Reviews of new films from Stephen Daldry, Chase Palmer, and Neill Blomkamp.
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All in Horror
Reviews of new films from Stephen Daldry, Chase Palmer, and Neill Blomkamp.
James Wan is sorely missed behind the camera in this lackluster horror sequel.
Ben Wheatley’s pandemic horror flick is just suspenseful enough to work, but feels hemmed in by COVID restrictions.
Besides a few arresting images, Rose Glass’ plodding attempt at horror via religious zealotry is a near pointless exercise.
Vince Vaughn and Kathryn Newton are hilarious in Christopher Landon’s bloody body-swap horror/comedy.
Jacob Chase’s confident horror feature is rich in scares and social commentary.
Dave Franco makes a strong directorial debut with this smart, haunting thriller.
Romola Garai makes an impressive feature filmmaking debut with this ambitious slice of slow-burn horror.
Though well-made and plenty tense, this Australian horror/thriller may have missed its calling as a short film.
Kevin Bacon can’t save his toothless thriller from the formerly reliable David Koepp..
Leigh Whannell’s latest winner is heavy on quality suspense and scares, but light on character development and logic.
The “Goodnight Mommy” team returns with another top-notch psychological thriller.
The horror sequel follows the winning formula of its creepy predecessor, then contradicts itself in the name of mythology.
Creepy visuals and Alice Krige’s frightening performance aren’t enough to buoy Osgood Perkins’ Grimm adaptation.
A baffling, full-stop ending mars this otherwise promising Henry James adaptation.
The shockingly dull combination of Nicolas Cage, Richard Stanley, and H.P. Lovecraft is an almost complete failure.
The latest “Alien” rip-off has more in common with the “47 Meters Down” series than Ellen Ripley.
If any horror film characters deserve to die gruesome deaths, it’s these idiots.