On Halloween, a young woman receives a mysterious box with two words written on it... DON'T PEEK. A comedy/horror film by Jamie Hooper, starring Denise Horan, with Steve Thunderbolt Lightfoot as himself. The filmmaker describes it as "a silly Halloween short horror film I made with my lovely girlfriend. Enjoy!!"
In USA & SYFY's first trailer of the Don Mancini-created series, Chucky, we meet Jake (Zackary Arthur) who stumbles across a vintage ‘Good Guy’ doll at a suburban yard sale. Soon, everyone must grapple with a series of horrifying murders that begin to expose the town’s deep hypocrisies and hidden secrets.
Meanwhile, friends and foes from Chucky’s past creep back into his world and threaten to expose the truth behind his mysterious origins as a seemingly ordinary child who somehow became this notorious monster. CAST: Jennifer Tilly, Devon Sawa, Brad Dourif. Watch the premiere of Chucky, October 12th at 10/9c on SYFY and USA Network.
Looking forward to this, I love the Child's Play/Chucky films. Check out the trailer and Halloween scenes below:
Trailer:
Trick or treaters and Halloween costume party scenes from the trailer:
Chucky trick or treats in Hello Kitty mask and more Halloween party in the Behind the Scenes video below:
Total Film posted these pics on their twitter page and wrote: "We got the full story on the ultimate slasher sequel in our new Halloween Kills issue, plus a huge celebration of the career of John Carpenter! On the way to subscribers’ mailboxes now - and available on newsstands this Friday!"
Front covers:
Also up for pre-order (ships on September 14th) at HalloweenREMIND.com: "This October, ReMIND Magazine looks back at the horror franchise that started them all, HALLOWEEN. From cover to cover, this year we'll be taking a deep dive into John Carpenter's 1978 horror classic and the unrelenting slasher franchise it inspired!"
Scream Factory released the first 5 Halloween films on collector’s edition 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray combo on September 28th. Check out below a close-up look of the beautiful Halloween/Autumn artwork on the front covers and full front/reverse cover & disc scans taken from Cultsploitation.com:
Halloween H20 (1998) was not released in this collection. Created JUST FOR FUN, from Halloween The Sister Trilogy Facebook fan page, this is artist David Burk's interpretation of what the Halloween H20 4K UHD cover might have looked like. Not for sale. Not a real cover. Created FOR FUN ONLY!
Halloween 1-5 4K Scream Factory Collector's Edition UHD Blu-ray Unboxing
The first part of the Fear Street trilogy of films is now streaming on Netflix. Based on R.L. Stine’s best selling horror series of books, Part 1 begins in Shadyside, 1994 and the sequels follow the nightmares through the city’s sinister history in 1978 and 1666.
Fear Street Part One: 1994 - arrives on July 2 –A circle of teenage friends accidentally encounter the ancient evil responsible for a series of brutal murders that have plagued their town for over 300 years. Welcome to Shadyside.
Fear Street Part Two: 1978 - arrives on July 9 –Shadyside, 1978. School’s out for summer and the activities at Camp Nightwing are about to begin. But when another Shadysider is possessed with the urge to kill, the fun in the sun becomes a gruesome fight for survival.
Fear Street Part Three: 1666 - arrives on July 16 –The origins of Sarah Fier’s curse are finally revealed as history comes full circle on a night that changes the lives of Shadysiders forever.
Fear Street Part 1: 1994 (Netflix Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) | YouTube Playlsit:
Reviews:
“Fear Street Part 1: 1994 has an awkward start but finds its footing not too long after and delivers the goods in all the right ways. A blood-soaked neon nod to the ’90s, when things hit, they hit hard. This is a solid introduction to a world worth exploring ... Just know that this doesn’t quite figure itself out until the second act, and you’re sure to enjoy what comes after.” Rating: 7 GOOD JoBlo.com
“Part 1 infuses infectious energy that makes it a compelling and entertaining watch. The kills delight, and the storyline bring plenty of thrills and chills. It’s well-crafted and a visual feast, even if it can lean a bit too hard on its soundtrack to sell the period.” ★★★½ Bloody-Disgusting.com
“If you are a slasher fanatic, you should be foaming at the mouth for Fear Street. The kills keep coming, and trust me, the gore will make gorehounds howl with delight. There is nothing kid-friendly with the killings ... You need good characters to try and survive a slasher, and Fear Street gives you multiple to root for.” Grade: A- BulletproofAction.com
“Janiak’s direction is crisp, full of flair (it’s a hyper-coloured palette) telling a tale with genuine surprises. As the death toll rises, it’s tough to guess who makes it to the end credits — that, in a genre often marked by crushing predictability, is no mean feat. Fear Street Part 1: 1994 is a wild ride through ’90s horror tropes that somehow feels affectionate and fresh.” ★★★★ EmpireOnline.com
” ...like the slashers of old, it knows how to have fun ... But best of all, Janiak and company manage to make their teen heroes (and potential victims) likable. We start to care about these kids, which makes some of their gruesome demises surprisingly upsetting. This is not the type of slasher where you’re cheering about the body count. No one is safe here, but you’ll start to wish they were.” Rating: 7.5 out of 10 SlashFilm.com
“There’s real, seat-edge fun to be had here, the sort of fun that’s too often missing from modern horror (we saw a glimpse of it in last year’s equally well-balanced Freaky), whether it be a result of a stony-faced attempt to fit into the so-called “elevated” sub-genre or an overreliance on nausea-inducing nastiness (there’s gore here but, vitally, other things too).” ★★★★ TheGuardian.com
” ...its opening is reminiscent of another famous film in the slasher genre where the connections were so obvious that they were almost laughable. That being said, it still provided some solid entertainment. Once the film moves on from that homage, its actual story behind the macabre murders in Shadyside isn’t all that bad.” ★★★½ Keith Loves Movies
” ...to say the plot begins to feel overly contrived around the halfway mark would be a bit of an understatement. And yet, the “everything but the kitchen sink” approach employed by Janiak and fellow screenwriter Phil Graziadei works surprisingly well, because the film is just so damn fun.” LamplightReview.com
“Save for a late flurry when Janiak seems to pay tribute to Scott Spiegel’s cult supermarket slasher Intruder, there’s very little here to satisfy fans of the slasher sub-genre. With its focus on teen dynamics and non-stop needle drops, it’s more likely to find an audience among fans of Netflix shows like 'Riverdale' and 'Stranger Things'. Maybe that’s the point.” ★★½ TheMovieWaffler.com
” ...from the atmosphere to the performances to the writing, you are going to eagerly want to see the second part as soon as the credits roll. And, if that is not a testament to the quality of this first installment, I’m not sure what to tell you.” NightmarishConjurings.com
“Nothing is watered down or off limits for Kyle Killen’s screenplay, moving Fear Street: 1994 beyond cliches and excelling in pulpy B-movie craftsmanship ... Perhaps “1994” will encourage today’s youth to seek out the expansive catalog of slasher hits, but they should rightfully take ownership of this title because it deserves to be in the conversation among the greats.” Grade: B TheOnlyCritic.com
“Fear Street Part 1: 1994 totally slays at combining the Fear Street teen novel series and the thriller atmosphere of the 90’s teen slasher films that were in its peak of those days. Reminiscent of all the Scream movies, I Know What You Did Last Summer films, Halloween H20, and Urban Legends to name a few. An upgrade to an R rating as there is excessive profanity, a fear setting that stirs the sex drive, and of course, the blood and gore.” ★★★★ PunchDrunkCritics.com
“Despite some familiar moments and broad characterization (we are shown that Deena doesn’t fit in because she listens to Creep by Radiohead, etc.), the first half of the movie is a rip-roaring, fitfully scary affair ... That is until the second half, which slowly descends into a series of staid cliches and uninteresting shocks that end up having little impact on the plot.” ★★★ ReadySteadyCut.com
” ...strikes a great balance between building backstory and tying it into the chaotic present-day: the mythology settles in, and the movie focuses on lean and extra mean thrills that include a couple of excellent slasher set-pieces in the high school and a grocery store, all with an expressive, playful lighting palette. The most fun parts of 1994 display a strong balance of the brutal and the playful...” ★★★ RogerEbert.com
” ...offers plenty of grisly thrills, with up-to-the-minute casting and one rather subversive twist ... If the characters can occasionally get on your nerves just like their counterparts in the ’80s/’90s slashers did, they actors are all energetic and ultimately sympathetic enough to keep you hoping they’ll defeat the evil plaguing them.” Rue-Morgue.com
“Fear Street 1994 is an engaging story, with characters you want to see survive (and a few you’re happy when they don’t), a great new mythology, and an ending that both sets up for the next film in this trilogy, and possibly one that follows to the future. Janiak knocks it out of the park.” ScreenAnarchy.com
“The kill sequences are genuinely shocking, the violence brutal. At the same time, old slasher archetypes are updated with a diverse young cast and heartfelt romance. It’s easy to be cynical about the proliferation of cinematic universes and Stranger Things copycats. But when The Algorithm works? It works.” StarburstMagazine.com
” ...you got rivaling towns, teens selling drugs, so many psychopath killers who kill in notably violent ways, and nearly everyone’s presence on screen is welcomed, and when they are gone, you miss them. Hence the recommendation label because, while maybe not the smartest horror film you may have seen of late, it is one of the most entertaining by far.” Our Rating: Positive (Worth Seeing) – Recommended Wherever-I-Look.com