![[Documentary Review] Otto Baxter: Not A F***ing Horror Story (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1694458287012-7JVY9ZSD3NPWJTO81MNE/Screenshot+2023-09-11+at+19.49.49.png)
[Documentary Review] Otto Baxter: Not A F***ing Horror Story (2023)
Otto Baxter: Not a F***ing Horror Story is a beautifully constructed documentary that is real, honest and brutal about the world’s perceptions of people with Down’s Syndrome, through the eyes of someone who has it, whilst maintaining a comic undertone of wholesome affection.
![[Film Review] Children of the Corn (2020)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1694457663701-6IWKR8Q9R3IHKUOBJEY1/Screenshot+2023-09-11+at+19.38.41.png)
[Film Review] Children of the Corn (2020)
Movie adaptations have followed Stephen King’s work since the very beginning of his illustrious career, with Brian de Palma’s Carrie being released two years after the publication of the book of the same name, King’s first.
![[Documentary Review] FrightFest: The J-Horror Virus (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1694459005794-ZYWEBA8S04HDFCXZJ2CZ/Screenshot+2023-09-11+at+20.00.57.png)
[Documentary Review] FrightFest: The J-Horror Virus (2023)
Why is Japanese horror so scary? What is the ‘J-horror boom’? Is The Ring the first J-horror film? What makes J-horror a distinct cinematic movement outside of the broader ‘Japanese horror’ umbrella?
![[Film Review] Herd (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1694364865125-A0PFUV3M3L34SYUVCROF/Screenshot+2023-09-10+at+17.51.31.png)
[Film Review] Herd (2023)
This film keeps audiences guessing where it will lead them next, with subtle and nuanced changes in the narrative that will surprise even the most zombie-literate to a degree.
![[Film Review] We Might Hurt Each Other (2022)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1694364157288-Y0VQOFCOQM4VZSYBQXTZ/Screenshot+2023-09-10+at+17.39.58.png)
[Film Review] We Might Hurt Each Other (2022)
The Lithuanian slasher film We Might Hurt Each Other (also known as Pensive) deftly combines folklore, horror and the navigation of a high school social system to create a thrilling and thought-provoking movie.
![[Film Review] FrightFest: New Life (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1694361802334-O5M5EXSVXGTOBK1LPI2I/Image+2.png)
[Film Review] FrightFest: New Life (2023)
John Rosman’s New Life takes this distillation of the subgenre to create an impressive, emotionally-charged debut that weaves together veins of horror and drama to create a unique take on a well-trod path, one that will leave its audience both moved and uncomfortably in touch with their own mortality.
![[Film Review] Beaten to Death (2022)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1693768549820-ZOX7I92V88CI2NI5O0VR/IMAGE+1+%284%29.jpg)
[Film Review] Beaten to Death (2022)
Horror films love to ask the question, “What would you do if you were stranded in an unfamiliar area, and had to rely on the kindness of strangers?” And Beaten to Death (2022), written and directed by Sam Curtain, screams this question.
![[Film Review] FrightFest: Good Boy (2022)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1693768291513-CBB7XKGWM7RMXP8FDRO8/Screenshot+2023-09-03+at+20.07.48.png)
[Film Review] FrightFest: Good Boy (2022)
One of the most anticipated features among attendees to this year’s FrightFest, Viljar Bøe’s Good Boy, is a bizarre and unsettling Norwegian thriller that will have even the most ardent of dog lovers think twice before letting their pooch sleep in the same bed.
![[Film Review] Cobweb (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1693766620925-MFPRW11W02ZVHQBESNC4/Image+1.jpeg)
[Film Review] Cobweb (2023)
This kind of feeling is very much at the forefront of Cobweb, the first feature film from Samuel Bodin, known for the spooky Netflix series Marianne.
![[Film Review] FrightFest: The Moor (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1693767895752-N4QUUSNKGI74EK4X3KR0/Screenshot+2023-09-03+at+19.59.37.png)
[Film Review] FrightFest: The Moor (2023)
Chris Cronin’s The Moor (2023) is a sad and scary exploration of how childhood trauma can haunt you later in life. While horror fans have seen dozens of films about trauma over the last decade or so, The Moor does something fresh. It’s a horror movie that relies on a traumatic event to kick off the action, not a movie about trauma that is also frightening.
![[Film Review] FrightFest: Transmission (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1693767331352-76CYNFB6CIB3ZDELBE69/Image+1+%283%29.jpg)
[Film Review] FrightFest: Transmission (2023)
Written and directed by Michael Hurst, Transmission (2023) is the story of the weird stuff you used to see on late-night TV. Framed as something an old man saw while flipping channels one night, Transmission tells a few seemingly disconnected stories that end up intertwined when the film is finished.
![[Film Review] FrightFest: Here For Blood (2022)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1693511399895-U2US7123EPY1WH5OZX27/Image+1+%282%29.jpg)
[Film Review] FrightFest: Here For Blood (2022)
Babysitting has got to be the most dangerous job in horror films. Across subgenres, those who provide childcare coverage for parents are at the mercy of horror film villains, both human and supernatural. But what if the babysitter was ready for a fight? Here for Blood (2022), directed by Daniel Turres, answers that question.
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[Book Review] The Exorcist Legacy: 50 Years of Fear
However Nat Segaloff’s book The Exorcist Legacy: 50 Years of Fear is a surprising and fascinating literary documentation of the movie that caused moviegoers to faint and vomit in the aisles of the cinema.
![[Film Review] Tokyo Horror Film Festival: Idol Never Dies (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1691325964958-YFB6UYUU73TD3NUURZWY/Fz21U1GaQAMOnrn.jpeg)
[Film Review] Tokyo Horror Film Festival: Idol Never Dies (2023)
Comedy splatter legend (and the mastermind behind such Criterion classics as Zombie Ass: Toilet of the Dead and Mutant Girl Squad) Noboru Iguchi’s IDOL NEVER DiES played as the main feature of the inaugural Tokyo Horror Film Festival, which took place on July 1 in Tokyo’s Nakano ward. The festival also featured an exclusive Q&A with director Iguchi himself.
![[Film Review] New York Asian Film Festival: Back Home (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1691325439346-R9V91L02J8UBFAV29B2N/Screenshot+2023-08-06+at+13.33.17.png)
[Film Review] New York Asian Film Festival: Back Home (2023)
Despite what a particularly vocal subset of haters might crow online, horror has always explored the well-solidified connection between familial trauma and the supernatural. Countless horrors spanning all eras, from Don’t Look Now to Relic, have propounded the idea that far scarier than any ghost, ghoul or demon are the scars your family can leave on you - in the case of Nate Ki’s Back Home, both literally and physically.
![[Film Review] New York Asian Film Festival: The Abandoned (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1691325028171-V5WMZEJVHB04HBL5CSDC/Screenshot+2023-08-06+at+13.26.59.png)
[Film Review] New York Asian Film Festival: The Abandoned (2023)
One of the standout Taiwanese features played at this year’s New York Asian Film Festival was Ying-Ting Tseng’s The Abandoned, a bleak police procedural thriller that shone an uncomfortable spotlight on the harrowing realities faced by a country’s most vulnerable occupants.
![[Film Review] New York Asian Film Festival: Home Sweet Home (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1691324682025-OO3XKA8OB1A7BKJBOZYM/Screenshot+2023-08-06+at+13.20.52.png)
[Film Review] New York Asian Film Festival: Home Sweet Home (2023)
Star of last year’s NYAFF hit Shin Ultraman, actor and filmmaker Takumi Saitoh returned to the fest this year with his second directorial feature Home Sweet Home – a slick and sinister thriller that subverts the image of the haunted house from dusty old mansion to something far more enviable.
![[Film Review] The Breach (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1691242788939-2WLCETDHPWJECGX2BJCA/Screenshot+2023-08-05+at+14.37.54.png)
[Film Review] The Breach (2023)
Isn’t it great that there’s now an almost universally accepted shorthand for spooky, interdimensional stories that play with the fabric of time and often introduce creatures the simple mind cannot fathom? Instead of writing all that out, we just say “Lovecraftian Horror” and the avid viewer can fill in the blanks themselves.
![[Film Review] The Empty Space (2023)](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1691241939272-PUT9Q1RAQNSSROJ38A89/Screenshot+2023-08-05+at+14.23.50.png)
[Film Review] The Empty Space (2023)
Andrew Jara Continues to evolve with The Empty Space (2023). Andrew Jara’s delve into the complexities of grief blends the warnings of Pet Semetary with the discomfort and unease of psychological horror using the good bones of a clearly personal script to weave a tale of trauma, isolation, and self-initiated freedom.
![[Event Review] GASP! Horror Film Festival 2023](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fe76a518d20536a3fbd7246/1691244700071-RE6ABHHQW47AEVJZ4P6I/Image+1-Main+Image.jpg)
[Event Review] GASP! Horror Film Festival 2023
The first ever GASP! horror film festival, Manchester’s only horror film festival dedicated entirely to minority filmmakers, took place last month from June 17 - 18 at cult cinema CULTPLEX. Six feature length films and two short film showcases celebrated and elevated the work of female filmmakers, foreign language filmmakers, people with disabilities, people of colour and the LGBTQ+ community.