We've got even more sights to show you, such wonderful sights! Most of them horror movies in theaters, but still, quite the sights.
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Concept poster by Creepy Duck Design |
*Great job on this looking like a commercial for the Food Channel at the start
Streaming Exclusively on Shudder Starting Friday, October 3rd
A collection of Halloween-themed videotapes unleashes a series of twisted, blood-soaked tales, turning trick-or-treat into a struggle for survival.
With tales from directors Bryan M. Ferguson, Casper Kelly, Micheline Pitt-Norman, R.H. Norman, Alex Ross Perry, Paco Plaza, Anna Zlokovic.
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Concept poster by Creepy Duck Design |
Black Phone 2 only in theaters October 17th.
Director Scotty D is back for another fun outing with our favorite new Freddy. I'm not sure why we always seem to forget just like Freddy Kreugger that these child murderers are also child rapists and it makes it even weirder that he appears on cans of Fanta. But Freddy was so on so much merch on his heyday.
Synopsis: As Finn, now 17, struggles with life after his captivity, his sister begins receiving calls in her dreams from the black phone and seeing disturbing visions of three boys being stalked at a winter camp known as Alpine Lake.
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Concept poster by Creepy Duck Design |
Shelby Oaks is in theaters October 24
A new horror from writer/director Chris Stuckmann and executive producer Mike Flanagan.
Monster: The Ed Gein Story, October 3, 2025. Only on Netflix.
Maybe we should have put this with the Chain Reactions trailer, because without this psycho well we would have Psycho and Texas Chainsaw Massacre. It's hard not to see the trailer and thin there will be some sort of Murderverse where all of histories worst murderes team-up or something. Let's hope they don't.
Reminds us of lasts years X-Mas Guide though, here's a highlight:
From Netflix "Serial killer. Grave robber. Psycho. In the frozen fields of 1950s rural Wisconsin, a friendly, mild-mannered recluse named Eddie Gein lived quietly on a decaying farm – hiding a house of horrors so gruesome it would redefine the American nightmare. Driven by isolation, psychosis, and an all-consuming obsession with his mother, Gein’s perverse crimes birthed a new kind of monster that would haunt Hollywood for decades. From Psycho to The Texas Chainsaw Massacre to The Silence of the Lambs, Gein’s macabre legacy gave birth to fictional monsters born in his image and ignited a cultural obsession with the criminally deviant. Ed Gein didn’t just influence a genre -- he became the blueprint for modern horror."