Friday, December 05, 2025
EYE OF THE DEVIL (1967) starring David Niven
THERE’S SOMETHING IN THE BARN! (2023) starring Martin Starr
Despite a fun premise that initially had me giddy with gore-soaked anticipation, BARN doesn’t know what the hell it wants to be. Is it a comedy? Is it a bloody holiday horror? Unfortunately, it tries to be both and succeeds at being neither.
Thursday, December 04, 2025
KILL, BABY ... KILL! (1966) directed by Mario Bava
60-For-60 Introduction: 60 Horror Films from 1966 to 2026
Universal led to Hammer, which led to trashy cable viewings, VHS rentals, and spending afternoons cutting classes in Philly to go catch Lucio Fulci’s 7 DOORS OF DEATH (1981), watching NIGHT OF THE ZOMBIES (1980) with out-of-order reels at the drive-in, consuming copious amounts of beer along with ALIEN: CONTAMINATION (1980) at my buddy’s house, or hopping around area theaters soaking in every moment of DEMONS (1985), EVIL DEAD 2 (1987), DAY OF THE DEAD (1985), LIFEFORCE (1985—which I’m seeing on the big screen again tonight!), and more while scribbling notes for our trash cinema zine.
Friday, October 17, 2025
Dead End (2003) starring Ray Wise, Lin Shaye
AMITYVILLE 4: THE EVIL ESCAPES (1989) starring Patty Duke and Jane Wyatt
For a 70s kid weaned on “truth”-based pop culture like ‘In Search Of’, ‘Chariots of the Gods’ and the docudrama hilarity of such Sunn Classics entries as THE MYSTERIOUS MONSTERS (1975) and THE LINCOLN CONSPIRACY (1977), the possessed house shenanigans of all things Amityville Horror was right in my wheelhouse. Despite strict Catholic parents, I ate up everything Amityville-related during its period of peak relevance, from the now-debunked novel and newspaper articles to tv specials and, of course, the 1979 movie adaptation starring James Brolin and Margot Kidder.
AMITYVILLE 3-D (1983, aka AMITYVILLE III: THE DEMON)
Sunday, October 12, 2025
Blood Beach (1980) starring John Saxon and Burt Young
Sunday, October 05, 2025
ISLAND OF TERROR (1966) directed by Terence Fisher
THE FROZEN DEAD (1966) starring Dana Andrews
Tuesday, September 30, 2025
KRIMI! Issue One Debuts
I'm pleased to report that the new magazine KRIMI! The Magazine for Continental European Crime Cinema Culture is available now from old pal Holger Haase.
Krimi, for those who are unfamiliar, is short for Kriminafilm (crime film), a series of German-language crime movies that were popular in the 1960s and early 1970s. Often based upon the works of author Edgar Wallace, the films were populated with mysterious villains, intricate plots, and red herrings aplenty. (The one and only Klaus Kinski was a frequent krimi ko-star.)
The debut issue is lavishly illustrated and clocks in at more than 200 pages of information, history, analysis, reviews and more.
For more on the debut issue and worldwide ordering links, visit the Krimi! Magazine blog. — Dan Taylor









