
Welcome to the darker side of AICN! Mark L. Miller aka Ambush Bug here with another AICN HORROR: ZOMBIES & SHARKS column. Apologies for taking a week off. I needed to refuel my jets and get some necessary comic book writing done. Now that I’m finished (and I’ll let you know when it’ll be released), I’m back to checking out the latest, greatest, and of course, some of the not so greatest in horror!
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TFAW carries everything from comics to toys and any kind of collectible in between. Show your support for AICN HORROR and TFAW and click the pic above. You just might find something you can’t live without such as Cullen Bunn’s excellent Southern Gothic Horror Tale from Dark Horse Comics!
On with the horror reviews!
(Click title to go directly to the feature)
ATROZ (2015)
THE EVIL GENE (2016)
THE NEON DEAD (2015)
DARK EXORCISM (2015)
THE PURGING HOUR (2015)
THE DARKNESS (2016)
THE DEAD ROOM (2015)
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB (2015)
DER BUNKER (2015)
Advance Review: BLOOD HUNTERS (2016)
And finally…Matthew Forte’s SIN REAPERS: CIARA Part 4!

ATROZ (2015)
aka ATROCIOUSDirected by Lex Ortega
Written by Lex Ortega, Sergio Tello
Starring David Aboussafy, Laurette Flores, Aleyda Gallardo, Dana Karvelas, Patricia Leih, Orlando Moguel, Miguel Angel Nava, Lex Ortega, Carlos Padilla, Julio Rivera, Florencia Ríos, Carlos Valencia
Find out more about this film on Facebook here
Reviewed by Mark L. Miller aka Ambush Bug
While I understand American trends occasionally take their time to get to other countries, this mixture of found footage and torture porn prove why these two trends in horror are way past the realm of interesting.
I understand there’s a place for extreme horror such as a film like ATROZ, it’s just that I can’t recommend it to anyone but those who simply need to see it all. ATROZ takes place in Mexico, where the opening blurb reads that 98% of the murders are never solved. When a pair of scoundrels drunkenly run down a young girl and are caught by the cops, they find a series of video tapes that shows how inhuman these scumbags really are. Using the investigation as bookends for each “found” video, the film features all of these horrific tales that are linked together by a thread of violence and hate.

ATROZ translates to “Atrocious” in English and this film truly is. Sorry, but this one was just too intense for me. I guess the filmmakers can wear that as a crowning achievement, but I just can’t recommend this to anyone. Torture, rape, castration, abuse, murder, incest, necrophilia; its all here for those who want it. There’s a camera attached to a fist and another attached to a barb wired dildo in an attempt to be innovative and creative, but this film exists only to highlighting the bottom of the barrel in ways inhuman people can do inhuman things to one another. I guess, congrats is in order to ATROZ, for scraping that low a level, but there is no one I know or I want to know who will enjoy this film.
ATROZ is presented with a tri-fold Special Edition with a Bluray, DVD, and inexplicably, a soundtrack—which no found footage film should have unless a composer and an orchestra are somewhere hiding off camera.

THE EVIL GENE (2015)
Directed by Kathryn F. TaylorWritten by Kathryn F. Taylor
Starring Richard Speight Jr., Cameron Richardson, Lindsey Ginter, Anthony L. Fernandez, Gene Gabriel, Ted Heyck, Lindsay Ayliffe, Jon-Paul Vertuccio, James Crosby, Ned Liebl, Kervens Joseph, Kruiz Mauga, Jeffrey Henderson, Don Hartman
Find out more about this film here and on Facebook here
Reviewed by Mark L. Miller aka Ambush Bug
Strong acting manages to save the low budget psychological/exorcism/prison horror film THE EVIL GENE from total convolution.

This film is a narrative mess that doesn’t seem to have a firm hold on what it wants to be about. Does it want to be a possession film? A film about madness? A ghost story? In not really deciding on what it wants to be, it really gives the actors and therefore the viewer very little to establish a contact with and hold on to. So the story just becomes a series of hallucinations connected by scientific gobbity-talk trying to make the things happening make sense.
The actors involved, while not stellar, did have me invested in this story until the end. Speight is not exactly the first person one would think of in terms of a leading man, but it is because of this fact that I liked him as this unconventional lead. Richardson, as well, does a good job here and though he is gorgeous, she exudes the smarts and posture to make me believe her in the role. The rest of the cast aren’t as good; either cartoonish, sadistic guards, cardboard innocents to be killed, or foam-mouthed inmates snarling at the camera. The low budget doesn’t help either as this is trying to convince the viewer that all of this action is taking place in a huge facility, but only one hallway and a handful of guards and inmates are ever shown.
In the end, while the leads do a decent job of trying to communicate the vague story, the whole point of THE EVIL GENE really is ethereal and not worth trying to figure out.

THE NEON DEAD (2015)
aka INVASION OF THE UNDEADDirected by Torey Haas
Written by Torey Haas
Starring Marie Barker, Greg Garrison, D. Dylan Schettina, Nathan DeRussy, Josie Levy, John Reed, Mark Ashworth, Emma Greene, Bonnie Harris, Sean Haley, Candace Mabry, Andrew Puckett, Levi VanHoozer, Alan J. Sanders, Eric Davis
Find out more about this film on its website here and on Facebook here
Reviewed by Mark L. Miller aka Ambush Bug
This low budgeter is not going to scare anyone, but THE NEON DEAD might just charm you a little bit.

The good of this film comes from its undeniable likability. The tone is definitely more akin to old school GOOSEBUMPS episodes—family friendly terror that isn’t going to offend and will incite for laughs that chills. I also loved the way the whole latter half of this film is filmed with black-lighting and everything is lit up in neon. It’s a fun way of making everything feel otherworldly and surreal (it’s also a cheap way). These aspects again highlight the do it yourself scares one might find in a cheap haunted house. The puppeteering and rudimentary effects in the last act also have an appeal that I can’t categorize as anything other than adorable.
That said, the acting is amateur (though Barker is gorgeous and definitely the strongest performer of the bunch) and the whole thing is not going to impress most who steer more towards higher budget fare. THE NEON DEAD is cute and cuddly horror—it’s a safe gateway drug of a horror film for those who don’t usually venture into terror territories, but it’s definitely going to fail to impress hardcore horror fans.

DARK EXORCISM (2015)
aka …IN THE DARKDirected by David Spaltro
Written by David Spaltro
Starring Grace Folsom, Lynn Justinger, Fiona Horrigan, Catherine Cobb Ryan, Aaron Mathias, Jesse R. Tendler, Nikki Scheidt, Hayden Wall, Kayla Leasure, William Maloney
Find out more about this film here and on Facebook here
Reviewed by Ambush Bug

Young Bethany (Grace Folsom) is an aspiring art student, but lately she has been experiencing bizarre phenomenon in her basement studio. When these occurrences become more frequent, Bethany’s terrified mother (Catherine Cobb Ryan) contacts Lois Kearne (Fiona Horrigan), a respected paranormal investigator to get to the bottom of the problem. Accompanied by skeptic researcher Veronica (Lynn Justinger), Lois finds that Bethany has not been tormented by ghosts, but by a demon hungering for her soul.

On the critical side, when things do happen in the light, the budgetary limits become apparent, but this occurs late in the film and by that time, I was too engrossed in the fates of the characters to care about such things. With compelling performances and a story that really hooks, DARK EXORCISM is not your typical exorcism movie and worth a look see.

THE PURGING HOUR (2015)
aka HOME VIDEODirected by Emmanuel Giorgio Sandoval
Written by Zaidal Obagi, Emmanuel Giorgio Sandoval, Robert A. Trezza
Starring Alana Chester, Paul Cross, Tomas Decurgez, Sherry Driggs, Steve Jacques, Sophia Louisa, Jim Marshall, Tom McLaren, David Mendoza, Cara O'Brien, Phil Pierce, Art Roberts, Dean Testerman, Jovita Trujillo
Find out more about this film on its website here
Reviewed by Mark L. Miller aka Ambush Bug
THE PURGING HOUR wants to come off as an ominous and unsettling film. It brings in psychologists, witnesses, and all kinds of experts to attest that the events on this found footage that is interspersed into a shock-documentary format is the creepiest and most horrific of footages ever found. Unfortunately, once we get to the footage, it fails to live up to the hype.

THE PURGING HOUR works overtime to suggest something ominous and terrible happens on the tape that plays out in between the interviews with the experts. The problem is that the footage found isn’t very compelling. It actually is quite boring, as we follow a family arguing about banal things, preparing for dinner, washing dishes, and settling down for their first night in their new home. So despite the fact that the people cutting in are prepping us for something horrible, it takes forever to get to the part they are talking about. Once the bad stuff starts happening, the events are so vague, so shaky, and so undefined that it simply lacks any kind of impact once the terror ball starts rolling in the last twenty or so minutes.
The acting itself isn’t awful and the cast does a decent job of making it feel like what is going on is candid and captured rather than rehearsed, but again, it’s all just boring setup for an ending that comes too quick and too oblique. In the end, I feel you’re going to be more frustrated than entertained that you stuck around THE PURGING HOUR until the end as nothing is really revealed or resolved.

THE DARKNESS (2016)
aka 6 MIRANDA DRIVEDirected by Greg McLean
Written by Shayne Armstrong, Shane Krause, Greg McLean
Starring Kevin Bacon, Radha Mitchell, David Mazouz, Lucy Fry, Matt Walsh, Jennifer Morrison, Parker Mack, Paul Reiser, Ming-Na Wen, Trian Long Smith, Tara Lynne Barr, Krista Marie Yu, Christopher Darga, Judith McConnell, Ilza Rosario, Alma Martinez, Yoshio Be, A.J. Tannen, Sara Mornell
Find out more about this film here and on Facebook here
Reviewed by Mark L. Miller aka Ambush Bug
The latest family under siege by evil spirits flick from BlumHouse is THE DARKNESS, which at least boasts a strong cast, despite its undeniable conventionality.

This is a truly bland film. From the way the kid stumbles into the burial site (which is all too reminiscent of Bruce Wayne finding the Bat Cave – cue irony) to the systematic way the house gets gradually taken over by evil shadow creatures, this film plagiarizes straight from the POLTERGEIST playbook. And while the leadup is ominous given the dark handprints that are found all over the place, it really isn’t all that scary given that the biggest threat these evil beings offer is to the dry cleaning bill. Toss in a late in the game visit by a Native American ghost busting squad that has little to no impact or life to inject into the story at all, and you have a really tepid ghost story on your hands.

So while THE DARKNESS was nothing you’re going to want to bring to light, it is successful in reminding one that these actors are top tier and deserve to be in a better movie. There is nothing about this film that separates it from the million and one other BlumHouse joints about a family attacked by some other worldly evil presence. The production company should learn a different tune as I really am tired of all of these retreads in seemingly new packages they are churning out on a seasonal basis.

THE DEAD ROOM (2015)
Directed by Jason StutterWritten by Kevin Stevens, Jason Stutter
Starring Jed Brophy, Jeffrey Thomas, Laura Petersen
Find out more info from the website here and on Facebook here!
Reviewed by Mark L. Miller aka Ambush Bug
There’s not a lot in THE DEAD ROOM we haven’t seen before. In fact, this film feels a lot like a more horror-centric GHOSTBUSTERS without the comedy or the all-star cast. But even though many aspects of this film may seem familiar, it does do these familiar things in an effective and interesting manner.

Unlike most paranormal investigator films, this one is thankfully filmed cinematically rather than through the tired found footage technique. For that alone, I give this film a recommendation for not going the easy route with the material. Still, this film is filled with all sorts of what makes a good paranormal investigation film and not a lot of what shouldn’t be there. The thing that works with this film is that there’s a real mystery going on with the investigators actually trying to solve it through their own know-how, the empirical data they accumulate, and the gut feelings all of them listen to, question, and follow. More so than most paranormal investigator films, this one actually accentuates the investigation part and I love that about this film, as it makes a pretty standard ghost hunting film into an actual story, which so many ghost hunting films tend to leave out.

Writer/director Jason Stutter and his co-writer Kevin Stevens do a really fantastic job of making a thinking man’s ghost hunting film. THE DEAD ROOM is full of surprises and the effects are subtle, but effective. But what stands out the most if the character stuff and the fact that none of this feels formulaic. It’s a film that has been done so many times, it should feel like something tired and worn out, but the acting, the subtle scares and how they intensify, and most importantly the teamwork at play makes THE DEAD ROOM one of the better films about ghost investigation you’re going to bear witness to.

NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB (2016)
Directed by Kyle RankinWritten by Kyle Rankin, Andy Selsor
Starring Maria Thayer, Michael Cassidy, Ray Wise, Chris Marquette, Syd Wilder, Brian Sacca, Shawn C. Phillips, Julie Brister, Almarie Guerra, Grant Garry
Find out more about this film here and on Facebook here
Reviewed by Mark L. Miller aka Ambush Bug
The newest zom com to attempt to chomp into as well as warm our hearts is NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB, an undeniably fun and quirky little ditty that’s more com than zom. So while this one may not have enough teeth for hardcore horror fans, those just looking for a darkly funny good time will be pleasantly surprised by this one.

If NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB had cheeks and I were a septuagenarian, I would want to pinch and squeeze them because this is one cute little film. Much like SHAUN OF THE DEAD, the film pokes fun at how distracted we are about our own drama to be bothered by real world problems like the world coming to an end. This level of social commentary has been done before, but it hasn’t been done with a more lovable star in Maria Thayer. 90% of why this film works is because of this actress who is cute as a truckload of puppies and is more charismatic than most of the blonde beanpoles in Hollywood. You can’t help but root for this spunky redhead to get the guy and escape the zombie apocalypse. Thayer has star written all over her freckled face and I’m hoping she gets a role deserving of her spunky and likable demeanor soon.

Not much by way of gore is going on in NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB. This is the type of horror you can share with your girlfriend who doesn’t really like horror or with your teen who you’re trying to get addicted into horror and you need a gateway film to do so. Reminiscent of WARM BODIES, this film is superior because of its relatable and likable cast. Again, I’m rooting for big things in Maria Thayer’s future. She certainly shows she has the chops to carry a movie here. If you’re looking for light-hearted horror fun, NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEB is just the ticket.

DER BUNKER (2015)
Directed by Nikias ChryssosWritten by Nikias Chryssos
Starring Pit Bukowski, Daniel Fripan, Oona von Maydell, David Scheller
Find out more about this film here and on Facebook here
Reviewed by Mark L. Miller aka Ambush Bug
Nikias Chryssos, who directed the rather straight-forward and rock solid actioner TOWER BLOCK (reviewed here), goes into the realm of absurdity with DER BUNKER. This is a film that seems to be riding a wave of oddity and eccentricity along with films like RUBBER, DOGTOOTH, THE TAINT, and the upcoming king of oddball cinema THE GREASY STRANGLER.

DER BUNKER is an odd bird of a film, but once you get past the weird peculiarities of the four members of the cast, it becomes a fable of sorts about unrealistic expectations of family, the state of education, the frustrations of the educator, the distinction of the educated bs the uneducated, and sheer perversity of the typical family unit. Sure there are odd moments such as the Student’s method of drawing scribbles and finding the deepest of meanings in them or Father’s joke night where he dons clown makeup and reads a joke to the family, only to explain it in great detail afterwards or Mother’s disgusting open wound on her leg that seems to be the source of the voice she has heard since adolescence, or even Klaus’ bizarre choice in clothing and little hats. But apart from that there is a heartwarming tale of a friendship made between the Student and Klaus, as well as a powerful message about education and everything that is wrong with it. Decorating these themes with weirdness, DER BUNKER is a sort of odd little Christmas tree with all sorts of meaning beyond the strange baubles and gaudy tinsel.

Things get extremely dark by the end of this one and if a grown ass man being treated as a child doesn’t disturb you, the bleak and bloody final moments most likely will. Things get extremely stylish towards the end with fantastic lighting, bizarre twists, and breathtaking beauty to all of that madness unfolding. DER BUNKER is another indie gem that I felt enveloped by while watching.


BLOOD HUNTERS (2016)
Directed by Tricia LeeWritten by Corey Brown
Starring Lara Gilchrist, Benjamin Arthur, Torri Higginson, Mark Taylor, Julian Richings, Samuel Faraci, Peter Blankenstein, Tony Ning, Briar Nolet, Breeanna Booth
Find out more about this film here and on Facebook here
Reviewed by Mark L. Miller aka Ambush Bug
While simple and often schmaltzy, BLOOD HUNTERS is a single location, locked room mystery monster mash-up that had me by the throat for most of the film.

For the most part, BLOOD HUNTERS is a strong little mystery thriller that kept me guessing for the entire time. The monsters are formidably terrifying and the actors are good enough to make me care about them avoiding the creepy beasts. I liked the way this film unwrapped itself, shedding light on one question while presenting a new mystery to keep the thrills and chills going. From a storytelling standpoint, the film kept things low scale, but succeeded in keeping my interest with one challenge presented after the next that was equally entertaining.
That said, BLOOD HUNTERS is extremely formulaic. While the formula is formidable, it really follows a blueprint of “present the group with one problem, have them achieve their goal only to present the group with another problem.” The story unfolds as a series of challenges and while that can be said for many films, the skeletal structure of this film was evident, making the film feel more like a paint by numbers problem and solution game. The fact that the actors are going for a universal Oscar award in the final act and the film allows them to schmaltzily chew up the runtime for so long doing so is distracting and will definitely lose folks by the end. But the rollercoaster ride to the end is fun and boppy and the acting is less painful that most films of this level. Rank this one in the upper tier of ScyFy flicks one might see on any given weekend and you will probably not leave BLOOD HUNTERS disappointed.
And finally…a few weeks back I posted the three short chapters leading up to this final installment of SIN REAPERS: CIARA. This is the epic conclusion which has Ciara and the Reapers finally confronting those who took her life. You can find the first episode here, the second episode here, and the third episode here, just in case you missed Matthew Forte’s tale of vengeance. Enjoy!
See ya next week, folks!
Ambush Bug is Mark L. Miller, original @$$Hole/wordslinger/writer of wrongs/reviewer/interviewer/editor of AICN COMICS for over 15 years & AICN HORROR for 5. Follow Mark on the Twitters @Mark_L_Miller and on his new website collecting posts for AICN HORROR as well as all of the most recent updates on his various comic book projects on MLMillerWrites.com.
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