In the film, “After surviving a brutal attack by her insane mother, teenage Molly (Bennett) is eager to get a fresh start at a new school. The Haunting of Molly Hartley stars Haley Bennett ( The Equalizer) and Jake Weber ( Dawn of the Dead). He soon learns that he picked the wrong night to carry out his plans, for a masked madman has gotten there first, imprisoned the family, and lined the mansion with deadly traps.” In The Collector, “Desperate for money to pay off a debt, a man targets a wealthy family’s home and plans to break in and steal a valuable gem. We’re ending the month with a bang, also dropping both Marcus Dunstan’s cult slasher The Collectorand The Haunting of Molly Hartley, which are now streaming on SCREAMBOX. Romero’s zombie classic Day of the Dead, the supernatural festival hit Jethica, the SCREAMBOX Original body horror thriller New Religion, and the entire Subspecies franchise! This June was absolutely jam-packed with several horror gems hitting our SCREAMBOX streaming service, including the hotly anticipated must-see definitive documentary Hollywood Dreams & Nightmares: The Robert Englund Story, not to mention Wes Craven’s original A Nightmare on Elm Street, Tobe Hooper’s classic 1995 adaptation of The Mangler (also starring Robert Englund), George A. ![]() What’s the scariest Japanese horror movie YOU have ever seen? Comment below. ![]() Interview subjects include Kiyoshi Kurosawa ( Pulse, Cure), Shin’ya Tsukamoto ( Tetsuo: The Iron Man), Takashi Shimizu ( Ju-On), Masayuki Ochiai ( Infection) and Mari Asato ( Fatal Frame), plus actors Rie Inoo ( Ring) and Takako Fuji ( Ju-On). The synopsis continues, “From its origins in Teruyoshi Ishii’s 1988 fake documentary Psychic Vision: Jaganrei (1988) and Norio Tsuruta’s seminal Scary True Stories (1991/92) straight-to-video series, through such key titles as Hideo Nakata’s Ring (1998), Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s Pulse (2001) and Takashi Shimizu’s Ju-On: The Grudge (2002), critics and the films’ makers reflect on how the bleak dystopic visions and unsettling atmospheres that made these works so unique infiltrated their way across the world.” The Japanese horror boom of the late 1990s and early 2000s, spawned in large part by Hideo Nakata’s Ring, gets the spotlight in the upcoming documentary The J-Horror Virus.Ĭheck out the trailer below, first shared by Fangoria earlier today.įrom Sarah Appleton and Jasper Sharp, The J-Horror Virus is said to be a “feature-length documentary charting the origins, evolution and diffusion across the world of a distinctive brand of made-in-Japan supernatural chillers that seeped into the global consciousness at the turn of the millennium, films featuring vengeful ghosts manifesting themselves through contemporary technology again a backdrop of urban alienation and social decay.”
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