The King Tide, 2023 – ★★★
Grounded and well-acted, it explores its supernatural setup with a believable lens. Doesn’t push boundaries, but it sticks with you.
Grounded and well-acted, it explores its supernatural setup with a believable lens. Doesn’t push boundaries, but it sticks with you.
Predictable but gleefully savage, it delivers the bloody goods with style. You won’t be surprised, but you will be entertained.
Sleek and skillful, with a haunting precision—may resonate even more on a second watch. A strong showcase of craft.
Utterly by-the-numbers with no spark or identity of its own—just another forgettable entry in the ghost story pile.
Offensive title aside, it’s a rough, tasteless ride—but somehow the ending manages to stick better than expected.
Quietly unsettling and emotionally heavy, it offers a fresh, mournful spin on the undead that lingers long after.
Dripping with ’80s vibes and practical goo—it’s dated in the best way, with just enough weird to keep it fun.
Exactly what you’d expect from the name—silly, shallow, and proudly ridiculous, but not much beyond the gimmick.
Passable horror with a decent hook, but it never rises above average. You’ll forget it by the time the credits roll.
Ultimately just another slow crawl through well-worn horror territory with nothing new to say.
Stunning to behold, but the déjà vu is hard to shake. Style nearly makes up for the lack of fresh perspective.
Ambitious in structure but lacking in payoff, the threads feel disconnected and the themes half-baked.
Hooks you with its visuals and keeps you around with a thoughtful core. Familiar ideas, but presented with style and care.
Completely absurd but not in a way that works—Cage gives it his all, but even he can’t sell this laughably miscast adventure.