Fantastic Fest
A cheesy holiday horror that doesn’t try to be anything more than it knows it is, There’s Something in the Barn is wildly entertaining.
Bark plays on the maddening isolation and sense of despair when all hope seems lost and escape impossible.
A Guide to Becoming an Elm tree is one of the must see films of this year’s Fantastic Fest.
Mushrooms is a dark fairy tale, reverberating elements of the Brothers Grimm while grounding its revelations in modern horror.
When Evil Lurks proves itself a visceral horror that will get under your skin.
Living with Chucky welcomes newcomers into the fold, encouraging a new generation to embrace the revitalization of Chucky.
It all started with Brian de Palma’s Carrie, and Stephen King became a household name.
Missing retains the feeling of a J-horror, slowly building the intensity of its mystery while examining the potential compassion and deliverance of death.
What did people think he was doing? What did the legends say? Wrinkles the Clown is both a hilarious and terrifying documentary that tries to answer these questions.
First Love mixes and matches generic elements freely and playfully, making it impossible to pin down into one category.
Looking back on “the gayest horror film ever made”, Scream Queen! My Nightmare on Elm Street is the kind of documentary you wait all year to see.
VHYES tells a poignant story about the odd agency a child can find in television, and the combination of joy and horror that, almost always, follows.
Koko-di, Koko-da is a surprising triumph, a modern fable brilliantly told and performed to expert precision.
We got the chance to speak to director Yann Gonzalez about his new film Knife + Heart after its US premiere at Fantastic Fest.