Tag: FrightFest


  • FrightFest 2025: ’90s Throwback ‘213 Bones’ Brings Us Back to the ‘Scream’ Wave of Whodunnits

    As a child of the nineties, it’s amusing to me whenever new slasher films use the decade as part of their setting. While nothing is outright weird about exploring the time period, it just seems to me that The Silence of the Lambs defines early ‘90s slashers, and most late ‘90s slashers seem driven by inspiration from Wes…

  • FrightFest 2025: ‘Pig Hill’ Has the Markers of a Lost X-File

    Local urban legends are stories that make for the best childhood experiences. Somewhere around the time you’re seven or eight, you start hearing these campfire tales, usually through schoolyard misinterpretations. It’s like a game of telephone that began with some truth, which was slightly degraded through each person’s fantastic rendition. Where would society be without…

  • FrightFest 2025: Lost Film ‘A Blind Bargain’ Gets A Stunning 70’s-Style Reboot

    Every horror fan should know the story of the MGM studio fire. Sixty years ago, an electrical short caused a fire in Vault 7 of the MGM backlot just before ten o’clock at night on August 10, 1965. The nitrate film quickly burned, and the pressure building within the vault would eventually cause it to…

  • FrightFest 2025: She Who Walks Behind ‘The Rows’

    One of the films I most anticipated at this year’s FrightFest was undoubtedly Seth Daly’s The Rows. A film about a kid in a cornfield avoiding a group of murderers was like drawing a moth to a flame. Sure, the cornfield is getting a little overcrowded these days with a lackluster reboot of Children of…

  • FrightFest 25: The Haunted Forest Veils Pensive Subtext Behind Histories of Violence

    Haunt movies have become a bigger part of the horror landscape over the last few years. Films like Haunt, Hurt, and Hellfest have all been relatively successful in providing scares that make us question the sadism of the people providing our fear, especially when we clamor for more, holding the belief that everything we’re witnessing…

  • FrightFest: Noseeums is a Social Horror Go-See-Ums

    Imagine having nowhere to run to and nowhere to go that’s safe, not even being able to sleep without your nightmares reminding you that the color of your skin defines someone’s hatred for you. That’s the fresh idea behind Raven Deshay Carter’s debut film Noseeums. When social injustice and horror collide, the viewer often wins,…

  • FrightFest 2024: Scarlet Blue is a Surreal Cinematic Stunner

    When JP Nunez and I did our introductory article for FrightFest, we had a feast of horror titles to sort through and whittle down to five that each of us couldn’t contain our excitement for. Scarlet Blue was one of the first I picked. Aurélia Mengin’s sublime color use of reds and blues, mixing a…

  • FrightFest 2024: Honor, Forgiveness, and ‘A Samurai in Time’

    Over the last couple of weeks, FrightFest movies have consumed my life. I’ve seen vampires, banshees, serial killers, and surrealness portrayed in ways that surprised and antagonized, and hopefully, you’ve been along for the ride as well. However, with all of the horror and big ideas being displayed on screen, I’m still a sucker for…

  • FrightFest 2024: A Trailer Park Vampire Feud Hits Bogieville

    Bogieville was one of the films I was really hyped up for at this year’s FrightFest. I love a good vampire movie. Who doesn’t? The preview offered a no-holds-barred fight between two factions of feuding undead creatures of the night. I don’t know if other people do this with movies, or maybe even different color…

  • FrightFest 2024: The Daemon Drags You Under, Slowly But Surely

    When The Daemon was sent my way from one of my usual sources, it was a film that I almost immediately wanted to see. Both the description and the images included looked like they were my kind of jam. On top of that one of the leads, Sara Fletcher, was my first TV crush from…