There is something eternally appealing about a good animal attack movie. Put people in the wilderness, add bad decisions, stir in teeth and claws, and let nature do the rest. Grizzly Night arrives looking like it wants to sit comfortably in that tradition, but what it ultimately delivers is something a little stranger, a little heavier, and far more grounded than its marketing might suggest.
Read MoreA Crowdfunding Collapse: Shelby Oaks and the Horror of Almost Getting There
There is something immediately disarming about Shelby Oaks. It opens with that grainy, mockumentary chill that found footage sickos like me mainline without shame. The kind of setup that feels less like a movie and more like a late-night YouTube rabbit hole you regret clicking on but cannot stop watching.
Read MoreCabins, Chaos, and End Times Comedy: Weekend at the End of the World Is Dumb Fun With a Dragging Pulse
Some movies aim for reinvention. Weekend at the End of the World just wants to throw you into the woods, crank up the chaos, and see if you laugh before the world ends. Directed by Gille Klabin, best known for The Wave, Weekend at the End of the World is a horror-comedy that wears its influences proudly.
Read MoreTraining Ground for Feelings: Atropia Turns War Games Into an Awkward Romance
There is something immediately unnerving about Atropia, and not just because it takes place inside a fabricated country designed to help soldiers rehearse for war. Directed by Hailey Gates, the film understands that the strangest part of these simulations is not the fake buildings or staged violence, but the emotional labor required to keep the illusion alive. From that discomfort, Atropia builds a dry, frequently funny satire that slowly reveals a softer and more complicated center.
Read MoreNeon Bruises and Bad Decisions: Refn’s Pusher Trilogy Hits Harder Than Ever
Nicolas Winding Refn’s Pusher Trilogy has officially arrived on Standard Edition 4K UHD and Standard Edition Blu-ray courtesy of Second Sight Films, and it feels less like a routine home video release and more like a long-overdue reckoning. First detonating onto the scene in the mid 1990s, these films did not merely introduce a bold new voice in European cinema; they announced it with a clenched fist and a bleeding nose. Refn’s debut, Pusher, remains a jolt to the nervous system.
Read MoreLove, Calculated and Complicated: Materialists Proves Romance Is Never Clean
When Materialists arrived, it came with marketing that suggested a slick, modern rom-com. What it delivered was something far more interesting. This was a romantic dramedy with bite, emotional messiness, and a lot on its mind.
Read MoreLove, Flesh, and Fracture: Together Lands at Home in Bloody Fashion
NEON has officially brought one of the year’s most talked-about genre hybrids home. Michael Shanks’ body-horror love story Together is now available across all major platforms, including digital, 4K Ultra HD, Blu-Ray, and DVD. Often described as one of the most fun horror films in recent years, Together turns a quiet night in into something far more disturbing.
Read MoreFrom Fine to Frenzied Perfection: Re-Animator Lives Again
There was a time when Re-Animator didn’t fully click for me. I thought it was good, fun even, but it didn’t immediately register as the genre-defining classic so many swore by. That changed with repeat viewings.
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