Sunday, 20 July 2025
COMPETITION: Win When Evil Lurks on Blu-ray
Thursday, 17 July 2025
REVIEW: Final Destination Bloodlines (2025 Film) - Starring Kaitlyn Santa Juana
It’s surprising that a horror series can still feel fresh in its sixth entry, yet Final Destination: Bloodlines pulls it off. Directors Zach Lipovsky and Adam Stein blend the franchise’s signature elaborate death scenes with a story that feels deeper, more personal and even surprisingly emotional. This instalment builds its scares on family ties and haunting premonitions as much as on gore, making it the most rounded entry in the series so far.
Kaitlyn Santa Juana excels as Stefani Reyes, a college student caught in a curse handed down from her grandmother’s unrealised vision of a restaurant collapse in 1969. The film wastes no time connecting past and present, plunging you into Stefani’s nightmares and then into her desperate attempt to understand what is coming for her family. You are not merely watching teens try to cheat Death, you are witnessing a family’s bonds strain and crack under the weight of fate.
The balance between dread and dark humour remains intact and the death sequences have never been more inventive. Just when you think you have guessed what will happen next, the film surprises you with a twist that keeps you on edge. Each gruesome moment feels essential to the story rather than a simple shock tactic.
Bloodlines also honours its own mythology without getting bogged down in exposition. Tony Todd returns as William Bludworth, bringing gravitas and clarity to the rules of Death’s design. His scenes explain the mechanics of the curse while reinforcing the emotional stakes. The tension between Stefani and her estranged mother adds a real heart to the supernatural chaos.
The supporting cast delivers solid performances. Teo Briones is warm and engaging as Charlie, Stefani’s younger brother. Richard Harmon captures the swagger and self‑doubt of his character, while Rya Kihlstedt conveys trauma and resilience as the siblings’ mother. Gabrielle Rose, as Iris, delivers one of the most haunting portrayals in the series, grounding the premonition that sets everything in motion.
Not everything lands perfectly. At just under two hours, the film’s middle section loses some momentum and a few lines of dialogue verge on cliché. Longtime fans may spot beats from earlier entries coming a mile off. Even so, the tension never fully relents and the final act delivers with renewed fervour.
What sets Bloodlines apart is the investment it builds in its characters. The kills remain memorably twisted, but you care about these people beyond the spectacle. You want them to survive and see their story through.
Final Destination: Bloodlines may not be flawless, yet it does not need to be. It is clever, brutal, often funny and at times unexpectedly moving. Few horror franchises can sustain this level of energy so far down the line. For fans it hits all the right notes and for newcomers it could be the perfect entry point. In cinemas now.
In Cinemas Now
And on Apple TV https://apple.co/3I4SIcY
Tuesday, 15 July 2025
Interview with Megan Tremethick
Megan Tremethick is no stranger to horror. An actress and filmmaker with a clear love for the genre, she’s carved out a space for herself through smart, grounded performances and an obvious respect for the craft. When we last spoke, she hinted at a deep affection for the golden age of British horror. Now, she’s starring in In The Grip of Terror, the brand-new anthology from Amicus Productions, stepping into the kind of role she once admired from the audience. I caught up with her to find out what it was like bringing Nurse Charlotte Gibbon to life and to talk about what this project means to her.
Thursday, 10 July 2025
FrightFest 2025: A Five-Day Horror Spectacle Unleashes Its Full Line-Up
By Jon Donnis
FrightFest is back and bigger than ever. From 21 to 25 August, the UK’s premier horror and fantasy film festival returns to the ODEON Luxe Leicester Square, spilling over into two screens at the ODEON Luxe West End. With sixty-nine features from fourteen countries across four continents, this year’s event promises a wild, bloody ride through the strange and spectacular.
The festival kicks off with the UK premiere of The Home, a chilling thriller from The Purge creator James DeMonaco. Comedian Pete Davidson stars as Max, a rebellious young man sentenced to community service in a quiet retirement home that quickly proves to be anything but. FrightFest closes with Influencers, the follow-up to Shudder’s social-media shocker. Directed by Kurtis David Harder, it’s a twisted, unsettling take on digital fame and the dangers that lurk behind the perfect filter.
FrightFest regulars return in force. Erik Bloomquist unveils his latest cult nightmare Self-Help, while Simon Rumley brings Crushed, his most emotionally raw work to date. The Adams family are back with Mother of Flies, a spiritual follow-up to Hellbender. Joe Begos returns with Jimmy and Stiggs, a gore-soaked joyride packed with added footage from Eli Roth. Neil Marshall also reappears, hosting a special 4K restoration screening of his 2005 classic The Descent, with cast members in attendance.
Main screen highlights include the long-awaited reboot of The Toxic Avenger, the UK premiere of A Serbian Documentary, and genre-benders like The Rows, Bone Lake and What She Doesn’t Know, co-written by the daughter of horror legend William Castle. Also screening are British entries like Odyssey and Cognitive, and inventive indies such as Flush, Marshmallow, Night of Violence and Redux Redux, a reality-hopping horror from the McManus Brothers.
The Discovery Screen slate is as unpredictable and bold as ever. The 'First Blood' strand features world premieres from up-and-coming UK talent, including He Kills At Night, Healing Andy and The Haunting at Jack the Ripper’s House. US entries bring everything from killer clowns in Super Happy Fun Clown to rural terror in The Confession, while Canadian and Australasian films deliver werewolves, body horror, and a uniquely twisted musical journey.
Notable entries include Bambi: The Reckoning, a gory reinterpretation of the classic tale, and Blockhead, the debut narrative feature from Matt Harlock. The documentary section is packed too, with deep dives into genre icons like Graham Humphreys and Andy Milligan, and Sane Inside Insanity, a detailed look at the enduring cult of The Rocky Horror Picture Show.
International animation also makes a strong showing with the UK premiere of Latvian film Dog of God, which explores historic werewolf trials with fever-dream energy, and Gill from South Korea, continuing the powerful visual storytelling of director Jae-huun Ahn.
As co-director Alan Jones puts it, “FrightFest in its 26th year remains the UK’s Number One destination for genre fans.” With a huge range of world premieres, cult favourites, experimental visions and nostalgic callbacks, this year’s festival celebrates the strange, the stylish and the genuinely scary.
Full short film line-ups and guest appearances are still to come. But one thing is already clear. If you love horror in all its forms, there’s nowhere else to be this August.
PREVIEW: Neurovenge (2025 Film) - Delivers a Chilling AI Nightmare This June
Monday, 7 July 2025
REVIEW: M3GAN 2.0 (2025 Film) - Starring Allison Williams, Violet McGraw, Ivanna Sakhno and Jemaine Clement
There’s something oddly satisfying about a sequel that doesn’t bother playing it safe. M3GAN 2.0 doesn’t just change lanes from the 2022 original. It builds an entirely new vehicle, straps a rocket to the roof, and takes off in the opposite direction.
The creepy satire on screen-time and parenting is long gone. What we get instead is a slick, self-aware sci-fi action film that wears its inspiration on its sleeve. And yes, let’s not pretend otherwise, this is a modern retelling of Terminator 2. Think about it. The original killer machine becomes the protector. The upgraded villain android is faster, deadlier, and practically unstoppable. There’s a teenager who holds the key to the future, a traumatised guardian figure, a doomsday-level AI threat, even a hideout used to regroup for the final showdown. Every major T2 beat is echoed here.
M3GAN is the T-800. AMELIA, the soulless upgrade, is the T-1000. Cady is John Connor. Gemma stands in for Sarah. Christian Bradley steps into that uncomfortable Skynet role. And the whole thing plays out like a high-stakes remix with a glossier coat of paint. Honestly, it’s kind of brilliant.
M3GAN, once the pint-sized assassin with eerily graceful dance moves, returns as something closer to a reluctant hero. She still moves like no one else, still delivers lines with that strange mix of cheer and menace, but there’s purpose behind her this time. She's not just back for the ride. She’s trying to do the right thing. Somehow, the shift works.
Allison Williams slips comfortably back into the role of Gemma, who’s now become a high-profile advocate for AI regulation, carrying guilt from the first film like an old injury. Violet McGraw’s Cady, no longer a grieving child, now has teenage spark and attitude. Their relationship feels more complicated and real this time, and it gives the film something grounded to play against all the tech-fuelled chaos.
The chaos itself? Pretty well handled. AMELIA is the new creation, all steel and silence. Played by Ivanna Sakhno, she never raises her voice or makes a show of her power. She's just colder than everyone else in the room, and that’s enough. She feels less like a villain and more like a logical conclusion to unchecked ambition. Jemaine Clement, meanwhile, brings a laid-back menace to Alton Appleton, a smug billionaire with more influence than sense. He’s the kind of character that doesn’t need exaggerating, he already exists in the real world.
Amie Donald returns as M3GAN’s physical presence, and Jenna Davis once again delivers the voice work with that perfectly unnatural charm. The film gives them enough space to let the character evolve, rather than just plugging her back in for fan service. And somehow, even with the world on the line, it finds moments of lightness. There’s humour, warmth, and the occasional knowing wink without tipping into parody.
It’s a clear tonal shift from the first film. Horror has taken a back seat. This is action, clean and stylised, with ideas about power, control, and what it actually means to coexist with machines. That change won’t be for everyone. If you came looking for another creepy doll horror, you’re probably going to be annoyed. But if you’re up for something that moves fast and thinks bigger, this one delivers.
The pacing holds up. For something that runs close to two hours, it never feels bloated. The plot moves, the stakes escalate, and there’s always something just a little strange happening around the edges.
Not every decision will land for every viewer, but for a sequel that takes a proper risk, M3GAN 2.0 deserves credit. It’s bold, oddly emotional in places, and not afraid to reinvent itself.
Score: 9 out of 10.
In Cinemas Now!
Thursday, 3 July 2025
PREVIEW: Monsters of California (2025 Film) from Blink–182’s Tom DeLonge
Tom DeLonge, best known as a founding member of Blink‑182, turns his passion for the unexplained into a full‑blown sci‑fi adventure with Monsters of California. Available on UK digital platforms from 7 July 2025 via Plaion Pictures, this coming‑of‑age drama explores government secrets, UFO legends and eerie phenomena through the eyes of one determined teenager.
Set under the bright skies of Southern California, the film centres on Dallas Edwards, played by Jack Samson, still haunted by his father’s mysterious disappearance. His family has tried to move on, but Dallas remains convinced there is more to the story. With his friends Riley (Jared Scott) and Toe (Jack Lancaster) at his side, he squats in abandoned warehouses, hunts for ghostly sightings and debates the existence of extraterrestrials. Their quest heats up when they uncover classified files linked to Dallas’s father, a former fighter pilot, and realise they have stumbled into dangerous territory.
Enlisting the help of Dr Walker, one of his father’s old colleagues portrayed by Richard Kind, Dallas races to decode the meaning of these documents. Meanwhile Uncle Myers, played by Casper Van Dien, commands the military unit desperate to keep those truths buried. As the teens dig deeper, they find themselves entangled in a network of conspiracies and hidden agendas, transforming their search from a personal mission into a fight for survival.
DeLonge’s love for 1980s sci‑fi is woven into every frame. He cites the spirit of classic Amblin films, blending UFO chases, skateboard stunts and even Bigfoot lore into the mix. The tone nods to E.T. and The Goonies while grounding the story in today’s world where fact and fiction blur more each day. Moments of humour and friendship balance the high‑stakes mystery, giving the film a warm heart amid its thrills.
The supporting cast includes Gabrielle Haugh and Arianne Zucker, familiar faces from Days of Our Lives, who add emotional depth to the unfolding drama. The script moves seamlessly between light banter and startling revelations, ensuring the tension stays rooted in the characters rather than relying on CGI alone.
What sets Monsters of California apart is its focus on youthful curiosity against a backdrop of secrecy and paranoia. Dallas and his friends are not superheroes. They are ordinary teens driven by stubborn questions that most adults have long given up on. Their relentless pursuit of answers gives the film its spine and a relatable human touch, even as the story ventures into the realm of the unbelievable.
At its core, the mystery surrounding Dallas’s father propels the narrative, but it is the loyalty and bravery of these young characters that leave the lasting impression. It is a story about chasing the impossible and discovering more about yourselves in the process. For DeLonge, it is a deeply personal project, uniting the obsessions of his youth with a tale that is as heartfelt as it is thrilling.
Monsters of California makes no apologies for its enthusiasm for conspiracy files, secret research bases and teenage defiance. If you are drawn to stories of hidden truths and fearless young explorers, this one is well worth your attention.
Apple TV - https://apple.co/44b1RIf