The Illustrated Terrors Of The Pocket Chiller Library
The long-forgotten series of gruesome British digest-sized horror comic books from the 1970s.
The Illustrated Terrors Of The Pocket Chiller Library Read MoreCultural Chaos and Forgotten Stories
The long-forgotten series of gruesome British digest-sized horror comic books from the 1970s.
The Illustrated Terrors Of The Pocket Chiller Library Read MoreA collection of Bangladeshi folk horror stories that is impressively creepy and original.
Raindance 2023: Pett Kata Shaw Read MoreContinuing our festival previews with a look at Sean Hogan’s relentlessly creepy slice of Folk Horror.
Mayhem Film Festival 2023: To Fire You Come At Last Read MoreUnfairly demonised by Hollywood, the cat has carved out a place as a symbol of occult mystery and seductive evil in horror cinema.
When Cats Wander And Witches Dance: The World Of Feline Horror Read MoreYakuza action meets gothic horror in a 1970s Japanese movie classic.
The Delirious Madness Of Blind Woman’s Curse Read MoreFrom drugged candy to kids bursting into flame, this year’s Halloween moral panics are well underway.
Halloween Panic Catches Fire Read MoreThe scary TV shows made for kids in the 1970s were unnervingly good at getting under the skin – and remain just as effective today.
Ghosts, Paranoia And Folk Horror: The Creepy World Of British 1970s Children’s TV Read MoreThe enhanced Mayhem screening of the Japanese classic is an interesting reinterpretation of the film.
Mayhem 2022: Kuroneko Read MoreThe film version of Thomas Tyron’s bestseller has been unfairly overlooked by horror fans but the subtle chills still work today.
The Ghosts Of Childhood Explored In The Other Read MoreThe slick and stylish British TV series that mixed vampirism, spy drama and action is better than you might have been led to believe.
The Genre-Bending Pleasures Of Ultraviolet Read MoreThe fire-breathing, demonic monster that gripped the public consciousness in the 19th Century.
The Legend Of Spring-Heeled Jack Read MoreThe problems in adapting a complex story for the screen laid bare in John Irvin’s messy, compromised version of Peter Straub’s magnificent novel.
I Will See The Life Run Out Of You: The Curse Of Ghost Story Read More