Mainstream and underground horror movies: the good, the bad, and the terrorble.
After his friend is killed by her abusive father, the new kid in town attempts to save her by implanting a robotic microchip into her brain. Deadly Friend (1986) dir Wes Craven Find on socials @ thatsterrorblepodcast. Recommend us a movie! Or two!
Oh, we are SO BACK. After a forty-four week hiatus, we finally got around to When Evil Lurks. Turns out, it's still just as messed up now as it was so many weeks ago. As always, you can find us, reach out to us, suggest movies, all of that on just about any social @ThatsTerrorblePodcast
Some movies pay homage to their ancestors, and some rip them off. Somehow we're caught in the middle with no diversion in sight.
The most un-horror pick we've ever had leaves us with a lot of feelings despite the fact that it doesn't seem to want to say much.
A young girl gets younger, her new asylum home burns down, she loses her mind completely, and a couch-moose doesn't know how to fly.
A cult, a rookie cop, and a benevolent demon walk into a police station, sacrifices ensue.
Jeff is on vacation, so Jordan enlists a little help to cover a long-requested movie.
One of the two of us is not who they seem.... Who will win the war?
Attempting to break a few curses, the boys look to a story of a few super-powered kids. What could possibly go wrong? linktr.ee/thatsterrorblepodcast
This week we subject ourselves to something resembling a commentary on the treatment of animals in the farm system. Or we're making that up. The movie is unclear.
Is a Stephen King movie even a Stephen King movie without Stephen King?!
Jeff and Jordan go to camp, summon a witch, and have to outrun small children. Also, one of them did intimate-time with the witch. Guess which one.
Jeff is out, Jordan is waters, can they find common ground in this absolutely bonkers found footage horror movie?
The boys return to debate the merits of proper childcare during the desecration of some haunted grounds.
Unlike us, a struggling youtuber heads to a haunted house to salvage his audience. I think we're gonna take some queues from him anyway.
It's just a cozy fireplace, what could possibly be terrorble about that?
They're baaaaaack and ready to finally, once and for all, begin to crown the single best horror movie ever made. We'll start that quest with A Christmas Horror Story, an unexpected yuletide tale.
Well, we finally hit episode 52. We cap off the longest 52-week stretch ever with the second greatest Blair Witch sequel ever.
We don't think anyone asked for a sequel to The Exorcist, but it happened. Can it live up to the hype of following up one of the best horror movies ever?
Phil Tippett's Mad God is a damn-near impenetrable movie that leaves you with more questions than answers. At the end of the horrifying journey, though, you might be left thinking about it long enough to find your own answers.
The boys are back again to take a look at this unique take on a possession.
The boys are back to shake things up a little bit with a brief chat on The Amusement Park, followed by a... strange... double feature.
The boys are BACK and ready to watch Michael King get hecka possessed. Short, sweet, and to the point as we get our scream-legs back.
We're back (from 1963), and boy, do we have terror and hauntings to talk about!
We're back with more nazis, a man named Kevin James, and a girl named Becky, or is it Kevin?
We've got it all: Nazis, murder, dogs, machetes, and punk rock. What more could you want?
Can this family-produced horror film leverage charm and inventive ideas to overcome its micro budget?
Actual Speed Racer, Emile Hirsch, attempts to carry this low-budget horror sci-fi story, that is so much more than what it seems, to great heights.
It may be a low budget experience, but that doesn't stop TDATW from pulling off a few surprises.
Home invasion movies have been around the block a few times. Can this group of horror contributors help it find new roads?
Spree keeps the pedal to the metal, and it just might work for it.
Whether it's a sofa or an armchair, comedy or horror, Killer Sofa definitely tries its heart out.
M. Night McTwisty is back with another one, but can he stick the landing in his follow up to After Earth?
We're back after our break to watch what's been billed as an original horror movie from the year 2016.
It may sound generic, but this particular clown brings something special to the horror table.
Does this distilled home-invasion horror capitalize on the "inspired by a true story" tag to create effective scares?
The first movie filmed entirely on Zoom, in quarantine, attempts to set a new bar for this small genre bursting with potential.
The Den is a very overshadowed entry in the "zoom horror" space or whatever, but that doesn't stop us from talking about Shocktober stuff anyway.
The first Unfriended didn't set the world on fire, but does a change of direction lead to a better sequel?
Keanu Reeves and Eli Roth team up to make a single location horror movie that is more reminiscent than revolutionary.
The cast is primed for a cult classic (and Marky Mark's brother is there too) but does Dreamcatcher achieve such heights?
Kevin Smith brings together a fantastic cast who bring great performances to this ridiculous, made-in-a-podcast story. Does it come together as an enjoyable horror-comedy? #walrusyes
Can one of our generations greatest actors save this blatant Halloween rip off?
Stephen King only directed one movie because it was just too good, right?
Has the problem with King adaptations been that the man himself hasn't written the screenplays the whole time?
This somewhat forgotten Stephen King story dropped right before the IT remake, so was it the actual beginning to this new, good era of King movies, or the finale of the old era of bad ones?
One of the more recent (and underrated?) Stephen King adaptations is a real trip that forced us to repeatedly stumble through talking about it, but was it worth it?
John Carpenter's Halloween stands among the top horror classics, but does the second revival, written by funnyman Danny McBride, deserve top-tier consideration?
Nightmare either came out at the wrong time or targeted the wrong audience when it was reintroduced. Ten years on, does that remain true?
Jason has always been campy and corny, but does the Michael Bay-adjacent remake capitalize on that, or simply marinate in the fondue?
Leprechaun Returns is the 8th sequel in a 25-year franchise, but does this pervy villain deserve to die? Does anyone even care to notice either way?