Click here to read about this gory entry from Latin American director Adrián García Bogliano.

Click here to find out more. It’s very cool.
From Fangoria.com.: Welcome to Shadowvision, a regular column in which Fangoria.com revisits modern horror films in black-and-white. The purpose is to analyze these films through a new lens, seeing if the classically informed viewing experience will give a new angle to familiar images. If you’d like to watch along at home, it’s simple: go into your TV settings and desaturate the picture completely, then adjust the contrast and brightness to fit either standard or high definition.


Poster for the film “Suspiria” (1977)
If you haven’t already, please do yourself a favor and watch this Italian-Brazilian master of horror’s best known film. “Suspiria” is pretty mind-blowing. (i.e. great and weird.)
Interesting facts:
* Argento collaborated with George A. Romero on “Dawn of the Dead.”
* Argento’s 1996 film “The Stendhal Syndrome” was the first Italian film to use CGI.
* He directed an episode called “Jenifer” on Showtime’s Masters of Horror.
* Argento has contributed to the development of the survival horror video game Dead Space, and also in the dubbing of the character “Dr. Kyne” in the game’s Italian version.
* Daughter Asia Argento is an actress and director.
Source: Wikipedia
Click here to read at Fangoria.
Click here for Cinedelphia’s website.
Festivities include a mock-fest of Jack Perez’s ‘Mega Shark vs. Giant Octopus,’ which features the incomparable Lorenzo Lamas.

At least one half of Dark Matters is a sucker for stories where scary little towns don’t let anyone leave.
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