31 Days of Horror: Carnival of Souls— A Miraculous Masterpiece That Refused to Die



A Miracle Born from the Midwest

The Woman Who Shouldn’t Be Alive

Industrial Filmmaking Meets Existential Horror

The Dance of the Dead

From TV Filler to Cult Legend

A Personal Discovery

The Legacy of Herk Harvey

Eleanor the Great — Scarlett Johansson’s Graceful Directorial Debut


The Story of a Lonely Heart Finding a New Purpose

A Story That Could Have Been Sitcom Fodder — But Isn’t

Scarlett Johansson Behind the Camera

June Squibb and Erin Kellyman: A Friendship for the Ages

The End of “Old People Acting Young” Jokes

Final Thoughts: A Beautiful, Unflashy Triumph





31 Days of Horror: Jennifer’s Body (2009) — The Demonization of High School Popularity



When Megan Fox Stopped Being the Pretty Face and Became the Monster

Blood, Friendship, and Fame

Diablo Cody’s Pop-Horror Experiment

A Cult Classic That Finally Found Its Audience

Reelscope Rating: 3.5/5 Stars



Oh Hi (2025): A Smart, Sharp, and Slightly Twisted Romantic Comedy

A Modern Romance That Turns Delightfully Awkward

Love, Gaslighting, and Misdirection

When Love Becomes a Hostage Situation

Balancing Tone Without Losing Heart

Brooks’ Confident Step Forward

Verdict: 4 out of 5 Stars

31 Days of Horror:Tsui Hark’s Vampire Hunters (2002)

Tsui Hark's Vampire Hunter 

Directed  by Wellson Chin 

Written by Tsui Hark 

Starring Danny Chan, Michael Chow, Ken Chang 

Release Date August 12th, 2002 

Tsui Hark’s Vampire Hunters (2002) mixes martial arts mayhem with supernatural splatter. Discover why this overlooked Hong Kong horror-comedy deserves cult classic status in our 31 Days of Horror series. 


The Forgotten Hong Kong Horror Gem

A Crouching Tiger–Style Vampire Tale

Goofy, Gory, and Gloriously Over the Top

Blood, Bones, and B-Movie Bliss





31 Days of Horror: The Black Phone 2 Review — Scott Derrickson’s Chilling Sequel Expands the Nightmare

Black Phone 2 

Directed by Scott Derrickson

Written by C. Robert Cargill, Scott Derrickson 

Starring Ethan Hawke, Mason Thames, Madeleine McGraw

Release Date October 17th, 2025 

A horror sequel done right: Black Phone 2 reunites Finney and Gwen in a nightmare at Camp Alpine, delivering chilling visuals, emotional stakes, and a terrifying evolution of The Grabber. Our full review dives into what works — and what doesn’t, with no spoilers.


Revisiting the Black Phone Universe

The Plot: Nightmares Return at Camp Alpine

Character Depth and Emotional Stakes

Derrickson’s Visual Mastery: Cold, Claustrophobic, and Beautiful

The Grabber Reimagined

The Ending: Controversial but Earned

Final Verdict

Opening Shots: The Big Lebowski — The Dude as a Human Tumbleweed

The Big Lebowski 

Directed by The Coen Brothers 

Written by The Coen Brothers 

Starring Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Steve Buscemi, Tara Reid 

Released March 6th, 1998 

In the Coen Brothers’ The Big Lebowski, the opening image of a tumbleweed rolling through Los Angeles defines everything about The Dude. This Opening Shots column explores how that single image becomes a metaphor for life, fate, and the art of abiding.




The Coen Brothers’ Perfect Opening

A Symbol in Motion

The Philosophy of the Tumbleweed

Dropping Seeds, Spreading Meaning

The Dude Abides




Relay (2025) Review: Riz Ahmed and Lily James Can’t Save This Thriller Snoozefest

Relay  Directed by: David Mackenzie Written by: Justin Piasecki Starring: Riz Ahmed, Lily James Release Date: August 22, 2025 Rating: ★☆☆☆☆...