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Escape from Cannibal Farm (2017)

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Escape from Cannibal Farm is a 2017 British horror film written, produced and directed by Charlie Steeds (Labyrinthia). It is a Dark Temple Motion Pictures production.

The film is currently in post-production and is due to be released in 2017.

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Main cast:

Kate Marie Davies (Knights of the DamnedApparition of Evil), Barrington De La Roche (Deadman Apocalypse; Blood Moon), David Lenik, Rowena Bentley, Toby Wynn-Davies, Peter Cosgrove (Evil Souls), Joe Street, Dylan Curtis, Kate Llewellyn, Sam Lane, Charlotte Roest-Ellis, Jackson Wright, Jack Miller, Harrison Nash, Joe Smith.

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Plot:

In the British countryside, the Harver family head out on an idyllic summer camping trip where they can bury past tensions and enjoy some family bonding. But when their camp is sabotaged by an unseen intruder in the night, they head to the nearby creepy old farm desperate for help, where vengeful farmer Hunt Hansen and his hideously deformed son aren’t farming animals.

Caged and waiting for their limbs to be severed, cooked and eaten one at a time, the Harver family must overcome their differences and unite in order to escape alive…

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IMDb | Official site | Facebook | Twitter



Harbinger (2015)

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‘Not all fairy tales are created equal.’

Harbinger is a 2015 American horror thriller written and directed by Cody Duckworth (making his feature debut). It should not be confused with Harbinger Down (also 2015).

The film is being marketed by TomCat Films/Summer Hill Films at the American Film Market (AFM) being held in Santa Monica November 2nd – 9th, 2016.

Main cast:

Dimitrius Pulido, Tina Rodriguez, Paeka Campos, Joseph Campos, Anne Frances, Gerard Flores.

Plot:

Twelve-year-old Mira Gonzaga who has been having terrible dreams. As the night terrors continue warnings from her deceased grandmother and visions of things-to-come haunt her dreams as well as her waking reality.

When nearby fracking operations begin to infiltrate the ranch’s water supply; Mira’s parents begin to feel it’s dire effects as a transformation begins… and Mira’s worst nightmares become real.

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Interviews:

Cody Duckworth interviewed by Victor Diaz for Time Warner Cable News

Filming locations:

Fischer and Austin, Texas, USA

IMDb | Facebook


Enclosure (2016)

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‘Don’t breathe’

Enclosure is a 2016 horror film directed by Patrick Rea (Fun Size Horror: Volume Two; The Invoking 2; Nailbiter) from a screenplay co-written with Michelle Davidson.

Main cast:

Jake Busey (From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series; Most Likely to Die; Nazis at the Center of the Earth), Fiona Dourif (The Medium; Fear Clinic; Curse of Chucky), Kevin Ryan, Michelle Mills.

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Plot:

A couple’s romantic camping trip is cut short after a group of nearby hunters are brutally killed by a mysterious creature. As the creature turns its focus on the couple, they must fight for their survival while their shelter is destroyed…

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Reviews:

“Some cartoonish effects and digital compositing do let the side down, robbing chunks of fear factor from the tense, siege-like tent sequences and leaving the monsters lacking, but the dramatic threads playing out remain consistently compelling…” Gareth Jones, Dread Central

“By the end, Enclosure has far outstayed its welcome, lumbered with a decent concept that is neither fully developed, nor has enough scare potential to properly sell it. Among all of the other forest-based horror movies, this is tame, and often quite boring stuff. It’s still a win for Dourif, however, who further solidifies her position as one of the most interesting actresses in recent years…” Joey Keogh, Wicked Horror

“Patrick Rea’s Enclosure is a solid if not perfect supernatural allegory about motherhood that boasts a well-written script and a few genuinely creepy moments. It’s well worth the effort of a bag of microwaved popcorn and an hour-and-a-half on the couch.” Tom Holland’s Terror Time

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“A frightening and fraught story elevated by strong performances and some intense creature designs. Predator meets The Descent by way of The Hallow.” Kat Hughes, The Hollywood News

“Director Patrick Rea builds a great little horror film that relies on simplicity and builds some remarkable tension and mounting terror. Rea’s production is tight and he brings the best out of his cast, including Jake Busey who is deliciously slimy. The film’s villain is absolutely creepy, especially when you glimpse at the utterly unnerving make up effects.” Cinema Crazed

Filmed locations:

Charleston, South Carolina

IMDb | Image credits: The Hollywood News

Related: Don’t Read This!!! – article


Feed the Devil (2015)

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‘Fair game is here’

Feed the Devil is a 2015 British-Canadian horror film produced and directed by Max Perrier from a screenplay co-written with Matthew Altman.

The film was released on DVD in the UK on 3 October by High Fliers Films.

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

Main cast:

Jared Cohen (Sharknado: Heart of Sharkness; Pernicious; 13/13/13), Ardis Barrow, Brandon Perrault, Victoria Curtain, Nahka Bertrand, Tyson Houseman, Marco Collin, Nicholas B. York, Astrida Auza, Alan Harrington, Jean Drolet, Julia Dawiskiba, Jonathan David Orr, Serge Patry, Daniel Tuira.

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Plot:

Marcus takes his sister and her friend on a dangerous trip into an ancient forest that according to ancient Native American legend is haunted.

The trip soon becomes a deadly game of cat and mouse as Marcus must battle the ancient evil forces that are determined not to let them leave alive…

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Reviews:

Feed the Devil is a competent and confident addition to horror from Max Perrier and proves that running through the woods still has the ability to shock, scare and surprise. This is definitely an impressive demonstration of intensity that is filled with fun jumps and scares.” Jessy Williams, Scream magazine

“Perrier’s direction is uneven, and his script (with Matthew Altman) is plodding and incoherent at times. But he succeeds at keeping the tension in high gear, aided by Miksa Kovek’s inventive score and gorgeous, if chilling, scenery. The best of Feed the Devil boils down to the uniformly good acting, especially by Cohn, Barrow and Tyson Houseman, who plays an unwilling and unwitting accomplice to Marcus, arriving late to the party.” Allan Walton, Ravenous Monster

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“Despite the characters’ improbable reactions and appalling dialogue, writer/director Perrier and co-writer Altman prove lush filming and a retelling of primal, aggressive folklore builds suspense and makes for good filmmaking. Silence interspersed with an interesting soundtrack by Miksa Kovek adds to the tension, and sweeping cinematic work builds to the inevitable.” Kerry Black, Cryptic Rock

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“Like many other first time horror directors, Perrier goes to the woods and we watch his cast slowly get bumped off in various nasty ways. However the particular evil in this film comes from Native American roots and gives the film an uneasy racial tone … the film often drags with slow pacing.” Christopher Stewart, UK Horror Scene

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IMDb | Official webpage


Wilderness (2006)

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‘Don’t go down to the woods today’

Wilderness is a 2006 British-Irish horror film directed by Michael J. Bassett (Ash vs Evil DeadSilent Hill: Revelation 3DDeathwatch) from a screenplay by Dario Poloni (Black Death).

Main cast:

Sean Pertwee (Howl; The Seasoning House; Dog Soldiers), Alex Reid (The Facility; ArachnidThe Descent), Toby Kebbell (Kong: Skull Island; A Monster Calls; Dawn of the Planet of the Apes), Stephen Wright, Karly Greene, Lenora Crichlow (Being Human; Doctor Who), Luke Neal, Ben McKay (Hot Fuzz), Richie Campbell (The Frankenstein Chronicles).

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Plot:

Following the suicide of a young offender, the other teenage prisoners are sent on a character-building adventure trip to a remote supposedly uninhabited island. There, they encounter two female young offenders and their ex-army warden. Both groups are soon picked off one by one by a mysterious man lurking in the woods…

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

Reviews:

“The graphic and expertly executed gore effects are the standout aspect of the film, elevating this fairly derivative, if well told, story into a gorehound’s all you can puke buffet. We’re treated to dismemberment, beheadings, torture, and a particularly “sucks to be you” moment involving not one, but two, bear traps.” Jon Condit, Dread Central

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“Taut and visceral, Wilderness is a marked improvement on director Michael J Bassett’s muddled debut feature, Deathwatch, thanks, one suspects, to Dario Poloni’s bleak, misanthropic script. But this is also the film’s Achilles heel: some may find it hard to care about the fate of these selfish, hateful toe-rags.” Nigel Floyd, Time Out London

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“It’s a violent affair, very like Dog Soldiers in which hard-as-nails Sergeant Sean Pertwee led a band of threatened squaddies on a doom-laden military exercise in Scotland, and somewhat arbitrary in its sense of what constitutes rough justice.” Philip French, The Guardian

“Tight, by-the-book script, credited to Dario Poloni, moves the action at a predictable clip, and knows when to pause for a tension-breaking wisecrack from one of the ensemble or a quieter spooky moment.” Leslie Felperin, Variety

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” …street tuff dialogue sounds as though it was lifted off the last Dizzee Rascal album. Meanwhile, atrocious editing and hapless direction stifle interest long before the preposterous identity of the killer is exposed.” Jamie Russell, BBC

“Michael J Bassett’s horror film is lurid, wildly improbable and not especially well made, but it is also entertaining in its own B-movie way … There are lots of gruesome touches – heads impaled on sticks, bodies ripped to pieces – and some incongruously comic ones (for instance, the kids are reduced to eating barbecued dog).” Geoffrey Macnab, The Guardian

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“This over-literal, fright-free slasher is strictly for completist gorehounds and Home Secretaries seeking radical solutions to the high number of youth offenders.” Anton Bitel, Film4

” …a distinct improvement on Deathwatch. The characters are clearly defined, well-rounded and believable in their actions and reactions. And we are not asked to like any of them. There have been so many films glamourising aggressive thugs that it’s refreshing to watch a film where they are depicted as realistically anti-social low-lifes.” MJ Simpson, Urban Terrors: New British Horror Cinema 1997 – 2008

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Buy: Amazon.comAmazon.co.uk

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Cast and characters:

Sean Pertwee as Jed
Alex Reid as Louise
Toby Kebbell as Callum
Stephen Wight as Steve
Luke Neal as Lewis
Ben McKay as Lindsay
Lenora Crichlow as Mandy
Karly Greene as Jo
Adam Deacon as Blue
Richie Campbell as Jethro

Filming locations:

Scotland
Northern Ireland
Republic of Ireland

Wikipedia | IMDb


Amityville: No Escape (2016)

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Amityville: No Escape is a 2016 supernatural American horror film directed by Henrique Couto (Alone in the Ghost House; Haunted House on Sorority Row; Babysitter Massacre) from a screenplay by Ira Gansler (Scarewaves: segment ‘Office Case’).

Main cast:

Joni Durian (Halloween Spookies; Her Name Was Torment 2; Babysitter Massacre), Alia Gabrielle Eckhardt, Allison Egan (Just Your Average Halloween Party; Snuffet; Easter Casket), Ira Gansler, Julia Gomez, Josh Miller, Michael William Ralston, Duane West.

Plot:

A group of college students go into the deep woods by the most haunted town in America to better understand fear – and they found it…

Cast and characters:

  • Joni Durian as Sarah Benning
  • Alia Gabrielle Eckhardt as Lisa Sheets
  • Allison Egan as Elizabeth Wells
  • Ira Gansler as Woodsman
  • Julia Gomez as Lina
  • Josh Miller as George Wells
  • Michael William Ralston as Simon Tressler
  • Duane West as Tim

Wikipedia | IMDb | Facebook


Playing with Dolls: Bloodlust (2016)

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Playing with Dolls: Bloodlust is a 2016 American slasher horror film directed by Rene Perez (The Obsidian Curse; The Burning Dead; The Dead the Damned and the Darkness). It is a sequel to Perez’ 2015 movie Playing with Dolls.

The film has been launched in foreign territories, including Germany. In North America, it will be available on iTunes and Amazon, on November 1st in an unrated Ultra HD – 4K version.

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Main cast:

Richard Tyson (The Obsidian Curse; Soul Lake; Hayride 2), Karin Brauns (The Obsidian Curse), Colin Bryant, Elonda Seawood, Marilyn Robrahn, Andrew Espinoza Long.

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Official synopsis:

A group of aspiring actors are chosen for a reality horror TV show. In the show, they must survive being chased by a killer. The program is filmed with scores of tiny cameras, in a cabin and the surrounding forest.

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What the contestants don’t know is that this murderer is a real killer and the television program is a ruse. Deep in an underground bunker, a psychotic voyeur watches as life and death play out for his amusement. The only prize, here, is survival…

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Buy: Amazon.com

IMDb


Hotel of the Damned (2016)

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‘Your first stay will be your last’

Hotel of the Damned is a 2016 Romanian horror film producer and directed by Bobby Barbacioru from a screenplay by Luca Bercovici (director of The Granny; Rockula; Ghoulies) and Paul Petcu. It is an Imago Creative Studio and Luna Films production. The working title was Hotel Kill.

The film will be distributed by Uncork’d Entertainment in the US and released on DVD by 101 Films in the UK.

Main cast:

Peter Dobson (The Frighteners; Bates Motel – 1987), Manuela Harabor, Louis Mandylor (Daylight’s End; Sorority Party Massacre; The Cursed), Oltin Hurezeanu, Roxana Luca, Bogdan Marhodin, Valentin Petrisor, Natalia Mateut, Florin Kevorkian, Dimitrina Zhivkova.

Plot:

After a near fatal car accident, and stranded in the middle of nowhere, ex-con Jimmy (Peter Dobson) and his daughter Maria (Manuela Harabor), find themselves in an abandoned hotel deep in the Carpathian Mountains. Their bad luck becomes a nightmare when they discover that in the cavernous remains of the hotel live a race of sub-human cannibalistic creatures…

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IMDb | Related: C.H.U.D.



The Descent (2005)

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‘Face your deepest fear’

The Descent is a 2005 British horror film written and directed by Neil Marshall (Tales of HalloweenDog Soldiers).

The plot follows six women who, having entered an unmapped cave system, become trapped and are hunted by blood-thirsty human hybrids lurking within.

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

The film took $57.1 million at the box office against a reported budget of £3.5 million. A sequel, titled The Descent Part 2, was released in 2009.

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The skull of women motif used in some advertising material is based on Philippe Halsman‘s In Voluptas Mors photograph.

The film’s marketing campaign in the UK was disrupted by the London bombings in July 2005. Adverts on London’s transport system (including the bus that had exploded) had included posters that carried the quote, “Outright terror… bold and brilliant”, and depicted a terrified woman screaming in a tunnel.

The film’s distributor in the UK, Pathé, recalled the posters and reworked the campaign to exclude the word “terror” from advertised reviews of The Descent. Pathé also distributed the new versions to TV and radio stations. The distributor’s marketing chief, Anna Butler, said of the new approach, “We changed tack to concentrate on the women involved all standing together and fighting back. That seemed to chime with the prevailing mood of defiance that set in the weekend after the bombs.”

The Descent was released in North America with approximately a minute cut from the end. In the American theatrical cut, Sarah escapes from the cave and sees Juno, but the film does not cut back to the cave.

In the 4 August 2006 issue of Entertainment Weekly, it was stated that the ending was trimmed because American viewers did not like its “uber-hopeless finale”. Lionsgate marketing chief Tim Palen said, “It’s a visceral ride, and by the time you get to the ending you’re drained. [Director Neil] Marshall had a number of endings in mind when he shot the film, so he was open [to making a switch].” Marshall compared the change to the ending of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, saying, “Just because she gets away, does that make it a happy ending?” The North American Unrated DVD includes the original ending.

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Buy: Amazon.com

Plot:

A year after the tragic death of her husband and young daughter on the drive back from an adventure holiday, Sarah (Shauna Macdonald) and her adventurous girlfriends, Juno (Natalie Mendoza), Beth (Alex Reid, Arachnid) , Sam (MyAnna Buring, Kill List) and Rebecca (Saskia Mulder) are reunited at a cabin in the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina (admirably portrayed by the wilds of Scotland and Buckinghamshire). Holly (Nora-Jane Noone), Juno’s new friend, is introduced.

Whilst Sarah begins to imagine the time she had with her family just twelve months prior, she is whisked along to a potholing jamboree in a cave-system kept as a surprise by Juno. Alas, no sooner have they begun to explore, than the passageway collapses behind them, shutting them in what, Juno now admits, is a completely unmapped labyrinth of tunnels and caverns. Despite the group’s previous disastrous holiday, no-one thought to inform anyone where they were going.

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As the unhappy group progress through the gloom, they find evidence of previous explorers and, more pertinently, cave drawings describing a second exit from the cave, towards which, they hopefully advance. No sooner have they set off than Holly falls and suffers a pleasingly graphic compound fracture of her leg; Sarah applies a splint, though you imagine the entire group is relived it happened to the most annoying of their number.

Whilst collecting their thoughts, Sarah fleetingly spies a figure in the murk, the others essentially patting her on the head, assuming she’s still suffering mental trauma. Exasperated and frightened, Sarah is proved right as the girls find that indeed they are not alone and something humanoid is hunting them down, like lions in the savannah, attacking the weakest (Holly) and ripping out her throat. In the melee of pickaxes and claws, Juno accidentally plunges her rock climbing equipment into Beth, a fact she is not too happy about but does little to resolve.

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Briefly the group are separated but Juno locates Sam and Rebecca, dispatching another of the ever-increasing number of troglodytes before further casualties are inflicted. She convinces the duo to continue on with her towards the exit, despite Sarah being missing. Fearing for their lives and owing something of a debt of gratitude, they relent.

Meanwhile, Sarah is still alive, slightly more-so than Beth who is more blood than flesh but still manages to inform her friend that not only had Juno done her a mischief but had also been having an affair with Sarah’s dead husband, which she proves by producing a pendant she snatched from the increasingly unpopular ‘friend’. Now in a clouded rage, she mercy-kills Beth and slays a family of the pale creatures en-route to find the others.

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Most of the ladies have by now realised the creatures are blind, a result of their evolution underground, though have excellent hearing. This knowledge is ultimately redundant, as the creatures mastery of their domain means that escape is almost impossible, First to demonstrate this are Rebecca and Sam, leaving only Juno and Sarah to fend off their attackers and seek salvation. They’ve come so far but is Sarah in the mood for forgiveness, and even if she is, is there any chance to escape?

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Review:

After the huge critical and commercial success of Neil Marshall’s debut effort, 2002’s Dog Soldiers, everybody waited expectantly to give him a polite ripple of applause for his follow-up but not to push his luck. Much eating of head-wear followed when it was clear that Marshall had at least equalled his efforts and had pushed himself and his team yet further, filming a low-budget horror film with a small cast in a near to pitch-black environment. In fact, no caves were harmed during the making of this movie, the immersive and believable sets being made at Pinewood.

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The Descent has, aside from the creatures and a brief appearance by Sarah’s husband, an all female cast, an intentional device but one which is somewhat nailed-on and for the most part, glaring. The film doesn’t suffer as such, the group still has an alpha female, a brash annoyance and a baddie but it’s an unnecessary ‘first’ and not the only example of the film-maker perhaps trying a little too hard, when their storytelling skill and understanding of what it means to be frightened were already sound.The actresses all do a sterling job both emotionally and physically, their rock-climbing exertions regularly being wince-inducing for the audience. Helpfully, they are given different accents, a huge help in distinguishing who’s who in the necessarily dark filming environment.

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It’s frustrating to watch a film which feasts on such raw human fears – the dark, being lost, claustrophobia, loneliness, things going bump in the dark  – knowing that if every horror film director tapped into such universal emotions, we’d be left with far less chaff. The dark is dealt with bravely and skilfully, the only light being of provided sources, torches, helmets, watch displays and the like. The creatures, known retrospectively as crawlers, are well-devised in many respects, pale and pathetic on one level, possessed of cunning and finely-honed senses on the other.

There are niggling gaps – their excellent hearing makes up for lack of sight but whispering is apparently fine (take heed of the zombies of the Blind Dead series, able to hear even the beating of your heart!) and one might think that a sense of touch would also be similarly keen but their ability to sense the heat of flaming torches and indeed the trapped party’s body-heat is lacking. Curmudgeonly sorts may point to their similarity to Gollum of Tolkein fame.

Though an effective score is provided by David Julyan (The Cabin in the Woods), the traditional musical stingers designed to make the audience jump, are instead easily facilitated by the rasping crawlers appearing out of nowhere.

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As is many a film’s wont, despite the presence of the crawlers, the human participants pose at least the equal amount of physical and psychological danger. The film just about stays the sensible side of the 2000’s version of the 80’s trapping of ‘it was all a dream’, fortunate – although it was felt a statement had to be made beyond the basic plight of the cavers, it would be refreshing to have a horror film that didn’t fall back on ulterior factors, as if to suggest just being a horror film wasn’t enough.

The crawlers themselves, humanoid enough to clarify that they have evolved from Earth not from Mars, are the work of Paul Hyett (HowlThe Facility, Eden Lake) and his team, the prosthetics being anatomically sensible but still repulsive, their appearance being hidden from the actresses until filming started, ramping up the tension yet further. The film spawned one, ill-advised, sequel, whilst Marshall has yet to recapture his early vigour and invention on the big screen.

Daz Lawrence, Horrorpedia

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

Other reviews:

” …Marshall delivers what amounts to a feature-length exploitation of viewer phobias — distressingly claustrophobic and shot so vertiginously that it feels as though you’re dangling in the cave with the women. The generously gelatinous gore isn’t without metaphorical purpose either. As the cave gets wormier and wetter, tighter and more terrifying, it feels like a womb thick with amniotic fluid.” Nick Rogers, The Film Yap

“Its no hyperbole to call Neil Marshall’s second feature a masterpiece. It succeeds brilliantly on technical and artistic level and it achieves the basic aim of any horror film. It is as scary as hell.” MJ Simpson, Urban Terrors: New British Horror Cinema 1997 – 2008

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Buy: Amazon.comAmazon.co.uk

” …carefully establishes the psychological relationships among the women, then squanders this calibrated and generally plausible setup with a series of crude, implausible, and scattershot horror effects. The two strains are supposed to merge but mix like oil and water as the narrative grows increasingly incoherent (the fact that so much of it transpires in darkness doesn’t help). 

“Marshall could very well be the Caravaggio of the B-movie. Working in complete darkness, he playfully uses the cavers’ equipment as his paintbrush … As for a “deeper meaning,” Marshall covers that, too. What is most haunting about this film is Sarah’s own descent into feral madness. In one close-up, her blue eyes pierce the blood that covers her face, and we realize that she might have transformed into a creature herself.” Sarah Lilleyman, Time

“The watery cavern is as scary as the nasty critters who show up about an hour in. Some of the human complications are not as effective and Marshall overuses one flashback device. Ecen so, this works well enough.” Mike Mayo, The Horror Show Guide

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

“One of the scariest films of this or any decade… Ultimately, The Descent is the purest kind of horror film – ruthless, unforgiving, showing no mercy.” Bloody Disgusting

Cast and characters:

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Wikipedia | IMDb


Bloodmyth (2005)

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‘And this too has been one of the dark places of earth.’

Bloodmyth is a 2005 British horror thriller written, produced, photographed, co-edited and directed by John Rackham. The reported budget was just £3,000.

The film was released on DVD in North America in May 2010 by Seminal Films.

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Main cast:

screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-22-39-54Ian Attfield, Natalie Clayton, Henry Dunn, Keith Eyles, Jane Gull, Shelley Halstead, James Payton, John Rackham, Ben Shockley (Left for Dead, Ten Dead Men), Robert Harley Wainwright.

Cast:

Juliet Corman, instructor for a survival training company invites her sister Holly along to the first course in a new centre in Kent woodland, unaware that waiting for them is a killer experimenting with ancient Celtic methods of human sacrifice…

Reviews:

Bloodmyth doesn’t take advantage of its cheapness and that is to its detriment. But not hugely so. Not significantly so. Not enough to stop the excellent script and sterling performances from shining through in what is certainly one of the most interesting and enjoyable films I have watched this year.” MJ Simpson, Cult films and the people who make them

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“If I hear the orchestral background music loop one more time, I will go insane! It plays nearly constantly in the background on seemingly endless loop with the only exception being the occasional addition of timpani drums and/or a slightly faster pace. Most of the elements of this movie are terrible: acting, character development, weak plot, script, and special effects.” Maria Fahlsing, IMDb

Filming locations:

Ruckinge and Shadoxhurst, Kent, England, UK

IMDb

 


Never Open the Door (2014)

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Never Open the Door is a 2014 horror film directed by Vito Trabucco (Psycho a Go-GoBloody Bloody Bible Camp; Slices) from a screenplay co-written with producer Christopher Maltauro. The movie is an homage to the original Twilight Zone, Outer Limits and Alfred Hitchcock Presents series.

The film will be available to rent or own from December 6, 2016, via Amazon Instant Video and Google Play. The same date, Blu-ray and DVD releases are issued. These will include interviews with the cast and crew, behind-the-scenes footage and other extras.

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Main cast:

Jessica Sonneborn (Psycho a Go-Go; One Night of Fear; House Across The Street), Kristina Page (The Haunting of Alice D), George Troester, Deborah Venegas (Bloody Bloody Bible Camp), Matt Aidan, Mike Wood, Steven Richards.

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Plot:

Three happy couples retreat to a cozy secluded cabin in the woods to enjoy Thanksgiving. A badly wounded stranger appears at the door, and when they let him in, he throws up blood and collapses on the floor. As he dies, he points towards the lovers and croaks his final words: “Never open the door”.

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The dumbfounded group of friends start to panic as one of their own inexplicably disappears. Doubt rises by the minute and mistrust soaks through the cabin. As strange men surround the cabin, escape becomes paramount. Who will open the door?

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Filming locations:

Big Bear Lake, Big Bear Valley, San Bernardino National Forest, California, USA

IMDb


Killbillies (2015)

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‘The hills are alive with the sound of slaughter!’

Killbillies – original title: Idila (“Idyll”) – is a 2015 Slovenian horror film written and directed by Tomaz Gorkic.

The film was released in  North America on DVD on October 25, 2016, by Artsploitation Films.

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Main cast:

Nina Ivanisin, Lotos Sparovec, Nika Rozman, Sebastian Cavazza, Jurij Drevensek, Manca Ogorevc, Damjana Cerne, Matic Bobnar, Damir Leventic, Ajda Smrekar, Liza Marija Grasic, Kaja Janjic, Klemen Nadler, Polona Torkar, Luka Zivec, Nada Bozic, Kristof Modic, Jana Nucic, Tomaz Pangersic

screen-shot-2016-11-23-at-10-59-57Plot:

A group of fashionistas from the city, including models Zina (Nina Ivanisin) and Mia (Nika Rozman), make-up artist Dragica (Manca Ogorevc) and photographer Blitcz (Sebastian Cavazza), begin to shoot on an idyllic countryside hilltop.

However, two physically deformed psychopathic countrymen approach them and quickly attack. After the terrified group finds themselves chained in a basement and awaiting their gruesome fate, they decide they must fight no matter what the odds. A wild, bloody, taut clash ensues between urban and rural, women and men, between savages and civilized man…

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Reviews:

“…isn’t going to win any awards, nor does it break new ground as far as the cannibal sub-genre goes. What it does do is offer solid entertainment value through nasty and explicit action. I love the title, as well as the Slovenian backdrop and the dynamic cinematography that highlights it. The lighting and audio are really impressive and the acting performances are pretty consistent across the board.” AdamTheMovieGod

“I found Killbillies to be quite a surprise. It looked like it would be a cheesy movie, but it  turned out to be the opposite. There may be some dark humour here and there with the murders, but for the most part, it’s a serious, well-shot film.” Michael Tatlock, From the Mind of Tatlock

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“Brace yourselves for some serious face bashing carnage and plenty of brain-matter throughout. If you like and appreciate practical effects, you will love what the team have put together with this one … I really do urge you to check this one out, it played out very well, had some really grotesque violence and the story was intriguing. And, I know I’ve said it already, but the entire cast was killer…” Chris Savage, HorrorMovies.ca

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“Some fantastic effects also make Idila shine brightly. Again, it’s hard to tell if the actors are wearing makeup or not, but once the blood is shed, these moments feel chillingly real due to the complexity and subtlety of the gore shown. This is one good looking, harrowingly effective, sublimely acted, and gruelingly bloody film.” Mark L. Miller, Ain’t It Cool News
“All of the make-up effects, within Killbillies, are well done, thus increasing the film’s shock factor. While the film does stick a little too closely to Tobe Hooper’s groundbreaking picture, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, there is still a lot to commend Tomaz Gorkic for. Slasher film fans are encouraged to take a walk down this darkened, bloodied and corpse filled memory lane.” Michael Allen, 28 Days Later Analysis
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The Fiancé (2016)

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‘Love hurts.’

The Fiancé is a 2016 American bigfoot horror film written and directed by Mark Allen Michaels (Valentine DayZ; Mind Rage) and produced by Staci Layne Wilson (Fetish Factory) and Kate Rees Davies (Altered Perception) for Firebreathing Films.

Main cast:

Carrie Keagan, Dallas Valdez, Douglas Tait, Curt Lambert, Danni Lang, Staci Layne Wilson, Tony Snegoff, Kate Rees Davies, Dallas Valdez, Curt Lambert, Aaron Kai,  Ed Morrell, Robert Acres, Larz Yungbliut, Alison Roedel, Isaiah Waldron, Seamus Cattaneo.

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Plot:

When a beautiful bride-to-be is bitten by the legendary creature, Bigfoot, she becomes a brutal force of nature hellbent on breaking her engagement – and her fiancé…

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Reviews:

” …a fun, character driven take on the Bigfoot genre. It managed to feel fresh and new in a subject that has been done to death. If you like being able to invest a little bit more than face value in your horror films, then I highly recommend this Sasquatch flick with a twist.” Charlie Cargile, PopHorror.com

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Interviews:

Carrie Keagan, Staci Layne Wilson and makeup artist Michelle Sforzo talk to Legion of Leia

Mark Allen Michaels talks to Redlands Daily Facts

Filming Locations:

Topanga Canyon, California, USA

IMDb | Twitter | Official site


The Ritual (2017)

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The Ritual is a 2017 British horror film directed by David Bruckner (Southbound; V/H/SThe Signal) from a screenplay by Joe Barton, based on Adam Nevill’s 2012 novel of the same title.

The film is produced by Jonathan Cavendish, Richard Holmes (Eden Lake) and Andy Serkis (actor in Rise of the Planet of the Apes and sequels; Burke and HareKing Kong; The Cottage).

Main cast:

Rafe Spall (Jurassic World 2; Shaun of the Dead), Rob James-Collier, Arsher Ali, Sam Troughton (Slumber; Spirit TrapAVP: Alien vs. Predator), Paul Reid, Kerri McLean, Jacob James Beswick.

Plot:

A group of college friends reunite for a trip to the forest, but encounter a menacing presence in the woods that’s stalking them…

Filming locations:

Romania

IMDb


Pitchfork (2016)

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‘Every generation has its monster’

Pitchfork is a 2016 American slasher horror film directed by Glenn Douglas Packard from a screenplay co-written with Darryl F. Gariglio. It was produced by Packard, Gariglio and Noreen Marriott, with associate producer Shaun Cairo.

The film is released in theaters and On Demand on January 13, 2017, via Uncork’d Entertainment.

Main cast:

Daniel Wilkinson [as Pitchfork], Lindsey Nicole, Brian Raetz, Ryan Moore, Celina Beach, Keith Webb, Sheila Leason, Nicole Dambro, Vibhu Raghave, Rachel Carter, Andrew Dawe-Collins, Carol Ludwick, Derek Reynolds, Addisyn Wallace and Anisbel Lopez.

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Plot:

Having recently shared a life-changing secret with his family, Hunter recruits his friends to come with him from New York to the farm where he grew up as he faces his parents for the first time.

As the college students enjoy the fresh air of Michigan farm country, an older, more dangerous secret slowly emerges. While Hunter navigates a new place within his conservative family, a vicious creature from their past descends on the farm, putting the unsuspecting city kids in mortal danger…

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IMDb



Honeymoon (2014)

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Honeymoon is a 2014 American science fiction horror film directed by Leigh Janiak (her feature film debut) from a screenplay co-written with Phil Graziadei.

It stars Rose Leslie and Harry Treadaway as a newly-married couple whose honeymoon ends up being ruined by a series of strange events.

The movie had its world premiere on March 7, 2014 at South by Southwest. It should not be confused with the 2015 Mexican horror thriller Honeymoon, directed by Diego Cohen.

Opening plot:

Bea (Rose Leslie) and Paul (Harry Treadaway) are newly married and off to have a romantic honeymoon in a rustic cabin set in a secluded forest.

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During their stay there, they go to a small restaurant where Will, the owner, initially acts hostile and asks them to leave, but later calms down, realizing he was Bea’s childhood friend. Will’s wife then comes in, acting strangely and saying they need to get away.

Afterwards, everything goes normally until their wedded bliss is cut short when Bea goes missing. Paul finds her naked and disoriented in the woods with no evidence as to how she got there or why she was there in the first place. He takes her back to the cabin, where she claims she was sleepwalking due to stress, and tells him to make nothing of it.

As time passes, Bea’s behavior becomes increasingly distant and strange. At first, Paul blames Bea’s strange behaviour on some encounter with Will, but soon he realizes there’s more going on…

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Reviews:

“Janiak demonstrates some wonderfully confident direction for a first-timer, utilizing space, sound design and two very good lead actors as her tools to slowly amplify the tension and mess with your head. The situations she present before the discovery of Bea in the woods and after ring true and Paul’s reactions are justified, making it all the easier for the us to be affected by the grotesqueries that await in the latter half of the film.” Ryan Turek, ComingSoon.net

“The story comes first and foremost, and it’s the story that empowers the scares, not special effects, an escalating score or the boogeyman popping into frame from nowhere. To be succinct, Honeymoon is a beautifully crafted mystery that culminates in an unforgiving but not offensive finale.” Matt Molgaard, Horrorfreak News

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“Janiak does an admirable job of keeping the audience off guard without letting things feel manipulated. She is obviously a student of horror, but uses this to know what not to do, just as much as what works. But don’t be scared away by thinking this is a kind of movie like Cabin in the Woods that riffs on the tropes of the horror genre. Honeymoon is very much its own beast; a good story, excellently told, and very, very scary.” Ryland Aldrich, Screen Anarchy

Main cast and characters:

  • Rose Leslie as Bea
  • Harry Treadaway as Paul
  • Ben Huber as Will
  • Hanna Brown as Annie

Filming locations:

North Carolina, USA

Wikipedia | IMDb


Bornless Ones (2016)

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‘Only evil will survive’

Bornless Ones is a 2016 supernatural horror film written, edited and directed by Alexander Babaev, making his feature debut.

Having just moved to a remote home near an institution to better care for her brother Zach, Emily invites a few friends over to help her unpack. They soon discover strange symbols etched into the boards on the windows.

In an effort to clean the house they clear them away, soon realizing the gravity of their mistake as they one by one become possessed by an evil force…

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The film is distributed in North America by Uncork’d Entertainment in theaters and VOD from February 10, 2017.

Main cast:

Margaret Judson, Devin Goodsell (Bloodsucka Jones), Michael Johnston (Teen Wolf), Mark Furze, Bobby T, and David Banks.

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Other titles:

Goetia – working title
Haunted House on the Hill – Malaysian title

Filming locations:

Los Angeles, California, USA
Pine Mountain Club, California, USA (cabin)

IMDb


The Shrine (2010)

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‘Once you find it. They won’t let you leave.’

The Shrine is a 2010 Canadian supernatural horror film directed by Jon Knautz (Goddess of Love; Girl HouseJack Brooks: Monster Slayer) from a screenplay co-written with Brendan Moore and Trevor Matthews (Girl House).

A young American backpacker has gone missing in Poland. Three journalists link his disappearance to a remote village infamous for its bizarre cult activity and rumours of human sacrifice and go to investigate…

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Main cast:

Aaron Ashmore (Fear Island; The Thaw), Cindy Sampson (Supernatural; High Plains Invaders; Swamp Devil), Meghan Heffern (American Gothic; The Fog; Insecticidal), and Trevor Matthews (Girl HouseJack Brooks: Monster Slayer).

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

Reviews:

“After a rocky start, The Shrine finds its footing and delivers a tense, exciting, wacky conclusion. The final twist is satisfying and does not feel forced in any way. The film is more enjoyable than expected, but could have used a more focused and entertaining beginning. The shrine itself is creepy as hell and the final act is full on madness and possessed mayhem.” Doc Rotten, HorrorNews.net

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“Its hard to throw punches at a film that’s so effortlessly entertaining, despite its inherent flaws and weaknesses. In many ways its these perceived weaknesses that actually elevate it to a higher status. The overacting, the ‘too bright’ colours, the head-scratching plot holes, (build a f*cking fence!!) and the cheesy costume designs all add to its charm.” The Horror Hotel

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“Everything that is wrong here – the dull stock characters, the derivative plotting, Polish folk obviously played by non-Poles and Polish settings obviously not shot in Poland – could have been elevated by some sharp parodic writing and self-aware wit, as if to show that the filmmaker was in on the joke of how well-worn his material is. Instead we get a po-faced, poor imitation of a standard straight-to-video horror flick.” Anton Bitel, Eye for Film

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“There’s a pretty solid crucifixion-style scene, some decent looking rubbery monsters, some solid in-camera no frills jump-scares, and some flat out brutality that redeems this little number by the end of its running time.” Frank Cotton, Horribly Hooched

“Even with its familiar trappings and some occasional bumps in the road, The Shrine is an enjoyable little throwback.” Scott Weinberg, FEAR.net

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Buy: Amazon.com

The Shrine is a lean, mean tale that recalls the fog shrouded hamlets cursed by horrific unearthly evils which were brought to life by H.P. Lovecraft. It’s plot is original and unique; a rare bird to find in this age of cinematic remakes,  bland re-imaginings, crappy reboots and horrid knockoffs. Check it out!” Bloody Whisper

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Cast and characters:

  • Aaron Ashmore as Marcus
  • Cindy Sampson as Carmen
  • Meghan Heffern as Sara
  • Trevor Matthews as Henryk
  • Vieslav Krystyan as Arkadiusz
  • Laura DeCarteret as Laura Taylor
  • Ben Lewis as Eric Taylor
  • Julia Debowska as Lidia
  • Monica Bugajski as Emilia
  • Stefen Hayes as Aleks
  • Connor Stanhope as Dariusz
  • Philip Craig as Dale

Production company:

Brookstreet Pictures

Filming locations:

Pickering, Toronto and Vaughan, Ontario, Canada

Wikipedia | IMDb | Facebook


Talbot County (2017)

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Talbot County is a 2017 American horror film directed by Bev Land, making his feature debut, from a screenplay co-written with Michael Mordler.

Official synopsis:

When six college kids in a sleepy Southern town are assigned a group project to rediscover a moment in history, one of them sets in motion a horrific fate when he proposes they head into the Georgia backwoods to tackle the legend of Emily Burt, the Talbot County werewolf.

Talbot County is a Hitchcockian tale of horror set in 1986 that delves into a hundred year old fable where our students are met with very real consequences that go beyond any classroom lessons…

Main cast:

Vanessa Angel, Gail O’Grady, Dania Ramirez, Parker Croft, Rebekah Graf, Alina Puscau, Kalia Prescott, Jake Lockett, Craig Tate, Presley Melson.

Filming locations:

Columbus and Upatoi, Georgia, USA

IMDb

 


Wolf House (2016)

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‘Six People. One House. Lots of monsters.

Wolf House is a 2016 American found footage supernatural horror film directed by Matt D. Lord, making his feature debut, from a screenplay by co-producer Ken Cosentino and Elizabeth Houlihans. It stars Cosentino along with Jessica Bell (Sting; The Fate of Sophie Miller; The Other Side) and Marcus Ganci-Rotella.

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Six friends on a camping trip think they have discovered, and killed, a Sasquatch. But what they have actually unleashed is something more evil, more ancient and more deadly than they could ever imagine – an army of supernatural terrors that will hunt them until none of them remain…

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The film is released on DVD on January 17, 2017, by Wild Eye Releasing. The DVD includes a feature-length commentary with director Matt D. Lord, a behind the scenes documentary, a featurette on “Making the Monster” and trailers. Pre-order from Amazon.com

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Main cast:

Ken Cosentino, Jessica Bell, Marcus Ganci-Rotella, Elizabeth Houlihan, Bill Kennedy, Marc Sturdivant, Rick Williams.

IMDb

 


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