The Monster Maker
I believe the easiest manner in which to handle a film like The Monster Maker is to go straight into a plot synopsis and then begin exploring the possible, however implausible, justifications for what occurred cinematically. Doctor Igor Markoff (J. Carrol Naish)...
Monster House
I will say this, It was good to get away from all the blood and guts for once and watch a children's movie that has a horror based theme to it. It was also nice that my wife actually sat down with me and agreed to watch a film that I had to review for this here site....
Monster House
Gil Kenan’s Monster House, one of the charter films in which a live actor’s movements are recorded before they are “animated” via a digital coating, is a disconcerting effort in two primary aspects: its projected audience and the manner in which its characters are...
Monster Brawl
Wrestling Entertainment it not what it used to be. I stopped watching wrestling when the WWE monopolized the industry by buying out its competition back in the late nineties. After the Stone Cold era ended in the WWE and all the wrestling heroes of the eighties and...
The Mole People
With The Mole People, the co-editor of Orson Welles’s Touch of Evil, Virgil Vogel, made the inevitable manifest: A notorious B-movie which posits a barrage of substantial ideas. Obviously in defiance of the dictum that a B-movie disaster must violate aesthetic...
Misty Secret/ Vampire Seduction
Alright, Yup folks you guessed it, another one of those soft-core-porn Lesbian horror flicks, however we have some great and beautiful women in this one. The wonderful and beautiful Misty Mundae, and a women whom happens to be a friend of mine Tina Krause. Now this...
The Mist
Over the years, King’s horror adaptations have been a hit, i.e. Misery, Dolores Claiborne, Riding the Bullet, Pet Sematary, The Shining, Secret Window, Cujo, 1408, or miss, i.e. Dreamcatcher, Graveyard Shift, The Mangler, The Dark Half, Needful Things. Don’t get me...
The Mist
After a lifetime of putrid adaptation failures, Stephen King was given his due in 2007. Following Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining twenty-seven years prior, Mikael Håfström issued his anxiety-inducing 1408 before Frank Darabont, who made a name for himself by setting the...
Misery
Consummate yuckster Rob Reiner takes Stephen King’s worst nightmare made manifest--an author held captive by a mentally unstable killer who perpetually reiterates that she is his “number one fan”--and crafts one of the most taunt thrillers in the last half of the...
Mirrors 2
In 2008, Alexandre Aja, acclaimed horror director of such films as The Hills Have Eyes Remake and High Tension, managed to get actor Kiefer Sutherland away from his hit television show 24, and bring him back into the horror genre. The film was Mirrors, the tale of an...
Mirrors
Director Alexandre Aja first jumped into the horror scene with 2003 horror hit Haute tension. Then he moved onto one of the better remakes in recent years THE HILLS HAVE EYES before directing this half good, half disappointing film MIRRORS. Maybe I'm being a bit too...
Miners Massacre
I was surprised about this film, with the recent amount of bad films coming out on video, this one was not all that bad. It was fast paced and moved, there were some things that pointed out low budget horror film, but it had a lot more than most of the films being...
Mimic 3: Sentinel
Ok , so you all must be saying to yourself, dam why does Horror Bob like this movie so much. I'll tell you why, My favorite movie of all time is Alfred Hitchcock's "Rear Window", and this film follows the "Rear Window" formula almost perfectly. Set in a apartment...
Mimic: Sentinel
Surprisingly, most every single facet of Mimic: Sentinel--the third installment in the Mimic/Judas Breed horror series--is masterfully handled and skillfully conveyed. Sure, following the steadfast rule of diminishing returns (which is especially relevant when horror...
Mimic 2
Whereas Guillermo del Toro’s Mimic played it safe by going strictly by the numbers, Jean de Segonzac’s sequel, Mimic 2, challenges itself and has fun in so doing. Though it doesn’t set any genre or cinematic precedence, it does take the time to develop character...