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House of the Dead II: Dead Aim (2005) - Horror Film Review 28 Feb 12:50 PM (16 hours ago)


I've owned zombie horror film House of the Dead II: Dead Aim for many years, but I had such bad memories of the Uwe Boll directed original that I had long put off watching this sequel. That original made the cardinal sin of being as dull as dishwater, even if it had a couple of inspired moments, such as editing in gameplay from the Sega video games it was based on during some of its more action packed scenes. In terms of quality, this Michael Hurst (New Blood) directed sequel is not better, but is more entertaining in that special way that only low budget zombie films can be.

A university science professor trying to perfect a serum to resurrect the dead (a short but sweet role by cult actor Sid Haig - The Devil's Rejects) results in the accidental unleashing of a virus that turns the students and teachers of the university into flesh hungry ghouls. Catching the attention of a zombie hunting organisation known as A.M.S, they send two agents; Nightingale (Emmanuelle Vaugier - Saw II) and Ellis (Ed Quinn - Werewolf: The Beast Among Us) as well as a small group of soldiers to the place of learning. Their mission is to retrieve a blood sample from patient zero, with the hope a vaccine can be created from the blood. They are working against the clock however, the army planning to destroy the place by missiles in order to contain the contagion.

This was cheesy, predictable, and silly in a way that if not purposely done, was still a good reflection on the cheesy video games that the property spawned from. Over the hour and a half runtime there are many easily avoidable deaths, groan worthy one liners, and stupid ideas. One of the things I most love about zombie films is that it doesn't matter if the plot is particularly good, as long as there are enough undead I am going to be happy, content to switch off my brain and let the goofiness and mayhem wash over me. Unlike the first movie, this one remembers to be entertaining, from the start to the finish there isn't really a let-up, with the action forever increasing, and the odds of survival getting more and more ridiculous. Side characters mainly existed to be swiftly killed, it was funny how fast the soldiers were defeated, even one of them who stated he had fought the undead before, kept mistaking zombies for survivors until his luck ran out. Most memorable of these soldiers was Bart (James Parks - Kill Bill: Vol 1, Vol 2), a self serving and cocky man who was as entertaining as he was sleazy. I liked Nightingale and Ellis, they didn't have much to them other than tonnes of bravado and a willingness to be cold as ice when it came to dealing with the recently infected, but they did remind me of the protagonist duos you would see in the games.

Initially in small numbers, the amount of walking corpses increases as the film goes on. There did seem to be a bit of main character energy with the protagonists, as they are able to survive intense close quarters fighting of large groups without getting bitten or scratched, while the more expendable characters instantly get bitten. To be fair to them, by the end of the movie the zombie actors direction seems to be 'pretend you are in a mosh pit at a hardcore music festival' as they seemed to do little more than rush the heroes with their arms windmilling in large circles! There is plenty of blood, plenty of action, and a couple of references to the games. The games are not known for their deep stories, and this is the same, the plot is incredibly basic and fitted the vibe of a short and sweet arcade machine light gun game. Some later story beats were more silly than serious, but it gave a reason to increase the tension and threat level. Zombies were plentiful and looked the part, often appearing in huge groups. Nothing like the games, there were just zombies here and no other creatures, and those zombies look like former people rather than lab grown monstrosities. I was fine with this though, I was more than happy that the film was enjoyably dumb rather than a lesson in tedium. I also appreciated how this was linked to the first movie, rather than being a completely self contained story. Lastly, I enjoyed the bleak ending to this, always good to see in these types of movies!

With zombie films it is never so much 'is this good?' but more 'is this fun?' House of the Dead II: Dead Aim is not a good movie, but it was an enjoyable one. The university setting might not be the most original, in fact, there is little here that is original, but there are spirited performances from people who are likely all too aware of the level of film they are acting in. The story might be incredibly basic, but I kind of get the feeling that was the intention, and being from the early 2000s (that I have huge nostalgia for), this was a zombie film that did exactly what it set out to do, mindless entertainment.

SCORE:

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The Rotting Zombie's Round-Up of Horror News for February 2025 27 Feb 8:45 AM (yesterday, 8:45 am)


2025 has been continuing unexpectedly interesting in my personal life this year, while I'm trying to keep my rotted beak out of Reddit too much as there is some terrible things happening around the world at the moment it seems. Also, I have to say, I really dislike the apparent Nazi in charge of Twitter, but due to having the most followers on that platform I am stuck having to use it. I am however on Threads and Bluesky now. With that out the way, onwards to the news...

New werewolf film Byte is now on Tubi. The weird synopsis states a group of friends discover a phone app that claims to be able to transform people into werewolves, which coincides in a series of gruesome attacks around town. Written/directed by Eddie Lengyel (St Patrick's Day: The Sluagh Awakens), this stars Kayden Bryce (An Intrusion), Marshall Vargas (Specter) and Carlie Allen (Shredded).


Final Days: Tales from the End Times is a new anthology that as the title suggests is based around the apocalypse. Five different directors bring five different tales of the end of everything, with the film starring Robert LaSardo (Bloodthirst), Kayla Kelly, Seth Boyer, and Rodney B. Snyder. It is currently available exclusively on Amazon Prime Video to rent or buy, and beginning March 28th 2025, Terror Films Releasing will be releasing it across a variety of digital platforms.


The American Ripper is the latest horror film from ITN Movies. Said to be inspired by The Shining and Joker, this comes from filmmaking couple Chuck and Karolina Morrongiello who were responsible for all aspects of production, from acting to directing, the soundtrack, and editing. The synopsis has a newly married couple moving into a new house. It is here that the husband swiftly turns into a homicidal maniac, torturing his new wife, and killing anyone who gets in his way. The American Ripper is currently available on Tubi and Amazon.


Don't Get Eaten is a family horror-comedy set for digital debut for North American VOD platforms and DVD on March 4th 2025. The story is about a zombie apocalypse prepper whose wife is fed up with her husbands obsession with making zombie survival videos. On the advice of a couples therapist, the family head away for a technology free weekend, but it is here where an actual zombie apocalypse begins. Written and directed by George Simon and Joseph Simon, the cast include among them Justin Kilduff, Melinda Rose, Dale Dobson, and Reese Ravencraft.


Finally for today, March 11th 2025 sees the release of Troma Entertainment's Eating Miss Campbell on Blu-ray. This is a high school horror comedy about a vegan-goth introvert (Lyndsey Craine - Book of Monsters) whose affair with teacher Miss Campbell (Lala Barlow) results in the girl getting a taste for flesh and deciding to try and win the schools 'All You Can Eat Massacre' contest. Though not a sequel, Vito Trigo (Return to Nuke 'Em High), Lloyd Kaufman (President of Troma Entertainment), Dani Thompson (Video Shop Tales of Terror), and Laurence R. Harvey (The Human Centipede sequels) all reprise their roles from My Bloody Banjo.

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Heretics (2024) - Horror Film Review 26 Feb 11:59 AM (2 days ago)


It had been a hot minute since I had last watched a found footage horror for review so I was ready to give the Jose Prendes (Monster Mash) directed and Ryan Ebert written Heretics a fair chance. This was very old school in how it was created and unfortunately that meant there was a lot to dislike here.

A bunch of teenage friends are having a drunken garden party one evening. With the alcohol flowing and the friends running out of ideas for what to do, one of them suggests that they head to the abandoned Simmons estate (no relation, my surname is 'Simmonds'!). It is a local place rumoured to be inhabited by crazy homeless people, which teens in the area visit as a test of their courage, to see if they can last the night there. Things briefly go well, but it isn't too long before the group find themselves under assault from a group of murderous demon worshipping cultists.

Firstly, I thought how the found footage aspect was presented was different to the normal way. There is some text at film's start but instead of stating the following was to be recovered footage found it is instead praising a demon named Lilith. I thought that screen and the one at the end of Heretics was probably the best idea here. This falls into all the usual generic tropes of the genre. It begins with a far too long introduction, twenty seven minutes of dumb teenagers playing drinking games and flirting might have intended to give the characters some fleshing out, but it just made me dislike them more than I would have without that part. By the half hour mark the teens have finally got to the abandoned house, I noted that it was thirty three minutes when the first moment that could be considered horror happened, and from here it is somehow all downhill.
Things progress predictably, lots of people filming for absolutely no reason, the scared teens constantly running into the basement rather than making any attempt to break the multitude of weak looking windows in the house proper, constant excuses as to why they shouldn't just try and escape, and then the third act. Third act goes full shaky cam, lots of really blurry and hard to see scenes put against static camera recordings that were so dark it was hard to make much out. This wasn't exciting, instead the most action packed section of the film felt plain dull.

There were too many characters to care about, none of which had much personality to them. Stand-out was Eva (Neeley Dayan), only because her being the only religious character made her easier to remember than the rest of the idiotic teens. I also enjoyed seeing prolific actor Eric Roberts (Devil's Knight, Down Below) in a small role here. I assume a lot of the dialogue was improvised as it was mainly made up of characters saying the same things in different ways over and over again. A bit where Jessica (Shelby Wright) films a video message for her parents while sniffling was a blatant homage to The Blair Witch Project, making me roll my eyes. The cultists unfortunately came across as comically cartoonish. When they first appeared, climbing through windows they briefly looked like a threat as it appeared they were wearing balaclavas so seemed intimidating. It soon became clear they were idiots too, black robed and wearing goofy black masks, it was hard to take them seriously, not helped by their bumbling around and Scooby-Doo type reveals of who they actually were. One thing Heretics does get right is the amount of on-screen deaths, with a large cast comes a large body count thankfully, and the sticky looking red blood looked good on screen.

Heretics had little bursts of good ideas but all too often it was content to be a derivative copy of found footages from before. This wasn't all terrible, and if for some reason you are in the mood for a brain dead found footage then Heretics will be right up your street.

SCORE:

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Schicksalsweg (2024) by Schatten Muse - Music Album Review 25 Feb 12:32 PM (3 days ago)


Schatten Muse
are a band from Berlin/Athens whose sound the press release states is mainly influenced by electronic underground music of the 1980s and 1990s, especially with regards to NDT (New German Death Art). Schicksalsweg (Fateful Path in English)was released last year and brings together nine tracks of darkness.

The album has a simple, repetitive, and often addictive quality to its music. Sometimes sounding like a soundscape such as with 'Vergangen' and closing trio 'Es Stirbt Ein Teil Von Mir', 'Verlorene Seelen', and 'Zerrissenheit'. Music is by Shelmerdine, with all vocals/lyrics coming from Sylvia Fürst, and the lyrics are different to what you might expect. A lot of the time the vocals are more of a narration or incantation. I don't know German so the words mean nothing to me, but with the atmospheric music it sounded like a spell being spoken. Looking back to the press release it states the lyrical concept is about '...darkness, melancholy, isolation, philosophy of life and death, solitude, madness, depression, desperation, surrealism, expressionism, (and) existential philosophy...'.

The music remained simple throughout, such as the pulsating drumbeats on opener track 'Angst', and the piano led 'Fluss Des Lebens'. Second track 'Illusion' with its atmospheric Silent Hill mist-world type sound began a trip-hop sound that followed on to my favourite track 'Transzendenz' with a Depeche Mode vibe to it and that title constantly being spoken. The only other track to mention on the forty one minute album is the mournful 'Charlotte Manchmal', a track that I quite enjoyed.

I wouldn't say this genre of music is one I would say I'm a giant fan of, but I still did enjoy what I heard here. I felt this was better with tracks which felt more like isolated songs, rather than some of the later ones that became a bit abstract and soundscape like to my ears. There was plenty to like here, so I am glad I gave Schatten Muse's Schickalsweg a listen.

SCORE:

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#Manhole (2023) - Thriller Film Review 24 Feb 8:14 AM (4 days ago)


Last year I saw Fall, a dizzying thriller about a thrill seeker trapped at the top of a giant tower. Today's review is the complete inverse of that one; #Manhole, a Japanese one person disaster movie about a man who has fallen down a manhole. Directed by Kazuyoshi Kumakiri and written by Michitaka Okada, this seemed to be low on ideas, but turned out it was saving them all for the bonkers end.

Shensuke Kawamura (Yuto Nakajima) is a successful young salesman who is thrown a surprise party on the eve of his wedding to the daughter of the CEO of the company he works for. Him and his colleagues drink late into the night until eventually, a drunk Shensuke sets off for home. In the dark however he doesn't see an open manhole and promptly falls through the opening. Coming to, he realises that he sustained a nasty leg injury during the fall, and that even worse, the ladder leading out of the hole is broken. When he discovers that his phone's GPS appears to have been altered, so that he is unable to tell where he is, the man starts to suspect that this was all planned by someone out to cause him harm.


This avoids the usual plot device of the mobile phone being damaged or without signal and instead makes the phone a central part of the storytelling device. Being the middle of the night, Shensuke is unable to get through to any contacts on his phone, apart from awkwardly, a girl he had dated before he met his bride to be. He also gets through to the police, but due to his GPS not working they don't know how to locate the man. Much of the story for him comes through an in universe version of Twitter (Twitler?) called 'Pecker', on this social media platform he swiftly creates a profile named 'Manhole Girl', figuring people are more likely to assist him if they think he is a damsel in distress. It is via this platform that backstory for the type of person the protagonist is, is revealed to the viewer. The phone was an integral item, also being used to take photos that Shensuke hopes will identify where he is trapped, as well as for him to watch videos taken earlier in the evening, to look for clues on who may have spiked his drink (if he was indeed lured to the hole by someone sinister).

Make-up effects were effective, the protagonist getting more dirty and bloody as the one hour forty film goes on. The blood effects were good, and the manhole location was suitably gross. There always feels a need to have various unbelievable things happen to keep the movie interesting, and here is no different. Aside from his leg wound hindering his movement, other urgent matters randomly pop up, such as a gas pipe in the hole leaking gas, rain threatening to flood the hole, and waste from a slaughterhouse causing some type of foam to start filling up the space. These moments all felt a bit generic, this feeling not helped by the fact that Shensuke seems a bit of a self absorbed protagonist, thinking himself the most important person in the world.
By the end of the second act I felt like #Manhole may have ran out of energy, it became a bit meandering, and the dull location didn't do much to keep events exciting. Thankfully then, there is a third act that turns everything on its head. Flashbacks and revelations combine to make for story twists that I didn't remotely see coming. The film may end on a bit of a fun note, but it sure gets bleak along the way!


#Manhole started off fun enough but soon felt like it was running out of ideas. I  was glad that there was a fresh injection of thrills added in that third act as it really turned things around for me, leading to a thrilling finale that was full of dark humour as well as misery! #Manhole streams exclusively on SCREAMBOX from February 25th.

SCORE:

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The North Witch (2024) - Horror Film Review 21 Feb 5:46 AM (7 days ago)


The North Witch
(directed by Bruce Wemple - The Hangman, Lake Artifact) had an intriguing premise to it, one that drew me in. It was a shame then that a lot of the one hour twenty minute run time saw me feeling a bit let down, mainly due to how rushed the set-up for this was. I was actually ready to write this off as a terrible film, but there were elements that did appeal, and I'm happy to say it does manage to pull things back together somewhat for the final act.

Having recently been kicked out of the home she had been renting with two others due to them not liking her, Madison (Anna Shields - Lake Artifact, and who also wrote this one) phones an old friend to see if she can stay at her home. The friend, Gemma (Jessy Holtermann - The Hangman) tells Maddie that she is actually just about to go on a camping trip with friends to a remote area in Canada named 'The Barren Lands'. There is a legend of a mysterious vanishing cabin known as 'The Barren Cabin', and Gemma and her friends, who include among them Laura (Brianna Cala), Alice (Ameerah Briggs - The Hangman, Split), and Talia (Kaitlyn Lunardi - The Hangman) are hoping to find evidence of this house while on their trip. On the very first night there, the group find themselves caught up in a terrible storm, in the chaos they are all separated, with Maddie discovering an old cabin that she decides to take shelter in, unable to go too far away from it due to a bad leg injury she sustained during the storm. A few days later she is joined by Talia, but the woman's increasingly disturbing behaviour leads Maddie to suspect something isn't right with her, and she begins to fear for her safety.

This started great, an opening found footage style blurb that speaks about the legend of the vanishing cabin. A not so great ending blurb that attempts to sell the idea that during the making of the movie the film crew experienced weird goings on. This didn't seem to have anything to do with anything as up to that point The North Witch was set up like a traditional film. There are a cast of five friends initially but I wondered just what the point of all these people were. The story moves forward at a lightning pace, with Maddie finding herself alone in the cabin before even fifteen minutes of the film has passed. The set-up felt rushed to me, and due to most the characters having had barely any lines, or character development, I couldn't care less that they all seem to have vanished, likely dead. Much of the film has Maddie as the sole character, even when she is joined by Talia this still remains the same, as that character always seemed to be off doing her own thing. I did think Talia was the highlight of the movie, the actress getting to be really crazy without seeming over the top, a great range of insane looking facial expressions.
That own thing Talia was doing was mainly performing increasingly sinister self mutilation, from smashing her mouth in with a hammer, to getting into a bath of boiling hot water, to slamming a compartment drawer onto her arm until bone shows! It did all look good though, decent special effects selling the damage being done.

There is a strange method of some of the potentially more interesting ideas taking place in scenes that aren't shown on screen. Most of the film takes place in the cabin, a place that looked far too new for a building that is apparently from the sixties or seventies. I guess you could defend it by saying a building that disappears and reappears might not age in a normal way. The cabin interior never felt like it was in the middle of a forest, with the windows always not really showing anything. The few scenes set outside seemed in a different location entirely, with an altogether older looking building. Maddie wasn't the most likeable of protagonists, but she was fine enough. I did feel peril for her, trapped in a building with an increasingly erratic friend. I felt that the moments where she watches videos on her friends phone in a found footage manner were very good, some of those clips felt like they would have benefitted by being shown on screen, but it was a good way to show some of the more messed up things.
I wasn't that taken with the story, the idea that the cabin had been home to a witch in the past wasn't explained that well. More details on the backstory of the place would have been good, as well as more reaction from the characters that they were staying in a place that was only said to have existed in legend, as they seemed mostly unfazed to be staying there. Thankfully, the last twenty minutes are were things become to come together a lot better. There are a whole variety of twists, introduction of new characters, and a feeling that what the viewer is being shown can't really be trusted. I thought this third act was good enough to claw back an additional rotting zombie head to my score.

A rushed first act, a long meandering second act, and an exciting third act make for a witch based horror that may have been poor on occasion, but also had plenty of strong moments to it. The North Witch comes from High Fliers Films.

SCORE:

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The Rotting Zombie's News Anthology for February 20th 2025 20 Feb 2:52 AM (9 days ago)


Today sees my sister getting married, so I will be off busy with that this day, but should still have time to stick up this small news post, bringing three stories plucked from the bottom of my bloody news sack. Onwards to the news.

Starting with some music news and industrial rockers Gillsaw have released a new single with their track 'Siren Comes'. This is the second single from the group, following on from 'Rizen' and this brings a '...relentless blend of metal, electronic, and industrial elements'. The track is about a man who is tormented by night by the titular siren creature.


The Dead Rose is an upcoming feature film that is about a man (played by Jimmy Drain) who gets caught up in the world of organised crime, coming across a secretive cult planning on world domination in the process. This is written and to be directed by Drain, and other cast members include Eric Roberts (Babylon), Vernon Wells (The Road Warrior), and Richard Tyson (Black Hawk Down). Production for The Dead Rose continues in Denver, Colorado and Los Angeles this summer.


Finally for today, FOUND  TV have announced the exclusive streaming release of What Happened to Suzy, which will be coming to the platform on February 21st. Directed by James Ersted. This found footage horror is described as a social mystery horror, and is also going to be shown on the big screen at the Toronto Indie Horrorfest on April 3rd.

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Delicate Arch (2024) - Horror Film Review 19 Feb 8:51 AM (9 days ago)


Delicate Arch
(written and directed by Matthew Warren in his feature length directorial debut) is just the sort of messed up confusing horror that appeals to me. This desert based horror constantly hints at fourth wall breaking elements using similar ideas to The Cabin in the Woods, but executed better, and on par with the excellent Resolution and The Endless, even feeling like a companion piece to those messed up movies. It doesn't quite stick the landing however, running out of steam for its confusing and hard to follow third act.

With high pollution in the city causing health issues, four friends - film nerd Grant (William Leon), his ex-girlfriend Wilda (Kelley Mack - The Walking Dead TV series), stoner Ferg (Rene Leech), and alpha male Cody (Kevin Bohleber - V/H/S/Beyond segment 'Fur Babies') head out on a camping trip to the Utah desert. Their plan is to hike to a rock formation known as 'delicate arch', doing plenty of drugs on the way. The journey becomes increasingly surreal, and Grant starts to suspect that they might unknowingly be characters in a horror movie.

The story is really out there, from the start it is shown how this being a film means that part is able to interfere with the actual story going on. A prologue has a narrator (Katie Self - Silent Hill: Ascension web series) being able to influence a man to take his own life, serving as an early hint as to the strangeness of the film world. This then appears throughout, with Grant in particular seeming to sense he is inside a film, such as blacking out in-between scenes and losing time, commenting when the film is at its exact midpoint, literally measuring out the boundaries of the camera shot he finds himself in, as well as staring directly at the viewer. That part of the film takes a slight backseat to the drama of the four friends travelling across the desert. There is tension with Grant seeming to still have feelings for Wilda, while it seems she is secretly hooking up with Cody. As Grant indicates, Ferg serves as the stoner comic relief, and also can be seen as a catalyst for some of the strange events due to the amount of random drugs they have on them.

It sometimes felt that this was a little too much style over substance. I'm all for that in horror films, and for much of the run time it didn't disappoint. I particularly liked the mid-film point where after taking a lot of magic mushrooms the film starts to at first slip into an animated feature, before becoming all CG (via the use of AR). This made for a suitably trippy segment that was entertaining to watch. I liked also how there are three distinct types of film work here. Most of the movie plays out in a constricting wide-screen format, but at times we get horizontal phone footage instead, and with Grant having brought an old school film camera, there are also sections where it is grainy found footage type sequences. That third act lost it for me though, I didn't understand where the story was going, with many fake out segments that show various unhappy things happing to the protagonists before rewinding to suggest they didn't take place? Or that everything shown is taking place somewhere? I'm not too sure at all what was going on, there was a vague reference to the delicate arch rock formation maybe being a gateway to other worlds, but I just felt lost in the final ten to fifteen minutes. It wasn't badly made, there was impressive film work here, but I just could not follow what was going on and what I as a viewer was meant to make of it all.

Delicate Arch was a film that felt unique, similar ideas to Resolution, but that was no bad thing. The desert location helped the paranoia and isolation that the characters begin to feel, and I thought the direction was good. For me, I got a bit too lost with where the story went to, leaving me feeling a little dissatisfied when the end credits rolled. Described as a 'psychonautic horror', Delicate Arch came to the streaming platform SCREAMBOX on February 11th.

SCORE:

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Dead on Arrival - Escape Room Review 18 Feb 8:18 AM (10 days ago)


Shame on me! My sister and her boyfriend are always going to escape rooms and stating how fun they are, but I admit that when I was told that as part of my birthday present I would be going to a local escape room with them and my father I wasn't that excited. I should have been more excited though, as this turned out to be a great time that made me feel like I was inside a survival horror video game (minus any enemies).

The escape room we went for was titled Dead on Arrival, rated five out of five stars for difficulty, and three out of five scare factor, and apparently just a 13% escape rate. As we arrived I overheard the previous group saying they had failed the room, and with me and my father having no real idea what to expect with an escape room, I expected we wouldn't survive. After being led blindfolded to the escape room, the introduction story plays out over a speaker. The set-up states that we had gone to hospital after an accident and family members had been told the injuries were not major. For some reason able to hear the room around us but unable to move or respond, we are alarmed when the heart rate monitor goes wild and our family are told we have sadly passed away. Awakening some time later, we find ourselves in a morgue, with it soon dawning on us that our death was faked in order to sell us to some type of dark web buyer. We are given an hour to escape the room before our captor returns to deal with us.

As films such as Escape Room and...well, Escape Room had already taught me, this is made up of a series of rooms, rather than literally one room. I found that rather than abstract solutions to puzzles, it all revolved around unlocking various types of locks that are sealing doors, drawers, and cupboards shut. Different to what I had expected, we were able to ask for hints at any time, seemingly infinitely should need be. I think that we asked around four times for hints, including the very first room that to my knowledge contained the most obscure puzzle of the whole lot, that didn't instil much hope of us escaping. Obviously, I'm not going to go into too much detail on the puzzles for fear of spoiling, but there were some fun ones here, though also some that appeared a bit broken. A great one that took me straight back to the Resident Evil games saw us lining up a series of x-ray photos to spell out a number, but some of the photos seemed a bit faded, so we had to get a lot of assistance to get the numbers correct. My personal favourite had us in a security room having to enter a series of questions on a PC, with the added difficulty of the mouse and keyboard being portioned off, away from the screen. Initially a two person job, I realised that thanks to my long arms I was just about able to move the mouse and see the screen at the same time, making for a much quicker time with that part! Puzzles in general were not too difficult, the difficulty came more from not being sure how props worked, such as the process to turn off a fan in one room, and working out what the relevance of a locked away severed hand was. It was all a learning process though, going forward I will know more what to expect. 

Finally with less than five minutes left, we escaped the cold morgue and its secret rooms via a narrow passageway. Truthfully, I found this a lot of fun. I had feared that constantly being watched by the games master over the cameras would make me feel a bit awkward and hesitant to give any suggestions, but the feel of being inside a survival horror video game removed that fear of embarrassment. As my first escape room experience, I enjoyed Dead on Arrival, especially as we were able to work together to solve the clues and escape!

SCORE:



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Bokshi (2025) - Horror Film Review 17 Feb 6:31 AM (11 days ago)


I know not why, but I had in my head that the Bhargav Saikia directed and Harsh Vaibhav written Indian folk-horror Bokshi (that word being a Nepalese one meaning witch, sorceress, or someone believing in witchcraft) was a short film. Imagine my surprise then when I sat down to watch it and saw it had a daunting two hour forty five minute run time! So much so that I did a real life double take. A long run time of course doesn't mean a bad film, but I have seen more than my fair share of overly long arthouse horrors where the time is filled with style over substance, and with this one starting in that manner I feared I may overdose on tedium. Thankfully, while this certainly felt as long as its runtime, it was an effective horror, with a setting relatively unique for me in terms of horror. I have seen horror films set in India, but aside from comedy horror Goa Goa Gone, the ones I have seen all featured white protagonists.

Anahita (Prasanna Bisht) is a seventeen year old girl who has frequent terrifying nightmares relating to an incident she was caught up in involving her shaman mother as a young child, which led to her mother disappearing. After a violent encounter with a bully at her school, her grandma decides to send Anahita away to a boarding school, thinking the change in scenery could help her get over her past trauma. It is at this new school that she encounters captivating history club teacher Shalini (Mansi Multani), and takes an instant shine to the woman due to her lessons talking about folklore related to the type of beliefs her mother's side of the family practised. Learning that Shalini is going to take a select group of students on a fieldtrip to a mysterious prehistoric site deep in a remote forest, Anahita convinces the teacher to let her come along as well, as again, it relates to the type of thing her mother had believed in. Things begin well, but after Shalini decides to ignore the advice of the guides and head into a part of the forest that the locals believe to be cursed by an ancient witch known as the Bokshi, the carefully planned field trip begins to fall apart.


I always make notes when watching a film for review, and this time around those notes are many! After an arthouse style prologue that sees the screen bathed in a red tint as discordant images are edited together, things settle down. Being so long, the film is split into seven distinct chapters with intelligently placed beginnings and ends. For instance, chapter one ends with Anahita heading off to boarding school, while later on, chapter five sees the hapless group entering the forbidden part of the forest. This does feel like a long and lengthy movie, but thinking of it all, I was hard placed to be able to identify anything added just to extend the run time. There was always something going on, whether the trippy sequence that saw two shamans separated by distance battling each other via magic (really gave me vibes of the wizard battle between Gandalf and Saruman in The Lord of the Rings!), or the frequent nightmare flashback sequences Anahita suffers with. The pure length of the film helped to really make the group's trek deep, deep into the forest feel like a real journey, adding the impression of it feeling like they really are far away from any type of help. While traditionally shot rather than found footage, I did get a real The Blair Witch Project vibe to this, though the supernatural elements here are shown to be genuine with many characters experiencing the effects of that part of the film. A lot of this was atmosphere and build-up, again with the references to other films, I got more than an echo of The Ritual in the way the characters keep stumbling across unsettling offerings. This ramping up of tension leads to a decent payoff with a quite insane final act that with forty five minutes to go, saw the bubbling madness finally boil over, before simmering down to another red tinted arthouse sequence for the film's ending. One that added elements that felt similar to Midsommar, and used elements of the Bokshi as an analogy for female empowerment.

Characters were a varied bunch, and settled down to a key set once the story really gets going. There are seven students, five girls and two boys, some of which have been on previous field trips with their history club teacher. Then there are three local guides, Shalini and another teacher, Avinash (Sandeep Shridhar Dhabale). Of course, being the protagonist, Anahita had a lot of development to her character, the main draw being exactly what happened to her when she was a child that could have possibly opened her up to being possessed by a Bokshi. Shalini was a much more mysterious character, her behaviour became more of a type of cult leader, constantly convincing the group to press forward, and acting very strangely the deeper the group got. I personally thought Avinash was the best character here, a man with an impressive moustache and a voice of reason who is forced to accept his world view isn't correct when the myths and legends he sees as being silly begin to come to life around him. Right up until the end this stern teacher was trying to do the best by his pupils, Avinash - I salute you! Outside of a core four or five, the other key characters didn't have as much to them, the two male students mainly kept outside the story, while two of the girls only defining characteristics were that they were identical twins.
Special mention has to go to Advait Nemlekar who created both the songs and background score, an unnerving rustic tribal sound that was a perfect fit.


Bokshi is a horror that feels long, but it also was something that really drew me in. The unique Indian setting set itself apart in terms of looks, while the story was something that I found a little confusing, but there was enough provided to give you at least a vague idea of what was going on. The film looked quality, just a couple of effects that looked a little CG, and it was a bit distracting having the myths and legends play out as a series of animated hand drawings, but that saved on cost, and fitted that these would have been stories passed down before the advent of technology. I was impressed with the atmospheric folk-horror that was on display here, and regardless of the big ask in terms of time, this was something I was very happy I got to see. Bokshi had its world premiere on 31st January at the Rotterdam International Film Festival.

SCORE:




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The Gift (2000) - Horror Film Review 14 Feb 1:46 PM (14 days ago)


I requested a screener of the 2000 supernatural horror film The Gift but later discovered I already owned it on VHS. This wasn't a good sign for this Sam Raimi (Drag Me to Hell, The Evil Dead) directed movie as usually if I can't remember something it means it left little impression. I found the film to be a bit of a slow burn, but maybe due to being more mature, I found myself really enjoying this story, and it was a delight spotting a whole bunch of famous actors throughout this.

Cate Blanchett (Thor: Ragnarok, The Lord of the Rings trilogy) stars as Annie Wilson, a small town psychic who performs readings for the local townsfolk. After socialite Jessica King (Katie Holmes - Brahms: The Boy II, Miss Meadows) goes missing, her worried father convinces the local Sheriff (J.K Simmons - Spider-Man) to enlist Annie's help, and soon using her powers she is able to locate the body of the woman hidden in a pond of the property of local redneck Donnie Barksdale (Keanu Reeves - John Wick). After a trial however, Annie discovers her visions about the murder have not stopped, and that the wrong person might have been convicted of the crime.

The Gift is played super seriously and super straight, with the paranormal elements only popping up every now and again. At its heart this is a small town drama, made up of a variety of important characters who add texture to the film world. You have Donnie's abused wife, Valerie (Hilary Swank - P.S. I Love You), mentally ill mechanic Buddy (Giovanni Ribisi - Ted) and Annie's husband to be (Greg Kinnear - Mystery Men) all fleshing out Annie's character, with Valerie she is trying to do the right thing by her, with Buddy she is trying to be a friend to him, while with Annie's husband she is forced to confront her own past with relation to the husband of her three children who died a year or so previously. The three children also play a part, but felt much less developed and there just as a prop rather than feeling like living breathing characters. As the movie's most vocal antagonist, Reeves was on fun form, even if he seemed far too good looking and well presented to be playing a backwater redneck.

The story plays out like a murder mystery, including police procedure scenes, and a relatively lengthy court case sequence that makes up a lot of the second act. I found this all interesting in my more mature guise, but I will admit, I have a giant soft spot for films from the early 2000s, I have such a huge feel of bittersweet nostalgia for that time in my life. It was a delight spotting so many famous faces, with most the actors here doing great jobs. The horror is very slight, mainly taking the form of a couple of nightmare/vision sequences that Annie has, there are more elements of a thriller here, including a satisfying finale that works despite using old horror film tropes (the final encounter taking place at night during a thunder storm). Special effects were minimal, but the blood shown on screen was fine enough, and the make-up effects on the corpse looked effective.

The Gift is light on horror and high on drama, it can easily be seen as a slow burn. For me, I was there for the acting, and the tightly woven story that while predictable for the most part, I still enjoyed seeing play out to its thrilling conclusion. The Gift is currently streaming exclusively on ARROW in the UK.

SCORE:



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The Rotting Zombie's News Anthology for Thursday 13th February - Birthday Edition 13 Feb 1:29 PM (15 days ago)

Despite being a rotted corpse, this rotting zombie is one year older somehow today, having arrived at my forty third birthday. To celebrate I've not only taken a week off of my day job, but also crafted a trio of news stories to make you scream...possibly.

A crowdfunding campaign has been released for new Bigfoot movie, Fear The Fouke Monster. Inspired by the real life legend of a hairy swamp monster living near the small American town of Fouke, this follows in the footsteps of 1972 cult classic The Legend of Boggy Creek, which also was based on the same legend. Half of the movie has currently been shot and pre-editing has begun. Filmmaker Mark Francis says about his film "We kill women, children and pets in this film. This ain't no 'gentle giant of the forest!" An Indiegogo campaign is currently running, for more details, travel the link to find out more.

David Lynch inspired horror film Texas Nightmare has had an official trailer released. This comes from director Michael Merino and stars Sadie Katz (Wrong Turn 6: Last Resort), Felissa Rose (Sleepaway Camp), James Pratt (The 3 Killer Pigs), Lew Temple (The Devil's Rejects), and Eva Hamilton (The Black Mass). The film sees a writer heading to an isolated home in rural Texas to work on a new book. They find themselves caught up in a battle against a local cult instead.


Finally for this Birthday Day, Gator Creek is coming to digital platforms in the UK and Ireland on March 24th from Vertigo. This survival film was directed by Taneli Mustonen and Brad Watson and features an ensemble of young stars. The story has a plane crashing in the remote Louisiana bayou, with the survivors discovering they are being hunted by giant alligators mutated by chemical waste dumped in the area.




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Do You See Me? (2017) - Horror Film Review 13 Feb 12:23 AM (16 days ago)


Do You See Me?
I had assumed would be a slasher film, it shares similarities with that genre, particularly with Halloween. This follows the old adage of less is more, with the creepy clown stalking the protagonist rarely shown, but unfortunately is shown so very little that this Corbin Timbrook (The Belly of the Beast, Blood Ranch) directed and co-written indie horror felt like it wasted whatever potential it had.

Emily (Rya Meyers) is an ordinary woman who one day begins to receive disturbing messages from an unknown number that read 'Do You See Me' which is then typically followed up by the woman then spotting a creepy clown (Robert Ambrose) somewhere in the distance watching her. She contacts the police, but due to only herself ever seeing the clown, and her not keeping hold of any of the 'gifts' it leaves her, no one is really sure what to believe. As the days draw closer and closer to Halloween, the stalking increases, with Emily starting to fear for her life.


I get keeping the antagonist at arms length and rarely sighted as a way to build up tension, but this goes far too far with this concept. In total, in over eighty two minutes, the clown appears on screen for a literal total of about two minutes, and that includes the prologue where the clown kills his one and only on-screen victim. Many of the sightings appear in nightmare sequences the main character has. I figure that prologue was a compromise to actually make it seem like there was a genuine threat going on, but due to the rest of the movie this part felt almost unrelated. It also gets in the way of the mid-point notion that it is possible the creepy clown is all in her head. That might have been an interesting idea but the viewer knows that isn't the case.
It is hard to talk too much about the clown as it is on screen for so little time. When it isn't texting Emily (as an aside, she has the most sinister text message noise possible, I figured the clown had somehow made her phone make that noise, but no, it appears that is her own choice!), it stands around staring for seconds at a time. The Halloween comparisons are made here, with quite a few first person perspective shots of the clown watching Emily while hidden. I had expected this would lead up to a terrifying conclusion, but when the horror finally gets closer to home for the protagonist, I noticed that there was just four minutes of run time left before the end credits appeared, and what is shown in that time also included an epilogue scene!

I spent far too much of the movie expecting something more clever from this than it actually was. There are plenty of suspects as to who the clown could be, from Emily's jerk ex-husband Randy (Phillip Boyd), to oddball gym member Taylor (Taylor Piedmonte) and some weird neighbours. I even began to suspect it could be her ex-detective father's former partner, as the detective investigating the case mentions he used to work with her father, but this is never verified as that character is never shown on screen despite being around. Too much time is spent establishing that the protagonist is being stalked, but the threat not ramping up until far too late. I would have had the clown make an appearance properly much sooner into the movie than here, where his eventual inclusion almost felt like an afterthought.

Do You See Me? is good at ramping up the tension, but it squanders the potential and feels like it ran out of time to give a satisfying conclusion. There is far too much treading water, with the escalation coming far too late. For what you see of him, the clown had a suitably disturbing look to it, but did feel wasted, leading to a feeling of frustration that the story never really got going properly before it ended.

SCORE:

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Radio Sessions (2025) - by Eamon The Destroyer - Music EP Review 11 Feb 9:08 AM (17 days ago)


Having previously reviewed Eamon The Destroyer's second album We'll Be Piranhas and EP Alternate Piranhas, I knew what to expect from latest EP titled Radio Sessions. This Edinburgh based musician creates mellow music with a rustic sound, something that could be hard to picture in a horror setting. I am forever trying to improve my music review game though, and so here is my latest attempt.

This EP brings together six acoustic versions of his songs, rocking in at around twenty six minutes in length. It begins with 'Nothing Like Anything' which at nearly five minutes is a chilled and rustic sounding intro. Trying to link it to horror, I could picture the lovely rural folks in Deliverance banjoing along to this.
Next comes 'Underscoring the Blues' which at just over two minutes is the shortest track on Radio Sessions. I really liked this one, had the feel of a sea shanty to it, short and bittersweet.
Middle of the EP starts with the classic 'We'll Be Piranhas', something I am familiar with, actually recognising this when it started. A sailor song, at four and a half minutes this made for a pleasant and mellow time.

The second half of the EP begins with 'Silver Shadow', a sad song referencing tepee tents, probably my second favourite track to be found here. 
Penultimate track is 'Avalanche', this to me sounded like a bit of a lost track from Blur's Thirteen album, not a bad comparison as Blur are on of my favourite bands.
Finally comes 'The Choirmaster', a peaceful end to a mellow EP. Sure, trying to link it to anything horror related is a fool's errand, but I thought Radio Sessions was a good listen, I really liked the stripped back feel. Radio Sessions was released on January 31st, Eamon The Destroyer will be releasing his third album later this year, provisionally entitled Full Picture Revealed.

SCORE:

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Round the Decay (2025) - Horror Film Review 10 Feb 1:40 PM (18 days ago)


Round the Decay
is the latest indie film from writer and director Adam Newman (Everwinter Night) and takes the form of a creature feature with a large ensemble cast. With my screener of this film, I also received a note saying that the version I watched for review wasn't the complete version, with VFX being worked on, the sound mix not in its final form, and the monsters voice not finalised. As a result, I won't let those elements effect my thoughts in this review.

After a short prologue in which early American settlers reveal they have summoned a monster as revenge against the ingenious population, the story moves to present day. The remote town of Newport has fallen on hard times, with tourism down, something that Bart (Cary Hite), the new owner of the local hotel hopes to remedy. Also in the area are a group of young adults, who have came to climb the nearby hillside. Unfortunately for them, they stumble across an abandoned mine which happens to be the home of a monstrous creature called the Wrexsoul (Rachel Pizzolato), the same creature that had been summoned in the prologue. Added to the mix are a group of redneck hunters who seem intent on capturing the young friends, and the shady townsfolk who seem to know more about what is going on than they initially let on.


There were a large cast of characters here that on the one hand meant lots could be happening concurrently, but also had the downside of making it hard to remember who was who. Key characters for me where Munroe (Damian Maffei - The Strangers: Prey at Night), a monster hunter from out of town who serves as a device for the viewer to have the backstory of the creature explained in a somewhat natural feeling way. Other highlights were Gregory Newport (Jamie Dufault) as a descendent of one of the founding fathers of the town, and the frat boy styled slightly loveable idiot James 'Muffin' Ford (Jay Voishnis - Everwinter Night). With so many characters to be found in the film, it did take a while to get going properly. The first forty five minutes were more mysterious, with the various groups discovering strange things on their own. The monster itself didn't appear until the forty five minute mark, but with an hour left to go still, it meant that plenty of this creature was shown.

The Wrexsoul did look like someone wearing a monster costume, but I thought it had a cool design to the mask part of the suit. I also thought it was really cool that the monster was able to speak, but only by mimicking the words of people it had encountered. Despite this limitation, it uses this ability to have some basic communication with the protagonists at times. There were plenty of death scenes, and featured a pleasing amount of blood and gore squirting out everywhere. One later scene featured a whole cast of characters being attacked, it did make for a thrilling sequence, but the vibe was ruined slightly by it being obvious actors were just running backwards and forwards in front of the camera, rather than feeling like the characters were trying to flee the location they were in! The special effects were one of the highlights of Round the Decay, despite the not so stellar monster costume, the action scenes were exciting and well choreographed with pleasing effects used.


I couldn't help but feel that nearly the first half of this horror felt a bit longer than it needed to be. The film rapidly improved once the horror finally properly started, making me wish more of the movie had been as interesting. I felt that there were maybe too many characters hanging around to try and find a time to explain their particular backstory to the viewers, though the large cast also led to a large body count. Round the Decay came to theatres on January 31st from Dreamscape Productions.

SCORE:

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Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 - The Tomb - Impressions of the new Zombies map 6 Feb 11:46 AM (22 days ago)


I mentioned Call of Duty: Black Ops 6's 'Zombies' mode briefly last month, but this was a swift overlook of the mode as a whole, covering the first three maps. It has been a while since I spoke about a map in isolation, but now, with the release of fourth map 'The Tomb' it felt like it was the time. 'The Tomb' is the first map released for the new game that felt like it had some personality to it, something that couldn't but help remind me of the more classic Zombies maps of old.

The story is as convoluted as ever, especially as I have yet to finish the story quests on the prior three maps. Following on from whatever events occurred during third map 'Citadelle des Morts', the four heroes - Weaver, Maya, Carver, and Grey arrive at an ancient holy burial site said to be the resting place of the Sentinel Artifact, something that is said to be able to bring the dead back to life. They find unlikely help in the form of Archibald; an English explorer from an earlier time who is somehow able to guide the team. Of course, being a Zombies map, they also discover plenty of the walking dead.

The map might not go back to as claustrophobic as the ones of old, but it is closer than the other maps have been this game. The location has a logical circular design to it, while 'Revelations' style gateways allow you to teleport to the four key locations. Starting off outside in a dig site, the rest of the map takes place within the tomb, dark and dank locations where it can be difficult to see the enemies. A central hub area takes place in a mystical zone that looks like a location ripped out of The Elder Scrolls Online, vast giant mushrooms and the backdrop of a starry sky. I liked the location due to how different it felt compared to the more realistic and slightly dull previous maps. I got echoes of 'The Frozen Dawn', as well as the Ancient Greece themed map whose name and game eludes me.
The default enemies here are zombies as expected, these ones had an older look to them, coming across as more ancient and dusty, like the creatures for the classic Blind Dead series of Italian zombie films. The special round again brings the spider monsters and flying insect creatures, while bigger boss creatures I've encountered so far include a giant beast covered in electricity, and mimics; large monsters who are initially disguised as helpful items.

I have only dipped my rotted toes into this new map, but it is the first one this game that had me actually excited to go back to and play some more. The more fantastical design set it apart from the less atmospheric ones received so far, and as a whole it looks fantastic, a neat design, and plenty of places to go. With 'The Tomb', you finally have a round-based Zombies map that feels it can compare even slightly to the classics of old.

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Vampire Clay (2017) - Horror Film Review 5 Feb 11:32 AM (23 days ago)


Directed and written by Soichi Umezawa, Vampire Clay is the second blood sucking body horror watched for review this week, continuing a trend of unplanned for themed movies. This surreal horror had some great special effects, but sometimes felt like the budget couldn't adequately display the story it wanted to tell.

While doing some gardening, a small earthquake reveals a sealed bag of clay buried in the clay. Miss Aina (who had been doing the gardening) decides to take the bag and put it in her small rural art school. One of the students then ends up using the clay from within the bag, unaware that this clay is a living creature that feeds on blood and other bodily fluids in order to sustain itself. Soon, the school finds itself under attack from a clay based creature that is able to transform its victims into clay, and absorb them entirely into itself.


The stop motion effects used throughout Vampire Clay were impressive, as were the special effects used to show the carnage it was able to bring about. From moving small phallic looking objects, to a clay mouse, and clay tentacles, this bizarre antagonist had a feel and look of The Thing to it. One of its abilities is to create a clay replica of its victim that can then be used to trick others into becoming new victims. Being made of a soft clay means it is easily damaged, and is able to use this to its own advantage, such as using items embedded in its soft flesh as weapons. The make-up effects looked fantastic, giving characters 'infected', a look of being part clay and part human. Later on there is a short fully stop-motion sequence that looked more effective due to the stop-motion being jerky and unnatural looking. It also had a fun ability to transform body parts it is able to touch into clay itself, an early highlight being a girl who smashes her now clay arms against a table top, resulting in her arms being ripped off!

The story was simple but barrelled along at a fast pace, and never really lets up once it gets going fully. There was a fun way at the forty five minute mark to have a relatively lengthy five minute or so origin story for the clay monster, narrated by a key character. The small cast of characters didn't have too much to flesh them out, other than Aina, whose backstory of trying to make it big in Tokyo is represented by some scenes that play out dialogue free. Up until the last ten minutes I thought this wasn't doing much wrong. I found the ending both stretched out, and a bit confusing. I think I got what the film was going for, but it wasn't really shown on screen in the most cohesive way.
A lot of the soundtrack felt more jolly than the events being shown, giving a nice juxtaposition between the onscreen horror and the music alongside it.


Vampire Clay was an entertaining, often darkly comedic horror that delighted due to the special effects, in particular the clay effects, both stop motion and make-up wise. The story was simple, making for the feel of a body horror that had a unique vibe to it, and some very messed up moments that I was totally on board for. Vampire Clay is streaming exclusively on ARROW.

SCORE:


 

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The Rotting Zombie's News Anthology for Tuesday 4th February 2025 4 Feb 8:13 AM (24 days ago)


Another small news trio of horror stories to curdle your blood...possibly. In real life everything is going tickity-boo, life has a way of being unexpected at the exact time you need it. Onwards to the news.

February 25th sees the release of dark comedy Daddy on Blu-ray and DVD from Anchor Bay Entertainment. It takes place in an alternate future universe where the government must grant permission for men to become fathers. Four such men are invited to a remote workshop to see if they are eligible, finding the place deserted, the four decide to do their best to prove their worthiness, unsure if the situation they find themselves in is all part of a test. Special features include a commentary from the directors/stars Jono Sherman and Neal Kelley, plus a bonus web series, an extended scene, and an improvisation reel.


Also releasing on February 25th is Dinner With Leatherface, a documentary that explores the life of actor Gunnar Hansen. The doc includes actors from The Texas Chainsaw Massacre describing their experiences making the iconic movie, as well as a variety of actors from other films he featured in. Extras include a commentary with writer/director Michael Kallio and editor Josh Wagner among other items.


Finally for today, Metamorph has released a new single and video for 'Hiss Kiss'. The press release states this is a '...celebration of the snake's magic and the promise of rebirth', and that the track is a 'gothic dance floor anthem'. This is taken from album Mabon, which is due for release on 22nd September.

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Let the Right One In (2008) - Horror Film Review 3 Feb 9:13 AM (25 days ago)


I saw Swedish vampire film Let the Right One In a long time ago originally, likely very soon after it came out. It has been over a decade at least, so with the film coming to digital platforms in the UK and Ireland, I felt it was time to revisit the cult classic. Directed by Tomas Alfredson (Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy) and written by John Ajvide Lindqvist, this slow burn coming of age vampire movie was nominated for a BAFTA, and had seventy six wins and fifty eight nominations in total worldwide.

It takes place entirely in a small Swedish town in winter, most of the scenes taking place at night or in the evening. Oskar (Kare Hedebrant) is a twelve year old loner whose only attention at school is from the local bullies. One evening he meets a strange twelve year old girl named Eli (Lina Leandersson) who tells him that she recently moved into the next door apartment from his. With the hopes of finally having a friend, Oskar begins to spend more time with the girl despite her not really giving much information about who she is. Elsewhere, there is a series of murders in the small town, that unknown to Oskar is related to Eli. She is actually a vampire, with her ward getting too elderly to supply her with her regular blood supply (he being the one doing the killing), she has turned to Oskar, seeing something common with him due to both their social isolation, but not wanting him to share the same life long fate as her ward had.

This is nearly two hours in length but the time just flew by, despite me already remembering many of the story beats. I guess that shows how much the film had stuck in my mind, as I remembered key scenes from this, and even recalled how it ended, something I can't say I can do for many films. This is yet another example of a slow burn horror done right, and if you are after a peaceful film then this is a great example. There are screams every now and again, but for the most part this is a film that paces itself well, lots of scenes of not much noise, characters quietly speaking amongst themselves. The setting is perfect for the story being told, the snowy landscape adds a lot of atmosphere, and of course, red blood on white snow never fails to look good. Oskar was interesting as the bullied protagonist, having to put on the pretence of being happy while at home with his mother, keeping his unhappy existence a secret. Eli was also a great character, she doesn't talk much, but the increasing closeness between the two young teenagers felt natural, and I liked how there could be seen an ulterior motive for why Eli is getting close to the boy, something that is never implicitly brought up.

Being a vampire, Eli is shown able to climb sheer walls, have super strength, and an aversion to sunlight. There are plenty of scenes where she is attacking people, but this is always done in an understated way, or with the dramatic finale, mainly takes place away from the lingering shot from under a swimming pool. The violence never felt gratuitous, and was carefully considered, being used as and when the story required it. Blood effects look great here, the blood being the right colour and consistency to shine on camera. Special effects were also impressive, there was great make-up effects to show a character who had badly mutilated their face, a scene where a character bursts into flame, and an almost amusing scene when a character is attacked by multiple cats!

Rather than take the route of high action and high horror, this instead looks at the subject of a vampire from a more cursed perspective, with Eli doing what she needs to survive but not enjoying what she has to do, and Oskar finding an unlikely soulmate due to both being outcasts of a type. The story isn't deep, but it is effective, focussing more on the relationship between the two lead characters rather than a more extravagant story. I don't mind vampire films, and watching Let the Right One In, I was reminded of how good and different this particular one felt. Vertigo Releasing brought Let the Right One In to UK and Irish audiences across digital platforms on 20th January.

SCORE:

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M3GAN (2022) - Horror Film Review 31 Jan 8:41 AM (28 days ago)


If the screener link received for a review doesn't work, then as a rule of thumb I will instead watch a film of my own choosing. Such was the case last Sunday, so I picked out M3GAN, a film I had been interested in seeing and which had recently been added to Netflix. The Child's Play series is a classic, killer dolls really can be creepy, that was the reason I found the Annabelle series of killer dolls so disappointing due to the possessed doll causing evil to occur around it, rather than it physically moving around and causing mischief. With this Gerard Johnstone (Housebound) directed and James Wan co-written horror, I had heard it wasn't as bad a film as had been expected.

When she is involved in a tragic traffic accident that results in the death of her parents, young Cady (Violet McGraw - Doctor Sleep, The Haunting of Hill House TV series) goes to live with her aunt Gemma (Allison Williams - Get Out). Gemma is a workaholic who is obsessed with her job at a toy company, and sees having to look after her niece as a burden she didn't want. Her interactions with the girl end up inspiring her to go ahead with her pet project - to make a life-like robotic childlike doll that is able to bond with its owner and use A.I learning to grow. Naming it M3GAN (played by Amie Donald, voiced by Jenna Davis), she gifts it to Cady and is impressed with how the girl takes to it. Unfortunately for all involved, she didn't programme in all the necessary protocols, and soon M3GAN starts to resort to extreme violence, to punish anyone who causes Cady to be upset.

I enjoyed this horror and thought the doll design was very creepy. It helps that I have a very mild fear of puppets anyway. The design purposely heads out into uncanny valley territory, leading to lots of fun moments where people initially mistake the doll for a real child. As much as I did love the design, the story did noticeably play it safe, going through the motions of escalation that were predictable to chart. Starting off with the neighbour's aggressive dog, M3GAN's path of mayhem ramps up on a traditional route, earlier victims being people who in a horror film sense could be seen to deserve the punishment they are given, before later victims are punished excessively. There were no real surprises to be found, from the expected ending shot allowing the possibility of a sequel, to information presented to the viewer early on, and that just so happens to be integral to stopping the killer doll in the climax.
The scenes with the doll being evil were fun to watch, but it was a shame that a lot of the kills were either toned down in violence or cut out completely to allow M3GAN to have a lower age rating. I thought it's ability to mimic voices was a decent idea however, it was effectively used as it set itself apart and made for some scenes that didn't feel as familiar as the general movement path of the story.

The film carries with it a bit of a quasi-dystopian vibe, especially with the toy companies ridiculous adverts. There is more than the feel of a Black Mirror episode with this one, but this does set itself apart from the original Child's Play movies, as technology is the root evil here. Gemma is a flawed protagonist, and could easily be seen as the inadvertent antagonist of the movie also, not only creating the doll and not programming it properly, but also relieved that it is acting as a surrogate mother to Cady, allowing her to pretty much ignore the child and allow it to be shaped by the doll. The message is about how the increasing reliance on technology might not be such a good thing for humans, especially in a world where a killer doll with access to all the information of the internet is able to have free reign. Special effects were great, especially with that doll, I liked the design, and its later 'battle damaged' look also appealed, even if it didn't go as far down that path as I had hoped. Characters were mostly fine, no one really stood out to me, I thought Ronny Chieng (Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings) was probably the highlight, bringing comedy to his role as the toy company boss.

I did like M3GAN, I thought it was effective as a new movie monster, and it had some nice ideas. The story in general did play out a little too safely, an obvious ramping up of threat, and an unsurprising ending occasionally caused me to realise that as much as I enjoyed this, it wasn't entirely something I hadn't seen before. M3GAN is currently streaming on Netflix.

SCORE:

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The Rotting Zombie's Round-Up of Horror News for January 2025 30 Jan 8:11 AM (29 days ago)


It is a new year and full of possibilities, a time to get out of the groove and expand your comfort zone. At least it is for a die-hard introvert like me. I usually fail to get my blog finished within two days, meaning I tend to work most the weekend on it. This is my last post of the weekend, and am hoping that this month my news round-up returns to a more full look.

Fright Teck Pictures have released a special anniversary edition version of Hellweek on Amazon. The film is about a group of mask wearing psychos who decide to target a group of college kids who enter the warehouse where the crazies live, as part of a hazing ritual. Directed by Eddie Lengyel, this stars Robyn Griggs, Brenna Lee Roth, Karen Fox, Rob Jaeger and Michael Reddy.


Areas of High Strangeness: Pennsylvania is out now on digital platforms from BayView Entertainment. This documentary sees members of the Demon Hunter Society heading out to Pennsylvania to investigate reports of Big Foot, Dog Man, and other cryptids thought to either be long extinct or not real.


Streaming service NYX UK has announced that they will be having a 'zombie week' on their service that is due to run from February 3rd to February 9th. It begins on the 3rd with Lucio Fulci's classic 1979 horror Zombie. Subsequent days see The Crazies, Night of the Living Dead, Tombs of the Blind Dead, Return of the Evil Dead, Night of the Seagulls, Nightmare City, and The House by the Cemetary being added to the service. A lot of classics to be found there.

The Stone: No Soul Unturned is out now on digital platforms including on Xumo Play, via VIPCO & BayView Entertainment. This horror was the winner Best Foreign Film at the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival. The film's story concerns a team of soul searchers who unleash psychological and supernatural terror after discovering an ancient stone. Written and directed by Philip Gardiner, this stars Andrew Gough, Sarah Dunn and Layla Randle-Conde.


The official trailer and poster for Heart Eyes is available now. Coming to cinemas on February 14th, this is about a killer named the 'Heart Eyes Killer' who operates on Valentine's Day by going after romantic couples.


Finally for today, with my inbox once again empty, a teaser trailer has been released for Linnea Quigley's Trash's Revenge, part of the Return of the Living Dead universe. The set-up suggests that the original film was indeed based on true events, and that the character of Trash (played by Quigley) is now washed up, but does happen to have a canister of the zombie making toxin kept in her basement.

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Lizzie Lazarus (2024) - Horror Film Review 29 Jan 10:53 AM (last month)


It seems this week's theme for films I watched for review is one of unexpected outcomes, with Grace Point and now the Aviv Rubinstien written and directed Lizzie Lazarus fitting that criteria. I make it a point to not read the synopsis before sitting down to watch a film and I think that really benefitted me with this one.

After an odd opening that sees the corpse of Lizzie (Megan Oesterreich) lying in a creek singing a song about dying, the film starts properly with two people deep in woodland carrying a corpse between them. It is soon revealed that the body is that of Lizzie, and that the two people carting it around are Lizzie's sister Bethany (Lianne O'Shea - A Taste of Phobia segment 'Somniphobia'), as well as her boyfriend Eli (Omar Maskati). In the past, after an argument with Eli, Lizzie crashed her car on route to her sisters, resulting in her death. Bethany being a believer in wild conspiracies and myths, had discovered a book in the local library that spoke of an area deep out in woodland that Native American's believed had the ability to bring the dead back to life after a specific ritual was performed. With her and Eli deep in mourning, she convinces him to help her dig up her sisters body and take it to this area, on the off chance that the legend about resurrecting the recently deceased is actually real.

Expecting a movie about a woman who can't truly die, I was surprised to find one in which the titular character is already dead. It was light on action, and if not for the fact the duel protagonists are carrying a corpse between them, this would appear as a straight drama. It was unique that the whole movie was the journey to this Pet Sematary style location, rather than that part just being the first act. As they slowly travel they converse on the nature of life and not only get to know each other, but get a good idea of how each of them perceived the type of person Lizzie had been. With so much dialogue and so little really happening, this conjured up the feel of a stage play, the amount of serious po-faced talking giving off a vibe of a darker Garden State.

There was a rich vein of black humour running through this, the set-up of two bickering characters awkwardly carrying a corpse was funny in itself, then there is the gallows humour that comes from them dealing with issues such as accidentally dropping the body, and running out of duct tape to keep the body bag they had created intact. It felt like the journey to the burial site was intended to be the core story, rather than what happens when they eventually get there. After twenty minutes had passed and it was still just two characters walking through woods, I hoped that it would turn continue this trend. Forty five minutes in, still walking through woodland, over an hour in, still the same, amusing in itself that the characters were doing exactly the same thing they had been doing when they were introduced. I would have been fine with it being simply conversations, but there are concessions to make things more exciting at times. These include having to sneak past a couple having sex in an abandoned car, or avoiding a passing hunter and his curious dog. Adding to the plot are a couple of short flashback sequences that show how Bethany first suggested her wild plan, as well as silent images of Lizzie back when she was living, that play out over certain comments the characters make about her. The two main characters were expertly cast, but I also thought Oesterreich was great as Lizzie, despite barely featuring in the conventional sense. Her most memorable part was the weird opening song she sings, but I guess the lyrics of that song were meaningful to the themes of the film.

I loved Lizzie Lazarus, the surreal story and setting had me engaged despite it mainly just being an hour and a half of two characters talking amongst themselves. It ends up going in a somewhat unexpected direction, finishing on an entertaining note that seemed to be a neat and satisfying full stop to end the story with. Lizzie Lazarus came exclusively to streaming platform SCREAMBOX on 14th January.

SCORE:

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Grace Point (2023) - Thriller Film Review 27 Jan 8:53 AM (last month)


Unexpected is a word I would use to describe the Rory Karpf directed and co-written thriller Grace Point - a minimalist thriller that sets out to provide a wholesome message. Despite the movie being surprisingly tame, I was enraptured from start to surprising finish.

As a last resort for his son - Brandon's (John Owen Lowe) drug addiction, a desperate father (Winston played by Andrew McCarthy) has arranged for him to stay at a remote rehab centre deep out in the American countryside. Stopping off for petrol enroute, Winston manages to inadvertently anger a local redneck and so leaves the station in a hurry. Not much further down the road, the car they are travelling in breaks down and the angry redneck appears with friends in tow. During an altercation with the men (that Brandon records on his phone), Winston ends up getting shot in the stomach and with maybe his last breath implores his son to flee. This begins a nightmare journey through Hell for the boy, unsure if his father even still lives, he sets out on a crazed trek through the remote and hostile countryside, his goal to make it the twelve miles to the rehab centre so that he can seek assistance. Hot on his heels are the rednecks, led by Luther (Sean Carrigan) - the psychopathic leader of an isolated survivalist community who is none too pleased that Brandon has evidence of his crime against Winston. Out of his depth, Brandon's only help comes in the form of a former marine named Cutter (Jim Parrack - Lost Child, Suicide Squad) he encounters, who sees something in the boy worth saving.

There was a feeling of The Warriors to this thriller, with Brandon's road trip though an alien landscape where danger lurks at every corner echoing the gang's flight through New York. The somewhat generic opening turned into something more interesting, having a protagonist who was certainly more 'flight' than 'fight', his young age meaning he wasn't a match for anyone he encounters. Having a film start mid-story always appeals to me, but as the boy spends most the film running, to have a scene of him running through woodland before a 'four days earlier' message pops up, didn't make for the most exciting teaser of things to come. Forced to pull on reserves he didn't even know he had, and not able to trust anyone he meets, the film became a real thrill ride that carried a feeling of prolonged tension. As the lead character, Brandon was a bit annoying, this was purposeful with the story developing his character in a way that he starts to recognise his own flaws and begin to change. He may have been a bit pathetic, but I really enjoyed the learning journey he goes on, and the many varied characters he meets. Favourite character was Cutter, this PTSD afflicted former soldier was really likeable and had some great lines. I think my favourite line in the whole film was when he says "There's no getting away from pain Brandon. Sometimes it's best to face it head on." Luther appeared to be an intimidating antagonist, carrying with him an aura of quiet menace that made him feel like a genuine threat. It's good he had this aura about him as his actions didn't live up to his threatening words, more intent on trying to convince Brandon to join his community than to hurt him. A high threat level didn't translate into much on-screen horror or violence shown with those elements being mostly absent. Instead, the pacing is mainly made up of a wild cat and mouse game between the boy and Luther's men that included a whole bunch of thrilling chase sequences, including on foot, on bicycle, and on quad bike sequences.

With how focussed this was on Brandon's flight, the film had a minimalist feel to it, from the simple story being told, to the barren run-down locations. The protagonist is given depth via frequent childhood flashbacks that hint at what made him turn to drugs, and these scenes are used to empower him on his seemingly hopeless quest. There came a huge plot twist at the end that took me totally by surprise. I had a feeling that there would be a twist of some kind as there were some odd moments, but I assumed it would be a done to death twist, such as all the events taking place in the main characters mind. This though, was one of those moments that would make a second viewing show events in a completely different light.
For those who like their UFC (Ultimate Fighting Championship), the cast includes ESPN broadcaster Din Thomas, as well as former champions Aljamain Sterling and Chris Weidman.

As much as I enjoyed the story once it had been completed, Grace Point was high on thrills but low on on-screen peril. Luther looked the part of the all powerful antagonist, but really seemed to be more bark than bite when it came down to his actions. Usually that would be a deal breaker for me, but I did enjoy the direction the story went in, even if it perhaps wrapped things up a little too neatly. A clever film that explores the nature of addiction in a vaguely preachy yet still intriguing way. Grace Point is due to release on January 28th and his it's L.A premiere on 30th January.

SCORE:



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Rufus (2025) - Horror Anthology Film Review 24 Jan 12:38 PM (last month)


It is completely coincidental, but Rufus is the second horror anthology film I have watched for review this week after Rampo Noir. Directed and mainly written by Mars Roberge, this indie horror brings together five stories of madness that each have a B-movie feel that gave them an endearing feel, and featured a variety of famous names.

Rufus ('Freeway' Ricky Ross) is a man in the hood known for his wild and frequently disturbing stories. The anthology features five of these that he is telling to various people such as neighbourhood kids and his wife (Rah Digga - Thir13en Ghosts). It begins with a fifteen minute short about a mortician named Stanley (Angelo Moore from the band Fishbone) whose hands accidentally get infected with the blood of a recently deceased criminal. He soon finds to his horror that he is no longer able to control what his hands do, leading him on a path of increasingly serious crime that he is powerless to prevent. I imagine it can be quite hard to make it look like your hands are possessed, while Moore doesn't reach the lofty heights of Bruce Campbell in Evil Dead II, he still brings an angle to it that was amusing. I loved how the character was just out for a peaceful and friendly visit to town before events spiral into increasing chaos. None of this was done as a serious horror, there is a real B-movie feel to the action going on, from generic sound effects to obviously CG blood. That just added to the charm. As simple as the story was, it was a fun entry point for Rufus.
Next up was a a very twisted tale that was really enjoyable to watch. Emily (Debra Haden) has recently arrived in New York and despite limited acting experience has landed the lead role in a play. To say anymore would ruin the surprise, but needless to say, her fellow cast members may not be exactly who they appear to be. Again there are obvious CG effects used, and it is assumed you will be able to piece together what has happened as certain transitions play out off screen. Roughly ten minutes long, this was very memorable and the highlight of Rufus for me.

The third short has Rufus telling someone on their way to a doctor's appointment about a story set at a hospital. At eighteen minutes long this one felt very stretched out, it did drag in places. Due to unusual brain patterns when two comatose patients (played by David Scott Greene and Princess Frank) are left together, their doctor, Dr. Saul (played to amazingly entertaining effect by Spookey Ruben, a Canadian musician) has isolated them in their own room. He may not know what is going on with their brains, but it turns out that the two men are able to communicate with each other via thoughts alone. The problem for these men is that they don't really like each other that much. The unexpected happens when a new nurse from Mexico - Luciana (Annalisa Guidone) arrives, she just happens to be the ex-girlfriend of one of the men, and more importantly, is able to read his thoughts and carry on conversations with the man. This short finishes on a 'to be continued' message which made me hope the later part would be have more variation in what was happening.

Next was a surreal one about a couple who are talking about the child they have adopted, hoping he fitted in with new friends. Around three minutes long, this had a fun pay-off that really demonstrates the silly stories that the character Rufus is able to come up with, seemingly off the top of his head. This is followed by one of the more bright and surface level cheery. It had a miserable veteran - Roger (Jim Sclavunos) discovering a series of exploding dolls in the area where he lived, though there was more to it than was expected. This was silly, had a great soundtrack and at five minutes did not outstay its welcome.
Finally was a return to the long hospital drama that picks up where the first one ended, bringing an additional half hour of surreal. Again, I thought Ruben was great here, but it just went on too long without there seeming to be much of an aim.

Rufus was quite entertaining, despite my personal least enjoyable of the shorts taking the space of half of the overall anthology. That one did have some fun ideas, and the general set-up was decent, it just felt a bit overlong. I thought the second short set in New York with the stage actors was excellent, and the rest all had their good parts. The wraparound segment was also decent, sure, not much might happen in it, but the characters featured in that part all came across as likeable. With anthologies there is usually always something worth watching, and with this one there are a good few. Rufus has not yet had its world premiere, but is planned to be shown at a film festival by the time March comes around.

SCORE:





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The Rotting Zombie's News Anthology for Thursday 23rd January 2025 23 Jan 8:20 AM (last month)


A second news post for this week, for both the news and screeners keep on coming. I currently have a bloated list of twelve films awaiting review, soon I will have to stop accepting screeners for a time. Onwards to the news.

Renner is an A.I themed thriller that stars Frankie Muniz. He stars as a computer genius who creates an A.I named Salenus to help him find love. Somehow, the man accidentally programmed the traits of his controlling mother into the code, with dark secrets emerging when he forms a relationship with next door neighbour Jamie. Directed and produced by Robert Rippberger, Renner heads to U.S theatres from February 7th.

American Psychopath is a new film from writer, director, actor, and rock star Frank Palangi. The film is about an out of town girl who becomes the target of a mysterious serial killer, and must discover the truth of what is happening in order to try and regain her missing memories. The film stars Erica James (Souls of the Damned) and will be coming soon to Tubi from Cinema Epoch/Palangi Films.


Finally for today, The Marketing Macabre Show hosted by Michael Joy has released its first episode. The show brings together various trailers from independent horror films, with the first episode featuring trailers for Pancake Man, A Hard Place and The Alien Report. There are also teasers for Space Goblins and Blackout as well as an exclusive clip from Black Daruma.

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