Friday the 13th Part 2
After slyly positing the possibility that Jason Voorhees’s mother, Pamela, didn’t in fact kill anyone in the opening chapter of his blockbuster Friday the 13th saga, Sean Cunningham handed his producer, Steve Miner, the directorial reigns. The rookie filmmaker...
Friday the 13th
Well folks, we all had a feeling it was going to happen sooner or later. THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE, HALLOWEEN; these are some of the great horror films of legend that have been remade in the past few years and now it's Jason's turn. Release rightfully so on Friday...
Friday the 13th
With the remake of FRIDAY THE 13TH, (excuse me, Reimaging) right around the corner; it's pretty much a shoe in that the original movie would get a re-release on DVD with more bonus features and the likes. The last time I watch FRIDAY THE 13TH I was probably about...
Friday the 13th
Warning: The following is a literal “review” of Sean Cunningham’s Friday the 13th in that it contains spoilers. Regardless of one’s opinion concerning the Friday the 13th or its sequels, one is forced to admire director Sean Cunningham and producer Steve Miner for the...
Freddy vs. Jason (DVD)
DVD DETAILS: Ok first off that alterative ending is bad, I really did not like it at all and thank god they ended this film the ay they did. With that said the bonus material on this DVD is pretty good. Here's what get: Audio Commentary with Ronny Yu, Robert Englund,...
Freddy vs. Jason
Preview to the Review Well folks where do I begin, this is not the review to the film that would be posted below, but how long have we waited for this movie? 10-15 years about. well it's finally here the day all horror fans have been waiting for. And then BAM Blackout...
Freddy vs. Jason
The first attempt to bring Jason Voorhees together with Freddy Kruger occurred during the planning stages for John Carl Buechler’s Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood. However, when the respective owners of the horror icons, Paramount Pictures and New Line Cinema,...
A Nightmare on Elm Street 6: Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare
Rachel Talalay (Tank Girl, Ghost in the Machine), production manager of A Nightmare on Elm Street (NOES) and its sequel, and producer of parts 3 and 4, makes her directorial debut with the closing chapter in the A Nightmare on Elm Street saga. The garbled work, much...
Freakshow
The sophomore effort of director Drew Bell, Freakshow--a mixture of Tod Browning’s Freaks and Donn Davison’s She Freak--is an unexpectedly effective film posing as a piece of horror exploitation and lethargic plagiarism. Masterfully, Bell plays to the viewer’s...
Freak Out
As the final credits of Christian James’s Freak Out started to roll, I was perplexed because I was sure I’d missed something, so I marched my little butt to the computer and proceeded to read what others thought about the film and this is what I have thus surmised:...
Freak Dog
FREAKDOG, like jobbing director Paddy Breathnach’s last horror film, SHROOMS, is a competent, good-looking, slick product let down by mediocre material and all too obvious attempts to appeal to the worldwide (read : American) market. In this case, the latter is even...
Red Mist (Freak Dog)
When I got this DVD in the mail today I was actually shocked to see that the site was quoted on the front cover. I said to myself, I must be watching to many movie, cause I don't even remember seeing this one, maybe Steven reviewed it. So I checked the archives....
Frankenstein Meets The Wolfman
More about a werewolf than the results of a mad scientist’s megalomania (hence, the title should have been “The Wolf Man Meets Frankenstein’s Monster” but, granted, the former--obviously--doesn’t have the audience pull to merit top billing), Roy William Neill’s...
Frankenstein vs. The Creature from Blood Cove
I've always been a fan of old school b-movie horror. "Frankenstein vs. The Creature from Blood Cove" is a homage to all those films from the 1940's and 50's. It's got that cheesy b-movie feel, ( with a few nude women) scene's on a beach that remind you of those great...
Frankenstein
Of all horror films, the figurehead of the genre is James Whale’s Frankenstein. One of the greatest films of all time, the work has been written upon, critiqued, and analyzed frame-by-frame, thus, I will spend the this review highlighting the more interesting readings...

