Kaiju Kommentary: Godzilla Video Games (Part 1)
It’s pretty obvious that I have a lot of fondness for Godzilla movies. Growing up, I just couldn’t get enough of the big green guy, and my adoration of his cinematic exploits extended to...
It’s pretty obvious that I have a lot of fondness for Godzilla movies. Growing up, I just couldn’t get enough of the big green guy, and my adoration of his cinematic exploits extended to...
Isn’t it just the worst when a movie franchise known for its longevity and creativity ends with an absolute clunker? A Good Day to Die Hard and Rocky V are good examples of terrible sequels...
It was a long time coming. Ten years after being hinted at in the final scene of 1993’s Jason Goes to Hell, two of cinema’s most popular horror icons would finally share the big screen...
The manly men responsible for Man Crates (crates filled with “bragworthy gifts for guys” that ship alongside a crowbar that you actually use to open the crate!) recently reached out to NotR requesting ideas...
Despite New Line Cinema’s insistence that the Nightmare on Elm Street series was permanently laid to rest (did they remember the holy water?) after the release of the abysmal Freddy’s Dead, it would find...
How did it all go so very wrong? After the critical and commercial failure of The Dream Child, New Line Cinema decided to make the sixth Nightmare on Elm Street the last, but the resulting film is...
Riding high on the great commercial success of A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master, New Line Cinema kept the Freddy Krueger train rolling by releasing A Nightmare on Elm Street 5:...
1988’s A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master begins shortly after the events of Dream Warriors, and focuses on the surviving teens from the Weston Hills psychiatric hospital, who have since fully recovered from their...
Uncategorized
A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors is proof that the producers at New Line Cinema learned their lesson after the woefully misguided Freddy’s Revenge and were determined to bringing the series back...
Horror films and subversion go together like, well, peanut butter and jelly. Many of my favorite horror films are the ones that subvert the audience’s expectations in order to deliver scathing social commentary or...