UNSUNG HORRORS HORROR GIVES BACK 2025: Faceless (1987)

Each October, the Unsung Horrors podcast does a month of themed movies. This year, they will once again be setting up a fundraiser to benefit Best Friends, which works to save the lives of cats and dogs across America, giving pets second chances and providing them with happy homes.

Today’s theme: Lina Romay

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Adam Hursey is a pharmacist specializing in health informatics by day, but his true passion is cinema. His current favorite films are Back to the Future, Stop Making Sense, and In the Mood for Love. He has written articles for Film East and The Physical Media Advocate, primarily examining older films through the lens of contemporary perspectives. He is usually found on Letterboxd, where he mainly writes about horror and exploitation films. You can follow him on Letterboxd or Instagram at ashursey.

I really do not have the expertise to write anything about a Jess Franco film. It’s not going to stop me though. 

Faceless is only the sixth Franco film I’ve watched. And the ones I have watched may not be the ones that spring to mind. Venus in Furs and Bloody Moon seem to be popular (at least according to Letterboxd). My favorite film of his has been The Other Side of the Mirror. And then I’ve watched some really random ones: Night of the Skull and Bahia Blanca. So I do not have a great handle on Franco’s filmography.

I have seen Eyes Without A Face. And I’m not the only one apparently. Faceless owes a lot to Georges Franju’s classic tale of a doctor trying to successfully graft another person’s face onto the face of his daughter. I’ve never really tried to make a ranking of my favorite horror films of all time, but if I did, this one would surely be high on the list.

Apparently, Jess Franco uses this motif a good bit in his films about Dr. Orloff (played by Howard Vernon). Again, I’m really at a disadvantage because I just have not watched these films. But I really want to. And after watching Faceless, I feel a great need to prioritize these Franco films.

In Faceless, we are treated to Helmut Berger as a plastic surgeon who has made an enemy in a former patient who blames him for a botched procedure. When this patient tries to throw acid on his face, he ducks and unfortunately his sister receives the burn. So one does what one has to—get his assistant (Brigette Lahaie, an actress whose films I should also prioritize) to start kidnapping models, and contact the infamous Dr. Orloff to perform face transplants. Unfortunately for them, one of the models they kidnap is the daughter of Teddy Savalas (criminally underused here). He hires Christopher Mitchum (of all people) to go to Paris and find his daughter.

Faceless has pretty much everything I look for in a horror movie this time of year. A stellar cast. An interesting enough plot to keep my interest. Some over the top gore. I really cannot ask for much more.

This selection feels a bit like a cheat since it was supposed to highlight Spanish actress Lina Romay, long time collaborator and eventually the wife of Jess Franco. In Faceless, she only appears in a cameo as Dr. Orloff’s wife. There were definitely plenty of other films to choose from. If nothing else, this day has been a good reminder that I really should focus on more Jess Franco in the new year. Maybe I will make a goal to have Franco be my most watched director of 2026. 

CHILLER THEATER MONTH: The Mummy’s Curse (1944)

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Mummy’s Curse was on Chiller Theater on Saturday, September 25, 1965 at 1:00 a.m., Saturday, February 10, 1968 at 1:00 a.m., Saturday, September 30, 1972 at 1:00 a.m., Saturday, January 25, 1972 at 1:00 a.m., Saturday, September 20, 1975 at 1:00 a.m. and Saturday, April 23, 1977 at 1:00 a.m.

The fifth entry in Universal’s original Mummy franchise, this is a direct sequel to The Mummy’s Ghost. Kharis (Lon Chaney Jr.) and his beloved Princess Ananka (Virginia Christine ) remain in the swamp, even if the swamp has moved from Massachusetts to Louisiana—even if the accents don’t always sound right.

The Southern Engineering Company — one of those TVA or New Deal kind of public works projects — wants to drain the swamp, but the locals are afraid of even going there. Sure, they’re poor, but would you want to deal with a mummy, much less two?

Scripps Museum sends Dr. James Halsey (Dennis Moore) and Dr. Ilzor Zandaab (Peter Coe) to investigate, just as a worker is killed with all the handmarks — literally of Kharis. But never trust science, as Zandaab is really a priest of the pharaohs and is working with Ragheb (Martin Kosleck) to fully return the Egyptian royalty to life within the mucky confines of this deep southern bog.

Thus follows brewing the tea leaves and killing a monk as Kharis rises, filled with power anew. Ananka also rises, being found by a bulldozer and washing herself clean. She’s found by beloved local Cajun Joe (Kurt Katch) and, of course, taken to the local bar before Kharis busts in and starts killing people. She’s found by Halsey and Betty Walsh (Kay Harding) and is shocked by how much she knows about Ancient Egypt. I was shocked finding out how much English she could speak.

Of course, it ends as it always does, with evil scientists pushing their luck and the Mummy being dead all over again.

Directed by Leslie Goodwins, this had a huge list of writers attached, including Bernard Schubert, Leon Abrams, Dwight V. Babcock, Ted Richmond and Oliver Drake, who would go on to make another mummy movie, many years later and somehow with an even lower budget, The Mummy and the Curse of the Jackals which, outside of the Las Vegas setting, feels like it could be the lost sequel for this film.

Universal had one left — Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy — but Joe Dante in Famous Monsters Vol. 4 No. 3 wrote that this was one of the most disappointing horror films the studio would release, packed with footage from The Mummy and The Mummy’s Hand instead of new scenes. Between the stock footage and stunt men stand-ins for the occasionally drunk Chaney Jr., The Mummy is played by at least three people, including Boris Karloff and Tom Tyler.

I kind of love this, as the swamp is a fun place. If we follow the timeline of these movies, with The Mummy’s Tomb set in 1970, The Mummy’s Ghost two years later and this twenty-five years after all that, it should be 1997. It does not feel like 1997 at all.

ARROW 4K UHD RELEASE: In the Mouth of Madness (1994)

After The Thing and Prince of Darkness, this is the third and final part of John Carpenter’s Apocalypse Trilogy. It’s a film that explores the very notion of reality, how fictional characters perceive themselves within a narrative, and issues of creation itself. It’s a natural next step after Prince of Darkness, playing with many of the same themes.

The film begins with a narrative device familiar to readers of H.P. Lovecraft, as Dr. Wrenn (David Warner, The OmenFrom Beyond the Grave) visits a patient in a psychiatric hospital who has written all over the walls and himself, covering them with crosses.

John Trent (Sam Neill, Jurassic Park) is an insurance investigator who can smell out a co like no one else. We’re shown an example in the beginning, as he breaks down a scam being perpetrated by a business owner (Carpenter, regular Peter Jason). Later, he meets with the owner of an insurance company (Bernie Casey, Gargoyles) who gives him a new case: investigating a claim made by Arcane Publishing that their biggest-selling author, Sutter Cane, has disappeared.

Just then, a man attacks them with an axe. He stops to ask Trent, “Do you read Sutter Cane?” The police shoot him, and later, we learn that this man was Cane’s agent, who was so influenced by reading his latest manuscript that he killed his entire family.

Trent meets Arcand Publishing owner Jackson Harglow (Charlton Heston!), who asks him to look into the disappearance with the help of Cane’s editor, Linda Styles (Julie Carmen, Fright Night Part 2). As he begins to read Cane’s books, Trent learns that his readers have been known to suffer from disorientation, memory loss and paranoia firsthand.

He’s also convinced that this disappearance is a publicity stunt. Yet he spends plenty of time tearing apart Cane’s book covers, which depict the state of New Hampshire and mark Hobbs End, the location for many of Cane’s stories—a setting quite similar to Castle Rock in Stephen King’s tales.

As they travel to the fictional town, Linda begins to see things, and they both lose track of day and night. Once in the city, the people and landmarks are precisely as they appeared in the written word. Trent believes this is still a publicity stunt. Linda comes clean and says that the disappearance started as a stunt, but no one can find Cane. Everything that happened from now on is real, she claims.

For example, inside their hotel room, Trent claims there should be a black church out the window. The only problem is that he didn’t read the books closely enough. While the first window he opens reveals nothing, the evil cathedral is shown when he opens the window that faces east.

As they travel to the church, an army of black dogs emerges to defend Sutter Cane (Jürgen Prochnow, DuneThe Keep), who sits inside. Linda confronts him, but simply being exposed to his final novel, In the Mouth of Madness, drives her insane.

The fabric of reality has begun to tear asunder. A man (former pro wrestler Wilhelm von Homburg, who played Viggo in Ghostbusters 2, who led an insane and demented actual life) tells Trent that Cane has his son, and he can no longer save him. His own daughter attacked him, and he could do nothing to stop her. He wishes that he could tell him more, but this is how Cane wrote him. With that sentence hanging in the ether, the man blows his brains out with a shotgun.

The townspeople have become monsters, and the story beats of each of Cane’s tales have started to come true. Trent tries to drive away but keeps coming back to the center of town. He takes Linda with him, but she transforms into a monster. Finally, he crashes his car and wakes up inside the church. Cane explains to him that his stories ended up being true, an almost Bible for a new and more horrible world. As more of his readers began to believe in his stories, they raised a race of Ancient Ones from the before times. Again, this is well-trod ground for anyone who has read Lovecraft, but it is not something that often makes it to the screen.

Cane explains that Trent is just one of his characters, and his role is to help end humanity by delivering his final story to Arcane. He then tears his face open, sending Trent to the dimension of the monsters from beyond time and space. As he runs down a long tunnel to return to the real world, he begs Linda to come with him. She says that since she has read the whole book, she can’t.

Once Trent returns, he destroys the story. But once he visits Arcane, he learns that Linda never existed, and the final book has already been published. In fact, they are almost done making a movie. Trent is then arrested after attacking readers of the book with an axe.<

We come back to the asylum, where Dr. Wrenn laughs off the story and walks away to leave, only to have the attendant, Saperstein (John Glover, Gremlins 2), ask him, “Do you read Sutter Cane?”

Trent barely sleeps at night, convinced that people are fighting and dying outside the walls of his cell. He awakens to find the hospital and most of the city abandoned, with only the pages of Sutter Cane books left behind. A radio announces that mass murder and suicides are happening in every major city, with some people mutating into monsters.

Finally, he wanders into a theater where In the Mouth of Madness is playing. As he watches the entire movie replay, he begins to laugh hysterically before breaking down and crying. He is just another character in another story, never real in the first place.

Between characters named Pickman and the closeness of Cane’s titles to Lovecraft’s (Sutter Cane’s novels have similar titles to H.P. Lovecraft stories: The Whisperer of the Dark is The Whisperer in Darkness, The Thing in the Basement is The Thing on the Doorstep and The Haunter Out of Time is almost The Haunter of the Dark or The Shadow Out of Time), this is probably the closest we’ll get to a significant budget Lovecraft film that isn’t Re-Animator. All of the words read from Cane’s books are also from Lovecraft, including parts of The Rats in the Walls and The Haunter of the Dark.

Beyond that, even the town’s name — Hobb’s End — is a reference to a work that is close to the heart of Carpenter. It’s the train station where the spaceship is found in Quatermass and the Pit. The inscription on the church, “Let these doors be sealed by our Lord God and let any who dare enter this unholy site be damned forever,” is similar to the words “Terribilis est locus iste” found at France’s Rennes Le Château. In English, that should read “This place is terrible.”

Even more interesting, if you pause and read the movie poster for the movie within the movie, you’ll learn that, aside from the three main characters, all the actual people who worked on the film are listed. So is the movie real? Was Cane ever real? Was Trent just a made-up character? Are we real? Is reality just an illusion?

The Arrow 4K UHD of In the Mouth of Madness has a new 4K restoration from the original 35mm camera negative by Arrow Films; commentary with director John Carpenter and producer Sandy King Carpenter; another with Carpenter and director of photography Gary B. Kibbe; another with filmmakers Rebekah McKendry & Elric Kane, co-hosts of Colors of the Dark podcast; interviews with Sandy King Carpenter, Jürgen Prochnow, Julie Carmen and Greg Nicotero; featurettes and appreciations of the movie; behind-the-scenes footage; theatrical trailer and TV commercials; a reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Francesco Francavilla; a double-sided fold-out poster featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Francesco Francavilla and a perfect bound collector’s book featuring new writing on the film by Guy Adams, Josh Hurtado, Richard Kadrey, George Daniel Lea, Willow Catelyn Maclay and Alexandra West. You can get it from MVD.

ARROW 4K UHD AND BLU-RAY RELEASE: Spawn: Director’s Cut (1997)

There was a time when comic books were not celebrated. When only the disenfranchised cared or knew about them instead of the mainstream. And in those ancient times — let’s call them 1992 — no news was bigger than when Marvel’s biggest creators left en masse to form Image Comics. At the time, these artists were derided as style over substance. Many of them weren’t known for hitting their deadlines. Or even how to draw feet properly. But one of them — Todd McFarlane —  took the opportunities that his new home presented and made the most of them, creating his signature character: Spawn.

Spawn is everything that McFarlane loved to draw: a muscular hero covered in spandex, chains and a cape that seems to be way longer than it should be. It was an instant hit, giving birth to a toyline, an HBO animated series (which still holds up) and finally, this movie.

Al Simmons (Michael Jai White, playing one of the first African-American superhero to be a movie lead, as this movie and Shaw’s Steel came out at the same time) is a black ops soldier assigned to a mission to investigate a North Korean biochemical weapons site. But he’s been set up by his boss, Jason Wynn (Martin Sheen) and is killed by Jessica Priest, Wynn’s new top assassin. After being set on fire, he winds up in Hell, where Malebolgia offers him a deal. If Simmons will lead his armies to Heaven’s gate, he can see his true love, Wanda, one more time.

You know how those deals with demons work. They’re rarely fair. When he returns to Earth, Simmons learns that Wanda is now married to his best friend Terry(D.B. Sweeney, Fire in the SkyThe Cutting Edge), who is raising his daughter, Cyan.

Malebolgia sends one of his demons, Violator (John Leguizamo), to mentor Simmons. But there’s also Cogliostro (Nicol Williamson, The Exorcist III), who also sold his soul to become a Hellspawn but who has found his way to Heaven.

Meanwhile, Simmons becomes Spawn and attacks Wynn, now a powerful arms dealer. He easily defeats his killer, Jessica, and escapes an attack by an army of mercenaries thanks to his new powers.

Violator — who either appears as a clown or an Alien-esque demon — gets Wynn to add a device to his heart that will release Heat 16, a biochemical superweapon, if he dies. Malebolgia wants Simmons to kill Wynn and start the end of the world. But Violator has his own agenda and nearly kills our hero before Cagliostro saves him. As he learns how to use his powers just as he also learns that Wynn plans on killing everyone he loves.

What follows is a battle on our earth and in Hell, where Spawn denies his contract with the Devil, bests Violator and returns to our reality, ready for the sequel which never came.

Spawn is very of its time, a film packed with early CGI (nearly half of its effects were unfinished until two weeks before it was released) and a soundtrack that mixes techno with hard rock and metal (the Atari Teenage Riot/Slayer mashup “No Remorse” is a highlight). It’s a decent enough film but is a sanitized version of the chaos inside every panel of the Spawn comic. It just feels like something is missing. There’s no real heart in the film, nor any real threat to our hero.

After years of talk of a sequel, McFarlane announced a new Spawn adaptation in 2015, with the goal of the creator writing the script and directing. In July of 2024, it was confirmed that this was true, with the film being produced by Blumhouse. Here’s hoping for something great.

The Arrow 4K UHD and Blu-ray releases of Spawn have 4K restorations of both the Director’s Cut and Theatrical Cut of the film from the original camera negatives by Arrow Films. The reversible sleeve featuring two original artwork options, plus you get an illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by John Torrani and a double-sided foldout poster featuring two original artwork options.
The director’s cut has new audio commentary with comic book expert and podcast host Dave Baxter; archival commentary by Todd McFarlane, Mark A.Z. Dippé, Clint Goldman and Steve Williams; interviews with Michael Jai White, Melinda Clarke, D.B. Sweeney, Howard Berger, Greg Nicotero, Happy Walters and Michael Knue; multiple featurettes; a trailer; scene-to-storyboard comparisons; original Todd McFarlane sketches and a Spawn concept and sketch gallery.

You can order this on 4K UHD or Blu-ray from MVD.

ARROW 4K UHD RELEASE: Ms .45 (1981)

Thana (Zoë Tamerlis, who also wrote director Abe Ferrara’s Bad Lieutenant) is a mute seamstress working in New York City’s Garment District.

After she’s assaulted twice — once at gunpoint in an alley by a masked man and then again in her own apartment by a burglar — Thana lives up to her name, which is inspired by Thanatos, the Greek god of death. She attacks the second man with a glass red apple and then beats him to death with an iron and leaves him in her tub. After dealing with her horrible work situation, she cuts her rapist apart and dumps him all over the city.

She keeps the man’s gun and soon uses it on another man who corners her, then runs up her steps and throws up in an echo of Paul Kersey’s first night of vigilantism in Death Wish.

Soon, she’s a literal Angel of Vengeance, which was the film’s other title. She targets a series of men who have treated women badly, and even causes one of them to kill himself when her gun jams. Finally, her vengeance reaches the point where she unleashes her full fury on her horrible boss and every man who attends her party as she whirls around, full action heroine, repeatedly shooting everyone while dressed as a nun.

Ms. 45 is better regarded than I Spit On Your Grave, perhaps because it doesn’t dwell on its rape scenes or have them take up much of the movie’s running time. Or maybe, just maybe, because it’s a much better movie.

The Arrow 4K UHD of Ms. 45 has a brand new 4K restoration by Arrow Films from the original 35mm camera negative, as well as extras including new audio commentary by Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, author of Rape Revenge Films: A Critical Study and Cultographies: Ms. 45, featurettes with film critic BJ Colangelo and Kat Ellinger, interviews with director Abel Ferrara, composer Joe Delia and creative consultant Jack McIntyre, plus short films, a trailer, an image gallery, a reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Sister Hyde, a perfect bound collector’s book featuring new writing by Robert Lund with previously unseen photographs of Zoë Lund, plus select archival material including writing by Kier-La Janisse and Brad Stevens, and a double-sided fold-out poster featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Sister Hyde. You can get it from MVD.

PARAMOUNT BLU-RAY RELEASE: Smurfs (2025)

Directed by Chris Miller and written by Pam Brady (who has worked with Trey Parker and Matt Stone on their projects going back to Cannibal: The Musical), The Smurfs is the sixth full-length movie for the cartoon characters created by Peyo.

Rhianna is Smurfette, following Katy Perry and Demi Lovato, while John Goodman is Papa Smurf. This is the kind of movie that has Dan Levy, Kurt Russell, Marshmello, Nick Kroll, Alex Winter, Amy Sedaris, Nick Offerman, Jimmy Kimmel, Natasha Lyonne and more, all to tell the story of how the Intergalactic Evil Wizard Alliance once battled the smurf force of Papa Smurf, his brother Ken and the best smurf ever, Ron for magical supremacy until Papa decided to run following a defeat and hide, occasionally battling Gargamel but rarely getting involved in the world of magic — until No Name Smurf tries to find what his talent is, tries the occult and leads Gargamel’s brother Razamel to Smurf Village where he takes nearly every one of them, doing what his brother never could.

Many reviewers said it was tedious, dull and unfunny. Me, I liked it, but I watched so much Smurfs as a kid that I know who Johan and Peewit are.

I could do without James Corden being a voice in these movies, though. There’s also no Frank Welker in this. Come on, what the smurf?

The Paramount Blu-ray Smurfs has over 25 minutes of Smurf-filled bonus content, including voice-over features, music videos and animation features. You can get it from Deep Discount.

FANTASTIC FEST 2025: Dildo Heaven (2002)

Allow me to play this broken record again, but it’s astounding just how much the moviemaking of Doris Wishman, Bruno Mattei and Jess Franco line up. At the end of all of their careers, there they are, making movies way past their contemporaries, even if it’s shot on video now. As Bruno would make Zombies: The Beginning and Franco would make so many movies in hotel conference rooms with quick zooms into the anatomy of his actresses, Doris would come back to make this film, one that is so close to her past movies, even if it looks better when every other director who shot on video was supposedly taking a step down quality wise.

Doris was 89 when she made this and was working at the Pink Pussy Cat in Miami — which is in the movie and so is Doris, as well as a photo of Chesty Morgan on the wall — and it allowed her to finally have sync sound in a film and seemingly look back on her own career. Yet in this movie, she still does all the things you want: the apartment is needlessly over-decorated, sex scenes often just show feet rolling around in the bed, dialogue feels like one of those Russian spy stations that are trying to read English phrases to send coded messages and all the men are jerks. And, as if ready to seem like another of my favorite warped directors, Claudio Fragasso, Doris places several stuffed animals in this, and they are often zoomed in on.

This is the story of three roommates—Lisa, Beth, and Tess—who all want to sleep with their boss. Only Tess has succeeded so far, except that she’s had to hide her short dark hair and wear a blonde wig to win him over. There’s also a teenage peeper who keeps looking in on the girls and fantasizing about them, which transforms into footage from The Immoral Three. Not to be outdone, but when a TV comes on later, it’s playing Doris’ Love Toy. Never mind that these movies were shot on film, and the jump between media is jarring.

That peeping tom also has a dream where he has two penises, which reminds me of the creepy story where Bill Cosby told Keenan Thompson that after he played Fat Albert, “You know, life is good in the movies or whatever, but you just be ready, because when this movie comes out, you’re gonna need two dicks — because women are gonna be all over you.” That pervert also goes to Dr. Faust, who promises that his cream can make his small-eyed monster into a bigger beast. That reminds me of a joke that used to make my dad laugh, even when he was going through dementia.

“Dad, I finally got this penis cream. It’s going to make me so much bigger when I rub it on it.”

“Does it work?”

“They said it might take a few months. But my hands are huge!”

This movie made me overjoyed, as it feels like, unlike so many directors, Doris got the opportunity to finish her career on her terms, making a movie that was uniquely hers. She never fit any mold, starting to direct movies much later in life than most and continuing it well past nearly all of her nudie cutie contemporaries. I’ll think about this film and how the women finally discover that perhaps dildos are better than men — and then a new neighbor knocks on the door — more than any movie I’ll see made in this year or any other.

It feels and looks like sub-VCA porn and never gives you the payoff. And that’s the payoff. And it’s terrific.

Thanks to the incredible theironcupcake on Letterboxd, whose Doris reviews were an inspiration to me. She even wrote down the lyrics to this film’s theme:

“When love has left and you’re bereft, reach for your dildo
When life’s a mess and fraught with stress, reach for your dildo
When a lover twice caught cheating
Says for you his heart’s still beating
Send him away, don’t let him stay
Reach for your dildo!
My dildo is very close to me. I keep it in my drawer
It’s HIV negative, it has no flaw
Someday I’ll find my love divine, and I’ll be overjoyed
But ’til that fateful day, my dildo fills the void
Reach for your dildo!”

I’m thrilled that there’s a new 2K version of this film, especially one that features a poster by one of my favorite artists, Corinne Halbert.

No matter how much they clean this up, however, it still has the scuzzy and wonderful heart within. I get all emotional just thinking about Doris, a woman who some would think should just be playing bingo or taking it easy, was out there making movies into her eighties.

Good Boy (2025)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Joseph Perry writes for the film websites Gruesome Magazine, The Scariest Things, Horror FuelThe Good, the Bad and the Verdict and Diabolique Magazine; for the film magazines Phantom of the Movies’ VideoScope and Drive-In Asylum; and for the pop culture websites When It Was Cool and Uphill Both Ways. He is also one of the hosts of When It Was Cool’s exclusive Uphill Both Ways podcast and can occasionally be heard as a cohost on Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror: The Classic Era podcast.

Official synopsis: Our canine hero, Indy, finds himself on a new adventure with his human owner — and best friend — Todd (Shane Jensen), leaving city life for a long-vacant family home in the country. From the start, two things are abundantly clear: Indy is wary of the creepy old house, and his affection for Todd is unwavering. After moving in, Indy is immediately vexed by empty corners, tracks an invisible presence only he can see, perceives phantasmagoric warnings from a long-dead dog, and is haunted by visions of the previous occupant’s (Larry Fessenden as Grandpa) grim death. When Todd begins succumbing to the dark forces swirling around the house, Indy must battle a malevolence intent on dragging his beloved Todd into the afterlife.

Dog lovers, whether or not you usually enjoy horror movies, you’re bound to love director Ben Leonberg’s labor of love, Good Boy. Fear-fare aficionados, you’re likely to be captivated by Indy — Leonberg’s pet Nova Scotia Duck Retriever — and the lengths that Leonberg went to to replicate the film as much as possible from a dog’s eye view and with canine reactions to supernatural occurrences.

Indy is a star. From showing affection to sickly owner Todd to cowering from malevolent forces to playing hero — one scene in particular will have audiences cheering with glee — this “middle-aged, 35-pound retriever,” according to press notes, nails every nuance that Leonberg could hope for. Sure, it took the director three years to complete the film because, I suppose, some days Indy just wasn’t feeling it, but it was worth it because the result is a super slice of genre fare.

Virtually every shot seems to be from dog ‘s-eye level, whether from Indy’s perspective or for wider ones showing the dog in action. That’s commitment. Also, human faces are rarely shown, and dialogue is minimal. 

It takes a while for any shots of real horror, as the assumption is that dogs are in tune with unseen forces that we humans might be less aware of, but when the creepiness truly kicks in, it does so effectively. The element of the cursed house into which Indy and Todd move could have used more backstory, but there’s enough here to make things work.

Stylistically intriguing and emotionally engaging, Good Boy is a fun watch. Helmed with original approaches and a huge heart, I strongly recommend it.

Good Boy, from Independent Film Company and Shudder, opens in theaters on October 3, 2025.

THE IMPORTANT CINEMA CLUB’S SUPER SCARY MOVIE CHALLENGE DAY 3: Cult (2013)

October 3: A Found Footage Horror Film Directed by Koji Shiraishi

Directed and written by Kōji Shiraishi, this starts when Tomoe Kaneda (Sayuri Oyamada) and her 15-year-old daughter Miho catch paranormal activity in their new home on camera. A paranormal TV show sends actresses Yu Abiru, Mayuko Iwasa, Natsumi Okamoto, and Mari Iriki — playing themselves — along with Buddhist priest Unsui (Shigehiro Yamaguchi) to investigate.

Yet when Unsui tries to move the spirit from the home, it possesses Miho, who murders her dog. Bringing in his superior, Ryugen (Hajime Inoue), Unsui and the older man are unable to stop the entity and are both killed. Another exorcist, NEO (Ryosuke Miura), learns that Miho is the perfect conduit between a cult and their god, bringing it to this world to take over.

This film is tied to the EisukeNaitō movie The Crone and Norio Tsuruta’s Talk to the Dead.

You can watch it on Tubi.

Night of the Reaper (2025)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Joseph Perry writes for the film websites Gruesome Magazine, The Scariest Things, Horror FuelThe Good, the Bad and the Verdict and Diabolique Magazine; for the film magazines Phantom of the Movies’ VideoScope and Drive-In Asylum; and for the pop culture websites When It Was Cool and Uphill Both Ways. He is also one of the hosts of When It Was Cool’s exclusive Uphill Both Ways podcast and can occasionally be heard as a cohost on Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror: The Classic Era podcast.

Official synopsis: In the heart of a quiet, 1980s suburb, college student Deena returns home and reluctantly takes on a last-minute babysitting job. That same night, the local sheriff receives a cryptic package that pulls him into a sinister scavenger hunt that sets off a game of cat and mouse with a dangerous killer. As the clues unravel, Deena finds herself ensnared in a nightmarish mystery that she may not survive. 

Plenty of 1980s-inspired throwback slasher movies are released every year, some merely aping the style, others paying loving homage, and a few that add their own flavor and unique elements to a revered fright-fare tradition. I’m happy to report that director Brandon Christensen’s Night of the Reaper is planted squarely in the third camp.

The lengthy opening sequence involving a teen babysitter (Summer H. Howell in a fantastic supporting performance) and the murderer who toys with her nicely sets the tone for what’s to come, and suffice it to say that it is no mere cold open. The film is rich with surprises and twists, and is best viewed by going in as cold as possible, so no spoilers here.

Jessica Clement is terrific as Deena, who, being the lead female character in a slasher-themed movie, seasoned viewers of the subgenre can guess will eventually cross paths with the main baddie. Ryan Robbins is also great in an emotional performance as Sheriff Rodney Arnold, now a single father after losing his wife in a single-car crash.

Christensen cowrote the screenplay with his brother Ryan Christensen (the pair worked together on 2023’s The Puppetman and this year’s Bodycam, which is currently on the film festival circuit), and it’s a corker, playing with slasher and whodunit horror tropes and therefore viewer expectations that go along with watching those types of films. Brandon is well-versed in horror filmmaking and builds both suspense and drama impressively here.

Night of the Reaper is super Halloween season fare. This strong slice of post-meta horror comes highly recommended.

Night of the Reaper is currently streaming on Shudder.