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All Hallows Eve: Inferno is currently streaming free with ads on Tubi and Roku. The 4th part of the horror anthology All Hallows' Eve series and 2nd part by executive producer Steve Barton originally began streaming on Tubi in October 2024.
SYNOPSIS: From an executive producer of "Terrifier" comes "All Hallows' Eve: Inferno" a new installment of the franchise that first introduced the world to Damien Leone's Art the Clown and the short film "Terrifier". When a woman survives a horrific crash that leaves her paralyzed, her nightmare is far from over. Transported to an infernal hospital, she becomes the victim of a sadistic doctor's torturous experiments forcing her to enter a haunted dimension filled with monsters and mayhem. Showcasing the work of multiple acclaimed horror film writers and directors, "All Hallows Eve: Inferno" brings bone-crushing suspense, gut-wrenching gore, and enough scares to haunt your dreams for eternity. Featuring Heather Langenkamp (‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’) and Larry Cedar (‘Constantine’, ‘Battlestar Galactica’), ‘All Hallows Eve: Inferno’ is perfect to add to your Halloween binge-watch. It’s Time to fear, Halloween is here.
Directed by Kays Al-Atrakchi, Christianne Cruz, John Ferrer, Patrick Kennelly, Jorge Lucas, Sumire Takamatsu, Evan Tramel and starring Marcos Esteves, Joe Lando, Bethany Orr, Claudia Fabella and Isabelle Hahn.
I think they should stop advertising Art the Clown in every new installment of this series when he's not in it. The AI poster is terrible but I liked 3 of the stories, I didn't understand the prick chef's story and I loved the last creature feature story. There's hardly any Halloween vibes, you get a silent pumpkinhead character in the CGI animated wraparound, a devil mask and a mention that it's Halloween on a car radio, that's it. If I had to pick which one of the 2 Steve Barton produced All Hallows' Eve movies I liked more, All Hallows Eve: Trickster is so much better. ★★ Jack-O @trickhorrortreater
More Reviews:
"“As a follow-up to the 2023 hit All Hallows' Eve Trickster, this film takes a stab at rekindling the eerie, frightening atmosphere of its predecessor while adding a new layer of hellish intrigue and scares. The film, once again, revolves around multiple interconnected tales of terror, but this time it trades the iconic, clown-faced Art the Clown for a fiery dive into an infernal realm of demonic horror. This sequel delivers a fair share of creepy moments and gruesome set pieces, all in the name of the originality of horror anthologies...Ultimately, All Hallows' Eve: Inferno is a mixed bag of horror genres and unique tales. Some stories might feel a little rushed, especially the opening vignette which barely has time to establish its characters before thrusting them into the dangers of the eerie hospital. It goes without saying though that it is worth watching for fans of anthology horror and those who enjoy a heavy dose of supernatural gore, but also who like the originality that some horror anthologies can bring with the multitude of directors lending their creativity to terrify the audience." Christopher Boise at macabredaily.com
"Meicore. It's understandable that there's references to Terrifier in the promotional material for this but that's probably a disservice; in that you might expect something more frightening than what this film offers. I can't say that any of the stories in this anthology really stood out, yes some were better than others but that's not saying much. There's some cool creepy imagery in the base storyline (if that's what you'd call it) but honestly it all kind of seems half assed. The folk horror stories are the most interesting ones in my opinion but again everything is pretty "mid" as they say. Not horrible but not very good either." 5/10 amduscias-73252 at imdb.com
"Now that Art has moved on and become an icon, shouldn't they just stop making these? Yes, the answer is yes." ★ 13beersl8r at letterboxd.com
"Ignoring the atrocious AI poster, this film looked pretty good! All the shorts are enjoyable, they aren't all great but definitely watchable... I did notice that two or three of the creature designs looked reused from the last film and I can't tell if that was intentional or not. The character watching segments are done in this animation style that you will have seen on YouTube and in some older PC games. Honestly I don't want more of these films as I think they should take these original ideas and designs and make an original horror creature flick. Stop riding of the back of Art's success, you tried to be like the first film in the second but then you moved on so why are we still mentioning Art and producers from the terrifier movies? That might get more people watching but it's giving them the wrong expectation. What these films have does work but you need to market it accurately and not cheap out on basic things like the god damn poster." ★★ Connor Jury at letterboxd.com
"So this is the 4th and very probably not final installment in the series that introduced the world to Art the Clown. Art was the only really good thing to come out of this very mediocre anthology series, but none of them have been outright terrible and this is a step up from the third one... The best part of the whole thing is the weird animated wraparound that’s actually really dark and fucked up. It goes harder than any of the individual segments do and they should have just made that into a movie and given it a proper ending, but what do I know? Probably more than the people who slap this series together honestly." ★★½ Tony the Terror at letterboxd.com
"Had no idea that there would be a fourth film in the All Hallows Eve franchise, but keep them coming. I enjoy anthologies and horror shorts. The wrap around story was okay but the creatures looked odd. Overall I did enjoy this movie.
In Lucidity - 2.8/5 CGI tentacles but this was pretty good. Most people will not be able to overlook the CGI but I didn’t mind it, it’s about the concept 😂
Hammurabi - 3/5 Short and simple but lacks scares.
Bakemono - 3/5 Despite a lacklustre ending, I liked this one and it made me hungry.
Aftertaste - 3/5 Another simple and short one but it has a few horror elements sprinkled in.
Trial 22 - 3.5/5 My favourite of the bunch. I wish it had been a tad longer though." ★★★ jaydeqt at letterboxd.com
"This anthology series was pretty good. The beginning which set up a main story of a car accident patient in a very Silent Hill-esque hospital was confusing and was too dark to see. The stories were great. My favorites were the Japanese and Chinese supernatural stories. Good acting throughout. A little heavy on the CGI for the first story but the soundtrack was dope. This was a fun watch, even on TUBI." ★★★ Christian Dives at letterboxd.com
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Haunt Season is currently streaming free with ads on Tubi. Epic Pictures’ specialty horror label DREAD originally released the Halloween slasher to a limited theatrical run on October 4, 2024, followed by VOD release on October 8, 2024.
SYNOPSIS: A masked maniac targets cast members at a suburban Halloween haunt attraction, turning their staged injuries into gruesome real-life horrors. As the terror escalates, the lines between performance and reality blur.
Haunt Season was filmed on-location at a working Midwest haunted house during its Halloween season and utilizes practical effects and jaw-dropping SFX makeup to achieve its terrifying kills.
The slasher film features prominent YouTube stars Rob Scallon and Craig Benzine in supporting roles. The soundtrack features songs from YouTube stars Rob Scallon and Andrew Huang and music by Composer Rasheed Thomas of the band Nonpoint.
Epic Pictures CEO Patrick Ewald says, “DREAD is the leader in Halloween films, and with HAUNT SEASON arriving just in time, it promises to kick off the spookiest time of the year in terrifying style. Brace yourself for a cinematic thrill that only DREAD can deliver.”
“HAUNT SEASON is about the world of passionate creatives. Partnering with a real haunted house gave us incredible insight into the world of haunters and there were so many parallels to our world of indie production.” says writer/director Jake Jarvi. “It’s about creative people doing what it takes to turn their dreams into reality. Except in this case one person’s dream is killing a whole lot of people.”
Written, directed, edited and co-produced by Jake Jarvi, the film stars Katelin Stack, Jeremy Warner, Rob Scallon, Brent Bentley, Sarah Elizabeth, Stephen Kristof, Craig Benzine, Tommy Martin, Brooklyn Lehman, Janet Jurado, Kelton Neals, Terry Holt, Cydney Moody and Adam Hinkle.
"I loved this film, awesome Halloween haunt neon colored scenes, likable characters with good natural acting for an indie film and the killer wears really great costume's for each kill. The kills are mostly off screen but are really creative. The movie ends too soon after the killer's reveal but I love their Conal Cochran-type Halloween III speech. I'll give it ★★★. I would've given it one more star if they showed more of the kills." Jack-O @trickhorrortreater
More Reviews:
“Jarvi and cinematographer Alexander Lakin take advantage of their location’s neon, candy coloured funfair aesthetic, and it’s a refreshing change from the grimy, squint inducing visuals of many of today’s indie horrors (and indeed many horror movies working with Hollywood budgets). By no means a slasher classic, Haunt Season offers enough in its enthusiasm to make it worthy of a spot on your spooky season watchlist…” ★★★½ TheMovieWaffler.com
“While it has some fun moments, Haunt Season suffers from uncertainty over just what kind of a film it wants to be. It bounces back and forth between horror and drama, frequently killing its own momentum in the process. It’s not until it ditches the drama in the final act and concentrates on scares that it really comes to life.” ★★½ VoicesFromTheBalcony.com