So, while some classic movies may declare otherwise, these horror films claiming to be true are, in reality, stretching the real stories to fit a certain narrative. In many cases, events have been greatly embellished to create a more chilling and powerful story. In other inst...
Templeheart Films Terry Gilliam TEST SCREENING THAT’S A WRAP THE ADVENTURES OF MAID MARIAN THE AMAZING MR BLUNDEN The Bank Job THE BIGFOOT TRAP THE BITTER TASTE THE BONE BOX The Business THE BYSTANDERS THE COLD BLUE THE COLOUR OF GUILT THE DARKSIDE OF SOCIETY The Desc...
Vote up the confusing movie endings that aren't so confusing after all. Often, horror movies don't offer simple endings. Many of the most intriguing horror films of the last few decades have offered up confusing endings that leave room for the viewer to decide what really h...
here’s a look at the true crimes that inspired some of the horror genre’s most notorious films. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 1. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre – Inspired by Ed Gein’s Gruesome Crimes In 1974, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre shocked audiences with its raw and brutal...Read Mo...
Nosferatu might be over 100 years old, but its subtitle ‘A Symphony of Horror’ holds true to this day. 16. Night of the Living Dead (1968) (Image credit: Janus Films) The movie: In 1968, George A. Romero directed, filmed and edited one of the most celebrated and influential zombie...
there's few of these interviewees that sounded so sour, like a someone yapping, complaining. I mean I guess some film directors didn't want black people to come out in films or I guess these "monsters" were interpreted as blacks. Why not just think of those creatures, just creatures. ...
1989’s Pet Sematary marked the first time Stephen King wrote the screenplay for one of his films, and critics pointed out that they’d very much wished he’d let someone else write it. “The result is undead schlock dulled by a slasher-film mentality,” Variety wrote, “squandering its...
Nosferatu might be over 100 years old, but its subtitle ‘A Symphony of Horror’ holds true to this day. 16. Night of the Living Dead (1968) (Image credit: Janus Films) The movie: In 1968, George A. Romero directed, filmed and edited one of the most celebrated and influential zombie...
We can vouch that the following films—classics still terrifying today, modern tales as horrifying as they are original, and foreign fare so spooky you'll be glad you have those subtitles to focus on—leave permanent scars.
The Scorpion King and Van Helsing aren't bad movies, but fantasy fans deserve a better selection from Netflix than films that are two decades old. Even this month's third addition, The Covenant, is closing in on 20 years. Netflix has made some original fantasy movies of its own, but ...