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Post by Deleted on Apr 3, 2023 12:49:41 GMT
Let's get this horror board going then...
What was the last horror filum you watched?
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Post by Deleted on Apr 3, 2023 12:51:00 GMT
Last night I rewatched 'Long Time Dead' (2002).
S'alright I guess. Nothing to get excited about...
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Post by TheSowIsMine on Apr 3, 2023 12:54:53 GMT
Smile (2022) I did not like it very much. Very predictable.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 3, 2023 12:57:06 GMT
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Post by bomtombadil on Apr 3, 2023 12:57:09 GMT
Filum. You keep using that word. I do not think that word means what you think it means.
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Post by SixOfTheRichest on Apr 3, 2023 13:29:59 GMT
Smile (2022) I did not like it very much. Very predictable. I thought it had some good ideas, all ruined with a leaden pace and wokeness in the casting which seemed forced.
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Post by sdm3 on Apr 3, 2023 15:12:59 GMT
I honestly can’t remember. It might have been a rewatch of the original Ringu - my favorite horror film. I still have dreams about it and the American remake to a lesser extent.
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Post by James on Apr 3, 2023 15:15:33 GMT
Vampire in Brooklyn (1995) - 6/10
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Post by kuatorises on Apr 3, 2023 15:49:16 GMT
Is Concaine Bear considered horror? If not, M3GAN.
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Post by nostromo on Apr 3, 2023 15:50:51 GMT
'Speak No Evil' (2022) Very good. Horror in the truest sense.
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Post by cryptoflovecraft on Apr 3, 2023 15:56:57 GMT
Freeze (2022) - Surprisingly decent Lovecraftian horror film and the closest we're probably ever going to get to a feature length adaptation of At the Mountains of Madness, Lovecraft's classic novella. One other thing I like about the film is that it relies on old school special effects (guys in rubber 'fish people' suits, etc) and there's very little, if any, CGI in this film. Fans of Carpenter's The Thing and the late Stuart Gordon take note.
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Post by ghostintheshell on Apr 3, 2023 16:26:25 GMT
The Forever Purge, same old script but with better characters.
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Post by Captain Spencer on Apr 3, 2023 17:52:38 GMT
A Werewolf In England (2020)In Victorian-era England, a Parish Councillor and criminal take refuge from a storm, at a remote countryside Inn. They soon learn of the deadly pact between the inn-keepers and bloodthirsty werewolves that surround the area. A fast paced, fun-filled horror movie that alternates from campy comedy to gory thrills. Plus it has what I consider to be one of the most outrageously tasteless scenes in a horror movie that involves werewolf diarrhea. Acting honours go to Tim Cartwright as the councillor, bringing an entertainingly non-nonsense, boorish manner to the less-than-likeable character who eventually becomes somewhat likeable. Another horror goody from director Charlie Steeds. 7/10
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Post by Toxicalicity on Apr 3, 2023 18:06:01 GMT
Kill Her Goats - 3/10
Well, it wants to be a throwback horror film with languid pacing and unironic nudity, but it's really just a nonsensical and heavily undercooked misfire that has more plotpoints than it has time to develop any of them. The finale in particular is jaw-dropping in its stupidity and randomness. kane Hodder has maybe ONE minute of screen time, lol. What an absolute joke of a movie.
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Post by Captain Spencer on Apr 3, 2023 18:13:25 GMT
Freeze (2022) - Surprisingly decent Lovecraftian horror film and the closest we're probably ever going to get to a feature length adaptation of At the Mountains of Madness, Lovecraft's classic novella. One other thing I like about the film is that it relies on old school special effects (guys in rubber 'fish people' suits, etc) and there's very little, if any, CGI in this film. Fans of Carpenter's The Thing and the late Stuart Gordon take note. This is definitely one I'll be watching in the future, as I am becoming a fan of director Charlie Steeds. I just posted a review of A Werewolf In England, which he directed. Another one of his I liked was Death Ranch.
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