Category: Film Reviews

The Battery (2012) – By Baron Craze

The horror genre landscape appears like a freshly dug cemetery, where each grave represents another zombie film, and in fact, some estimate the number of zombie films as low as 273 to as high of over 7,000 with the first film dating back to 1932 with White Zombie. Why the vast variance? Defining what a…


Phantasm: Ravager [2016] – By Baron Craze

Horror fans know the process of seeing a sequel sometimes drags for a bit, and becomes frustrating, those of Friday the 13th have experienced this, however those of the Phantasm series likely endured the most, with having to wait 18 years for possibly the final installment of the beloved films.  Phantasm: Ravager, marks the first…


To All A Goodnight (1980) – By Baron Craze

If I were to quiz horror fans, similar to the style in Scream [1996] and stated name the movie that someone killing in revenge of a child dying and it included a doomsayer named Ralph, the answer is easy Friday the 13th – except once again you are wrong, it’s this movie. According the trivia…


Elves (1989) – By Baron Craze

Christmas horror movies will always be that unique niche market, a true subgenre of late, in the 70s and into the 80s it was a common one-off film for the season, but with the incorporation of nutty storylines, Krampus, St Nick, and Elves it all allowed for hell to freeze over unleashing blood good cheer,…


The Beach House (2019) – By Baron Craze

First, on this site we discuss various subgenres, it’s not just slashers or zombies we tend to dive into the unique corners of the horror realm, discovering or unearthing those unusual creations, The Beach House is just one of those, it presents itself as a H.P. Lovecraft, but plays as arthouse horror. It is not…


DOA Review The Amazing Bulk [2012] – By Baron Craze

    CASE NUMBER #0022: Sometimes in the DOA graveyard one comes across a bizarre film associated with the genre of horror, and that is fantasy, this trinket contains no value in either cinematic visionary conceptual design or in the effort to waste time viewing the hot mess still thoroughly wretched as from the first…


Jack’s Back (1988) – By Baron Craze

In 1988, a horror film called Jack’s Back established the directorial debut of Rowdy Herrington, however it was more of a thriller, aside from that it starred James Spader in dual roles, and it marked the 100th anniversary of the Jack the Ripper killings. Herrington used Ripper’s atrocious crimes and the anniversary as a clever mystery…


The Possession Experiment (2016) – By Baron Craze

Most horror fans have likely seen at least thirty possession and exorcism movies, hence understanding the general themes and concepts, and here from music video turned feature film director Scott B. Hansen (Bad Candy [2020]) who co-wrote with producer Mary Dixon; a new variation on this tried and tested method of scares, in the form…


The Owners [2020] – By Baron Craze

The film is a horror thriller, which is loosely based on the French graphic novel “Une Nuit De Pleine Lune” by artist Hermann and writer Yves H, serves as the foundation for the feature debut of French director Julius Berg after directing several French TV series, including the Netflix projects La Forêt and Osmosis; here…


Death of Me (2020) – By Baron Craze

Darren Lynn Bousman, who likely is best known for Saw II [2005] and recently St. Agatha [2018] delivers an interesting horror film, something that’s been missing from the landscape of the genre, it combines themes from The Serpent and the Rainbow [1988] and The Wicker Man [1973] while using folklore and hints of foreign countries…