
So, what do you watch when you want to have fun being scared on Halloween? A fan of classic horror movies who prefers shivers over gore offers his picks for the most entertaining October 31st fright fare.
Read more →Classic and not so classic horror movie reviews, horror movie polls and movie fun. Features on Golden Age of Hollywood horror actors and the great movies they made, bad B horror movies and Top 10 horror movie lists.
So, what do you watch when you want to have fun being scared on Halloween? A fan of classic horror movies who prefers shivers over gore offers his picks for the most entertaining October 31st fright fare.
Read more →Since the remake of Nightmare on Elm Street was recently released, I decided to review the original Wes Craven version of the film. Well, let’s start off with some of my thoughts on it–this is probably the best 80s horror movie…
Read more →One of the fringe benefits of producing Ghouly Irv’s MovieFrightFare videos is how often I can wax nostalgic—both inside my head and occasionally by way of little nods in our programs—about Dr. Shock. Remember Dr. Shock? If you’re a monsterfan…
Read more →Guest blogger Ted Brown writes: Skull Heads Plot: For generations, the strange, inbred Arkoff family has lived in their creepy Italian castle undisturbed by the outside world. Until one night when their sanctuary is invaded by a trio of treacherous…
Read more →Over the years Japan’s big green stomping machine has fought such enormous enemies as Mothra, King Kong, the three-headed Ghidorah and his own bionic counterpart. Vote in MovieFanFare’s poll for the Godzilla foe you like best.
Read more →George A. Romero is back on the zombie track with George A. Romero’s Survival of the Dead. The New York City -born, Pittsburgh-raised and now Toronto-based director has brought us gore and lots more in his shockers about the living…
Read more →Since his debut in the Bela Lugosi film White Zombie, our friend Zed has always been the idiot bastard son of the horror movie genre. He never receives any credit for being a loyal, quiet servant to the practitioners of…
Read more →Guest blogger Ivan G. Shreve, Jr. writes: John Willard’s hardy old stage chestnut The Cat and The Canary—first performed in New York City on February 7, 1922—has been around the block, cinematically so to speak, on at least four different…
Read more →My love of Vincent Price’s tongue-in-cheek horror films (and horror-comedies) really blossomed in the 1990s, but the seeds were planted much earlier, all the way back to my days as a child watching TV in the 1970s. Vincent could be…
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