Movie Review: “Nightmare” (1964 film)

         Although 1964‘s British horror film Nightmare might feel out of the blue to many of you, looking back at it serves an actual, real purpose. For…

Movie Review: – “Get Gone”

           Get Gone is a film I don’t think was on many people’s radar when it was released across on-demand and home video platforms on July 31st, 2019, and a person…

Movie Review: – “13 Sins”

   I hadn’t intended a marathon of director Daniel Stamm‘s filmography when I decided to watch The Last Exorcism and 13 Sins back-to-back. In-fact, while I had chosen to watch The Last Exorcism, it was…

Movie Review: “The Departed”

   In-retrospect, I don’t believe there is a single film I have postponed a review on longer than Martin Scorsese‘s crime-drama film The Departed. I can remember when I first watched the film…

Movie Review: “Missing”

   South Korea is the absolute domain for darkly detailed storytelling and methodical characters. Directors like Park Chan-Wook and films like I Saw the Devil and Oldboy are the reason I think that. There’s always a definite lack…

Movie Review: “Murder in the Dark”

   Murder in the Dark is a 2013 horror whodunnit written and directed by Dagen Merill (Beneath) and is amongst After Darks’ 8 Films to Die For. (I have been doing a series of reviews for…

Movie Review: “Confessions of Murder”

   The Statute of Limitations in South Korea is something often criticized in their films, it’s an outdated and archaic perspective that needed to be abolished. I think most of…

Movie Review: “Benny’s Video”

    The Film Site was started with a certain outlook, … a mission statement of sorts, and that was to provide the largest and most varied collection of reviews on the…

Movie Review: “Nurse 3D”

   I have been reviewing a lot of new releases lately, films like The Maze Runner and Interstellar and Big Hero 6, and other films that moviegoers actually watch. I…

Movie Review: “P2”

   P2 is a 2007 American/Canadian horror thriller film directed by Franck Khalfoun, written and produced by Khalfoun, Alexandre Aja and Gregory Levasseur. Those names might be familiar to you if you happen to…