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What are some obscure or very obscure horror films you really like?
Begotten (1990) and A Wounded Fawn (2022) are two of my favorite less popular horror films. Not sure exactly what constitutes “obscure” but I don’t see these 2 talked about much on this forum
Begotten is so disturbing. I love it!
I loved wounded fawn; I remembering seeing less than favorable reviews around here when it first came out but I thought it was a great time
I love it. That end credits scene is awesome
How Begotten doesn’t have a modern boutique release blows my mind with every passing day.
Watched wounded fawn because of this comment. Loved it. Same guy is in Scare Me, he’s really good at playing a creep.
Housebound It's a low budget New Zealand gem.
I watched this one with my mom, we had a great laugh
Something's in the water in New Zealand... they are making some great independent horror
Omg, this is great. Love it.
Either half the films listed aren’t that obscure or I‘ve just seen too many horror films.
The central problem with these posts is the definition of “well known” “obscure” “hidden gem” slides with the viewers knowledge.
I’ve noticed some people on this sub will list their favorite movies of the year and it’s basically 2-5 movies that were released into theaters. Meanwhile others name movies that were no where near commercially successful. The world looks different depending on your willingness to dig.
Coherence
It's a fun time bender, in the same realm as Triangle. Not a ton of outright horror, definitely leans more into the suspense and horrific situation side of things, but still a terrific film.
The ending sat with me for ages
I don't think I've ever watched another movie that feels so intimate. The way it was shot just makes it feel like you're at that party and that just makes all the horror-ish elements feel so much more creepy
I put this one on randomly without hearing about it first and my wife and I were mind blown how good it was
This is the movie I came to mention.
It's an absolute mind fuck that leaves you questioning who is where and where is who... if that makes sense.
Definitely not horror, in the traditional sense. But it's absolutely worth a watch if you're a fan of the genre.
the subtly of this one is so so so good!!!
Recently watched Aniara. If you like space, gay romance, reading subtitles, and being depressed forever you’ll really enjoy it 😅
Nice recommendation! Agreed!
I don't know that I'd called it obscure, but Glorious on Shudder is one of my favorites. Cosmic horror/Comedy.
Also I'll give a half recommendation to Abattoir. The premise hooked me right away, and the ride is pretty good, but I think it falls flat in the third act/ending.
Glorious is surprisingly a great time. I love movies set in a single location, and that movie utilizes its setting the best it could
"Lovecraftian Horror" and "JK Simmons" were the only things I needed to hear to know I would be on board fully
Possum. Hagazussa. Roh. Thale. Sator. Older Gods. Harbinger. Bite. Jug Face. Plank Face. Honeydew. Monstrous.
Honeydew was a WTF kind of movie. Jug Face I watched randomly one day and thought it was about to be bad but ended up getting and keeping my attention.
Hagazussa... Ooooof. Tough watch,
I fucking love jug face and honeydew. Those were two movies I went in not expecting much but man they blew me away.
I just watched them on a whim. Discovered quite a few good movies that way
Jug Face is on a list that I use for requests like this. It’s so well done on a shoestring budget.
Honeydew is so good. The actress playing the old lady is so creepily amazing.
Overall, the acting was done well. But yes, the old lady was so creepy
Jug Face is on a list that I use for requests like this. It’s so well done on a shoestring budget.
I have seen two of your mentions, and am glad to know of the other two. Twins of Evil isn't very obscure, being a Hammer film with their usual stars, plus twin vampires played by twin centerfold models. Hammer was following a trend of more nudity in horror movies they began with The Vampire Lovers.
I also saw that Exorcism movie, because my wife sees every exorcism movie. I agree it does a lot with a low budget. It's fairly believable, which is a good thing, but outside my viewing preferences.
As a matter of personal taste, I like odd horror movies with wild, unusual points of view, or lots of "camp". If you add obscure to that, I would pick one like Daughter of Horror (1957) aka Dementia. It's a 58min. nightmare movie taking place over one night on "skid row" (actually Venice, near where Welles later shot Touch of Evil). I don't want to spoil the plot, but it came out in '53, was banned, re-edited and re-released in '55, re-edited again and released in '57 with a new title and feverish voiceover narration by Ed McMahon, sounding like Phil Hartman. There's no sync dialogue, just music, fx and the VO.
Oh! I saw Dementia. So good
Human Lanterns
I bought it a while ago and haven't yet watched but just looking through the little booklet this movie looks insane and something I'm pretty sure I'll love when I get to it.
i’ve often heard it described as a ‘great pick and a creepy but fun watch’
I hope it's creepy but fun to watch, could anyone let me know if it's creepy but fun to watch?
Great pick and a creepy but fun watch!
Great movie with pretty much every interpretation of the title
Great pick and a creepy but fun watch!
Great pick and a creepy but fun watch! Shaw Brothers!
Ngl, watched Frailty (2001) last week, and it was an absolute mindfuck of a movie. Bill Paxton (True Lies, Near Dark) was really genuinely creepy as an overbearingly religious dad, and McConaughey is pretty unironically good. Crazy ending
I really love this one, I watch it every year
One of the best horror movies of the 2000s.
November (2017) Kanopy/YouTube rent
Visitor Q (2001)
Bedevilled (2010) plex/Amazon rent
Let's Scare Jessica to Death (1971) Hoopla/YouTube rent
The Haunting of Julia (1977)
The Other (1972)
The Other is incredible. So atmospheric.
My contribution is possibly not that obscure or overly horror, but The Little Girl that Lived Down the Lane (1976). Jodie Foster is appropriately eerie and her behavior necessarily chilling. One of my favorite slow burners.
I agree 100%
Foster’s character isn’t really eerie though and definitely not the antagonistic character. I keep hearing interpretations that she is an “evil kid” and it’s an “evil kid” movie but literally the plot is her fighting to live independent from predatory authority figures. It’s more of a drama/suspense than horror but it is a stellar film nonetheless.
I see your point. But I saw it as a child and knew absolutely no one our age that acted that detached and mature. So through that lens, she came across as eerie, although that's perhaps not the best choice of words.
And even then, I never saw her as evil at all. I'm assuming that was an assumption made because she was so young, but anyone who has even a modicum of analytical skills would argue otherwise.
BeDeviled is so fucked. Good suggestion.
November is amazing! Cinematography and special effects should win some sort of award.
I will keep saying this but The Prowler. Tom Savini's best effects and is probably the scariest slasher of the 80s.
Not very obscure, but one of my favorites, some of the bayonet kills are brutal
I hated the prowler, but I loved rosemary's killer
What? They are the same thing.
Just checking :)
The lair of the white worm
The wasp woman
The manster
The Lair of the White Worm is a great film, but I think it's quite well known, despite coming out in 1988. I haven't seen the others.
Fair, the latter 2 are very B 1950s horror sci-fi
It's a shame there are only a small number of British 1980s horror films, you know? America had taken over the horror genre by that decade. Having said THAT, Dream Demon and Paperhouse are both pretty good, and scary, British horror films from the 1980s. I think they're basically obscure.
Wasp Woman got two remakes that are worth checking out if you like Stuart Gordon influenced movies with nutso FX. There’s The Rejuevenator from 1988 and a Roger Corman/Jim Wynorski direct remake in 1995 with the original title. Both are super fun!
The Thaw
Baskin
Nightbreed
The Bay
Monster Project
Yellow Brick Road
Isolation
I think of Absentia any time I see a walking path going under a bridge or through a tunnel.
He filmed that movie in his own apartment. The tunnel was nearby.
Halloween Party- Two college students unwittingly release the tortured souls of monstrously disfigured children.
Leaving DC- After relocating to WV, a man begins documenting his experiences on video and soon realises he may not be alone.
I've been trying to find Leaving DC forever
It’s on Amazon. Unfortunately, not on prime so there’s a fee.
I love Leaving DC right up until the very end. I wanted more.
I always recommend a dark song!
Great film but definitely not obscure
maybe not in this sub, but in real life it is
Who the fuck is going around downvoting all these comments? I've tried to fix it, but shit like that makes posting on this sub infuriating.
Anyway, I'll throw out: The Burning Moon and the Hotel Inferno franchise. The former is an extreme Horror from the 90s with one of the most effective visions of Hell I've seen. It's low budget, but it hits hard. Hotel Inferno is basically Doom in movie form: a first-person, splatter-filmed romp through Hell.
I just watched Hotel Inferno last night. It was wild. I went in blind so I had no idea what to expect. I don't know if I loved it but it was very interesting to watch.
Less than a minute after me posting this morning it was downvoted. Someone was salty about this post.
The Deep House. Currently on Amazon Prime
Midnight (2021) [Peacock/Tubi] - an excellent Korean thriller. I always recommend it on these types of posts. The acting is awesome, the suspense is intense, and the ending is one long chase sequence that is so exhilarating.
When a Stranger Calls Back (1993) [Prime/Tubi] - the original is a horror classic, and the remake is both loved and hated by the community, but imo this sequel to the original is the best in the series. The opening scene (which is 30 minutes) is so exciting and I think more suspenseful than the original. And after the opening scene, the rest of the movie is still very interesting and suspenseful (unlike the original). Highly recommend if you haven't seen it.
The Red Queen Kills Seven Times (1972) [Tubi] - one of my all time favorite Italian Giallos. Not as famous as some of the classic giallos (Blood and Black Lace, Deep Red, Tenebre, etc), but an excellent time. It's gothic, stylish, sexy, and an engaging murder mystery. Also the score is really good. The theme for the movie gets stuck in my head all the time.
I recommend Fresh Hell (2021). (Disclosure: I made it. Would be thrilled if you checked it out.) Obscure, Microbudget FF, 100% Rotten Tomatoes. On Tubi, Prime and Peacock.
Not totally horror but “Spring”
Spring is a really good, obscure horror film. Why don't you think it's horror?
I suppose it is but it’s because it’s like a “monster” movie but It relies on so many other themes/genres and isn’t really scary so I didn’t know how to classify it haha.
I don’t know what classifies as „obscure“ but Onibaba is really great. I also really like She-Wolf of London, a very underrated Universal „Monster“ film that’s usually overshadowed by both The Wolf Man and the already a bit more obscure Werewolf of London.
The Shout (1978)
Was going to mention Absentia too. Such a great movie
Wer?
Ther!
Funny
Antrum seems pretty under the radar. I loved it but I seem to be in the minority on that one.
Just saw this a couple of weeks ago and still thinking about it.
YellowBrickRoad also.
I watched The Endless yesterday - not sure how obscure, but it was new to me and I haven’t seen any mention.
Cactus Jack (2021). It’s a perfect look inside the mind of a fanatical bigot.
Lace Crater, We Go On, You Won't Be Alone
Sole Survivor (1984)
Dead End (2003)
Sole Survivor is fantastic. First time I heard anyone mention it. Final Destination owes the entire franchise to that movie.
EDIT: I just saw you mentioned Dead End and it completely flew past me the first time since I was excited someone mentioned Soul Survivor. But Dead End is one of my favorite films of all time. What a simple concept done so cleanly and eerily. Holy shit. Ray Wise and Lin Shaye are treasures and I wish they worked together more often because the chemistry is off the charts.
Dark Water- an adaptation of a short story from the same author who wrote Ringu. It's about a divorced mother who moves into a decrepit apartment complex with her young daughter and starts noticing weird things about the plumbing.
I actually love the remake with Jennifer Connelly and Tim Roth
I haven't seen the remake yet, but I'll check it out! The original has a great spooky atmosphere.
I really liked it, too. The Roosevelt Island setting was its own character.
Agreed! As someone who has always just driven past Roosevelt Island it really made me curious. John C Reilly was great too
Yes! It took me several watches before I picked up on some things with Reilly"s character. (Like there was no other couple looking at the apartment.) So good.
Cemetery of Terror (1985) and Vacation of Terror II (1989)
Both are Mexican horror movies that take place on Halloween. Both are bonkers.
Intruder 1989
One of my favorite second tier 80’s slashers. Full Moon, the Raimis acting and a Bruce Campbell cameo. I love the supermarket setting. I hardly ever hear anyone mention this one.
Some insanely graphic kills too!
C.H.U.D. And Humanoids from the Deep. Don’t forget O.G Pirarana 70’s version
Cannibalistic humanoid underground dwellers…..yes one of my faves from my very long ago youth.
Me too back in the day. No way any of us were going into an abandoned bunkers or anything under ground for quite some time.
Sewers still creep me out due to this
Definitely! That’s why IT by Stephen King book and movie works to creep me out as well as CHUD.
The Devil’s Gift(1984). I found it on YouTube. it is one of those so bad it’s good movies and I love it.
The Cellar Dweller... directed by John Carl Buechler and starring Jeffrey Combes and Y'vonne DeCarlo!
a comic book artist draws a demon that comes to life and kills him. 30 years later, it happens again.
GREAT STUFF!
Luz
13 Tzameti. 🔫 Hungarian obscure thriller, what a ride.
The Abomination (1986). The only thing I hate about it is that the movie opens with a dream sequence, which is like a "premonition" of what's about to happen in the movie, so, EVERYTHING gets spoiled in the first 3 minutes of the movie, by the movie itself.
That aside, it's a really weird and awesome story; a woman watching a TV preacher gets cured of cancer, and coughs up her tumor, which then possesses her son like a parasite, and sends him on a killing spree, where he coughs up more tumor-parasites that he spreads around.
It's one of those next-to-no-budget films, but the story is just SO weird that it became one of my favorite movies the first time I saw it!
Severance (not the show, the 2006 british horror comedy). Haven't seen it in years and no body talks about it...but I remember really enjoying it. Not sure if it still holds up though.
The Forbidden Files (French found footage anthology; if you can find it), Mindkiller (1987; on Prime with bad sound as it’s a VHS rip so subtitles will help you; AMAZING effects), last suggestion isn’t obscure but it’s not popular among general audiences—Eyes of Fire (scary as hell and especially impressive given 95% of the scares are in fully lit daytime)
I've never seen Stitches mentioned in this sub. Maybe consider watching it.
Stitches is a 2012 comedy slasher film directed by Conor McMahon and written by McMahon and David O'Brien. ... The plot concerns a birthday clown returning from the dead to exact revenge upon a boy and a group of children/teenagers who contributed to his death. [Taken from Wikipedia])
Oh god every year or so this movie pops up somewhere when I’ve forgotten about it. Great movie to get a bunch of friends (even those who don’t do well with horror, as long as clowns aren’t a particular fear!) together with some drinks and just laugh your asses off. Love it.
Dream Home (2010)
Just Before Dawn
Candyland
I Am Not A Serial Killer
The Shrine
Kristy
Significant Other
My default answer to this is always Baby Blood (1990) from France. Great escalation of gore and mayhem with an awesome finale and it starts pretty violent too.
Just looked this up and it sounds deranged. Straight onto the watchlist. Thanks for the rec.
Enjoy!
Bad Biology
Tromeo and Juliette
Olivia
The Suckling
The Medusa Touch
The Strings
The Bay is a relatively obscure found footage horror movie that I really enjoyed. It presents itself as a documentary about a parasite that’s infested a town’s fish and quickly spreads to the public, causing horrific effects and damage. If bugs, anything crawly, or outbreaks freak you out — this is the movie for you.
Wouldn't say obscure, but it's rarely mentioned: The Headhunter. It's one of those movies that you have to watch and see for yourself.
Hammer House of Horror TV series
Humongous (1982)
Wikipedia: Humongous is a 1982 Canadian slasher film directed by Paul Lynch)...The story centers on a group of young adults who become stranded on a deserted island, where they are stalked and murdered by a monstrous assailant.
The Baby’s Room (6 Films to Keep You Awake) - smart, and very creepy. No one really does ghost stories like the Spanish - very classic British in tone, but better films than we make
February - the whole film is a decent horror/drama, but there is a single scene which is one of the creepiest I think I’ve ever seen (the phone in the corridor)
The Evil (1978)
Session 9 (2001)
That one still haunts me
This movie is on everyone’s favorite slow burn list, not really that obscure.
Please accept my sincerest apologies
Doom room
Blood Diner - absolutely crazy and hilarious. An absolute classic that doesn’t get enough recognition.
I'd like to throw in Creepy (2016). It's billed as a Japanese thriller...but I think it had some horror elements to it.
The End? is an AMAZING Italian zombie movie. It's one you never hear about but it's one of my favorites now.
I've been reading about/looking up zombie movies pretty extensively lately, and I've never heard of this one. Looks pretty cool-thanks for the recommendation!
No problem, enjoy! I found it by accident on Tubi when I was googling zombie movies. I also found Daylight's End for vampire movies and it was also another excellent movie! There are unusual horror gems that don't get enough love so watch both!
I’ve been desperately trying to watch this for a couple of years but cant find it anywhere. I cant stream it, buy physical media, pirate it. No luck so far.
No Tubi in England.
Not sure if these are obscure enough for this enlightened audience, but here are some of my favorites:
Anything for Jackson (2020)
Messiah of Evil (1973)
The Last Exorcism (2010)
Anything for Jackson I had never heard of and watched at random. Sooo good. And had multiple legitimately scary/unsettling moments. I want to watch again now.
I originally didn't care for TLE, but then I read a fan theory that changed my mind: the whole thing was fake and orchestrated by the main guy (who faked his own death/disappearance) in an attempt to sell the tape/story to pay for his son's treatment.
Went back and rewatched in that mindset and it changed my viewing experience.
Silver bullet
The Stephen King movie?
I love Absentia - it's Mike Flanagan's take on The Three Billy Goats Gruff.
The Shrine- a low budget folk horror film that takes place in Poland.
Lovely Molly - a sort of supernatural/possession film that genuinely creeps me out.
The Sacrament - Ti West takes on Jonestown.
The Veil- a supernatural take on Jonestown.
The Triangle- a ff film about a mysterious Montana cult (NOT the Melissa George boat movie)
The Forgotten One- a writer buys a big, creepy house and finds something in the walls
What Lies Beneath, Savageland, Hellhouse Origins
Calvaire (2004).
The Broken.
A woman leaving the hospital sees herself drive past and investigated the mystery.
Low budget horror starring Lena Heady with super creepy atmosphere.
Hatching 2022. Finnish body/monster horror thriller on hulu. The first time I watched it last year, I couldn't stop thinking about it and came home after work the next day and watched it again.. It really stuck with me. The visuals are awesome, and I'm a sucker for some handmade SFX. Very little CGI was used. It's just an awesome movie, and I love it. May be time for a rewatch today 😅
Messiah of Evil and Dark Waters (1993).
Messiah of Evil is really cool. The set design in that is brilliant. Shame it's an obscure horror film.
Shocker (1989)
Singapore Sling
Begotten
Angel for Satan, Nightmare Castle or Castle of Blood. Anything with Barbara Steele in b/w
Deep Dark, Found and A Feild in England would be up there.
I think if you've got Absentia on the list, which is always my top pick for mainstream "obscure," given it's by Flanagan, you should check out Toad Road.
Not sure where you can see it now, I caught it on Tubi (in Canada) a couple of years ago. I thought it had a similar vibe as Absentia with the lo-fi understated weirdness. Also the tone of the ending. Enjoy!
Ok, three of three differing qualities, first, Decent into Darkness: My European Nightmare. The best way I can describe it is a Be My Cat: A Story for Anne but as a travel documentary in Paris. Basically comes off a bit like Borat, but if Borat started killing people by the end of the movie.
Second, Lunacy. Sorta a play on some Marquis de Sade type stuff with a lot of stop motion raw meat as the connective tissue between scenes. A really weird movie.
Final movie, The Enemy (2011), a movie taking place in a tentative peace after a massive civil war. The soldiers are disarming mines and end up finding a dude holed up in a wall who isn't hungry, cold, or tired. He may be the Devil, and the soldiers have to figure out what to do with him.
I'm not sure if it counts as obscure but Possum was great.
the exorcist of God
I never see anyone mention it but I liked Left Bank alot. Also, Sauna
While it's probably not very obscure within this subreddit, I've found that outside of more dedicated horror communities, Bob Clark's 1974 horror flick "Deathdream" (AKA: Dead of Night) remains largely unknown.
Inspired by W. W. Jacobs' short story "The Monkey's Paw", Deathdream also serves as a pointed allegorical protest of the Vietnam War. When taken metaphorically, you can see the parallels between the horrific realities of that War, and the costs it incurred on the soldiers who fought it, and their families as well.
Deathdream is well-written, the actors are excellent, and the film is off-kilter and creepy throughout. It maintains an atmosphere of dread punctuated by escalating horrific events until all hell breaks loose in the final act. As a bonus, a young Tom Savini lent his talents to lot of the film's horror FX.
If you haven't seen it, I can't recommend it highly enough, especially if you are fond of that era of horror films.
Mute Witness, which is now on Shudder. I saw it in the theater when it came out and then it disappeared. It’s a lot of fun.
I was a teenage zombie. Comedy horror b movie at its finest.
Baskin
Macabre (2009)
Took me FOREVER to find it for my brother
Indonesian slasher flick that’s heavy on blood and gore, great twist, and lots of action. Love it, can’t find that damn movie anywhere.
I’ve been looking for this one as well
A Lizard in a Womans Skin (1971). Go for it if you like trippy, sensual and homoerotic Giallo.
What Josiah Saw (2022). A perfect southern gothic film. Great storytelling and atmosphere.
Not sure if this counts as obscure, but I recently discovered the Japanese movie “House/Hausu” (1977). It’s a very fun and confusing film, not too scary but more just strange and quirky.
Sweetheart. The reveal itself was the last movie that had me sit up and go #”wtf was that”
Eny’s Men
I remember enjoying “Lovely Molly”, that didn’t get much attention when it was released in 2011.
The Devil's Business
Noroi
Larry Fessenden’s Habit is a good one, though the less you know about it going in the better.
Starry Eyes, Pyewacket
Dolls. 1989 think?
The Werewolf Versus the Vampire Woman
John Carpenter's Cigarette Burns lives rent free in my head 🖤
Char Man
YellowBrickRoad
Hellbender
Resolution followed by The Endless.
These would normally be too artsy for me, but there's just enough cosmic horror to keep me wanting to watch these movies on loop every few years.
The Battery 2012 - a very unique take on zombie apocalypse, with a pretty great soundtrack. Solid movie!
Twins of Evil is only obscure if you weren't brought up in the Hammer era. That film was burned into my teenage brain.
I'm not sure if this is obscure enough, but I found Hatching (2022) to be very good, but don't hear it spoken of much.
Kill Her Goat. Fun movie from a well known actor in the B movie horror genre.
Under The Skin has to be one of the best ones that came out recently
Polar Void
I don't know if I'd call Twins of Evil obscure. It's still a Hammer movie after all.
The basement 2018 – the acting quality is just phenomenal
Also, British cannibal movie called gnaw was actually really good
Behind the Mask The rise of Leslie Vernon. Great mix of horror and Comedy. Not talked about very often.
May. Frozen. (Not the Disney one)
Dude, you've seen May? WHere the girl is lonely and fucked up? I saw that recently and thought it was pretty good! It's basically a horror drama comedy film, and it worked well.
It actually gets better the more you watch it. The bleak atmosphere of being an average twenty something working in LA in the early aughts. Her life long trauma. Her social awkwardness. Just watching her descend further into madness. I watch it at least once a year. Oh, and the soundtrack is to die for. (See what I did there?) lol
Beau is Afraid. Not completely horror but I think it is enough that it counts. Also Eraserhead, one of the best movies of all time, is also very obscure. I really like Men as well which has one longgg obscure scene but the entire movie isn’t too obscure, I think it counts though. I haven’t seen very many lesser known obscure movies so I can’t say anything about that.
I think you might be mixing up obscure with surreal. Or a word like that.
Yeah you might be right
Kiroshi Kurosawa doesn't get enough attention ( cure is my favorite, but creepy and charisma are excellent and more of a deep cut)
Calvaire will always get a rec from me, a deeper cut from French horror that imo is as good as some of the best ( I prefer it to Hu the very popular high tension, though not on the level of martyrs)
The vanishing (original) is underrated imo
Just watched miss violence last night- it was so dark and disturbing I have a hard time recommending it to people in general, but it was pretty powerful
Ravenous. Not particularly obscure maybe, but definitely underrated.
Compliance. Not a horror but it’s a true story and a pretty horrific look at what people are prepared to do if they think they are obeying an authority figure.
Boys In The Trees. Probably too whimsical to be horror but it’s creepy in some places and a good one for Halloween.
Savageland (2015). Its a great spin on the found footage genre into 'found photography'. Those photos are brilliantly creepy, and I would love to see more movies try that type of narrative. The movie also tackles issues of racism, bigotry and corruption in its message. The ending is pretty stupid though with shoehorned found footage. Still a great zombie movie though.
Not sure if any of these obscure, but I rarely hear anyone speak about them.
• The Blackcoat's Daughter (February) (2015)
• Frontier(s) (2007)
• The Feast (Gwledd) (2021)
• Earwig (2021)
• Knife+Heart (2018)
• My Heart Can't Beat Unless You Tell It To (2020)
• Kotoko (2011)
• Alleluia (2014)
• Amer (2009)
• In My Skin (Dans ma peau) (2002)
Pontypool
Low budget Canadian film about a Radio station surrounded by zombies.... that's all I'll say
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