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    • The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) Directed by Tobe Hooper. Starring Marilyn Burns, Edwin Neal, Allen Danziger. Horror (1h 23m) 7.4 on IMDb — 89% on RT. Tobe Hooper's classic horror film has been referred to by Quentin Tarantino as a "perfect movie."
    • Soylent Green (1973) Directed by Richard Fleischer. Starring Charlton Heston, Edward G. Robinson, Leigh Taylor-Young. Crime, Mystery, Sci-Fi (1h 37m) 7.0 on IMDb — 70% on RT.
    • The Hills Have Eyes (1977) Directed by Wes Craven. Starring Susan Lanier, Robert Houston, John Steadman. Horror, Thriller (1h 30m) 6.3 on IMDb — 67% on RT.
    • Cannibal Holocaust (1980) Directed by Ruggero Deodato. Starring Robert Kerman, Francesca Ciardi, Perry Pirkanen. Adventure, Horror (1h 35m) 5.8 on IMDb — 67% on RT.
    • Wind River (2017) Rating: 7.7/10. Length: 1h 47min. Genre: Thriller, Drama, Crime, Mystery. Director: Taylor Sheridan. Storyline: East of Boulder Flats, deep into the vast and unforgiving white territory of the Wind River Indian Reservation, the seasoned game tracker, Cory Lambert, discovers the frozen body of the young Native American, Natalie.
    • The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) Rating: 7.5/10. Length: 1h 23min. Genre: Horror. Director: Tobe Hooper. Storyline: En route to visit their grandfather's grave (which has apparently been ritualistically desecrated), five teenagers drive past a slaughterhouse, pick up (and quickly drop) a sinister hitch-hiker, eat some delicious home-cured meat at a roadside gas station, before ending up at the old family home...
    • Split (2016) Rating: 7.3/10. Length: 1h 57min. Genre: Horror, Thriller. Director: M. Night Shyamalan. Storyline: Though Kevin (James McAvoy) has evidenced 23 personalities to his trusted psychiatrist, Dr. Fletcher (Betty Buckley), there remains one still submerged who is set to materialize and dominate all of the others.
    • Dawn of the Dead (2004) Rating: 7.3/10. Length: 1h 41min. Genre: Action, Horror. Director: Zack Snyder. Storyline: Ana goes home to her peaceful suburban residence, but she is unpleasantly surprised the morning that follows when her husband is brutally attacked by her zombified neighbor.
    • Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
    • Bone Tomahawk
    • The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2
    • Eating Raoul
    • Death Line
    • Delicatessen
    • Parents
    • Raw
    • The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
    • Ravenous

    Tim Burton is the epitome of a mixed-bag director, but one of his best films — and his last great film — is this period musical horror film about revenge, baked goods, and cannibalism. It stands apart from most cannibal movies for several reasons, but the most relevant is that the consumption of human flesh here is done unknowingly. Men and women a...

    In America’s desperate attempt to plant a flag on every hill in the land, its people often found themselves in unwanted territories. Declaring “Mine!” doesn’t make it a reality. Carving up the land and erecting white picket fences doesn’t make it home. You’re an outsider, and you’ve just put your first foot on the frying pan. Bone Tomahawk is a mea...

    How do you follow up one of the scariest movies of all time? By switching gears and dropping the gritty and raw horror for some outlandish horror comedy. At least that’s what Tobe Hooper did when he took us on another visit to see our favorite Texas family, and it worked out pretty well too. Leatherface and the gang are still cannibals but with the...

    The next item on our fleshy menu comes with a side order of laughs. Eating Raoul tells the hilarious story of a prudish couple with dreams of opening a restaurant, but they’re broke. So, they start killing swingers who frequent the orgies in their apartment block. As we all know, every apartment block has at least one person who hosts kinky sex par...

    In the early 70’s, British horror wasn’t known for its contemporary savagery. The landscape was more synonymous with Gothic horror, but director Gary Sherman had other ideas in mind. WithDeath Line he unleashed a socially conscious effort that was inspired by the bloodier fare coming out of America post-Night of the Living Dead. The film follows a ...

    The debut feature from visionary directorial team Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro, Delicatessen is, like many of their films, almost unclassifiable. Part horror film about a landlord offing new tenants to feed to his neighbors, part comedy film of an out of work clown in a post-apocalyptic landscape trying to make the best of his Chaplin-esque lif...

    Being a child and thinking your parents are strange is something most of us can relate to. When you’re little your parents may as well be aliens because they’re so different from you that they must be from another planet. For little Michael things are no different, aside from the fact that his parents are murderous cannibals. Bob Balaban’s excellen...

    Cannibal-Coming-of-Age is a genre we didn’t know we wanted but here we are. Then again, apart from eating other people, the runner up for horrible bodily betrayals is definitely puberty. A grounded personal drama with a sprinkle of awkward college comedy, Raw sees a sheltered veterinary school student developing a hunger for human flesh. In more th...

    There are more than a few iconic horror films that may have felt unassuming on release but grew into cinematic legends over the years. George Romero’s Night of the Living Dead and John Carpenter’s Halloween share a shelf with Tobe Hooper‘s tale of a flesh-eating family on the lookout for tasty visitors. It’s stark, raw terror unfolding on the scree...

    “Eat to live. Don’t live to eat.” Easier said than done, am I right? Especially when you discover that the consummation of human flesh can increase your natural abilities to supernatural heights. Robert Carlyle stumbles into an old west Sierra Nevada fort and discovers a band of military misfits. The losers are perfect fodder for his endless appeti...

  1. Dec 19, 1986 · Little Shop of Horrors: Directed by Frank Oz. With Levi Stubbs, Rick Moranis, Ellen Greene, Vincent Gardenia. A nerdy florist finds his chance for success and romance with the help of a giant man-eating plant who demands to be fed.

    • (83K)
    • Comedy, Horror, Musical
    • Frank Oz
    • 1986-12-19
  2. Oct 11, 1996 · The Ghost and the Darkness: Directed by Stephen Hopkins. With Michael Douglas, Val Kilmer, Tom Wilkinson, John Kani. A bridge engineer and an experienced old hunter begin a hunt for two lions after they start attacking local construction workers.

    • (65K)
    • Adventure, Drama, Thriller
    • Stephen Hopkins
    • 1996-10-11
  3. Mar 26, 2024 · A dark comedy about eating human flesh and selling it at a restaurant, this movie was a sleeper hit when it first came out and has gone on to create a cult following. The plot involves Paul and Mary Bland—an aptly named puritanical married couple who find themselves surrounded by late-1970s hedonism.

  4. 25,066 admissions (France) [5] The Little Shop of Horrors is a 1960 American horror comedy film directed by Roger Corman. Written by Charles B. Griffith, the film is a farce about a florist's assistant who cultivates a plant that feeds on human blood. The film's concept may have been inspired by "Green Thoughts", a 1932 story by John Collier ...

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