Leigh Whannell to Direct ‘Insidious: Chapter 3a 2
Posted by Horror Movies News on May 8, 2014Commenting Rules: Keep the conversation civil and on topic. If your comment does not add to the conversation, it will be removed.
Commenting Rules: Keep the conversation civil and on topic. If your comment does not add to the conversation, it will be removed.
A Seattle lawyer has pleaded guilty to reduced charges of raping masseuses in exchange for a 25-year sentence, avoiding a trial that could have earned him up to life in prison.

© RAM Releasing
It was only a matter of time before Apple's Siri became a villain in a horror movie -- well, sort of. In the Dutch film App, a woman's phone is taken over by an app called "Iris" that seemingly has a mind of its own and sets its sights on ruining her life. To heighten the experience, there is an actual real-life Iris app (text IRIS to 97-000) that viewers can download and run while watching the movie to access additional content. Read about it in my review of App, which becomes available in limited theatrical release (find out where at RAMReleasing.com) and on demand starting Friday, May 9.
...Wiry Zoe Saldana got a kick out of wearing a huge fake belly as she played a young, pregnant wife on the Paris set of the remake of the classic horror tale Rosemary's Baby.
As far as movies go, the horror-musical is a strange bird. How many horror freaks want a film's unstoppable killer to break out in song seconds before committing his evil deed? That ruins the suspense.
After director Len Wiseman dropped the project because of schedule that was too busy, Universal Pictures' reboot of The Mummy franchise seemed to be back on track when the production hired Mama filmmaker Andres Muschietti.
Any horror movie buff will instinctively recognize these memorable patterns utilized in the 237 Collection by Mondo, which references the eye-catching carpeting featured in the 1980 classic, The Shining.
"From Cameo to Close-up," a free exhibit on view through Nov. 26 shows items from the silent era to the 1990s.
The classic "Human versus The Elements" formula has been finding new life at the multiplex in recent years.