horror
In Parker Finn’s feature film debut, SMILE offers popcorn flick entertainment with PG-13 level horror, despite its R rating and a few intense moments.
Census #1 infuses supernatural elements into its workplace comedy setup, resulting in a wild, weird look at the millennial struggle.
Weird, twisted, sad, and weird some more, Pearl is a vibrant technicolor narcissism-fueled descent into violence from Ti West & Mia Goth.
Saloum is a genre-bending gem of a film, expertly weaving together a revenge narrative with notes of horror, action, and Westerns.
Blood Oath #1 introduces readers to a Prohibition Era story with baddies more dangerous than the mobsters and bootleggers.
Who Invited Them is a Shudder Original home-invite horror film that slowly moves the dial on uncomfortable up until a rousing climax.
With Seire, we see a take on paternal horror, as a man begins to lose his grip on reality and maybe his new family.
Alex Garland’s Men (2022) isn’t extremely cerebral, but it does use genre trappings that evolve into an unnerving look at gendered violence.
All Of Us Are Dead combines a cast of compelling characters and a high school setting for a zombie story that breaths life into the genre.
Nocterra: Blacktop Bill Special #1 peels back the layers of the series’ antagonist, revealing just how terrifying he’s always been.
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Primate (2025) is at home in its absurd violence, pulling apart jaws, smashing in skulls, ripping off faces, is where it shines.
IT: Welcome to Derry Episode 7 is a chimera of an episode. What starts as a brutal and uncomfortable morphs into an empty military spectacle.















