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The ramblings of a sexy rambler

A Sexy Blog

A spicy corner of the web where movie critiques, music rants, and sharp takes collide.

Terrifier Trilogy

Terrifier Trilogy

One comes to a marathon of the “Terrifier” films much as you might approach a rickety rollercoaster at a fading state fair, skeptical, but secretly hoping to stumble out a little changed. It all begins with a shriek and a snicker: Damien Leone’s creation, Art the Clown, born of a 2011 short that was less a calling card than a threat. Yet by the third film, set amid Christmas glitter and moral queasiness, the series has grown into a twisted, almost baroque pageant of splatter and dark wit. The “Terrifier” films, watched in quick succession, form their own fevered treatise on what horror can still provoke, where it dare not go, and just how long you can keep laughing in the dark before you start to worry about yourself.

27th Nov 2024 - Fawk
Terrifier 3 (2024)

Terrifier 3 (2024)

There’s a peculiar thrill in surrendering to a franchise you once tiptoed around, only to discover, three films deep, that what you’d dismissed as mere butchery contains a bewitching, misanthropic wit. “Terrifier 3,” the latest of Damien Leone’s splatter operettas, is that rare slasher sequel that not only resurrects the franchise corpse, but hustles it, grinning, into the main square, clad in Christmas tinsel and brandishing a bloodied candy cane.

27th Nov 2024 - Fawk
Terrifier 2 (2022)

Terrifier 2 (2022)

This low-budget slasher reintroduces Art the Clown, a character who has quickly risen to iconic status within the horror genre, while delivering a story that ups the ante in every conceivable way, violence, scale, and ambition. With a runtime of over two hours, Terrifier 2 pushes the boundaries of modern horror, offering a visceral experience that caters to hardcore fans while alienating some mainstream viewers.

26th Nov 2024 - Fawk
Dune Trilogy - A Cinematic Odyssey Through Time and Beyond

Dune Trilogy - A Cinematic Odyssey Through Time and Beyond

Frank Herbert’s “Dune” is the Mount Everest of science fiction, looming, treacherous, irresistible to climbers. Its reputation has become its curse. With each attempt to bring Herbert’s syncretic, sand-blasted cosmos to the screen, we glimpse the mirage on the horizon, the masterpiece peeking through the haze, while filmmakers crawl toward it, parched, hallucinating grandeur but often finding only the plastic taste of compromise on their tongues.

25th Nov 2024 - Fawk