The New Jersey Horror Con and Film Festival returns to the NJ Expo Center April 19-21!
Read MoreMacabre Daily talks to Jason Jenkins about PHANTOM LIMBS, his upcoming book on unmade horror!
Read MoreThe Adams Family announces their 3rd feature film, HELL HOLE, which has found a home on horror's favorite streaming service, SHUDDER!
Read MoreThe first great horror film of 2024 is here, and it’s not what you would expect. Andrew Cumming’s “Out of Darkness” has been described as “paleolithic horror,” which is certainly part of the elevator pitch, but that just scratches the surface of its many descriptors. It’s a dark, foreboding film that has a few twists on what initially seems like a simple set-up.
Read MoreThough the genre has been around for only 20 years, mumblecore films have common signifiers. They’re low-budget, mostly single-location films with few characters and naturalistic dialogue. Chris and Jay Duplass made a cottage industry of these films (my personal favorite is “You Sister’s Sister”) before each of them branched out into more “mainstream” projects, including horror. Chris made the “Creep” films and now Jay stars in “Ghostwritten,” a ghost story that still keeps one foot planted firmly in the mumblecore world.
Read MoreRemember last January when we thought Halloween 2023 would be a parade of 2,000 “M3gans?” That didn’t quite come to fruition (Hi Barbie!). While it definitely won’t have the same mainstream appeal, Bertrand Mandico’s “She is Conann,” a queer arthouse fantasy epic, will definitely inspire some crazy costumes. If that was too many descriptors, well, get ready for more.
Read MoreFor most horror sequels, prequels, and remakes, there’s a story about a different version that almost came to be. Author Jason Jenkins would explore these in his “Phantom Limbs” column for Bloody Disgusting, along with interviews from the creatives behind them. Now he’s assembled the first volume into a new book. Coming this Spring from From Encyclopocalypse Publications, Jenkins collects the columns for the first time in print!
Read MoreLong Island, New York is recognized for many things. We’re the home of Billy Joel, third-wave emo, and the people who actually claimed to believe George Santos. One of our numerous exports is the infamous slasher film “Sleepaway Camp.” While the film shot in upstate New York, the cast and crew primarily hailed from Long Island, as did their accents, including the star of the film, Felissa Rose. Interviewing Rose on Long Island is almost like interviewing Elvis in Graceland. If there was ever a place to talk to the scream queen, it would be at Farmingdale, New York’s Necromantic Brew Co. Earlier this month, the brewery hosted an event featuring Rose and the hilarious Dave Sheridan as they hung out, signed autographs, played drinking games, and provided commentary for “Victor Crowley,” “Scary Movie,” and for its 40th anniversary, “Sleepaway Camp.” I highly recommend “Sleepaway Camp” with live commentary from Felissa Rose, just for the record.
Read MoreEveryone remembers the first time they saw “Sleepaway Camp.” Robert Hiltzik’s deranged debut slasher is so indelible, it’s nearly impossible to imagine it as part of a horror marathon. If you’ve never seen it before, what other films would you remember? To commemorate the film’s 40th anniversary, author and filmmaker Jeff Hayes has written a book, “Sleepaway Camp: Making the Movie and Reigniting the Campfire, from 1984 Publishing. Hayes talked to us about writing the book and his journey to talk to the people behind the scenes. He also debunked some rumors about the genesis of the film, and gave us some details on the script on the in-development reboot!
Read MoreThis year marks the 40th anniversary of “Psycho 2,” one of the most underrated sequels of all time. Written by Tom Holland and directed by Richard Franklin, the very idea of a sequel to Hitchcock’s classic was a major gamble, but it paid off in a major way. Due to the film’s success, Holland went on to write and direct seminal horror classics like “Child’s Play” and “Fright Night,” as well as continue collaborating with Franklin on “Cloak & Dagger.” His latest venture is “Oh Mother, What Have You Done?: The Making of Psycho 2,” which chronicles Holland, Franklin, and editor Andrew London as they set out to make a film Hitch would be proud of.
Read MoreThis year marks 40 years since the release of “Sleepaway Camp,” which is both hard and easy to imagine. Easy, because it’s dated, yet hard because it hasn’t aged. It’s still the deranged slasher wrapped around a sweet tween romance (and for some reason, an entire baseball game). Not to mention one of the most infamous endings in horror. While it’s celebrated at cons and revival screenings, author Jeff Hayes has written “Sleepaway Camp: Making the Movie and Reigniting the Campfire,” a new book chronicling the making of the film.
Read MoreAfter making a splash with 2019’s “The Deeper You Dig” and last year’s “Hellbender,” the Adams family (not that one) have returned with another feature just one year later. The filmmaking collective is known for making independent films on and around their property in upstate New York. John Adams, his wife Toby Poser, and their daughters Zelda and Lulu Adams have been writing, directing, producing, and acting in their own films for years, and I’m probably missing a few jobs. They do just about all of it. Their latest film from Yellow Veil Pictures, “Where the Devil Roams,” is their most ambitious project yet. Under the banner of their production company Wonder Wheel Productions, they've crafted a dark fable about a family of carnies who murder wealthy people during one winter of The Great Depression. If that sounds like a Rob Zombie movie, well, he wishes. Sorry, Rob.
Read MoreWatch any behind-the-scenes vignette on the making of a stopmotion animated film, and your jaw will hit the floor. Making those films is a lengthy, strenuous exercise in tedium that you hope will yield a compelling film. We all love “The Nightmare Before Christmas,” but when you realize it takes a full day to record mere SECONDS of footage? If you think about it, there really aren’t that many compared to hand-drawn and CGI-animated films. Robert Morgan’s first full-length feature “Stopmotion” isn't a documentary, but rather a window into obsession like “May” or the recent “The Angry Black Girl and Her Monster.”
Read MoreWatching “Oppenheimer” in a packed theater was one of the more shocking movie moments of 2023. Not because of how the display of Cillian Murphy’s hubris will kill us all someday, but because of his first sex scene with Florence Pugh. It was short and tame, yet people gasped like they just realized Bruce Willis was dead. It was as if this 17+ audience had forgotten movies used to have sex scenes. But Joe Lynch, he with a recall that rivals Pepperidge Farms, remembers. His new film “Suitable Flesh” is a throwback love letter to the 1990’s by being both an erotic thriller and a cosmic horror film. This isn’t to say we were all perverts in the ‘90s, but moviegoers in general were used to watching a nude scene or two in major R-rated releases. Paul Verhoeven, the daimyo of erotic thrillers, peppered them in, while still serving the story instead of descending into porn (while I never cared for them one way or the other, why as there so much nudity in “Starship Troopers?”) Lynch walks the line between Verhoeven and the late great Stuart Gordon (who allegedly pitched Lynch to direct this before he passed) in creating a body-hopping horror film with blood, galore.
Read MoreDescribing “Only the Good Survive” as a heist-turned-horror film is like calling Panos Cosmatos’ “Mandy” a movie where Nicolas Cage avenges his murdered girlfriend. That’s not technically wrong, but there are so many more toppings on that pizza. At this year’s Brooklyn Horror Film Festival, “Only the Good Survive” was introduced to us as an “energetic pop punk horror heist thriller.” There might not be a better descriptor, but let’s give it a whirl. That’s what film festivals are for, aren’t they?
Read MoreYou might not know the name Sandy King, but she’s been a crucial part of some of the best genre films of the past 40 years. She’s worked with her husband, John Carpenter for almost as long as a script supervisor, producer, and the first woman founder of a comic publishing house. In its 10th year of operations, Storm King Productions puts out horror comics for all kinds along with a slew of writers and artists, including Carpenter, Steve Niles, and Duane Swiercyznski.
King is also the executive producer, along with Carpenter, on “Suburban Screams,” a new series on Peacock about the evil at your front door. Each of the 6 episodes feature an interview subject intercut with the scripted reenactment of their true horror story. Here, King discusses a range of topics, including Storm King, working on set, and the true life horror of “Suburban Screams,” as well as the fictional horrors of Carpenter classics like “In the Mouth of Madness” and “They Live.” It still counts as fiction, right..?
Read MoreLegionnaires fighting hordes of wolf creatures with elemental magic. Steampunk pirates having aerial dogfights while magic crystals blast around all around them. A hard-boiled Chicago P.I. using his wizard training to see if a race of vampires killed a member of one of the fae courts.
Also, talking cats! Skulls, too. Really just one skull named Bob.
Welcome to the worlds of bestselling author Jim Butcher, who loves to write about things that talk, but shouldn’t. Butcher has been exploring the realms of fantasy and horror for over 20 years, while putting his own spin on each one. His latest book, released next month from Penguin, is “The Olympian Affair,” book 2 in his steampunk series “The Cinder Spires.” Butcher had a conversation with me at this year's New York Comic Con, where we talked about his new book and everything else under the sun, from airships on down.
Read MoreWhen it comes to the eternal battle between good and evil, demons just have more fun. This is the conceit of the upcoming tabletop card game, “Demoniac” by Steven Tartick. For the uninitiated, a demoniac is a person possessed by demons. Your Reagans, your Emily Roses, your…everyone from “The Evil Dead.” Here, Tartick sat down with me to discuss staying creative during the pandemic,, his love of possession movies and tabletop games, collaborating with local game creators, and the time I watched him do a magic trick that made someone run out the room.
Read MoreSo much has been written about ordinary people doing terrible things, which they justify for whatever reasons make them sleep at night. Nazism is the biggest modern example of the banality of evil, but sometimes examining it on a small scale can be just as frightening as the larger picture. Nadav Aronowicz’s “The Altman Method” is an Israeli thriller that takes a microscopic look into one particular abyss.
Read MoreSeveral horror subgenres are at work in “There’s Something in the Barn.” Dumb Americans in a foreign country getting in over their heads, kids befriending creatures that reveal themselves to be malevolent, Christmas horror, horror comedy fu, home invasion fu…sorry to become Joe Bob there for a second, but it goes to show this film is drenched in the drive-in spirit. And blood. A good amount of blood.
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