30 Days of Night (2007)

Set in a remote Alaskan town, just entering a 30 day period of darkness, a clan of sadistic vampires take this opportunity to attack. The town sheriff and a handful of townspeople fight desperately for their lives.

30 Days of Night is worth watching again, to refresh your memory, before watching Dark Days. It still stands out as one of the best vampire movies of all time.

The vampires here are a different breed to the mysterious, sexual creatures which have become so popular, first with Anne Rice and more recently with Twilight. The relentless, feral, creatures depicted in 30 Days of Night restore the vampire to its proper place as something to be feared.

5 out of 5.

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Red Mist (aka Freakdog) (2008)

Kenneth, a disturbed hospital worker, has a crush on Catherine, a doctor in training, but is picked on by everyone else. After a night of partying, Kenneth is left in a coma, but that doesn’t stop him from seeking revenge on those responsible for putting him there.

Like the other movies directed by Paddy Breathnach, psychedelic slasher Shrooms and crime comedy I Went Down, Red Mist was also filmed in Ireland; but unlike the other two movies Red Mist is set in the USA. Thankfully this isn’t as bad as it sounds; it would have been far worse to have filmed it in the USA and set it in Ireland. The horror!

Red Mist  is an enjoyable watch. The story is interesting with plenty of edge-of-the-seat moments and the American accents don’t stand out as being fake either. You will find it difficult not to cringe during the acid-funnel scene.

3 out of 5.

Check out another review of Red Mist here.


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Let the Right One In (aka Låt den rätte komma in) (2008)

Young Oskar (Kare Hedebrant) has a lonely existence, bullied at school and neglected at home. He finds a ray of hope one night when he meets a strange girl, Eli (Lina Leandersson), who has just moved to his apartment block. Oskar soon falls in love with Eli, and she encourages him to stand up for himself, but their relationship gets more complicated when Oskar discovers that Eli needs a fresh supply of human blood to survive.

Based on the novel by Swedish author John Ajvide Lindqvist, who is also responsible for writing the screenplay, Let the Right One In is one of those rare horror movies that succeed in transcending the genre. There is plenty of horror here, but the story is so compelling, and the relationship between Oskar and Eli so tender, that you cannot help but side with them despite what unfolds.
Let the Right One In is a beautiful movie; the quiet Stockholm nights, snow enshrouded, with the occasional dash of crimson. But, more importantly, Let the Right One In is an emotionally complex movie, which raises questions of the nature of good and evil, especially from the perspective of a child. There is a complex weave of brutality and affection running throughout and it will be interesting to see if this mood can be replicate by the American remake, Let Me In. I have my doubts.
Let the Right One In should be a recommendation for anyone who is sick of sparkly vampires (*cough* Twilight), tired of vampires who constantly complain about being vampires (*cough* Interview with a Vampire) and have had enough of vampires who think that they are rock stars (*cough* The Vampire Lestat). It’s damn near perfect.
 
5 out of 5.


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Grotesque (aka Gurotesuku) (2009)

A sadistic doctor abducts a young couple on their first date and tortures them in turn as the other watches helplessly. He cruelly offers one of them a chance to go free…

This review is about the unrated version of Grotesque which, at 73 minutes runtime, is just 4 minutes longer than the censored version. Only 4 minutes of this was cut by the censor? How do they choose which parts to cut? Where do they draw the line? There’s plenty of choice in Grotesque: Chainsaw amputations; eye-gouging; sexual sadism; genital mutilation. A difficult movie to watch at times. Not surprisingly banned by the British Board of Film Classification.

Oh, and the doctor guy in this movie is a real dick…

A wincing 3 out of 5.


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Deadgirl (2008)

Cutting class for the day two senior high school kids, Rickie a wannabe rebel, and J.T. a borderline sociopath, go to an abandoned asylum on the edge of town to drink beer and break stuff. During these intellectual pursuits they happen upon a girl; bound, naked and covered in a sheet of plastic. At first she seems to be dead but on closer examination shows signs of life. Rickie wants to free her but J.T. has some other ideas…
Deadgirl is one sick puppy of a movie; a coming of age story meets torture flick with an unhealthy slice of the undead. The subject matter is dark and depraved, featuring scenes of torture, bondage and rape, seeking to answer questions you never wanted to know the answer to about what might be going on in the mind of a teenager.

The dead girl of the title, played by the stunning Jenny Spain, deserves a special mention as she spends most of the movie naked, in a series of uncomfortable looking positions. Young actor Noah Segans’ also does a great job with his portrayal of the sadistic J.T.; a nasty piece of work, truly unlikable.

Deadgirl is extreme cinema, but it pulls some of its punches, suggesting violence instead of showing every minute detail. That’s not to say there isn’t plenty of gore but the real horror here comes from the twisted actions of Deadgirl’s many morally ambiguous and sadistic teenage characters. The gore is secondary.
A disturbed 3.5 out of 5.


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Fido (2006)

I watched Fido recently, having missed it when it first came out and having put it off for one reason or another after that. I usually jump at the chance to watch anything zombie related, and I have been known to sit through some very, very, very bad zombie movies indeed but the thoughts of Billy Connolly as one of the undead filled me with foreboding. And domesticated zombies? Surely not!I needn’t have worried though as Fido works brilliantly.

Set in a world inspired by 1950’s America but after a particularly vicious Zombie War, we find a young boy, Timmy, neglected by his father and with nobody else to turn to for companionship but his pet zombie Fido. All is well until Fido’s electronic pacifying device malfunctions and he develops a taste for the neighbours.

A pleasantly surprised 4 out of 5. Phew!

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The House of the Devil (2009)

Set in the 1980’s, House of the Devil, has an authentic retro feel throughout. The story unfolds as Samantha, a college student, accepts a ‘babysitting’ job from a creepy couple in an isolated house on the night of a full lunar eclipse. Needless to say things are not quite as the seem.Things started off slowly but I didn’t feel that this was a bad thing; the shocks, when they came, were riding on the back of some genuine tension. There was also some good use of props in the satanic ritual design; nicely atmospheric.

3.5 out of 5.

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Cell by Stephen King

A signal transmitted by cell phone turns all who hear it into murderous maniacs. Nowhere is safe, least of all the streets, but Clay, Cells main character, must brave them if he is to see his son again.King has written a solid piece here with a refreshing slant on the zombie apocalypse theme. The characters are believable throughout and I even found myself caring about the fate of a few of them. Consequentially there were some genuinely shocking moments.

I don’t get a chance to read a huge amount of fiction these days and I honestly feel that I didn’t waste my time with Cell.

4 out of 5.

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La Horde (aka The Horde) (2009)

La Horde is perhaps one of the most thrilling zombie movies I’ve had the pleasure to watch in recent years. I was glued to the screen as I watched the cops enter a run down apartment complex seeking revenge on the criminal gang responsible for murdering one of their own. They run into difficulty when the dead just won’t stay down.

This movie contains extreme horror violence so maybe not for the faint hearted or those sensitive souls. You know who you are! For the rest of us La Horde offers an exceptional horror experience.

One thing that really stands out in La Horde is the action. This movie features some of the most frantic, human vs. zombie, hand-to-hand fight sequences I’ve ever seen. Worth watching for this reason alone.

5 out of 5.


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Rammbock (aka Siege of the Dead) (2010)

Rammbock, or Siege of the Dead as it’s called outside of Germany, is a well thought out,
intelligent zombie movie of similar grain to 28 Days Later and its sequel.The movie begins with Michael, our ‘hero’ arriving at his girlfriends flat to drop off his set of keys just as a sudden, rage inducing virus hits Berlin. Michael finds himself trapped in his girlfriends flat with Harper, a young plumber, a limited supply of food and no idea where his girlfriend has gone.

The storyline of Rammbock is tense; exaggerated by the innate normality of the main characters. The effects are of a really high standard with suitably disgusting fluids everywhere. Even the length of the movie fits well to the story being told; at just an hour long I would normally complain but here it fits just right.

5 out of 5.

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