

NEW ON SHUDDER: APRIL 2017
It seems like just yesterday we were ringing in the new year, and now we’re already a quarter into 2017. April is coming up, and that means new horror flicks over at Shudder! The streaming site is commonly known as “Netflix for horror fans”, and only costs $4.99 a month for countless films, both new and obscure. Without preamble or fanfare, Shudder shocked its subscribers in March by announcing that one of the most controversial horror films ever is now available for streamin


Z For Zombie : An Exclusive Interview With Andreas Rønning
Christmas is still quite a ways away and, for most of us, the last thing we’re thinking of is powdery snow, warm coco, and a jolly fat man squeezing himself down the chimney to deliver cheer. For the Andreas Rønning and the creative team of Z for Zombie, though, it’s always Christmas. I first came across an ad for the ambitious graphic novel a few days before New Year’s Eve and, while the title itself didn’t immediately grab my attention, the artwork slapped me across the fac


Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday
I’ve been seeing a lot of articles online lately about an unreleased director’s cut of 1993’s Jason Goes to Hell suggesting that the already gruesome ninth installment was meant to be more violent and terrifying than what was originally released. For those of you unfamiliar with this particular episode in the franchise, this was one of a few films in the series intended to be the “Final Friday” and featured some of the more campy and strange elements of horror that have added


Bring Out Your Dead: Resurrecting the Nashville Zombie Walk. Part One: Digging Up the Bones
The road to hell is paved with good intentions. I never really understood that until I took over the Nashville Zombie Walk. See, back in 2007 I took my family to our first zombie walk downtown along Riverfront Park and it was one of the best outings we’ve ever had. Dressed up like monsters we ran around Music Row freaking out tourists in cowboy hats to a sound track provided by the various street performers lining Broadway. It became an annual tradition for us as important as