The Witch Who Came From The Sea – One Of The Most Hauntingly Odd Films Of The 1970s
One of the weirdest and most unsettlingly haunting horror films of the 1970s is also one of the most misunderstood.
Cultural Chaos and Forgotten Stories
One of the weirdest and most unsettlingly haunting horror films of the 1970s is also one of the most misunderstood.
A bizarre, one of a kind slice of outsider horror cinema from the 1970s.
Cinema, But Not As We Know It: Malatesta’s Carnival Of Blood Read More
The belated sequel to the classic 1974 Texas Chain Saw Massacre is a cocaine-fueled, everything-cranked-up-to-11 reworking of the original narrative.
The Saw Is Family: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 Read More
Basil Dearden’s revolutionary film that combines impassioned social campaigning and powerful crime drama still feels as angry and powerful as ever.
The Blackmailer’s Charter: Revisiting The Groundbreaking Drama Of Victim Read More
Genre collision and wild excess in a deranged Japanese cop-horror-action movie starring the legendary Sonny Chiba.
Enraged Lycanthrope: The Hair-Raising Pleasures Of Wolf Guy Read More
Vittorio De Sica’s ever-timely tale of the bottom rung of society being crushed by the pressures of life – and the love of a man for his dog – remains an emotional punch to the guts.
The Heartbreaking Neo-Realist Melodrama Of Umberto D. Read More
Krzysztof Kieslowski’s cooler-than-cool trilogy exploring Liberty, Equality and Fraternity remains the most essential French film collection of the 1990s.
The Three Colours Trilogy Revisited Read More
This oddball Christmas slasher film is more interesting than you might expect.
You Better Watch Out: the Holiday Misery Of Christmas Evil Read More