Man with ridiculously accurate surname Dennis Skinner is a sexy serial killer who rents a room from Ricki Lake & not that Geoff Tate while he works a weirdly urban-appearing industrial area in a small town.
Greasy ex-boyfriend, the OG oblivious man, goofy gore Stef (@witchxpudding) & L (@nocturnical) kick off Ted Raimi month (Noblivion) with the movie that started it all — the 1989 slasher…
Jay (@JayRaffertyPoet), Mel (@Heda_Mel), Sadee (@SadeeBee), Al (@MayBMockingbird), & Molly (@Night_TimeTea) tackle one of the worst movies of the month & some other stuff in the final installment of #31daysofhorror 2023.
Another Stephen King pessimistic writer self-insert in this narrative but we’ll forgive him because Kathy Bates practically eats up this performance and earning herself an Oscar in the process.
A mostly faithful adaptation of the Stephen King novel, this 2007 film takes all of the ambiguity of an unreliable narrator and open-ended story and gives you a definite cause and ending with an iconic final scene to boot.
Modern Australian horror really loves psychologically damaging single mothers, huh? Based on director Jennifer Kent’s 2005 short film Monster this 2014 film did the rounds in the meme world when Pennywise and the Babadook became lovers.
A 2001 would-be movie monster classic. Let’s set the scene: A hot, dusty road in the American countryside. Two sweaty teens in an old car encountering a dark, menacing vehicle.
A return to Hammer Horror on the podcast with this 1957 classic starring Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing. It twists the well worn formula of the 1818 novel only slightly but this was early days in horror cinema.