” have been battling for box office supremacy since Christmas, with Disney’s latest CGI animated outing having a day by day edge, heading towards a $58 million five day “weekend.” “Sonic … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged bob-dylan-movie, box-office, film, horror, kidman, kinky, moana, movies, mufasa, nosferatu, robert-eggers, sonic, the-fire-inside
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Movie Review: Robert Eggers’ “Christmas Carol” with fangs — “Nosferatu”
With just a handful of films, Robert Eggers has established himself as the Merchant/Ivory, Powell and Pressburger of horror. The writer, director and most tellingly production designer of “The Witch,” “The Lighthouse” and “The Northman” creates exquisitely detailed lithographic prints … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged horror, nicholas-hoult, nosferatu, robert-eggers, willem-dafoe
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Movie Review: A Doc Dad figures out that “Devils Stay” with Transplanted Organs
“Devils Stay” is an occasionally chilling genre thriller primarily of interest for depicting a Korean Catholic exorcism and its aftermath. A teen girl wrenched about violently, floating in the air as Latin rites and expulsion prayers are said over her, … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged exorcism, horror, k-horror, korean-cinema, movie-review, movies
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Movie Review: “Y2K,” back when the end was nigh
Why “Y2K?” Why now? Seriously, WTF, Gen Y and Kyle Mooney? Films? LOLs? Not on your life, A24 Films. The ex-“SNL” player Mooney co-wrote, directed and co-stars in “Y2K,” a “horny teenager” comedy that aims to be a sort of … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged film, horror, kyle-mooney, movies, y2k
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Movie Review: An Old West Sheriff sees Dead People — “Ghosts of Red Ridge”
“Ghosts of Red Ridge” is a low-budget Western that tries to be a ghost story. It’s not anything to write home about in either genre. There’s some nice lived-in detail in the locations, the dusty, dirty costumes and almost-colorful characters. … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged comedy, ghost-story, horror, indie-film, movie-reviews, western
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Classic Film Review: Hitchcock’s first take on the dainty and deadly “The Man Who Knew Too Much” (1934)
The earliest signs that the filmmaker would one day to be branded as “The Master of Suspense” in Alfred Hitchcock’s 1927 silent classic “The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog.” But it took the advent of sound, and several … Continue reading
Posted in Reviews, previews, profiles and movie news
Tagged alfred-hitchcock, film, horror, movies, thriller
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