All Things HORROR

I would prefer Day of the Dead: Bub-line or better yet Daniel Day Lewis of the Dead: There Will Be Bub.
 
Tales From The Hood 2 Is Finally Heading Our Way!
http://www.dreadcentral.com/news/264125/tales-hood-2-finally-heading-way/

Can that mean Bones 2 has a chance?!?!?!
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FWIW, this is playing today at the AMC on Universal CityWalk. There are two screenings today, one of which is going on right about now, so that's no help. I saw it last night, and it's not very good; but if anyone wants to catch it on the big screen, today might prove to be a rare chance.
 
‘Arizona’ Review: Danny McBride Goes on a Murderous Rampage | Sundance 2018
http://collider.com/arizona-review-danny-mcbride/#rosemarie-dewitt

Is there a limit to the likability factor of Danny McBride? That’s put to the test in the dark comedy/horror thriller Arizona, in which the affable comedic performer takes his “funny but kind of a jerk” sensibility to the extreme, playing a fed-up homeowner in the wake of the housing crisis who stumbles his way into a murder spree—all the while insisting he’s “a really good guy.” Fans of the dark comedy on display in Vice Principals and Eastbound & Down will feel right at home, while first-time director Jonathan Watson continues to push the genre throughout the film’s runtime, shifting from a black comedy to a straight-up horror-thriller. And through it all, Arizona is a wild, violent, unforgettable ride.
 


With The Walking Dead serving up weekly doses of dismemberment and post-apocalyptic survivalism, we don’t get a lot of old-fashioned zombie movies these days. Instead, filmmakers and storytellers have turned to subversive, pensive reinventions of the genre in the vein of Maggie and The Girl with All the Gifts. The next film in that tradition is The Cured, a new horror drama set in a world ravaged for years by a zombie-like virus that turns the infected into feral cannibal when a cure is found at last, allowing the surrivors to reintigrate back into society.

The cured follows Senan (Sam Keeley), an infected young man who moves in with his widowed sister-in-law after he’s cured and struggles to reconcile with his violent deeds while he was afflicted — see, in The Cured, the ex-zombies remember all the grotesque, gruesome things they did during their sickness. The film also promises some potent allegory and “provocative parallels to our troubled times,” and in that regard, It reminds me a lot of the short-lived but wonderful series In the Flesh, with a bit more of an arthouse, outright horror vibe
 
Sundance Film ‘Hereditary’ Getting Buzz as Scariest Horror Movie in Years
http://bloody-disgusting.com/movie/...ary-getting-buzz-scariest-horror-movie-years/

Doesn't this same hyperbole get applied to some horror movie every year? However, the article did remind me that The Killing of a Sacred Deer is a pretty unsettling movie. As Yorgos Lanthimos films go, it's far more akin to Dogtooth than The Lobster. That is to say it is unapologetically Lanthimos.

Now off to mark Hereditary into my film calendar!
 
Doesn't this same hyperbole get applied to some horror movie every year? However, the article did remind me that The Killing of a Sacred Deer is a pretty unsettling movie. As Yorgos Lanthimos films go, it's far more akin to Dogtooth than The Lobster. That is to say it is unapologetically Lanthimos.

Now off to mark Hereditary into my film calendar!

I swear we were separated at birth, felt the same way...while drooling over the prospect of a pants wetter. Glad and not surprised to see your Yorgos praise. Killing of a Sacred Deer was so alien...yet so haunting.
 
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