Frightfest 2010
Frightfest may be over for another year, but check out our capsule reviews of almost every film from the main screen and let us know what you thought!Latest reviews
Blog
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Things we learned at Frightfest 2010
4 Oct 2010 - No Comments
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Frightfest round-up: day 5
31 Aug 2010 - No Comments
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Frightfest round-up: day 4
30 Aug 2010 - No Comments
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Frightfest round-up: day 3
29 Aug 2010 - No Comments
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Frightfest round-up: day 2
28 Aug 2010 - No Comments
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Things we learned at Frightfest 2010
Twitter
- Off to the cinema. Back in 24 hours. #frightfest 2011-10-29
- The Survivor. Tediously slow and utterly underwhelming. A Twilight Zone episode placed on the rack. 2011-07-26
- Who Can Kill a Child: crass opening masks a taut, slow burning gem. Pacing a model of efficiency, ably assisted by eeriest of settings. 2011-06-10
- More updates...
Nasties Archive
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The Hills Have Eyes (1977)
Posted on March 8, 2006 | No CommentsAnother lo-fi parable about the dehumanising effects of violence from Wes Craven. -
Dawn of the Dead (1978)
Posted on March 1, 2006 | No CommentsYou’d be forgiven for thinking that George Romero would be content with one genre-defining movie. You would be wrong. -
The Driller Killer (1979)
Posted on February 5, 2006 | No CommentsRather like the dentist he has a drill and he hurts people with it, only I know which one I prefer -
I Spit On Your Grave (1977)
Posted on January 22, 2006 | No CommentsOne of the poster-children for the whole 'video nasty' debacle - and a trite, squalid and unpleasant movie to boot. -
Last House on the Left (1972)
Posted on October 17, 2005 | 2 CommentsA deeply repulsive but utterly rivetting parable about the desensitising and soul-destroying nature of violence from modern horror master Wes Craven.




