I guess the burning question is…Why would anyone feel the need to commit suicide? Firstly, I think you must establish the reasoning behind such a film. In a convincingly good way, the camera draws you in, and even though we only meet each person for ten minutes we feel like we’ve known them for a lifetime. Suicide follows Markus Eberhard [...]
Back in Gatlin Sheriff Blaine (Wallace Merck – Friday 13th 6, Brainstorm) discovers the adults murdered by Isaac Chroner, Malachai and the towns children, some three years earlier, in basements of homes and out in the corn fields, where ‘He Who Walks Behind The Rows’ dwells. The townsfolk of neighbouring Hemmingford agree to take in the surviving children unaware that [...]
First appearing as a short story from King’s Night Shift collection and originally published in a March 1977 edition of Penthouse, Children of the Corn was mocked by critics, using the fact that it was a film conceived from a thirty page story. What we should remember is both Stand by Me and The Shawshank Redemption, two other acclaimed films [...]
Okay, so before I begin you may be wondering where the ‘mini’ review came from. Basically, I find it easier to sum things up quickly rather than droning on about nothing. On with the review… This Review May Contain Spoilers! Phenomena (1985) is one of Dario Argento’s most popular movies, known also as Creepers. It stars Jennifer Connolly, who plays [...]
Triangle R1 Review by: Death Gore Machine © 2010 A very clever ‘time-shift’ film. Theres not many films that can deliver a fresh, new feel and angle on the horror genre. The last time i can remember seeing a ‘fresh’ angle was the first Saw film, but Triangle has a great story to tell – Exploiting our own inner fears [...]
Nutbag (2000) Review Review by: Father Gore Nutbag is a hideous true story that assaults your mind. We follow the killer (Mack Hail – Carnage Road, Mr. Ice Cream Man) on a bloody rampage that pulls no punches. He stalks the neon streets of Las Vegas, picking up hookers and women along the way to satisfy his hunger for death. [...]




