Love Death + Robots: Night of the Mini Dead (2022) – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
Night of the Mini Dead gives you Robot Chicken vibes in the best way.
Night of the Mini Dead gives you Robot Chicken vibes in the best way.
Unnerving and graphic, but with an ending that lacks a punch, Men leans more towards art house than being a commercial horror.
Humans (The Warms) battle for survival against a vampire invasion that has pushed their people to the brink of extinction.
Best described as coming-of-age body horror, Hatching is just as much about the monster as an independent thing as its connection to the lead.
Choose or Die is the kind of pseudo-horror that has a better story buried beneath what it gives you.
Tomodachi Game is likely to be the show you will clamor for the next episode of and wish it was available to be binge-watched.
While you must applaud Umma for being a mainstream movie that talks about various aspects of Korean culture, sadly, it is a lukewarm horror film.
X is everything you expect as you go from sex scenes to watching people get mutilated and then find yourself immensely uncomfortable.
This short release by Sony, alongside giving us another notable performance from Sophie Thatcher, also pushes you to hope more shorts might be released on Sony’s channel.
After a tryst in their home in Brooklyn, an infamous writer moves, with her family, to Connecticut, where hallucinations make it seem things have become far worse for her.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.