Internalized misogyny” is not a phrase you’ll hear me say very often, but I think it’s weirdly appropriate when it comes to Coralie Fargeat’s critically acclaimed body horror film, The Substance, which has become—rather bizarrely—a massive hit since its release last year.
Body-horror films have been around since the silent era. Ultimately, they all ask us to consider the idea at their heart: authenticity.
Goosebumps season 2 stars David Schwimmer as a scientist dad, and I think the body horror scenes make it even scarier than season 1.
The latest unofficial entry in the "birds as horror movie villains" section of the genre, Tilman Singer's Alps-set body horror Cuckoo strongly benefits from game performances - especially from Hunter Schafer and Dan Stevens - gonzo tonal features, and creative directorial choices from Singer.
Here’s how it works. One thing is for sure, Leigh Whannell knows how to create an unmistakably scary movie. I’m sure his newest and most detailed foray into body horror will be the same.
A man’s body has been found in far-southwest New South Wales. The body, believed to be a man in his 50s, was found outside the town of Wentworth on Thursday. The body was found a few hundred metres from the Murray River and about 3km from the centre of the Wentworth township.
The Substance is easily one of the best horror films to have been released in 2024 and now Mubi has released a lengthy behind-the-scenes video for it.
There’s a lot of bouncing back and forth between the farmhouse and the barn and the obligatory Rickety Old Pickup Truck with a Dead Battery; at times it’s reminiscent of that insurance commercial with the chainsaw killer, where the teenagers keep making bad decisions. Of course, there are jump scares along the way, some more effective than others.
For Season 2, the creative team went full body horror as David Schwimmer's botanist gets into some serious trouble. “Goosebumps” returned for its second season on Hulu and Disney+ January 10 ...
This is where body horror comes in to turn our fear of mortality, or perhaps just ennui, into something, well, horrific. Something gooey and viscous and crunchy. The heroines and heroes of such ...
Ari Aster’s 'Hereditary’ uses horror tropes to address the “corrosive effects” of family traumaIf the final scenes of Hereditary had you mind blown, you’re not alone.The psychological horror film, directed by Ari Aster — also known for the popular movies Midsommar starring Florence Pugh and Beau Is Afraid starring Joaquin Phoenix — follows the Graham family in the wake of their domineering grandmother Ellen's death.
Leigh Whannell’s Wolf Man reimagines the 1941 classic with a visceral, modern edge that blends raw emotional stakes with atmospheric dread. Anchored by stella