Sentences with phrase «just great horror»

Just great horror deals!

Not exact matches

That is a great step forward for you in appreciating just how vengeful and murderous the awful god of the Christian horror tales is.
The beauty and majesty of the cross is that just when Satan thought he had won his greatest victory, it is exactly then, as the last breath escaped from the lips of Jesus, that Satan realized to his complete horror what he had done.
The very appetite proceeding from labor and peace of mind is gone: we eat just enough to keep us alive: our sleep is disturbed by the most frightful dreams; sometimes I start awake, as if the great hour of danger was come; at other times the howling of our dogs seems to announce the arrival of the enemy: we leap out of bed and run to arms; my poor wife with panting bosom and silent tears takes leave of me, as if we were to see each other no more; she snatches the youngest children from their beds, who, suddenly awakened, increase with their innocent questions the horror of the dreadful moment.
Even the most just war entails great horror.
Just for the ease of this convo, she got the shot that flushes your system — it takes a day to 2 weeks for the entire effect, and there is a great deal of pain involved so its most definitely not without its horrors.
It's charming, touching, and mostly successful — and a great example of the reasons 2015 specifically and the» 10s generally have been such great years for horror fans.2015 was just a cornucopia of....
Melo should have been sent off twice for his horror tackle on Alexis but escaped with just a yellow, but our star man punished him anyway with another great goal after a nice assist by Ozil.
They've also drawn just as heavily on great scifi and great horror to create a really impressive and spooky horror series.
The truth is that it's just not a great horror film, and doesn't really resemble one.
Its just not a substantive movie, but I guess, if you want a horror film, the mean spirited dialogue, creepiness and stabbings will make it worthwhile, but those aren't really features of a great movie in general.
I would implore anyone who ever wrote it off as a soulless remake to dig a little deeper with a rewatch, because you might just be surprised at how great of a modern horror movie it truly is.
One of the greatest horror movies of all time, and my personal favorite Christmas horror movie, is coming home this December just in time to make the perfect gift for genre fans, and Scream Factory has announced details of its upcoming 2 - disc Collector's Edition blu - ray release of Bob Clark's original 1974 Black Christmas.
Unfortunately, as a plausible psychological horror film, it just doesn't make a great deal of sense.
How are you trying to achieve an effect that is greater and more affecting than just a shock, horror game - something that is perhaps more psychological?
I love it watch it any day just not alone!it is a great horror movie.
I have never seen the original now with that of the way i wan na say the Crazies blew me away I loved it i havent see A zombie style movie this good since 28 weeks later (which I loved) The acting is good and the gore and killings are just awsome I love horror maybe if you don't like horror you may think it's good not great but i love this movie A must see for any true horror fan
Something that is becoming apparent is that the truly great horror films do not come from the major Hollywood studios; they haven't bankrolled a truly great horror film in years, instead just churning out one turd after another.
Yea it's great to see indie horror break out like that, just sucks they decided to do it a week from its VOD release.
This also doesn't look that great, but maybe I'm just not into this kind of ghost horror story.
The Dantean grotesques invading Langdon's head and complete lack of plot coherence also hinted at the chance that maybe, just maybe, Howard would pull off the greatest conspiracy of all and turn a lavish studio tentpole into an unhinged Italian horror send - up.
The original, unquestionable, undisputed great grandpappy of «possession» horror, and one hell of a brutally good time, William Friedkin's The Exorcist is not just one of the scariest films ever made: it's also one of the most well - constructed horror movies of all time.
So compared to that crop of... let's just call it «crop»... Insidious: The Last Key is a fairly adequate supernatural horror thriller, with a few decent scares and another great turn by Lin Shaye as the unassuming but deeply heroic ghostbuster Elise Rainier.
Krampus, with its stand - out indie cast that includes Adam Scott, Toni Collette, Allison Tolman and David Koechner, could just be the first great «Bad Santa» horror movie.
Scream Factory gives this horror classic a great treatment just in time for the Holidays!
Charlie features predominantly in the trailer above and goes a long way to proving that he may just be the next great horror child.
I knew what was going on and all that, but the whole thing just seemed way too cheesy and ridiculous to be a great horror movie.
Just as the respectable Oscar bait churned out by Harvey Weinstein's Miramax was financed by the less glamorous chillers and slashers of Bob Weinstein's Dimension Films, so too the slight pleasures of mumblecore cinema associated with the Duplass brothers, Lena Dunham and Great Gerwig find their ugly kid brother in a series of outré horror films that look back to the schlockier video rentals that must have punctuated these filmmakers» formative artsier viewings.
Going head to head with one of the greatest horror films of all time is bound to end in bad blood, but while this reimagined «The Texas Chainsaw Massacre» is no real match for the original, it has just enough mad mayhem and hysterical helter - skelter to satisfy most horror - fiends - and a film about a terrifying family of mad Texans wielding ruthlessly lethal power from a big white house has never seemed more pointedly political.
October 10, 2013 Halloween is the best excuse in the world to watch something terrifying yet life - affirming, and certainly we can all use some distraction right about now... My friend, horror aficionado and extremely talented fellow critic, Dustin Putman, has just released a great book of previous as well as brand spanking new reviews of movies...
Not as commendable were the slick but forgettable Leatherface, the first disappointment by French filmmaking duo Alexandre Bustillo and Julien Maury; the Spierig Brothers» Jigsaw, part 8 of the exhausted Saw series; the dull Amityville: The Awakening by Franck Khalfoun, usually a respectable genre director, who does still add his share of clever touches (and meta moments, like when a group of teenagers watch the original Amityville Horror in the «real» Amityville haunted house, into which one's family has just moved); Open Water 3: Cage Dive, whose shark - franchise designation was tacked on as an afterthought, not that it helped to draw in audiences (in an anemic year for great whites, 47 Meters Down takes the prize for the best shark film); Jeepers Creepers 3, a super-limited release — surely in part because of director Victor Salva's history as a convicted child molester — which just a tiny bit later would probably have been shelved permanently in light of the slew of reprehensible - male - behavior outings in recent months.
It's a riveting and intense horror movie, a terrific (and timely) piece of racial and societal satire, and just a great fucking film.
With Alien: Covenant just around the corner, Sean Wilson looks back at the illustrious musical heritage of one of cinema's greatest franchises... Just recently I was listening to the score for the imminent Alien: Covenant, Ridley Scott's return to the sci - fi horror franchise he inaugurated, and was struck by the plethora of material from Jerry -LSB-just around the corner, Sean Wilson looks back at the illustrious musical heritage of one of cinema's greatest franchises... Just recently I was listening to the score for the imminent Alien: Covenant, Ridley Scott's return to the sci - fi horror franchise he inaugurated, and was struck by the plethora of material from Jerry -LSB-Just recently I was listening to the score for the imminent Alien: Covenant, Ridley Scott's return to the sci - fi horror franchise he inaugurated, and was struck by the plethora of material from Jerry -LSB-...]
This film is just plain scary and that's not a compliment I'm able to pay many horror films of late, much to my great chagrin.
I have watched in horror as indie writers (making great money) have fallen for this myth by suddenly turning and selling to traditional publishers, even though they would make more money and get to more readers just by continuing on what they were doing.
Just use these links to search for great Horror titles that meet your needs: Horror — Free Horror — Quality 99 - Centers Horror — Kindle Lending Library Books Last Call For Horror -LSB-...]
I recall going to the movie theater to see Arnold Schwarzenegger's Conan the Barbarian and Conan the Destroyer and just being enamored at how he was able to overcome the horrors of his childhood to eventually become a great king.
RE5 is hardly scary at all... they lost their way with the way this series went... RE4 and RE5 are just action shooters now... the survival horror factor is no longer there... the magic that made RE such a great game is gone... honestly, the scariest game by far this gen is the game that most people have slept on and that is Siren: Blood Curse and coming second would be Deadspace IMO.
In the developers defense it's clear that this style of checkpoint system as intended to complement the survival - horror nature of the game by making it tougher on the player, which would have been great, except that the checkpoint doesn't make the game tougher, it just makes it more bloody infuriating when you've got to replay an entire section because your lead pipe passed through a zombie, or because of some other daft thing.
The modern world has proven just how great the appeal for more advanced games fit for the young minds of today has become, the old shovelware nonsense of the past has been surpassed by fun, entertaining, and thoroughly educational games like space tactics game FTL, rocket science themed masterpiece Kerbal Space Program, and even the popularity of, while darker and more advanced (and for older children) than the other two, the insane popularity of the horror franchise Five Nights at Freddy's and its habit of making the players work and dig for its story elements which have created communities of amateur sleuths.
More than most genres, atmospheric horror (often just walking simulation with jump scares) is cramming both fists up the industry's blowhole, with thousands upon thousands of ill - conceived half - finished and buggy «games,» choking out would - be classics and keeping them unknown despite great work by dedicated developers.
This charm is just another component of the great overall package on offer here in Poltergeist: A Pixelated Horror.
I am hoping that Nintendo might announce something soon at E3 and give us some interesting information because the Wii U could be great for survival horror just look at Zombi U.
I'd like to take this opportunity to say that I just played Manhunt for the first time last year and it was a fucking great game, a great blend of stealth and survival horror that offered a very good challenge
I don't know, but the horror El Ninos of the early 1790s, which coincided with one of history's great human disasters in India, just by chance make their way into the earliest journals of the baby Australian settlements of Sydney and Rose Hill.
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