All tagged Horror Movie Review
Our Hammer Horror loving Bloke Down The Pub is back and hypothesising just what goes into the development process of a Hammer Film and wishing that Hammer had signed Tallulah Bankhead to a 10 picture deal because of her excellent presence in 1965’s Die! Die! My Darling! AKA Fanatic.
Jon Cross talks with author, blogger, podcaster and direct to video connoisseur, Matt Poirier all about his new novel, the movie Critters, Dan Aykroyd’s music, Nazi game shows, red head discrimination and more.
Jon starts his journey delving into modern horror with a look at 2017’s Netflix Stephen King adaptation, 1922 starring Thomas Jane.
Host Jon Cross and guest Axl Kay dissect, discuss and ask questions of the Silent Night, Deadly Night franchise from part 2 through to the 2012 remake. It’s a fascinatingly weird and sometimes wonderful franchise which rattles off into some mad places. Altogether now… GARBAGE DAY!
Jon Cross takes a look at MVD’s Unearthed Classic Blu-Ray release of The Unnamable, a rare, low budget, late 80s monster movie based on an H.P. Lovecraft short story.
Lisa Gullickson examines the sound of silence and familial normalcy in an abnormal world with John Krasinski’s A Quiet Place.
The Bloke Down The Pub, lover of all things Hammer, is finally tackling cleavage and the preponderance of "twins" of another kind in the third part of Hammer's Karnstein trilogy, 1971's Twins of Evil starring Peter Cushing.
Lisa Gullickson looks at how, for slasher films, the worm may finally be turning in her review of the smart, sassy, horror comedy Tragedy Girls.
Michael Campochiaro Vs. Michael Myers in his annual revisit of the perennial seasonal favourite, John Carpenter's Halloween (1978).
On this our last Horrotober podcast for 2017, Jim Wallace and Jon Cross talk two completely bizarre and quite probably awful Dracula films - Francis Ford Coppola's Bram Stoker's Dracula and Dracula 2000 with Gerard Butler as Dracula (which sounds like a Monty Python joke but isn't, it's painfully true)
The Bloke Down The Pub, lover of all things Hammer, debates the guilt in "guilty pleasure" sequel of Hammer's long-running Dracula franchise, 1972's Dracula A.D. 1972.
At 2 a.m. in the noisiest diner in all of New York, the tired & grumpy Jon Cross and the generally affable Jim Wallace sit down to try and work out just what Dario Argento's Suspiria is all about.
This week Jim Wallace and myself look at the Donald Pleasance, Martin Landau, Jack Palance and Dwight "Howling Mad Murdoch" Schultz starring horror film Alone in the Dark.